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Abusive Women In Relationships
13 hours ago ago from Stop Bad Breath
Creation always portrayed man to be the alpha species in comparison with women throughout the decades. The hunter gatherer syndrome has been one that has been globally accepted worldwide. However, the times have changed and the women have been increasingly been educated about how they too can bear equal rights as men. This has brought about revolutionary concepts and changes in many walks of life. However, little notice is given for abusive ...
Related contentHUGE Announcement: TTD’s Very First Virtual Book Tour Participation — Kelly McGonigal’s Yoga for Pain Relief!
19 hours ago ago from the tramadol diaries
Regular Tramadol Diaries reader Kelly McGonigal contacted me this week with some amazing, awesome news: her book, Yoga for Pain Relief: Simple Practices to Calm Your Mind & Heal Your Chronic Pain (New Harbinger, Dec 2009) is now in stock at Amazon! (Yep, that's an affiliate link. So is the one at the bottom of the post.) Even better? Kelly's going to do a virtual book tour to promote Yoga for Pain Relief and one of her stops? Right here! ...
Related contentAfter conventional breast cancer treatments, half of women have lingering, long-term pain
22 hours ago ago from Herbal-Bulgaria.com
(NaturalNews) A Danish study published in the November 11 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association found that women who have undergone conventional breast cancer treatment experience pain long after completing treatments. Mastectomies, breast-conserving surgeries, radiation treatments, chemotherapy, and lymph node dissection were among the treatments women in the study had received. More than 3,000 women were instructed ...
Related contentDiscussing The Ravenous Audience with Kate Durbin
15 hours ago ago from Splinter Generation
Kate Durbin is a 28 year-old Los Angeles poet who, just this past October, released her first book of poetry, The Ravenous Audience (Black Goat Press/Akashic Books 2009). This collection is an exciting study of women, myth, Hollywood, and the ever-hungry audience. Using a multitude of forms, Durbin cracks into the world of her subjects, women from film and lore, to study the parts that ooze and drip out—we’re talking bodily juices. Through ...
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