Monday, August 5, 2013

Mental health and spiritual power

A Christian Science perspective: Why love is particularly needed in the treatment of mental illness.

By Margaret Rogers / August 5, 2013

The good news in this week's cover story is that there's some progress in destigmatizing mental illness as someone's fault. It's also encouraging to see that mental health care that emphasizes the dignity of each individual has a positive effect beyond what medication can do. Considering the whole person rather than simply focusing on treating the disease, having a nonjudgmental attitude, and giving people as much freedom as possible to make their own decisions are expressions of love that evoke good response in any type of health care.

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It's useful to probe a bit deeper into why love is particularly needed in the treatment of mental illness. No matter how disturbed people's ability to reason may be, they relate to love on a different level from reason. Even in the middle of tragedy, people are grateful when a stranger hugs them. Love calms and comforts naturally.

Still, when no amount of human love is adequate to deal with serious mental disorder, there's a stronger love to call on. Spiritually considered, love is the very core of existence, the intelligence and power that causes everything to be. We can define Love as the universal Mind, the reality many call God. Divine Love is independent of the brain. It expresses itself constantly throughout creation. Everyone's true identity is in fact the expression of infinite Love.

These insights can't be confirmed by conventional scientific methodology. One grasps them in a different way from human reason. But knowledge of them is practical in healing oneself and others, and this knowledge can be gained through the study and practice of spiritual teaching. When Jesus said, "I and my Father are one" (John 10:30) and "The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do" (John 5:19), this can be understood to mean each of us is inseparable from the perfect Mind, the loving Father and Mother of all. This relationship gives the ability to act reasonably and lovingly, an ability that can't be lost.

As a Christian Science practitioner who treats people through prayer, I've found that these spiritual truths have strengthened my conviction that healing, not just managing, mental disorders is possible. Labeling a disease and grading its curability can make people feel like victims of something beyond their control. But the knowledge that divine Love creates us perfectly and loves us unfailingly puts a rock of assurance under efforts to heal disease. It has helped me and many colleagues over the years to put down fear and blame for the afflicted and their families and to persist in bringing out the health that's God-ordained.

The mental health care system needs help. Good care should be the norm, not the exception. When Jesus said, "The kingdom of God is within you" (Luke 17:21), could he have been pointing to the ability to heal ourselves and others spiritually that is always accessible? Referring to that statement, Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science, wrote: "Know, then, that you possess sovereign power to think and act rightly, and that nothing can dispossess you of this heritage and trespass on Love" ("Pulpit and Press," p. 3).

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/VlylzExAWR0/Mental-health-and-spiritual-power

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Jaguars' Chris Prosinski has a nose for the football

Jaguars safety Chris Prosinski?s nose isn?t having a good training camp. However, the third-year veteran is as the team prepares for its first scrimmage Saturday night at EverBank Field.

The bridge of Prosinski?s nose has been bloodied the last two days during practice. The 6-foot-1, 208-pound Prosinski says he?s struggling to find a helmet that won?t slide down. He doesn?t appear to be struggling on the field.

Prosinski has made an impact with second-round pick Johnathan Cyprien sidelined with a hamstring injury for the first week of camp. Cyprien, the 33rd-overall pick in April?s draft, will be in the starting lineup sooner rather than later. However, Prosinski has shown the Jaguars might have some solid depth at the position.

He?s made a couple of the more memorable defensive plays in camp. On Thursday, Prosinski recovered a Cecil Shorts fumble and returned it 40 yards for a touchdown. Prosinski then saved a touchdown in 11-on-11 work near the goal line on Friday, when he batted a ball out of Shorts? hands in the end zone.

?I saw Chris Prosinski do a nice job today,? Jaguars coach Gus Bradley said. ?We have coaching terms and clich?s and things that we use on the field to help illustrate what we?re looking for. He had two really good illustrations I know [defensive coordinator Bob] Babich will use today in the defensive meeting.?

