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Google Reader Shared ItemsEgypt halts doctor visas to Saudi
The Egyptian government says it has placed a ban on Egyptian doctors going to work in Saudi Arabia.(author unknown)
Peugeot-rative languageA protest in the Ghazl El-Mahalla spinning factory necessitated another memorable trip in a 7-seater Peugeot on Thursday, this time driven by a man with the world’s foulest mouth. Short, dishevelled and unshaven in a striped t-shirt, he had a bar-fighting attitude to driving - while the bloke across the room may not have been looking at his bird, he probably was. The blokey cockiness was probably in part encouraged by the two insalubrious-looking types next to him on the front seat. One of this pair spent the first ten minutes conducting an animated mobile phone call in which he informed his interlocuteur and everyone else in the Peugeot that he had “flogged the car for a grand” and “had Mohamed so and so’s licence” and wouldn’t sell it for less than 50 quid. “Fuck no, 50 quid or nothing” he declared. He had a dirty laugh of the best kind. The rumbling sort. A filthy old engine starting up. The journey started with a tape of Qu’ran recitation, to ensure a safe journey. The driver and the dirty laugh man talked up front, exchanging jokes, gripes and cigarettes while the slightly younger and timid-looking man sat between them acted as a buffer for the stream of profanities they emitted. Listening to the driver was like watching Goodfellas dubbed into Arabic. Nothing escaped his venom. Kossom [fuck*] this and the ebn el weskha [son of a slut] that. It was spectacularly vile language for a Thursday afternoon, particularly given that swear words are frowned on in Egyptian society much more than e.g. England, where one can not give a flying fuck audibly in public without raising many eyebrows. The Qu’ran was eventually replaced by a tape of sha3by mawwal, which was when the fun really began. This cassette we were treated to was obviously a particular favourite of the driver’s, and he bellowed out the lyrics (sometimes in advance of the singer actually saying them). When not singing, he danced, requiring the use of his torso, and both hands. “Aho…aho…” [there it is…there it is…] he said to Dirty Laugh while shoulder shimmying with both hands off the wheel, and looking at Dirty Laugh. Dirty Laugh smoked and nodded approvingly, apparently unconcerned that we were going at 90 kilometres an hour on the Delta road and that control of the car had been sacrificed for boogie wonderland. A particularly rousing chorus suddenly inspired the driver to clap noisily and at length, again while we sped along and vehicles zigzagged behind us and in front of us like video game space invaders. I can’t say I blame him. Sometimes musical needs must. We stopped three times. The first time all three men got out, opened the bonnet, revved the engine once manually, and then got back in. In silence. The second time the driver parked the car on the side of the motorway, sort of, and then asked whether anybody wanted something to drink before the three men absented themselves for about five minutes. The last time we stopped, the driver didn’t have time to steer to the side of the road because he was too busy going through the A-Z of swear words. Traffic had almost come to a halt for some reason, and while we crawled along a lorry to our right very slightly cut the driver up. “YA OSTA! YA OSTA!” [Oi, driver!] dirty laugh bellowed out of his window, prompting absolutely no response from the lorry driver, probably because he couldn’t hear him up in his cab. Driven wild by this atrocity the driver sprang out of his car and delivered a verbal assault of astounding proportions involving the lorry driver’s mother, homosexuals and pimps. He jumped up and down while clenching his fists by his sides. Dirty laugh looked on impassively, smoking as usual, as if he was at the cinema. The driver returned to his car eventually (still swearing), opening his door from the inside, and was only pacified by a cigarette. Another encounter occurred when a microbus driver decided to overtake us at approximately 100 kilometres an hour, on our right. The manoeuvre forced him off the road slightly, into the dust, and a sleeping passenger in our Peugeot was suddenly woke up by a hail of mud and pebbles hitting him in the face. The microbus sped off in a cloud of dust while in front the driver’s face slowly turned red. “I’ll get that fucking son of the bitch at the road bumps,” he hissed. And indeed he did. Traffic slowed down and we were soon side by side with the microbus. A 3-way conversation then ensued between the microbus driver, our driver, and dirty laugh. Driver ended every literally sentence he said with “ebn el weskha”, e.g. “mesh sama3 bey2ol aih ebn el weskha dah” [I can’t hear what that son of a slut is saying] he said, as he reluctantly turned down his sha3by mawwal and leaned towards the passenger side of the car. This carried on for about two minutes (while we were still moving, and cars piled up behind us) until the microbus driver handed our driver a packet of biscuits, and then it was over. The driver opened the biscuits and consumed them, while still cursing the microbus driver. He only interrupted this process to curse the speed bumps we encountered, in the process of being made. He dismissed them as "mattabaat sena3y bent weskha” [fucking speed bumps], before railing against the people making them, who were of course welaad el weskha. Arriving in Mahalla with my swearword vocabulary doubled, I found a