shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 02 2008 | health
Wow, this article is really making me want to try giving up sweets for a bit just to see how it changes the way I feel...
Quoted: The average American consumes a shocking 150 pounds of sugar a year, or roughly 20 teaspoons every day. Such through-the-roof concentrations of added sweeteners may contribute to all sorts of health problems.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 9 hours ago | news, science, health
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 2 days ago | health, news
Autism is back in the news as a result of Michael Savage's controversial statements on his radio show last week...
Quoted: Children's advocacy groups are demanding that Michael Savage apologize for denigrating autism as the " illness du jour" on his radio program last Wednesday. Savage also attributed the high prevalence of autism and related disorders to faulty diagnoses: "In 99 percent of the cases, it's a brat who hasn't been told to cut the act out." How do doctors spot the disorder?
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 2 days ago | health, environment
Really interesting Green Lantern. It seems obvious, but I never realized how processed soy milk is. Still, it has a slight environmental edge over cow's milk.
Quoted: You've already weighed in on the question of whether veganism or vegetarianism is better for the environment. But I want more specifics: Which is better for the environment, soy milk or cow's milk?
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 3 days ago | world, health, news
An important article from Slate about the strings that are attached to IMF loans and the corner into which they back a lot of small countries & their economies.
Quoted: Question: The International Monetary Fund often attaches strict conditions to its loans, hoping to help the economies of the recipient countries grow and become stable. For example, in order to tamp down inflation, countries have been required to limit expenditures for education, social services, and health.
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 8 days ago | news, food, health
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 10 days ago | sports, health, news
I think this article does a good job of pointing out that the benefits of yoga still far outweigh the risks, and that it's a very individual activity that requires listening to your own body rather than trying to "compete" with other students.
Quoted: Sloppy teaching and growing numbers of overly competitive students are giving yoga lovers serious and scary injuries: slipped disks, torn tendons, even strokes.
ShareViewed: 3 Times
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - 16 days ago | health, news
Eek, scary that a simple illness could affect one's sense of smell and taste so drastically! Must be hard...
Quoted: There was nothing remarkable about the cold I caught. But a few weeks after I was otherwise back to feeling normal, my sense of smell and taste hadn't returned. I went to my doctor, and he said I had a sinus infection, prescribed antibiotics, and told me not to worry. That was three years ago.
ShareViewed: 1 Time
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 17 2008 | health, women
I never realized HPV could cause cancer in men. But I think vaccinating men for HPV will be treated a lot like birth control by legislators - in other words, it's a "woman problem."
Quoted: The virus that causes cervical cancer also leads to throat cancer in males. Now researchers are looking into whether the vaccine should be given to boys, both to prevent the spread of HPV, and to prevent the rarer, but no less deadly, cancers that can occur in men from the virus.
ShareViewed: 1 Time
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 13 2008 | sex, health, law, news
Fascinating! These distinctions rely so much on state laws and statutes...
Quoted: As people across the country fête their fathers this weekend, Thomas Beatie, who's male according to state law but who retains his female reproductive organs, will enter the final weeks of his first successful pregnancy. Will the baby's birth certificate register Beatie as the father or the mother?
ShareViewed: 3 Times
shiwani | Shared With: Everyone - Jun 02 2008 | brain, health, news
Update: looks like Ted Kennedy is out of surgery and doing relatively well.
Quoted: Surgeons on Monday performed brain surgery on Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, and his doctor said the procedure to treat his cancerous brain tumor “was successful and accomplished our goals.”
ShareViewed: 7 Times



- ms.kruse - Apr 02 2008
- mohit - Apr 02 2008
- shiwani - Apr 02 2008
- mohit - Apr 02 2008
- ms.kruse - Apr 02 2008
- shiwani - Apr 02 2008
- mohit - Apr 02 2008
You must be shiwani's friend before you can comment on this Fave.I know. I wish I could give up sugar too. But, what about cupcakes?! There are some things that are bad for you that make life worth living...like alcohol and dessert. Still, it would be a fun experiment to go off it all for a while. I've managed to give up alochol for up to 4 days at a time, and I always feel great by day 4. Okay, I better shut up before my AA group sees this.
i'm eating a "brownie cupcake" as i type this.
this discussion is making me crave some chocolate and a glass of wine, ha. that's just it though - anytime you forcefully deprive yourself of something, you just want it more!
sounds like a plan for tonight!
Whoa. What's a "brownie cupcake"? I'm trying to imagine the texture and I can't.
yeah, that sounds kinda good. hey mohit, how bout you bring over some of those to dinner tonight? haha.
i think it's essentially a brownie -- but less crumbly so it doesn't fall apart as you're eating it. unfortunately, i just had one.
Send shiwani a friend request or a personal message instead.