http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vb9R0x_0NQ
This awesome film explains it all, and shows how we are causing this planet to inevitibly self-destruct. The bees have maybe 7 years left, after which we will have no growing plant food. Humans will begin the die-off with cancer no later than 10 years from now. The kids are destroying their cells with wi-fi and phones as young as eight. There is a surprising hope of delaying the decline in individuals by changing their sleep habits... that is, going to bed with the chickens the way we were made to... when the sun goes down. The protective ingredient is melatonin... and we only make it when we are asleep in pitch dark. Try to find some darkness on this electrified planet. This film deserves a Nobel Prize for enlightenment of humanity. But I'll bet only those of us who are ES will watch it through. So sad. Marji |
I can't agree to this. There had been many studies that people have different
biosystems regarding when they sleep. It depends at which time they had been born. People who were born during the night are rather like to be awake during the night, and can also work more effective during the night, and so on! Stefanie --- Marjij <[hidden email]> schrieb am Mo, 7.1.2013: Von: Marjij <[hidden email]> Betreff: [eSens] Strap your congressman down & make him watch this ! An: [hidden email] Datum: Montag, 7. Januar, 2013 03:24 Uhr http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vb9R0x_0NQ This awesome film explains it all, and shows how we are causing this planet to inevitibly self-destruct. The bees have maybe 7 years left, after which we will have no growing plant food. Humans will begin the die-off with cancer no later than 10 years from now. The kids are destroying their cells with wi-fi and phones as young as eight. There is a surprising hope of delaying the decline in individuals by changing their sleep habits... that is, going to bed with the chickens the way we were made to... when the sun goes down. The protective ingredient is melatonin... and we only make it when we are asleep in pitch dark. Try to find some darkness on this electrified planet. This film deserves a Nobel Prize for enlightenment of humanity. But I'll bet only those of us who are ES will watch it through. So sad. Marji [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
--- In [hidden email], Stefanie Toth wrote: > > I can't agree to this. There had been many studies that people have different > biosystems regarding when they sleep. It depends at which time they had been born. > People who were born during the night are rather like to be awake during the night, and can also work more effective during the night, and so on! > > Stefanie I'm astonished at such a simplistic response from you, to a video about how wi-fi causes cancer. Regardless of whether people "like" to be awake and work at night (I am one and I was born at 9:15 in the morning)... the point of the story is that lack of melatonin made by the pineal gland ONLY in the dark, when asleep, will result in loss of the cancer protective hormone, melatonin. Studies, likewise, have shown that people who work swing shift have more cancer, especially breast cancer, than those who sleep in the darkness of night. Also, lack of melatonin causes restlessness at night, thus these people prefer to be up and active. This is in the video too. Obviously you did not watch the video. I'm surprised that you would comment with such an irrelevant observation of what hours people "like" to work... completely missing the point. People "like" to smoke too, but that happens to lead to cancer also. Marji |
If I have the chance to see the video I will look at it. I feel overdone of all the information. Is there still a way and life style to live healthy on this planet?
