Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Life. Show all posts
20 August 2011

American girl in Italy: 60 years later

By Mike Krumboltz

‘American Girl’ photo: American Girl in Italy, 1951 © 1952, 1980 Ruth Orkin / Courtesy of …

A stunning young woman walks down a street in Florence, her head held high. All around, men playfully gawk at her grace and beauty. Just then the camera shutter snaps. "American Girl in Italy" is among the most popular snapshots of all time, and it's turning 60 years old this month.

The photo, which was shot in 1951, perfectly captures the fun and romance of being abroad. In honor of its birthday, Ninalee Craig, the subject of the photo spoke with the "Today" show about what happened behind the scenes and what the photo really represents.

In her "Today" appearance, Craig spoke about how, despite what some might say, the photo isn't a "symbol of harassment." Craig insists that the image is "a symbol of a woman having an absolutely wonderful time."

Craig should know--when the photo was taken, she was a 23-year-old traveling alone through Europe. While staying at a cheap hotel, Craig met photographer Ruth Orkin, who was also touring the continent solo. The two spoke about the fun and challenges of being alone while on the road in Italy--and went on to hatch a plan to take photos highlighting that experience.

For two hours, the photographer and amateur model walked the streets of Florence. Orkin took photos at markets and in cafes. The street-scene photo came about naturally. According to Craig, Orkin shot only two pictures of her walking down the macho street. One of them turned out to be the iconic image commemorated today.

As for whether or not the photo was staged, Craig says no way. "The big debate about the picture, which everyone always wants to know, is: Was it staged? No! No, no, no! You don't have 15 men in a picture and take just two shots. The men were just there . . . . The only thing that happened was that Ruth Orkin was wise enough to ask me to turn around and go back and repeat" the walk down the street.

In the interview, Craig also remarked that she never felt in danger while walking among the admiring men. "None of those men crossed the line at all," she said.

Craig is now a great-grandmother living in Toronto. Orkin, who passed away in 1985, went on to co-write and co-direct the 1956 Oscar-nominated film "Little Fugitive." Of course, both women will be best remembered for one indelible image that, staged or not, captured the public's imagination and never let go.

Photo of Ninalee Craig today: Courtesy Keith Beaty/Toronto Star/GetStock

12 July 2011

Indian Teens Are Seriously Spoilt Brats

By Prathibha Joy

Indian teen smoking.jpg

If a recent survey is to be believed, Indian teens are seriously bad-ass. They cheat in school, smoke, drink, try drugs and are rather promiscuous. To make matters worse, they won't discuss any of this with their parents.

And why would they, ask experts, when they have access to any information they need at their fingertips.

According to student counsellor Romila Rodrigues, urban youngsters with working parents spend more time with their cellphones and laptops than they do with their parents.

"Youngsters today grow up in a world where information is freely available.

There are books, the Internet and satellite television that they have easy access to. If we don't teach them about the cons of substance abuse and casual sex, they'll get information from other sources, which may be convoluted," says Romila.

And the problem with young people having sex is that most often, they don't know the consequences. "Though a lot of adolescents experience some form of physical intimacy early on, a majority of them do not know about the effects and consequences of sex.

In most cases, they are not even well-informed about the act itself," says Rekha G, branch manager of the Family Planning Association. Her view is endorsed by Dr Vinod Chebbi, sex and marriage therapist. "Adolescents think they are too young to get pregnant, but old enough to have sex. But the problem is that they are just satisfying their curiosity," he says.

With contraceptives available over the counter, youngsters have a false sense of security, adds Rekha. "And when a period is missed, they go into denial and think it's the hormones or stress that's causing the missed period. By the time they realise what it actually is, it's too late," adds Dr Chebbi. But even if it's too late, youngsters these days have a solution. "What's worrying is that there's a growing lack of morality among youngsters, especially when it comes to teen pregnancies.

If a girl does fall pregnant, she gets an over-the-counter drug to terminate the pregnancy or goes to a shady clinic to get it medically terminated. And the parents of the girl remain oblivious to what's happening," says Romila.

And if that's the state of teenagers today, the parents are to blame, feel experts. "Sex education is still frowned upon in this country and the anatomical approach to the subject that was practised in schools is detrimental — telling them how and when to do it is not the key. Parents also shy away from broaching the subject and expect teachers to handle it and vice-versa. That's when ill-informed peers and siblings step in," adds Dr Chebbi.

The other issue, says Romila, is that parents take pride in ensuring that their children are kitted with the latest and most hi-tech gizmos and ample pocket money. "Even if a teen doesn't want to try hard-core drugs or alcohol, peer pressure forces him/her to at least try them, even if it is a milder version.

Information about drugs is available on Net-enabled cellphones or laptops. Money is not a problem for an urban teenager, whose parents use it to compensate for the lack of quality time spent together," she says.

What parents and society at large should realise is that these activities of teenagers are no longer secrets, adds counsellor Kavitha Michael. "It's considered uncool if you aren't up to speed with the rest of your peers.

Sex, drugs, alcohol are all part of the growing-up process now," she signs off.

08 July 2011

All You Want To Know About Botox

Ageing is totally natural, but through aesthetic dermatology you can slow down the signs. The popular Botox is one such method.

All you want to know about Botox

The field of dermatology has witnessed unprecedented growth and success in the last couple of years. People have found an easy and effective way to treat many skin issues, including ageing.

Aesthetic dermatology deals with different types of skin problems, including skin diseases; changes brought about with ageing; scars caused by accidents and cosmetic corrections. Aesthetic dermatology corrects skin problems along with enhancing the cosmetic appearance of skin.

The world of aesthetic dermatology is a vast and ever-evolving one. We start by introducing you to one of the most popular procedures used to arrest ageing and improve skin quality.
Botox

Botox is the popular term for 'Botulinum Toxin'. Botox has multiple uses including, curing muscle spasms, chronic migraines and excessive sweating. One of the most popular uses however, is to erase or reduce signs of ageing from one's face. Across the world, dermatologists use Botox injections to remove wrinkles and forehead creases in a non-surgical manner.

