• Ignore the negativity spewed out by the world.

    Getting all stressed and anxiety over what the world does, what they says, all that junk, are not worth it.

    Best to turn your backs on them.

    They do not care about you, about your health, about your wellness. They only cares about selling you nightmares. That's all they do. Sell nightmares. Sell fear. Sell terror.

    Where's the happy news? It's always depressing news.

    Bah, to hell with those rubbish.

    Heck, there's a phrase here that I reminds myself a lot:

    "Why worry? It probably won't happen."

    How cool is that? Why worry indeed. So all the bad news of the world are not personal. They're just bad news that they sells. They makes money from all the bad news they manufactured. It's all "make work" crap. No point wasting time on reading their bad news.

    Look, instead, to good news out there, hidden, but they are out there. Good news is everywhere.

    The problem is we've been trained since birth to expects bad news, to look for bad news, and on and on. When you lives for a long time, and year by year got tired of hearing / reading bad news, you realise you don't have to take in all this bad news crap and ingests their petrufaction.

    You can let go. Let all the bad news go. You don't HAVE to take on all that crap.

    You feels relief and then free, from having to look much less hear those crap.

    It feels good. It feels great!

    Go do your thing that makes you HAPPY. That's the most important thing.

    When everyone, the whole world, would stop focusing on bad news, and do their own thing without hurting anyone else, THEN suddenly these bad news crap would dries up.

    It's simple.

    Eyeballs is what they're trying to drown with bad news. Don't give them your eyeballs, (or ears), aka attention.

    Ignore them.

    Unless some bad news affects your life, THEN you must deal with it, but other than that, yes, you can ignore bad news.

    Just make your life the most happiest way you can create.

    Be happy. Enjoy each day to the fullest.
    Ignore the negativity spewed out by the world. Getting all stressed and anxiety over what the world does, what they says, all that junk, are not worth it. Best to turn your backs on them. They do not care about you, about your health, about your wellness. They only cares about selling you nightmares. That's all they do. Sell nightmares. Sell fear. Sell terror. Where's the happy news? It's always depressing news. Bah, to hell with those rubbish. Heck, there's a phrase here that I reminds myself a lot: "Why worry? It probably won't happen." How cool is that? Why worry indeed. So all the bad news of the world are not personal. They're just bad news that they sells. They makes money from all the bad news they manufactured. It's all "make work" crap. No point wasting time on reading their bad news. Look, instead, to good news out there, hidden, but they are out there. Good news is everywhere. The problem is we've been trained since birth to expects bad news, to look for bad news, and on and on. When you lives for a long time, and year by year got tired of hearing / reading bad news, you realise you don't have to take in all this bad news crap and ingests their petrufaction. You can let go. Let all the bad news go. You don't HAVE to take on all that crap. You feels relief and then free, from having to look much less hear those crap. It feels good. It feels great! Go do your thing that makes you HAPPY. That's the most important thing. When everyone, the whole world, would stop focusing on bad news, and do their own thing without hurting anyone else, THEN suddenly these bad news crap would dries up. It's simple. Eyeballs is what they're trying to drown with bad news. Don't give them your eyeballs, (or ears), aka attention. Ignore them. Unless some bad news affects your life, THEN you must deal with it, but other than that, yes, you can ignore bad news. Just make your life the most happiest way you can create. Be happy. Enjoy each day to the fullest.
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  • The Relaxator Breath Trainer

    Do you often feel stressed out? Do you want to find inner peace and focus better?

    Then the Relaxator is for you! With the Relaxator, you train your breathing to become calmer. It reduces stress in an instant and increases your focus and well-being. It is easy to use, affordable, and designed according to the latest research on stress. The Relaxator comes with simple instructions for use. Try it today and increase your well-being immediately!

    The Relaxator takes you to slow, low, relaxed, and rhythmic breathing that:

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    The Relaxator Breath Trainer Do you often feel stressed out? Do you want to find inner peace and focus better? Then the Relaxator is for you! With the Relaxator, you train your breathing to become calmer. It reduces stress in an instant and increases your focus and well-being. It is easy to use, affordable, and designed according to the latest research on stress. The Relaxator comes with simple instructions for use. Try it today and increase your well-being immediately! The Relaxator takes you to slow, low, relaxed, and rhythmic breathing that: * Promotes relaxation, focus, and mental clarity * Balances your nervous system between activity and recovery * Opens up your airways in the nose, sinuses, throat, and lungs * Strengthens your breathing muscles * Increases your energy and ability to burn fat https://www.consciousbreathing.com/alexanders #consciousbreathing #relaxator #healing #health #breathing #breathe #breath #sports #performance #sleep #insomnia #illness #injury #relaxation #stress #anxiety #anxious #fever #rest #sleep #sleepwell #sleepbetter #healbetter #healwell #wellbeing
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 18760 Views
  • THE RELAXATOR

