• 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
    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 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 5275 Views
  • “A year ago my dear brother Kamod had a horrible accident, when he was electrocuted. His heart stopped for 15 minutes and ever since he’s been in a coma, the first three months on a ventilator. When he got off the ventilator he formed a lot of mucus in his throat, which made it hard to breathe. We had to use a device to suck out the mucus 30-40 times per day.

    These problems lasted for 7 months, until he was given CO2 mixed with normal air for 10 minutes per day, using the Carbohaler device. After a few weeks, very little mucus was formed, so we only needed to suck out mucus 1-2 times per day. And the last few weeks he has been able to oopen and close his eyes and make eye contact. And his need for sleep has gone down from 18 hours to only 10 hours per day.”

    - Chameera Subasinghe,
    Brother of Kamod, Sri Lanka.

    CARBOHALER BENEFITS
    * Reduce Mental Stress
    * Slow Down Your Breathing
    * Heal Emotional Wounds
    * Open Up Your Blood Vessels
    * Increase Muscle Strength
    * More Blood To Your Brain
    * Faster Recovery
    * Open Up Your Airways

    * Better Oxygenation
    * Hypoxia Reduction
    * Increased Vasodilation
    * Increased Cerebral Blood Flow
    * Improve Lung Function
    * Improve Recovery Time
    * Stress Reduction
    * Increased CO2 Tolerance

    https://carbogenetics.com/ref/19

    #carbogenetics #carbogen #carbohaler #breathing #consciousbreathing #healing #healthy #injuryrecovery #eyesightimprovement #sportsperformance #superendurance #healthimprovement #calmer #relaxation #peaceofmind #covid #covidrecovery #healfromcovid
    “A year ago my dear brother Kamod had a horrible accident, when he was electrocuted. His heart stopped for 15 minutes and ever since he’s been in a coma, the first three months on a ventilator. When he got off the ventilator he formed a lot of mucus in his throat, which made it hard to breathe. We had to use a device to suck out the mucus 30-40 times per day. These problems lasted for 7 months, until he was given CO2 mixed with normal air for 10 minutes per day, using the Carbohaler device. After a few weeks, very little mucus was formed, so we only needed to suck out mucus 1-2 times per day. And the last few weeks he has been able to oopen and close his eyes and make eye contact. And his need for sleep has gone down from 18 hours to only 10 hours per day.” - Chameera Subasinghe, Brother of Kamod, Sri Lanka. CARBOHALER BENEFITS * Reduce Mental Stress * Slow Down Your Breathing * Heal Emotional Wounds * Open Up Your Blood Vessels * Increase Muscle Strength * More Blood To Your Brain * Faster Recovery * Open Up Your Airways * Better Oxygenation * Hypoxia Reduction * Increased Vasodilation * Increased Cerebral Blood Flow * Improve Lung Function * Improve Recovery Time * Stress Reduction * Increased CO2 Tolerance 👉 https://carbogenetics.com/ref/19 👈 #carbogenetics #carbogen #carbohaler #breathing #consciousbreathing #healing #healthy #injuryrecovery #eyesightimprovement #sportsperformance #superendurance #healthimprovement #calmer #relaxation #peaceofmind #covid #covidrecovery #healfromcovid
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 4934 Views
  • Fully Recovered From Covid Within a Couple of Days

    "I had covid pretty bad, but thanks to the Carbohaler I could recover really fast. I had problems breathing, and I couldn’t talk as my throat was inflamed. Apart from the high fever and extreme tiredness I also had a lot of dry cough. When I started using the Carbohaler it had a huge impact. My oxygen levels immediately stabilized at around 99% and my cough disappeared. Within a couple of days, I was fully recovered."

    Anthony Perera
    Engineer, Sri Lanka

    CARBOHALER BENEFITS
    * Reduce Mental Stress
    * Slow Down Your Breathing
    * Heal Emotional Wounds
    * Open Up Your Blood Vessels
    * Increase Muscle Strength
    * More Blood To Your Brain
    * Faster Recovery
    * Open Up Your Airways

