Beautiful faces
Beautiful voices
Heart touching songs
Loving hearts
Clever minds
So many wonderful attributes
Bless the world with them
Be a good example
Don't disgrace our dear God
What do you think
When all the caring angels are watching
When God gives so much love to humanity
When you act like His archenemy
It hurts all of us
All Posts (12248)
David is a correct user. John Almann is not a pedophile. Deca is not a cop.
My friend McCormick is a cop. He is a private investigator as Jesse Beltran and Melinda Kidder.
You can go to facebook or in another forum. The problem is you and not David or Deca or John.
Flaming, cyberbullying, misinformation, libel by a newspaper (Article 1 §7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution) , trolling. You are in our home and our community. You're not a Targeted individual.
Where do you live? In the USA or Canada? Where are you? The accusation of pedophilia is very grave. Want to go to tribunal? I do not joke. I call McCormick or the police post? Are you sadic?
Please, miss, please may I watch my son's school Christmas play?
@ @ Deca: fake victim site "anthony forwood"
@ anthony forwood:
Misleading and discussion with many attacks. Are you a debunker?
You do not seek the truth. You mix truth, wickedness and falsehood.
http://exposinginfragard.blogspot.it/2014/08/whos-perping-who-exposing-kathleen.html
@ Scree-shot of Deborah Dupré is a fake. Deborah and not Debra. You've got the name wrong intentionally. https://plus.google.com/106164425314333707552/posts
Where do you live? In the USA or Canada?
Peacepink Collins
Google plus
Scree-shot of Deborah Dupré is a fake. Deborah and not Debra. You've got the name wrong intentionally.
If you are a British actor, I am a judge and you are judged. I call McCormick or ...
@ The Mounted Police Post - Vancouver - phone number, website, address & opening hours - BC http://vancouver.ca/police/
Your crimes:
Flaming,
cyberbullying,
misinformation,
debunking,
libel by a newspaper (Article 1 §7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution),
trolling.
A study of the psychology of 2014 identifies the user as a troll harassing, busybody, snoop and especially sadistic.
The trolls are persons who are part of online social contexts in order to annoy, harass or mislead threads, may have narcissistic personalities, psychopathic, sadistic, or even suffer from personality disorders worse. The research scientists at the University of Manitoba, in Canada, the most common trait would be the sadistic behavior. Scientists have developed a test to identify the trolls and found that they show what is' known as the "DarkTetrad" personality. The trolling - explained ErinBuckels, one of the authors of the study - shows correlations with sadism, personality psychopathic and Machiavellian behavior. Trolls and sadistic experience a rewarding satisfaction suffer when others. The sadist wants to just have fun, and internet becomes his "playground".
This is a community of Targeted individuals. The Targeted Individuals are people who suffer. This is not a community that suits you. My suggestion is to go to a community of sadomasochistic (BDSM).
Are you a man or are you a donkey sadic?
To see! They suffer and they are not fake! Shame on you!
To see!
A multi-million law suite was filed in the IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ALABAMA on behalf Dr. David M. Carnrike, president of Agape College of Mobile and the Staff of Life Church Conference also based in Mobile Alabama. Carnrike is also Bishop of the United Gospel Holiness Churches of America.
The law named as defendants the Titusville Herald (Titusville, PA) and staff writer Joshua Sterling.
In a press conference after the filing, Carnrike stated, “Newspapers and their workers cannot just print falsehoods to defame the name of good people.”
“The paper has also to answer upcoming law suites for libel that will be filed by lawyers representing Agape College Inc., Mobile, AL: Staff of Life Church Conference, INC of Mobile, and the International Association of Ministers and Christian Ministries - by the time that they loose the law suites we will own the newspaper,” Carnrike added
The suite itself states:
The right of a free press is guaranteed in the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights and in Article 1 §7 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. However, this does not give the Titusville Herald and Mr. Joshua Sterling the right to publish false and misleading information to purposely defame my reputation.. False and defamatory statements were written and caused to be published which for the sole and only primary purpose of harming my reputation as a minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and has caused and exposed (and because it is on the internet - is still causing) me public hatred, contempt and ridicule. It did in fact caused such harm to my reputation that I could not function as a minister of the Lord Jesus Christ in Northwestern Pennsylvania - it is also harming me because the libelous article is on the internet so that I cannot function without contempt my ministry of the Lord Jesus Christ.
