
Borderline - Page 1 of 16 Myoats - Create something. Mein Kampus | Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters - StumbleUpon A cultural shift is happening on university campuses across North America. Students are lining up for mental health services faster than they can be treated. This shift is defining a generation and marks a profound change in the mental environment on campuses today. Dr. “The current ideologies of success and beauty are unprecedented … students are coming in at increasing rates, saying they can’t cope.” The upward trend of psycho trauma on North American campuses is documented each year in the Association of University and College Counseling Center Directors Annual Survey. These results indicate what happens when the dominant economic ideology of the age, neoliberalism, creeps into the mentality of science and arts. Darren Fleet
List of common misconceptions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - StumbleUpon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Each entry on this list of common misconceptions is worded as a correction; the misconceptions themselves are implied rather than stated. These entries are concise summaries; the main subject articles can be consulted for more detail. A common misconception is a viewpoint or factoid that is often accepted as true but which is actually false. They generally arise from conventional wisdom (such as old wives' tales), stereotypes, superstitions, fallacies, a misunderstanding of science, or the popularization of pseudoscience. Some common misconceptions are also considered to be urban legends, and they are sometimes involved in moral panics. Arts and culture[edit] Business[edit] Federal legal tender laws in the United States do not require that private businesses, persons, or organizations accept cash for payment, though it must be treated as valid payment for debts when tendered to a creditor.[1] Food and cooking[edit] Food and drink history[edit] Music[edit]
Drunk Driving PSA proves everyone in New Zealand is funnier than you And is that what native Kiwi's look like ethnically? Learn something new... It's what disaffected youth sound like. It's kind of like here in the states. Think about how hard it is to understand teenagers. Add an different accent that makes it harder to understand engaged adults and then, on top of that, add the teen thing...makes it bloody hard to conquer. As for ethnicity, although Māori represent about 15% of the population at large, about 25% of under 18s are Māori. Based on my time in New Zealand, there's an unusual (in my experience) sense of "us" when it comes to New Zealanders with Pākehā (white folk) actively embracing Māori culture in what seems like an interesting reversal of the more typical "Westernization" of native cultures that occurs elsewhere. I know, it's like if Napolean Dynamite had a Cockney accent. Ahh, thanks. I always like to learn new things.
How To Build A Fireball You Can Hold&Video - StumbleUpon LibriVox Recycled Paper Beads Paper Crafts ---- paper-craftsJewelry Making - Earrings ---- jewelry-making-jewelry-making-earrings What you need Any type of paper: newspaper, sheet music, copy paper, flyers White glue A bamboo skewer, (or other round object to roll the paper onto) A large paint brush Craft paint, your choice of colors Instructions This jewelry making project shows you how to make your own beads using recycled paper and junk mail. 1. Fold the paper over the skewer about 1 inch, and roll the paper for about 2 inches, just to condition the paper. 2. 3. 4. 5. (To cut the roll into beads, when the roll is only slightly dried, remove the roll from the skewer, and cut with heavy duty scissors into the lengths you desire, then place them back on the skewer, roll again on a flat surface to restore the shape, and allow the beads to dry. 6. Then place them on a protected surface, with a drop cloth, or a plastic grocery bag to catch the spatters. Metallic gold and metallic silver will add shimmer to the beads. 7.
By Way of the Heart: Toward a ... - Wilkie Au The Borderline Patient: An Overview by William Goldstein, M.D. Who may benefit from reading this article: Psychiatrists, primary care physicians, psychologists, social workers, psychiatric nurses and mental health care practitioners. Educational Objectives After reading this article, you will be familiar with: Historical background regarding the borderline patient. The term borderline first appeared in the psychoanalytic literature only later to become a term generally used among psychiatrists and other mental health professionals. Many of the patients from both of these groups would be considered borderline today. In 1967, Otto Kernberg, M.D., wrote his seminal paper providing for many clinicians an integration and synthesis of all earlier writings on the borderline patient, offering a unified and comprehensive framework for description, definition and understanding. With this in mind, I have presented Kernberg's work in a more simplified fashion (Goldstein 1985, 1996). Diagnostic Approach Reality Testing Thought Processes