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"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalThe author belongs to the burgeoning breed of the old-young-generation—chronologically ninety, physiologically seventy and psychologically only thirty—with a background of teaching electrical engineering, Armed with a never-say-die spirit, trudging through the thrilling roller coaster journey of life with an abundant zest for living. Presented a paper in the Fourth World Conference on Continuing Engineering Education in Lake Buena Vista, Orlando, USA. Had been a successful registered homeopathic practitioner. Authored a book on entrepreneurship. Now a prolific blogger on a wide varRead More...
The author belongs to the burgeoning breed of the old-young-generation—chronologically ninety, physiologically seventy and psychologically only thirty—with a background of teaching electrical engineering, Armed with a never-say-die spirit, trudging through the thrilling roller coaster journey of life with an abundant zest for living. Presented a paper in the Fourth World Conference on Continuing Engineering Education in Lake Buena Vista, Orlando, USA. Had been a successful registered homeopathic practitioner. Authored a book on entrepreneurship. Now a prolific blogger on a wide variety of topics.
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Hypochondria? It’s an imaginary illness. Illness is a physical condition. How can it be unreal? There are cases in actual life when a person obsessively believes that he or she is suffering from certain specific symptoms of a disease, which do not exist. Yes, it can happen. It happened to me—a tragic victim of the adverse impact of ubiquitous ads.
This book is the story of how it began and how I passed through three long agonizing decades of suffer
Hypochondria? It’s an imaginary illness. Illness is a physical condition. How can it be unreal? There are cases in actual life when a person obsessively believes that he or she is suffering from certain specific symptoms of a disease, which do not exist. Yes, it can happen. It happened to me—a tragic victim of the adverse impact of ubiquitous ads.
This book is the story of how it began and how I passed through three long agonizing decades of suffering from acute chest pain and survived another forty plus years to recount the dour narrative.
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