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Post by whiterose on Jan 6, 2007 14:27:47 GMT -5
One can get a parasite put into ones body that will control there mind or one can simply forgo there own common sense and logic, and put all their own power into the PTB, which parasite is worse? www.rense.com/general74/helping.htm
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Post by whiterose on Jan 21, 2007 1:53:40 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Jan 23, 2007 15:15:15 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Jan 23, 2007 20:23:33 GMT -5
The Manchurian Candidate, how to make one, first you must break the individual and then build them back up. Sibel Edmonds spoke of the Manchurian Candidate and said this has already happened. What makes you think morgellons couldn't be a part of this creation.
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Post by whiterose on Feb 9, 2007 11:58:16 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Feb 22, 2007 9:51:21 GMT -5
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Post by sarahconnor on Feb 23, 2007 19:51:28 GMT -5
It is VERY possible.
I just can't get vaccinations out of my mind you know. I wonder if there was something in those vaccines over the years that we have all been given, anything is possible in this world.
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Post by whiterose on Feb 23, 2007 21:35:00 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Feb 27, 2007 20:52:22 GMT -5
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Post by sarahconnor on Feb 28, 2007 5:07:39 GMT -5
whiterose - I think I understand it too well, this is just totally sick isn't it? I just can't believe the CDC have and are still prolonging this torture, they just have no idea.
I think I've had just about enough folks....
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Post by whiterose on Feb 28, 2007 8:11:15 GMT -5
I believe there are those that know at the CDC, I also believe there are those that would like to speak. Why does it seem TRUTH no longer has a voice, has someone cut their tongue out, who holds them hostage. I believe the whole world is in a war with a negative force.
The truth can set us free and the lack there of will continue to hold not only us but the world as hostage. There are so many that have died for speaking the truth, will we not honor them, or will we hide in the dark afraid and cower in fear. Fear and lies feed the monster that holds us hostage. Stand with COURAGE AND TRUTH and the world shall once again be in the LIGHT!
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Post by whiterose on Mar 20, 2007 20:13:15 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Mar 21, 2007 20:39:03 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Mar 22, 2007 17:11:41 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Apr 10, 2007 18:48:37 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Apr 12, 2007 10:40:59 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Apr 12, 2007 13:31:00 GMT -5
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Post by aligator on Apr 13, 2007 18:40:55 GMT -5
When Memories Are Scars
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Harrowing experiences damage the brain. New drugs promise to heal it. Could the end of posttraumatic stress be near? By Matt Bean, Men's Health Find More
Reveal Your Abs in Record Time Top 20 Ways to Reclaim Your Life Total Recall Roger Pitman, M.D., hunts nightmares for a living. Not the vivid phantasmagoria populated by zombies or disembodied skulls, or even the nude-at-the-podium orations that leave us blushing in our sleep. He's after the nonfiction variety, the indelible, enduring flashbacks that stick in our heads after reality goes awry: a saw blade meeting flesh, say, or an improvised explosive device overturning a Humvee.
I'm in Dr. Pitman's lab in Boston, watching him track down a particularly vivid figment, a stab wound to the neck that's been plaguing 43-year-old carpenter Al Carney for 2 months now. "We're about to put him back in the most horrifying moment of his life," says the Harvard psychiatrist, peeling back the top sheet on a thick medical file labeled Patient 102. In the room next door, the stout laborer sits, eyes closed, headphones on, wired with a battery of biofeedback equipment: electrodes affixed to his chest to monitor his heart rate; a forehead sensor scanning for tension; and a tiny pad on the inside of his palm measuring how much sweat seeps through his skin.
"It's 8:30 a.m. on Thursday, March 30," a narrator begins to read over the headphones. "Noticing Peter Bowman standing there, you become tense all over. He says he's here to collect a check. Feeling jittery, you tell him he needs to fix several things before you pay him any more. As the argument becomes heated, your heart beats faster. Peter becomes physically aggressive, and you feel a blow to your neck. You fall to the ground. Several people pull him off you. . . . After you're separated, you realize that you're bleeding profusely from several knife wounds."
