Kratom

I understand some folks are wary of Kratom, but I’ve had great success with it , and bought this strain along with others to address specific issues. This strain is used for pain and anxiety , which I have not used before .

This site discusses the side effects and uses of various strains , successfully .

I was prescribed morphine and oxycodone in Jan after surgery , and I hated having to use it , and went back to Devils Claw , Kratom ..

I have not developed an addiction , I was off for about 30 days and did not experience withdrawal symptoms.

I don’t intend to be addicted to anything and I think my past substantiates that . you know you, so if you’re interested, research to make sure Kratom is for you .

kratom.org/strains/red-vein/bentuangie/

Bless her, she was trying . Abuse resulted in trauma , which is not a mental illness- Snead O’Conner

Sinead O’Connor was left suicidal, suffering mental health breakdowns, and wanting to self harm because of the medication she was prescribed.

Sinead has now revealed doctors misdiagnosed her with bipolar disorder after giving birth eight years ago.

She said: “When my third child was 5 months old I became distressed over something extremely traumatic that happened. At the time I had not been working for some years and was taking care of the three children by myself. and doing a very good job of it too, even if I do say so myself.

“I could possibly have been somewhat post-natal but I was certainly distressed because of the aforementioned traumatic event.”

Sinead has to continue taking the drugs she was prescribed until she can slowly wean herself from them.

She said: “ It is dangerous to stop suddenly or over the course of a year at least.

“This is because of how these drugs affect receptors in your brain. They are the same drugs, some of them, that are used to treat epilepsy.”

And Sinead has revealed that when she cancelled her tour last year it wasn’t because of biopolar disorder as many believed but because she had tried to stop taking her medication cold turkey.

She said: “When I became ill and left the last tour it was because I stopped the drugs too quickly and without medical supervision.

“The illness was in fact what happens when you don’t go about coming off these meds properly.

“I’m delighted to be able to say that after ten years of poisoning myself with these drugs and having to live with the extremely difficult side-effects of them I can shortly begin the very, very slow indeed, process of getting them out of my system and my life and getting my life back.”

https://www.irishmirror.ie/showbiz/irish-showbiz/doctors-tell-sinead-oconnor-youre-2344863

#PrescribedHarm #SineadsVoice #StephensVoice

Amanda Palmer

Sinéad.

If I were a different kind of person I would let it settle and wait a few days to collect my thoughts and do this the right and grown-up way but I think she’d be more proud of me for writing like this….pulled off to the side of the highway writing from my fucking heart because that’s she did, all her life, made from the heart.

I got my first Sinéad record at age 14 – I Do Not Want What I Have Not Got – dubbed from my mentor Anthony’s CD collection onto a 90-minute Maxell XLII blank cassette tape. It changed my life. I wanted the artwork, so I borrowed Anthony’s CD booklet, took it down to the town library xerox machine, copied it, and carefully and lovingly cut it to size for a cassette tape. So I could see her face.

Her face.

I learned every song by heart.

She was fierceness and honestly incarnate.

She howled her heart out so purely that people had no idea what to make of it.

This is a woman who ripped up a picture of the pope on Saturday Night Live (when it had no ”safety delay”) to draw attention to the sex abuse happening in the Catholic Church, after delivering “War” by Bob Marley, a cappella:

Until the philosophy which hold one race

Superior and another Inferior

Is finally

And permanently

Discredited

And abandoned

Everywhere is war.

Twelve days later she took the stage at Madison Square Garden for a Bob Dylan tribute festival and you could barely hear her sing over the boos and jeers from the crowd. She scrapped her planned Dylan song and screamed out “War” again, as the crowd tried to overpower her.

That feeling. Many women have been there. I have been there too, shaking, as it feels like the whole world is trying to shout and drown you out, and put you in your place. Wondering if I am the crazy one. Wondering if this many people are right. Or wrong. Or even real.

She was right about the church. She was very fucking right.

She was right about so many things.

Now that she is dead, I know she’ll be lauded and applauded.

But back then? That night? How do you imagine she felt that night, crawling into bed, having been abused by a crowd of thousands? How would you feel? What would that do to you? Would you care if the world turned around, forty years later, and said: “Sorry about that, you were actually very brave?”

This is a woman who boycotted the Grammys saying she did not want “to be part of a world that measures artistic ability by material success.” This is a woman who refused to play US national anthem before certain concerts. That went down reallll well, too.

She was hated, she was scorned, she was cancelled for being honest over and over again. That SNL move was the beginning of the end of a career in many ways. She never recovered.

Too much, they said. Go away.

She used her voice. She kept on speaking.

She was loud. Being a loud woman is not fucking convenient, for anyone. Ever. Not around here.

She was strikingly beautiful. She shaved her head and gave the middle finger to the beauty standard. She wore combat boots and jeans. She opened her mouth to the max, literally. She did not mumble; she roared. She inspired me into taking power; she inspired so many of my friends. She showed us all another way. There’s this way, too. Go this way, she seemed to be screaming, GO.

Dismissed as crazy. She struggled, and she struggled, and she struggled. She was punished, she was mocked, she was ridiculed.

She retreated and came back time and time again, her roar ragged, her frustration jagged and visible. Painful. You could see it, feel it. We mourned it, me and my friends.

Sinéad? Misunderstood? Which chicken, which egg?