The libelous newspaper article was published in the Titusville Herald, located in Titusville, Pennsylvania and was written by Joshua Sterling on Sept 5, 2013. Even
the Headline which read “Leader of School gone, signs point to fraud,” was meant to destroy my reputation - No one other than I - was mocked even though my trip was temporary and I was not “GONE.” I have a right to go anywhere in the United States and I do not have to answer to that newspaper where I travel or how long that I can stay. Anyway there were at least a dozen persons who where associated with the work - and the newspaper made it a point to libel my good name only and me only.
In that article Sterling and the newspaper publish false and/or misleading information concerning me and the ministries that I represented - Since all the information on my ministries can be had simply by going to the Secretary of State Alabama web site and the IRS web site - any person must conclude that the misleading and false information was deliberately published for the sole purpose of destroying my efforts of starting a ministry in Crawford County and surrounding areas of Northwestern Pennsylvania.
I am asking the court to order that the Titusville Herald to take the libelous article off the internet immediately. I am also requesting that the newspaper correct the misleading and lies printed in that article.
If the newspaper does not take down the article immediately - I am asking the court to impose $5,000 a day punitive damage for each day that it has been on the internet and also award punitive damages of $1,000,000 to me from each defendant. If the paper does the above there is no need of punitive damages - that is not my purpose of filing this suite.
Hi! Im the Real DoT, and the Only DoT. However, there is an enemy agent here on peacepink that is systematically calling other members me, then he mercilessly bashes those members! There are over 20 members that have been treated thix way! Several have actually left our site completely because of the merciless bashing./p>
If you are one of those innocent bystanders being drug into this insanity, please share here! There are some things we apperantly share in common. And, there is strength in numbers. Together we can stop the abuse by this enemy agent, regardless of what we call ourselves.
Thanks! The Real DoT
http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sindrome_di_Stoccolma
Le continue torture tecnologiche che vengono inflitte tutti i giorni ai Target Individual,in futuro possono trasformarsi in una sindrome di Stoccolma.Voi cosa ne pensate?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome
The continuos technological torture are inflicted everyday to Target Individual,in the future can become in a Stockhol syndrome.What do you think?
Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley have invented a brain decoder device that’s able to work out what you’re thinking based on neuron activity inside the brain — essentially, the experimental system means your private inner thoughts are no longer so private. Researchers invited test subjects to read a passage of text out loud and then again in their mind, monitoring brain activity each time to look for linked patterns.
This is about more than spying on your secret thoughts, though — it could be an invaluable method of communication for people who have lost the ability to speak, for whatever reason. Further down the line we could find ourselves controlling smartphones, computers and other devices using nothing but the power of our minds.
Related: Brains are being hacked to fight mental illness, mine marketing-friendly data
“If you’re reading text in a newspaper or a book, you hear a voice in your own head,” the University’s Brian Pasley told New Scientist. “We’re trying to decode the brain activity related to that voice to create a medical prosthesis that can allow someone who is paralysed or locked in to speak.” Pasley and his team based their work around the hypothesis that hearing words in our head causes the same kind of brain activity as hearing them spoken.
The hardware required for this sophisticated decoding is still at the developmental stage and isn’t accurate enough to be used outside of the lab yet, but the signs are promising. “It’s preliminary data, and we’re still working on making it better,” says Pasley. The researchers are also looking into the effects that hearing music has on the brain.
At the moment, the technology only works if the subject has been carefully monitored for some time, and the algorithms underpinning the system can vary from person to person. Still, when an all-encompassing instant mind reading device does appear, remember that you heard it here first.
Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/scientists-develop-brain-decoder-can-hear-inner-thoughts/#ixzz3ZJIwjKpa
Follow us: @digitaltrends on Twitter | digitaltrendsftw on Facebook
Laughter: The Best Medicine
Laughter, it's said, is the best medicine. And there's lots of evidence that laughter does lots of good things for us.
It reduces pain and allows us to tolerate discomfort.
It reduces blood sugar levels, increasing glucose tolerance in diabetics and nondiabetics alike.
