Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Afghan raid kills 4 Taliban, 3 civilian bystanders

{ttle}

{cptn}","template_name":"ss_thmb_play_ttle","i18n":{"end_of_gallery_header":"End of Gallery","end_of_gallery_next":"View Again"},"metadata":{"pagination":"{firstVisible} - {lastVisible} of {numItems}","ult":{"spaceid":"84896432","sec":""}}},{"id": "hcm-carousel-577051595", "dataManager": C.dmgr, "mediator": C.mdtr, "group_name":"hcm-carousel-577051595", "track_item_selected":1,"tracking":{ "spaceid" : "84896432", "events" : { "click" : { "any" : { "yui-carousel-prev" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"prev","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } }, "yui-carousel-next" : { "node" : "a", "data" : {"sec":"HCMOL on article right rail","slk":"next","itc":"1" }, "bubbles" : true, "test": function(params){ var carousel = params.obj.getCarousel(); var pages = carousel._pages; // no more pages, don't beacon again // if same page, don't beacon if(("_ult_current_page" in carousel) && carousel._ult_current_page==pages.cur) return false; // keep track of current position within this closure carousel._ult_current_page = pages.cur; return true; } } } } } } })); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {(function() { try{ if (Math.floor(Math.random()*10) == 1) { var loc = window.location, decoded = decodeURI(loc.pathname), encoded = encodeURI(decoded), uri = loc.protocol + "//" + loc.host + encoded + ((loc.search.length > 0) ? loc.search + '&' : '?') + "_cacheable=1", xmlhttp; if (window.XMLHttpRequest) xmlhttp = new XMLHttpRequest(); else xmlhttp = new ActiveXObject("Microsoft.XMLHTTP"); xmlhttp.open("GET",uri,true); xmlhttp.send(); } }catch(e){} })(); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings = '"projectId": "10001256862979", "documentName": "", "documentGroup": "", "ywaColo" : "vscale3", "spaceId" : "84896432" ,"customFields" : { "12" : "classic", "13" : "story" }'; Y.Media.YWA.init(Y.namespace("Media").ywaSettings); }); Y.later(10, this, function() {if(document.onclick===YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.newClick){document.onclick=YAHOO.Media.PreventDefaultHandler.oldClick;} }); }); });

A Content Marketing Strategy That Works | Small Business ...

Posted on 29. Oct, 2012 by Brian Clark in Blog, content marketing, conversion, Featured, Small Business Internet Marketing, Small Business Marketing

Image of Scribe Ebook Cover

It?s time to get strategic about your content marketing.

After all, it?s one thing to create compelling content that spreads via social media and ranks well in search engines. It?s quite another for that content to build an audience that builds your business.

The key to making that happen? Building authority thanks to that audience.

With that goal in mind, I?m happy to announce another free ebook for you. This is the second installment in a series I?m writing to give you a solid road map to developing a content marketing initiative that works.

This time I lay out a 7-step process that provides you with a solid strategy framework. There are also checklists of tasks and tactics within each of the seven steps.

In this quick 18-page read, you?ll discover:

  • The strange trick authority does to your prospect?s brain
  • How to become more important than the ?experts?
  • Why Google keeps getting better at mimicking offline authority
  • What to focus on for better search engine rankings (it?s not what you think)
  • The 7-step process all effective content marketing follows
  • What a minimum viable audience is (and how to get one)
  • The ?unfair advantage? that comes from content marketing

There?s also a nifty forward by Sonia Simone. Click here to get access.

Get months of education from us ? at no charge

You get instant access to A Content Marketing Strategy That Works when you register for the Scribe Content Marketing Library. If you missed the first ebook in the series (The Business Case for Agile Content Marketing), you?ll get instant access to that as well.

And you?ll also receive all the ebook installments that follow, plus webinars, audio seminars, and other educational resources ? all free. Up next in the series from me (coming in a few weeks):

How to Create Content That Converts

How to Tell a Story Over Time that Transforms an Audience Into Customers and Clients

Register today to get instant access plus each new installment.