very different scene to the last time I had been to the town. Medan Shoon, the scene of April’s clashes was sleepy, with barely a policeman in sight. Last time I had been here it had looked like a military barracks. On our way to the factory journalist Per Bjorklund and I saw a stream of people coming from the direction of the factory. Per correctly identified them as workers, who it transpired had been let out early, an attempt by state security to control the size of the protest. A group of women stopped me, asking if I was a journalist before they caught sight of Per. Who is Swedish and looks it. “ALLAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 3EYNAYK GAMILA GEDDAN!!!!!!!!!!!!!! [WOW! YOUR EYES ARE REALLY GORGEOUS!] she cooed/screeched at Per. Who smiled a twinkly smile with his heavenly Scandinavian blue eyes. I managed to extract from the women that the 3 p.m. shift had been let out early from the factory before they returned to the theme of Per and his eyes. Outside the factory a group of women waited, flanked by the usual state security men in tight jeans and sunglasses. I recognised one of them from the Mahalla 49 trial. He never ever lets me in to the courtroom until the last possible moment. I also remembered a state security officer I had seen outside the Doctors’ Syndicate last week. An underling brought him a chair, before wiping it clean for him. After el basha had sat down the underling, a kid of no more than 22, held his coffee for him. But to ensure that it was at the correct height he bent over at back-breaking angle while el basha talked on the phone, just froze in that position. One of the more nauseating sights I have witnessed recently. I’ve heard that Ghazl El-Mahalla women tend to spearhead protests in the factory, and today seemed to be no exception. “El sa7afa fein?” [where’s the press?] they chanted, as they waited to either enter the factory, or for their male colleagues to join them. They entered the factory eventually. Their male colleagues were assembled in the factory’s central courtyard. A fight ensued with factory security about whether the women would be admitted into the courtyard. They were, and the women flocked through, journos sneaking through in the middle of them. Protests have a unique sort of energy, and experiencing them is always inspiring. This is particularly true of Egyptian protests, where participants in them risk so much. Individuals who lead chants know that they will be noted, a mark placed against their name, and yet they risk all. At one point during the protest I was standing near the gates, and overhead a man saying of the participants “dowl schwayet 3ayyal malohomsh lazma” [they’re a bunch of useless kids] and of a woman protestor, “bent el weskha bet3mel fadee7a” [a daughter of a slut making a scandal]. It wasn’t the Peugeot driver, I checked. * Commenter Fully P has pointed out that 'fuck' conceals the true vileness of the literal meaning of this word, which is 'your mother's cunt'. Since this delicate expression isn't a popular term of abuse in English, I chose the nearest equivalent. 'Cunting' might have been an alternative, if that exists outside Croydon. But the absence of the mother from this again misses the gynacological intensity of the Arabic.noreply@blogger.com (Scarr) First case study of developmental phonagnosia [Neurophilosophy]The term phonagnosia refers to an inablity to recognize familiar voices or to discriminate between unfamiliar ones. This is a rare condition that is usually associated with brain damage: the ability to recognize familiar voices is impaired by damage to several regions of the right parietal lobe, and impaired voice discrimination is associated with damage to the temporal lobe in both hemispheres. Researchers from UCL now report the first known case of developmental phonagnosia. In the journal Neuropsychologia, they document the case of a 60-year-old woman known as K.H., who says that she has been unable to recognize familiar voices for as long as she can remember. Read the rest of this post... | Read the comments on this post...What to Do When a Patient is Crying.Uh oh. Your patient is crying. What to do? What to do? (1) Do not reflexively refer the patient to a psychiatrist. That hasty referral sends the message that (1) it’s not okay to cry, (2) I don’t want to see you cry (or I can’t tolerate seeing you cry), and (3) there must be something wrong with you since you are crying. (”Not only do you have Medical Condition X, but you might be mentally ill, too!”) Crying can be a completely natural and expected response to information. Furthermore, there is variation in how people respond to news; some express more overt emotions than others. You also don’t know what else is going on in the patient’s life; sometimes your news is actually the single straw—as unremarkable as it may be—that, according to the proverb, breaks the camel’s back. “But! But! But!” you may protest. “I know all of that, but I just don’t have the time to deal with that kind of stuff! I don’t want to ask more about it and then open the floodgates and have this person bawl in my office for hours and hours. I’m not a therapist; I’m a doctor. My job is to take care of the patient’s (uterus, blood pressure, alcohol use, diabetes, whatever)!” Ah ha. You and your patient don’t share the same agenda. Well, part of your job is to help comfort the patient. Although curing disease may seem like the primary function of medicine, the reason why we try to cure disease is to maximize quality of life and optimize function. We don’t encourage people to