Monday, July 8, 2013

Emergency aid in 'heart attack'.

Do get familiar with this ‘do it yourself plus friend’- till ambulance arrives.
There is enough oxygen in the lung to feed the brain for some time.
So you need not do mouth to mouth breathing till help arrives.
jksw


>
> Useful to know and easier to practice.
>
> This is an easier and better method of CPR developed by doctors at the University of Arizona Sarver Heart Center.
>  
> This short video illustrates the best demonstration and gives the simplest explanation of exactly what to do if someone near you collapses and is presumably having a heart attack.
>     Check it out:    http://ahsc.arizona.edu/node/730

Multi-function phones - email jksw

Subject: Get one ?



Latest from Samsung


?
 

 

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Imagination and reality - email jksw

What we see and hear can be reshaped by our imagination
Inbox
x

philavi
06:09 (1 hour ago)

to me
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "J. K. S. Weerasekera"
To: "J. K. S. Weerasekera"
Cc:
Date: Sun, 07 Jul 2013 18:50:16 +0530
Subject: FW: What we see and hear can be reshaped by our imagination

From as young as 6 years up to 50 years, I recall just three such short instances lasting a few seconds. If it gets more frequent I shall be meeting the head-shrinkers.
As my esteemed colleague in psychiatry once stated, all are mad on a scale of 1 to 100. He did give me a better sane score than on himself.  Flattery?

jksw  

Perceptions of the attributes of one's 'first love', or for that matter one's 'first car' are largely shaped by imagination and not reality.
Philip G V

Sent: Sunday, July 07, 2013 3:28 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: What we see and hear can be reshaped by our imagination

Imagination Can Change Perceptions of Reality

What we see and hear can be reshaped by our imagination.
Published on June 28, 2013 by Christopher Bergland in The Athlete's Way
Description: Image removed by sender.
Researchers in Sweden have found that our imagination can change our perceptions of reality. Your mind can literally play tricks on you by changing illusions of what you think you hear and see into what seems like reality. The new study from the Karolinska Institutet is published in the scientific journal Current Biology. The findings offer new clues on how the human braincombines information from the different senses and how imagination can alter mind-brain function.
"We often think about the things we imagine and the things we perceive as being clearly dissociable," says Christopher Berger, doctoral student at the Department of Neuroscience and lead author of the study. "However, what this study shows is that our imagination of a sound or a shape changes how we perceive the world around us in the same way actually hearing that sound or seeing that shape does. Specifically, we found that what we imagine hearing can change what we actually see, and what we imagine seeing can change what we actually hear."

Saturday, July 6, 2013

Vodka anyone? I'll drink to that! - email from Sunil Liyanage



 This a fantastic act so don't miss it!
Want a good Vodka drink? Watch this! -AMAZING

Doesn't look like he spills a drop!!!!


 
I need to have this guy at our next party!!!!!!
 
 

Old time cricket - email from jksw.

Subject: Fwd: Cricket

Seventeen minutes, but worth watching every minute.....Enjoy! 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UiZMde1MLrA&feature=player_embedded

Friday, July 5, 2013

Old Ceylon - email from Gallege De Silva.

Sent: Friday, 5 July 2013 7:43 AM
Subject: Nostalgic photos of Ancient Sri Lanka




 Nostalgic photos of Ancient Sri Lanka

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u72tAhiDQoc

These encapsulating photos of ancient Sri Lanka compared to the development Colombo has undergone of late is a wonderful way to appreciate the past and present.

It would be good for public places to feature these photos of numerous others in the relevant areas and would like to suggest Bus Stands as appropriate so that locals and tourists alike can see what Sri Lanka was like in ancient times...


Thursday, July 4, 2013

Kilinochchi - email from jksw

To: "J. K. S. Weerasekera"
Cc:
Date: Wed, 03 Jul 2013 10:51:08 +0530
Subject: FW: Hope in Killinochchi


Forwarded below an account of Kilinochchi.

People abroad get their news English media to whom deep within, Asians yet remain  expendables, 20 million people quite so. To wit, supply of arms with the right to invade up the sleeve.

