[Abel-tasman] ***SPAM*** Free Quotes - compare top insurance
providers
EasyInsurance
EasyInsurance at laundrylifeday.info
Sat Aug 10 02:02:05 CEST 2013
$250K Life Policy - for around $10k/Month
http://www.laundrylifeday.info/1826/22/51/105/222.10tt62883642AAF13.php
To Unsub- http://www.laundrylifeday.info/1826/22/51/105/222.10tt62883642AAF8.html
WikiCommons via KellyPhDThink caring for a newborn is hard? Try a newborn
that's still attached to its placenta!The all-natural trend, called Lotus
Birth or umbilical nonseverance, calls for a mother to allow the umbilican
border to detach from her baby naturally, The New York Post reported.In
practical terms, that means carting around a blob of red matter (aka
the placenta) that can stayed plugged into the baby's tummy for up
to 10 days.Related: New trend: Moms saving breast milk in jewelryMary Ceallaigh,
a Lotus Birth advocate and midwife educator, talks with The Post about
the benefits to the non-traditional practice and how it can help with
the mother and baby's health. The 47-year-old Austin, Texas native, who's
helped in more than 100 natural births, says keeping the umbilical cord
intact is actually a beautiful thing.Q: What made you start believing in
the importance of the Lotus Birth?I first learned of Umbilical Nonseverance
from Jeannine Parvati, an expert on prenatal yoga. She taught me there
are natural and safe ways for mothers to give birth.Q: What are
the best reasons to practice Lotus Birth?Theres no wound created at the
umbilical site, which lessens the chance of infection.It allows a complete
transfer of placental/cord blood into the baby at a time when the
baby needs that nourishment the most. Babies immune systems are going through
huge changes at a very rapid rate when theyre first born. Not
disrupting the babys blo
A group of education organizations and state leaders is proposing a kind
of national treaty that would regulate online education. The arrangement,
announced Thursday, would create a common market and make it easier for
institutions to enroll students anywhere in the country.Currently, regulations
that authorize universities' and companies' online courses vary from state
to state.The proposed state compact would also create a uniform set of
consumer protections. That could give students in some states new recourse
to complain to state regulators about a program that's based elsewhere.
But in some states, the common standard could dilute oversight.About 7 million
U.S. students currently access college courses online.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://post.in-mind.de/pipermail/abel-tasman/attachments/20130809/628c831c/attachment.htm
More information about the Abel-tasman
mailing list