All you want to know about Botox

When injected underneath the skin, the Botox temporarily paralyses facial muscles and thus reduces wrinkles and lines. The effect usually lasts from between 6 to 8 months.

Although it is a clinically proven methodology that's revolutionised the cosmetic branch of dermatology, it does have its own set of advantages and disadvantages.

Advantages

- Botox is much less invasive than a face-lift.

- It's also far quicker and cheaper than other surgical procedures. Botox can be administered in a couple of hours.

All you want to know about Botox

Disadvantages

- The change in appearance is not permanent and after the effect of Botox wears off in a 6-8 months, the lines and wrinkles reappear.

- It's not abnormal to face certain side effects like soreness and some initial pain.

- Since the muscles have been numbed, the person who's had Botox injected may end up looking surprised or always frowning. Fortunately, since the effects are temporary, the face comes back to normal after a few months.

- Some people may experience an allergic reaction to Botox.

- It may not agree with some medication or antibiotics that the person is already on.

- Also, in some rare cases, these injections have caused weakening or drooping of the facial muscles. This often occurs if the dosage being injected was too high.

If you are considering using Botox on your skin, make sure you get a licensed professional to administer it and inform them of any pre-existing medical conditions or medication you may be on.

29 June 2011

History as her stories

By C.K. Meena

Lucky Lobster can be called a political play


LIFE'S PLAY Lucky Lobster

That Swar Thounaojam hails from Manipur was an inconsequential detail in the context of her debut “Fake Palindromes” staged this January, but a matter of inescapable significance when it came to her second play, “Lucky Lobster”, staged at Ranga Shankara last weekend. Try as she might to universalise it by refusing to name places or characters, it ends up addressing those for whom the ‘North-East' blurs into a single amorphous entity. Like the Kashmir ‘situation' we often talk of the Manipur ‘situation', which we reduce to Maoists, army bullets, naked mothers and Irom Sharmila. The playwright avoids such clichés and, through the narratives of women who run a market in Imphal called Ema Keithel, draws attention to the history of her troubled state. The four teenagers on stage who ask questions classroom-lesson-fashion represent various social groups at different points in the play: the ignorant audience, a bunch of outsiders documenting the oral histories of the local people, and the new urban generation that doesn't care for the past and lives entirely in the present.

There is a problem with history lessons, though. In the hands of the wrong teacher they can be tedious. Why does the director/playwright choose to make her lead actors read out (or pretend to) long sections of text for a good half hour or more? And make the schoolchildren look conspicuously bored out of their wits for the entire length of the play? And, to cap it all, make them move about continuously? This is hugely distracting. Not only does the spectator, who has at most two eyes, find it difficult to take in seven things at a time, but the restlessness on stage also infects her. Occasional, relevant movements to break an actor's monologue can be justified: for instance, when Lakshmi Krishnamurty, who convincingly plays the confused old vendor living in the past, talks of the changes she resents, the schoolchildren keep blocking her path while she speaks of how crowded her town has become. If showing uninterested school kids is pressing the point, so is the academician's (played by Vijay Nair) reading out an entire jargon-packed thesis on women's empowerment. The irony is lost after a few minutes although Nair attempts to bring in light relief through his periodic ear-and-throat-clearing noises. Half way through, when the play snapped out of recital mode into actual theatre with Nair enacting an event, the energy level rose; it peaked with the subsequent narratives of the two younger vendors, particularly those of Anu H.R.

All told, this is a political play that deals with authority and repression. It begins with a (Manipuri) nonsense verse “Te-te tena-wa” set to the tune of “Jana Gana Mana”, which degenerates into a cacophonic shouting that clearly symbolises disturbance and conflict. The powerful stories of women whose sons have disappeared — either killed by the state or recruited by militants — are not specific to any state or even country. Vendors relocated from an old market into a new one, teenagers with money to burn… the playwright has constantly tried to generalise human experience.

Before the play began the audience was invited to walk on stage and examine an ‘installation'. This consisted of some strong portrait shots and backlit images of presumably Ema Keithel and its women vendors (taken by Deepika Arwind), all the props in the play (including a teapot and glucose biscuits), and a silent, looped video showing a woman in the grip of either extreme grief or possession. If this was meant to draw us into the atmosphere of the play it didn't work. Had the photos been strung up along the last landing leading to the auditorium entrance, one could have lingered over them on the way in. Ambient sounds recorded in the market played through speakers would have captured the mood.

Thounaojam seems to have a penchant for catchy but mystifying titles. This one is a reference to an essay by David Foster Wallace (this uber-cool po-mo dead dude who is suddenly all the rage) in which he countered the belief that the lobster feels no pain when dunked in boiling water. Lucky lobster if feels no pain. Hmm. That requires quite a stretch of the imagination.

12 June 2011

Beyond First Kiss

First child more memorable than first kiss for women

A new survey has found that having first child topped list for women’s most memorable experiences while the first kiss came in seventh.

First child more memorable than first kiss for women

Washington, Jun 12 : You might think of your first kiss as a life-changing moment, but your perception may change after having your first child.

A new British survey has found that having a first child topped the list for women’s most memorable experiences while the first kiss came in seventh, reports the Daily Mail.

In the study, over 2,000 people across the UK were asked to rate their top 15 firsts, from getting drunk to having a mid life crisis, and reveal the age at which the event occurred.

For men, the most momentous occasion was getting married, according to the poll.

It confirmed teenage years as the most challenging period, while people seem to be happiest in their twenties.

Late teenage years were highlighted as the most difficult, with the majority of the British public losing their virginity at 18, then suffering their first heartbreak at 20, as well as leaving home.

However by 54, after suffering a mid-life crisis, things seem to get better as the first grandchild arrives greeted by retirement.

The poll was conducted to mark the release of virtual-life computer game The Sims 3: Generations.

