Sunday, August 15, 2010

SLIMALUMA™ is a potent appetite suppressant

SLIMALUMA™ is a potent appetite suppressant. Controlled clinical trials on SLIMALUMA™ have clearly demonstrated that it suppresses appetite.

Have you ever heard of Caralluma Fimbriata? How about Slimaluma? No, well you are probably not alone. If you have you are probably pretty familiar with what is being called the latest fat buster.
Caralluma Fimbriata is essentially a vegetable of daily use in tribal India. Indian tribals chew chunks of Caralluma Fimbriata to suppress hunger when on a day's hunt. This succulent is used amongst the labor classes in South India to suppress appetite and enhance endurance.
When we eat, the nerves from the stomach send a signal to the hypothalamus in the brain. This is the part of the brain that controls appetite. When the stomach is full, the hypothalamus signals the brain to stop eating. When a person is hungry, the hypothalamus sends a signal to the brain that food is needed.
SLIMALUMA™ inhibits this hunger sensory mechanism of the hypothalamus. The Pregnane Glycosides contained in SLIMALUMA™ by interfering with the signaling mechanism and creating of a signal on its own, seem to fool the brain into thinking that the stomach is full, even when the person has not eaten.
SLIMALUMA™ has also been shown to promote fat loss and weight loss.
This is because SLIMALUMA™ inhibits fat synthesis by blocking the formation of Acetyl Co-Enzyme A and Malonyl Co-Enzyme A, which are the building blocks of fat synthesis.
SLIMALUMA™ also increases burning of fat by the body. This makes more energy available to the body and makes the person more active and lively. It's a well known fact the muscle cells burn more calories than fat cells. So when more energy is available to the body, muscle cells burn energy faster. Muscle Cells are heavier than fat cells but they are also denser than fat cells. So they occupy lesser space and consequently the person appears more compact and trimmer, compared to before.
Slimaluma is pretty expensive, but you know what? You get what you pay for. With Slimaluma you are getting something that has worked for centuries. I highly recommend supplements with Slimaluma!

Try our Fruitrients Slimaluma - on sale Now!

Roger & Lisa Booth - Good Living Products, LLC

Sunday, August 1, 2010

My Name is Lisa and I'm an Animal Lover........

I have a huge soft spot in my heart for animals especially dogs.  They are my family. The first picture is Buddy and Gracie, my 4 year old Golden/Mix dogs.

I try to give them the healthiest life ever. I did not get them from the Human Society but from a home where they had 27 dogs. They were not cruel or abusive to the dogs at all but they also couldn't care for them and keep them healthy & give them the attention they need and deserve.
I am a huge believer in the Human Society. I have donated alot to them in the past year and try to give more and more. The next step for me is to give some of my time as a volunteer to at least help the dogs feel less afraid during their stay  there and give them the attention they deserve and love that they always give to us. I live in Arizona and often go on the Arizona Human Society website to see what events or up coming. They are having one on August 14th their 12 annual Pet Telethon. Maybe you could take some time out of your day and log onto the Human Society in your area and see how you could help out the animals that don't deserve the hard lives they have been living.

Take Care,
Roger & Lisa Booth

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Things That Make You Go Hmmmmm

Here are some interesting - but totally nonsensical  facts I found. I thought they were fun and  interesting and wanted to share them with you. Hope you enjoy.


-The average person says 5,000 words in one day.

-A giant squid's eye is as big as a basketball.
-Barbie's real name is Barbara Millicent Roberts.
-The national anthem of Greece has 158 verses.
-The dog who played ToTo in the 1939 movie "The Wizard of Oz" got paid $125 per week.
-One in every five people in the world live on less than $1 a day.
-Jellyfish are 95% water.
-One billion seconds is about 31.7 years.
-There are 293 ways to make change for one dollar.
-By age 65, an average person has seen two million commercials.
-One toad can eat 10,000 insects in one summer.
-The only food that never ever spoils is honey.

-50% of all pizzas sold in North America have pepperoni on them.
-Lemons have more sugar than strawberries.
-Lifesavers candy has a hole in the middle primarily because of a machine malfunction, but the manufacturers thought it was a good idea, so they kept it that way.
-Apocolocynopsis is the fear of being turned into a pumpkin.
-Clinophobia is fear of going to bed.
-Logizomechanophobia is the fear of computers.
-Pteronophobia is the fear of being tickled by feathers.
-Phobophobia is the fear of fear.
-The supreme court ruled on the difference between fruits and vegetables in 1893.
-The can opener was invented about 50 years after the can.
-Leonardo daVinci wrote backwards because he was left-handed and did not want to get ink all over his hand.


