If you’re wondering
“What does a busy woman like Sandra Bullock do to stay looking so young and slim at age 57?”
Well, I’ve asked myself that question a couple of times too…
I mean, just look at her.
Sandra Bullock is fifty-seven, and she has this same glowing, youthful aura and slim looks as women half her age.
“Is she on a crazy diet or exercise program?”
“Does she follow an intensive skin care routine?”
“Did she get plastic surgery?”
You wouldn’t believe it…
But the answers to all those questions is a solid “NO!”
How do I know that?
The elegant actress revealed she does not use an extravagant skincare routine at all…
In fact… her routine is so basic that most women probably already follow the same one…
Exfoliate once a week… use a cleanser… and moisturize.
WOW! Isn’t that shocking?
And that she only does yoga once or twice a week…
“So what’s her secret?”
Sadly…
Our Oscar-winning actress has been intensely private about her “
stay young and slim secret” until recently…
When she revealed that for over 20 years, she had been using the power of healing crystals to stay slim and young!
At the same time… leading water scientists have now found that…
Any woman over 40 can use crystals and literally make ONE simple change in the way they drink water…
And STOP the anti-aging process… while losing a lot of weight naturally!
And look 20 years younger… slim and sexy… Just like Sandra Bullock!
I know it sounds crazy, right…
But thousands of women over 40 are now drinking
this new slimming water that's made with crystals to combat inevitable aging and lose weight naturally …
… WITHOUT exercises…
… WITHOUT any surgeries…
… WITHOUT any pills or medications…
… and certainly, WITHOUT any dieting!
See how it works below!
Go here right now to see how to prepare your slimming water, so you can lose weight naturally and look 10 years younger!
Have an amazing day,
any of the alleged relics of the saint are held in Catholic churches in France, especially at Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume, where her skull (see above) and the noli me tangere are on display; the latter being a piece of forehead flesh and skin said to be from the spot touched by Jesus at the post-resurrection encounter in the garden. A tibia also kept at Saint-Maximin-la-Sainte-Baume is the object of an annual procession. Her left hand relic is kept in the Simonopetra Monastery on Mount Athos. Speculations Christ with Martha and Mary (1886) by Henryk Siemiradzki, showing the conflated "composite Magdalene" sitting at Jesus's feet while her sister Martha does chores. See also: Jesus bloodline and Beloved Disciple In 1998, Ramon K. Jusino proposed an unprecedented argument that the "Beloved Disciple" of the Gospel of John is Mary Magdalene. Jusino based his argument largely on the Nag Hammadi Gnostic books, rejecting th
e view of Raymond E. Brown that these books were later developments, and maintaining instead that the extant Gospel of John is the result of modification of an earlier text that presented Mary Magdalene as the Beloved Disciple. The gospel, at least in its current form, clearly and consistently identifies the disciple as having masculine gender, only ever referring to him using words inflected in the masculine. There are no textual variants in extant New Testament manuscripts to contradict this, and thus no physical evidence of this hypothetical earlier document. Richard J. Hooper does not make the Jusino thesis his own, but says: "Perhaps we should not altogether reject the possibility that some Johannine Christians considered Mary Magdalene to be 'the disciple whom Jesus loved'." Esther A. de Boer likewise presents the idea as "one possibility among others", not as a definitive solution to the problem of the identity of the anonymous disciple. There is a
theological interpretation of Mary as the Magdala, The Elegant Tower and certain churches honor her as a heroine of the faith in their teach