Read, Register, Release

Read, register, release

How often have you given away old books to the raddi wala or just sold them to the newspaper vendors as they were taking up too much space?

For booklovers this is tantamount to a hanging offence.

There is, however, a solution to this. Aiming to make 'the whole world a library', is a free online book club called BookCrossing.

Here one can ‘release’a book for people all over the world to read. The exchange takes place in the form of direct swaps with other members of the websites, or 'book rings' in which books travel in a set order to participants who want to read them.

Seventeen-year-old Luqmaan Siddiqui from Little Flower Junior College says, “My mom got me into reading whatever books I could lay my hand on, for as long as I can remember.

And now I have my own personal collection ranging from fantasy to fiction. BookCrossing sounds like a novel idea. I mean, you have this vast collection to choose from and for avid readers like me it means a paradise of books.”

A modern day ‘Message in a Bottle,’ the books must be registered with the website. Users can then ‘go hunting’, this is where a member will log on to the website to view a list of books that has recently been ‘released’, they then go to the location where it has been left to ‘catch’ it.

People interested in BookCrossing in the city can find whatever books they want with the help of members on the website http://www.bookcrossing.com/mybookshelf/PanjimInn-OBCZ/.

Books may also be left at Official BookCrossing Zones. Panjim Inn, Goa’s heritage hotel is India’s first Official BookCrossing Zone. You can either leave them here or can write to the in-charge of Panjim Inn at thefrangipanijournals@g-mail.com.

For some the concept is incredible and they are having a hard time comprehending how it works. Thirteen-year-old Nikita Hari from Indus World School, says, “I have never heard of this website.

When it comes to sharing books, I have only thought about my friends. But to have people from all over the country get access to my collection sounds incredible. ”

But not everyone wants to share their books. “Certain books have great sentimental value and even if I’ve read them a billion times I wouldn’t want them to fall in the hands of someone who wouldn’t even be interested in them.

A person might sell them for some money instead of reporting them on the website, as intended,” says 17-year-old Sayoni Chakrabarti, who finished her intermediate from FIITJEE Junior College.

No matter what the perspective be, ‘Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counselors, and the most patient of teachers.’

So what are you waiting for? Get ready as it’s time to increase your circle of friends.

11 June 2011

Now, 3-D Printed Bikinis To Custom Fit Every Curve!

For the first time ever, designers have created bikinis called the ‘N12 bikini’ made from 3-D printers which could adapt to fit every woman’s curves perfectly.

The world's first 3-D printed two-piece is made of small nylon discs that are held together by thread-like springs.

Shapeways used their 3-D printing technology to create the material for the designers and called it Nylon 12, which is 'ideal swimsuit material as it is innately waterproof', and this is where the ultimate custom fit 3-D bikinis got its name from.

“Thousands of circular plates are connected by thin strings, creating a wholly new material that holds its form as well as being flexible," Discovery News quoted the designers Jenna Fizel and Mary Haung of Continuum Fashion as saying.

“The layout of the circle pattern was achieved through custom written code that lays out the circles according to the curvature of the surface. In this way, the aesthetic design is completely derived from the structural design,” they added.

30 May 2011

Mile-High Flirting Goes Horribly Wrong

flirtingA US man who tried to flirt with a young woman on board a plane by bragging he was carrying enough poisonous gas to knock out the entire aircraft found himself arrested and banned for life from Delta Air Lines.

Bryan Sisco, 40, allegedly knocked back five whiskey-and-cokes at an airport bar in Dallas on Friday before boarding his Atlanta-bound plane, on which he took a wrong seat and found himself next to Danielle Valimont, 23, from Griffin, US, The Commercial Appeal reported.

When confronted by a flight attendant about being in the wrong seat, Sisco said he and Valimont were newlyweds.

The 40-year-old then whipped out a butane lighter, sparking it near Valimont's legs, and boasted that he had a canister that contained enough gas to knock out everyone on the plane.

In further attempt to impress her, Sisco also claimed he was an architect and a federal marshal, and his father was in the CIA, according to Valimont who wrote about the incident on her blog.

"He was very crass with his language and called me "B****" and "F*****" in a friendly, joking way - if that's possible"Delta Airlines

The quick-thinking Valimont pretended she needed the bathroom and managed to alert a flight attendant.

The flight was diverted to Memphis, where a baffled Sisco, who had been sleeping and oblivious to the unfolding panic, was arrested by officers who boarded the plane.

"I fell asleep, and woke up in handcuffs in Memphis with the FBI questioning me. ... I couldn't even feel my thumb, the handcuffs were put on so tight," he said.

Sisco added that he was puzzled by the fuss which came about "because of that one comment".

"We were talking, sharing M&Ms, eating chocolate, having a good time," he said. "I fabricated some truths about myself. ... I thought we were getting along pretty good."

The flight continued on its way to Atlanta, while Sisco was released on a $10,000 bond. He faces charges of carrying a weapon or explosive on an aircraft.

19 May 2011

Caught On Cam : Bride-To-Be Attempts Suicide

Chinese Bride Attempts Suicide on Wednesday May 18, 2011

Woman in a wedding gown sits on a windowsill before attempting to kill herself by jumping out of a seven-storey residential building in Changchun

In this photo taken Tuesday, May 17, 2011, a cadre of the community office grabs 22 year-old woman after she tried to kill herself by jumping out of a window of a seventh floor building in Changchun c

Woman in wedding gown attempts to kill herself by jumping out of seven-storey residential building in Changchun

In this photo taken Tuesday, May 17, 2011, residents tried to save 22 year-old woman after she tried to kill herself by jumping out of a window of a seventh floor building in Changchun city in northea

In this photo taken Tuesday, May 17, 2011, a cadre of the community office grabs 22 year-old woman after she tried to kill herself by jumping out of a window of a seventh floor building in Changchun c

Woman in wedding gown is grabbed by local community officer, as she attempts to kill herself by jumping out of seven-storey residential building in Changchun

Combo picture shows woman in wedding gown being grabbed by local community officer as she attempts suicide in Changchun

10 May 2011

Clothing Firms 'Sexualise' Girls

Clothing firms 'sexualise' pre-teen girls: study

As six are being pitched clothing that highlights their breasts, buttocks or slimness or sends a message of sensuality, the study says.'

