Word: breathings
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...Bourg, and Kelly Reilly is the perfect bitch as the manipulative Caroline Bingley. The one outstanding flaw of the film (other than Jena Malone’s hideous performance) are the stormy long shots of Knightley perched in contemplation on top of a moor. These “breath-taking” sequences are gratuitous and too Bronte-esque; it’s not to say that a wet and pouty Knightley against a stunning British countryside isn’t visually appealing, but Wright is far more successful at extending the narrative when he restrains himself to the intimacy...
...everyone's convinced. And not everyone will be until there's a biological test for depression instead of the series of questions doctors use now. Don't hold your breath waiting for that, says British academic Moncrieff: "I believe that human emotions will never be located in a simple biochemical formula." The chemical-imbalance theory is nonsense, says Adelaide psychiatrist Jureidini. SSRIs alter a patient's serotonin levels within days, he says, but their antidepressant effect - if there is any - doesn't occur for several weeks. "The idea that there's a serotonin deficiency that explains depression is such...
WAKE UP! SNORING AND STROKES Obstructive sleep apnea, a narrowing of the airways, causes raucous snoring and shortness of breath in millions of Americans (and keeps millions of spouses awake at night). Apnea has been linked to heart disease, but a new study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that it also significantly raises the risk of strokes...
...made difficult by the exactness we put into it,” says Verdi DiSesa ’09, a member of the Harvard squash team. “We may get more strength training and injury prevention from weight training, but yoga helps our team to internalize our breathing and to concentrate on moving more deliberately on the court.”A college tennis player at Harvard and now the founder and director of Core Yoga, Deborah Cohen ’91 customizes her yoga sessions for the Harvard women’s tennis team...
...eight attempts—with just over seven minutes remaining in the middle frame. That goal was a wake-up call, and given a power-play opportunity of its own seconds later, Harvard evened the score, thanks to Raimondi.“We just all took a deep breath and realized the penalties were killing us,” Raimondi said. “We played the entire second period man down and a lot of that was our fault. Collectively we just kind of decided to turn it around.”From the right point, junior defenseman Lindsay...