Stefanie --- Marjij <[hidden email]> schrieb am Mo, 7.1.2013: Von: Marjij <[hidden email]> Betreff: [eSens] Re: Strap your congressman down & make him watch this ! An: [hidden email] Datum: Montag, 7. Januar, 2013 17:53 Uhr --- In [hidden email], Stefanie Toth wrote: > > I can't agree to this. There had been many studies that people have different > biosystems regarding when they sleep. It depends at which time they had been born. > People who were born during the night are rather like to be awake during the night, and can also work more effective during the night, and so on! > > Stefanie I'm astonished at such a simplistic response from you, to a video about how wi-fi causes cancer. Regardless of whether people "like" to be awake and work at night (I am one and I was born at 9:15 in the morning)... the point of the story is that lack of melatonin made by the pineal gland ONLY in the dark, when asleep, will result in loss of the cancer protective hormone, melatonin. Studies, likewise, have shown that people who work swing shift have more cancer, especially breast cancer, than those who sleep in the darkness of night. Also, lack of melatonin causes restlessness at night, thus these people prefer to be up and active. This is in the video too. Obviously you did not watch the video. I'm surprised that you would comment with such an irrelevant observation of what hours people "like" to work... completely missing the point. People "like" to smoke too, but that happens to lead to cancer also. Marji [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Marji
I've been a night owl since I was young. I now sleep in the dark from
4 am to noon or later, with blackout curtains and an eye mask. I understand night owl vs. lark has to do with cortisol production and heredity. My sister and I were born 5 years apart, but both in the 3 am range. She is a lark. My mother and one sister were night owls, my daughters are night owls, my granddaughters are night owls. Like all night owls, I had to live on a daytime schedules when I was working, until I became disabled from CFIDS and MCS at the age of 43. In fact, I'm suspect not being able to live by my own natural time clock during those working years affected my immune system because I couldn't get enough sleep. Despite getting up at 5:30 or 6 am, I still couldn't fall asleep by 10 pm, which was when I got a "second wind". I'd then be awake until midnight. On weekends, I'd sleep til noon, and stay up until 2 am or later. I am introverted, right-brained, intuitive, and very sensitive to energies including others' waking minds. The night is when it peaceful and quiet, and I love it. I have NO desire to become a day person, just because the world operates on a day schedule. By the way, Alexander Graham Bell was a night owl, who worked until 4 am in his laboratory and slept until noon. His family had strict instructions not make noise that would wake him in the morning before he got up at noon. Here's an article that might provide some insights: http://www.care2.com/greenliving/the-truth-about-night-owls-and-morning-people.html The Truth About Night Owls and Morning People March 14, 2010 By Brie Cadman, DivineCaroline I used to work with one of my roommates and getting up in the morning and heading to our job proved to be one of the most trying times in our friendship. I was up with the alarm clock and onto my morning routine, whereas she would stay in bed well past the ringing. Convinced we would be late, Id go in and give her some gentle nudging, which never went over well. Shed grumble and complain; sometimes shed hurl insults like Leave me alone, or I hate you, or simply, Die. Offended, Id sulk away, even more convinced of our impending tardiness. Later on, over a strong cup of coffee, shed apologize and wed have a good laugh, only for the same routine to be repeated the following morning. Get Up by Your Own CLOCK As it turns out, our sleeping preferences werent just due to the fact that I responded better to the alarm. The circadian rhythm, a 24.1- hour period that dictates the sleep-wake cycle, differs among people and can influence whether we are a night owl or a morning lark. Studies have indicated that self-described morning people have shorter circadian rhythms than self-identified night owls. This means that morning people sleep through their peak hour of sleepiness, so they wake up feeling refreshed. Evening types usually wake up right around their peak hour of sleepiness, so they may have high levels of melatonin and feel groggy. No wonder its tough to rouse them. Hormones and body temperature also differ between the sleep groups. Early birds have higher levels of cortisol in the morning, which may give them the perky edge. Body temperature tends to be low in the morning, peaks in the late afternoon, and decreases until bedtime. Early risers have a body temperature peak around 3:30 p.m., while night owls are hottest around 8 p.m. Our sleep preferences are at least in part hereditary. Differences in the CLOCK gene (short for Circadian Locomotor Output Cycles Kaput), for instance, may contribute to differences in our favored times of activity. Sleep researchers at Stanford University found that people with one genotype had an increased preference for eveningness, while the other genotype had an increased preference for morningness. Biology and Behavior Though our sleeping and waking preferences may be partially innate, some are due to what were used to from childhood, the seasons, or what weve adapted to. This