...to embrace, not to be ashamed of. Obstacles are meant to be overcome, even if it takes a toll on one’s life. The greatest challenges I have faced, and am still facing, are consequences from the concussion I sustained two years ago from soccer. This head injury took me out of school for three and a half months, and put me behind in my academic journey. In October 2014, I was held back from any academic and social achievements due to a head injury that would affect me for the rest of my life. Because of the gnarly concussion, I was unable to participate in any academic activities, including reading and writing; this was the hardest challenge of all. As a result, I was too far behind in school to suddenly make it all up; my 3.86 G.P.A. (grade point average) quickly declined to a 2.8 G.P.A. The only chance I had to somewhat makeup these points was to go on independent studies accompanied by a home-hospital teacher. Thankfully, I was able to raise my grades enough to pass each class I was in. Not only was the academic side very difficult, but also so were the emotional repercussions I had, and still have. The head injury made my anxiety and depression levels skyrocket, and made any situation an uphill battle....
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...Christopher Nolan’s films, Memento and Inception, both approach the question of how humans experience time. What is known as the “pathologies of temporal experience”, is exemplified in Memento, where Leonard’s head injury breaks his main connection between the present and the past, also by causing him the inability to make new long-term memories. In the movie Inception, this same idea is presented to us but in a different form. Auxier describes it as “ a lasagna of ideas about time and dreams” (Auxier, 280) and begins with firstly explaining the idea of mementoes and totems. A “totem” is an object that the characters in this film keep with them in real life and in the dream world. It is identified as something unique, heavy and that only the owner is allowed to handle. Its purpose is to provide the dream-invaders a way of knowing whether they are in the dream world or in reality. If a totem is expected to fall, or operate in a certain way, then any change in this indicates that you are in a dream. Most importantly, Auxier says that this serves as “a point of connection between what you’re experiencing within yourself (beliefs, perceptions, assumptions) and the way the world really is.” (Auxier, 282) The idea of a “totem” allows for continuity of time in the narrative, it acts as a guide when discontinuities are found. Furthermore, both films attempt to explore the same problem, the continuity and discontinuity in our experience, and how discontinuity affects our ability...
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...and loss of life (Potter, 2013, pg. 709). Necessary loss is a loss that everyone experiences and is the result of simply moving forward in life. Further, a maturational loss is a form of necessary loss and includes all losses normally expected as a person progresses through life. A sudden, unexpected external event may cause a situational loss. A situational loss results from a change in a life situation. This could be the loss of a person, object, physical/mental quality. In addition, losses can be actual or perceived (Potter, 2013, pg. 709). Ambiguous loss, is a type of disenfranchised grief that occurs when the lost person is still physically present but their personality or mental status is lost such is in severe dementia or brain injury(Potter, 2013, pg. 710). Nursing interventions and rationales for caring for the body after death The RN is responsible for providing safe and appropriate nursing care following death. Depending on the state and/or facility, different events may occur after death. Organ and tissue donation, and autopsy, may or may not occur depending on the circumstances of death and family/cultural/ religious preferences (Potter, 2013, pg. 723-724). Nurses are also responsible for recording all assessments and activities surrounding a death. Nurses usually witness the signing of medical forms by doctors and coroners and gather and record much of the information surrounding deaths (Potter, 2013, pg. 724). Postmortem care requires the same respect...
