[100671] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Time to regrow your hair before Christmas - Drink this
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Harriet Tyler)
Mon Dec 4 03:10:52 2017
Date: Sat, 2 Dec 2017 15:16:09 -0500
From: "Harriet Tyler" <harriet_tyler@thebestjerewe.com>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
You will get all your hair back drinking this every morning
By Sunday you will even start seeing your hair coming back
http://www.thebestjerewe.com/baptismal-European/97286tI64bHJ100BhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONWa8f
You dont have to cover up your head this Holiday Season -
instead walk proudly with a full head of hair you can show off.
New technology allows hair follicles to regrow in practically an instant at an extremely fast rate.
Get a head full of hair by Monday
http://www.thebestjerewe.com/baptismal-European/97286tI64bHJ100BhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONWa8f
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There have been multiple studies published that link addiction to alcohol and other substances with chemical imbalances in different regions of the brain, but this is the first study Ive read about internet addiction that shows such a link, Wintermark told Live Science.
With appropriate intervention, the teens were able to basically correct those chemical changes in their brains, Wintermark said. Thats the part of the study I find most interesting. It shows theres hope.
The teens who participated in Seos study all took standardized tests used to diagnose internet and smartphone addiction. The participants whose scores indicated an addiction tended to saythat their internet and smartphone use interfered with their daily routines, social lives, sleep and productivity. These teenagers also had significantly higher scores in depression, anxiety, insomnia and impulsivity than the control group the participants whose scores did not indicate internet addiction.
The research was presented yesterday Nov. 30 at the Radiological Society of North Americas annual meeting in Chicago.The paper, which was presented by lead study author Dr. Hyung Suk Seo, a professor of neuroradiology at Korea University in Seoul, South Korea, found an imbalance of chemicals in the brain of internet addicted teenagers. This imbalance was similar to that seen in people experiencing anxiety and depression. 9 Odd Ways Your Tech Devices May Injure You