Prosinski seems to realize that although he?s started seven games for the Jaguars, he?s likely not going to have that role this season. Cyprien is expected to team with Dwight Lowery, with rookie Josh Evans also in the mix. The key for Prosinski will be how much his repetitions drop once Cyprien returns to the field next week.

?It?s a good opportunity for me to get a lot of quality reps,? Prosinski said. ?I?m trying to make the most of it. As much value as you can have to a team, whether it?s special teams, playing defense, as a backup. That?s kind of what I want to do is have as much value wherever this team needs me. In this league, it?s all about value as a player.?

Bradley values communication among the defensive backs, something he?s pleased with as the Jaguars learn the new scheme.

?We wanted to be an aggressive, attacking defense with our style of play especially on the perimeters with our corners,? Bradley said. ?It appears to me that our corners are getting a better idea and our safeties a better idea how to work.?

Bradley has challenged his secondary to communicate with each other in a unique way. Throughout camp, the Jaguars have practiced with constant music playing in the background.

?You hear the music, how loud it is,? Bradley said. ?We?re going to be playing in our home stadium and on the road there are loud stadiums, so communication is so important. It really forces them to do that. You really can?t execute and play unless you communicate, so we?re really putting stress and pressure on them to do that. It?s coming. You see a little bit more comfort level and guys are understanding their responsibility.?

Lowery, who forced the Shorts fumble Prosinski returned for a score, appears to have emerged as the leader in the Jaguars? young secondary. The sixth-year veteran has started 39 games in his career, including 20 for the Jaguars. He?s encouraged by what he?s seeing on the field and in meetings.

?As many young guys as we have in the secondary, there?s a lot of learning going on,? Lowery said. ?Guys are getting experience every day. Meetings come down to asking the right questions and I?m seeing that. Chris and I have played together before. There?s that familiarity. As we go along, we?re all starting to understand the defense much more. The chemistry back there is going well.?

Hays Carlyon: (904) 359-4377

Source: http://feeds.jacksonville.com/~r/JacksonvillecomsNewsSportsAndEntertainment/~3/ZpyBgA77Lw4/jaguars-chris-prosinski-has-nose-football

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Nigeria: Doctors treat lead-poisoned children

FILE - A Thursday, June 10, 2010 photo from files showing local health workers removing earth contaminated by lead from a family compound in the village of Dareta in Gusau, Nigeria. The Nigerian village that suffered one of the worst recorded incidents of lead poisoning is now habitable and doctors can start treating more than 1,000 contaminated children, a doctor and a scientist from two international agencies said Friday. For some, it already is too late to reverse serious neurological damage, said Dr. Michelle Chouinard, Nigeria country director for Doctors Without Borders, told The Associated Press on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Some children are blind, others paralyzed, many will struggle at school with learning disabilities, she said. Doctors Without Borders uncovered the scandal in 2010 but nothing was done until this year about the worst-affected village, Bagega, because the federal government did not provide a promised $3 million, the group said. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba, File)

FILE - A Thursday, June 10, 2010 photo from files showing local health workers removing earth contaminated by lead from a family compound in the village of Dareta in Gusau, Nigeria. The Nigerian village that suffered one of the worst recorded incidents of lead poisoning is now habitable and doctors can start treating more than 1,000 contaminated children, a doctor and a scientist from two international agencies said Friday. For some, it already is too late to reverse serious neurological damage, said Dr. Michelle Chouinard, Nigeria country director for Doctors Without Borders, told The Associated Press on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Some children are blind, others paralyzed, many will struggle at school with learning disabilities, she said. Doctors Without Borders uncovered the scandal in 2010 but nothing was done until this year about the worst-affected village, Bagega, because the federal government did not provide a promised $3 million, the group said. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba, File)

