
|
|
|
|
‘After four operations, no one understood why I was still in such intense pain’ |
|
A hip condition accelerated by a childhood skiing accident left Jean Campbell in debilitating pain – until she learned how to live with it |

|
|
|
|
‘After four operations, no one understood why I was still in such intense pain’ |
|
A hip condition accelerated by a childhood skiing accident left Jean Campbell in debilitating pain – until she learned how to live with it |
Filed under Food, Health affairs
Leading an active lifestyle results in better sleep, according to new research from Reykjavik University in Iceland. The study, published in the journal BMJ Open, found that people who engage in regular exercise, like jogging or swimming, at least twice weekly were 42% less prone to insomnia and more likely to sleep at least six hours a night. The research demonstrates how maintaining good exercise habits is “vital to preventing insomnia from taking hold,” The Times said.
Filed under Health affairs, Lifestyle

Every day, whether enjoyable or not so enjoyable, comes to an end. When we are tired, we will enjoy going to bed. There, if we can, we will get into dreamland. Our sleep then allows us to process the things we have been through.
* “In the quiet of the night, when stars twinkle above and the world sleeps below, a bedtime story is a whisper from the universe, reminding us of …
In the quiet of the night…
Let the silence of the night soothe your soul and bring peace and rest to your body.

|
|
Filed under Food, Health affairs
|
>
Filed under Health affairs, Lifestyle
|
|
+
| Forget signing up to the gym and hours of cardio – there is an easier route to a better body |
|
| Want a younger, feel-good body? There’s a vital component most are neglecting, and it can slash years off your ‘metabolic age’. |
To help you out today |
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
Filed under Health affairs, Lifestyle
flickering morning fire
quietly throws warmth
across the shadows
no sleep lifts me up
from my warm bed
to sit in the dark
thinking, weighted
yesterdays forge
into serenity
praying in resolution
knowing the day
will be full
copyright: 2017 CMM
For those who have a partner who snores, it can be really an annoying problem.
According to YouGov, around 52 per cent of adults are regular snorers?
Obstructive sleep apnea: As soft tissue falls to the back of the throat, it impedes the passage of air (blue arrows) through the trachea.
Snoring is the hoarse or harsh sound that occurs when air flows past relaxed tissues in your throat. It happens upon the intake of breath during sleep, a recurrent state of reduced responsiveness to external stimulation that is accompanied by complex and predictable changes in physiology and is caused by the vibration of the soft palate and vocal cords. It is known that nearly everyone makes some noise in his or her sleep during the night, or when having a nap, during the daytime. Snoring is often associated with a sleep disorder called obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA), but not all snorers have OSA.
Sleep contrasts with wakefulness, in which state there is an enhanced potential for sensitivity and efficient responsiveness to external stimuli. The sleep-wakefulness alternation is the most-striking manifestation in higher vertebrates of the more-general phenomenon of periodicity in the activity or responsivity of living tissue.
Snoring is more common in the elderly because the loss of tone in the oropharyngeal musculature promotes vibration of the soft palate and pharynx. It is also more common in men than in women, and it occurs most often in obese persons.
Children’s snoring usually results from enlarged tonsils or adenoids.
Whatever the cause, snoring is always associated with mouth breathing and can be corrected by removing obstructions to normal nasal breathing or by altering the sleeping position so that the affected individual does not lie on his back. Big problem is when there are moments when the person stops breathing. Snoring or apnoea prostheses are also very helpful devices.
A bed partner or family member may observe individual snoring or appear to stop breathing, gasp, or choke while sleeping. In severe cases this may occur once every minute during sleep and in turn may lead to profound sleep disruption. In addition, repetitive interruption of normal breathing can lead to a reduction in oxygen levels in the blood.
It can happen by people who are too fat, but also by thin persons who have a set-back chin (retrognathia), and it may be for this reason that patients of East Asian heritage are more likely to have sleep apnoea without being overweight.
Not only can snoring be annoying for the sleeper himself but also for the person accompanying him. It can be a nuisance to the partner.
“Lots of people say that they snore when they’re flat on their back,”
says Guy Leschziner, professor of neurology and sleep medicine at King’s College London and author of The Secret World of Sleep.
“The reason for that is because the tongue tends to move backward a little bit, sometimes the jaw retracts and that narrows the airway. And when the airway’s narrower and floppy, you’re more likely to get this reverberation of the soft tissues.”
In some cases, snoring can reach up to 100 decibels, the same as a passing truck, and unsurprisingly, it can have a major impact on a partner’s sleep.
Mayo Clinic in the US found that women get 13 per cent less sleep per night when their partner is snoring, something which can lead to deep resentment over time. One UK survey of 2,000 people found that 68 per cent were woken up by their other half snoring, while 12 per cent even cited it as a contributory factor for divorcing their partner.
Scientists from the Mayo Clinic in the US found that women get 13 per cent less sleep per night when their partner is snoring, something which can lead to deep resentment over time. One UK survey of 2,000 people found that 68 per cent were woken up by their other half snoring, while 12 per cent even cited it as a contributory factor for divorcing their partner.
