6252. arkymalarky - 8/26/2004 7:40:15 AM My goodness. I hope it stays ok.
Did you say in the Cafe the other day that you got stung? Bob killed about ten wasps up here this afternoon. I don't know where they're coming in or what we're going to do, besides set of bug bombs. He thinks they're coming in through the recessed lights. Diva loves to kill them and eat them when we swat them, and so far we haven't been stung. 6253. judithathome - 8/26/2004 7:47:31 AM Yes, I was stung 3 times by some really tiny little bug which I couldn't see because it was still dark outside where I was. It was painful as hell and I got rather dizzy. After the Benedryl, though, I didn't remember anything for hours. ha! 6254. arkymalarky - 8/26/2004 7:49:36 AM That's creepy (not the benedryl, the bug). Wonder what it was. 6255. judithathome - 8/26/2004 7:59:19 AM I don't know but he packed a powerful punch. It flet like fire was under my skin until the pill kicked in...yur friend who has all the allergies would've freaked!
How is she, by the way? 6256. arkymalarky - 8/26/2004 8:07:05 AM I guess she's ok. I rarely talk to her, though Bob keeps in regular touch with her husband and we talk on the phone. Last I talked to him (last week some time) she was doing ok. 6257. Bill Russell - 8/30/2004 12:32:49 AM Health professsionals used to tell us to eat only one or two eggs a week because of the cholesterol. Now they're saying it's OK to eat one egg a day.
Next year, perhaps, they will tell us about the new egg diet:
Eat eggs for every meal, and eat all you want. They are high in protein and contain everything an animal needs for good health.
LMBO 6258. judithathome - 9/1/2004 11:34:04 PM Flame Retardants Found In Foods
A wide variety of common food in American supermarkets is contaminated with tiny doses of toxic artificial chemical flame retardants, according to a study released Wednesday.
Samples of fish, pork, duck, turkey, cheese, butter, milk, chicken, ice cream and eggs from three Dallas grocery stores were tainted with polybrominated diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs, according to an article in the journal Environmental Science & Technology. Researchers said those stores should be typical of most American supermarkets.
Because this is a relatively new health concern, no one has studied yet whether PBDEs are harmful to humans and, if so, at what levels, the Environmental Protection Agency's top toxicologist said. However, in animal tests they've harmed the nervous system and altered hormonal function and the development of reproductive organs.
6259. thoughtful - 9/2/2004 12:04:34 AM That's a relief! I'm off to make my 5-alarm chili!
Bill R, haven't you heard? Eggs are real food, straight from the chicken and are good for you. I eat 2 eggs a day. 6260. Bill Russell - 9/3/2004 12:10:26 AM ' I eat 2 eggs a day. '
My guess is:
You don't need vitamin and mineral supplements.
And you likely don't need doctors either. 6261. Bill Russell - 9/4/2004 10:27:40 PM Battle of the sexes: Toilet seat up? Toilet seat down?
When a toilet is flushed the swirling water "atomizes" and sends out a very fine mist/spray of bacterally laden moisture.
Apparently this "bacteria laden moisture" arises from the toilet bowl, then settles upon everything, and anything, that is in your bathroom....your toothbrush, face-cloth, towels, etc. etc.
The best thing to do with any and every toilet seat (that you have chance to employ) is to close the lid completely prior to flushing, hence eliminating that debate 'tween males and females.
So away we go, can we flush out further comments?
6262. arkymalarky - 9/5/2004 12:22:44 AM Solves it for me. I'll have to try to remember that. 6263. Bill Russell - 9/5/2004 2:15:52 AM The World would be a better place and husbands and wives can stop fighting about it. 6264. Bill Russell - 9/5/2004 2:15:57 AM The World would be a better place and husbands and wives can stop fighting about it. 6265. Bill Russell - 9/5/2004 4:05:53 PM A Hospital is no place to be sick.
Samuel Goldwyn (1882 - 1974) 6266. Bill Russell - 9/7/2004 5:04:31 PM http://chetday.com/type2diabetes.htm
Cinnamon Helps Stop Type 2 Diabetes
By Mike Hodge - The AntiWrinkle Shop
American scientists have claimed that a teaspoon of cinnamon a day may help prevent the onset of diabetes.
The common spice could help millions of sufferers of Type II, non-insulin dependent diabetes. This condition usually develops in middle-age and prematurely kills 100 million people around the world every year.
Type II diabetes causes cells to lose their ability to respond to insulin, the hormone that tells the body to remove excess glucose in the bloodstream. If glucose builds up in the blood, tiredness, weight-loss and blurred vision are some of the resulting symptoms. In extreme cases this can lead to blindness, heart disease and premature death.
Data from the Agricultural Research Unit in Maryland was first published in the New Scientist in August 2000. The researchers found that cinnamon rekindled the ability of fat cells in diabetics to respond to insulin and greatly increased glucose removal. It is believed that a substance in cinnamon called MHCP is the main reason for its beneficial results.
When mice were given MHCP, their glucose levels fell dramatically and tests on humans have begun this year. The researchers are so confident that cinnamon will have the same dramatic effect of reducing insulin tolerance in humans they recommend that type II diabetics should take a quarter to one full teaspoon of cinnamon per day.
Many Type II diabetics have already found a new feeling of well-being and improvement in health by using this simple cinnamon supplementation in their diet.
Continued..
6267. thoughtful - 9/7/2004 10:08:31 PM re that toilet bowl thing, the myth busters busted that myth. bathroom bacteria seems to make its way to toothbrushes wherever they are, even those that haven't been anywhere near a bathroom.
However, for the peace of all everywhere, I highly recommend the no-slam toilet seat that toto makes. I've not had my sleep interrupted by the slamming toilet seat ever since we got it. A gift straight from heaven! 6268. arkymalarky - 9/8/2004 6:44:42 AM Bill,
My husband's a Type II diabetic and we heard about cinnamon early (I think Robert posted an article on it) but not how much. He started taking it anyway and changed his whole diet and lifestyle and he's lost 60 pounds and hasn't had a high blood sugar reading in months. 6269. Bill Russell - 9/8/2004 8:07:29 AM "he's lost 60 pounds and hasn't had a high blood sugar reading in months."
Thanks for the testamonial, Arky. I'm just happy to know it works for some people anyway.
I don't have diabetes and neither does my wife, but it is a huge problem and a growing problem.
6270. Bill Russell - 9/8/2004 3:26:40 PM My Son is a doctor of internal medicine in Maryland. He has develped a new treatment for diabetes, using a combination of three drugs, but if cinnamon works, it may not be necessary. It is better to treat people that way rather than with prescription drugs, imho.
I would try cinnamon first, I think. 6271. arkymalarky - 9/9/2004 7:14:04 AM He's in a much needed area of medicine. Diabetes can be devastating. I have a good friend whose mother lost both her legs (at the same time) due to diabetes. She was never able to recover from it and adjust.
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