    Go from feeling stressed-out and overwhelmed to experience an inner calm, energy and focus - one breath at a time.

    https://www.consciousbreathing.com/alexanders

    #consciousbreathing #relaxator #healing #health #breathing #breathe #breath #sports #performance #sleep #insomnia #illness #injury #relaxation #stress #anxiety #anxious #fever #rest #sleep #sleepwell #sleepbetter #healbetter #healwell #wellbeing
    THE RELAXATOR Go from feeling stressed-out and overwhelmed to experience an inner calm, energy and focus - one breath at a time. https://www.consciousbreathing.com/alexanders #consciousbreathing #relaxator #healing #health #breathing #breathe #breath #sports #performance #sleep #insomnia #illness #injury #relaxation #stress #anxiety #anxious #fever #rest #sleep #sleepwell #sleepbetter #healbetter #healwell #wellbeing
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 11345 Views
  • THE RELAXATOR

    Go from feeling stressed-out and overwhelmed to experience an inner calm, energy and focus - one breath at a time.

    https://www.consciousbreathing.com/alexanders

    #consciousbreathing #relaxator #healing #health #breathing #breathe #breath #sports #performance #sleep #insomnia #illness #injury #relaxation #stress #anxiety #anxious #fever #rest #sleep #sleepwell #sleepbetter #healbetter #healwell #wellbeing
    THE RELAXATOR Go from feeling stressed-out and overwhelmed to experience an inner calm, energy and focus - one breath at a time. https://www.consciousbreathing.com/alexanders #consciousbreathing #relaxator #healing #health #breathing #breathe #breath #sports #performance #sleep #insomnia #illness #injury #relaxation #stress #anxiety #anxious #fever #rest #sleep #sleepwell #sleepbetter #healbetter #healwell #wellbeing
    Conscious Breathing Institute
    Master your nervous system by changing your daily breathing habits and take your mental, emotional, and physical health and well-being to the next level.
    0 Commenti 0 condivisioni 10935 Views
  • 'They watched her die': Teen dies hours after arriving at juvenile detention center in front of employees who did nothing, lawsuit says.



    Elbert Shaw Regional Youth Detention Center in Dalton, Georgia . Alexis Marie Sluder.

    A 16-year-old runaway died after overdosing on methamphetamine in a youth detention center in Georgia hours after she was arrested, and authorities did nothing as they watched her convulse, writhe in pain and cry for help until it was too late, her family alleges in a lawsuit filed this week.

    Alexis Marie Sluder died in 2022 at the Elbert Shaw Regional Youth Detention Center in Dalton, according to the lawsuit filed on Tuesday in a federal court in Georgia. Dalton is about 90 miles north of Atlanta.

    “Instead of monitoring her health and safety, they watched her die,” said Sam Harton, the family’s lawyer, in a news conference . “No one even picked up the phone to call 911 until after Alexis stopped breathing.”

    Related Coverage:
    The lawsuit names five Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice employees as defendants, including an officer, a cadet, a sergeant, a nurse, and the facility’s director. It also names Augusta University, the medical and mental health services provider for juvenile detainees at the facility.

    In a statement , the Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice said it “is committed to the well-being and safety of the individuals entrusted to our care. We remain deeply saddened by this tragic incident and continue to hold heartfelt thoughts and prayers for the family of the deceased.”

    A media representative for Augusta University did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The events leading to Sluder’s death began after her arrest for possession of methamphetamine and shoplifting on Aug. 26, 2022, court documents said. She was issued a ticket and jailed before being transferred to Elbert, where she was booked at 9 p.m.

    Upon booking, Gilmer County Sgt. Sharon Ellis “failed to note that methamphetamine or any other foreign substance was found on Alexis Sluder’s person,” even though she had noted she saw a white substance on the police vehicle seat next to Sluder earlier, the lawsuit said.

    Notes in her medical screening indicated Sluder had “medical problems,” had previously been hospitalized, and was taking medication. Sluder had depression, bipolar anxiety, and schizophrenia, the lawsuit said.

    In her mental health screening, when asked why she was at the facility, Sluder said, “because I ran away.” She also said she had attempted suicide, had recently been sexually abused, had been hospitalized for an overdose the previous month and “sometimes sees shadow people that are not there,” court documents said. Her answers warranted four “Warning” and four “Caution” notations.

    Sluder’s answers about drug and alcohol use were “explicitly excluded from the ‘Warning’ and ‘Caution’ totals,” court documents said.