It improves your job performance, especially if your work depends on creativity and solving complex problems. Its role in intimate relationships is vastly underestimated and it really is the glue of good marriages. It synchronizes the brains of speaker and listener so that they are emotionally attuned.
Laughter establishes -- or restores -- a positive emotional climate and a sense of connection between two people, In fact, some researchers believe that the major function of laughter is to bring people together. And all the health benefits of laughter may simply result from the social support that laughter stimulates.
Now comes hard new evidence that laughter helps your blood vessels function better. It acts on the inner lining of blood vessels, called the endothelium, causing vessels to relax and expand, increasing blood flow. In other words, it's good for your heart and brain, two organs that require the steady flow of oxygen carried in the blood.
At this year's meeting of the American College of Cardiology, Michael Miller, M.D., of the University of Maryland reported that in a study of 20 healthy people, provoking laughter did as much good for their arteries as aerobic activity. He doesn't recommend that you laugh and not exercise. But he does advise that you try to laugh on a regular basis. The endothelium, he explains, regulates blood flow and adjusts the propensity of blood to coagulate and clot. In addition, it secretes assorted chemicals in response to wounds, infection or irritation. It also plays an important role in the development of cardiovascular disease.
"The endothelium is the first line in the development of atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries," said Dr. Miller. "So given the results of our study, it is conceivable that laughing may be important to maintain a healthy endothelium. And reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease."
At the very least, he adds, "laughter offsets the impact of mental stress, which is harmful to the endothelium."
The researcher can't say for sure exactly how laughter delivers its heart benefit. It could come from the vigorous movement of the diaphragm muscles as you chuckle or guffaw. Alternatively, or additionally, laughter might trigger the release in the brain of suchhormones as endorphins that have an effect on arteries.
It's also possible that laughter boosts levels of nitric oxide in artery walls. Nitric oxide is known to play a role in the dilation of the endothelium. "Perhaps mental stress leads to a breakdown in nitric oxide or inhibits a stimulus to produce nitric oxide that results in vasoconstriction."
Dr. Miller offers a simple prescription that won't bankrupt you and could save your life. "Thirty minutes of exercise three times a week, and 15 minutes of laughter on a daily basis is probably good for the vascular system," he says.
The 120-Year-Old Mind-Reading Machine
Once recorded sound became reality, people believed all kinds of things were possible.

In the 1890s, when technologies like telephones and automobiles and lightbulbs were still strange and wonderful and new, inventors promised another remarkable device would soon be ubiquitous: the mind-reading machine.
Inspired by the phonoautograph—a new device that showed what sound waves looked like on paper—the scientist Julius Emmner invented a machine that he said could record thoughts. It was simple, really. If invisible sound vibrated in a ways that could be measured, Emmner figured, why wouldn't unseen thoughts do the same?
"Sound is addressed to the ear," he told The Times of Washington, D.C., in August 1895, "yet it may be made visible, a proof of which fact is found in the phono-autograph, in which the vibrations of sound are made distinctly visible." Reporters took him at his word. From that same article: "Mr. Emmner is carefully guarding his secret, but he speaks so enthusiastically of his success that he must have obtained the most satisfactory results so far from his investigations."
Reports of thought-reading machines were common in those days. "Secrets will cease to be hidden in the day when the perfected psychometer comes into general use," the Seattle Star declared in a 1908 article about Columbia University professor Frederick Peterson's lie-detector-esque "mind-reading machine."
Seattle Star, 1908 (Library of Congress)Peterson's device was made out of a mirror, a lamp, a horizontal glass scale, and a galvanometer—a tool to measure electric current. It was designed to shine light on a person whose hands would be resting on copper-plate electrodes. That person would be instructed to say any words that came to mind, and if the beam of light shining on him moved more than 6 to 8 centimeters in response, Peterson interpreted it as a "complex" emotion.
Okaaay. So it doesn't exactly sound like the "instrument of precision" the Starclaimed it to be, but coverage of Peterson's apparatus clearly highlights the era's cultural obsession with mind-reading as the next big thing in technology. By 1910, a British psychologist claimed that thoughts vibrated enough to be discernible to those "constantly attuned" to the phenomenon. Others in academia focused on the visible form a thought might take—what colors could thoughts be? And what would those different colors mean? In 1938, The New York Times called the idea of a thought-reading machine "delightfully plausible."
