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Monday, January 31, 2022

When is Lunar / Chinese ๐Ÿงง New Year?

When is Lunar / Chinese ๐Ÿงง New Year?
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 Chinese Year 4720 ๐Ÿฏ February 1, 2022
 ๐Ÿ… Sign: Tiger  ๐Ÿ…  Yang Year  ๐Ÿ…
 ๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ ๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ ๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ ๐Ÿงง
Chinese Year 4721 - Jan. 22, 2023, Sign: Rabbit, a Yin year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4722 - Feb. 10, 2024, Sign: Dragon, a Yang year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4723 - Jan. 29, 2025, Sign: Snake, a Yin year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4724 - Feb. 17, 2026, Sign: Horse, a Yang year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4725 - Feb. 6, 2027, Sign: Sheep a Yin year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4726 - Jan. 26, 2028, Sign: Monkey, a Yang year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4727 - Feb. 13, 2029, Sign: Rooster, a Yin year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year 4728 - Feb  3, 2030. Sign: Dog, a Yang year. 
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year  472 -    Feb 13  2031  Sign: Rooster
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year                  Jan 23  2031 Sign: Pig, a Yin year
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year                 Feb 11   2032    Rat     Wednesday
๐Ÿงง  ๐ŸŽ‰  ๐ŸŽˆ
Chinese Year                 Jan 31   2033        Ox     Monday 
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Chinese New Years is celebrated by billions of poeple around the world. The date of Chinese New Years changes every year. It is a 15 day celebration, beginning on the first day of the new moon, and ends on the full moon. The celebration on the15th day is called the Chinese Lantern Festival.
Chinese culture is amongst the oldest in the world. While the rest of the world is in the early years of but the third millennium, Chinese culture is in their fifth millennium.
In Chinese astrology, every year is represented by an animal. The cycle is twelve years, with a different animal each year. To find out about your sign, and what it says about you, see Chinese Astrology.
Chinese New years or Spring Festival, is the biggest holiday in Chinese culture. It is celebrated with festivities, fireworks, brightly colored lights, special meals with family and gift giving. Like Christmas in the western world, most Chinese travel home to be with family for the new year celebration.
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Chinese New Year is the Chinese festival that celebrates the beginning of a new year on the traditional Chinese calendar. The festival is usually referred to as the Spring Festival in mainland China, and is one of several Lunar New Years in Asia. Observances traditionally take place from the evening preceding the first day of the year to the Lantern Festival, held on the 15th day of the year. The first day of Chinese New Year begins on the new moon that appears between 21 January and 20 February. In 2019, the first day of the Chinese New Year will be on Tuesday, 5 February, initiating the Year of the pig.
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Chinese New Year is celebrated as the national holiday in some countries around the East Asia such as South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam, Indonesia, and Malaysia. It is a major holiday in Greater China and has strongly influenced the lunar new year celebrations of China's neighbouring cultures, including the Korean New Year (seol), the Tแบฟt of Vietnam, and the Losar of Tibet. It is also celebrated worldwide in regions and countries with significant Overseas Chinese populations, these including Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, Cambodia, the Philippines and Mauritius, as well as many Chinatowns and Koreatowns in North America and Europe.
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Chinese New Year is associated with several myths and customs. The festival was traditionally a time to honour deities as well as ancestors. Within China, regional customs and traditions concerning the celebration of the New Year vary widely, and the evening preceding Chinese New Year's Day is frequently regarded as an occasion for Chinese families to gather for the annual reunion dinner. It is also traditional for every family to thoroughly clean their house, in order to sweep away any ill-fortune and to make way for incoming good luck. Another custom is the decoration of windows and doors with red paper-cuts and couplets. Popular themes among these paper-cuts and couplets include that of good fortune or happiness, wealth, and longevity. Other activities include lighting firecrackers and giving money in red paper envelopes. For the northern regions of China, dumplings are featured prominently in meals celebrating the festival. 
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January ❄️ Bye

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Sunday, January 30, 2022

Cello ♫Classical ♪Music

Classical ♪
♫ ♪  Cello  ♫♪

      