About the Author: Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and CEO of Copyblogger Media. Get more from Brian on Twitter and Google+.

Related Stories

Make sure you pick up your copy of our FREE Business Acceleration Report! Simply enter your info on the form to the right and I'll send it right out! -->> Thanks for visiting!

Tags: Small Business Internet Marketing

Source: http://www.frontlinemarketingsystems.com/blog/small-business-marketing/a-content-marketing-strategy-that-works/

kony 2012 jim irsay the new ipad apple announcement indianapolis colts joseph kony joseph kony

Hurricane Sandy Forces Avon Breast Cancer Crusade To Cancel ...

Photo Credit: Avon

For the past 20 years Avon, known as ?the company for women,??has championed for more than woman?s beauty, taking a stand for woman?s health issues and the fight against breast cancer?through its New York-based?Avon Breast Cancer Crusade.

Today breast cancer death rates among American women are higher than any other cancer besides lung cancer (breastcancer.org). Since its launch in 1992, the?Avon Foundation has donated more than $78 million worldwide?for breast cancer research through its Avon Breast Cancer Crusade initiative. In all, Avon has helped provide access to health care programs in more than 58 countries, making it the leading corporate supporter of breast cancer research in the world.??Some examples of the Crusade?s work include providing?screening and diagnoses, support services for patients and their families,?and scientific research studies focused on breast cancer. Publicly, Avon has announced that it will continue to grow its education and awareness efforts about the disease until there is no more breast cancer.

Fergie serves as an Avon Women?s Ambassador, speaking out for breast cancer awareness and education. (Photo Credit: Just Jared)

A unique element of Avon?s Crusade is its commitment to bringing together powerful business, community?and health leaders to help build awareness about breast cancer and its impact on women. In the U.S., one in every eight women will develop invasive breast cancer during their lifetime, a statistic that is all to close to home for every mother, daughter and sister. To accelerate breast cancer research, Avon-hosts yearly?events including the Avon Foundation Breast Cancer Forum and Breast Cancer Global Congress, focused on current issues that are affecting breast cancer patients today.

At the Breast Cancer Forum held earlier this March at the Millenium Broadway Hotel in New York City, more than 300 community health educators, patient navigators, nurses and physicians from all 50 states gathered to focus on improving breast cancer care and overcoming racial disparities in breast cancer treatment. Avon?s biggest announcement at the Forum?was?the?launch of Avon?s Global Breast Cancer Clinical Scholars.?On September 12, 2012,?25 breast cancer specialists from countries such as Armenia, Brazil and China began training at Avon Foundation-funded U.S. breast cancer centers in order to bring new skills and information back to their home countries to improve care and treatment of breast cancer patients. Each scholar represents a different medical specialty ranging from?reconstructive surgery to medical oncology,?and will advance training during their time in the U.S.

A shot of last year?s presentation at the Avon Foundation Awards Gala held in New York City. (Photo Credit: Avon)

To mark these achievements and more, Avon planned a 20th Anniversary Awards Gala set for this Tuesday, October 30th?at the New York Mariott Marquis. The elegant affair, which feted hosts Fergie, a Global Avon Ambassador for Women and Avon Products CEO Sheri McCoy, was cancelled late Sunday due to the impending Hurricane Sandy. Avon will announce future plans for recognizing its benefactors and progress in breast cancer research later this year.

?

Related Articles:

Source: http://askmissa.com/2012/10/29/hurricane-sandy-forces-avon-breast-cancer-crusade-to-cancel-20th-anniversary-awards-gala/

eminem Samantha Steele yankees Tagg Romney Bosses Day Cabin Fever 2 nhl

SDC to Co-sponsor Ventana Research's Biz-Tech Innovation Summit

About the panel

Stephen Baker is the author of The Numerati & a journalist with 20 years of experience at BusinessWeek. More??