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...TRAFFIC CRASH REPORT LOCAL INFORMATION PHOTOS TAKEN OH -2 OH -3 OH -1P LOCAL REPORT NUMBER * 13014176 2 CRASH DATE * CRASH SEVERITY 1 - FATAL 2 - INJURY 3 HIT/SKIP 1 - SOLVED 2. UNSOLVED 3- PDO 0 OTHER PDO UNDER STATE REPORTABLE DOLLAR AMOUNT PRIVATE REPORTING AGENCY NCIC * REPORTING AGENCY NAME * PROPERTY 05718 CITY, VILLAGE, TOWNSHIP cITY * vILLAGE* Englewood TOWNSHIP * * Englewood Police NUMBER OF UNITS UNIT IN ERROR 1 98 - ANIMAL 99 - UNKNOWN DAY OF WEEK COUNTY * TIME OF CRASH Montgomery County DEGREES/MINUTES/SECONDS LATITUDE 04/10/2013 DECIMAL DEGREES 12:22 WED LONGITUDE :: RoADWAY DIVISION DIVIDED UNDIVIDED N - NORTHBOUND S - SOUTHBOUND :: DIVIDED LANE DIRECTION OF TRAVEL E - EASTBOUND W -WESTBOUND NUMBER OF THRU LANES O R LATITUDE LONGITUDE 39.867823 84.292132 WA - WAY 4 LoCATION ROAD NAME ROAD TYPES OR MILEPOST AL - ALLEY CR - CIRCLE AV - AVENUE CT - COURT BL - BOULEVARD DR - DRIVE HE - HEIGHTS HW - HIGHWAY LA - LANE LOCATION ROAD TYPE MP - MILEPOST PK - PARKWAY PI - PIKE PL - PLACE RD - ROAD SQ - SQUARE ST - STREET TE - TERRACE TL - TRAIL US LoCATION ROUTE NUMBER LOCATION ROUTE 00040 TYPE LoC PREFIX N,S, E,W ST ROUTE TYPES IR - INTERSTATE ROUTE (INC. TURNPIKE) US - US ROUTE SR - STATE ROUTE CR - NUMBERED COUNTY ROUTE TR - NUMBERED TOWNSHIP ROUTE REFERENCE ROAD TYPE DISTANCE FROM REFERENCE DIR FROM REF REFERENCE REFERENCE ROUTE...
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...Author Advisor Richard Buchanan Department Head & Professor of Design Carnegie Mellon University Advisor Suguru Ishizaki Assistant Professor of Design Carnegie Mellon University May 1997 Designing forAn Experience: Design Approach to Human-centered Jodi L. Forlizzi Submitted to the Department of Design, College of Fine Arts, Carnegie Mellon University, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Design in Interaction Design Abstract My thesis attempts to understand experience as it is relevant to interaction design. Based on the work of John Dewey, Mihalyi Csikszentmihalyi, and Richard Carlson, I identify two types of experience in user–product interactions: satisfying experiences and rich experiences. A satisfying experience is a process–driven act that is performed in a successful manner. A rich experience has a sense of immersive continuity and interaction, which may be made up of a series of satisfying experiences. Based on this definition, I identify a set of design principles with which to create products that evoke rich experiences. These principles are intended to encourage designers to think about how to create user–product interactions that suggest values and communicate meanings that enrich the quality of life. Narrative plays a key role in these design principles. Our series of life experiences form a narrative; the values that designers impart in an object form a narrative which is elaborated...
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...FSU Winner Florida State’s Caitlin Quinn has been named the NSCA’s Assistant Strength Coach of the Year. http://www.seminoles.com/sports/w-softbl/spec-rel/112613aaa.html Critical Condition A California high school football player is in critical condition after suffering neck and spinal cord injuries during a game. http://www.pe.com/local-news/riverside-county/corona/corona-headlines-index/20131124-santiago-football-player-remains-in-critical-condition.ece State Total More than 4,400 middle and high school student-athletes in Massachusetts suffered head injuries last year, according to reports filed by the schools. http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/11/25/mass-schools-report-head-injuries-among-athletes-compliance-with-concussion-law-rises/njPFK6a92knIhcvY9UGxdN/story.html Refueling Product A new product can allegedly help athletes refuel during competition by providing precise carb and electrolyte recommendations based on a quick analysis of their sweat. http://www.prweb.com/releases/FuelstripMMA/UFCBellator/prweb11284260.htm Vegan Praise Several top athletes credit veganism with playing a key role in their success. http://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/elite-athletes-reveal-the-vegan-diet-secret-behind-their-success/story-fneuzkvr-1226768537898 Baseline Challenges Three new studies of baseline testing highlight the difficult of accurately assessing an athlete’s true baseline ability. http://www.momsteam.com/studies-show-pitfalls-in-baseline-neurocognitive-testing ...