+
Please come to read more about snoring that can disturb sleep, affect your health and drive a long-suffering partner insane, but with the help of the experts you can make a change:
How to stop snoring and avoid being banished to the sofa
Filed under Health affairs, Lifestyle
Lots of people may fear death and be very unrestful when they think about the dead.
Many long for moments without pain and moment where they can be at ease not having to worry about so many things. They are longing for peace and tranquillity. Many also want some time to recuperate and to get some new enforced energy.
Rest is something that most people desire, but are unable to find. Running from morning until night, seven days a week, people struggle to find rest. {Psalm 62:1 Finding Rest}
There are those who are unable to sleep the following night after they dared to take a nap in the middle of the day. Others do not mind falling asleep in their church whilst the priest gives his sermon. Others find it great to have the Sunday free so that they can have a nap on Sunday afternoons.
Every day we are confronted by the world which demands so many things from us; Having the pressure of society on us we often do not dare to have a rest somewhere in-between.
Rest becomes elusive because of the race that people are in to try and satisfy their soul. They fear rejection, poverty, looking bad, and missing out so they run harder to prevent those things from occurring. When they lie down at night, their minds race in fear for the next day trying to determine how to make something happen or to keep moving forward, thus not getting any rest. {Psalm 62:1 Finding Rest}
Lots of people do think when they do not follow the tred of this fast running world, they shall not be respected or recognized for what they do. They would love to please everybody around them, and by doing so sometimes forget what is really right or appropriate in the eyes of God.
The goals of people are for temporary happiness and enjoyment, but often these are missing in the race. People miss out on life striving to run hard after false things, false hopes and false dreams. {Psalm 62:1 Finding Rest}
Most people do think it are the living beings that can provide them with what they need. They do forget that it is the Most High Divine Creator Who is the Sustainer and Provider of all. They forget that salvation they seek can only be found by God.
Every believer needs to realize that it is God who is the true provider for every need he has. Provision for physical, spiritual and emotional needs. There is nothing that God cannot supply. {Psalm 62:1 Finding Rest}
We should not so much honour the dead when we have the Living God to Whom all honour belongs. In Him, we should trust and not in those who are already death. It is God Who deserves our confidence.
Instead of looking to the temporary things that this world can provide, one must look to God for the eternal things. The things that last are forgiveness, love, peace, joy, kindness, mercy, patience, and God’s presence. When a believer has God at the center of his life, he will know the rest that God provides. This will allow him to lie down at night in peace and sleep knowing God is in control and will save him in the end. {Psalm 62:1 Finding Rest}
Instead of partaking all those festivities for the dead, we should choose for God given feasts and choose for more life than the life most people see in front of them. Our hopes should not come from those in the graves but from That One Who man can not see. We may be sure of it that He provides the most stable ground under our feet. He is The Rock that shall not be broken in pieces or being destroyed. We can wait calmly for God alone, because our hope and expectations comes from Him. He alone is should be our rock our defence and stronghold.
Trusting in God we shall not be shaken. Him being our high tower we who believe in Him and trust Him shall not be moved.
Are you hoping that those people, called saints, who died a long time ago shall bring peace and salvation for you?
Please do know that our salvation and glory depends on God and not on the dead.
8 Trust him at all times, you people. Pour out your hearts in his presence.
God is our refuge {Psalm 62:5-8}
*
My soul waits calmly for God alone.
My salvation comes from him.
{Psalm 62:1 GW)
+
Preceding
In October-November People often too busy with death and the dead
Looking forward to a year full of Kindness
Tending to develop a genuine confidence in our Higher Power
++
+++
Wen Autumn comes in the land lots of people seem to come to think about “Life and death”. Not only are there the many pagan festivals like Halloween, Samhain, Witches Night, All Saints, All Souls, and commemorative services for the many casualties of war.
Back in Wintertime, having the darkness falling earlier, people retreated in their house, after work, often feel more lonely and wonder also what they are doing in this world and why. For many this life seems a great big burden. They do not seem to be able to feel any joy in having to get up to go to work every day and not being appreciated for what they do.
Even when nature does not really die, for many it feels like dying. The leaves falls off, and we hear less singing of the birds. The different bugs and the animals “hide” whilst the colourful flowers “falls to rest”. But for man it does not seem to offer a moment for rest. The opposite Autumn for most people comes after the moment of joy and rest, after the pleasant Summer holiday.
Now we are confronted with a time of reflection, having us wondering about life and death. Now we also want to fill up time with reading more and watching more television, willing to escape from daily business. For many the distraction does not seem enough to take away the feeling of loneliness, instead it pushes it more to the forefront.