Paul Barsch directs professional services marketing programs for Teradata and has more than fifteen years of information... More??

Gary Cokins is an internationally recognized expert, speaker, and author. More??

Jill Dych? is an internationally recognized author, speaker, and business consultant. More??

Themos Kalafatis has worked as a consultant for Data Mining, Text Mining, Information Extraction and Data Quality for over a decade. More??

James Taylor is CEO and Principal Consultant at Decision Management Solutions and a leading expert in decision management. More??

Source: http://smartdatacollective.com/clifffigallo/82816/sdc-co-sponsor-ventana-researchs-biz-tech-innovation-summit

hologram pulitzer prize winners nfl 2012 schedule gmail down ryan oneal file taxes online tupac shakur

Obama Campaign Fears Impact of Hurricane ... - Yeshiva World News

A top aide to Barack Obama voiced fears Sunday that Hurricane Sandy could hurt the president?s re-election chances by reducing turnout, as the impending storm forced both candidates to cancel campaign stops.

Republican challenger Mitt Romney received good news in two key swing states, winning the endorsement in Iowa of the main newspaper, the Des Moines Register, and tying Obama in a newly-released poll in all-important Ohio.

But nine days out from the nailbiter November 6 election, all eyes were on Hurricane Sandy and how the potentially catastrophic storm might play out on the neck-and-neck race for the White House.

?Obviously we want unfettered access to the polls because we believe that the more people come out, the better we?re going to do,? senior Obama strategist David Axelrod told CNN.

?And so to the extent that it makes it harder, you know, that?s a source of concern,? he said.

Democrats desperately need to rally Obama supporters as Romney surged into the lead in national polls following a commanding first debate victory on October 3 and his momentum shows little sign of evaporating.

With the storm due to hit late Monday or early Tuesday, Obama and Romney scrambled to revamp their schedules in the hectic final stretch of a campaign that has seen them criss-cross the main battlegrounds on a near-daily basis.

Romney canceled appearances in Virginia to head for Ohio before the hurricane?s arrival, while Obama moved up his planned departure to Florida in order to be back in Washington in time for the storm?s landfall.

After attending a church service in Washington as usual on Sunday morning, the president headed to the headquarters of the Federal Emergency Management Agency for a briefing on storm assistance preparations.

?The storm will throw havoc into the race,? Democratic Virginia Senator Mark Warner told ?Fox News Sunday,? as coastal evacuations were ordered in New Jersey and New York and forecasters warned of millions being affected by flooding.

As the storm drowned out media coverage of campaign issues, Obama faced a key test of his leadership under the glare of the election spotlight, raising the stakes on his decision-making on the eve of the cliffhanger election.

Republican party chairman Reince Priebus hit back at claims from Democrats that Romney?s momentum was leveling off and argued that key states like Ohio and Wisconsin were beginning to swing towards the challenger.

Democrats normally do better at early voting and Obama?s get-out-the-vote effort in 2008 was phenomenal but Priebus told ?Fox News Sunday? that things were different this time around.

?They?re not where they were in 2008. We?re far ahead of where we were in 2008. Our ground game is better than their ground game. We are going to do more voter contacts this year than all of 2008 and all of 2004 combined. We have an army on the ground,? he said.

Forecasters predict Sandy will collide with a seasonal ?nor?easter,? creating a supercharged, cold weather system that could burst through the Mid-Atlantic as far inland as Ohio, just days before the country votes.

Romney and Obama are in a down-to-the-wire battle for the White House, in an election which most national polls have said is too close to call.

The outcome of the vote is expected to hinge on a handful of battleground states where the two contenders also, for the most part, are running within a few percentage points of each other in the polls.

The latest poll from a consortium of Ohio newspapers on Sunday showed that race all tied up, 49 percent to 49 percent, but it was conducted October 18-23 and may not be the absolutely latest snapshot.

