Everything under the SunApril 30, 2008 4:45 pm

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Everything under the Sun 4:19 pm

 

Jewelry is a personal ornament, such as a necklace, ring, or bracelet, made from gemstones, precious metals or other materials. In early times, jewelries are worn by royalties such as king, queen, prince, princess, pharaohs, and some elite families in the society. Even the images of greek and roman gods and goddesses wears jewelries. Now, in the early and modern times, almost all of the people in the world have jewelries as long as they can afford to buy one, they won’t hesitate to buy. These items symbolize your social capabilities and social status in the society. These items are so precious that the one who owns it would rather keep it for the rest of his/her life. But because we have our love ones we intend to give these precious items to them and serve as our token of appreciation to them for always being there in times of pains, sorrows and in happy moments.

But now, because of the great demand in the market, the prices of these precious items are above the neck. But worry no more!  I have found the site that will be your source of these precious items at an excellent price and high quality service. It is the My Jewelry Box. My Jewelry Box is an online jewelry store that offers a large collection of ring jewelry, emerald pendant jewelry, earring jewelry, bracelet jewelry and necklace jewelry to choose from. The collection includes diamond stud earrings and tennis bracelets. For the hottest deals check out the clearance center which has fabulous jewelry selections at discount jewelry prices.

If you’re planning to get married and still can’t find the best ring for your bride. Then, My Jewelry Box has a wedding center that contains stunning and sparkling diamond engagement wedding rings and also anniversary bands for anniversaries.  Enjoy shopping at their birthstone jewelry shop where anyone can select the birthstone type they are seeking and then view an entire list of offerings for that type. Need the right birthstone for that special birthday? Well then shop this May their emerald jewelry sale to find the right gift at a reasonable price!

Still can’t find the gift that would show how precious your mother to you? Well worry no more! You can make your mother feel like she is a queen with the Mothers day jewelry. So, what are you waiting for? Don’t miss this great opportunity!

Everything under the Sun 3:37 pm

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EntertainmentApril 29, 2008 2:37 am

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Riya Sen is the grand daughter of Suchitra Sen, a legend in Bengali cinema, and daughter of Moonmoon Sen, a former actress. Before moving to Mumbai, she lived with her parents and sister Raima Sen, also an actress, in Kolkata. Her father Bharat Dev Varma belongs to the illustrious royal family of Tripura. Her paternal grandmother Ila Devi, was the princess of Cooch Behar, whose younger sister Gayatri Devi is the Maharani of Jaipur.
Before entering show business, she studied at Loreto House and Rani Birla College, both in Kolkata, but dropped out of both institutions.She also briefly studied at the National Institute of Fashion Technology. Since her Bollywood debut, she has moved from Kolkata to Juhu in Mumbai.
Many have commented on the strong resemblence between her and her mother, Moonmoon Sen, a sex symbol in her time. However, her sister Raima has a very different image from them both.

Acting
Riya Sen first appeared as a child artiste in the film Vishkanya, where she played the role of the young Pooja Bedi. At the age of 15 she was cast in a major role in Bharathiraaja’s Tamil film Tajmahal. Her Bollywood film debut was supposed to have been in Love You Hamesha, opposite Akshaye Khanna, but the film was stalled and she ultimately made her debut in N. Chandra’s low-budget comedy Style.
Though Style met with success at the box office, most of her other films have not done as well. An exception was Jhankaar Beats, another comedy in which she co-starred with Shayan Munshi, Juhi Chawla, Rahul Bose, Rinke Khanna and Sanjay Suri. Most of her appearances have been item numbers and cameos. Her few leading roles have been in low-budget films
Riya has also appeared in Bengali,Tamil, Telegu, Malayalam and even English films. She was slated to appear in Anjan Dutta’s The Bong Connection, with her sister, but was eventually dropped from the project. She was replaced by Peeya Rai Chaudhary. It would have been the second time the two sisters acted together, after director Ajai Sinha’s The Bachelor. She has also appeared in a Bangladeshi film, titled Money Porey Tomakey. Her most notable South Indian film to date has been director Santhosh Sivan’s Ananthabhadram, which was also the director’s first Malayalam venture.