C.E. Pereira writes
The measure of loneliness.
The day drags on, slowly.
A long wait for night.
Time is mocking you.Night doesn’t bring relief.
Sleep is but a dream.
Sixty seconds, a minute past.
You watch the hour hand.Each second of time.
In slow motion, a split.
Is time stuck? Tell me.
No. Time is not stuck.Time moves on, not me.
The pull of quicksand.
Time drags, time crawls.
Sinking into loneliness.Happiness makes time fly.
Loneliness makes time crawl.
It is but an illusion we create.
Time is constant. Timeless.{Time drags, time crawls C.E. Pereira – 16-10-2019}
+
Preceding
Just a thought for this month of Changing colours in Western Europe
What traditions/rituals/routines do you have for welcoming Autumn?
+++

I hear the wind
high and hard above the trees in the back yard,
feel its stony edge hammer through
the thin legs of my dress pants.
It pounds along the ground,
refreezing the thawed mush of the earth.
It pushes through
the seams of woods and brush,
shoving up against the cold brick and rock
in an indifferent rush against the house.
I step into the unlit porch,
welcoming the warmth inside the darkness.
On such a night as this,
it is good to have a place
beyond the wind’s lancet,
a place where love is strong.
I climb the stairs,
still hearing the wind beyond the walls and roof.
I lie down in warm blankets,
close to the one I love,
grateful, kept, held,
knowing and being known.
Together, we sink into sleep
in the keeping of Him who sends both wind and fire.
H. Arnett
1/26/10
Filed under Being and Feeling, Nature, Poetry - Poems, Re-Blogs and Great Blogs
Dutch version / Nederlandse versie > Verliefdheid, slaap en werkelijkheid
Filed under Positive thoughts, Quotations or Citations
Lonely on the land I walk,
Lonely cross the sea I sail,
Lonely air of beach I stroll –
This lonely life doth take its toll.Lonely trek of woodland trail,
Lonely mist in haze o’ dawn,
Lonely spies the bird of prey
In lonely circles all astray.Lonely be the dark of night
When sleep is but a yearning wish,
To dream of sweet companions close,
As wine would pair with diner’s dish.Lonely do these thoughts me make
That draw my blood of precious life;
Replace with stream of flowing pain
To bless my veins with coursing strife.Lonely years are now my friends,
Lonely cries bereft of sound,
Lonely tears that cool my face
In lonely life of sullen pace.
Copyright © Mark R Slaughter 2009
All rights reserved
Mark R Slaughter is a biological scientist, who took up poetry to challenge his written skills. In march 2014 ‘Lonely Life’ was recited on the BBC by Mark Benson in the introduction to a documentary on loneliness.

Loneliness hurts, emotionally and physically.
Filed under Being and Feeling, Poetry - Poems