Omaha Daily Bee, 1901 (Library of Congress)Decades of neuroscience research later, most of these mind-reading designs sound absurd. But you can't blame people for wanting to believe. The best real-life technology begins with marvelous, outlandish ideas. Consider the technological advances that adults of the late 1800s had just lived through: Humans could now be captured on camera (1838), there were devices that could snatch sound from the air and record it (1860), people in different houses could have real-time voice conversations by talking into machines (1876), and electric lights had just been installed in the White House (1891)!
The concept of recorded sound was still so new in the 1890s that it seemed reasonable—or at least the tiniest bit possible—to think recorded sound might be a precursor to recorded thought. Sounds had always been something you heard once, while they happened, and never again.
And if you haven't tried recording someone's thoughts, how do you know you can't do it? In the same way that if you haven't seen the surface of the moon, why shouldn't you be open to the idea of moon elephants roaming on it? When a new telescope was debuted in Paris in 1899, The Times (of Richmond, Virginia) called it the "telescope by which animals as large as an elephant can be plainly seen upon the moon" and promised it would "show us the large animals upon the moon and their movements."
The Times (Richmond, Va.), 1899 (Library of Congress)It was an age of mind-reading machines, and moon elephants, and horse-powered hippocycles (to be fair, the hippocycle inventor called his design, below, more theoretical than practical):
San Francisco Call, 1896 (Library of Congress)And although video calls didn't become a reality in 1912, as the Chicago Day Book predicted ...
Day Book, 1912 (Library of Congress)... they did become a reality. Timeless ideas, it turns out, often just have to wait for technology to catch up with them. Other ideas eventually recede.
The promise of a mind-reading machine was, in its day, a sort of shorthand for what might be technologically possible. And a willingness to believe—or at least to explore—such an idea reflects the kind of optimism that's still essential to invention. The culture of what could be is part of how we organize all kinds of ideas about the world. It's in that same spirit today that we talk about the promises of stem cell research and gene therapies, advances in cryogenics and artificial intelligence, the search for life on other planets, etc.
And yet there's an irresistible construct about technology of the past, a way of thinking that obsesses over what we got wrong. It's that part of you that says: Of course we don't have mind-reading devices. And this is kind of funny because we tend to swing to the opposite extreme when considering possibilities for the future. A machine that does simple math isn't just a useful new tool but something that "will supplant brains."
Day Book, 1915 (Library of Congress)But that "mechanical brain" didn't supplant the human brain any more than Julius Emmner's secret machine read minds. World-changing technology has never been about devices or machines, but rather people's interactions with them. Only by pushing the boundaries of what's possible can we discover what's real.
Scientists, by the way, are still designing mind-reading experiments.
Social support: Tap this tool to beat stress
Having close friends and family has far-reaching benefits for your health. Here's how to build and maintain these essential relationships.
By Mayo Clinic StaffA strong social support network can be critical to help you through the stress of tough times, whether you've had a bad day at work or a year filled with loss or chronic illness. Since your supportive family, friends and co-workers are such an important part of your life, it's never too soon to cultivate these important relationships.
What is a social support network?
A social support network is made up of friends, family and peers. A social support network is different from a support group, which is generally a structured meeting run by a mental health professional.
Although both support groups and support networks can play an important role in times of stress, a social support network is something you can develop when you're not under stress. It provides the comfort of knowing that your friends are there for you if you need them.
You don't need to formalize your support network with regular meetings or an official leader. A coffee break with a friend at work, a quick chat with a neighbor, a phone call to your sibling or even a visit to church are all ways to develop and foster lasting relationships with the people close to you.
Don't wait for someone else to make the first move. If you meet someone you think might become a good friend, invite him or her to join you for coffee or another casual activity.
Benefits of a social support network
Several studies have demonstrated that having a network of supportive relationships contributes to psychological well-being. When you have a social support network, you benefit in the following ways:
- Sense of belonging. Spending time with people helps ward off loneliness. Whether it's other new parents, dog lovers, fishing buddies or siblings, just knowing you're not alone can go a long way toward coping with stress.
