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Short Documentary On Acid Attacks

What does a heart attack feel like?

I had a major heart attack in 2014, and here is my story:I woke up not feeling well - I couldn’t explain it… I just didn’t feel well.Around 9am, my mother and father stopped by; they had gone to the stations of the cross at the church right down the road. I began feeling a pain in my right arm, but I tried to ignore it. My mother looked at me and said that I didn’t look well, but I told her I was fine, so her and my father left.So, it was just me and my 23 year old son. He saw me rubbing my arm and asked me what was wrong. I told him I wasn’t sure - that it was like a pressure pain that was moving up my arm. He said it sounded like a heart attack, and I laughed because I thought that I was too young for a heart attack. In 2014 I was going to be 43, I believe.Anyhow, I told him that I was going to take a hot shower and put the water on my arm but that I was going to leave the door open in case I needed him to call someone. I got in the shower. At that point, the pain was in my upper arm and neck. I stood under the hot water and aimed on my neck, but it did not help. I was uncomfortable, but I managed to get out and get dressed.I then told my son that maybe a nap would make me feel better, but after just two minutes of lying down, I was too uncomfortable to bear it. I thought that I would do a breathing treatment to make myself feel better. To this day, I still wonder why in the world I thought that a breathing treatment would be effective even though I was breathing just fine and the pain was in my arm and neck.Anyway, I took out my nebulizer and albuterol and started the machine. I took one deep breath and the pain shot up from about a 5 to past a 10. I cried for my son to call 911.I made it to the local hospital, and they performed many tests and gave by nitro glycerin four times. They then stabilized me so that I could fly in the Flight for Life helicopter into the city for emergency surgery. In the city, I had a stent put in. That night, the nurse accidentally opened up my surgical site and blood splattered everywhere, making me lose so much blood that I needed two transfusions.I was told that I was lucky to be alive, and that I should have come in to the hospital when I first felt the pain in my arm and neck, and that that would have saved me a lot of trouble. I also suffered a mild brain injury because I didn’t have enough oxygen going to my head.

Is a Hijab suppose to stop rape/ sexual harassment?

I am guessing your another ignorant troll. Here is the answer for you, in Germany few years ago they did a research. They took a group of women and they dress up like sister at church and when they walked by a group of men, all the men respected them and were very nice and gentle to them. BUT, when the same women dress up in shorts/tight clothes and passed by the same group of men, the same men started staring/flirting/checking out those girls. What does this show to you? This shows that when a women dress up nicely and cover her body, most likely everyone will give her respect and treat her in gentle way. Also, the most important thing, Hijab is mandatory in Islam...but ignorant people like you wouldn't understand....May Allah guide you and help your sick mind...Ameen
I hope I helped

Why does BBC publish more negative news about India? Why do BBC and some of the western broadcasting agencies focus mostly on publishing the negative side of India?

Same question popped in my mind, twice.I am not an avid reader but these two incidents caught my interests.Airing of the Nirbhaya's documentary a.k.a "India's Daughter" despite objection from Indian government.Recent documentary about Snake Charmer community. Though documentary was in right spirit but its promotion on their twitter handle clearly stereotyped Indians as snake charmers.Thinking about them I can come only to one conclusion.​​​​"Just good business"They are not here to do charity. They may not be anti-indian but they are not pro-indian either. They will produce a content that is bound to grab eyeballs however controversial the subject may be. Leslee Udwin's controversial interview of one of the accused in Nirbhaya incident despite repeated objection from ministry is tip of the iceberg. The movie supposedly shows the entire Nirbhaya incident from perspectives of the convicted rapists and the aggrieved parents. The interview supposedly is enough to formulate a wrong view of the country.People might have different views regarding this subject but I think that the documentary undermined Indian reputation on large scale and should have been directed keeping in mind the influence and impression it would have globally.It was a great shock to me when I read a comment relating to this incident in a post that was discussing "racial discrimination prevalent in Australlia".In the post an Indian guy had shared his own experience about how he was subjected to racial discrimination there, to which a Taiwanese national had replied (and i quote)..." I prefer an Australlian racist over Indian Rapist any day".

How did humans become the top of the food chain if we are so weak and slow? We cannot fight other apes nor predators. Was it due to our reproduction abilities?

