Joseph Weaver at the age of ten became very interested
in philosophy, spirituality and religion. At sixteen, he
would visit different Ashrams in Upstate New York, where
he practiced Yoga, reflexology, herbology and meditation.
Joe Weaver studied Biology at the State University at Stony
Brook, where he won achievement awards in biological research,
focusing on the hippocampus and stroke. Joe then got an
award to participate in a research assignment at Tulane
University in New Orleans, which was published in the European
Journal of Pharmacology in March 1993.
In 1994, Joe Weaver went to pursue a medical career at
the University Tuebingen in Germany. After a year and a
half, he had a change in heart and moved back to the States.
After Germany, Joe noticed that he was losing his spirituality
and did not like the "new Joe" that he saw-- He
was smoking more than three packs of cigarettes a day and
eighty pounds overweight. Joe smoked for over 18 years,
smoking three packs a day and over 80 pounds overweight
when he decided to quit and change his life. His life was
falling apart and he decided to take a long vacation to
Nepal and Tibet. After his long journey, Joe was finally
a nonsmoker and lost over 90 pounds.
Joe had quit smoking over ten times in those
years. As, most smokers know. Stressful situations can bring you back to
being a slave to Nicotine. The real test was Joe's first stressful
situation. His mother had two heart attacks and three strokes within one
year. Unable to cope with all the new added stress, Joe began to write
Nic-the Habit,while along the bedside of his mother, who could no longer
speak.
Smoking a cigarette was the last thing in his
mind. The Tibetan culture taught Joe to be strong and to find the
strength within to combat feelings or desires that were destructive,
such as smoking and over-eating.
A quote from his book " Human are separated from
Animal, being that humans don't have to act on their Instinct.., Being
trained in college as a biologist and research scientist, Joe never
dreamed that he would write about spirituality and quitting smoking. Joe
wrote medical journals, not books about spirituality. This is what
makes Nic-the Habit special.
Joe Weaver's book has a combination of science,
nature and spirituality all neatly written into one. Joe believes that
this book was guided from a higher source. Joe learned in Nepal to
cherish each day and live life and to focus on the present, being that
the past is only to guide and the future only depends on the
"here-and-now" (The Present.) Focusing on one day at a time, brings
total success into the future.