Hope you all enjoyed  and maybe chuckled a little!


Be well,
Roger & Lisa Booth
Good Living Products 

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Basil-Tomato Salad

Happy Summer to everyone from Good Living Products. I wanted to share a very good summer receipt I found the other day. It is great to have with your lunch or dinner or at a family BBQ. We have been having alot of those lately and its so fun with.

Basil-Tomato Salad Ingredients

1  recipe Lemon Vinaigrette, recipe below
1  small baguette or French roll
2  Tbsp. olive oil
2  cloves garlic, minced
1  small head green leaf lettuce, torn (6 cups)
3  cups fresh basil, torn
2  cups grape tomatoes, halved, or chopped plum tomatoes
1/2  cup pine nuts, toasted
2  oz. Parmesan cheese, shaved
Directions
1. Prepare Lemon Vinaigrette; set aside.
2. Preheat oven to 425 degrees F. Split baguette in half horizontally. In small bowl combine olive oil and garlic. Brush onto cut sides of baguette. Cut each bread piece lengthwise into 3 or 4 breadsticks. Place on baking sheet. Bake 3 to 5 minutes or until toasted. Transfer to wire rack; cool.
3. In large bowl combine lettuce and basil. In 3- to 4-quart glass canister or desired container layer greens, tomatoes, pine nuts, and cheese . Serve with breadsticks and Lemon Vinaigrette. Makes 6 servings.
Lemon Vinaigrette: In small screw-top jar combine 1/2 cup olive oil, 1 tsp. finely shredded lemon peel, 1/3 cup lemon juice (1 large lemon), 4 cloves minced garlic, 1 tsp. sugar, 1/4 tsp. salt, and 1/4 tsp. ground black pepper. Cover; shake well.

Hope you enjoy and stay cool. Remember to stay hydrated during these hot summer days & nights. Please check out our Special Summer Savings @ goodlivingproducts.com

Be Well,

Roger & Lisa Booth

Good Living Products




 

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

May 5th - Cinco de Mayo

 Lisa and I have spent a great deal of time in Mexico.  In fact we lived there for 2 weeks of every month from 2006 through 2008!  We loved it there and loved the people and culture.  We thought we'd give the real reason that Mexico celebrates Cinco de Mayo.  It's actually celebrated more in the US than in Mexico and my opinion is that it's really just an excuse to drink.........a lot!!!! 

Cinco de Mayo is a date of great importance for the Mexican and Chicano communities. It marks the victory of the Mexican Army over the French at the Battle of Puebla. Althought the Mexican army was eventually defeated, the "Batalla de Puebla" came to represent a symbol of Mexican unity and patriotism. With this victory, Mexico demonstrated to the world that Mexico and all of Latin America were willing to defend themselves of any foreign intervention. Especially those from imperialist states bent on world conquest.


Cinco de Mayo's history has its roots in the French Occupation of Mexico. The French occupation took shape in the aftermath of the Mexican-American War of 1846-48. With this war, Mexico entered a period of national crisis during the 1850's. Years of not only fighting the Americans but also a Civil War, had left Mexico devastated and bankrupt. On July 17, 1861, President Benito Juarez issued a moratorium in which all foreign debt payments would be suspended for a brief period of two years, with the promise that after this period, payments would resume.

The English, Spanish and French refused to allow president Juarez to do this, and instead decided to invade Mexico and get payments by whatever means necessary. The Spanish and English eventually withdrew, but the French refused to leave. Their intention was to create an Empire in Mexico under Napoleon III. Some have argued that the true French occupation was a response to growing American power and to the Monroe Doctrine (America for the Americans). Napoleon III believed that if the United States was allowed to prosper indescriminantly, it would eventually become a power in and of itself.

In 1862, the French army began its advance. Under General Ignacio Zaragoza, 5,000 ill-equipped Mestizo and Zapotec Indians defeated the French army in what came to be known as the "Batalla de Puebla" on the fifth of May.

In the United States, the "Batalla de Puebla" came to be known as simply "5 de Mayo" and unfortunately, many people wrongly equate it with Mexican Independence which was on September 16, 1810, nearly a fifty year difference.