    * Better Oxygenation
    * Hypoxia Reduction
    * Increased Vasodilation
    * Increased Cerebral Blood Flow
    * Improve Lung Function
    * Improve Recovery Time
    * Stress Reduction
    * Increased CO2 Tolerance

    https://carbogenetics.com/ref/19

    #carbogenetics #carbogen #carbohaler #breathing #consciousbreathing #healing #healthy #injuryrecovery #eyesightimprovement #sportsperformance #superendurance #healthimprovement #calmer #relaxation #peaceofmind #covid #covidrecovery #healfromcovid
    Fully Recovered From Covid Within a Couple of Days "I had covid pretty bad, but thanks to the Carbohaler I could recover really fast. I had problems breathing, and I couldn’t talk as my throat was inflamed. Apart from the high fever and extreme tiredness I also had a lot of dry cough. When I started using the Carbohaler it had a huge impact. My oxygen levels immediately stabilized at around 99% and my cough disappeared. Within a couple of days, I was fully recovered." Anthony Perera Engineer, Sri Lanka CARBOHALER BENEFITS * Reduce Mental Stress * Slow Down Your Breathing * Heal Emotional Wounds * Open Up Your Blood Vessels * Increase Muscle Strength * More Blood To Your Brain * Faster Recovery * Open Up Your Airways * Better Oxygenation * Hypoxia Reduction * Increased Vasodilation * Increased Cerebral Blood Flow * Improve Lung Function * Improve Recovery Time * Stress Reduction * Increased CO2 Tolerance 👉 https://carbogenetics.com/ref/19 👈 #carbogenetics #carbogen #carbohaler #breathing #consciousbreathing #healing #healthy #injuryrecovery #eyesightimprovement #sportsperformance #superendurance #healthimprovement #calmer #relaxation #peaceofmind #covid #covidrecovery #healfromcovid
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 5065 Views
  • Registration opened for the Reserve Bank of India Quiz for college students.

    https://informationsite.in/college-students/

    #InformationSite
    #information #Latest_News #LatestNews #reservebankofindia #RBI #Quiz #Competition #collegestudents
    Registration opened for the Reserve Bank of India Quiz for college students. https://informationsite.in/college-students/ #InformationSite #information #Latest_News #LatestNews #reservebankofindia #RBI #Quiz #Competition #collegestudents
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 2588 Views
  • New opportunities in UPSC opened for experienced professionals working in the private sector.

    https://informationsite.in/lateral-entry-in-upsc/

    #InformationSite
    #Careers #CareerOpportunities #CareerGrowth #Jobs #GovernmentJobs #UPSC #LateralEntry #newopportunities #newopportunity #experiencedprofessional #privatesector #opportunities #opportunity #professional #open #working #professionals
    New opportunities in UPSC opened for experienced professionals working in the private sector. https://informationsite.in/lateral-entry-in-upsc/ #InformationSite #Careers #CareerOpportunities #CareerGrowth #Jobs #GovernmentJobs #UPSC #LateralEntry #newopportunities #newopportunity #experiencedprofessional #privatesector #opportunities #opportunity #professional #open #working #professionals
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 3319 Views
  • Inspiring Story
    Helping hands


    For the second time, Hand Camp in Colorado opened its doors to children with upper limb differences. Campers got to participate in a talent show and “wacky Olympics” along with practical lessons — from brushing their teeth to tying their shoes. The purpose of the camp is to foster an inclusive environment that’s a reminder to all to be kind: “I just want others to know that anytime they see anyone with a limb difference, they’re no different, they’re just human beings and please treat them like so,” said Jue Cao, a hand surgeon with the camp.
    Inspiring Story Helping hands ​ For the second time, Hand Camp in Colorado opened its doors to children with upper limb differences. Campers got to participate in a talent show and “wacky Olympics” along with practical lessons — from brushing their teeth to tying their shoes. The purpose of the camp is to foster an inclusive environment that’s a reminder to all to be kind: “I just want others to know that anytime they see anyone with a limb difference, they’re no different, they’re just human beings and please treat them like so,” said Jue Cao, a hand surgeon with the camp.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 1640 Views
  • Word of the Day: Irrefragable

    ADJECTIVE 1. Not able to be refuted or disproved; indisputable.

    Example Sentences.
    1. "I tried to prove my brother wrong, but on this point, he seemed to be irrefragable."
    2. "It was an irrefragable truth that Wren was the most capable manager the restaurant had ever employed."
    3. "Franklin had an irrefragable talent for writing that they bolstered through poetry open mic nights and writing workshops."

