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Phenyleph-Chlorphen with Hydrocodone Syrup...


...and The New Arguement for Chocolate

...This combination product is used to treat symptoms caused by the common cold, flu, allergies, hay fever, or other breathing illnesses (e.g., sinusitis, bronchitis). Decongestants help relieve stuffy nose symptoms. This product also contains a narcotic cough suppressant (antitussive) that affects a certain part of the brain, reducing the urge to cough. Antihistamines relieve watery eyes, itchy eyes/nose/throat, runny nose, and sneezing...

Creep Out. I started taking this medicine for my terrible awful no good very bad flu, and while last night I received the first good night's sleep I've had in three nights, free entirely from coughing and the hot sandpaper scratchiness in my throat, I have been horrified at what I've found after just a little research about this drug.

Firstly, the bottle in which my miracle cure was delivered contains little more than a shred of evidence as to what is inside it, referring to it only as ED-TLC 5-2-1.67 SYP EDWARDS. Now while I could have assumed that this stood for nothing more than Edward's Tender Loving Care, I decided I wanted to know more.

On first Google search, the one hit returned was a list of drugs eligible for rebate with some Iowa state medical somethingorother, in Excel form. The list is organized by pharmaceutical company and, as could've been expected, nearly all of them were unfamiliar--all except one, that is. 3M. That's right, our friendly office supply company is extending their reach further than Post-It's and Scotch tape. Now they're manufacturing a gel to treat bacterial vaginosis, and Tambocor, a drug to suppress cardiac arrhythmias, along with a number of others. This, for some reason, makes me squirm.

But back to the drug in question: Edward's TLC. Half a dozen Google searches after my 3M discovery, I had it's full name: Phenyleph-Chlophen with Hydrocodone, in Syrup form. And, wading through the innumerable drug rebate web pages, I came across the above stated description.

Now I really don't like to think of my cough medicine interacting with my brain in any way, let alone suppressing any of it's urges. Maybe this is rather naive. After all, upon more reasonably consideration, this must be how all cough suppressants work, even the over the counter ones. Even cough drops must be communicating with the brain, I suppose. So probably this is just a silly over-reaction. However, this morning after waking from my blissful sleep, I received a note from a friend sputtering on about Irish dancers in the Crown Plaza and dark chocolate being an expectorant. As it happened, the latter was a bit of information I stumbled across again, amidst an article on antitussives. It turns out she was pretty close to right.

A recent study published by Gaia Vince in the New Scientist (a source I did, at first, question, but which upon further scrutiny seems to be respectable enough) says...

...theobromine, a compound found in cacao, is more effective as a cough suppressant than prescription codeine. This compound suppresses the "itch" signal from the nerve in the back of the throat that causes the cough reflex...

The article goes on to say that this effect can be achieved through consuming only 50 grams of dark chocolate, just under two ounces! How had I not heard of this before?! Perhaps because the New Scientist may not be as credible as I had initially assumed, and the author of this particular study is a bit of a nut...

While he has published articles like "Mind altering drugs: Does legal mean safe?" and "Cosmetic chemicals found in breast tumours", I also came across two entitled "
Erotic images can turn you blind" and "Goth subculture may protect vulnerable children." All articles were published in the New Scientist. He has, to his credit, also written for Seed Magazine, a publication which has received a number of semi-prestigious awards, though the articles were, well, semi-puff pieces. However, it's true that is was only the author reporting on these studies, not the scientist doing them. So the credibility of chocolate is not lost!

The Imperial College London (an institution in extremely high standings) reports that...

...a methylxanthine derivative present in cocoa, effectively inhibits citric acid-induced cough in guinea-pigs in vivo. Furthermore, in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study in man, theobromine suppresses capsaicin-induced cough with no adverse effects. We also demonstrate that theobromine directly inhibits capsaicin-induced sensory nerve depolarization of guinea-pig and human vagus nerve suggestive of an inhibitory effect on afferent nerve activation. These data indicate the actions of theobromine appear to be peripherally mediated. We conclude theobromine is a novel and promising treatment, which may form the basis for a new class of antitussive drugs...

And if that is not enough (though it very well should be!), Reuters has reported on the study, along with ABC and more than a handful of online journals.

And, as icing on the top of my chocolate (theobromine) cake, researchers at the University of Bristol published an article in the British Medical Journal stating...