US Clothing firms marketing sexy garments for pre-teen girl - AFP

US Clothing firms marketing sexy garments for pre-teen girl - AFP

Paris, May 11 : Some clothing firms in the United States are marketing sexy garments for pre-teen girls, reinforcing a destructive stereotype of female attractiveness, research released on Monday said.

Girls as young as six are being pitched clothing that highlights their breasts, buttocks or slimness or sends a message of sensuality, the study says.

Researchers led by Sarah Murnen, a professor of psychology at Kenyon College in Ohio, looked at 15 websites of popular clothing stores, ranging from bargain to high-end sectors of the junior US market.

Using 38 college students, they devised a system to assess the sexiness of various garments, and used this system to grade 5,666 clothing items.

Clothing was rated according to whether it had only childlike characteristics; revealed or emphasised an intimate body part; or had characteristics that were associated with sexiness.

An example of a ‘childlike’ characteristic would be a top with a butterfly print in pastel colours.

In contrast, a bikini was coded as ‘revealing’ because it exposed the waist and part of the chest. The bikini was considered ‘emphasising’ if, for instance, it outlined each breast with triangular pieces of fabric.

Similarly, highly-decorated back pockets on trousers adorned, for instance, with a bird or sequins were deemed ‘emphasising’ because they drew attention to the buttocks.

Material that was lingerie-like (such as in slinky red or black fabric) or in leopard or zebra prints was categorised as having characteristics associated with sexiness.

Sixty-nine per cent of the clothing assessed in the study had only child-like characteristics.

Four per cent had only sexualising characteristics, while 25 per cent had both sexualising and childlike characteristics. One per cent had neither sexualised nor child-like characteristics.

The researchers said the biggest sexualisation was in clothing sold by ‘tween,’ or pre-teen stores, especially Abercrombie Kids, which came under fire in 2002 for selling thong underwear in children's sizes with ‘wink wink’ and ‘eye candy’ printed across the front.

The paper appears in a specialist journal, Sex Roles, published by Germany's Springer publishing house.

Its authors say girls face escalating demands placed to meet the Western stereotype of slimness and sexiness. The pressures of ‘self-objectification’ can lead to body dissatisfaction, depression, low confidence and poor self-esteem.

"The co-occurrence of sexualising and child-like characteristics makes the sexualisation present in girl's clothing covert," it says.

"Confused parents might be persuaded to buy the leopard-pink miniskirt if it's bright pink. Clearly, sexiness is still visible beneath the bows or tie-dye colours."

09 May 2011

Tunnels of light. Meeting with dead loved Ones... The Truth About Near-Death Experiences

By Steve Boggan

Are those extraordinary stories proof of the afterlife - or plain hokum? A top brain specialist has a compelling new theory...

Gillian MacKenzie remembers feeling worried for her unborn child, as the world around her fell into darkness, save for a dot of brilliant light.

She was somehow aware that her delivery had gone wrong and she was losing a lot of blood, but there was comfort in the light.

‘It was like a tiny pinprick at first and then I realised I was being drawn closer to it and it was getting bigger and bigger,’ she says. ‘The brightness was shining like the walls of a tunnel.

Lucid: Out-of-body experiences can change the course of people's lives - but can they be explained by how our brains work?

Lucid: Out-of-body experiences can change the course of people's lives - but can they be explained by how our brains work?

‘I felt no fear as I went into the tunnel and emerged fully into the brilliance. There was the most wonderful feeling of bliss. I can only describe it as ecstasy.

‘Suddenly I heard a man’s voice saying: “Gill.” It was a very nice voice and I thought:

“Oh no, I’ve come before God — and I don’t even believe in Him!” He asked if I knew who he was and I said: “Yes, but I’m afraid I can’t say your name.” He obviously had a sense of humour because he chuckled at that.’

Who’s to say that these mechanisms weren’t created by God in the first place precisely to provide comfort just when we might need it most — as we approach death

Gillian’s experience happened many years ago, before the term near-death experience had been coined, but it is as real to her today as it was when she began haemorrhaging during a difficult childbirth.

No one knows for sure, but scientists believe as many as one in ten of us will have a near-death experience, most likely during cardiac arrest.

Typically, we will see a light, travel through a tunnel, have an encounter with a lost loved one or float above ourselves and watch doctors and nurses trying to resuscitate us.

Those who have had such experiences often describe profound moments of joy and insight that change them for ever.

Many believe they have had a glimpse of the afterlife, an experience that shores up their faith and leaves them unafraid of death. To them, it is real, lucid and precious.

Dreaming could be a contributing factor to near-death experiences

Dreaming could be a contributing factor to near-death experiences

It might come as something of a shock, then, for them to learn that a respected American neurologist believes he can explain all the symptoms of near-death experience in physiological terms — terms that would firmly close the door on thoughts of souls departing for the afterlife before returning to Earth.

Kevin Nelson, Professor of Neurology at the University of Kentucky, has been studying near-death experiences for more than 30 years.

In his new book, The God Impulse — Is Religion Hardwired Into The Brain?, he puts forward explanations for all elements of the near-death experience, but central to his argument is the involvement of REM — rapid eye movement.

This is the time during sleep when we dream most and during which the sleeper is paralysed apart from the eye muscles, heart and diaphragm (which controls breathing).

Professor Nelson believes that some people are more susceptible than others to a condition called ‘REM intrusion’, where the paralysis that accompanies REM happens while an individual is awake — and is often accompanied by vivid hallucinations.

Research conducted by Professor Nelson examined the cases of 55 people who had described having a near-death experience.