    Word Origin.
    Latin, mid-16th century

    When engaging in a debate, come bolstered with an irrefragable argument. This adjective comes from the Latin "irrefragabilis," the combination of the words "in" ("not") and "refragari" ("oppose"). Before you start throwing out statistics and dates, do some fact-checking. "Snopes" is a website with a mission to verify whether various outlandish-sounding claims are irrefragable.
    Word of the Day: Irrefragable ADJECTIVE 1. Not able to be refuted or disproved; indisputable. Example Sentences. 1. "I tried to prove my brother wrong, but on this point, he seemed to be irrefragable." 2. "It was an irrefragable truth that Wren was the most capable manager the restaurant had ever employed." 3. "Franklin had an irrefragable talent for writing that they bolstered through poetry open mic nights and writing workshops." Word Origin. Latin, mid-16th century When engaging in a debate, come bolstered with an irrefragable argument. This adjective comes from the Latin "irrefragabilis," the combination of the words "in" ("not") and "refragari" ("oppose"). Before you start throwing out statistics and dates, do some fact-checking. "Snopes" is a website with a mission to verify whether various outlandish-sounding claims are irrefragable.
    Like
    1
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 3707 Views
  • At 15, Danielle Vaughan was left in the care of her mother’s friend, who was then a 50 year old man. They became romantically involved, Danielle got pregnant, and Vaughan was a mother by the time she was 17. They married and eventually had four children. Their youngest was named Dennis. Dennis Vaughan Jr. was born in 2014, the fourth of Danielle Vaughan children.
    Vaughan, now 33, has led a life marred by abuse. She remembered her mother, Sherry Connor, as erratic and prone to violent outbursts.
    Danielle’s husband grew controlling and violent. Both of them started using drugs. Dennis Sr. has been repeatedly arrested for drugs. In 2016, police raided the family’s Laconia home, arresting Dennis Sr. — and Vaughan lost custody of her four children.
    “That was the beginning of a horrible four years,” she said, but she was willing to move mountains to get her children back.
    She kicked heroin. She went to her appointments. She found stable housing, away from Dennis Sr. She worked to piece together a life and prove she could care for her children.
    In the summer of 2017, a court granted custody of the four children to Vaughan’s mother, Sherry. Vaughan had reservations about the arrangement, after the way she had grown up.
    “I knew my mom had that mean bone in her body,” she said. But she wanted to believe she would love and care for her grandchildren.
    Before long, Vaughan said, she started noticing the children had bruises on their wrists or their ears. One of the children was hospitalized with a concussion. Connor would always have an explanation, Vaughan said.
    Then during one visit, Vaughan noticed finger-shaped bruises around her children’s chins. “I knew those bruises. I knew what they were from.”
    Vaughan said her mother used to grab her by the chin, almost lifting her off the floor as she yelled, “Now you look at me.”
    All the children were too skinny, Vaughan said. On a visit to Connor’s home for Christmas in 2018, she discovered their deplorable living conditions.
    Connor’s home in Laconia was vile, Vaughan said, with human and dog feces on the floor. She kept the refrigerator and cabinets locked, so the children — 4-year-old Dennis and the three older children — couldn’t get food or drinks themselves. When they got too thirsty, Vaughan said, they drank out of the toilet — and were punished for it. They used a bucket to go to the bathroom.
    After that visit, Vaughan figures she called DCYF every day.
    But the division screened out her reports, or the cases were closed as “unfounded,” she said, meaning an investigation did not turn up abuse or neglect.
    One day, Vaughan got a voicemail from her mother, who seemed to have dialed by mistake. Vaughan could hear a hand smacking flesh, her third-oldest child screaming, and her mother screaming back. “I hate you, you dirty dog,” she screamed, cursing at the 8-year-old, Vaughan remembered. “I can’t wait for someone to take you away.”
    Vaughan made another report, she said.
    In July 2019, Vaughan said, her mother duct-taped that same child to a chair and left him overnight in an Epsom campground. Other people in the campground called police. DCYF petitioned a court to remove the child from Connor on an emergency basis, and returned him to Vaughan.
    Vaughan said she is still not clear about why the division removed only one of her children from Connor’s care in the summer of 2019 — but did not move to get her other three children, including Dennis Jr., out of Connor’s home.
    By this time, Vaughan said she was calling for help multiple times a day. She called the Office of the Child Advocate, an ombudsman’s office, police, every authority she could think of. She was frantic.
    “I was begging to put them anywhere else but her house,” Vaughan said.
    On Christmas Eve 2019, Vaughan went into work early for her cleaning job at Elliot Hospital.