...some [over the counter] cough medicines are no more effective than placebos for acute coughs in adults...

...which I feel just suggests even more strongly that I ought to get out of bed and procure some of Harry Potter's favorite medicine.
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Alcoholic Addicts Anonymous




Is it possible that my new crush is an alcoholic? Drinking at noon, sloshed by three--it's a serious possibility. So we've been flirting and having a great time, and today he told me about his cute new two bedroom (that I now realize is ohsoclose to where my previous alcoholic is living), and I just can't help thinking that today it was irrefutable: he's crushing on me too. But he was also telling me that twelve years ago he had a drug problem, and twelve years ago he was 27. This startling new fact may be changing my feelings about him. He's almost twice my age! Why is it that I was completely comfortable with 36, and just three years older makes me uncomfortable? Well, surely neither of us is interested in anything serious or committed. But I'm ohso wary of getting involved with another alcoholic. And what must he assume of me? Relative to my average personal presentation, I'm remarkably put together at the job. In the beginning I was shaving my legs and wearing earrings--sometimes even lipstick! I can only imagine his reaction, if in the midst of heavy petting he came across legs whose hair rivaled his! So I'm nervous. I think, if I can look past his NRA card, surely he'll be able to look past my holey sweaters and ducted taped shoes... But how realistic am I being? This man is from LA, and that in itself is intimidating. The women he must have dated before! Suddenly, now that this seems like an actual possibility, I am opening my eyes and seeing the ocean for the sharks, instead of the shimmering turquoise water. Either way, I am getting far ahead of myself.
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"Read and Respond"




Anthem


by Ayn Rand

"I look upon the history of men, which I have leaned from the books, and I wonder. It was a long story, and the spirit of which moved it was the spirit of man's freedom. But what is freedom? Freedom from what? There is nothing to take a man's freedom away from him, save other men. To be free, a man must be free of his brothers. This is freedom. This and nothing else."

Respond.

"For the word "We" must never be spoken, save by one's choice and as a second thought. This word must never be placed first within man's soul, else it becomes a monster, the root of all the evils on earth, the root of man's torture by men, and of an unspeakable lie."

Respond.

Reference to Prometheus.

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Goal




I have a new goal: to write everyday about something I'm passionate about. To become passionate. And if there isn't something readily available that I'm feeling passionate about, to turn on the radio or tv, walk outside, read the news, or figure out what I'm feeling and write on the emotion. But unlike my unproductive brooding, write on what's causing the emotion, rather than my reaction.
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SPEW: Second Thought




"Every time you abolish an institution, it is replaced with whatever is surrounding it culturally."

So then, instead of demolishing, we must be consistently creating. Maybe the act of creating the culture serves as demolishing the institution, in that it will become obsolete.

Create a community system of barter, trade, and gift, and the better it is created the more obsolete money becomes.

Create a rehabilitation structure that involves community and society, and proves itself at rehabilitation, and let prisons become obsolete.

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I am watching my grandmother be deeply affected by a man who stole from her and a number of people in her church community. A man she trusted and supported, alongside her community, and who betrayed her trust. This reinforced her ideas about addicts, and brought up a lot of old feelings. I hear it in her generalizations and the conviction in her anger. She wants this man punished for her ex-husband, her parents, god knows who else. She's afraid, angry, sad, and resentful. There are other members of her community that feel similarly. One woman had her engagement ring stolen, and felt deeply wronged. This is a common and ideal situation, because it provides an opportunity to create. This is my idea...

Blatantly reminiscent of Re-evaluation Counseling, Radical Honesty, and Nonviolent Communication, the offender would sit with his victims while they express themselves, reducing their accusations to feelings, and were encouraged to own their feelings. The offender would, in turn, be given space to respond, with the same guidelines of recognizing his feelings and owning them. The group would be counseled, in effort to help them relate to one another, and to recognize the origins of one another's actions and emotions. When everyone feels fully expressed, the victims would be given the chance to communicate needs and make requests of the offender, and the offender would be given then chance to do the same with his victims. The process would not need to follow a specific format, but the end goal stays the same: that a resolution is created that the victims and the offender feel is just. Maybe this resolution involves courts, trials, and the possibility of probation or prison. Maybe it involves dropping all charges.



spontaneity
dave-creating [spontaneously] w/o aim of destruction
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