What the world did to Sinéad was death by a thousand cuts. The world lauded her, worshipped her, bought her, sold her, forgave her, claimed her, disavowed her. Over and over in cycles. How could anyone survive that? Like a piece of metal getting bent over and over and over again. It breaks.

She began as a fragile person. A fragile artist. Which is why her songs were so beautiful and powerful to begin with. A raw heart. A mother. Not an idea, not a theoretical. A person.

The world loved the taste of her. The world didn’t know how to digest her. The world spit her out.

She never apologized for ripping up that picture of the pope. When asked later, she said “I’m not sorry I did it. It was brilliant”.

It was.

She was.

Never forget this woman.

Let her memory guide us.

Let them scream at you, but do not stop singing.

Never apologize just to make them happy, to make them go away, to “get along”, to make them accept you.

No, no, no.

Me say War.

Sinéad….rest in world-changing ripped paper phoenix-pieces from the stage, rising and burning into the white night stars. Find peace at last. I hope you forgive us what we could not give you.

James Rozoff- Farmers Market

I used to look forward to getting drunk on a Friday night, but nowadays the favorite part of my week is Saturday mornings. I still get drunk on Friday night, but I don’t enjoy it as much as I used to.

Check out my weekly haul from the farmers market. The thought of waking up early on a Saturday morning to get there when it opens is what keeps me from having that last beer. It’s what urges me to eat a big salad on Friday night in order to clear out the refrigerator for my new purchases. I won’t say all that wonderful produce keeps me healthy, because the love for beer and chocolate is strong in this one, but it surely must help atone for my vices. And besides, there are many wonderful locally-prepared food to be found at the farmers market—things like scones, mochas, cookies and cakes—in which I often indulge.

The more I think about it, the more I see my local farmers market as the solution to every problem. Concerned about global warming? Why have your food trucked in from the other side of the country? Or from another country? Why not eat local and save all of that fuel consumption? Seems like a no-brainer to me.

Want to get healthy? What’s healthier than fresh, local, organic kale? Throw away those expensive supplements and the boxed stuff you find in the health food section of your local supermarket and find a recipe for all of those tomatoes, peppers, asparagus, etc. piled up at the assorted booths. (Availability dependent upon the season, of course)

Want to build community? Let me tell you, the farmers market is a wonderful way to get to know people in your community. Perhaps the vendors might view me as a nut, but I consider many of them my friends and all of them as cherished neighbors. So full of gratitude am I for the people who take the time to grow such wonders and then show up to sell them, I try to buy at least a little something from each and every one of them.

Worried about sustainability? Buy your food from the farmers market and compost what you don’t use, and you’ll be approaching 100% sustainable. Bring your own bags and ride your bike down and you’re not really taking ANYTHING from Mother Nature, you’re just borrowing things for a while until nature’s cycle reclaims them.

Are you concerned that corporations and billionaires have too much power and are taking too large a slice of the pie? Buying your food at the farmers market is taking money right out of their hands. Sorry, Bill Gates (yank), we don’t need whatever you’re planning on growing on all that farmland you’ve been gobbling up. Sorry Walton family (pry, tug), we don’t need you as middle men anymore, we’ll just buy direct. Sorry Monsanto (prying money from their toxin-covered fingers), we have no interest in your GMOs or Roundup. Shove off, we don’t like you and we don’t want what you’re selling.

Care about the people who grow and harvest your food? Why not get to know the people who grow and harvest your food? They might have some different beliefs or opinions than you do, but talk to them for a little while and you’ll realize how many values and concerns you share with them.

I have come to view those who work at growing and producing food locally for us as heroes. It’s not about the money for any of them but about the love of farming and gardening and about their desire to maintain tradition and ties to the land.

I find it hard to trust a doctor I do not see at the farmers market. Why would one whose job is to ensure health not buy his produce and other essentials there? What kind of example is he or she setting for his or her patients? I find it difficult to place faith in a politician or activist who does not visit the farmers market regularly. Here they will find people willing to work to make things better. What nutritionist, chef, or restaurant owner would not be a regular at the epicenter of healthy food? (I realize many of them work directly with local farmers and therefore don’t need the farmers market.) A clown, surely. Ronald McDonald, perhaps.

Our local farmers market is located in the middle of town, and every town should have a farmers market at its heart. It all begins here. It all begins with food.

I’m sure flaws and complaints can be found regarding farmers markets. I’m sure there are some vendors who are less pesticide-free than others, some who are more environmentally aware than others. But its potential to make things better on a local level is immense, its impact immediate. I could go on all day, but I have some vegetables to clean and a salad to make.

Arsenic Raises Cardiovascular Disease Risk | NaturalHealth365

Whew, I knew it was bad , having had the exposure in a rental..and I find it totally insane to ignore it .. this is more valid proof that Arsenic should be tested for before renting , building, buying a home . Unfortunately , and shamefully , folks do know of the contamination and put others in dire jeopardy .

A map showing mines in my area

http://www.us-mining.com/virginia/floyd-county

NaturalHealth365) New research shows arsenic exposure in children correlated with increased signs of cardiovascular disease.
— Read on www.naturalhealth365.com/new-study-links-arsenic-exposure-in-children-to-increased-cardiovascular-disease-risk.html

Psychosis Patients Prioritize Non-Psychosis Issues in Therapy

In therapy for psychosis, most patients prioritize non-psychosis issues; over 20% didn’t mention psychosis at all.
— Read on www.madinamerica.com/2023/07/psychosis-patients-prioritize-non-psychosis-issues-in-therapy-study-finds/