#  Classical ♫ Cello ♫ Time
1 Yo-Yo Ma - Meditation (J.Massenet)  5:41
2 Yo-Yo Ma - Bach: Cello Suite No. 1 in G Major, Prรฉlude  3:16
3 Yo-Yo Ma, Kathryn Stott - Lullaby (Brahms)  1:57
4 Hauser - Casta Diva  7:39
5 Hauser - Waltz No. 2 (Shostakovich)  3:59
6 Hauser - O Mio Babbino Caro  2:44
7 Hauser - Pie Jesu  3:48
8 Hauser - Adagio (Albinoni)  6:57
9 2CELLOS - Vivaldi Storm  2:37
10 Hauser - Scarborough Fair  3:02
11 Hauser - Petrit ร‡eku - Concierto de Aranjuez - Adagio  6:28
12 Hauser - Oblivion (Piazzolla)  4:47
13 Hauser - Song to the Moon (Rusalka)  7:04
14 Hauser - The Swan  3:34
15 Hauser - Ave Maria  3:24
16 Hauser & Ksenija Sidorova - Oblivion  4:26
17 Hauser & Caroline Campbell - Torna A Surriento  3:42
18 Hauser - Cello Suite No.1 - Prelude (J. S. Bach)  2:29
19 Hauser - Hungarian Rhapsody  9:10
20 Hauser & Petrit ร‡eku - Concierto de Aranjuez  6:09
21 Hauser & Petrit ร‡eku - Bachianas Brasileiras No. 5 - Aria  5:35
22 Hauser - Meditation from Thais (Massenet)  6:25
23 Hauser - Largo from Xerxes (Ombra mai fu)  5:54
24 Hauser - Vocalise (Rachmaninov)  7:26
25 Hauser - Mon coeur s'ouvre a ta voix  7:07
26 Hauser - Gabriel's Oboe (The Mission)  2:59
27 LoLa & Hauser - Moonlight Sonata  4:08
28 LoLa & Hauser - Fรผr Elise  3:22
29 LoLa & Hauser - Love Story  4:19
30 Luka Sulic - Theme from Schindler's List  4:24
31 Luka Sulic - Clair de Lune (Debussy)  4:19
32 2CELLOS - Despacito  3:10
33 Hauser - Ave Maria  4:52
34 Jacqueline du Prรฉ - Dvoล™รกk Cello Concerto  46:30:00
       


Saturday, January 29, 2022

RNAi ๐ŸงชDiscovered

RNAi Discovered
RNA, the close chemical cousin of DNA, was once thought to be a bit player in the life of a cell, but not anymore. RNA is now at the heart of a scientific and medical revolution.
It’s a revolution that started with the cultivation of a purple petunia,
https://paulcpw.blogspot.com/2012/12/rnai-discovered.html

RNAi Based Insecticidal Crops:
Risk Awareness
This animation lends a non-technical perspective to the mechanisms, uses, and risks of utilizing RNAi technology as a pesticide in agricultural applications. BASED ON THE ARTICLE RNAi-Based Insecticidal Crops: Potential Effects on Nontarget Species Lundgren JG, Duan JJ. BioScience Magazine, Vol. 63 No. 8, 2013 And also igrow.org/agronomy/corn/the-next-generation-of-pesticides
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NOVA scienceNOW:
8 - RNAi
RNA, the close chemical cousin of DNA, was once thought to be a bit player in the life of a cell, but not anymore. RNA is now at the heart of a scientific and medical revolution. It's a revolution that started with the cultivation of a purple petunia, and it has led scientists to what may be the most important advance in biology in decades. Through a process known as RNAi (the "i" is for interference), researchers have a new way to shut off specific genes, yielding insights into the human genome as well as providing potential treatments for a wide range of diseases.
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RNAi:
Slicing, dicing and serving your cells
Alex Dainis
 RNA, the genetic messenger, makes sure the DNA recipe gives your cells exactly what they ordered. But sometimes that means inhibiting some other RNA that got the recipe wrong. This process is called RNA interference (RNAi), and it acts as a self-correcting system within the complicated genetic kitchen of your body. Alex Dainis explains the importance -- and exciting potential -- of RNAi. Lesson by Alex Dainis, animation by Cinematic Sweden.
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Friday, January 28, 2022

Feeling anxious? ๐Ÿ—ฃThe way you breathe could be adding to it

 Feeling Anxious?
๐Ÿ—ฃ The way you Breathe ๐Ÿ—ฃ
Could be adding to it
Jan 8, 2021 / Kira M. Newman
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Scrolling social media, amid frantic posts about politics and COVID-19 cases, you may have come across a friend or two reminding everyone to “just breathe.”
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But can just breathing really make a difference?
In his new book Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art, journalist James Nestor argues that modern humans have become pretty bad at this most basic act of living. We breathe through our mouths and into our chests, and we do it way too fast. There’s even a phenomenon called “email apnea,” where multitasking office workers breathe irregularly and shallowly — or even hold their breath — for half a minute or more while glued to their devices.

