What if the greatest health crisis of our time is not hidden in our genes, but in our plates — in a food chain so fractured that we are forced to replace meals with pills?
In this provocative and luminous manifesto, Calina Aliman-Dorneanu invites us to question the very foundation of modern health. Symptom of a Broken Food Chain is not a wellness guide, but a mirror. It exposes the supplements are not proof of progress, but confessions of loss — of sunlight, soil, seasons, and the original design of being human.
This is not just a book; it is a call to remember. To remember the taste of real food, the warmth of the sun, the rhythm of life unbroken.
Key Takeaways (10 Lessons from the Book)Supplements Are Confessions: Pills exist because the food chain no longer sustains us.
A Pill Cannot Replace a Plate: Real nourishment is whole, lived, and digested.
Hidden Hunger: Malnutrition persists even in abundance, disguised as fatigue and disease.
The Forgotten Sun: Vitamin D bottles reveal a deeper loss — our broken bond with sunlight.
Balance Is an Illusion: Counting grams and calories replaced rhythm, season, and soil.
The Broken Chain Speaks: Our bodies reflect the fractures of industrial food.
Children Deserve Soil: Supplements in baby bottles are confessions of a lost heritage.
An Industry Thrives on Failure: Supplements profit where food has failed.
Meat Misunderstood: Demonized not by truth, but by convenience and ideology.
Not Progress, but Proof: Every capsule proves what we lost — not what we gained.
✨ This book is not an argument against science, but a plea for restoration. Written in accessible philosophy, it calls us to reconnect with the original design of life itself.
Books by Armony began from my own need to understand — life, choice, the way reality bends between thought, memory, and feeling.
People say that aging means slowing down. But for me, it feels like waking up — a new beginning, not an ending.
I write about vibration, manifestation, and quantum physics, but they’re only the structure — the quiet science behind the story.
What truly drives me are people and the ways we grow, break, heal, and begin again. I write about memory and love, about food and health, about remembering the wisdom of our ancestors and daring to create new ones.
Sometimes I explore what it means to become unforgettable in someone’s life. Other times, how tragedy can turn into the most unexpected kind of beauty — even in an age where artificial intelligence and human emotion learn to coexist.
My work lives at the meeting point between science and soul — where philosophy becomes personal and every story is a reflection of being alive.
I don’t write answers. I write the wonder that keeps me asking. And maybe, just maybe, I’ll keep asking… until I’m 124.