    Sluder told authorities that just before she was about to be arrested before arriving at the facility, she “ate the meth she had on her when the cops came and she realized she might be going to jail” and “she had taken other unknown items earlier in the day as she felt suicidal over the last 3 weeks and currently feels this way,” court documents said.

    Ellis declined to take her to the hospital, saying she wasn’t permitted to because she had already released her into the custody of the state of Georgia, “so she no longer had jurisdiction to transport Alexis Sluder,” court documents said.

    Instead, Sluder was placed in a room equipped with a live video feed where she could be constantly monitored.

    In her cell, Sluder began to suffer a medical emergency. She convulsed, writhed in pain, thrashed about, sweated profusely, and breathed heavily. The overdose symptoms lasted over four hours, court documents said.

    Despite an employee, Rebecka Phillips, being with Sluder the entire time, a second employee, Maveis Brooks, being with her intermittently, and Cadet Russell Ballard watching via the video feed from a control room, no one did anything, the lawsuit alleges.

    During the final two hours of the medical emergency, Sluder lay on the ground, nearly motionless. At one point, Sluder even reached out and grasped toward the ankle of Phillips, who stood over her, watched, and did nothing to help her, court documents said.

    At another point, Sluder turned to the camera and said, “Someone please help me. I took something,” the lawsuit alleges.

    The defendants talked about the girl’s condition but didn’t act, saying they did not have enough officers on staff to take her to a hospital without violating a policy, court documents said.

    “There is no policy set forth by the State of Georgia, the Department of Justice, and the Dalton RYDC preventing State employees from calling 9-1-1 or another emergency medical services to transport juveniles to the hospital in a medical emergency,” the lawsuit said. “Alexis Sluder was not suspected of a violent crime. Alexis Sluder was not arrested for a violent crime. There was no legitimate penological interest in keeping Alexis Sluder from going to the hospital.”

    At 3:12 a.m. on Aug. 27, 2022, Phillips advised over the radio that Sluder “was not breathing properly,” the lawsuit said.

    Brooks went to the cell, assessed Sluder and advised Ballard in the control room to call 911.

    “Soon after Sergeant Maveis Brooks advised Defendant Cadet Ballard to call 9-1-1, Alexis Sluder stopped breathing,” court documents said.

    The 911 call was made, and Brooks and Phillips began lifesaving measures, but Sluder was pronounced dead from methamphetamine toxicity at 4:26 a.m. on Aug. 27, 2022, court documents said.

    The five employees were terminated from their jobs stemming from the death. They were indicted on charges of cruelty to children a year later, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said in a statement . Their cases are pending.

    The parents have shared their pain over the death of their daughter, who once won an award for “Prettiest Smile,” enjoyed playing softball and was set to graduate from Gilmer High School this year. Instead, her school reserved a seat for her at the ceremony on May 24, where she graduated posthumously.