Another poll showed Obama clinging to a four-point lead in Virginia, a state now seen as a tie that the president had led by a clear margin before his disastrous first debate performance.

Campaigning in the must-win state of Florida on Saturday, Romney pleaded for supporters there to set him on the path for a come-from-behind White House victory that seemed a long-shot only a few weeks ago.

?Early voting began today,? he said. ?That means today you can go vote, and it helps for you to vote now because the earlier you vote, the more help you can give us to get people to the polls,? he said.

The message for the Republican candidate resonated with Luis Maldonado, 38, a Florida electrician, who said he believes Romney can fix the ailing US economy.

?In the past four years we haven?t seen what we were expecting from the president. I believe he?s going to create more jobs,? Maldonado said of Romney.

The start of early voting Saturday in Florida, Maryland, and Washington brought long lines of voters who in some cases wrapped around city blocks.

So far, at least 12.3 million people have cast their ballots, according to a tally by experts at George Mason University near Washington.

But Hurricane Sandy was already making its presence felt and Governor Martin O?Malley announced that early voting in Maryland would be cancelled statewide on Monday due to the storm. Other states could be poised to follow.

?

Source: France24.com

Source: http://www.theyeshivaworld.com/?p=142906

courtney upshaw russell wilson catch me if you can delmon young arrested the raven the raven zerg rush

Education as Mimesis ? Matthew Kruger-Ross

Education as Mimesis

For EDUC 901
29 October 2012

It is the third or fourth session of Stephen?s Curriculum Studies colloquium and I experience the sensation of stepping outside my body to watch and listen to myself share a particular insight I?ve pulled from the reading and current discussion to my prior experience. As I approach a phrase I mean to use ironically, I raise my hands to insert air quotes and my mouth forms to produce a distinct clicking noise. Time stops. My peers and Stephen stare at me. I?ve just imitated Kieran and I acknowledge as such as an aside and the room erupts in laughter. Where did this come from? I did not do it consciously; it just happened.

Introduction

The goal in the next few pages is to explore the relationship between mimesis and education. Mimetics ? mimesis, imitation, mimicry ? is largely absent from educational conversations (excluding the ones included below, of course). I have hunches as to the reasons for why mimesis has fallen out of favor and plan to weave them through an analysis of perspectives on mimetics. The question that elicited this analysis originally concerned the virtues and ethics of mimesis in education, but it is the pragmatic that demands a shift in the question to an understanding of mimesis in the practice of pedagogy. Put bluntly, we (as participants in educational endeavors) are already always engage in mimesis ? so why not understand just what we are doing?

Personal and Current Contexts

We all would like to think that we are our own person, independent of any one else. We are told from birth (and as adults in every diversity training program) that we are unique. Pluralism at its best is the simultaneous acknowledgement and celebration of multiple perspectives. Plato?s critique of the poets in The Republic, Itard?s work with socializing Victor, and Locke?s focus on the virtuous gentleman calls these everyday presuppositions into question. How does mimesis occur in the everyday life of a school and, more broadly, in teaching and learning? As easy as it would be to ignore and explain away the phenomenon, something is left undone by not exploring it further.

At present Western culture is obsessed with owning and possessing ideas in the same way as owning cars, houses, and cell phones. In the age of digital technologies and global communication capabilities, is it possible ? is it realistic ? to attribute and own ideas? This begins a (dangerous) change of pace: Where does ownership lie when a student learns (absorbs) another?s idea? (e.g. from Plato, Locke, etc.). In due time I will call upon the ideas of others and reference their contributions to understandings of mimesis. Are they my ideas? Or are they simply the other writers that I cite? Is it a combination? Copyright law and traditional conceptualizations of who owns what have been transformed by the revolution in digital communications. Plagiarism is a damning offense in academia; you must cite and footnote and when in doubt, cite and footnote again.