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...treatment with this client? One of the most important aspects of counseling is to learn how your client copes with their struggles. I found that this was not covered in the “Karen” intake. If I were to go back and complete an assessment with her, I would most definitely cover this topic in further detail, specifically with her traumatic event with her own personal experience with her car accident as well as losing her father to a car accident. I could always assume that she has chose to cope with the traumatic event of being in the car accident by isolative behavior as well as disengagement from social events with her friends and family; however, this would need to be clarified with her to see if she has any awareness of this unhealthy coping mechanism. I would also need to know more in regards to her head injury-concussion, she had following her car accident to see if her isolation could be due to another medical condition that should be considered. I would need to have a medical exam conducted on Karen before diagnosing her with something that could be explained by a medical condition. 2) Provide your narrative diagnosis of this client, including WHODAS score, with rational. I would diagnose Karen with (309.81) Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder due to her meeting the criteria for this disorder. WHODAS score was 2/5 and her Cross Cutting Symptom measure being highest on depression, Anxiety, Repetitive thoughts or behaviors, and personality functioning. My rational...
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...Jonathan Peragine Professor McMillan English 101 June 9, 2015 Emergency Decision-Making Unfortunately, people are confronted with medical emergencies all the time. Such emergencies can be very scary and the people involved must make crucial decisions without much time to deliberate. Because emergencies happen so frequently, I usually already have a detailed plan of how to act when I encounter them. However, I know from personal experience that even if a person has a plan for how to navigate an emergency, his plan will go out the window the minute his emergency becomes a reality. He will have to make the best decisions that he can in hopes of them not coming back to rest on his conscience. In my experience, driving my girlfriend to the emergency room with a suspended driver’s license was not what I would have planned, but ultimately satisfied my conscience. A few years ago, my girlfriend decided that she wanted to play college softball. This meant that I had to spend every weekend going to watch her softball games. One weekend, as my girlfriend was up to bat, she tried to bunt the ball and the ball hit her finger, crushing it between the extreme force of the fast ball and the titanium bat in her hands. Because of the strange thud noise that this created, I knew pretty quickly that something had gone wrong. I became immediately nervous and as she turned to me with a pale and distressed face, my stomach dropped into my shoes. As we made eye contact, I began to hear a slight...
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...earlier works, concentrating on his narrative elements such as the MacGuffin technique, the likeable antagonist, the innocent man or woman whom is falsely accused or misunderstood, and the act of balancing suspense and tragedy with humor and comedy. From a stylistic standpoint the paper conveys Hitchcock’s profound use of atmosphere and landscape, song as a suspense device, landscape of crowd caricatures, and point-of-view technique. Looking at The 39 Steps (1935), The Lady Vanishes (1938), Saboteur (1940), and Shadow of a Doubt (1943) we can see the styles and techniques these precursors pioneered and why they were implemented into Hitchcock’s greatest works in the coming decades. We take our first look at Hitchcock’s famed narrative technique, the MacGuffin. The MacGuffin was a plot device used by Hitchcock to hold the tension of the story without actually having any relevance to the plot itself. It was a gimmick that had the sole purpose of adding suspense to whatever situation the hero or heroine might have been in by motivating the characters to start the story. They do not know what it is but they will do anything to uncover its mystery, thus pushing the action and drama of the narrative forward. The initial use of this technique was in one of his earlier British films of the 1930’s, The 39 Steps. The character Mr. Memory had a set of secret plans for a new type of airplane engine that which he had memorized and stored inside his head. However, this does not come to...