Fade Away
Carney's vital signs ebb and flow on a flat-screen monitor in the corner of the room as he reimagines the assault. They spike when he's "stabbed" by Bowman. But I don't need whirring telemetry machines to tell me the narrative has struck a nerve: Carney starts fidgeting, and he taps his scuffed gym shoes together at the toes. Even though he's been asked to sit still, his head twitches back and forth against the recliner's headrest. Later, Dr. Pitman will compare Carney's physiological responses with the results from previous sessions, as well as his reactions to positive scripts used as controls—the birth of his first child, a transcendent round of golf.
Carney is one of dozens of accident victims that Dr. Pitman and his team have culled from Boston emergency rooms to study a drug called propranolol. The study is double-blind—no one, least of all Carney, knows whether the pill he took was a placebo or propranolol. But the contractor hopes he'll get lucky and will be able to stop the spiral of substance abuse, irritability, and insomnia that started with the stabbing at the construction site.
Dr. Pitman's study is leading a new wave of research that promises to curtail the harmful psychological effects of extreme stress, especially posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Today's most common treatment, cognitive-behavior therapy coupled with drugs such as Prozac, fails at least as often as it succeeds. Dr. Pitman hopes that defusing horrible memories—that high-school car crash, the abusing babysitter—could within 5 years become less difficult with the help of propranolol.
"Posttraumatic stress disorder is just a memory that has its volume set too loud," Dr. Pitman observes, thumbing through a thick sheaf of case histories. "Something turned up the switch. We're trying to turn it back down again."
Surviving Trauma
We all have things we'd like to forget. And some of us have things we can't bear to remember. According to the National Center for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, 61 percent of American men will be exposed to a traumatic event in their lifetimes. And, according to the National Comorbidity Survey, 5 percent of men nationwide will develop PTSD at some point in their lives. These men include 9/11 survivors, Hurricane Katrina victims, and, increasingly, military veterans: According to a 2005 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, 17 percent of Iraq war veterans suffer from PTSD, anxiety, or depression.
But the disorder also hits closer to home. Domestic disputes, burglaries, accidents, and even surgeries can engrave malignant memories on the brain. One recent study suggests that more than 15 percent of heart-attack victims suffer from PTSD, slowing recovery and increasing chances of a second attack.
Not every man who falls victim to atraumatic event develops PTSD, of course. To be diagnosed, you must experience a laundry list of symptoms for more than a month. Some people, inexplicably, shrug off serious trauma without a second thought. Carney is somewhere in between the two extremes: While the past has become an inescapable drag on the present, it is a nagging presence, not an overriding one.
"We all have stress hormones, and we're all affected by them," says Deane Aikins, Ph.D., a Yale psychologist who heads up the cognitive neuroscience wing of the National Center for PTSD. "We're just now beginning to understand why some of us are inherently more resilient to the stress, and how maladaptive behaviors learned at an early age can impact us for the rest of our lives."
Just as cancer researchers have made countless discoveries about how normal cells live and die, so have PTSD researchers used their unique niche to shine a broader spotlight on the delicate interaction between the brain and the body. And what they've learned has implications far beyond PTSD. It could change how we think about stress altogether.
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Read More on PTSD and Trauma:
Would You Take a Pill to Erase Traumatic Memories? Symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Treatment Options for PTSD Read More on Depression:
Is It SAD? Are You Depressed? Reality Check: Depression
Provided by Men's Health
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Post by whiterose on Apr 20, 2007 18:44:06 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Apr 22, 2007 18:25:58 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on May 4, 2007 14:10:40 GMT -5
and what we purchase. One thing that has happened to me a couple times is that I think I am purchasing one thing, and I end up with something else. The label looks different than what I saw in the store, is this my imagination playing games on me? www.redicecreations.com/article.php?id=961
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Post by whiterose on May 8, 2007 8:08:59 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on May 10, 2007 10:00:55 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on May 13, 2007 13:34:40 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on May 23, 2007 13:51:25 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on May 27, 2007 11:40:04 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Jun 10, 2007 6:16:27 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Jun 10, 2007 9:03:07 GMT -5
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Post by whiterose on Jun 17, 2007 14:32:23 GMT -5
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Post by sarahconnor on Jun 18, 2007 0:01:28 GMT -5
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