 Over, the years Cinco de Mayo has become very commercialized and many people see this holiday as a time for fun and dance. Oddly enough, Cinco de Mayo has become more of Chicano holiday than a Mexican one. Cinco de Mayo is celebrated on a much larger scale here in the United States than it is in Mexico. People of Mexican descent in the United States celebrate this significant day by having parades, mariachi music, folklorico dancing and other types of festive activities.

Hope you enjoyed educating yourself about Cinco de Mayo.  Salud!!!  Roger and Lisa Booth of Good Living Products, LLC

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Who Says Long Distance Love Can't Work?

We thought you would enjoy this story

By Monique Jessen, Tonic

No distance is too far for Rodan, the lovesick stork.

Making the trip from South Africa to Croatia every spring, the male bird travels 13,000 km to see his beloved female partner, Malena, who is disabled and unable to fly, reports Britain’s Metro

The loving storks cozy up, mating and raising their new chicks (they have produced 32 offspring so far) and teaching them how to fly. Rodan then departs to spend the winter months in South Africa and returns on exactly the same day, the following spring.
Locals in the small village of Slavonski Brod in Croatia thought crippled Malena would almost certainly die when she was shot by a hunter in 1993, but thanks to the Vokic family, whose roof she lives on and her ever faithful partner, Rodan, she has survived for over 17 years.

Reunited again last week, Rodan was more eager than ever to see his love, arriving two hours earlier than usual. “It was clear they were pleased to see each other,” said one local to the Romanian Times. Stjepan Vokic added, “He knows he needs to return home because Malena is waiting for him.”

The storks have become so famous in the village that it’s not only Malena that waits anxiously for her partner to return, local residents and reporters gather round to welcome the tired bird home, every March.

Lets hope the couple’s little chicks will be just as loyal and faithful as their Papa!

Didn't that just make you smile!
Be well,
Roger & Lisa Booth of Good Living Products, LLC

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Earth Day April 22, 2010

Ways to Green Your Earth Day


1. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
It sounds simple but it really works. Get in the habit of incorporating the “three R’s” into products you use on a daily basis. This process can have an effect on what you choose to buy. It also affects how you use and dispose of things you already have. Recycle your household waste.

2. Green Your Garage
Chances are you’ve got more than a few items sitting in the garage that you don’t know what to do with. It could be:
Household cleaners
Paint/paint thinners
                                  Batteries
                                  Old sports equipment
                                  Car care products

3. Create a Compost Pile
Earth Day is in late April. Winter is over and gardens are in bloom. One of the key ingredients to your perfect garden will be nutrient-rich fertilizer.
Luckily, you can make your own fertilizer and reduce waste at the same time. This is known as composting. You just mix raw food scraps from your kitchen with leaves from your back yard and water.

4. Buy Recycled
You likely already do this without knowing it. When products are recycled, this material is used as the main ingredient for new products. So buying recycled content creates a market for recycling. Most times the packaging will be labeled if it is recycled content, so keep an eye out.

5. Party Smart
Late April is also a great time for parties. But parties can generate a lot of waste. Here’s a few tips for an eco-friendly party:
Set up recycling bins for plastic bottles
Buy large quantities of food and drinks to reduce packaging
Encourage guests to bring their own glasses and/or plates to reduce waste (there will also be less confusion about which drink belongs to each person)

6. Take Advantage of the Weather
Depending on where you live, this time of year has some of the nicest weather. Try opening windows instead of running the air conditioning and/or heater. This will also save some money on your energy bill.
Nice weather is also a great excuse to drive less. Walking helps your health and is better for the air.

7. Use Water Wisely
Saving water around the house is important because it is a limited resource.
Here’s a few easy ways how:
                                                      Take shorter showers
                                                      Put a filled bottle in your toilet tank
                                                      Reuse water around the house, such as
                                                      using cooking water for plants

8.Ask a friend to go with you to a farmers’ market, and buy local products when possible. A huge amount of energy goes into transporting goods from where they are produced. Stuff produced closer to home uses less of that energy.

Well that was just a few ideas on how we can be green. There are so many more ways that we can help our environment stay green.   
Take Care,
Roger & Lisa
Good Living Products



Thursday, April 15, 2010

Known to millions worldwide as "The Natural Physician"


Hello Everyone,

We wanted to tell you about a new line of product that has just arrived @ goodlivingproducts.com. The products are formulated by Dr. Mark Stengler, a licensed naturopathic medical doctor, author and lecturer with expertise in nutrition, herbal therapy, vitamin therapy, homeopathy, natural hormone replacement and integrated medicine.