means we can and do change our sleeping patterns. For instance, during the summer, when daylight hours are plenty, we may stay up later but rise earlier with the sun. In the winter, darkness and cold sets in early, making our beds all that much more alluring. Its also harder to wake early in the winter when its dark out. Age also alters our sleeping patterns. Different times in our lives lend themselves to different sleeping patterns. During the teens, for instance, hormones may change the sleep and wake patterns, and this is one explanation as to why so many teens tend to shift to a night owl schedule. (Socializing, studying, and busy schedules also contribute.) Alternatively, as people get older, work and familial demands tend to make people more morning focused, regardless of their preferences. Later in life, in the sixties and seventies, people tend to need less sleep altogether. In Sleep as in Life? In reality, however, few of us are true morning people who can effortlessly bound out of bed at five or six in the morning; likewise die-hard night owls are also rare. Researchers estimate that extremes comprise about 10 to 20 percent of the population, with the rest of us falling somewhere on the intermediate spectrum. And in fact, the majority of us prefer a common point in the 24-hour continuum: daytime. So what does that say about the common belief that night people are more creative the artist who stays up to the wee hours to paint or the musician who keeps a bedtime-at-dawn type schedule? A few studies show that character traits may differ between the diurnal and the nocturnal. A Spanish researcher found that the time of day we prefer to be most active corresponds to certain personality traits. Early risers were more likely to be logical and analytical, and likely to use concrete information as sources of knowledge, whereas those that stayed up late were more imaginative and intuitive. Another study published in the February 2007 issue of Personality and Individual Differences determined that night owls scored better on creativity tests than did intermediary and morning people. However, the research presents a bit of a chicken and egg conundrum: Does your internal clock shape your psychology or does your psychology help shape your sleeping patterns, and thus your internal clock? Many questions still remain and Im sure there are many creative early risers and analytical late-nighters who would dispute the above studies. Can an Owl See the Light? Despite our preferences, we do live in a society where we pretty much follow an early risers schedule. If you are someone who has to conform to a regular work schedule, then there are some things you can do to help shift your sleep pattern into one. Many of them are tips on how to get a good nights sleep in general. The National Sleep Foundation has the following recommendations: Dont bring it with you. The bed should be used for sleeping and sex, not computing, watching TV, eating, etc. Though I read before going to bed, the NSF even recommends banning books from your boudoir. Try to stay consistent. Studies have shown that night owls tend to have inconsistent bed and waking times. One of the best ideas for a good nights sleep is to try to go to bed around the same time every night. (I find this nearly impossible on the weekends.) This will not only help you sleep better, it can help shift your clock to an earlier (or later, if thats what you want) bedtime. Dont pull the shades. Our sleep patterns are affected by light, so letting the natural stuff in each morning will help you rise. Dont put down the blinds or shades; the brightness will help you wake up. (If not totally make you mad.) In addition, when evening rolls around, dim the lights and make sure your bedroom is dark. No midnight snacks or drinks. The NSF recommends not eating two to three hours before going to bed and not drinking too close to bedtime either. Likewise, people who have a hard time falling asleep are generally told to limit late afternoon caffeine consumption. Exercise regularly it can help you fall asleep. Exercising too close to bedtime can have the opposite effect, but generally if you finish within an hour or two of hitting the hay, you should be okay. As it turns out, although Im normally chipper in the a.m., Im not a true morning person I have to set an alarm and I like to hit snooze at least two to three times. And my late-sleeping roommate has now adjusted her schedule to her new job with early hours. And she gets up all by herself. On Jan 7, 2013, at 8:53 AM, Marjij wrote: > > > --- In [hidden email], Stefanie Toth wrote: > > > > I can't agree to this. There had been many studies that people > have different > > biosystems regarding when they sleep. It depends at which time > they had been born. > > People who were born during the night are rather like to be awake > during the night, and can also work more effective during the night, > and so on! > > > > Stefanie > > I'm astonished at such a simplistic response from you, to a video > about how wi-fi causes cancer. Regardless of whether people "like" > to be awake and work at night (I am one and I was born at 9:15 in > the morning)... the point of the story is that lack of melatonin > made by the pineal gland ONLY in the dark, when asleep, will result > in loss of the cancer protective hormone, melatonin. > > Studies, likewise, have shown that people who work swing shift have > more cancer, especially breast cancer, than those who sleep in the > darkness of night. Also, lack of melatonin causes restlessness at > night, thus these people prefer to be up and active. This is in the > video too. > > Obviously you did not watch the video. I'm surprised that you would > comment with such an irrelevant observation of what hours people > "like" to work... completely missing the point. People "like" to > smoke too, but that happens to lead to cancer also. > > Marji > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Yahoo! 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In reply to this post by Stefanie Toth