stop smoking “just” because we want them to stop smoking; we encourage them to stop smoking so that they can breathe easier for as many years as possible and minimize the development of other conditions like emphysema, COPD, and lung cancer in their futures, which, as you know, will (likely adversely) affect the quality of their lives. Although medicine has made some remarkable advances, we can’t cure everything and sometimes, the best thing we can “do” is offer comfort. Additionally, comfort in of itself can maximize quality of life; there’s something about sharing a burden with someone else that can make life seem less laborious and more tolerable. So your patient is crying and you can’t cure crying. You’re astute, though, and realize that the crying means something. In our culture, crying is not embraced and, in the vast majority of cases, if someone is crying in front of you, s/he is significantly distressed and is trying not to cry. (Think of all the people who have apologized for crying, as if it is something to be ashamed of.) Yes, it can be hard to see people cry. It’s uncomfortable. There’s that strong urge to make them stop—because if they stop crying, that must mean they feel better, right? Then there’s the fear that we are the ones doing something that’s causing them to cry (is it always about us?). Or the fear that they will continue to cry forever and forever (see above). Contrary to popular fears, crying does not last forever. The emotion that underlies crying will also not persist forever. That emotion may not disappear completely, but it will abate enough so that the individual will eventually stop crying. This doesn’t even take into account the social pressures we experience to refrain from crying in public (see above). Remember these points. You don’t have to do anything if your patient is crying. Sometimes, the best course of action is to just be with the patient. The gives the message that (1) it’s okay to cry, (2) I’m not going to freak out just because you’re crying, and (3) maybe the best response to the situation is to cry. “But! But! But!” you protest again. “You’re not listening! I don’t have the time to deal with that kind of stuff! I habitually run late and I’ve got all these other patients waiting for me! What am I supposed to do?” Suggestions: (1) Acknowledge the situation in a calm manner. Please note that this does not mean that you should bluntly describe the situation: “You are crying. I don’t have time to be with you while you cry.” Just because you’re pressed for time does not give you the license to lack civility. Try: “This is understandably upsetting. I’m afraid that I cannot spend the time with you that I’d like to due to the clinic schedule.” Your overt recognition of the situation acknowledges the patient’s experience. Sometimes, that in itself can be healing. People don’t like to be ignored. (2) Communicate that you are concerned about the patient and, though there may be nothing you can do to “fix” the situation, you would like to offer what you can. That “something” can be a modified version of “being” with the patient. If you are in an inpatient setting, you can offer to visit the patient again later on in the day to briefly check in on how s/he’s doing. If you’re in an outpatient setting, you can offer to the patient the opportunity to wait in the waiting room until s/he feels calmer and then you can briefly pop out to check in on how s/he’s doing between patients. Or you can offer to call the patient in a day or two to check in. Please note that these are just “offers”. Don’t foist yourself on patients; some people are already feeling mortified about crying in front of you and don’t want reminders that they committed this heinous act. Some people may seek comfort in other places and people. And, to be sure: Make sure you actually do these things if you say you’re going to do them. People like integrity. (3) Ask the patient what would be most helpful in that moment. If you don’t know what to do, ask for help. You can qualify this statement with something about your packed clinic schedule if time is slipping away from you. This inquiry communicates that you respect the patient’s opinion, that this is a collaborative effort, and that you want to help. It is the rare patient (or human being, really) who will scowl at you and bark, “Well, you’re the doctor, you should know!” in response to that question. For most physicians, a crying patient is a low-incident event. This partially explains why doctors may feel as uncomfortable as they do when a patient does cry during the appointment. This occasion, however, need not instill fear: This can be a grand opportunity to heal, even when you cannot cure. Turkey: Blogspot.com Banned
From Armut [tr]: T.C. Diyarbakır 1. Sulh Ceza Mahkemesi 20.10.2008 tarih ve 2008/2761 sayılı kararı gereği günlük sayfama erişimin engellendiğini öğrendim, ne bir duruşma çağrısı, ne bir karar, ne bir tebliğ aldım, yargısız infaz edildim, sesim soluğum kesildi sansürlendim. İki yıldır bağırıyoruz, internet sitelerini TV kanalı gibi gören bir kanun, koltuk sevdasından bu kanuna arka çıkanlar, bu kanun sayesinde Türkiye'de istediği siteyi yasaklatabileceğini bilen hainler ile bunlara maşa olan cahil vatandaşlarımız yüzünden kendi kendimizi mağdur ediyoruz. I have learned access to my journal page has been blocked by decision of the T.R. Diyarbakir First Criminal Court of Peace no. 2008/2761, dated Oct. 20, 2008. No subpoena, no verdict, no written notice; I have been judged without trial. My voice, my breath has been taken away. I have been censored.