His passion is to combine the best of conventional and natural medicine to achieve optimized health and wellness for his patients at his holistic clinic in La Jolla, California.
Besides practicing what he preaches at his clinic in California. Dr. Stengler also teaches what he preaches. He is an adjunct associate clinical professor at the National College of Natural Medicine in Portland, Oregon,is a member of the American College for advancement of Medicine, and served on amedical advisory committee for the
Yale University Complementary Medicine Outcomes Research Project.
In addition to his clinical and academic work, Dr. Stengler is the author of the Bottom Line/NATURAL HEALING newsletter, and 15 books, including two best sellers, "The Natural Physician's Healing Therapies" and "Bottom Line's PRESCRIPTION FOR NATURAL CURES. He is a frequent contributor to leading health magazines, and a popular expert medical source on television, including FOX, CBS and NBC affiliates. He has also been involved in two PBS documentaries on natural medicine: "7 Steps to Perfect Health" and "Supercharge Your Immune System."
Dr. Stengler's patients include Olympic gold medalists, Hollywood stars, CEOs of Fortune 500 companies—and plenty of "regular folks" of all ages who he helps to achieve their best.
You can find Dr Stanglers products @ goodlivingproducts.com

Take Care,
Roger & Lisa Booth
Good Living Products

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Support Your Local Animal Shelter

Lately I have been thinking more and more on how I can help give to our local animal shelters and what timing to find this article. I sure have a soft spot in my heart for animals. My two dogs Buddy and Gracie are a huge part of my life and I try my best to keep them healthy and happy and give them the best life ever.
Please take a minute to read the article below and see if you can help out.

There's a place in your community where the hungry are fed, the homeless are sheltered, and the abandoned are provided care. It's your local animal shelter, which provides comfort and care for unwanted animals.

You can do a number of things to help your local animal shelter.
Your shelter also offers many other services for pets and their owners—and even for people without pets. To do all this, it relies on support from people like you. Here are a few ways you can help animals, especially at your local shelter:
Give a little bit. Donate food, old blankets, towels, or other needed supplies. Contribute to one of its special programs.
Lend a hand. Volunteer your time. Bathe and groom the animals, walk dogs, or play with cats. Stuff envelopes for a mailing. Help publicize an event.
Find that special someone. Choose your next pet from your local shelter, which has many wonderful dogs and cats, in different shapes and sizes, just waiting for a permanent, loving home.
Help spread the word. Tell your friends about your shelter's services. Promote animal safety and responsible pet ownership.
Be a responsible pet owner. Keep current identification on your dog or cat at all times. Spay or neuter your pet. Always keep your dog or cat properly confined or supervised. In addition to the basics—food, water, shelter, and veterinary care—give your pet lots of love and attention.
Vote for the animals. Support legislation to protect animals. Contact government officials and urge them to support pro-animal legislation.
Be a hero. Report animal cruelty and neglect as well as injured or stray animals. You may prevent suffering and even save a life.
Teach your children well. Instruct children in how to care for animals properly and how to treat them with kindness. Set an example by doing the same.

Take Care,
Roger, Lisa, Buddy & Gracie Booth       Good Living Products.com

Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Easter Lily History...

Native to the Ryukyu Islands of southern Japan, and the islands of Okinawa, Amani and Erabu, Easter Lilies were introduced to England in 1819, and brought to America during the late 1880s from Bermuda.
History, mythology, literature, poetry and the world of art are full of stories and images that speak of the beauty and elegance the Easter Lily. For many, the beautiful trumpet-shaped white flowers symbolize purity, virtue, innocence, hope, and life.
According to Roman mythology, Juno, the queen of the gods was nursing her son Hercules, when excess milk fell from the sky. Part of the milk remained above the earth and created the group of stars known as the Milky Way while the remainder fell to the earth creating lilies. Another tradition has it that when Eve left the Garden of Eden she shed tears of repentance, and from those remorseful tears sprung up lilies.
The pure white lily has long been closely associated with the Virgin Mary. In paintings, the Angel Gabriel is pictured extending to the Virgin Mary a branch of pure white lilies, announcing that she is to be the mother of the Christ Child. Legend holds that when the Virgin Mary s tomb was visited three days after her burial, it was found empty except for bunches of majestic white lilies.
Often called the "white-robed apostles of hope," lilies were found growing in the Garden of Gethsemane after Christ's agony. Tradition has it that beautiful white lilies sprung up where drops of Christ's sweat fell to the ground in his final hours. Churches surround their altars and crosses with masses of Easter Lilies, to commemorate the resurrection of Jesus Christ and hope of life everlasting.
Whether given as a gift or enjoyed in your own home, the Easter Lily serves a reminder that Easter is a time for rejoicing and celebrating.

