There is an oval-cut garnet ring in a size 8 coming up.
Also, not for nothing - they have an affiliate program. Should we see about adding b.org to their program?
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
There is an oval-cut garnet ring in a size 8 coming up.
Also, not for nothing - they have an affiliate program. Should we see about adding b.org to their program?
There's a garnet up now, ita.
I'm holding out for the lapis.
The Lower Silesian Metropolitan Area is so much cooler....
This is what I've heard.
For anyone interested in bizarre brain stuff - this is fascinating:
In The Echo Maker, Powers' character Mark flips his truck on an icy stretch of road in Nebraska and ends up in the hospital in a near-vegetative state. His sole-remaining family member, his sister Karin, immediately rushes to his bedside to nurse him back to health. Mark remains comatose for long enough that the doctors begin to lose hope. But then, miraculously, he wakes up. It takes him weeks to regain the power of speech, but once he does, it becomes clear that something is seriously amiss: Mark is convinced that this person who hovers by his bedside at all hours of the day, who looks and sounds just like his sister, is a plant--an imposter sent to surveil him and report back to "the authorities."
Powers soon reveals that Mark is suffering from a condition known as Capgras Delusion, which just so happens to be my favorite neurological condition. Once thought to be undeniable evidence of psychosis, Capgras Delusion is now believed to be a neurological syndrome caused by faulty wiring between the two areas of the brain involved in facial recognition: the temporal lobe, which contains pathways specializing in identifying faces, and the limbic system, which is responsible for attributing emotional significance to these faces.
...
When we encounter a face, two things occur in the brain. Our visual centers survey the physical attributes of the person in front of us and match them up with a template stored in the temporal lobe, thus allowing us to classify the person. This information then gets transmitted to the limbic system, which conjures up the appropriate feelings.
People suffering from Capgras Delusion only experience the first half of this process. Because their temporal lobes are intact, they recognize that the person standing in front of them looks exactly like their mother, but this recognition evokes no emotional response. The way the brain copes with this disjunction is by making a logical leap: 'This person looks like my mother, but doesn't feel like my mother, therefore she must be a fraud.'
Now if the person suffering from Capgras was unaware of his impairment, this response would be entirely understandable. What's really mystifying is that explaining what's happening makes absolutely no impression on the patient. No matter how many times he's told that he's suffering from a neurological condition, he will persist in believing that he's being hounded by doppelgangers. If the rational brain was at the reins, it stands to reason that the patient would accept his doctor's explanations. But when it comes to Capgras Delusion, emotions trump logic. The mind simply cannot accept the idea that a spouse, a mother, or beloved sister elicits no feeling, so the delusion persists.
Kalshane, you're taking Metra, right?
Yup. The Metra station in Chicago is six blocks from the placement firm, where I'd doing the interview. I've only taken Metra into the city once before and recall the station as being large, noisy and cofusing. So I have that to look forward to.
I ran a program for Physicians for Social Responsibility in the early 90s targeting childhood lead poisoning in Silesia. At the time, it was widely known as the most polluted place on the planet. Open lead smelters everywhere and home-based lead jewelry making. Very bad for children and other creatures.
In 1992, PSR began a lead poisoning abatement program in Silesia, Poland, a city that suffers from the effect of years of unchecked industrial, mining, and agricultural activity during the Cold War. More than 60 percent of the children exposed to pollutants from nonferrous smelting plants suffer from low body weight and height, and chronic bronchitis is reported in 35 percent of the children.
eta: 8 and 9 are too close to each other on the keyboard
No matter how many times he's told that he's suffering from a neurological condition, he will persist in believing that he's being hounded by doppelgangers.
Twilight Zone episode!
At the time, it was widely known as the most polluted place on the planet.
Yeesh. No wonder all the cool kids are moving downwind to Lower Silesia.
For anyone interested in bizarre brain stuff - this is fascinating:
That guy was on NPR the other day.
Brain disorders are fascinating and scary.