What if the real key to fat loss wasn't diet or exercise...
But
what happens while you sleep?
That's what one 46-year-old mom of 3 from Kansas discovered - and it helped her
melt away 63 pounds of stubborn fat without changing her diet or hitting the gym.
It's a strange yet powerful ritual that helps reset your body's fat-burning hormones overnight - simply by targeting the one thing 95% of people are missing: deep, restorative sleep.
Click here to discover the bizarre overnight trick
ais died in 1896, the Prince of Wales (later to become King Edward VII) chaired a memorial committee which commissioned a statue of the artist. The statue, by Thomas Brock, was installed at the front of the National Gallery of British Art (now Tate Britain) in the garden on the east side in 1905. On 23 November that year, the Pall Mall Gazette called it "a breezy statue, representing the man in the characteristic attitude in which we all knew him". In 1953, Tate director Norman Reid attempted to have it replaced by Auguste Rodin's John the Baptist, and in 1962 again proposed its removal, calling its presence "positively harmful".[citation needed] His efforts were frustrated by the statue's owner, the Ministry of Works. Ownership was transferred from the Ministry to English Heritage in 1996, and by them in turn to the Tate. In 2000, under Stephen Deuchar's directorship, the statue was removed to the side of the building to welcome visitors to the refurbished Manton Road entrance. In 2007, the artist was the subject of a major retrospective at Tate Britain, London visited by 151,000 people. The exhibition then traveled to the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, followed by venues in Fukuoka and Tokyo, Japan, and seen by over 660,000 visito