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...WAYLAND BAPTIST UNIVERSITY THE LIFE AND INFLUENCE OF IGNATIUS LOYOLA PAPER PRESENTED TO DR. GARY MITCHELL IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR RLGN5354 SCHOOL OF RELIGION BY MARK D. RIGG PLAINVIEW, TX OCTOBER 15, 2015 THE LIFE AND INFLUENCE OF IGNATIUS LOYOLA Introduction This biographical research paper will focus on the life of Ignatius of Loyola. It is the intention of this writer to deal with three major concerns regarding this post-New Testament Christian personality. First concern: to provide some background and personal history. Next, to set forth the contributions of Ignatius and the significant impact he had on the Church in general among his contemporaries, right up to the present day. Finally, the writer will reveal how the life of Ignatius relates to and has personally influenced his own. Background and personal history Iñigo Lopez de Oñaz y Loyola, whom we know as St. Ignatius, was born the youngest of thirteen children in northeastern Spain in 1491. He was raised in a noble Basque family of high Catholic piety but lax in morals. His father had several children by another woman, and his grandfather's lawless behavior led to the top two floors of the Loyola castle being demolished by order of the crown. Iñigo hardly knew his mother, Marina Saenz de Licona. As was the custom of the time, “A few days after his birth Iñigo was handed over to a wet-nurse, Maria de Garin, wife of the blacksmith living in a cottage...
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...proverb says, “Never judge a person until you’ve walked a mile in their shoes.” It explains that a person does not know how another is living, until they actually live the same lifestyle. In the story, “Serving in Florida” by Barbara Ehrenreich, she is a journalist that prepares herself to write about the working-class life. She decides to step into the shoes of the working class and embody their way of life. She accomplishes this by working typical jobs such as waitressing and housecleaning and attempting to survive with the meager wages the jobs paid. She does this experiment to shed light and bring attention on how people in America are able live on minimum wage. Throughout her narrative, she uses vivid and specific details to evoke an emotional response and connects with the reader on a personal level. She wants to show the world how working-class people are living an unfortunate life. After her reading, I believe working-class employees are entitled to more financial attention. Working-class people can be defined as people who usually work either one job, or perhaps two jobs to maintain their livelihood. The working class usually lives pay check to paycheck. Majority of the time they are not going to school, but working full time. Some blue-collar jobs include waitressing, housecleaning, and retail sales. Some duties include washing dishes or serving food to customers. They work being paid the national minimum wage. They do not have a decent home but live in an apartment...
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...U.S. ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT CENTER AND SCHOOL FORT SAM HOUSTON, TEXAS 78234 NURSING FUNDAMENTALS I SUBCOURSE MD0905 EDITION 100 TABLE OF CONTENTS Lesson Paragraphs INTRODUCTION UNIVERSAL BODY SUBSTANCE PRECAUTIONS 1 2 PATIENT RELATIONS Section I. Basic Human Needs and Principles of Health Section II. Communication Skills Section III. Reaction to Stress and Hospitalization Section IV. Transcultural Factors Influencing Nursing Care Exercises THE ADULT PATIENT CARE UNIT Exercises 3 BODY MECHANICS Section I. Techniques of Body Mechanics Section II. Positioning and Ambulating the Adult Patient Exercises ACTIVE AND PASSIVE RANGE OF MOTION EXERCISES Exercises 2-1--2-7 ADVANCED PRINCIPLES OF PATIENT HYGIENE Exercises 4 1-1--1-9 1-10--1-20 1-21--1-26 1-27--1-31 5 6 ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND THE PRACTICAL NURSE Exercises MD0905 i 3-1--3-15 . . 4-1--4-7 4-8--4-21 5-1--5-9 6-1--6-5 CORRESPONDENCE COURSE OF THE U.S. ARMY MEDICAL DEPARTMENT CENTER AND SCHOOL SUBCOURSE MED905 NURSING FUNDAMENTALS I INTRODUCTION Never before has there been a greater need for nurses. Never before has health care delivery challenged the nurse's commitment, knowledge, or technical competence more. Issues influencing current health-care delivery focus on promoting wellness, preventing illness, and rehabilitation to increase the patient's independence. This subcourse will present theory and concepts the person...