Have a Happy Easter,
Roger & Lisa Booth
Good Living Products

Monday, March 29, 2010

Finding Your Joy - Be Happy Every Single Day


Being happy doesn’t come naturally to everybody. 
Choose happiness every day.


Our lives are rich with potential sources of happiness, but sometimes we become victims of negative thinking because we believe that focusing on all that has gone wrong will provide us with the motivation we need to face the challenges of survival. When we choose to focus on what makes us happy, however, a shift occurs in the fabric of our existence. Finding something to be happy about every single day can help this shift take place. The vantage points from which we view the world are brought into balance, and we can see that being alive truly is a gift to be savored. There is always something we can be happy about—it is simply up to us to identify it.

On one day, we may find happiness in a momentous, life-changing event such as a marriage or the birth of a child. On another day, the happiness we experience may be a product of our appreciation of a particularly well-brewed cup of a tea or the way the sun shines on a leaf. If we discover that we literally cannot call to mind a single joyful element of existence, we should examine the cause of the blockage standing between us and experiencing happiness. Keeping a happiness journal is a wonderful way to catalog the happiness unfolding all around us so that joy has myriad opportunities to manifest itself in our lives. Writing about the emotions we experience while contemplating joy may give us insight into the factors compelling us to resist it.

Happiness may not always come easily into your life. You have likely been conditioned to believe that the proper response to unmet expectations is one of sadness, anger, guilt, or fear. To make joy a fixture in your existence, you must first accept that it is within your power to choose happiness over unhappiness every single day. Then, each time you discover some new source of happiness, the notion that the world is a happy place will find its way more deeply into your heart. On this day, find one thing to be happy about and let it fill your heart. 



Find your inner joy today!!
Roger & Lisa Booth
www.goodlivingproducts.com



 

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Find Out Why It's Easy to Be Green

Here is an interesting article on a few things we can all do to be green. Easy stuff for sure.
by Denise Austin

Simple Steps

Have you "gone green" yet? There are many steps you can take to give back to the environment so we can all continue to enjoy our beautiful planet! Doing something positive for the environment is not as hard as it may seem. Here are a few simple ways you can show our planet your love — and save money and calories too!

Carry your own bags. Invest in solid canvas bags you can take
 with you on your weekly shopping trip so you don't have to
use paper or plastic. Some stores even offer a discount if you
bring your own bags.
 
Bring your own bottle. Instead of shelling out a buck or more for a bottle of water at the gym, fill up an aluminum water bottle at the fountain. Keep a mug or glass on your desk at work to refill at the cooler.

Pack your lunch. Cut down on restaurant take-out packaging by bringing last night's leftovers for lunch in a washable container. You'll save on calories, fat, and sodium, too!

Ride your bike — or walk! Save on gas and reduce emissions by biking or walking to work or to run errands. Public transportation is an environmentally friendly option as well. If you must drive, at least combine your errands so you can do them all in one trip. You'll save time too!

Wear a sweater. Turn the heat a few degrees lower in the winter — and a few degrees higher in the summer — to save energy. Stay warm — or cool — by dressing for the season.

Sort your garbage. Set aside paper, magazines, aluminum cans, and plastic and glass bottles for recycling. Contact your sanitation department to find out about pickup options or where to drop the recycling off. In many states, you can recycle bottles and cans at local supermarkets — and get back a deposit for each one!

Make your own gifts. For birthdays, holidays, and other occasions, create unique gifts at home instead of buying something (typically with disposable packaging) at the store. Bake or cook a special treat, give a nice piece of clothing or jewelry that you haven't worn in a long time, or write a poem on a homemade card — it's really the thought that counts!

Make it an Earth-friendly week! Try one of these suggestions on two days in the week ahead — or come up with more ideas of your own to protect the environment. The possibilities are endless!
Please check out our website @ goodlivingproducts.com.