Besides all the worrisome health problems this may cause, which Nestor details in his book, our ineptitude at breathing may have another big consequence — contributing to our anxiety and other mental health problems.

“The rate and depth we breathe at is a huge determinant of our mental state,” says Elissa Epel, a professor at UC San Francisco.

Researchers like Epel are exploring how using breathing techniques — some new, some ancient — can help people stave off anxiety. What they’re discovering is that breathing could be an overlooked key to finding more calm and peace.

How breathing can calm us
We often try to tame anxiety by changing our thoughts — questioning the worst-case scenarios in our heads, interrupting rumination with some kind of distraction or going to therapy. But breathing offers a different approach, bypassing the complexities of the mind and targeting the body directly. Instead of trying to think yourself out of feeling anxious, you can do something concrete — breathe slow or fast, in a particular rhythm, or through one nostril — and sometimes find immediate relief.

In a 2017 study, highly anxious people were assigned to take a course in diaphragmatic breathing relaxation and they practiced twice a day at home. Diaphragmatic breathing, or belly breathing, involves breathing deeply into the abdomen rather than taking shallow breaths into the chest. After eight weeks, they reported feeling less anxious compared to a group that didn’t receive the training. They also showed physical signs of reduced anxiety, including lower heart rate, slower breathing and lower skin conductivity.

So, a regular breathing practice might help you feel calmer in your everyday life. But other studies suggest that focusing on your breathing in moments of acute stress could also be useful.

In an older study published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, researchers brought participants into the lab and told them they were going to receive electric shocks. Some of the participants practiced breathing slowly before the shocks (which were actually never administered), while others focused on breathing at a normal rate or didn’t regulate their breathing at all. The slow breathers — breathing about eight breaths per minute — not only reported feeling less anxious while anticipating the pain, they also showed lower anxiety on a physical level, as measured by sweat and blood flow to the fingers.

Another study followed up on this research and tested three different breathing rhythms: fast inhaling with slow exhaling; slow inhaling with fast exhaling; or evenly paced inhaling and exhaling. Here, the fast inhaling with slow exhaling (2 seconds in, 8 seconds out) was the most effective at relieving both the physical and mental experience of anxiety.

Of course, breathing is a major component of many meditation and Buddhist mindfulness practices, and it may be a key reason why they work. In a small 2017 study, researchers asked people with anxiety disorder to try either alternate nostril breathing or mindful breath awareness for 10 minutes, two days in a row. They found that practicing alternate nostril breathing was about three times as effective at reducing people’s feelings of anxiety.

These benefits felt profound to the participants in a small, 12-week yoga breathing class in the United Kingdom. According to researchers from the University of Southampton:

Participants described feeling “more in control,” noting “anxiety doesn’t feel debilitating anymore.” One participant reported marked increases in confidence, mindfulness, and spirituality; [and] greater ability to relax … Three participants returned to paid employment, another was able to secure a long-desired job, and another became able to contemplate a return to work, having been unable to do so for many years.
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The ripple effects of breathing
The way we breathe can set off a cascade of physical changes in the body that promote either stress or relaxation.

“If we’re breathing really shallowly and fast, it causes our nervous system to up-regulate and we feel tense and anxious,” says Epel. “If we’re breathing slowly, it actually turns on the anti-stress response.”

Technically, breathing influences the sympathetic (“fight or flight”) and parasympathetic (“rest and digest”) branches of our nervous system, and certain techniques can promote more parasympathetic calm and relaxation. Some may also cause us to release hormones like prolactin and possibly oxytocin, the feel-good hormone of love and bonding.

“[Breathing techniques] are allowing you to consciously take control of your breathing so you can take control of your nervous system so you can take control of your anxiety,” says Nestor. “When we breathe in a certain way, we are sending messages to those emotional centers of our brain to calm down.”

Other techniques, like tummo — a yogic breathing practice that involves forceful or gentle breathing, abdominal contractions during breath holding, and visualization — actually amp up the sympathetic nervous system, spiking our body’s stress to activate a deeper relaxation afterward, similar to how tensing a muscle and then letting it go works.