Of those, 60 per cent had previously had episodes of REM intrusion, compared with only 24 per cent in a group of people chosen at random.

‘Instead of passing directly between the REM state and wakefulness, the brains of those with a near- death experience are more likely to blend the two states into one another,’ he says.

This places the subject into what he calls the ‘borderlands’ of consciousness.

Some people believe they meet with dead relatives during their experience

Some people believe they meet with dead relatives during their experience

‘Many people enter this unstable borderland for only a few seconds or minutes before emerging into REM or waking,’ he says.

‘In the borderland, paralysis, lights, hallucinations and dreaming can come to us. During a crisis such as a cardiac arrest, the borderland could explain much of what we know as the near-death experience.’

But what about the light, the tunnel, the spiritual encounters and out-of-body experiences? He has explanations for these, too.

In his study, Professor Nelson found that the symptoms of near-death experiences happened in fainting as well as during life-or-death traumas such as heart attacks.

But what most of these episodes have in common is a temporary interruption of blood flow to the brain.

‘Normally, 20 per cent of the blood the heart pumps sustains the brain,’ he says. ‘If the blood flow is reduced to a third of its normal supply,  the brain remains immediately active, but after ten to 20 seconds, it  loses consciousness.

‘The brain sustains no injury, even if this flow rate lasts for hours. At these marginal flows, a person may slip in and out of consciousness.

‘A great deal of what happens in the brain during near-death experiences comes about because of a reaction to the crisis of having low blood flow, regardless of how briefly. When blood is draining from the head, just before consciousness is lost, the tissue that is most sensitive to failure is not the brain, it is actually the eye, the retina.

‘When the retina fails, darkness ensues and it fails from the outside inwards, producing the characteristic tunnel vision.

‘The light at the end of the tunnel could come from two different sources. It could be from ambient light — such as the background light in a hospital emergency room — which may be all the brain can recognise as blood drains from the head.

‘Alternatively, the REM system, which is known for its robust activation of the visual system, could generate light internally, within the brain.’

But people don’t just see the tunnel — they feel themselves travelling through it. How can this be?

‘Well, the area of the brain associated with out-of-body experiences, the temporoparietal region, is right next to the area that is responsible for our sensation of motion,’ he says.

‘Normally, this area gets turned off during REM sleep, but in some cases it could be that this process does not function properly, and that during  the transition into REM, the brain experiences a sense of motion.’

That explains the visions, the light and tunnel, but what about the floating out-of-body experience? And the sensation of being dead?

The dead bit is easy — this is down to the fact that sleepers are paralysed during REM sleep, otherwise they might hurt themselves acting out their dreams.

To explain the out-of-body floating, Professor Nelson refers to a piece of research conducted by a neurologist in Switzerland called Olaf Blanke.

Blanke and his colleagues made an astonishing discovery one day while preparing a 43-year-old woman for surgery. She was suffering from seizures and the surgeons were applying electrical impulses to her brain to try to find out from where the problem was emanating.

Suddenly, the woman, who had to be conscious for the procedure, said she had floated outside her body and was looking down on herself. The electrical current was switched off and she returned to her body.

‘The woman’s sense of being in or out of her body came and went with the mechanical predictability of turning on a light switch,’ says Professor Nelson.

‘The person manning the switch moved her consciousness at will. It was as if the elevator “up” button for an out-of-body experience had been discovered.’

Finally, feelings of bliss could be accounted for by the brain’s reward system. During moments of extreme crisis, the body releases chemicals that provide a sense of relaxation and well-being.

This is thought to be an evolutionary quirk that stems back to prehistoric times. If a hunting party had been cornered by a predator and was sure to be killed, it made it easier for the rest of  the group to escape if the victim did not struggle too much.

The predator would expend time and energy consuming one victim, making it easier for the others to avoid the same fate.

But what does Gillian MacKenzie think of all this? During her near-death experience, she met her grandfather, Harry, who had died two years before.

She told him she had given birth to a boy — which was correct, though she had no way of knowing it — and she floated above herself, seeing doctors working on her.

She also floated above her husband, Hamish, following him down a hospital corridor and watching him phone her mother.

‘I wasn’t at all frightened, but I was wondering how I was going to let Hamish know that everything was going to be all right and that I would get back into my body somehow,’ she says.

Gillian, now a pensioner living in Eastbourne, East Sussex, adds: ‘I told my grandfather that I would have to leave and go back to look after my husband and baby, but he said I had to present a strong case for me to be allowed back.’

During the episode, Gillian re-lived memories, good and bad, and said she came away with a better understanding of her life.

For example, she had never forgiven her mother for leaving her at boarding school and remembers crying as she walked away.

‘Re-living it made me realise that it must have been so hard for her, too, hearing me crying and not being allowed to look back at me,’ she says. ‘I had new insight and I told my grandfather that I would have to go back to put this greater understanding to good use in helping others. And then I went back.’

In later years, Gillian became a counsellor. ‘Before the experience, I had been intolerant with people. After it, I was a completely different person.

‘So you can put a rational explanation for the experiences of people like me, but that would be missing the point. To us, they are real and they have a profound effect on you and the way you live your life afterwards. It took away any fear I might have had of dying and I think it made me a better person. You can call them hallucinations if you want, but they are our reality.’

None of this is lost on Professor Nelson. He says his work isn’t intended to disprove the existence of God or to diminish the importance of near-death experiences.

‘There is a widening schism between people who think God is an anachronism and regard all spiritual experience as a dangerous delusion and those who consider religion [to be at] the core of their lives,’ he says.

‘I was determined that someone based in neuroscience should try to explain the nature of spiritual experience, not explain it away.

‘I treat all of these experiences with the reverence and respect they deserve because they are powerful to the people who have them. They are the most powerful experiences that many of them will ever have.

‘So, yes, I might be trying to explain how and why they happen in physiological terms, but I would argue that isn’t incompatible with people believing in God if they want to.

