21 August 2010

occupational health - how bug spray works

This is here because of a search I did on "paradoxical effects" of psychiatric medications. What I found was an article written by J K Palmer, associate professor of psychology, at Eastern Kentucky University.
      The article is interesting and relevant since the article first talks about the brain's neurons communicate with one another, and how drugs affect that communication process. Read down and you'll find that a chemical known as Acetylcholine is used by the neurons that control your muscles, heart, and lungs. It is also used by many neurons in the brain that are involved in memory. Acetylcholine crosses the brain synapses and tells the muscles to extend by stimulating the receptor sites on the muscles.
     When nerve signals are terminated this is called “reuptake”. Acetylcholine is rapidly broken down by a chemical called acetylcholinesterase. Have you ever looked at the fine print on a bottle of Prozac, Paxil, or Zoloft? It says in there that the drug is a “selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor” (SSRI).
     Now, read the fine print on a can of insecticide. For some of them, it says that the active ingredient is an “acetylcholinesterase inhibitor”. So, the same effect that we see with bug spray, can be facilitated by SSRIs. You do the math.
     As an FYI, nicotine directly stimulates acetylcholine receptors. Alzheimer’s disease results when these acetylcholine-using neurons in the brain die. [As an aside, does this new info about bug spray provide us any fresh insights on the actions of former US Senator and insect exterminator Tom DeLay?]

poetry - in the accupuncture workshop

In the acupuncture workshop

the breeze closes one door
then opens another - literally

Each of us comes seeking healing
for maladies never discussed.

Then we wait.
and participate in the group
wherein we do not speak
yet get connected.

I have no idea if this treatment will work.

If this seems disconcerting I wonder -
How much different is this
from a blind-faith trust in medication
and otherwise invasive procedures
Such as they are.

So many have faith without even knowing
If those procedures work at all

Give me then, instead
The cool breeze that opened the door.

IMAGE CREDIT: Mysteries Zone.com Acupuncture: Traditional Chinese Medicine

17 August 2010

hunting - hunter safety courses

The Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection has begun taking applications for upcoming Conservation Education/Firearms Safety Program classes.

It is recommended that you enroll early in the year and not wait until a month before the hunting seasons begin. Courses fill up quickly and you may have to wait or travel a longer distance to attend a course if none are available in your town. Where courses are taught varies from town to town and includes such locations as sportsmen's clubs, community centers, schools and offices of the Department of Environmental Protection. There are no fees for any of the courses and all materials are provided free of charge by the Conservation Education/Firearms Safety Program.

Anyone wising to enroll must do so through the DEP regional office [the closest one to me is in Franklin, CT]. You can also find where classes are being offered around the state.

FRANKLIN WILDLIFE MANAGEMENT AREA - 391 Route 32, North Franklin
Hours: Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. | Phone: (860) 642-7239

Pre-Registration is Mandatory. All firearms hunting courses are 16 hours or longer. You must attend all scheduled class times.

Preparing for hunting is more than this set of classes. Tree Stand Safety can be important, too. Improper use of tree stands is one of the most common causes for injuries and death to hunters in the field. For free online instruction on the proper use of tree stands and safety harnesses, go to this website on tree stand Safety.

By the way, you don't have to go out hunting [for which one should be licensed, anyway] to benefit from taking hunting, firearms or bow hunting safety courses. They are good cram courses on some of the many things a person ought to know when hiking in the woods anyway.

May be of particular interest to photographers, budding naturalists, plein-air painters and anyone interested in responsible use of firearms.

16 August 2010

art + artists - public art

From the Fairmount Park Art Association website ~ a thoughtful read


What is public art?
     Public art is not an art “form.” Its size can be huge or small. It can tower fifty feet high or call attention to the paving beneath your feet. Its shape can be abstract or realistic (or both), and it may be cast, carved, built, assembled, or painted. It can be site-specific or stand in contrast to its surroundings. What distinguishes public art is the unique association of how it is made, where it is, and what it means. Public art can express community values, enhance our environment, transform a landscape, heighten our awareness, or question our assumptions. Placed in public sites, this art is there for everyone, a form of collective community expression. Public art is a reflection of how we see the world—the artist’s response to our time and place combined with our own sense of who we are.

Who is the “public” for public art?
     In a diverse society, all art cannot appeal to all people, nor should it be expected to do so. Art attracts attention; that is what it is supposed to do. Is it any wonder, then, that public art causes controversy? Varied popular opinion is inevitable, and it is a healthy sign that the public environment is acknowledged rather than ignored. To some degree, every public art project is an interactive process involving artists, architects, design professionals, community residents, civic leaders, politicians, approval agencies, funding agencies, and construction teams. The challenge of this communal process is to enhance rather than limit the artist’s involvement.

What is the “art” of public art?
     As our society and its modes of expression evolve, so will our definitions of public art. Materials and methods change to reflect our contemporary culture. The process, guided by professional expertise and public involvement, should seek out the most imaginative and productive affinity between artist and community. Likewise, artists must bring to the work their artistic integrity, creativity, and skill. What is needed is a commitment to invention, boldness, and cooperation—not compromise.