Returning to how imitation and mimesis occurs within the realm of ideas and educational life, consider teacher identity. Is a teacher truly an innovative educator or are they imitating practices that have been deemed as good teaching? Considering content and curricula; Whose knowledge is being passed on to children (or constructed in children?s minds depending on your philosophical bent)? In what ways are teachers role models for students insomuch as we expect that student will embody the teacher?s own behavior and beliefs? How do students influence each other in their learning? Influence and model are concepts that attempt to name mimesis but lack a full expression of the phenomenon. Donald?s (1991) framework of mimetic culture will be helpful in moving forward.

Mimetic Culture

Merlin Donald in his book Origins of the Modern Mind (1991) presents a theory of human cognitive development grounded in evolution that offers an interesting perspective on mimesis in the generation of human culture. Put extremely simply, over time man evolved through cultural frameworks that involved the integration of specific cognitive tools that assisted in the development of humans. Beginning with primates, the first humans existed in an Episodic Culture, transitioned to a Mimetic Culture, then to a Mythic Culture, and finally to the External Symbolic Storage and Theoretic Culture. Donald argues that the Mimetic Culture was the critical mediator between the transition from ape to human (p. 162). Instead of relying solely on episodic memory (the core of the Episodic Culture), hominids in the Mimetic Culture transitioned into interactions and relationships based on intentional mimetic representation. ?Mimesis rests on the ability to produce conscious, self-initiated, representational acts that are intentional but not linguistic? (Donald, 1991, p. 168, emphasis added). Within this developmental model of cognition, language does not appear until the Mythic cultural stage.

Mimetic representation operates in multiple modalities and includes gestures, facial expressions, and tone of voice. Donald?s framework posits that mimesis was key for the development of social groups, norms, and, ultimately, ?the first truly human culture? (1991, p. 193). The obvious lack of language in mimetic culture is intriguing. Without words and grammar, mimetic representation allowed for the development of tools, games, play, dance and other rituals that over time developed into the foundations of social structure. Mimesis remains central even to modern cultures: ?No matter how evolved our oral-linguistic culture, and no matter how sophisticated the rich varieties of symbolic material surrounding us, mimetic scenarios still form the expressive heart of human social interchange? (Donald, 1991, p. 189). From the perspective offered by this developmental model for human cognition, mimetic representation is not only integral to human culture but it is impossible to ignore.

Donald?s developmental framework situates mimesis as ?the most basic medium of human communication? (p. 188). Adopting this presupposition, we move to Plato, Itard, and Locke?s treatment of mimetics concerning teaching and learning.

Mimesis in Education: Plato, Itard, Locke

Plato tackles mimesis in Books III and X in The Republic. Mimetic representation of the epic poets, and in particular Homer, is Plato?s target. He creates a distinction between the (1) simple narrative and (2) mimesis in the sharing of a poet?s story. Simple narrative is appropriate and acceptable while mimetic poetry is forbidden. In the oral presentation of the poem a poet is not to imitate or embody the personae of the character who is speaking or acting. Imitation is dangerous for the listeners and for the virtuous man/city. Plato does not necessarily argue for the banishment of the oral tradition, but a severe censorship. If humans are to have a mind then their charge in life is to learn to think for himself and identify what is true about the world as it is, not trusting mere imitations of the world. Plato?s critique of the need for the philosopher-kings? censorship of the poets situates the value and nature of art in human culture. With an eye to education, Plato would be wary of mimetic representation on the part of the teacher. Simple truths may be acceptable, but imitating another would be too risky for the greater good.