'After all, who’s to say that these mechanisms weren’t created by God in the first place precisely to provide comfort just when we might need it most — as we approach death.’

The God Impulse — Is Religion Hardwired Into The Brain?  by Kevin Nelson (Simon & Schuster, £16.99).

Now, A Viagra Condom

New erection-enhancing condom nears approval

London, May 9 : Men who have trouble maintaining erections when wearing a condom may get a boost from a new product dubbed the "Viagra condom."

British biotech company Futura Medical has created a new condom, currently known as CSD500, that is coated on the inside with a vasodilator gel that increases blood flow and results in a stronger, longer-lasting erection.

The product is nearing final regulatory approval, and condom company Durex announced late last month its aim to unroll the condoms in Europe by the end of the year. Plans have yet to be announced on whether the manufacturers will apply for FDA approval to market the condoms in the US.

Research has shown that men who struggle with maintaining erections while wearing condoms are less likely to use them and more likely to risk unprotected sex. Adam Glickman, founder of the online store Condomania.com, said in an interview with Portfolio magazine that the new condom might encourage these men to start changing their ways and practicing safe sex.

In clinical trials, subjects reported stronger erections and increased penis size -- although the manufacturers say the aim of the product is not recreational, but to give men with condom-related erectile dysfunction a better option.

Another problem some men and women face with condom use is latex allergy, but now consumers may get some relief from a new type of latex condom that retains all of the advantages of traditional latex and (almost) none of the allergens.

The Envy condom, made from a new patented low-protein variant of natural rubber latex (NRL), is sold on the company's website and via online retailers such as Condomania.com (international shipping available). A box of 12 condoms sells for $12.99 (about 9.50).

04 May 2011

How Most Of The World Probably Sees Americans

Hillbilly Celebrates Osama's Death In Most 'American' Way Possible

Hillbilly Celebrates Osama Death

ATV?
Check.

American flag?
Check.

Gun?
Check.

Dead terrorist?
Damn straight, that's a check.

Scroll Down for Video

Even as we've all breathed a collective sigh of relief, celebrated in our own ways, made jokes to relieve the last ten years of angst, most of us have had a moment or two where we stopped and thought, "Is it ok to be so happy that someone is dead?"

The answer, of course, is yes, but it's comforting to know that even in such a black and white case of "evil" being vanquished, our humanity always rises to the surface to ask the hard questions.

Of course, it's hard to explain that to the rest of the world when this is probably what they assumed we were doing anyway:

New Yorkers Can Now Watch Porn in Public Libraries

NewYork PublicLibrary

New York, May 4
: People of New York can now watch internet porn at the city's public libraries, thanks to a policy of free speech, officials said.

"Customers can watch whatever they want on the computer," said Brooklyn Public Library spokeswoman Malika Granville.

The New York Post reported that people are free to watch anything on computers at the city's 200-plus libraries.

The rule, however, has angered religious leaders and library patrons. "What they're doing is publicly funding an appetite for the most debased fare available," said Catholic League president Bill Donohue.

"It's not like a Playboy centerfold anymore - it's far worse," he said.

Library visitor Daisy Nazario, 60, said she was disgusted when she found she was sitting next to an elderly man watching porn at the Brooklyn Central Library.

"I could hear the voices," Nazario said. "It is very disrespectful to children."

Under American law, libraries that use federal funding only must install filters on publicly-used computers to block content that have obscenity and child pornography.

Library officials said it is a free speech issue.

"In deference to the First Amendment protecting freedom of speech, the New York Public Library cannot prevent adult patrons from accessing adult content that is legal," said New York Public Library spokeswoman Angela Montefinise.

02 May 2011

Do The Math

true date of birth

28 April 2011

Your Monthly EPF Deductions Can Make You A Crorepati

We normally hate any kind of deductions in our monthly salary slips -- either its income tax deduction, professional tax deduction or even an employees' provident fund (EPF) deduction.

Very few of us really know that this small EPF deduction each year can in reality make you a crorepati by the time you retire.

Encouraging fact is that this statement is applicable to even with those having modest salaries. There are many ifs and buts to achieve that, most notably resisting the temptation to withdraw money till retirement.

12 per cent of your basic salary that gets deducted as part of EPF account every month has a potential to make you a crorepati by the time you retire. Most of us are of view that investment is so small and interest rate offered is nothing special. Power of compounding clubbed with a matching contribution from your employer every month can do wonders for you.

Encouraging stats: 8.5 per cent interest earned on the EPF can help a person with a basic salary of Rs 25,000 a month accumulate a mammoth Rs 2.4 crore in 35 years. Sounds unbelievable.

Hard fact: A very few people are able to reach even 1 crore milestone in their careers.

Good news is that the initial draft of the Direct Tax Code has proposed that new contribution to EPF be taxed on withdrawal. However, the revised draft has made EPF fully tax exempt making it once again one of the best debt option available in the market.

Try not to touch your EPF account till you hang your boots. You may have to use it during acute emergencies but other than that avoid poking into this account while you are working. It's not uncommon of people to withdraw their EPF at the stage. Government discourages you to withdraw money as withdrawals from EPF within five years of joining are taxable. Early withdrawal don't allow power of compounding to come to play.

Lesson for everyone

Do not withdraw money from EPF while switching jobs, one should transfer the balance to the new account with the new employer. Remember, this do not happen automatically.

You need to fill 'Form 13' and deposit it with the EPFO. Make this one of your first TODOs things at new workplace as with course of time you will loose track of it and also get preoccupied at new job.

EPFO in addition is coming up with a software enabling online transfer of money from old account to new account. This will reduce both the paperwork and time taken for transaction.

Positives of EPF

Guaranteed returns: EPF is one of the safest debt instruments. Safety of principal and interest earned is very much there. Besides bring discipline in investing, it  serves well to accumulate a corpus for retirement.

Tax exemption for sure: The contributions you make towards provident fund gets you a tax benefit under Section 80C, upto a maximum limit of Rs 1,00,000.