Some of my forwarded first hand accounts by credible people have been construed as propaganda.

In my many trips up north  Kilinochchi showed dramatic improvements from 2010 on , so much so 1 ½ years ago, our car was copped for blowing the horn passing the magistrates court. The cops were civil but explained that the judge was very strict on noise.

This is forwarded. I do not know the author  but I have been at this orphanage. Not seen the unfortunate ladies, but I conjecture that everytime there is any fighting the poorest around will get the brunt. Jaffna escaped that.

I do know that very cleverly the army has been utilized building infrastructure, which they do with pride and gusto – they use correct  cement to sand ratios unlike some contractors!
So soldiers deliver water from the Iranmadu tank to Jaffna?

That new road to Mullaithivu which I travelled a few months ago has cut down travel time hugely, so any patient from the new Mullaithivu Hospital (which is in the short term short of specialists) can be quickly transferred to Vavunia Hospital with sufficient facilities.

There is a lot of social movement between the public and the army, some combatants striking deep friendships, some even getting married.

There were 3 Sinhala boys in the cricket team that beat the visitors. Hope it is not construed as colonization with the south so full of all communities.

I add the comments above from personal experience.
The article below is readworthy.
jksw    

 


This is an account of a hopeful story from my friend Skanda Kumar Aruni.

It is these acts of kindness and humaneness that raises hopes for our country.
--Nimal

Just back from Killinochchi (at 4 am Monday morning after having left at 8 am on Sunday ) !!

It was a  rewarding trip that allowed a group of us to visit an orphanage of 330 children,

and see the work a retired GA in charge, Rasanayagam is doing for them and for 6000 widows in that area.


We also visited  Harmony Centre constructed by the army

that  will soon provide access to IT, English etc

and also has a badminton court and modest gym facilities...

We then went to a village adopted by the Foundation of Goodness

(Kusils Met up with around 15 educated young women looking for opportunities to be self employed.

I have returned with a proposal they have made to that which will require Rs 150,000 ( to become a supplier to the many shops in town of consumer products )and once it is examined and approved by Kushils staff I will try and raise the funds and channel it through the foundation for monitoring purposes.

We saw  for ourselves the
interaction between the army and the civilian population

that was reflected in the resurgence of perhaps the biggest town in the North that was devastated in the closing stages of the war.

We saw the work that is being co
ordinated by the army


to take the water from the Iranamadu tank to Jaffna to provide drinking water in the North.

Finally the purpose of our visit ....to witness the first ever match
between a visiting Australian club u 17 team with a combined North East team ( also u 17 )...

and was very impressed with what we saw ( Michael Tissera was also there ) in terms of talent fitness and performance as

they beat the visitors by 70 runs ( made 173 in their turn at batting after winning the toss ) in a T 20 game.

The team had 3 sinhala boys and the rest were tamils and they blended well together.

There were over 4000 spectators, on the main ground in the centre of town,( matting pitch) and the arrangements were in the hands of the army ( headed by a very committed CO Maj Gen Udaya Perera ) and the attention to detail in all respects truly amazed us all !!

Finally 84 bicycles ( Rs 10,000 each ) were gifted to a similar number of schoolgirls through Sangakkaras Bike for Life Fund at the tea break, while at the end of the game the Australian players gifted a bike to each of the North East team players... donated by them, their parents and David Cruz ( a Sri Lankan born Australian now domiciled here who was responsible fo arranging the tour with Kushil Gunansekera). David pledged 2 turf pitches for the ground and the CO volunteered the army's services to maintain them !

I am aware that there have been mixed reactions to the role of the army in areas recovering from the war......

what we saw in our limited stay told us that

there is a sincere and committed effort being made to win hearts and minds

and the progress was there for us to see.

Our team  comprised of Kushil , Michael, self, 2 ex-UNDP and UN employed Sri Lankans (now retired ) and their spouses.

Cheers - Skanda

I will now try and get some sleep !!! and will send you some photos in due course.