    “I didn’t get to watch her pick out her first car, go to the prom, or graduate this past year with her friends,” her mother, Melanie Hogan Sluder, said in a statement . “I am lost without her, and not a minute goes by that I don’t think about her and what she would be doing.”
    'They watched her die': Teen dies hours after arriving at juvenile detention center in front of employees who did nothing, lawsuit says. Elbert Shaw Regional Youth Detention Center in Dalton, Georgia . Alexis Marie Sluder. A 16-year-old runaway died after overdosing on methamphetamine in a youth detention center in Georgia hours after she was arrested, and authorities did nothing as they watched her convulse, writhe in pain and cry for help until it was too late, her family alleges in a lawsuit filed this week. Alexis Marie Sluder died in 2022 at the Elbert Shaw Regional Youth Detention Center in Dalton, according to the lawsuit filed on Tuesday in a federal court in Georgia. Dalton is about 90 miles north of Atlanta. “Instead of monitoring her health and safety, they watched her die,” said Sam Harton, the family’s lawyer, in a news conference . “No one even picked up the phone to call 911 until after Alexis stopped breathing.” Related Coverage: The lawsuit names five Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice employees as defendants, including an officer, a cadet, a sergeant, a nurse, and the facility’s director. It also names Augusta University, the medical and mental health services provider for juvenile detainees at the facility. In a statement , the Georgia Department of Juvenile Justice said it “is committed to the well-being and safety of the individuals entrusted to our care. We remain deeply saddened by this tragic incident and continue to hold heartfelt thoughts and prayers for the family of the deceased.” A media representative for Augusta University did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The events leading to Sluder’s death began after her arrest for possession of methamphetamine and shoplifting on Aug. 26, 2022, court documents said. She was issued a ticket and jailed before being transferred to Elbert, where she was booked at 9 p.m. Upon booking, Gilmer County Sgt. Sharon Ellis “failed to note that methamphetamine or any other foreign substance was found on Alexis Sluder’s person,” even though she had noted she saw a white substance on the police vehicle seat next to Sluder earlier, the lawsuit said. Notes in her medical screening indicated Sluder had “medical problems,” had previously been hospitalized, and was taking medication. Sluder had depression, bipolar anxiety, and schizophrenia, the lawsuit said. In her mental health screening, when asked why she was at the facility, Sluder said, “because I ran away.” She also said she had attempted suicide, had recently been sexually abused, had been hospitalized for an overdose the previous month and “sometimes sees shadow people that are not there,” court documents said. Her answers warranted four “Warning” and four “Caution” notations. Sluder’s answers about drug and alcohol use were “explicitly excluded from the ‘Warning’ and ‘Caution’ totals,” court documents said. Sluder told authorities that just before she was about to be arrested before arriving at the facility, she “ate the meth she had on her when the cops came and she realized she might be going to jail” and “she had taken other unknown items earlier in the day as she felt suicidal over the last 3 weeks and currently feels this way,” court documents said. Ellis declined to take her to the hospital, saying she wasn’t permitted to because she had already released her into the custody of the state of Georgia, “so she no longer had jurisdiction to transport Alexis Sluder,” court documents said. Instead, Sluder was placed in a room equipped with a live video feed where she could be constantly monitored. In her cell, Sluder began to suffer a medical emergency. She convulsed, writhed in pain, thrashed about, sweated profusely, and breathed heavily. The overdose symptoms lasted over four hours, court documents said. Despite an employee, Rebecka Phillips, being with Sluder the entire time, a second employee, Maveis Brooks, being with her intermittently, and Cadet Russell Ballard watching via the video feed from a control room, no one did anything, the lawsuit alleges. During the final two hours of the medical emergency, Sluder lay on the ground, nearly motionless. At one point, Sluder even reached out and grasped toward the ankle of Phillips, who stood over her, watched, and did nothing to help her, court documents said. At another point, Sluder turned to the camera and said, “Someone please help me. I took something,” the lawsuit alleges. The defendants talked about the girl’s condition but didn’t act, saying they did not have enough officers on staff to take her to a hospital without violating a policy, court documents said. “There is no policy set forth by the State of Georgia, the Department of Justice, and the Dalton RYDC preventing State employees from calling 9-1-1 or another emergency medical services to transport juveniles to the hospital in a medical emergency,” the lawsuit said. “Alexis Sluder was not suspected of a violent crime. Alexis Sluder was not arrested for a violent crime. There was no legitimate penological interest in keeping Alexis Sluder from going to the hospital.” At 3:12 a.m. on Aug. 27, 2022, Phillips advised over the radio that Sluder “was not breathing properly,” the lawsuit said. Brooks went to the cell, assessed Sluder and advised Ballard in the control room to call 911. “Soon after Sergeant Maveis Brooks advised Defendant Cadet Ballard to call 9-1-1, Alexis Sluder stopped breathing,” court documents said. The 911 call was made, and Brooks and Phillips began lifesaving measures, but Sluder was pronounced dead from methamphetamine toxicity at 4:26 a.m. on Aug. 27, 2022, court documents said. The five employees were terminated from their jobs stemming from the death. They were indicted on charges of cruelty to children a year later, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation said in a statement . Their cases are pending. The parents have shared their pain over the death of their daughter, who once won an award for “Prettiest Smile,” enjoyed playing softball and was set to graduate from Gilmer High School this year. Instead, her school reserved a seat for her at the ceremony on May 24, where she graduated posthumously. “I didn’t get to watch her pick out her first car, go to the prom, or graduate this past year with her friends,” her mother, Melanie Hogan Sluder, said in a statement . “I am lost without her, and not a minute goes by that I don’t think about her and what she would be doing.”
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  • I want so much to learn how to skydive and get my license to jump by myself, but there are only 2 drop zones here in the Philippines, and they are quite far from where I live. Plus they only offer tandems. There are no drop zones here that offer Accelerated Free Fall(AFF) courses, so not sure what I am going to do, but I will figure something out. I really believe that skydiving will help so much with my anxiety. They say that skydiving teaches a person to live in the "here and now".
    I want so much to learn how to skydive and get my license to jump by myself, but there are only 2 drop zones here in the Philippines, and they are quite far from where I live. Plus they only offer tandems. There are no drop zones here that offer Accelerated Free Fall(AFF) courses, so not sure what I am going to do, but I will figure something out. I really believe that skydiving will help so much with my anxiety. They say that skydiving teaches a person to live in the "here and now".
    7 Commenti 0 condivisioni 1795 Views