They need to see
what kind of rhythm disturbance is there.
Not exact matches
And I sat with the local community for a long time to determine how we were going to do this ordination —
what kind of music and
what kind of dance and
what kind of liturgy — and I was all gung - ho for the fact that they had so many possible ways
of incarnating the liturgy through their own African embodiment and
rhythms and so forth, but they were absolutely adamant: they wanted Gregorian chant.
KRISTINA CHAMBERLAIN: Well sometimes moms will deal with it more in the first couple
of months just while their bodies and babies and still you know figuring out
what's the supply and demand is, so, a lot
of times after the baby's hit you know the 2 or 3 months mark that starts to get better just because again moms and babies bodies are you know dancing together a little bit better they're getting more in to
rhythm, so sometimes that the time and then in itself will
kind of resolve it as baby gets bigger and
kind of figures that out but if after the 2 months mark it's still an issue when it's making nursing hard for mom and baby I would say then start doing some
of the things that we talked about to be a little bit more assertively treating it
For the study, researchers tracked the circadian
rhythms of 91,000 adults in the United Kingdom to see
what kind of impact their daily
rhythms had on their mental health.
Actually I was
kind of looking to gain some weight, put on some muscle mass which in hindsight,
what I was doing was absolutely counter-productive, but ultimately it came down to the fact that I was so worn out and I don't have any cortisol tests to give you
what my cortisol
rhythm looks like.
The seasonal effective disorder and we also know this as the winter blues but it's this problem where whether you're stuck in the dark office all day and it's summer or spring or fall or winter or whether the sun just not out where you're at,
what happens is it lowers your serotonin levels specifically because when we get an upregulation
of melatonin and
kind of a natural circadian
rhythm, we get really nice stabilized serotonin levels and when that gets disrupted we can get depression, fatigue, sleepiness, irritability, difficulty concentrating, a lot
of different issues.
Looking at times like John Carpenter's The Thing (John Seale's ravishing cinematography is easily the best part
of the boondoggle), Dreamcatcher feels a great deal like
what it likely is: a product
of a down - on - his - luck director trying to juggle material that's clearly beneath him, jettisoning any sense
of rhythm and cohesion in the belief that King's massive sales represent the
kind of mindless support that defeats the director's best instincts while offering him a chance to regain the keys to the executive washroom.
I began to wonder
what it would be like to have this
kind of life — to be constantly on the water, sleeping, eating and dreaming while rocking to the
rhythms of the ocean.
So other than being a
rhythm game, just
what kind of a game is Dark Witch Music Episode: Rudymical?
I seem to remember some article somewhere where the Rocksteady guys said AA was originally envisioned as some
kind of rhythm game which eventually grew into
what we know and love today; but with that in mind, when you think about it the combat system does have that rather distinct QTE - ish / spectacle thing going on.