Be well,
Roger & Lisa Booth
Good Living Products

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Green Solutions for St. Patrick's Day


1. Use cast iron pans instead of non-stick.
2. To avoid chemicals leaching into food, go easy on processed, canned or fast foods and never microwave plastic.   
3. Buy organic, or eat vegetables and fruit from the "Clean 15" list. 
4. Pregnant women should use iodized salt to combat chemical interference from the thyroid.
5. Seal outdoor wooden structures. Order a test kit to find out if your wooden deck, picnic table, or play-set is leaching arsenic.
6. Leave your shoes at the door. This cuts down on dust-bound pollutants in the home
7. Avoid perfume, cologne and products with added fragrance. Search for personal care products that are fragrance-free, or check the products you're already using.
8. Buy products with natural fibers, like cotton and wool, that are naturally fire resistant. 
9. Eat low-mercury fish like tilapia and pollock, rather than high-mercury choices like tuna and swordfish.
10. Filter your water for drinking and cooking.
11. Learn your personal body burden.
Take a step-by-step tour of your home to learn the toxic truth about how household products contribute to your body burden of industrial chemicals.



We can all work a little bit every day to do our part in keeping God's Earth green!!
Roger & Lisa Booth
Good Living Products






Friday, March 12, 2010

Kissing 101

"How did it happen that their lips came together? How does it happen that birds sing, that snow melts, that the rose unfolds, that the dawn whitens behind the stark shapes of trees on the quivering summit of the hill? A kiss, and all was said." ~Victor Hugo

Written by: Wendy Strgar of Good Clean Love
As a purveyor of love products, I have had my fair share of conversations about kissing as the gateway to intimacy. A little kissing know-how goes a long way because nothing will doom a relationship faster than a bad first kiss. Some of this is a biological imperative, because kissing is the human form of long standing mammalian behavior of smelling our mates to determine compatibility. The human art form of kissing has developed over millennia when our ancestors believed that the kiss united their souls, as they believed the spirit was carried on the breath.

The key to a good kiss comes from the power of your intention, which is translated as attraction and love for the beloved. Even the most technically skilled kissers often fall short when their kiss is insincere. Many people never learned the basics of a good kiss, in part because kissing is more an art than an education. A good way to approach both is to compare it to the art of a meaningful conversation. In fact if you think of kissing as a way of communicating in ways that words can’t come close, the subtlety of good kissing technique comes clear.

Being prepared for a kiss begins with basic oral hygiene. Kissing with onion or garlic breath is an immediate detractor, so brushing the teeth or taking breath mints or gum, is a fundamental. The three primary elements that turn on a kissing conversation are breath, lips and tongue. Although it seems like stating the obvious, breathe through your nose while kissing and let your slight pulling back to take a deeper breath help slow down and connect you while you kiss. Although a racing heart and gasping for air is not uncommon during intense kissing it can be a little off putting at the beginning of the interlude.

Whether the intended kiss is just a little peck or inviting a longer conversation with an open mouthed kiss, the way you hold your lips is critical. Our lips are covered with thousands of nerve endings and have the ability to communicate soft opening as well as firm control. Experiment with softening your lips even for a short kiss and see how that changes the dialogue. Hard kisses with tight lips can be overwhelming even in the midst of serious passion. Soft open mouth kisses invite your partner into a dialogue, which is the goal. Feel for her response. Open-mouthed kissing can teach you a lot about opening to relationships: about how to avoid forcing things, as well as giving both partners the opportunity to be active participants choosing their unspoken words.

The agile tongue can speak volumes in a kiss. Unfortunately, many people think the French kiss is as simple as basic insertion of their tongue in the mouth of their partner. Nothing can kill a kissing mood like a sloppy tongue in the midst of a tentative open-mouth kissing conversation. Consider the tongue like a diplomat, and just like in a good conversationalist, use the tongue judiciously to communicate interest, curiosity and intrigue. A light tongue tracing the lips, quick darting meeting of tongues in the center of open lips is incredibly exciting and will open the conversation to new levels.

Discovering the art of kissing takes time. The patient kisser has the time to experiment and demonstrate their sensitivity and understanding. Rushing in and trying to take control of the kiss screams amateur and pushes people away more often than pulling them in. Developing the artistic capacity to communicate without words will not only enhance the physical intimacy that you share but you will be surprised at how much safer and more open your verbal conversations will become.

Thanks Wendy!  A great reminder that we need to pay attention to those "intimate" kisses!  Remember - practice makes perfect!
We carry Good Clean Love products that will enhance your love life!
Kisses!  Roger and Lisa Booth of Good Living Products  
Yep, that's Roger and Lisa in this picture!!!  Practice, Practice