For two years we have been shouting: because of a law that views internet websites as though they were TV channels, people who lend their support to this law to hang on to their positions, the scoundrels who know they can forbid whichever websites they want to thanks to this law and our ignorant citizens who allow themselves to be used, we are victimizing ourselves. So what is the criteria for a website to be banned in Turkey? Elma+Alt+Shift explains: Blogger banned in Turkey! Since the beginning till today… Undoubtedly the banning of yet more Turkish blogger's voices has left a large web-community outraged. Protest movements of Turkish netizens are already in place from earlier website bannings, the details of the movement can be found at www.sansuresansur.org. You can trust Global Voices to keep an eye on this developing situation. <div style="direction:rtl;text-align:right">ثوار قدامى</div>
سبتمبر 2006
alaa سافرت جنوب أفريقيا للمشاركة في مؤتمر عن الاعلام و تجمع للمدونين الأفارقة، الرحلة جائت في وقتها تماما بالنسبة لي لأني كنت عايش حالة من اللخبطة الشديدة في الوقت ده. كان فات شهرين على تجربة السجن و معموللي هيصة كبيرة و بقيت راجل مشهور و هاتك يا صحفيين و دعوات و عروض شغل و اهتمام مبالغ فيه و كان مفيد جدا لي في وسط ده كله أني أزور بلد أي انسان محترم في سن ال30 و طالع مر بتجربة سجن و تعذيب أطول و أصعب من أي حاجة أنا مريت بيها و بيتعاملوا مع ال45 يوم بتوعي على أنهم حاجة عادية خالص. كانت حرب تموز في لبنان لسه خالصه لكن الجدل حولها في مصر لسه شغال, و في وسط الخناقات و المزايدات و السجالات و النقاشات كان مفيد أني أزور بلد كل حد تقريبا فيها كان متضامن مع المقاومة اللبنانية و عنده موقف غير ملتبس من اسرائيل (أصلهم مش ناسيين لاسرائيل تعاونها مع النظام العنصري و لا قادرين يبلعوا استمرار الصهيونية لتشابهها مع الأبارتهايد) لدرجة أن شبكة تلفزيون اخبارية جديدة كانت عاملة الدعاية بتاعتها في الشوارع في صورة اعلانات عن انحيازهم للحقيقة في تغطية حرب لبنان مساويين ما بين الانحياز للحقيقة و ادانة اسرائيل. و كان مفيد أني أسمع ناس بتتكلم عن ثمن المقاومة المسلحة من خبرة حقيقية و من غير ما يكون الفرضية الأساسية بتاعتهم هو حتمية الهزيمة. لكن أهم خبرة في السفرية دي كانت التعرف على مجموعة متنوعة من المناضلين و الثوار القدامي اللي عاشوا انتصار حقيقي، و كان مفيد أني أعرف أن جزء من خبراتهم حاجات شبه اللي كنا بنعملها في مصر، فقابلت ناس كانوا من قادة الجبهة الديمقراطية المتحدة اللي بدأت حاجة شبه كفاية جدا، و ناس ناشطة في صحافة شعبية من قبل ما يخترعوا الانترنت و عندهم جريدة أهلية ملهاش طقم تحرير معين و و كل كتابها و مراسليها متطوعين و مع ذلك اصدارهم الأسبوعي بيوزع نصف مليون نسخة، و محامين حقوق انسان يحكوللي عن الدور اللي لعبه القضاء في تفكيك النظام العنصري، الخ. و اللي أثر في أكثر أن شوية من ثوار الأمس دول كنت حاسبهم من ضمن رفاق اليوم و السفرية دي كانت فرصة أني أعمق علاقتي الانسانية بيهم مش بس أعرف أجزاء من تاريخهم. المحارب الأيرلنديثاني يوم من المؤتمر، مكانش أي حد من أصدقائي و معارفي لسه وصل و جو المؤتمر الرسمي حبتين و المليان صحافيين مفيش مشترك كبير يجمعني بيهم مخليني تايه. وقع بختي يوميها على مائدة عشاء فيها مدير في بنك باركليز/أبسا يكاد يكون كاريكاتير للرأسمالي الاستعماري، واحد أمريكاني أنا مقتنع تماما أنه كان سي أي ايه (أو مشتاق يكون سي أي ايه) و واحدة أمريكانية ثانية مصرة تحكيلنا بحماس شديد عن ازاي الأتاتوركيين في تركيا بيستخدموا المدونات في الدفاع عن العلمانية و الديمقراطية ضد الاسلاميين الوحشين. و في وسط الترابيزة اللي مايعلم بيها اللي ربنا دي راجل أيرلندي طويل في أواخر الثلاثين بيشتغل مدير نظم في جمعية أهلية و شغله كله على نظم جنو/لينوكس، فطبعا شبطنا في بعض و بدأنا حوار تقني جدا عن البرمجيات الحرة و بصوت عالي جدا لحد ما طفشنا باقي الترابيزة. و بس بقى على عدد كبير من قزايز البيرة حكى لي عن تاريخه. في سن 15 سنة انضم سايمون للجيش الجمهوري الأيرلندي و بدأ تدريبه و اعداده للنضال المسلح، لصغر سنه مشاركش في عمليات و فضلوا محويشينه لكن على ما تم 18 كان بدأ يبقى عنده مشاكل مع أيديولوجية الجيش الجمهوري و شكوك في أسلوبهم في النضال و طلب الاستقالة. القادة بتوعه تفهموا بس كان فيه مشكلة، ده فدائي مدرب و كان جزء من خلية سرية، يعني مطلوب من الانجليز و عنده معلومات تخليه خطر على خليته و قيادته، فخيروه ما بين الاستمرار معاهم أو الهجرة خارج أيرلندا، في المعتاد في المواقف المشابهة كانوا بيهربوا المناضل على أمريكا و يبدأ حياة جديدة هناك، بس سيمون ميعرفش أي حاجة غير النضال المسلح هيروح أمريكا يعمل ايه؟ قرر أنه يبحث عن قضية ثانية محتاجاه و راح مهاجر على بتسوانا، و في ظرف شهور انضم لخلية بتحارب الأبارتهايد في جنوب أفريقيا و معسكرها السري عبر الحدود في بتسوانا. في الثمانينات كانت العنف في جنوب أفريقيا وصل لذروته و قوات الأمن و الجيش بدأت تعمل عمليات عبر الحدود، ده غير أن النضال الغير مسلح كان شعبيته و انتصاراته بتزيد. شك سيمون و رفاقه أن شرطة جنوب أفريقيا عرفت تفاصيل عن الخلية و أنهم مهددين و قرروا وقف النضال المسلح، و انتقلوا من بتسوانا لجنوب أفريقيا و قعدوا مستخبيين فترة طويلة. <!--break--> وقف اطلاق النارأغلب رفاق سايمون كانوا من جماعة المسلمين الملايو، بعد ما هدأت الأمور شوية استقروا كلهم وسط عائلاتهم في الكيب الغربية، و طبعا كل واحد فيهم راح شافله زوجة مسلمة صالحة بسرعة و مخلفله كام عيل. انتقل سايمون معهم لكيب الغربية، ما هو ميعرفش حد في البلد غيرهم و ملوش مطرح ثاني. حكى لي سايمون عن صدمته في رفاقه اللي انتقلوا بسلاسة شديدة من ماركسيين راديكاليين مقتنعين أن الدين أفيون الشعوب و مؤمنين بالثورة على مؤسسة الدين و مؤسسة العائلة و البرجوازية و كل الكلام ده الى برجوازيين مسلمين عندهم حياة مستقرة. فضل عنده مشكلة مع حياة رفاقه الجديدة لحد ما حضر جنازة ابن أقرب أصدقائه، اللي مات و هو طفل في حادثة عربية. الجنازة كانت طبعا اسلامية و سايمون رصد بنفسه ازاي الطقس و تضامن القرايب و الجيران ساعدوا صديقه و زوجته في أنه يتحمل الألم رغم شكه في مدى عمق ايمان صديقه لكنه اكتشف معنى ثاني للدين أفيون الشعوب. بدأ سايمون في التعرف على مجتمع الكيب الغربي و تاريخه الطويل و الغني من النضال، نضال مش شبه اللي هو متعود عليه، عائلات شديدة الاختلاط بتقاوم التقسيم العنصري في المنطقة السادسة، رجال دين يقودوا ثورات شعبية، رجال أعمال و تجار منخرطين في عصيان مدني. وعى سايمون الدرس جيدا، الثورة ليست أسلوب حياة، ملهاش شكل معين و مهياش حكر على أيديولوجية واحدة أو طبقة بعينها، و البدائل للسلاح عديدة. و بناء حياة و أسرة و مستقبل في ظل الظلم و القمع ممكن يكون في حد ذاته مقاومة. فطبعا راح لاقيله زوجة كاثوليكية صالحة و خلفله طابور عيال زي أي أيرلندي محترم نفسه. و استر تماما في جنوب أفريقيا. و بس بقى قعد يتنطط من شغلانة لشغلانة بحثا عن رزق أولاده و قعد يدور على دور يلعبه في السنوات الأخيرة للنضال. أخذ باله أن تكنولوجيا المعلومات دي حاجة مستقبلها كبير و الناس فيها مش هتدق قوي في موضوع الشهادات و التعليم، فعلم نفسه برمجة و شبكات، و مع نهاية النظام العنصري في منتصف التسعينات كان ابتدى يشتغل في الوب و أكتشف الجنو لينوكس. لقى سايمون نفسه في الثورة الجديدة اللى اتولدت في رحم حركة البرمجيات الحرة، شيوعية رقمية جديدة، نضال لتحرير المعرفة و الثقافة العلم و أدوات الانتاج الحديثة. و زي ما الثورة الاشتراكية الأممية ظهرت عشان ما يتمش اقصاء حد أثناء اعادة تشكيل العالم بعد الثورة الصناعية، فيه ثورة أممية ظهرت عشان ما يتمش اقصاء حد أثناء اعادة تشكيل العالم بعد الثورة المعلوماتية. هل انتصر سايمون أم انهزم؟انهارت العنصرية في جنوب أفريقيا لكن تخلى الثوار عن أحلام الاشتراكية و ورثهم النضال المسلح مجتمع مهووس باستخدام العنف كحل لمشاكله، تقدمت أيرلندا اقتصاديا و علميا بعد ما بقى ثوارها هم حكامها، و رغم تخليهم عن حلم توحيد أيرلندا و انضمامهم للاتحاد الأوروبي بعد ما كانوا بيحاربوا عشان يستقلوا من انجلترا الا أن ايرلندا لعبت دور كبير في مقاومة هيمنة الليبرالية الجديدة و تقويض الديمقراطية في أوروبا و بقيت حامي حمى الاستقلالية هناك. برضه حركة تحرير المعرفة و ان كانت معركتها لسه مستمرة لكن النتائج متذبذبة. يبقى انتصر ولا انهزم؟ السؤال ده بالنسبة له ملوش معنى، رغم تاريخه النضالي الطويل في المحصلة النهائية دوره في تحقيق النصر أو الهزيمة صغير، و مع أن العالم اللي هو عايش فيه النهاردة ميشبهش أحلامه و هو صغير لكنه شايفه عالم أكثر عدالة، سايمون لا يبحث عن هزيمة أو نصر سايمون يبحث عن المعركة القادمة و رفاق السلاح و بس. A case of sadomasochistic transference: the analyst's contributions to perverse enactments.