Modeling
Riya Sen in a featured picture in Dabboo Ratnani’s 2005 CalendarRiya became a popular model when she appeared in numerous music videos for songs by popular singers, including Asha Bhonsle, Falguni Pathak, Jagjit Singh and Sonu Nigam. She was one of many Bollywood stars who appeared in Haath Se Haath Mila an anti-HIV/AIDS music video.
She is also an advertising model. A high point of her modeling career was when she replaced Lisa Ray as the Lakmé Girl. She herself has since been replaced by Yana Gupta. Her other notable assignments include Colgate, Limca, Vatika, Cadbury Dairy Milk Chocolate, and Margarita King.
Riya has appeared on the cover of a number of magazines. In 2004, she was featured partially nude in leading Indian photographer Dabboo Ratnani’s annual calendar, which is a major happening in the Indian glamor industry. In Daboo’s words, “Her mother saw it much later, after the calendar released. She thought it was too sexy, and Riya shouldn’t have done it. But the response to the photograph was superb. Riya was so thrilled that for her next ad campaign, she asked me to light her up like I did in this.” She is the only female face to be featured on the calendar on four consecutive years (2004-2007).

Everything under the Sun 2:36 am

Try these tips to help relax before you hit the sack:
Unplug
Avoid having long conversations on your cell phone before bed: Researchers at Wayne State University in Detroit found that people who were exposed to the slight radiation that emanates from cell phones took longer to fall asleep and spent less time in the deep stages of slumber.
Make Your Bedroom a Haven
Draw the blinds and turn on a fan or a soothing CD of nature noises to block out distracting sounds. Swapping ordinary bedroom bulbs for yellow ones (GE makes a 25-watt version sold at drugstores) can help you feel more tranquil as you’re getting ready to nod off. Consider treating yourself to a cozy new comforter or putting flowers on your nightstand so that being in your bedroom—and sleeping!—becomes something you look forward to.
Say Thanks
Once you’re under the covers, take two minutes to reflect on the things you’re grateful for. Studies show that practicing grateful thinking makes people more optimistic. And going to sleep with happy thoughts will help you sleep more soundly.
Entertainment 2:34 am

 
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Whether or not Jackie Chan and Jet Li oppose or compliment each other in the latest Hollywood flick The Forbidden Kingdom, audiences seem to be lapping up all the action.
 

The massive hype about The Forbidden Kingdom revolves around it being the first movie collaboration between the two biggest Asian screen martial arts exponents, Jet Li and Jackie Chan. With a working title like The J & J Project, and having Yuen Wo-Ping as action director and Peter Pau as director of photography, the movie promised lots of sparks as the two legends go head-to-head for the first time.
In a recent report by LAT-WP, the Lionsgate Films and Weinstein Co release directed by Rob Minkoff that paired Li and Chan for the first time, topped the weekend box office in the United States with an estimated US$20.9mil (RM65.7mil) in ticket sales.
Financed at an estimated US$75mil (RM236mil) by Relativity Media along with Weinstein and Lionsgate, the martial arts adventure skewed male but attracted an age balance. The audience was 58% male and 54% under 25, Lionsgate said.

Chan turned 54 early this month and Li will be 45 this weekend. Together their ages add up to 99 so they really couldn’t wait any longer for their first on-screen pairing. And though they’ve known each other for over 20 years, opportunities to work together had not materialised before.
Their first opportunity came 15 years ago when they both filmed for the same company, Golden Harvest, but plans fell through due to political issues and distribution problems. A second opportunity came seven to eight years ago in Hollywood but, again, things did not work out. This time around, both are glad everything worked out fine.
Prior to the press conference, it was reported that in earlier interviews, both Chan and Li had advised audiences not to expect too much from The Forbidden Kingdom.

IT StuffsApril 28, 2008 5:09 pm

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Sony has announced the release of three new models of camcorders that are smaller, lighter and smarter compared to the former stars of Sony. In the picture you can see the HDR-CX model, Sony’s first flash-based HD camcorder. Sony proclaims this model as “the smallest and lightest AVCHD HD camcorder” available now on the market. It can record up to 30 minutes of high quality 1080i video on its 4 GB Pro Duo Memory Stick. You can buy it for 1200$, which is a definite competitor price for Panasonic and their line of HDC cameras.

The other models Sony released are SR5 and SR7. Both cameras provide with a 2.7 inch LCD screen on which you can admire the videos you are taking. You can also look at a thing from a closer angle from now on, thanks to their 10x optical zoom. The SR5 has memory of 40 GB and can shoot up to five hours of 1080i HD AVCHD video. In this chapter, the SR7 gives it a lesson with its 60 GB of internal memory and the ability of shooting up to 14 hours of 1080i video. You can buy the SR5 model for 1100$ and the SR& for 1400$.