This is similar to the kind of breathing that “Iceman” Wim Hof teaches his followers, a method that Epel is currently researching. Hof is famous for his seemingly superhuman feats, like climbing Mount Kilimanjaro in shorts and changing his immune response to E. coli, which he attributes to a finely tuned control over his own physiology thanks to breathing practices and more.

Fast breathing can be triggering for people with anxiety — causing the tingling limbs and lightheadedness that often accompany panic attacks — but that’s part of the point. When you breathe fast and start to feel symptoms you normally associate with anxiety, it may help you re-interpret those symptoms in a less threatening way. They become less worrisome because they have a clear cause, the same way that an elevated heart rate during exercise doesn’t bother us. And if you can connect anxiety to faulty breathing habits, it means you can change the way you breathe and potentially see some improvement.

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How to breathe better
If you want to practice breathing for better mental and physical health, there are endless techniques to try. Although these shouldn’t be seen as a replacement for therapy or a cure for severe anxiety, they can be a free and simple tool for both short-term relief and long-term benefit. “Breathing techniques could be used as first-line and supplemental treatments for stress [and] anxiety,” write Ravinder Jerath and colleagues in a 2015 study.

Many of the techniques that have been formally researched are derived from pranayama, yogic breathing that dates back to ancient India:

  • Ujayyi: Deep breathing with a narrowed throat, creating an ocean-like sound, often recommended while doing yoga asanas.
  • Bhastrika, or “bellows breath”: inhaling and exhaling forcefully.
  • Nadi Sodhan and Anulom Vilom: Types of alternate nostril breathing, where air is inhaled in one nostril and exhaled through the other, sometimes with breath holding.

There are also a variety of “box breathing” practices, derived from the pranayama Sama Vritti, where you inhale for four seconds, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four, and repeat. Other timed techniques include 4-7-8 breathing, often recommended to help you fall asleep.

In the same way that mindfulness practice isn’t just meditation, breathing as a practice isn’t just waking up every morning and doing 10 minutes of box breathing. It’s also important to be aware of the way you breathe in everyday life (or while you’re checking your email).

In Breath, Nestor’s tips boil down to a short list of general principles, including make sure to breathe through your nose and not your mouth, slow your breathing down (to five or six seconds in and five or six seconds out), and extend your exhales for even greater relaxation.

Now so much talk about breathing might have you feeling anxious — that’s how I felt, at least, while reading about all the ways that our breathing habits are faulty. In one study, the researchers noted that anxious people were skeptical in the beginning of the experiment and had some difficulty practicing. But this group still went on to feel better at the end of 12 weeks of practice.

All this research illustrates just how much influence our body has on our mind. Modern life brings many things to be worried about, but, as Nestor writes, not being able to breathe remains one of our deepest and most primal anxieties. If somehow the way we’re breathing is signaling to our brains that something is wrong, it’s no wonder we feel anxious — and it’s no wonder all these breathing techniques can bring such profound healing.

This article was originally published on Greater Good, the online magazine of the Greater Good Science Center at UC Berkeley.

https://ideas.ted.com/feeling-anxious-the-way-you-breathe-could-be-adding-to-it/?utm_source=pocket-newtab

#Breathe Exercises from Cosmos - Science Etc#Breathe Exercises from Cosmos - Science Etc
Breathe Exercises - Sea 
2 min Breathe Bubble
 Think Nothing Exercise I Breathe In Calm App
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Box Breathing for Anxiety And Panic
Box breathing is a very powerful breathing technique to assist you in regaining control during moments of high anxiety.

You breathe in for       4 seconds.
Hold your breath for  4 seconds.
Breathe out for            4 seconds.
Hold your breath for  4 seconds
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Repeat it as long as you need.
Often during anxiety or panic attacks we find ourselves starting to hyperventilate and by focusing on your breathing and regulating it intentionally it starts to assist in getting that breath control back.

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  1. We humans One way to calm an anxious mind: Notice when you’re doing OK 
  2. Science Mind going a million miles a minute? Slow down with this breathing exercise 
  3. We humans 7 strategies to help you live with uncertainty 
  4. Tech 3 ways that tech helps me handle my anxiety and depression

Thursday, January 27, 2022

FDA Warning ๐ŸชEating Raw Cookie Dough

FDA Issues Warning
๐Ÿช About Eating RawCookie Dough ๐Ÿช
But Not For Salmonella Risks

Used to licking the spoon or placating yourself with full-on chunks of raw cookie dough? 
The Food and Drug Administration issued a warning on Tuesday that strongly advises against continuing the habit. The agency asserted that consuming raw batter of any kind, whether for bread, cookies or pizza, could make a person sick.