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A case of sadomasochistic transference: the analyst's contributions to perverse enactments. Psychoanal Q. 2008 Oct;77(4):1147-78 Authors: Zeitner RM A young woman who came for treatment of anxiety and depression is presented in a detailed case report. She developed an erotized transference that was predominantly sadomasochistic and included her intention to torture and castrate the analyst. The author demonstrates how the analyst's behavior, including countertransference contributions, assisted in shaping the vicissitudes of sadomasochistic transference paradigms. A collusion was established between patient and analyst in a manner that enabled the analytic dyad to work productively toward an eventual resolution of the patient's conflicts. The author discusses the case's complexities pertaining to enactments, while emphasizing the importance of carefully monitoring and addressing countertransference experiences that mold and shape such a collusion. PMID: 18942501 [PubMed - in process] Zeitner RMSelf-Control and the Prefrontal Cortex [The Frontal Cortex]There's a new scientific appreciation for the importance of self-control. This trend began with Walter Mischel's astonishing marshmallow experiments, in which the ability of a four-year old to resist the temptation of a second marshmallow turned out to be a better predictor of future academic success than his or her IQ score. In other words, willpower trumped raw intelligence. But what cortical muscles are behind self-control? An excellent Boston Globe article summarizes some current research and future projects: Most recently, Yale University researchers found that delaying gratification involves an area of the brain, the anterior prefrontal cortex, that is known to be involved in abstract problem-solving and keeping track of goals. For example: You want to drive across town, so you find your keys, start your car, and navigate the route, all while that critical brain region keeps the overarching trip goal in your mind.The brain scan findings from 103 subjects suggest that delaying gratification involves the ability to imagine a future event clearly, said Jeremy Gray, a Yale psychology professor and coauthor of the study in the September edition of the journal Psychological Science. You need "a sort of 'far-sightedness,' to put it in a single word," he said. The problem with relying on the prefrontal cortex (PFC) for self-control, of course, is that the PFC is a relatively feeble bit of brain, at least when compared to the limbic/dopaminergic inputs coming from below. Consider this clever experiment, led by Stanford professor Baba Shiv. (I've blogged about this experiment before.) Shiv was curious whether "cognitive load" could influence self-control, so he gave half of the subjects a two-digit number to memorize (low load), while the other half were given a seven-digit number (high load). Subjects were then instructed to walk to another room in the building. On the way they passed by a table at which they were presented with a choice between a caloric slice of chocolate cake or a bowl of fruit salad. Fifty-nine percent of the people trying to remember seven digits (high load) chose the cake, while sixty-three percent of the two-digit subjects (low load) chose the fruit salad. In other words, having people memorize an extra five digits made them exhibit significantly less self-control. Why did the number of digits have such a strong effect? Shiv speculates that the effort required to memorize seven numbers drew cognitive resources away from our ability to control our urges. This makes anatomical sense, since working memory and self-control are both located in our prefrontal cortex. Having to remember seven numbers occupied neurons that would otherwise help us decide what to eat, which causes us to become more reliant on our impulsive emotions. While we tend to think of self-control as being an innate trait, it is actually dependent on a range of extrinsic factors, all of which affect the way our brain responds to a given situation. This model of limited "thinking resources" has now generated a large amount of supporting evidence. Our decisions really are swayed by the computational limits of our brain. For example, in 2003 neuroeconomists noticed that subjects on diets who resisted temptation in the morning (by foregoing the chance to grab snacks from a nearby basket) later ate significantly more ice cream in an ice-cream taste test than subjects who hadn't exercised self-control. They also quit 40 percent earlier when confronted with a difficult math problem. By resisting the morning snacks, they had temporarily "used up" their ability to resist further temptation. (Other variables that seem to exhaust our self-control are alcohol, stress, and sleep deprivation.) The moral of this data is that we have to pick our battles. Everybody occasionally splurges on the slice of cake, or quickly gives up on a difficult problem. Instead of trying to never be bad, we should focus on being good when it matters. Your PFC gets tired rather quickly. The passport saga continues…So two days passed and I went back to the passport office at the police station, armed with my passport stating that I was born in Italy, and two of my old Egyptian passports, my old Egyptian birth certificate and my old Lesotho birth certificate - all of which state that I was born in LESOTHO. My father and I walk in to see the officer on duty, and explained the situation to him. The first thing he said, without looking at a sheet of paper, was “Oh well then you didn’t write in the country of birth of course.” Um no - we did. So I said, “Why don’t you dig out the application form and we can see if we included the country?” So they did, while my father and I waited outside. I watched my application form being taken in to the officer and then sat there and waited. And waited. And waited. Finally we’re called in and, lo and behold, I was right. So I stood there and watched him as he