Itard?s Wild Boy of Aveyron offers a direct educational implementation of mimetic representation and mimetic theory, approach that is enacted to this day in Montessori schools (Ross, 2012). Itard takes Victor into his care and attempts to assimilate him into human society. While Victor is spoken at/to during his training it is presupposed that he cannot engage linguistically. The communication between Itard and Madame Gu?rin to Victor is based in imitating gestures and bodily movements. Considering Plato?s argument that humans should not be imitating truth but rather focused on identifying truth in and of itself, Victor?s mimetic behavior would suggest a certain emptiness, a going-through-the-motions without meaning or understanding. The features of mimetic culture that Donald (1991) suggests are demonstrate in the film. Victor communicates his needs and desires via bodily gestures and vocal grunting. What remains questionable is where mimetic representation transitions into learning and embodied knowing. Is Victor acting out meaningless (for him) actions as he is ?taught? his alphabet? Within the lens of Donald?s mimetic culture, would Victor have been able to absorb and transition more quickly? More efficiently? Can Donald?s developmental theory even be applied in this way?

Locke?s model for an ideal education, beyond the body, virtue, and academic curriculum, frames educational encounters as a series of conversations between the student and other learned, virtuous gentlemen. Connecting the mimetic cultures of the past, Donald (1991) threads mimetic culture to the present by referencing the Vygotskian pedagogy. Specifically, Vygotsky?s zone of proximal development (ZPD) is presented as a modern mimetically-based tool for teaching and learning. The types of conversations proposed by Locke seem to suggest the context of Vygotsky?s ZPD; communication cannot be too difficult or too simple but just right to encourage learning. In the modern day classroom this continues to evolve in the heterogeneous groupings minds so that the smarter will rub off on the not-as-smart. The result, in theory, is for the not-as smart minds to imitate the smarter and thereby becoming smarter. The conclusion is commonsensical and is, essentially, Locke?s argument that to educate a virtuous gentleman he must be surrounded by other virtuous individuals. Is this all that bad?

Concluding Thoughts and So what?

Kemp (2006) attempts the salvation of mimesis in education by approaching the phenomenon tangentially via hermeneutics. While mimesis has been pushed to the edge of pedagogy (Kemp describes it as repressed), understanding the teacher-student relationship is impossible without it. In education we traditionally focus on the formation of students. Drawing on Paul Ric?ur?s theory of narrative, Kemp reconnects mimesis to education:

We form and teach ourselves the moment we appropriate stories and ideas?which is a re-figuration. This is the actual mimesis, the creative representation (the putting forth) of a ?hermeneutic identity? ? We can only retrieve the narrative?s meaning because we already are familiar with the meaning given by the everyday world in which we live and in relation to which we understand the meaning of actions, goals, means, success, defeat and so forth. (Kemp, 2006, pp. 175-176)

Kemp references Aristotle?s critique of Plato?s denunciation of the poets in The Republic in ultimately framing all of culture as series of mimetic acts. Education, however, continues to resist mimesis: ?Today the position is that we in no way mimic anything in the process of learning? (Kemp, 2006, 177). This is not the case in other contexts; athletes imitate their coaches, musicians imitate their tutors, and craftspeople work as apprentices to masters. While a full exploration of the roots of the falling out of favor of imitation within the teacher-student relationship is beyond the scope of this analysis, the separation between pedagogy and mimesis begins with Plato and Aristotle and continues through time into neoclassicism, romanticism, and protestantism.

Returning again to Donald?s (1991) distinction of mimesis as intentional representation, it is clearer that an additional distinction needs to be made ? the phenomenon of unintentional imitation or pre-consciousness mimesis. Locke?s conceptualization of the education of a virtuous gentlemen relies on covert imitation. Itard?s work with Victor was focused, transparent, and intentional mimesis. But what of unintentional mimetic representation? In what ways are educators and students acting out (unconsciously imitating) particular ways of being that are not their own? Or are these imitations their own? Even with the distinction of intentional and unintentional imitation, does an escape route exist?

?Mimesis must be understood as a productive imitation that enters into all individual formation and education? (Kemp, 2006, 183). The question is not whether education should acknowledge imitation as a tool for teaching and learning but rather how mimesis should be integrated into the pedagogical context.

