I ended up proposing to her a few years later and every day I wake up next to her I feel like I've won a lottery. She has no idea what she did that night. She knew I was going through a rough spot, but I don't think she knows how deep I actually was. The only reason I haven't told her is because she's diagnosed bipolar and has enough on her plate as-is. I accompany her to therapy and wait in the waiting room for her and I've read extensively about her condition and how best to support somebody in her position. I figure it's the absolute minimum I can do to even begin pay back the wonderful gift she gives me every single day I wake up.

Female genital mutilation (FGM) comprises all procedures that involve partial or total removal of the external female genitalia, or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons. The practice has no health benefits for girls and women and cause severe bleeding and problems urinating, and later cysts, infections, as well as complications in childbirth and increased risk of newborn deaths.


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FGM is mostly carried out on young girls between infancy and adolescence, and occasionally on adult women. According to available data from 30 countries where FGM is practiced in the western, eastern, and north-eastern regions of Africa, and some countries in the Middle East and Asia, more than 200 million girls and women alive today have been subjected to the practice with more than 3 million girls estimated to be at risk of FGM annually. FGM is therefore of global concern.

Well - I tried most of the night to get this ePTP link to stabilize, and for whatever strange reason... I couldn't find a setting which worked. I could get ~210 mbit either way through it, but under load, lots of the packets would end up dropping to MCS5 or MCS6, plus it would do this 'AP KEEP ALIVE RX STUCK' and disconnect.


SO, I switched the Force300c "TDD PTP" at 75%/25% and on this link, that just rocks. I am now getting 250+ Mbit downlink, and 60+ Mbit uplink (at 27KM) and it's been solid since switching it at... 4 AM, and it's 11:20 AM now. Latency is about 4ms average (with customer data going across the link) so that's not horrible at 27km either.

I have found that this has nothing to do with receive signal level or MCS. I have subs that are nice and hot (-50) and ones that are not good at all (-78) and all different distances out to 9 miles or more. Seems to be no rhyme or reason to the CPEs disconnecting and showing this alarm.

I just got a 4pk of f300-25's for use as CPE in ptmp. doing the same thing. rock solid for 15 mins then drops, sometimes is back within the watchdog limit and resumes the connection, but most of the time it drops and has to fully re-reg. tested a F300-19 just to be sure and it does this too, but not as often. just for giggles tried these with a 3000L and a 1000-lite, both running 4.5. still does it regardless of th AP, same reason rxstuck!

Hundreds of South Central Pennsylvania residents are alive today due to a lifesaving treatment called extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) they received from a nationally recognized program at WellSpan York Hospital.

I love this story about this young person and why they are still alive. I wish that I was able to get a copy of this book. It sure would help a few people that I know are going thru some of the same things.

Events in the past have displaced families and groups, changing the makeup of regions and often causing tensions. Such events have also created government systems that have lasted generations beyond when they started. And all of it affects each person alive today.

The top causes of death at the start of the 20th century were very different to those that we see today. This may partially be explained by improvements in medical knowledge that have led to a more comprehensive classification system.

The Mayo Clinic reports that pneumonia is an inflammation of the lungs usually caused by infection with bacteria, viruses, fungi, or other organisms. Pneumonia is a particular concern for older adults and people with chronic illnesses or impaired immune systems, but it can also strike young, healthy people. There are many kinds of pneumonia ranging in seriousness from mild to life-threatening. Pneumonia acquired while in the hospital can be particularly virulent and deadly. Although antibiotics can treat some of the most common forms of bacterial pneumonias, antibiotic-resistant strains are a growing problem. For that reason, and because the disease can be very serious, it's best to try to prevent infection in the first place.

Pneumonia is slightly more complicated compared to flu because you usually don't "catch" pneumonia from someone else. Instead, you develop the disease because your immune system is temporarily weakened, often for no known reason. The following suggestions from the Mayo Clinic can help prevent pneumonia:

Humans have caused major climate changes to happen already, and we have set in motion more changes still. However, if we stopped emitting greenhouse gases today, the rise in global temperatures would begin to flatten within a few years. Temperatures would then plateau but remain well-elevated for many, many centuries.

Despite their reputation as being primitive 'cavemen', Neanderthals were actually very intelligent and accomplished humans. These were no 'ape-men'. So it's unfair to them that the word Neanderthal is used as an insult today.

The brain size of late Neanderthals ranged from at least 1,200cm3 to 1,750cm3. This is larger than the modern average, but in proportion to their body size. Homo sapiens skulls from around 30,000 years ago also had larger brains on average than people today.

The most recent fossil and archaeological evidence of Neanderthals is from about 40,000 years ago in Europe. After that point they appear to have gone physically extinct, although part of them lives on in the DNA of humans alive today.

We don't yet know. One view is that we are the reason. Early modern humans started to arrive in Europe more than 40,000 years ago. Perhaps Neanderthals were unable to cope with competition for resources from incoming groups of Homo sapiens.

In the paper, which is available online and will appear in an upcoming issue of American Psychologist, the journal of the American Psychological Association, the scholars contend that racism is a deeply American problem and identify, based on a review of prior research published on the topic, seven factors contributing to racism in the U.S. today.

Results:  Most nursing students are women, with a mean age of 20years, and most of them have siblings. The majority of them lives outside the city of Coimbra. Approximately 5% of students showed suicidal behaviors, being more frequent among women. Around 20% of the students take medication, with a higher prevalence among women. Fourth-year students had the lowest reasons for living and satisfaction with social support scores.

Conclusions:  Five percent of the students had a history of suicidal behaviors. Nine percent of the students take psychotropic medications. The students who take medication are 2.3578 times more likely to have suicidal behaviors. Fourth-year students had the lowest mental health scores. Third-year students were the most satisfied with social support, whereas fourthyear students were the least satisfied. First-year students had the highest reasons for living scores, whereas fourth-year students had the lowest scores.

Although scientists have described nearly 2 million species on Earth, this number is estimated to only be a small proportion of the actual number of species alive today. There is an extensive fossil record of plants and animals that lived in the past and that may be distant relatives of living species. The relationships between all of these different extant and extinct organisms on our planet are amazingly intricate and complex. Scientists are interested in classifying the many species currently living on Earth, as well as those that are no longer living. They are also interested in studying the evolutionary mechanisms that generate and maintain new species. Some species may look very similar to each other, so it is important for scientists to establish specific criteria for what distinguishes one species from another.

Most binomial names are Latin terms. However, some binomial names are Greek, and some are derived from the names of their discoverers or other scientists. When Carl Linneaus developed his classification system, almost all educated people were trained in Latin and Greek. No matter what country they came from, people could communicate with one another using these languages. Because Latin and Greek were the common languages of scientists, Latin and Greek were used to develop a universal classification system. Even today, the English language has many words that were originally Latin or Greek in origin.

Molecular phylogenies are made by examining the differences in the DNA sequence of the organisms being compared. There are many genetic similarities between organisms. For example, human and mouse genes have a similarity of about 85 percent, and human and chimpanzee genes have about 96 percent similarity. For this reason, it is easier to study differences in genetics rather than similarities. 2351a5e196

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