- Increased sense of self-worth. Having people who call you a friend reinforces the idea that you're a good person to be around.
- Feeling of security. Your social network gives you access to information, advice, guidance and other types of assistance should you need them. It's comforting to know that you have people you can turn to in a time of need.
Cultivating your social support network
If you want to improve your mental health and your ability to combat stress, surround yourself with at least a few good friends and confidants. Here are some ideas for building your social network:
- Volunteer. Pick a cause that's important to you and get involved. You're sure to meet others who share similar interests and values.
- Join a gym. Incorporating physical fitness into your day is an important part of a healthy lifestyle. You can make friends while you exercise too. Look at gyms in your area or check the local community center. Or, start a walking group at work or at your church.
- Go back to school. A local college or community education course puts you in contact with others who share similar hobbies or pursuits.
- Look online. The newest generation of social networking sites can help you stay connected with friends and family. Many good sites exist for people going through stressful times, such as chronic illness, loss of a loved one, new baby, divorce and other life changes. Be sure to stick to reputable sites, and be cautious about arranging in-person meetings.
Give and take: The foundation of social networks
A successful relationship is a two-way street. The better a friend you are, the better your friends will be. Here are some suggestions for nurturing your relationships:
- Stay in touch. Answering phone calls, returning emails and reciprocating invitations let people know you care.
- Don't compete. Be happy instead of jealous when your friends succeed, and they'll celebrate your accomplishments in return.
- Be a good listener. Listen when your friends are speaking. Find out what's important to your friends. You might find you have even more in common than you think.
Don't overdo it. In your zeal to extend your social network, be careful not to overwhelm friends and family with phone calls and emails. Save those high-demand times for when you really need them.
And while sharing is important, be wary of "oversharing" information that's personal or sensitive, especially with new or casual acquaintances and on social networking sites.
- Appreciate your friends and family. Take time to say thank you and express how important they are to you. Be there for them when they need support.
The bottom line
Remember that the goal of building your social support network is to reduce your stress level, not add to it. Watch for situations that seem to drain your energy. For example, avoid spending too much time with someone who is constantly negative and critical. Similarly, steer clear of people involved in unhealthy behaviors, such as alcohol or substance abuse, especially if you've struggled with addictions.
Taking the time to build a social support network is a wise investment not only in your mental well-being but also in your physical health and longevity. Research shows that those who enjoy high levels of social support stay healthier and live longer. So don't wait.
Start making more friends or improving the relationships you already have. Whether you're the one getting the support or the one doling out the encouragement, you'll reap a plethora of rewards.
In this article
What are the causes of mental illness? Although the exact cause of most mental illnesses is not known, it is becoming clear through research that many of these conditions are caused by a combination of biological, psychological, and environmental factors.
What Biological Factors Are Involved in Mental Illness?Some mental illnesses have been linked to abnormal functioning of nerve cell circuits or pathways that connect particular brain regions. Nerve cells within these brain circuits communicate through chemicals called neurotransmitters. "Tweaking" these chemicals -- through medicines, psychotherapy or other medical procedures -- can helpbrain circuits run more efficiently. In addition, defects in or injury to certain areas of the brain have also been linked to some mental conditions.
Other biological factors that may be involved in the development of mental illness include:
- Genetics (heredity): Mental illnesses sometimes run in families, suggesting that people who have a family member with a mental illness may be somewhat more likely to develop one themselves. Susceptibility is passed on in families through genes. Experts believe many mental illnesses are linked to abnormalities in many genes rather than just one or a few and that how these genes interact with the environment is unique for every person (even identical twins). That is why a person inherits a susceptibility to a mental illness and doesn't necessarily develop the illness. Mental illness itself occurs from the interaction of multiple genes and other factors -- such asstress, abuse, or a traumatic event -- which can influence, or trigger, an illness in a person who has an inherited susceptibility to it.
- Infections: Certain infections have been linked to brain damage and the development of mental illness or the worsening of its symptoms. For example, a condition known as pediatric autoimmune neuropsychiatric disorder (PANDA) associated with theStreptococcus bacteria has been linked to the development ofobsessive-compulsive disorder and other mental illnesses in children.