Why public art?
     Public art is a part of our public history, part of our evolving culture and our collective memory. It reflects and reveals our society and adds meaning to our cities. As artists respond to our times, they reflect their inner vision to the outside world, and they create a chronicle of our public experience.

Adapted from Public Art in Philadelphia by Penny Balkin Bach (Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 1992).
IMAGES: 1 - Philadelphia Museum of Art / Dali Exhibition ~ May 2005; 2 - Nymph / Goodspeed Opera Foundation ~ October 2008; Elephant Graffiti / Paris ~ April 2007; 4 - Chainsaw sculpture / Middletown, CT ~ September 2004; 5 - Sculpture, Parc Emily Gamelin / Montreal ~ May 2006. Click on the images to see larger representations.

original work - Hot Dog Vendor

15 August 2010

events - Burning Man

Oh, one of my long fantasies would be to attend a Burning Man event at Black Rock City, in Nevada, USA. I suspect that isn't happening this year.
Hot town, summer in the city
Back of my neck getting dirty and gritty
Come-on come-on and dance all night
Despite the heat it will be all right
... In the summer, in the city
In the summer, in the city
— Lovin Spoonful

This team Apokiliptika will be there.
IMAGE CREDIT: Pavilion of the Man - Rendering by Andrew Johnstone - Design by Rod Garrett and Larry Harvey Burningman.com

distractions - Dr. Laura's secret obsession

     Want to know what Dr. Laura Schisslinger is doing when not busy berating callers by repeatedly calling them the "N" word? Maybe she is giving advice on how to get a dirty sweaty man cleaned up ~ "...take a shower with him".


     No, she's also making jewelry! She is particularly fond of "WEIRD PEARLS"! But likes weird stuff in general. Who would have known?

mental health - Recovery is not treatment

"Recovery" is not a "treatment modality". For at least three decades [longer, if you go back to Clifford Beers] advocates, ex-patients and dispassionate observers have repeatedly argued that people can and often do, "recover" from long lasting disabling, debilitating conditions and experiences.
     At the same time, the idea was scoffed and dismissed by high ranking administrators and clinicians, citing [still] the ghosts of Kraepelin and Beuler as the rationale for why such an idea was untenable. "People don't recover from 'mental illness.' Their lives are lost and so is any hope for them doing much better" the clinical careerists would steadfastly maintain.
     Little or no thought was given to asking patients in mental hospitals what might be their wishes, hopes, dreams, or aspirations to achieve.
     Bean-counting bureaucrats spoke of "bed spaces," "treatment modalities" and "managed care." They asked drug companies when "the next miracle drug cure" would get people out of institutions and back on the streets.
     The standard response to those who had different ideas about treatment, care or rehabilitation, was to ignore them, keep them from the decision making process and to demean and invalidate the critical voices that offered options.
     Now, times have changed. Budget constraint called for innovation and "outcomes." Major funding sources started telling them that "recovery is good"! Gradually, those same clinicians and bureaucrats who walk past patients without seeing them took up the call.
     However, while the language has been embraced, other obstacles remain. "Clients" get wheedled and cajoled to large group meetings and say the process is "patient driven." Abusive staff and practices continue unabated. Known wrongs that take place fail to get "substantiated" when only patients witness those wrongs.
     How can this be? That bureaucrat driving his new custom SUV to the workplace while the patient gets penalized by Title 19 with "spend-downs" on maybe less than $500 a month. Patient driven huh!
     Folks, you don't have a clue.
     Admittedly, the samples mentioned oversimplify the problems inherent in social injustice and lack regard for people with mental illnesses. Administrators, Nurse Educators and other who shape professional opinion are still no different than the society at large. But my point would be the same no matter what quick capsule glimpse got noted.
     Recovery is not a treatment modality! The reasons people can and do recover are many and multifarious. But they come as much [or more] from within.
     "Recovery" may or may not include taking medications. For John Nash [the subject of the film A Beautiful Mind] they by and large did NOT, no matter what the film said.
     "Recovery" may or may not include assistance from mental health programs. In the case of survivors in the Vermont Longitudinal Study in 1987, for a goodly number it was in spite of what services the "system" provided.
     Recovery is a process It involves learning to live with complex and inexplicable phenomena [that many may call delusional], of freedom from unrealistic pressures to "get over" that phenomena within discrete time frame, and of being considered, cared for and loved as a fellow human being by others. Simple as that.
     How much more difficult this is to achieve in a society and culture that does not value those souls who are not immediately responsive to time-motion-study lifestyles. So challenging to those who drive efficient bureaucrats to distraction with abstruse, and often unexplainable questions. In the long run, it may call for dramatic and complete changes in cultural attitudes and norms, not something so easy to implement when it isn't even discussed.
     So...if you, the fashionably dressed mental health careerist can grasp this, then next time you wish to speak to someone -anyone, even one of your professional colleagues- about "Recovery" for people with living dramatic, even severe, cognitive / perceptual dissonance, then do so only after you actually drop your important paperwork and pre-occupation with meetings and give someone the time, energy and effort to sit with and actually get to know some of those persons who walk past you daily, but of whom you only know by diagnosis. Incidentally, it's a whole lot cheaper than funding the psycho-pharmaceutical companies, but takes longer to see results.
     Now that would be a step toward recovery.