Do you find it hard to resist gobbling up a piece of raw dough when making cookies, or letting your children scrape the bowl? Do your kids use raw dough to make ornaments or homemade “play” clay? Do you eat at family restaurants that give kids raw dough to play with while you’re waiting for the food?
If your answer to any of those questions is yes, that could be a problem. Eating raw dough or batter—whether it’s for bread, cookies, pizza or tortillas—could make you, and your kids, sick, says Jenny Scott, a senior advisor in FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition.

According to Scott, the bottom line for you and your kids is don’t eat raw dough. And even though there are websites devoted to “flour crafts,” don’t give your kids raw dough or baking mixes that contain flour to play with.

Why? Flour, regardless of the brand, can contain bacteria that cause disease. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), along with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and state and local officials, is investigating an outbreak of infections that illustrates the dangers of eating raw dough. Dozens of people across the country have been sickened by a strain of bacteria called Shiga toxin-producing E. coli O121

The investigation found that raw dough eaten or handled by some of the patients was made with General Mills flour produced in a Kansas City, Missouri, facility. Subsequent tests by the FDA linked bacteria in a flour sample to bacteria from people who had become ill.

General Mills conducted a voluntary recall of 10 million pounds of flour sold under three brand names: Gold Medal, Signature Kitchen’s, and Gold Medal Wondra. The varieties include unbleached, all-purpose, and self-rising flours. Flour has a long shelf life, and many people store bags of flour for a long time. If you have any of these recalled items in your home, you should throw them away.

Some of the recalled flours had been sold to restaurants that allow children to play with dough made from the raw flour while waiting for their meals. CDC is advising restaurants not to give customers raw dough.
๐Ÿช
Why Flour? 
People often understand the dangers of eating raw dough due to the presence of raw eggs and the associated risk with Salmonella. However, consumers should be aware that there are additional risks associated with the consumption of raw dough, such as particularly harmful strains of E. coli in a product like flour.
“Flour is derived from a grain that comes directly from the field and typically is not treated to kill bacteria,” says Leslie Smoot, Ph.D., a senior advisor in FDA’s Office of Food Safety and a specialist in the microbiological safety of processed foods. So if an animal heeds the call of nature in the field, bacteria from the animal waste could contaminate the grain, which is then harvested and milled into flour.
Common “kill steps” applied during food preparation and/or processing (so-called because they kill bacteria that cause infections) include boiling, baking, roasting, microwaving, and frying. But with raw dough, no kill step has been used.
And don’t make homemade cookie dough ice cream either. If that’s your favorite flavor, buy commercially made products. Manufacturers should use ingredients that include treated flour and pasteurized eggs.

๐Ÿช
Symptoms and Who Gets Sick
Common symptoms for Shiga toxin-producing E. coli are diarrhea (often bloody) and abdominal cramps, although most people recover within a week. But some illnesses last longer and can be more severe, resulting in a type of kidney failure called hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). HUS can occur in people of any age, but is most common in young children under 5 years, older adults, and people with weakened immune systems.
Parents of young children should be particularly aware. For instance, if your child is in day care or kindergarten, a common pastime may be art using “play” clay that is homemade from raw dough. Even if they’re not munching on the dough, they’re putting their hands in their mouth after handling the dough. Childcare facilities and preschools should discourage the practice of playing with raw dough. 

Handle Foods Safely
FDA offers these tips for safe food handling to keep you and your family healthy:
  • Do not eat any raw cookie dough, cake mix, batter, or any other raw dough or batter product that is supposed to be cooked or baked.
  • Follow package directions for cooking products containing flour at proper temperatures and for specified times.
  • Wash hands, work surfaces, and utensils thoroughly after contact with flour and raw dough products.
  • Keep raw foods separate from other foods while preparing them to prevent any contamination that may be present from spreading. Be aware that flour may spread easily due to its powdery nature.
  • Follow label directions to chill products containing raw dough promptly after purchase until baked.
This article appears on FDA’s Consumer Updates page, which features the latest on all FDA-regulated products.
June 28, 2016

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