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...7 BARTIMAEUS (Mark 10:46-52) The story of Bartimaeus is an experience of the healing power of faith that leads to discipleship. It begins in identification with the humiliation of a blind beggar sitting in the dust. It ends with his sight restored as he follows Jesus on the way up to Jerusalem. In a unique way, this story concretizes the power of the faith of persons who are oppressed by physical or mental handicaps, patriarchal social structures, racial discrimination, and economic systems over which they have no control. It is an invitation to allow our own personal and communal humiliation to be seen in the context of Bartimaeus's faith in Jesus as the Christ. The Story And they came to Jericho. And as he was leaving Jericho with his disciples and a great multitude, Bartimaeus, a blind beggar, the son of Timaeus, was sitting by the roadside. And when he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!" And many rebuked him, telling him to shut up. But he cried out all the more, "Son of David, have mercy on me!" And Jesus stopped and said, "Call him." And they called the blind man, saying to him, "Take heart; rise, he is calling you." And throwing off his mantle he sprang up and came to Jesus. And Jesus said to him, "What do you want me to do for you?" And the blind man said to him, "Master, let me receive my sight." And Jesus said to him, "Go your way; your faith has made you well." And immediately he received his sight...
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...Sexual Harassment in the Workplace EXPERIENCES OF WOMEN IN THE HEALTH SECTOR Paramita Chaudhuri Health and Population Innovation Fellowship Programme Working Paper, No. 1 This report is the result of a project entitled “Understanding Sexual Harassment in the Health Sector,” undertaken as part of the Health and Population Innovation Fellowship (HPIF) awarded to the author in 2004. The HPIF programme is administered by the Population Council, New Delhi and is a continuation of the MacArthur Foundation’s Fund for Leadership Development (FLD) fellowship programme that continued over the period 1995 to 2004. The Council is grateful to the MacArthur Foundation for its support to this programme. The HPIF programme aims to support mid-career individuals who have innovative ideas, leadership potential, and the capacity to help shape policy and public debate in the field of population, reproductive health and rights in general, with a focus on two priority themes – maternal mortality and morbidity, and the sexual and reproductive health and rights of young people. Since the transfer of the programme to the Population Council through 2006, a total of 17 individuals have been supported under the HPIF programme. For additional copies of this report, please contact: Paramita Chaudhuri Senior Programme Officer Sanhita 89B Raja Basanto Roy Road Kolkata 700 029 Email: sanhita@cal.vsnl.net.in Phone: 033-24227965 Population Council Zone 5A, Ground Floor India Habitat Centre, Lodi Road...
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...Smith’s early childhood evoke sympathy from the audience because they reveal the mistreatment he constantly faced and how that eventually shaped him into the criminal he became. By demonstrating the origin of Smith’s vulnerabilities, the readers are able to resonate with the character more as they can see that he possesses human emotions. This deeper understanding of Smith allows the reader to begin to question whether or not he deserved the harsh punishment of the death penalty. This is because Capote shows the complexities of Smith’s character, such as his weaknesses, which contrast with the simple narrative of typical villains who society has no problem putting to death. Similarly, Capote describes anecdotes about Dick Hickock’s family and promising future, and how permanent injuries from a car accident led him down the wrong path. Hickock’s father claimed that he “concussed his head in a car smash”. After that, he wasn’t the same boy. Gambling, writing bad checks, etc. I never knew him to do things before” (166). By including this backstory of Hickock’s life, Capote demonstrates how it is possible that an “ordinary” person can undergo a drastic change from a once promising life to that of a criminal. This further humanizes Hickock because readers can see that his criminal behavior stemmed from unfortunate circumstances, which challenged the views of society at the time, which thought that criminals were born evil. By including anecdotes, Capote adds character to Smith and Hickock...
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