FILE - In this Wednesday, June 9, 2010 file photo, men walk amongst the graves of children killed by lead poisoining, in Yangalma village, in Gusau, Nigeria. The Nigerian village that suffered one of the worst recorded incidents of lead poisoning is now habitable and doctors can start treating more than 1,000 contaminated children, a doctor and a scientist from two international agencies said Friday. For some, it already is too late to reverse serious neurological damage, said Dr. Michelle Chouinard, Nigeria country director for Doctors Without Borders, told The Associated Press on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Some children are blind, others paralyzed, many will struggle at school with learning disabilities, she said. Doctors Without Borders uncovered the scandal in 2010 but nothing was done until this year about the worst-affected village, Bagega, because the federal government did not provide a promised $3 million, the group said. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba, File)

FILE - A Thursday, June 10, 2010 photo from files showing local health workers removing earth contaminated by lead from a family compound in the village of Dareta in Gusau, Nigeria. The Nigerian village that suffered one of the worst recorded incidents of lead poisoning is now habitable and doctors can start treating more than 1,000 contaminated children, a doctor and a scientist from two international agencies said Friday. For some, it already is too late to reverse serious neurological damage, said Dr. Michelle Chouinard, Nigeria country director for Doctors Without Borders, told The Associated Press on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013. Some children are blind, others paralyzed, many will struggle at school with learning disabilities, she said. Doctors Without Borders uncovered the scandal in 2010 but nothing was done until this year about the worst-affected village, Bagega, because the federal government did not provide a promised $3 million, the group said. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba, File)

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) ? The Nigerian village that suffered one of the world's worst recorded incidents of lead poisoning is now habitable and doctors can start treating more than 1,000 contaminated children, a doctor and a scientist from two international agencies said Friday.

For some, it already is too late to reverse serious neurological damage, said Dr. Michelle Chouinard, Nigeria country director for Doctors Without Borders, told The Associated Press on Friday.

Some children are blind, others paralyzed and many will struggle at school with learning disabilities, she said.

Doctors Without Borders uncovered the scandal in 2010 but nothing was done until this year about the worst-affected village, Bagega, because the federal government did not provide a promised $3 million, the group said.

The poisoning caused by artisanal mining from a gold rush killed at least 400 children, yet villagers still say they would rather die of lead poisoning than poverty, environmental scientist Simba Tirima told the Associated Press Friday. Villagers make 10 times as much money mining as they do from farming in an area suffering erratic rainfall because of climate change, he said.

Managing five landfills with some 13,000 cubic meters (nearly 460,000 cubic feet) of highly contaminated soil, and teaching villagers how to mine safely are major challenges to prevent new contamination, he said.

"That's a big, big worry. But I am joyful that for the kids who will be born in Bagega, we have at least removed one of the major strikes against them because they have so many strikes against them ? nutritional problems, diseases ..." said Tirima, who is the field operations director in Nigeria for TerraGraphics International Foundation.

The Moscow, Idaho-based foundation advised Nigeria's northern Zamfara state government and oversaw the 5 ?-month cleanup, or remediation, of Bagega that ended two weeks ago.

There, people were exposed to mindboggling rates of lead contamination: Some residential soil with up to 35,000 parts per million of lead and the processing area with over 100,000 parts per million, Tirima said. The United States considers 400 parts per million safe for residential soil.

At the peak of the gold rush, Tirima said, more than 1,000 itinerant miners and followers were camped around the village ? deep in the countryside, beyond the reach of paved roads and electricity and quite cut off in the rainy season when dirt roads become impassable.

Despite its remote location, the booming economy attracted people from Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger to Bagega, which also drew many locals as a regional commercial center with a primary and high school, a hospital and weekly market. In addition, cattle herders and nomads came here to water their animals at a reservoir so dangerously contaminated it killed goats and cows.

The entire human population of 6,000 to 9,000 was exposed, including some 1,500 children under the age of 5. Human Rights Watch said the death toll of 400 was only an estimate as villagers initially tried to hide the deaths, fearing the government would stop their illegal mining. The group said it was the worst epidemic of its kind in modern history.