Because humans are a scarier version of this:That’s right, a zombie.Compared to other animals, humans are incredibly resilient. When a horse breaks its leg, what happens? Half the time it goes into shock right away and simply dies. Other times, it lies in place until it dehydrates. It’s the same with most other animals. Major injuries lead to shock or a loss of will to live.What happens when a human breaks his leg? He limps. He keeps coming. He gets angry. Or even scarier, he takes literal garbage from the ground - sticks, vines, whatever - and makes a splint. Heck, even if you manage to bite off his leg he’ll just make a new one.So not only are we like Zombies in our resilience, we are able replace parts and upgrade ourselves. We’re zombie cyborgs!But wait, it gets worse.A human is not only far more difficult to kill than it at first appears, it’s also impossible to escape from. Sure, we’re not the fastest animal around, but something like a lion is only going to be able to run for a few minutes at a time and we can track it. It will sprint for a bit, get hot and tired, then stop to rest. The human will jog until he catches up and scares the bejeezus out of the poor animal. The lion then sprints away, getting hotter and more tired. Maybe it trips, breaks a leg and goes into shock. No? Well, after a few more times that lion is going to overheat and pass out anyway - or perhaps it will just go into shock from pure fear of the human which constantly appears behind it. This is called persistence hunting and it���s exactly what zombies do.Wait, did I say human? As in one human? How silly. Humans hunt in packs.Imagine seeing this everywhere you run.Other thoughts:Most animals are scared of humans and our scent. Is it learned fear or do we just smell bad?The only animals crazy enough to prey on us regularly are those unable to catch their regular prey and now starving (tigers) or those unable to consider how dangerous we are (mosquitoes)Human tool-making abilities are certainly key, but even before we were able to build anything complicated we were an apex hunter-gatherer. Group mentality and persistence hunting beats out nearly every other strategy in the animal kingdom.What other animal hunts in packs and exhausts their prey? Wolves. What happened to wolves, the only animal that might beat us at our own game? We turned them into our pets.Zombies and ghosts are basically us imagining being hunted the same way we used to do to other animals.

HOW DO ANOREXIC PEOPLE GET OVER THEIR URGE 2 EAT?

they don't eat a lot of bread (to first answer). bread is considered a fattening food for most people and usually its the first thing to go.

the answer is- starving never stops hurting. Anorexics are very very hungry, although they'll never say it. usually hunger comes in hunger pangs which get more excruciating with time but last for about 10-12 minutes. Infact, after a long time the acid in your stomach that causes the hunger pangs will freak out when you try to eat. so there's pain when you eat and pain when you dont.
the fatigue- your arms feel like their tied down with weights and its hard to stand up as your legs buckle and you feel high when you're light headed but your skull is so heavy.
not to mention the panic attacks, depression, small ocd's, and social awkwardness it causes.

your body will eventually drag you down to the fridge and eat a mass amount of food. after banging your head against the wall you'll purge (throw it back up or sh*t it out) any way possible: fingers, ipecac syrup, laxitives, toothbrushes, etc.

in short, no one ever ever ever gets used to it, they get controlled by it.

oh, and as the other answerer said- they drink water like a faucet, chew gum, and do things to take their mind off food (they always think about food) i had a book of food wrappers i would smell when i got hungry. they have full websites full of "tips" to not eat

When God ordered killing witches, did he realize it would make christians do horrific things to children?

Remember: The Witchcraft Trials in Salem:

From June through September of 1692, nineteen men and women, all having been convicted of witchcraft, were carted to Gallows Hill, a barren slope near Salem Village, for hanging. Another man of over eighty years was pressed to death under heavy stones for refusing to submit to a trial on witchcraft charges. Hundreds of others faced accusations of witchcraft; dozens languished in jail for months without trials until the hysteria that swept through Puritan Massachusetts subsided.

circa 560 B.C.
1. The Bible condemns witches

circa 420
2. St. Augustine argues witchcraft is an impossibility


1208
3. Satan becomes sinister following
Pope Innocent III's attack on Cathar heretics.

1273
4. Thomas Aquinas argues that demons exist that try to lead people into temptation.

mid-1400s
5. Witchcraft trials erupt in Europe

Exodus 22:18 Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live. (KJV)

Leviticus 20:27 A man also or woman that hath a familiar spirit, or that is a wizard, shall surely be put to death: they shall stone them with stones: their blood shall be upon them. (KJV)

Exodus and Leviticus, two Old Testament books that make up part of the "Law of Moses" and the primary history of the Jewish people, were written in the sixth century B. C by a Jewish writer—whose name we do not know. The books, which include the passages quoted above that assume the existence of witches and urge that they be killed, were most likely written in what is present-day Iraq during the reign of Evil Merodach, a dark time of Jewish exile, around 560 B.C. The author was most likely a priest, and might have been assisted in his work by other priests and scribes.

The word "witch" in Exodus is a translation of the Hebrew word "kashaph," which comes from the root meaning "to whisper." The word as used in Exodus probably thus meant "one who whispers a spell." In context, the Exodus passage probably was intended to urge Jews to adhere to their own religious practices and not those of surrounding tribes.

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