- Brain defects or injury: Defects in or injury to certain areas of the brain have also been linked to some mental illnesses.
- Prenatal damage: Some evidence suggests that a disruption of early fetal brain development or trauma that occurs at the time of birth -- for example, loss of oxygen to the brain -- may be a factor in the development of certain conditions, such as autism.
- Substance abuse : Long-term substance abuse, in particular, has been linked to anxiety, depression, and paranoia.
- Other factors: Poor nutrition and exposure to toxins, such as lead, may play a role in the development of mental illnesses.
Causes of Mental Illness
In this article
What Psychological Factors Contribute to Mental Illness?
Psychological factors that may contribute to mental illness include:
- Severe psychological trauma suffered as a child, such as emotional, physical, or sexual abuse
- An important early loss, such as the loss of a parent
- Neglect
- Poor ability to relate to others
What Environmental Factors Contribute to Mental Illness?
Certain stressors can trigger an illness in a person who is susceptible to mental illness. These stressors include:
- Death or divorce
- A dysfunctional family life
- Feelings of inadequacy, low self-esteem, anxiety, anger, or loneliness
- Changing jobs or schools
- Social or cultural expectations (For example, a society that associates beauty with thinness can be a factor in the development of eating disorders.)
- Substance abuse by the person or the person's parents
Smiling is a great way to make yourself stand out while helping your body to function better. Smile to improve your health, your stress level, and your attractiveness. Smiling is just one way to look younger, and a fun way to live longer. Read about the others and try as many as you can.
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1. Smiling Makes Us Attractive
We are drawn to people who smile. There is an attraction factor. We want to know a smiling person and figure out what is so good. Frowns, scowls and grimaces all push people away -- but a smile draws them in (avoid these smile aging habits to keep your smile looking great).
2. Smiling Relieves Stress
Stress can really show up in our faces. Smiling helps to prevent us from looking tired, worn down, and overwhelmed. Believe it or not, smiling can reduce stress smiling can reduce stress even if you don't feel like smiling or know you're smiling! When you are stressed, take time to put on a smile. The stress should be reduced and you'll be better able to take action.
3. Smiling Changes Our Mood
Next time you are feeling down, try putting on a smile. There's a good chance you mood will change for the better. Smiling can trick the body into helping you change your mood.4. Smiling Is Contagious
When someone is smiling they lighten up the room, change the moods of others, and make things happier. A smiling person brings happiness with them. Smile lots and you will draw people to you.5. Smiling Boosts Your Immune System
Smiling helps the immune system to work better. When you smile, immune function improves possibly because you are more relaxed. Prevent the flu and colds by smiling.
7. Smiling Releases Endorphins, Natural Pain Killers and Serotonin
Studies have shown that smiling releases endorphins, natural pain killers, and serotonin. Together these three make us feel good. Smiling is a natural drug.8. Smiling Lifts the Face and Makes You Look Younger
The muscles we use to smile lift the face, making a person appear younger. Don't go for a face lift, just try smiling your way through the day -- you'll look younger and feel better.9. Smiling Makes You Seem Successful
Smiling people appear more confident, are more likely to be promoted, and more likely to be approached. Put on a smile at meetings and appointments and people will react to you differently.10. Smiling Helps You Stay Positive
Try this test: Smile. Now try to think of something negative without losing the smile. It's hard. When we smile our body is sending the rest of us a message that "Life is Good!" Stay away from depression, stress and worry by smiling.
How to Deal With Torture
Whilst many of us are unaware of its continued existence in the twenty first century, the fact remains that torture is still a commonly used interrogating method in many countries. Therefore, torture is serious business and should be regarded by everyone as so. On this page you will find a step by step instruction for enduring torture.
- 1Remain calm. Panicking will do you no good. You will need to stay focused and remain in control. The more you manage to achieve this, the better.
- You could try meditating unless your torturer is watching you.
- 2Assess the situation. Why are you being tortured? The reason for the whole operation can be vital to your endurance, since it will help you think of the appropriate responses to the torturer's questions. If possible, take a look at the equipment your torturer has in the room. This will help you to prepare for the horrendous pain that might be inflicted to you.
