Certain spices could help control high blood sugar or minimize the damage it causes.
The kitchen roll call
? Cloves, allspice, and cinnamon . . .
Certain spices could help control high blood sugar or minimize the damage it causes.
The kitchen roll call
? Cloves, allspice, and cinnamon . . .
To me, this is the lesson we must keep learning as a human community. Stop looking for someone to blame.
Stop trying to figure out if God is punishing us–or someone else–and learn the positive lessons that such situations can teach us.
Haiti is another great example of people coming together to help–in the face of terrible disasters.
Now Toyota, looking ahead at the second half of this century, sees a mounting health care crisis and aging population coming to Japan.
It sees a future where manufacturing robotic workers is the hot new industry and “autonomation†t akes on
a whole new meaning.
And the first place we might see these robots is in hospitals.
Jeffrey Weiss concludes:
Same thing with Pat Robertson.
As long as so many people jump in pain when he talks, there’s probably something important going on there, too.
Read rest of insightful article.
Weiss suggests that Americans still care deeply about religion and religious issues. I agree. No matter how much some want to think we don’ t, WE DO.
Historically, religion has long played an important part in world affairs.
Why would anyone think that’s stopped?
Johnny Bowden writes:
Unfortunately, the [1970s] report wrongly singled out saturated fat as the wicked element in our diet responsible for all our problems.
This was the beginning of
the low-fat movement.
And of the obesity epidemic.
Queen Eadgyth lived at the dawn of the English
nation.
Her grandfather Alfred the Great was the first monarch to style himself King of the Anglo Saxons, while her step-brother Athelstan was the first
King of the English.
Her bones were unearthed at Madgeburg Cathedral in Germany.
The preliminary findings will be announced at a conference at the University of Bristol today.
Meditation is no longer just for the groovy folk.
A just published study in the American Journal of Hypertension suggests the practice may br
ing cardiovascular and mental-health benefits.
Okay, so longer workouts are truly better for your overall health and longevity.
But knowing that a mini workout could still do good things for your body should inspire you to squeeze in at least a little something every day — even if it’ s ju
st a few trips up and down the stairs.
(Jan. 7) — The words “cell phones” and “health benefits” are r
arely, if ever, likely to be found in the same sentence.
But a study that surprised even the scientists who carried it out has concluded that long-term exposure to the radiation emitted by cell phones might protect, and even reverse, Alzheimer’s disease.
Read article.
[T]he Internet is giving rise to a newer phenomenon: the decades-late apology.
For those who’ve been wronged, and those who’ve wronged, it’s good to know that apologies do happen–sometimes decades later.
Thomas Ramey Watson is an affiliate faculty member of Regis University's College of Professional Studies. He has served as an Episcopal chaplain (lay), trained as a psychotherapist, done postdoctoral work at Cambridge University, and was named a Research Fellow at Yale University.
In addition to his scholarly writings, he is a published author of poetry and fiction.