Everything under the Sun 4:52 pm

Google has over two million entries about complementary therapy in cancer care. It is encouraging to see so much interest in this topic. But the volume of material can seem overwhelming, and some of the websites give information which is misleading or incomplete. Enhancing Cancer Care: Complementary Therapy and Support, edited by me (Jennifer Barraclough) and published by Oxford University Press is an evidence-based practical guide to this complex and controversial field, with contributions by experts from around the world. The focus is on supportive care for patients and families, rather than alternative treatments for cancer.

By definition, complementary therapies are not considered part of standard medical practice, but can be used alongside it. They include a varied range of interventions which all share the general purpose of improving physical, mental and spiritual well-being through natural methods tailored to individual needs. They can help restore a sense of choice and control to those feeling disempowered by their illness and the high-tech methods used to treat it. There is now sound research evidence that complementary therapies, when skillfully used, can help to relieve symptoms of cancer and the side-effects of medical treatments, improve quality of life and perhaps even extend survival, as well as being pleasant to receive. But there is still much to learn, for example:

    *

      Which therapies work best for particular symptoms?
    *

      Is it alright to use them together with chemotherapy or radiotherapy?
    *

      What about service delivery and funding, and how far should they be integrated with conventional management?
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      Is there a need for tighter regulation?

Despite all the evidence in their favour, complementary therapies are not a panacea. If misused, they not only waste time and money but may cause emotional and physical harm, for ‘natural’ does not always mean ‘safe’.

Although mainstream healthcare professionals and complementary practitioners have become much more willing to work together in recent years, they sometimes operate on different ‘wavelengths’ which can lead to misunderstanding and controversy. As a former medical doctor who has also trained with the College of Healing and the Bach Centre I can appreciate both viewpoints, and hope this book will help to bridge the gap between them.

Part 1 has chapters about the principles of holistic healthcare, the evaluation of complementary therapies, experience of providing them in oncology units and hospices for adults and children, and the role of family doctors in guiding the choice of therapies and therapists.

Part 2 describes sixteen specific approaches, reviewing the evidence for their benefits, explaining what happens during consultation and treatment, and what adaptations of technique may be required for safe practice in the cancer care setting.

The text is illustrated by real-life stories. One man who had experienced counseling, art therapy, group support, guided imagery and visualization, nutritional advice and spiritual healing at the cancer help centre in Bristol, UK wrote that the approach

    ‘…enabled me to regain control over my health and well-being. It proved to be the catalyst for many changes in my life. There were things that I could do to help my body, mind and spirit and now was the time to do them!’

Copyright 2007 Jennifer Barraclough Bach Foundation Registered Practitioner, Auckland, New Zealand.

Everything under the Sun 4:49 pm

Knowledge of how the brain works is in its relative infancy. It’s is the last frontier of the human body left to explore. While much has been discovered about the brain in a relatively short time, there is still so much more to learn about its 2,000 parts!

What is so tantalizing about the study of the brain is that it leads to a study of behaviour and our behaviour is influenced by the amazing chemistry lab in our brains and in every system of our bodies.

What we have recently discovered is that the brain is adaptable, flexible and has ‘plasticity’. We can re-circuit. We can lay new neurochemical pathways that influence our behaviour and thus the quality of our lives. We have the ability to change the picture!

The brain is actually a gland because ‘it secretes’. It secretes brain hormones called neurotransmitters. It produces and bathes itself in neurotransmitters. In fact neurotransmitters are found throughout the body! Another reason we cannot separate the brain from the body – or the mind from the body.

Here’s how it works: Our brains and bodies are responding, playing and taking action with the help of amazing brain systems that are flooding the body with messages via neurotransmitters. These chemical messages are influencing our behaviour and our choices and how we interact with our world.

Simultaneously, we receive thousands of messages every minute through our senses, affecting the delicate balance of the brain and body. At times it is a delicious dance. At other times, it is a tedious tug of war between reception and reaction, due to sensory perception and motor response, the input/output system.

Certain brain systems are involved in certain behaviours. By systems we can look at the relationship between the three parts of the limbic system or the emotional brain, as it is commonly known:

    *

      the amygdala
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      the hippocampus
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      the cingulate gyrus

While we can identify which structures or systems are responsible for particular functions, we have to keep in mind that the various parts have overlapping functions; while a structure belongs to one system, it can also play a role in another! A wonderful example is the amygdala which is a part of the limbic brain which can also play a function in the lower or reptilian brain. While the amygdala is involved in emotion, it also serves to keep us alive by acting as an alert system (flight or flight response) hence its relationship to the reptilian brain.

