Well, it looks like Hannibal has been reading the reviews
because episode NUMBER TWO (which he was eager to point out at the beginning of the
Not exact matches
This
episode is a must listen whether you've had a birth trauma or not
because it is something that a significant
number of women unfortunately still experience today.
We're running up on the end of the show but there's a question that I've asked every guest except that
episode number 66 where I forgot, probably
because I didn't take enough aniracetam.
Dave Asprey: If you enjoyed today's
episode, which of course you did,
because you've been listening, this is like almost
episode number 300, somewhere in that range, and that's pretty cool.
The sheer
number of underdeveloped or one - dimensional supporting characters after eight
episodes is perhaps the biggest frustration of Flesh and Bone,
because it leaves the show's whole world feeling underdeveloped and unrealized.
That it's taken three years for these initial ten
episodes of the show to come to home video suggest there is a lot of red tape to clear, but hopefully sales
numbers will show that it's worth it,
because this collection makes one hungry for more.
We may be worried about the implications of the Cambridge Analytica story — and what it means more broadly for our data privacy — but it's unlikely that Facebook will lose a meaningful
number of users
because of this
episode.
However,
because the duration of the current maternal depressive
episode at baseline was correlated with the
number of children's internalizing and externalizing symptoms at baseline (Cynthia Ewell - Foster, PhD, et al, unpublished data, December 2005), and the extent of children's improvement following maternal remission depended on the magnitude of improvement in their mothers, reverse causation is not likely to fully account for the association between maternal remission and child improvement.
W Wave; * Not included in analysis
because of low endorsement; n =
number of subjects who used alcohol at each wave; Original metric (alcohol) = average
number of drinks per drinking
episode X
number of drinking
episodes per year; Original metric (marijuana) =
number times smoked marijuana in past year