scrambled for any excuse so that they wouldn’t have to accept responsibility for their mistake. Him: Oh but everyone knows that Roma is in Italy. My father: No but we wrote Lesotho right there. So clearly if it says Roma, Lesotho, then the town is Roma and the country is Lesotho. Him: No but you see once you wrote Roma, Lesotho became irrelevant. Everyone knows Roma is in Italy. My father: No but you see, in English, the capital of Italy is spelled R-O-M-E not R-O-M-A. Him: No but spelling is irrelevant. No matter what we said, he had a retarded comeback, implying that whatever we said was irrelevant and that it was my mistake for being born in such an obscure country. And he just kept coming back to how it didn’t matter that we had written Lesotho, cause we had already written Roma, and cause in my previous passport (which was issued from the same friggin office) it only said Roma -cause some lazy government employee couldn’t be bothered to write 7 extra letters. So we basically had to go through the process of applying for my passport all over again, although they did promise to get it to us two days earlier than usual. We should have been so lucky. Later that afternoon the officer called my father and said “Um actually can you come and get the passport two days later than we agreed? You see, Lesotho isn’t listed in our system so it’s going to take a bit longer than we expected.” Cause everything was done manually in the past, they’re having a really hard time dealing with these new, technologically advanced machines called COM-PEW-TERS. So of course there was nothing we could do, but wait two more days. And then they called again, and said “Um no actually it’s going to take a bit longer cause we don’t know how to add Lesotho to the system.” Yes. We understand. Your morons. It’s ok. We won’t hold it against you. ElGamal shaked my hand!!!Today on the 22 of october 2008 @ Gitex Dubai 2008 , aproximity around 8:45AM GMT I had the honor and the pleasure to meet the Prof. Taher El-Gamal , the great Egyptian cryptographer, I don`t think I am not going to wash my right hand ever in my life !! I was soo exited so happy undiscripale feeling really. please take 5 min from your time to read his wiki pedia page to know how great he is, also try to do the next command: alaaFrance and Cairo’s beloved nun Sister Emmanuelle dies at 99
PARIS: Sister Emmanuelle, a nun who lived for years among scavengers in Cairo’s slums and who has been compared to Mother Teresa for her fight to defend the rights of the poor, died Monday at age 99.A spokeswoman for her association, Sandrine de Carlo, said the Belgium-born nun died in her sleep at(author unknown)
<div style="direction:rtl;text-align:right">غِنى</div>
"أريد ألا أعمل إلا من أجل الحق و الخير و الجمال. أن أبحث في كل إنسان عن شعاعٍ من نور الله."
(الأخت إمانويل ؛ 1908 - 2008)
راهبة بلجيكية كاثوليكيّة؛ عاشت في حيّ الزبالين بالقاهرة لأكثر من عشرين عاماً.
توفيت بالأمس - 20 أكتوبر 2008 - في فرنسا، عن 99 عاماً.
Italy, South Africa and Lesotho, Oh my!So I finally got around to renewing my passport, and I am no longer an owner of one of the big, ugly green Egyptian passports. Instead, I got myself one of those snazzy, new, small (but still ugly) green passports. So you’d think I wouldn’t have anything to complain about right? Wrong. They got my place of birth wrong. According to the police station where I renewed it, I was born in Italy. (The source of confusion here was the fact that the town I was born in unfortunately has the same name as a city in Italy). According to the birth certificate they issued me last year, I was born in South Africa. And in reality, I was born in Lesotho. Now I understand that very few people have heard of Lesotho, but did they actually look at my application form? And you’d think that a prerequisite for an employee who’s sole responsibility is issuing birth certificates would have some rudimentary knowledge of geography. Alternatively, you’d think they would have this little machine where they could punch a few buttons and pull out a person’s record and doublecheck that the information they are being told is actually correct - or is that asking too much? Renew Diptychal’s Passport Take 2… <div style="direction:rtl;text-align:right">ـ"تَسَنْجَلَت فَقَتَلَها!": أولى شهيدات الفيس بووك</div>قَتَلَ Wayne Forrester ذو الـ٣٤ ربيعاً زوجته Emma بعد ١٥ سنة زواج لأنّها "تَسَنْجَلَت"(أي حوّلَت پروفايلَها من متزوّجة إلى عازبة؛ مُعجَم النِت الحديث-تحت التأسيس) بعدَ مُغَادَرتِه مَنْزِلَه ببضعة أيّام. لم يحتمِل المسكين الصدمة العنيفة، وشكّكَ في زوجتِه العفيفة عاد متأثّراً بالخمر والكوكايين، وطَعَنها شرّ طعنة بالسكاكين وبعد هذا، يسموننا "صعايدة" ورجعيّين؟! ــــــــــــــــ ملحوظة: حَذارِ أن تبحَث عن "پروفايل" Emma أو أن تسوِّلَ لكَ نَفْسُكَ إضافتَهَا كصديقة على كِتابِ الوُجُوه. فأنتَ لا تعرف إن كان لزَوْجِها عزوةٌ! 9/11 memories reveal how flashbulb memories are made in the brain [Not Exactly Rocket Science]
Many studies have shown that peoples' memories become particularly clear when it comes to traumatic or shocking events. Even learning about a shocking event, rather than witnessing it first-hand, can produce unusually clear recollections. Many of us still remember where we where when we learned that famous figures like Princess Diana or John F. Kennedy had died (I found out about Diana on the toilet). Scientists have suggested that this type of event triggers a process that produces a very specific and exceptionally vivid type of memory called a 'flashbulb memory'. This concept has been kicking around since the 1970s, but the evidence that flashbulb memories actually exist is inconsistent. Tali Sharot and colleagues from New York University decided to find some proper answers by studying the brain activity of people remembering a traumatic event. Doing such experiments would normally be ethically impossible - you cannot after all willingly traumatise someone in the name of science. But Sharot did not need to - unfortunately for us, the twenty-first century has already provided its fair share of traumas.