The government released money for the cleanup in February, Doctors Without Borders began prescreening in March and found that nearly every one of 1,010 children tested need therapy, Chouinard said. Of them, 267 are severely contaminated and will get chelation ? where medication binds the lead to a child's blood and helps them to eliminate it faster from their system.

All the children had more than the international standard maximum of 10 micrograms per deciliter of lead in their blood. Some had as much as 700 micrograms per deciliter, she said. The children will have to be treated for one to two years, she said.

The more basic methods used to get at gold helped cause the poisoning. Some women used hammers to beat open rock ore. Others used some of the 60 grinding mills at a processing area adjacent to the village and water reservoir, Tirima said.

Many took the rocks that carried high concentrations of lead into their homes for processing. The poisoning was facilitated because the particular lead compounds are very toxic and easily absorbed into the body, unlike other forms of lead, Tirima explained.

His TerraGraphics Foundation has trained dozens of Nigerians to clean up any future contamination.

Government officials initially reacted by trying to enforce a ban on illegal mining. When that did not work, they promised to find other sources of income for villagers, but nothing has happened in a country where corruption is endemic.

Tirima pointed to mounting evidence linking lead poisoning to crime waves and said he fears for the community when their poisoned children grow up.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/bbd825583c8542898e6fa7d440b9febc/Article_2013-08-03-Nigeria-Lead%20Poison/id-8d0eb05875984910a6822b975dc8b24e

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President Obama In Chattanooga "Nicholas Pegues Photo Collection"

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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Microsoft patents futuristic transparent laptop display

Microsoft

3 hours ago

Microsoft's drawing from its patent of a laptop with transparent display technology.

Microsoft

Microsoft's drawing from its patent of a laptop with transparent display technology.

Your future computer may be able to do more than just detect your gestures and last longer on a charge. Microsoft has filed a patent for transparent display technology for laptops and mobile devices that can actually project holographic images right before your eyes.

In the patent?s claims, Microsoft describes a projection device that would be ?coupled to the mobile base for displaying the image,? which seems to be in reference to future cameras that will be built into devices. Additionally, the claims describe a transparent display that would come with a holographic optical element for directing images that are displayed by the projection device.

MORE: Don't be a Google Glasshole: 10 etiquette tips

The document describes various implementations of this type of technology, one of which could superimpose virtual images from augmented reality apps on to real-world environments. Microsoft hints that there could be a heads-up display accessory similar to Google Glass that would be used to navigate these apps.

?The mobile device may be used with pointing and telestration applications including but not limited to use as a portable heads-up display for an operator of the mobile device.?

The patent?s drawings depict a laptop with a projector in the keyboard deck. This component projects up through the notebook?s display panel and on to a surface beyond such as a wall. As shown in the drawing above, the user would look at the laptop?s display at the same angle and distance as you would when using a standard notebook, but the image would extend beyond the tangible screen.

This isn?t the first time we?ve heard of such plans from Microsoft, but the newly published patent shows that the company is pushing for this tech in laptops and mobile devices. Microsoft?s IllumiRoom concept for gaming details a similar system that would project images and scenes from the video game on your television onto the furniture and surfaces around you.

In a reportedly leaked Microsoft internal document from 2010, the company makes mention of an accessory called Kinect Shades that would accompany such a device, hinting that AR eyewear is in the works. Not too long ago, Microsoft posted a job listing that described telepresence technology for depicting virtual holograms in Skype conversations.

There?s no telling whether or not these technologies will hit the market, but the recently published patent is little short of a confirmation that Microsoft is diving deeper into perceptual computing.

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Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663301/s/2f5b8c26/sc/4/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Ctechnology0Cmicrosoft0Epatents0Efuturistic0Etransparent0Elaptop0Edisplay0E6C10A80A0A70A9/story01.htm

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