Interest rate fixed by government: The rate of interest on PF account is fixed eveny year during start of financial year by the government of India. The interest is for sure guaranteed and risk-free. The interest is credited to the members account on monthly running balance with effect from the last day in each year. The rate of interest is 9.5 per cent for the year 2010-11 as notified by the Government.

Out of 12 per cent (or 10 per cent as the case may be) of the employer's share of contribution, 8.33 per cent is to be remitted towards pension fund.

VPF option: In addition if you fund your debt portion lagging in your portfolio, you can add more through voluntary increases in your contribution (VPF).

Do not forget loans options against EPF: Your EPF balance can be used as a security for getting loans and thus makes your case strong for sanction of loan. Of course, it can also be utilised during acute emergency.

What if you do not withdraw and do not transfer?

Earlier keeping money in old EPF account was not much of a disadvantage as the amount continued to earn interest till time of withdrawal. But from April 2011, accounts which are inactive for more than three years will stop earning interest.

So there's a distinct disadvantage here apart from the fact that keeping multiple accounts can be a big pain. If accounts are located in different cities, it makes the process more cumbersome. Also a single account gives you a better idea of your current corpus.

Once UID number, which is currently being worked upon, comes into picture, EPF accounts will be portable. So in such a scenario there will be no need to switch funds. The new employer will make all contribution to this account and completely independent of workplace.

Source: Investment-Mantra.in

How Will Your Tattoo Look in 20 Years?

Mathematical model will help people predict how their tattoos look in 20 years

tattoo

A woman poses with her tattoos at the International Tattoo Convention in Frankfurt earlier this month. Picture: AFP Source: AFP

Tattoo artists are increasingly leaving their mark on Western culture, but a new study reveals for the first time how their designs will deteriorate as their human canvases age.

Tattooed celebrity trailblazers as diverse as David Beckham, Angelina Jolie and British “first lady” Samantha Cameron have helped bring body art into mainstream culture, but will they be regretting their choice as the years pass?

Ian Eames, a researcher in fluid mechanics at University College London, has created a mathematical model which can be used to predict the movement of tattoo ink particles over time, and give an idea of which designs age better.

“Tattoos are incredibly popular worldwide with more than a third of 18-25 year olds in the US sporting at least one design,” said Dr Eames.

The paper, which is published in the Mathematics Today journal, will enable those considering getting a tattoo to accurately predict how their design will look in 20 years' time.

Dr Eames said the study would “pave the way towards assessing whether there are any long-term health implications” and provide “an idea of how their chosen design could look several years down the line”.

Tattoo inks are a suspension of water-insoluble particles, such as mercury, lead, cadmium and iron, which are injected under the skin using a needle.

Over time, these inks become dispersed as the cells which contain them die, divide or leave the body.

“Skin type, age, size, exposure to the sunlight and the type of ink which is used all influence how a tattoo disperses with time,” explained Dr Eames.

“Broadly speaking... the small details in a tattoo are lost first, with thicker lines being less affected.

“Although finely detailed tattoos might look good when they are first done, they tend to lose their definition after 15 years,” he added.

AFP

A Gym That Converts Sweat Into Electricity

An eco-friendly gym that converts sweat into electricity

London: Reddening, a rivulet of sweat running across her cheek, Amy McCullough hunched over the stationary bike, pumped her legs like crazy and began producing serious power — enough watts to run a flat-panel TV and a ceiling fan.

An eco-friendly gym that converts sweat into electricity

She thrust her arms upward and exclaimed: "Oh, 180!"

And, with that, her electrical output drooped. The generator attached to her exercise machine slowed, and the digital readout from the device on the handlebars fell below 100 watts.

The transient burst was a personal best for the 43-year-old legal aid lawyer who works out five days a week at a storefront fitness center in north Portland where members on exercise machines fitted with compact generators can burn calories and generate electricity at the same time.

Their workouts satisfy a modicum of the electrical draw at the 3-year-old Green Microgym. More important, they satisfy a demand among its 200 members to be fit in a way that fits Portland's green-indie-local ethos.

The 3,000-square-foot gym aims for a neighborhood trade. It features solar panels, recycled toilet paper, renewable-source flooring and lots of reminders on the wall about turning off lights, fans and TVs.

"I was really attracted to the idea that it would be green," said McCullough, who joined shortly after the gym opened in 2008. "I could go in and generate electricity. How cool is that?"

An eco-friendly gym that converts sweat into electricity

It has occurred to many exercisers during long stretches on machines that it would be cool to turn sweat into watts. In recent years, a few tinkerers and entrepreneurs have brought the idea to market.

So far they have but a teensy sliver. The two leading startups sell equipment to retrofit existing bikes and elliptical trainers, and each reports hooking up about 1,000 machines. An executive of one company estimates that American fitness centers house 8 million to 10 million machines that could generate power.

They don't, though. Like much in energy that's efficient or alternative, from plug-in cars to compact fluorescents, initial capital outlays are steep. Absent a subsidy, or a quantifiable green marketing rationale, the returns on investment don't come quickly, if at all.

Kurt Broadhag, a Los Angeles consultant to health clubs and an advocate of greening them, says it appears the payback period for electricity-generating exercise equipment is about 15 years -- two to three times the machines' life span.

"The only sense it makes is in educating people in taking care of the environment," he said.

An eco-friendly gym that converts sweat into electricity

When Adam Boesel opened the Green Microgym in Portland's artsy, gentrifying Alberta district, he figured on a market among people already educated about the environment.

The former teacher from Seattle looked at Portland, a city that, when cut, bleeds green. It's regularly in top 10 lists for bicycle and mass transit commuting, recycling, composting, energy-efficient buildings and so on.

"When I was researching Portland businesses, they all were talking about sustainability -- all the good ones," he said.

He's gotten a lot of publicity about the technology -- helpful for a business that opened on credit-card financing a few weeks before the economy tanked.