SOME RESOURCES: Clifford Beers' A Mind That Found Itself, National Empowerment Center, MindFreedom, Mary Ellen Copeland's Self-help Strategies

geek stuff - websites to explore

 • Free Software Foundation: The Free Software Foundation (FSF) is a nonprofit with a worldwide mission to promote computer user freedom and to defend the rights of all free software users.
     * The FSF advocates for free software ideals as outlined in the Free Software Definition, works for adoption of free software and free media formats, and organizes activist campaigns against threats to user freedom like Windows 7, Apple's iPhone and OS X, DRM on ebooks and movies, and software patents.
     * We promote completely free software distributions of GNU/Linux, and advocate that users of the GNU/Linux operating system switch to a distribution which respects their freedom.
     * We drive development of the GNU operating system and maintain a list of high-priority free software projects to promote replacements for common proprietary applications.
     * We build and update resources useful for the free software community like the Free Software and Hardware Directories, and the free software jobs board. We also provide licenses for free software developers to share their code, including the GNU General Public License.
.

 • Photoshop Support: Creating Favicons, a tutorial by Jennifer Apple, who says "A Favicon is a little custom icon that appears next to a website's URL in the address bar of a web browser. They also show up in your bookmarked sites, on the tabs in tabbed browsers, and as the icon for Internet shortcuts on your desktop or other folders in Windows. And when I say little, I mean 16 pixels by 16 pixels. So if you like a good design challenge try your hand at this one."

other voices - Edward Abbey


"May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous, leading to the most amazing view. May your mountains rise into and above the clouds.

"What is the purpose of the giant sequoia tree? The purpose of the giant sequoia tree is to provide shade for the tiny titmouse.

"Wilderness is not a luxury but a necessity of the human spirit
".


distraction - lyp sync and dancing

other voices - Martin Luther King


"I believe that unarmed truth and unconditional love
will have the final word in reality.
This is why right, temporarily defeated,
is stronger than evil triumphant."

Martin Luther King

history - Hiroshima


     I read John Hersey's Hiroshima in junior high school, as an assignment for my world history class.
     It was during the height of the Cold War, and before Vietnam and it was still common practice to conduct air-raid drills during the school day.
     The drills were where virtually everyone was herded into the inner hallways, and instructed where the civil defense supplies were kept. Before reading the book, the drills were kind of a joke; a way of getting out of class for an hour. But the reading had a sobering influence.
     Although I was well aware that the Rocky and Bullwinkle Show was blatant political propaganda, I lacked any strong awareness of peace activism, nor much of a political sense at all. Reading Hiroshima began to change that.
     After reading the book, my sense was that no windowless hallway could save anyone from an atomic blast. If anything, we'd either be vaporized or crushed to death under the rubble of a collapsing building. It also set the stage for how fearsome the Cuban Missle Crisis seemed to me.
     Afterwards, it seemed that Popular Culture became obsessed with knowing that the Kremlin and the White House would be in contact with one another ~ using the eponymous "red phone" ~ to avoid a nuclear war. The decades continued tense, but by the 1990s ~ even with other nations acquiring nuclear bomb making technology ~ we were lulled into imagining that a nuclear annihilation could be remote.
     Now, 65 years later, the possibility of a nuclear attack is no less real, though the potential perpetrators are less likely to be heads of States, and more likely they'd be disaffected dissidents, power crazed megalomaniacs ...or even some idiot thinking he'd make a profit (somehow). This possibility remains, whether the perpetrator is some middle-eastern religious fanatic [e.g. someone akin to Osama Bin Laden] or some middle-western political zealot [e.g. Timothy McVeigh]. Let's hold no doctrinaire fantasies about which "side" the perp might come from.
     So where do we go from here? How does the risk become less severe?
     I don't have an answer.

IMAGE CREDITS: 1- Hiroshima LIFE; 2- Wikipedia; 3- BuzzFlash Blog. COMMENT: First published in the New Yorker, the editors recognized the impact that the article would have by providing a human face to the victims. Although four chapters were intended for serialization they decided to devote one entire issue only to it. There were no other articles and none of the magazine's signature cartoons.
     Readers, who had never before been exposed to nuclear war from the perspective of the actual people who lived through it, were quick to pick up copies, and the edition sold out within just a few hours. Shortly after it appeared, the Book-of-the-Month Club printed it and distributed it free of charge to all of its members. LINK: U S Department of Energy The Atomic Bombing of HIroshima

Big Pharma: financial fraud and false claims

"Pharmaceutical fraud is considered one of the top threats in financial fraud"
QUOTE: Sharon Ormsby, FBI Financial Fraud Unit


People & Power investigates fraud and corruption running through the veins of the US pharmaceutical industry.
THANKS TO: Beta Sheep for bringing this to my attention. Too bad we have to look to off-shore news sources for this kind of reportage.