DailyLit: Read books by email or RSS!!Awesome find of today! (via Geek Sugar) shamoussaHippocampal N-acetylaspartate Levels Before Trauma Predict the Development of Long-Lasting Posttraumatic Stress Disorder-like Symptoms in Mice. Related Articles
Hippocampal N-acetylaspartate Levels Before Trauma Predict the Development of Long-Lasting Posttraumatic Stress Disorder-like Symptoms in Mice. Biol Psychiatry. 2008 Oct 6; Authors: Siegmund A, Kaltwasser SF, Holsboer F, Czisch M, Wotjak CT BACKGROUND: Only a certain proportion of individuals develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the aftermath of a trauma. Biomarkers of individual susceptibility are not yet known but would enable selected primary and secondary prevention of PTSD. METHODS: Hippocampal N-acetylaspartate (NAA) levels were assessed by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H-MRS) in C57BL/6N mice prior to the perception of a 1.5 mA electric footshock. Associative (freezing to trauma context) and nonassociative (freezing to a neutral tone; i.e., hyperarousal) symptoms of PTSD-like fear were assessed 4, 5, 18, and 32 weeks after trauma. RESULTS: Low NAA levels in the left dorsal hippocampus predicted persistent PTSD-like symptoms (both contextual freezing and hyperarousal), while animals with pretraumatic high levels of NAA decreased their fear reactions to control levels in consequence of re-exposure to associative and nonassociative cues. N-AA levels in the right dorsal hippocampus, in contrast, were only partially predictive of the individual susceptibility to develop PTSD-like symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Left hippocampal NAA levels might be a predictor of an increased susceptibility to develop PTSD after trauma. PMID: 18842254 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher] Siegmund A, Kaltwasser SF, Holsboer F, Czisch M, Wotjak CTBan on commercial use of GPS in Egypt has consumers frustrated
CAIRO: Technology lovers and modern car owners in Egypt consider themselves unlucky because of a government ban on the usage of Global Positioning System (GPS) technology. Telecoms Law 10/2003 outlaws the import of GPS-equipped mobile phones, and retailers found selling them could lead to the confis(author unknown)
Singing to Females Makes Male Songbirds 'Happy' [Living the Scientific Life (Scientist, Interrupted)]tags: dopamine, behavior, evolution, rewarding affiliative behaviors, brain reward pathways, songbirds, birdsong, zebra finch, Poephila guttata, neurobiology A pair of wild Zebra (Chestnut-eared) Finches, Poephila guttata. Image: Adelaide Zebra Finch Society [larger view]. People have been known to "sing for joy" and we often experience happiness when others sing for us. Additionally, birdsong has often brought joy to those who have listened, but what about the birds themselves? Do birds experience "happiness" when they hear birdsong, or when they sing for others? According to newly published research, male songbirds do apparently experience happiness when they sing to females. Read the rest of this post... | Read the comments on this post... <div style="direction:rtl;text-align:right">جووجل يتحدى الندم! ـ</div>إذا كانت ميلودي تتحدى الملل، فجووجل-بلا شك-يتخطى المألوف والمعقول بهذه الخاصيّة الجديدة: لو كنت ممن يتهورون ويرسلون ما يندمون عليه لو كنت تشرب فيغيب عقلك وترسل ما ليس لك به علم فها جووجل تضيف ضميراً إلى الخدمة البريديّة ينبهك ويستمهلك: راجع نفسك وتأكّد أنّك في كامل قواك الحسابيّة ما رأيكم؟ هل ستضيفون هذه الخدمة، أم ستصيبكم بالغضب والحنق عند الرغبة في إرسال بريداً سريعاً؟ |
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