The teacher is the representative of the historical community. The teacher, highly?critical or not, is the intermediary of traditions, for even critiques must be based on premises and conceptions of man in order to be sound. Consequently, the teacher has something to offer the student, something to be imitated; the teacher cannot merely be the occasion that spurs the student to bring out truths hidden inside. The best teacher is the one who can make his or her student autonomous. Mimesis must be a creative imitation, and that naturally can only happen if the student appreciates the teacher?even when considering a particular teacher as the best teacher for him or herself. The teacher forms the student, but the student forms him or herself through the choice of teacher he or she wants to follow as the master. (Kemp, 2006, 183)

Creative mimesis is the term used to reframe imitation within pedagogy. There is an expectation that the student (apprentice) will imitate the actions and behaviours of the master and ultimately move just beyond the skill and creativity of the master. If mimetic representation is conscious, if it is distinguishable, something can be done with it. What needs attention is not a resolving or diminishing, but an acknowledging and embodying.

References

Donald, Merlin (1991). Origins of the modern mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Itard, J.M.G. The Wild Boy of Aveyron.

Kemp, P. (2006). Mimesis in Educational Hermeneutics. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 38(2), 171?184. doi:10.1111/j.1469-5812.2006.00186.x

Locke, John. Some Thoughts concerning Education. Hackett Pub Co Inc ISBN: 0872203344

Plato, The Republic. Dover. ISBN: 0486411214

Ross, S. (2012). The Montessori Method: The Development of a Healthy Pattern of Desire in Early Childhood. Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture, 19(1), 87?122. doi:10.1353/ctn.2012.0004

Like this:

Be the first to like this.

Source: http://matthewkr.com/2012/10/29/education-as-mimesis/

Kendrick Lamar Russell Means Taylor Swift Red Register To Vote Walking Dead Season 3 Episode 2 nascar celiac disease

Snoring Remedies | ArticleBro.com

Today Snoring is a common problem of the western countries. Due to this disease people are feeling shame in presence of others. You can Snurken stoppen with the help of easy exercise.
After the working period of whole day a man wants restful peace at night but if he suffers from snoring than his night also become heavy. Generally many people of western countries are suffering from it due excess drinking of alcohol and smoking. It is a common problem of many people so there is need of remedies to be secure from snoring. There are different snoring remedies such as don?t use any drug if you are going to sleep. You can take good sleep only of you are Snurken stoppen otherwise such drugs or alcohol will make you more tired and restless. So always try to avoid such things for the sake of your health because good health is the first cause of happiness .All other things are secondary but good health is primary. It is very foolish if someone to destroy help of ourselves for pleasure of a moment. In snoring you cannot take a restful sleep so its remedies are very helpful for you. There are many reasons are possible for snoring.
If you will develop a natural sleep pattern than you can remain free from it because every night you sleeps for more than 4-5 hours so if you will sleep in an uncomfortable way than it can grow the habit of snoring in you should always try to sleep in a good way. If you will quit smoking than you can feel more better in case of snoring problem because smoking put a very bad effect on throat. Anyone can quit smoking, it is very easy to quit smoking because once you understood that it harms you than you will quit it .How can a live in a way which harms himself , so it is Possible to quit such bad habits and to be free from snoring also.
A good Health has its own taste which is very much depends on a good sleep. A god sleep makes you free from it because sometime lack of good sleep results snore. Overweight is a major cause of snoring and other disease .If you will take part in some physical activities like walking, swimming, etc it will help you in weight loss and snoring simultaneously. Today?s dairy products are also very harmful in snoring and if you want to be free from snoring you should not eat them especially before your bed time. Stopnumetsnurken.com provides you such helpful remedies.

You can Snurken stoppen and want to be safe from it than don?t wait for a single moment and check it out here snoring remedies that how you will be remain free from snoring. Here you will get everything which will sure your health benefit. Snoring remedies is very necessary in today?s fast running world.

Source: http://articlebro.com/2012/health-fitness/snoring-remedies/

2012 nfl draft grades young justice nfl draft d rose iman shumpert mayweather vs cotto shumpert