    She was there less than an hour that Tuesday morning when a state police sergeant asked to talk to her. She felt a knot in her stomach as they walked into an empty room.
    “He looks at me and says, ‘Dennis is dead.’”
    3 years later, Danielle is still trying to get answers about how exactly her son died. In May 2020, an autopsy performed by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner said Dennis died of blunt force trauma to the head and neck, and ruled the death a homicide.
    No one has been charged, Associate Attorney General Jeffery A. Strelzin said the investigation is still open.
    Vaughan is trying to understand how the child welfare system failed her family so utterly.
    At 15, Danielle Vaughan was left in the care of her mother’s friend, who was then a 50 year old man. They became romantically involved, Danielle got pregnant, and Vaughan was a mother by the time she was 17. They married and eventually had four children. Their youngest was named Dennis. Dennis Vaughan Jr. was born in 2014, the fourth of Danielle Vaughan children. Vaughan, now 33, has led a life marred by abuse. She remembered her mother, Sherry Connor, as erratic and prone to violent outbursts. Danielle’s husband grew controlling and violent. Both of them started using drugs. Dennis Sr. has been repeatedly arrested for drugs. In 2016, police raided the family’s Laconia home, arresting Dennis Sr. — and Vaughan lost custody of her four children. “That was the beginning of a horrible four years,” she said, but she was willing to move mountains to get her children back. She kicked heroin. She went to her appointments. She found stable housing, away from Dennis Sr. She worked to piece together a life and prove she could care for her children. In the summer of 2017, a court granted custody of the four children to Vaughan’s mother, Sherry. Vaughan had reservations about the arrangement, after the way she had grown up. “I knew my mom had that mean bone in her body,” she said. But she wanted to believe she would love and care for her grandchildren. Before long, Vaughan said, she started noticing the children had bruises on their wrists or their ears. One of the children was hospitalized with a concussion. Connor would always have an explanation, Vaughan said. Then during one visit, Vaughan noticed finger-shaped bruises around her children’s chins. “I knew those bruises. I knew what they were from.” Vaughan said her mother used to grab her by the chin, almost lifting her off the floor as she yelled, “Now you look at me.” All the children were too skinny, Vaughan said. On a visit to Connor’s home for Christmas in 2018, she discovered their deplorable living conditions. Connor’s home in Laconia was vile, Vaughan said, with human and dog feces on the floor. She kept the refrigerator and cabinets locked, so the children — 4-year-old Dennis and the three older children — couldn’t get food or drinks themselves. When they got too thirsty, Vaughan said, they drank out of the toilet — and were punished for it. They used a bucket to go to the bathroom. After that visit, Vaughan figures she called DCYF every day. But the division screened out her reports, or the cases were closed as “unfounded,” she said, meaning an investigation did not turn up abuse or neglect. One day, Vaughan got a voicemail from her mother, who seemed to have dialed by mistake. Vaughan could hear a hand smacking flesh, her third-oldest child screaming, and her mother screaming back. “I hate you, you dirty dog,” she screamed, cursing at the 8-year-old, Vaughan remembered. “I can’t wait for someone to take you away.” Vaughan made another report, she said. In July 2019, Vaughan said, her mother duct-taped that same child to a chair and left him overnight in an Epsom campground. Other people in the campground called police. DCYF petitioned a court to remove the child from Connor on an emergency basis, and returned him to Vaughan. Vaughan said she is still not clear about why the division removed only one of her children from Connor’s care in the summer of 2019 — but did not move to get her other three children, including Dennis Jr., out of Connor’s home. By this time, Vaughan said she was calling for help multiple times a day. She called the Office of the Child Advocate, an ombudsman’s office, police, every authority she could think of. She was frantic. “I was begging to put them anywhere else but her house,” Vaughan said. On Christmas Eve 2019, Vaughan went into work early for her cleaning job at Elliot Hospital. She was there less than an hour that Tuesday morning when a state police sergeant asked to talk to her. She felt a knot in her stomach as they walked into an empty room. “He looks at me and says, ‘Dennis is dead.’” 3 years later, Danielle is still trying to get answers about how exactly her son died. In May 2020, an autopsy performed by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner said Dennis died of blunt force trauma to the head and neck, and ruled the death a homicide. No one has been charged, Associate Attorney General Jeffery A. Strelzin said the investigation is still open. Vaughan is trying to understand how the child welfare system failed her family so utterly.
    0 Commentarii 0 Distribuiri 5906 Views