--- In [hidden email], Stefanie Toth wrote: > > If I have the chance to see the video I will look at it. I feel overdone of all the information. Is there still a way and life style to live healthy on this planet? > > Stefanie Stefanie, thank you for your amicable response. I really screwed up. My post sounded like I was emphasizing when people sleep, and that issue became the main argument. I didn't mean to. The video deals with how the frequency of the planet, the Schumann resonance, comports with the frequency of the human body and all of our cells resonate with it. The bees resonate with it, and navigate by it. All the animals use the planet's frequency to navigate with. Plants too. When man began to mess with unnatural electromagnetic fields, we began to mess up the natural response and functions of the life forms that live here. Today, with the cell towers, the smart meters, the satellite connections, all the wireless stuff... we have completely turned the natural harmonious responses of our living cells (plant and animal) upside down. Cells don't replicate properly, or they replicate too much, causing cancer, etc. The only positive thing in the video is toward the end where they explain that our bodies are equipped to deal with much of the radiation stresses of wireless... and that is through the production of melatonin. And melatonin is made by the body only in the dark, when we are asleep. It explains why and how this happens. The brain uses sleep to heal and store memory... the body uses the peace of sleep to heal. It operates using melatonin. But if you don't sleep at night, especially in the dark, (night lights for kids are terrible)... your pineal gland will not produce it. Cancer is a frequent result. All I meant to say was you need melatonin. I didn't mean to say you MUST sleep at night. Point is: Either sleep at night in the dark, or use melatonin supplements! You don't have to give up your graveyard shift job. When you go to sleep at noon, take some melatonin, wear a dark mask, let your body think it's night and it will heal. Besides this issue... the video is AWESOME !!! Watch it, you guys... get some floss and floos your teeth while you watch and you will be amazed. (So will your dentist.) And thanks for your conciliatory attitude, Stefanie. Marji |
I guess we are in the meantime all in the same boat.
Stefanie --- Marjij <[hidden email]> schrieb am Di, 8.1.2013: Von: Marjij <[hidden email]> Betreff: [eSens] I've made a mistake. Was: Strap your congressman... An: [hidden email] Datum: Dienstag, 8. Januar, 2013 18:53 Uhr --- In [hidden email], Stefanie Toth wrote: > > If I have the chance to see the video I will look at it. I feel overdone of all the information. Is there still a way and life style to live healthy on this planet? > > Stefanie Stefanie, thank you for your amicable response. I really screwed up. My post sounded like I was emphasizing when people sleep, and that issue became the main argument. I didn't mean to. The video deals with how the frequency of the planet, the Schumann resonance, comports with the frequency of the human body and all of our cells resonate with it. The bees resonate with it, and navigate by it. All the animals use the planet's frequency to navigate with. Plants too. When man began to mess with unnatural electromagnetic fields, we began to mess up the natural response and functions of the life forms that live here. Today, with the cell towers, the smart meters, the satellite connections, all the wireless stuff... we have completely turned the natural harmonious responses of our living cells (plant and animal) upside down. Cells don't replicate properly, or they replicate too much, causing cancer, etc. The only positive thing in the video is toward the end where they explain that our bodies are equipped to deal with much of the radiation stresses of wireless... and that is through the production of melatonin. And melatonin is made by the body only in the dark, when we are asleep. It explains why and how this happens. The brain uses sleep to heal and store memory... the body uses the peace of sleep to heal. It operates using melatonin. But if you don't sleep at night, especially in the dark, (night lights for kids are terrible)... your pineal gland will not produce it. Cancer is a frequent result. All I meant to say was you need melatonin. I didn't mean to say you MUST sleep at night. Point is: Either sleep at night in the dark, or use melatonin supplements! You don't have to give up your graveyard shift job. When you go to sleep at noon, take some melatonin, wear a dark mask, let your body think it's night and it will heal. Besides this issue... the video is AWESOME !!! Watch it, you guys... get some floss and floos your teeth while you watch and you will be amazed. (So will your dentist.) And thanks for your conciliatory attitude, Stefanie. Marji [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
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