What is key to understanding the brain, is that there are constant energy modulations affecting how the brain fires. These energy modulations play a role in our behaviour. For example, specific parts of our brain systems may be over-firing or under-firing, under-energized or over-energized. The brain may be micro managing or macro managing. Or may be in a state of over-activity or under-activity.

Even though some days it may seem as though the boss isn’t home, your brain and body are always giving you 100% even if it doesn’t look like it. However if, your brain is struggling then you will find struggles in your life be it mental, emotional, spiritual and physical.

The cingulate gyrus provides us with an excellent example of how our behavior modulates according to input and old circuitry. Dare I even digress and talk about circuitry for a moment?

We receive information from our senses and that information will either travel to the visual, auditory or sensory areas in the cortex, simultaneously.

It then travels to the parahippocampal gyrus, which is associated with memory, storing this information temporarily and comparing it with old information. The information then travels to the amygdala where we will have a certain feeling about the information.

From there it goes to the prefrontal cortex where we will decide what to do with the information. That information then returns to the amygdala where we may solidify that feeling and experience an emotion. That in turn translates to a response from the hypothalamus that gives a command to the pituitary to release hormones.

And thus the sensory information has traveled through many brain structures and elicited a motor, neurochemical and hormonal response. You have behaved in a certain way depending on what you just took in and what old memories you have about your experience of life!

So if we think of our circuitry, pathways of memory and learned experience, partnered with the idea that there are energy modulations in the brain, we can now look at the cingulate gyrus for examples of symptoms that correspond with energy out of balance in the brain.

We can now possibly look at the cingulate gyrus as the gear shifter. When the cingulate gyrus is in balance, we experience a sense of being relaxed and settled. We have cognitive flexibility, are able to adapt and shift, we are willing to cooperate and are able change our mind about something. We can ‘shift gears’.

When the cingulate gyrus is over-firing we get stuck in ineffective behaviour
in jobs we don’t like, in relationships that don’t work and in states that don’t function. We partake in compulsive behaviour, over planning, oppositional defiance and feel constant anticipatory anxiety.

Conversely, when the cingulate gyrus is under firing, we can’t focus, and we hold on to old hurts for too long. Dysfunctions relating to the cingulate gyrus include headaches, grinding our teeth, feeling too serious and becoming too rigid in our thinking.

The question then becomes, how can we keep our brains in balance? How can we re-circuit old behaviour and thought patterns? What can we do?

Happily, there are many things we can do! Meditation is a great start. Meditation allows us to observe our thoughts and emotions and become aware of the landscape of our minds. Once we have awareness we have the ability to choose how we will respond to our environment. We can modulate our motor responses!

What scientists are also finding after examining the brains of monks and people, who have been meditating for years, is that the grey matter in their brains is actually thicker! It is in the grey matter that the brain integrates input and decides on output. The findings further state that having more grey matter actually makes us smarter!

Alongside meditation, we may be in need of an experienced facilitator that can act as a witness to our discoveries about our behaviours and states, and aid us with seeking options to the questions: What behaviour is not matching your desired state of mind? If you are not following your heart’s desire then what is stopping you? Even by posing the question we are creating the atmosphere in the brain to inspire the answer.

As with specific brain systems that can be over or under firing, neurotransmitters can also be under or over firing creating communication difficulties in the bodymind complex, which is then mirrored in our behaviours and choices. It may be that some part in our brain is busy over firing due to past experiences that are creating strong beliefs that are affecting our choices now.

Each day our senses are nurtured or bombarded with input depending on our circumstances. This input may be in or out of balance. We may be exposed to too much input, or not enough input. Conversely we may have a habit of expending too much output or not being able to put out.

All these modulations in our brains and bodies are affecting our behaviour and choices. But what is affecting our brain and body chemistry? The food we eat, the air we breath, the water we drink, the exercise we partake in, the spiritual practices we believe in, the thoughts we focus on, the life experiences we have, the perspectives we cultivate and the environment we live in, to name just a few of the myriad scenarios that are influencing our beautiful brain/body chemistries.

As soon as we take something in with our senses, as soon as we are made to think about something, as soon as we learn something new, as soon as we pose a question or imagine a new perspective, our brains are reacting neurochemically and laying down the pathways in our brain that creates the potential for something to shift in our lives.

Copyright 2007 Rita Bozi is a Calgary based Certified BodyTalk Practitioner with a private practice. For further information please go to www.brillianthealingsystems.com. This article was inspired by a recent course she took on Neuroanatomy and it’s Applications with Carol Anne Bickerstaff of Kinetic Education Network of Vancouver.

Everything under the Sun 4:42 pm

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