But the machines, he said, are "just the shiny wrapper on a package, which is energy efficiency," something gym members such as Martha Jones take seriously.

"Whoops, I have to turn off the lights," she said at the end of an interview in the gym's basement studio, dashing back inside.

An eco-friendly gym that converts sweat into electricity

Prominent in the gym are signs that explain how to use the individual, adjustable controls for lights and fans. A wall-mounted button connects to a remote device that allows the cable boxes to be shut down, not just put on standby and using 29 watts when the flat-panel TVs are not in use.

Jones is an Intel engineer who likes seeing her workout quantified in watts. But it's not primarily the electricity that attracts her to the Green Microgym.

"It's just really supportive," she said. "If you have somebody who knows you, who knows your name, they will keep you moving. I know for sure I will cheat right and left on my workout without that."

She counts hoofing it to the gym as warm-up and cool-down. "And I do more shopping in Alberta because I'm walking here," she said. "It helps the local businesses."

Boesel sees opportunity in such thinking. Emerging from what he called scary times in the recession, he's franchised a second neighborhood gym in southeast Portland and plans to open a third on his own. With a Seattle partner, he's getting into the manufacturing end, selling machines whose plugs feed electricity from the machine into a gym's distribution system.

Theoretically, in states like Oregon with "net metering" rules, such machines could power the gym itself and feed excess energy into the grid, perhaps generating a utility bill credit. But that level of output would likely be rare, especially in big gyms heavy on lights, heating, cooling and other energy draws. Most often, electricity-generating machines would supplant some of a gym's draw from the grid, a smaller savings.

An eco-friendly gym that converts sweat into electricity

Boesel said he doesn't try to calculate how many kilowatt-hours the Green Microgym produces. "The payback period is irrelevant to me," he said.

But the machines themselves and the potential they represent are "pretty cool," he said. "It's not inevitable that all the machines will make electricity someday. ... It's all going to have to be pushed along. That's what I think I'm doing."

Adam Boesel, owner of the Green Microgym in Alberta has succeeded in doing what numerous gym goers must have thought of while jogging on the treadmill, harness the energy created from workouts and turn it into electricity.

Since the past three years, Boesel has been turning his clients' endless miles on a set of custom-made exercise bikes into clean energy that he also markets. A generator creates electricity, which is then fed back into the building.

Most users normally generate between 50 and 150 watts while working out which is enough energy, if stored to power a mobile phone for a week. The electricity generated is used to help power the lights, fans, stereo and flat screen TVs in the gym.

Boesel, a former elementary teacher from Seattle, claims his electricity bill is now down 60 pc and the gym is 85 pc more efficient than other gyms of the same size.
'The only sense it makes is in educating people in taking care of the environment," the Daily Mail quoted him as saying.

Boesel says that in 2009, the gym had generated 36 pc of its own electricity or 37,000 Kilowatt hours equal to 74,000 pounds of carbon emissions, 81,400 miles not driven and 15 acres of trees planted.

The environment friendly Green Microgym is 3,000 square foot and features solar panels, renewable-source flooring and even recycled toilet paper.

Source: AP & ANI

27 April 2011

I'm Okay, You're Okay - We're All Deviants

Gays like straight porn, straights like gay porn ... web porn study finds we're all deviants

A Billion Wicked Thoughts

A new book, which analyses a billion web searches from around the world, highlights the way in which the internet apparently revolutionised sexual desires, making tastes once regarded as deviant more widespread.

A Billion Wicked Thoughts, by Ogi Ogas and Sai Gaddam, is billed as the first massive research in the field of collective sexual identity since the Kinsey Reports in the mid-20th century, the New York Post reported.

According to the authors' research, straight men enjoy a wider variety of erotica than previously thought, including sites devoted to elderly women and transsexuals.

The findings also indicated that straight men prefer heavy women to thin ones and that straight women enjoy reading about and watching romances between two men.

Gay men were found to enjoy straight porn in large numbers.

"Sex therapists haven't known which interests are common and which are rare," co-author Ogas said.

"We probably now know more than ever before ... we just let the data tell us where to go."

Though the information sent them to Japanese anime sites (exceptionally popular among straight men) or to "cuckold porn" (in which men are forced to watch their wives have sex with someone else), it unearthed an even more surprising finding: 80 per cent of all internet searches are composed of just 20 interests.

According to the search engine Dogpile - which provided the authors with search data from Google, Yahoo! and Bing - the top 10 sex-related searches include variations on youth (13.5 per cent), breasts (4 per cent), cheating wives (3.4 per cent) and cheerleaders (0.1 per cent) among others.

"The research, as far as I can tell, is pretty damn sound," said Dr Stephen Snyder, a sex therapist in private practice in Manhattan for over 20 years.

"They worked very hard to acquire a large data set, and they found some very, very interesting stuff."

"Web porn has changed everything," the book's co-author Gaddam said.

Whereas once men may not have had access to unique sets of sexual triggers, now that they do, and now that we know large numbers of men are searching for them, perhaps male desire is evolving, he said.

World's Last Typewriter Factory 'Shuts down' in Mumbai

Helen Keller Exhibit Preview

London, April 27
: Godrej and Boyce - the last company left in the world that was still manufacturing typewriters - has closed its production plant in Mumbai, India.

The company is now left with its last 200 machines - the majority of which are Arabic language models.

Although typewriters became obsolete years ago in the west, they were still common in India - until recently.

But with consumers switching to computers the demand for the machines started falling drastically in the last ten years.

"We are not getting many orders now," The Daily Mail quoted the company's general manager, Milind Dukle, as telling India's Business Standard newspaper.

"From the early 2000s onwards, computers started dominating. All the manufacturers of office typewriters stopped production, except us.

"Till 2009, we used to produce 10,000 to 12,000 machines a year. But this might be the last chance for typewriter lovers. Now, our primary market is among the defence agencies, courts and government offices," he said.

The firm began production in the 1950s.