- 3Say what they want to hear. If you want the torture to end quite quickly, you should say the things the torturer wants to hear. However, be aware of the consequences this might have. Your information could be too important, for example when it puts the lives of others in danger.
- 4Scream. There's always the possibility that your torturer is not a careful person and has left a window open. In this case, a stranger that was accidentally passing by could hear your cry for help!
- 5Find help. If you survived the torturing, you should immediately find a professional that can help you with your imminent post-traumatic stress syndrome. This one can be quite a bugger.
the devil has found a way to posess the believing christian mind, he injects the demon trough RFID chip so the christian is struggling 24 hours against him in mind. He cannot posses soul or body so he goes right trough the mans thoughts. But God gives me relief.
Tumore scambiato per depressione a Gallipoli muore donna di 66 anni. CCDU onlus commentava su fb: "Questo è gravissimo. La pseudocultura psichiatrica ha talmente contaminato la medicina in profondità che molti medici hanno ormai la testa infarcita di psicoscemenze e, di fronte alla prima difficoltà diagnostica, usano la scappatoia della malattia mentale. Il problema è assai più diffuso di quanto non si creda, sebbene (per fortuna) le conseguenze non siano sempre fatali come in questo caso: un’endocrinologa ci riferiva non molto tempo fa di sempre più pazienti affetti da gravi disturbi ormonali, precedentemente (mal)trattati per anni con antidepressivi!"
31 marzo 2015 - Tumore scambiato per depressione a Gallipoli muore donna di 66 anni. La donna è deceduta per le complicanze dovute alla malattia all’intestino. I figli della donna hanno presentato un esposto in procura
LECCE - Irene Lucia Vergari, pensionata 66enne di Nardò, è morta il 19 marzo scorso per le complicanze di un tumore all’intestino i cui sintomi sarebbero stati scambiati per quelli della depressione. Ieri, i figli della donna, vedova dallo scorso anno, attraverso gli avvocati Salvatore De Mitri e Ilenia Antonaci, hanno presentato un esposto in Procura chiedendo che sia fatta luce sul presunto caso di malasanità. Come è stato spiegato dai legali, in possesso dei referti medici rilasciati nei mesi scorsi in alcuni ospedali salentini, la presenza del tumore, scoperto solo nei giorni scorsi, non sarebbe mai stata diagnosticata, malgrado i sintomi di vomito e il forte dolore accusato dalla paziente. Sintomi che i medici avrebbero addebitato ad uno stato ansioso depressivo della donna, per questo sottoposta a terapia a base di ansiolitici e antidolorifici. La signora Vergari iniziò a sentirsi male nell’agosto del 2014, quando si rivolse al medico di famiglia che le avrebbe prescritto farmaci per curare l’ansia addebitando dolori e vomito alla depressione.
La diagnosi
Nel mese di ottobre la donna fu visitata all’ospedale di Gallipoli da dove sarebbe stata dimessa con la diagnosi di “dolore addominale generalizzato”. In seguito la paziente si è sottoposta anche a un’ecografia in uno studio radiologico privato, ma l’esame avrebbe evidenziato “meteorismo colico”, ossia un disturbo gastrointestinale e nulla di più specifico. Nel frattempo andava avanti la cura con ansiolitici. Il 10 marzo, invece, un’ulteriore diagnosi eseguita nell’ospedale di Galatina parlava di “gastrite cronica lieve”, secondo quanto riferisconi i famigliari della donna. La situazione clinica della paziente, però, si è aggravata negli ultimi giorni. Il 18 marzo, in una struttura privata, le è stato diagnosticato un disturbo di tipo “somatiforme”, derivante, cioè, da cause psichiche. Nel pomeriggio dello stesso giorno, però, la situazione è precipitata e alla donna, sottoposta a nuove indagine strumentali, fu diagnosticato un cancro all’intestino nell’ospedale di Galatina. Sottoposta ad un delicato intervento chirurgico, la signora Vergari “è morta per cause non ancora del tutto chiare”, spiegano gli avvocati che hanno annunciato la nomina di un consulente di parte e la richiesta di sequestro della cartella clinica dell’ospedale di Galatina. Gli stessi legali fanno, inoltre, sapere che la paziente, durante questi mesi, non sarebbe mai stata sottoposta ad una Tac.
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