H-I-L-A-R-I-T-Y: Obama’s Dan Quayle moment inspires #ObamaSpellingBee

http://twitter.com/#!/TheAmishDude/status/238319929693204480

Oi! Ho! Our aching sides! After Barack Columbus discovered America’s 57th state earlier today, conservatives, fed up with being branded as stupid while liberals deify Obama for his “wisdom,” weren’t about to let the president’s spelling slip-up slide. They let him have it, and they let him have it good.

#ObamaSpellingBee S-O-L-I-N-D-R-A

— David Burge (@iowahawkblog) August 22, 2012

https://twitter.com/LastBrainLeft/status/238320155011207169

#ObamaSpellingBee F-R-E-I M-A-R-C-I-T-S

— Ben Howe (@BenHowe) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee T-R-I-L-Y-A-N

— Snarky Basterd (@Snarky_Basterd) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee: "ObamaCare": C-O-N-T-R-O-L #tcot

— BreitTwit (@BreitTwit1) August 22, 2012

#obamaspellingbee your paycheck M-I-N-E

— Marta Saltus (@saltusmed) August 22, 2012

https://twitter.com/rlwood1/status/238328408197705729

#ObamaSpellingBee "Work": G-O-L-F

— KingShamusé (@KingShamus) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee A-R-O-O-G-U-L-A

— Leslie #WeAreN (@LADowd) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee D-E-T-T S-E-E-L-I-N-G

— Razor (@hale_razor) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee D-E-T

— David Burge (@iowahawkblog) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee Accountability: B-L-A-M-E-B-U-S-H

— Christine Korenthal (@LiberTEA_Lover) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee M-A-R-I-N-E C-O-R-P-S-E

— LMX (@laurenmarie10) August 22, 2012

#obamaspellingbee U-S-S-A

— DC Dude (@DCDude1776) August 22, 2012

https://twitter.com/Hayekonomics/status/238325472033898496

#ObamaSpellingBee T-O-L-A-R-A-N-T-S

— robert (@ProgressiveAle) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee "Reporters": R-U-B-E-S

— KingShamusé (@KingShamus) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee P-R-Y-V-E-T-T S-E-K-T-E-R #doingfine

— Razor (@hale_razor) August 22, 2012

#ObamaSpellingBee G-I-T-N-O

— Cuffé (@CuffyMeh) August 22, 2012

Smartest. Presdient. EVAH. Keep ‘em comin’, Twitter!

Read more: http://twitchy.com/2012/08/22/h-i-l-a-r-i-t-y-obamas-dan-quayle-moment-inspires-obamaspellingbee/

What does Anxiety/a Panic Attack feel like?

I documented a day with Anxiety here: https://link.medium.com/Nmt5keigN3 If you’re in Bangalore you can make an appointment with my psychiatrist here: https://www.lybrate.com/doctor/dr-ravi-prakash-psychiatrist If you’re elsewhere in India please use Lybrate.com or Practo.com to find a therapist near you. More from me on Instagram: @TakeItEasyPolicy Twitter: @KingfisherOnTap Medium: @KingfisherOnTap Facebook: @urvashi.goverdhan

The Age of Anxiety

A critical study of America’s tranquilizer culture ranges from the 1950s to the present day as it looks at Americans’ increasing dependence on pills and prescriptions to ensure peace of mind, traces the growth of the billion-dollar anti-anxiety business, and assesses the economic, cultural, and social influence of pharmaceuticals.

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Beyond the Pill

Out of the 100 million women—almost 11 million in the United States alone—who are on the pill, roughly 60 percent take it for non-contraceptive reasons like painful periods, endometriosis, PCOS, and acne. While the birth control pill is widely prescribed as a quick-fix solution to a variety of women’s health conditions, taking it can also result in other more serious and dangerous health consequences. Did you know that women on the pill are more likely to be prescribed an antidepressant? That they are at significantly increased risk for autoimmune disease, heart attack, thyroid and adrenal disorders, and even breast and cervical cancer? That the pill can even cause vaginal dryness, unexplained hair loss, flagging libido, extreme fatigue, and chronic infection. As if women didn’t have enough to worry about, that little pill we’re taking to manage our symptoms is only making things worse. Jolene Brighten, ND, author of the groundbreaking new book BEYOND THE PILL, specializes in treating women’s hormone imbalances caused by the pill and shares her proven 30-day program designed to reverse the myriad of symptoms women experience every day—whether you choose to stay on the pill or not. The first book of its kind to target the birth control pill and the scientifically-proven symptoms associated with taking it, BEYOND THE PILL is an actionable plan for taking control, and will help readers: • Locate the root cause of their hormonal issues, like estrogen dominance, low testosterone, and low progesterone • Discover a pain-free, manageable period free of cramps, acne, stress, or PMS without the harmful side effects that come with the pill • Detox the liver, support the adrenals and thyroid, heal the gut, reverse metabolic mayhem, boost fertility, and enhance mood • Transition into a nutrition and supplement program, with more than 30 hormone-balancing recipes Featuring simple diet and lifestyle interventions, BEYOND THE PILL is the first step to reversing the risky side effects of the pill, finally finding hormonal health, and getting your badass self back.

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Teens and Depression

Text and first-person accounts present the experiences of teenagers who have coped with and tried to overcome depression.

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Behavioral Toxicology

Behavioral toxicology is a young discipline in the United States; so young, in fact, that this is one of its first books. Behavioral questions are bound to play a major role in future scientific work and governmental decisions involving the health effects of environmental contaminants and other chemicals. This role springs from two key problems that face scientists and public agencies required to set acceptable exposure standards or to determine criteria for the toxicity of therapeutic chemicals: How do you evaluate effects that may show up only as subtle functional disturbances? And how do you de tect toxic effects early enough so that they may still be reversible, before they produce major damage? The contributions in this book come from a collection of scientists whose interests span a wide variety of problem areas. The focus is largely on me thodological issues because they represent the most immediate concern of the discipline. We expect that this collection of papers will represent a useful source book for behavioral toxicology for some time. For the past few years, the University of Rochester’s Department of Radiation Biology and Biophysics has sponsored a series of international conferences on chemical toxicity, partly as a response to concern over the con sequences to health of the rich chemical soup in which we live. This book is based upon presentations made to the fifth of the series. Held in June, 1972, it was the first formal meeting devoted to behavioral toxicology in this country.

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Exercise, Depression, and Anxiety: The Evidence

 
Exercise is one of those recommendations clinicians love, but what is the evidence that it can help our patients with depression? There are wonderful new data from the HUNT Cohort Study (Nord-Trøndelag Health Study), which followed over 33,000 healthy individuals in Nord-Trøndelag, Norway, starting around 1985