One Earth, One Life..

Friday, August 11, 2006

Living with food allergies

Eight different foods including peanuts, which can cause particularly severe reactions, are responsible for 90 percent of all food allergies. For the 11 million Americans living with food allergies, dining out, whether at a restaurant or a friend's home, can cause more problems than it's worth. Unless you're standing over the chef in the kitchen, the fact is you have no guarantee that the food or foods to which you're allergic won't end up on your plate.

Let's face it: Food plays an irreplaceable role in our social lives. And the good news is that, with a little planning and a lot of communication, you can continue to enjoy evenings out at your favorite restaurant or a potluck with friends.

If you're heading to a restaurant, call ahead and speak to the manager and/or chef. "Let them know you may need to bring a few food items to supplement or enhance your meal," says Debra Indorato, RD, LDN, a Virginia-based nutrition consultant. Ask the waiter questions about how the food is prepared. "Knowing hidden sources of your allergen, such as foods fried in shared oils or nuts added to crumb toppings, can help determine what questions to ask," Indorato says.

"Always carry a safe snack in case there is nothing on the menu that is acceptable," says William Berger, M.D., clinical professor at University of California, Irvine, and a Health advisory board member and allergy expert. Stick with simple dishes, and always request sauces on the side. Try to avoid buffets and bakeries, because they tend to use the same utensils and machines for a variety of foods.

Before going to a friend's house where food will be served, "let your friend know about your allergies as early as possible, and offer to bring some tolerated foods with you," Indorato says. Give your friend specific examples of foods to avoid.

Describe the symptoms of an allergic reaction and what you need your friend to do should one occur. "Have directions in your emergency kit on how the medicine should be administered in case you are unable to do so," Berger adds.

Regardless of the setting, "make sure you carry an emergency treatment kit that contains an EpiPen, Benadryl, and any other medications your doctor has prescribed," says Indorato.

The best way to determine if any food is safe is by looking at the label every time. The manufacturer could have changed the formula or ingredients since the last time you purchased it.

But thanks to the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act (FALCPA), any food produced after January 2006 containing one of the eight most frequent food allergens (in the linked PDF chart) will now use the common name for the allergen in the ingredient list. In other words, a product containing gluten, known to most of us as wheat, will now say "wheat" on its label.

The FALCPA will affect more than product labels; it will also increase the variety of foods available to allergy sufferers. "Foods that were once avoided due to uncertainty may now be consumed," Indorato says. "It's not fun to have to avoid a food just because 'spices' is listed, and you don't know what they are." It will take a few months for all products on the shelves to be labeled with these common names. In the meantime, refer to the accompanying chart to aid in your diet decisions.



Living with food allergies

Thursday, August 10, 2006

Say " I Love You " In 89 Different Languages

"I LOVE YOU" in:

Afrikaans Ek is lief vir jou
Albanian Te dua

Te dashuroj

Ti je zemra ime

American Indian (North American Native)
Apache Sheth she~n zho~n (nazalized vowel sounds)
Cheyenne Ne mohotatse
Chickasaw Chiholloli (first 'i' nasalized)
Hopi Nu' umi unangw'ta
Mohawk Konoronhkwa
Navajo Ayor anosh'ni
Sioux Techihhila
Zuni Tom ho' ichema
Arabic Ana behibak (female to male)

Ana Behibek (male to female)

Ana ahebik

Ib'n hebbak

Ana ba-heb-bak

Nhebuk (spoken to someone important)

Armenian Yes kez guh seerem (Western dialect)

Yes kez si'rumem (Eastern dialect)

Bangladeschi Ami tomake valobashi
Basque Nere maitea
Bengali Aami tomaake bhaalo baashi
Bolivian Quechua Qanta munani
Bosnian Volim te
Brazilian (Portuguese) Eu te amo (pronounced "eiu chee amu")
Bulgarian Obicham te

As te obeicham

As te obicham
Burmese Chit pa te
Cambodian Kh_nhaum soro_lahn nhee_ah
Canadian (French) Sh'teme (spoken)

Je t'aime (I like you)

Je t'adore (I love you)
Chinese Ngo oi ney (Cantonese)

Wo oi ney (Cantonese)

Wo ai ni (Mandarin)

Wo ie ni (Mandarin)

Wuo ai nee (Mandarin)

Wo ay ni (Mandarin)
Creol Mi aime jou
Croation (familiar) Volim te (used in common speech)
Czech Miluji te
Danish Jeg elsker dig
Dutch Ik hou van je

Ik hou van jou
Equador Quechua Canda munani
English I love you

I adore you

I love thee (poetic)
Estonian Mina armastan sind

Ma armastan sind
Ethiopian

ewedishalew (Male to Female)

ewedihalew (Female to Male)

Farsi (Iran-dialects in Afghanistan/Pakistan) Tora dost daram
Filipino (Phillipino) Mahal ka ta

Iniibig kita

Mahal kita





Finnish Mina rakastan sinua

Rakaastan sinua

("Ma") tykka"a"n susta (I like you)



French Je t'aime (I love you)

Je t'adore (I love you - stronger between lovers)

J' t'aime bien (I like you - meant for friends, family members - not for lovers)





Gaelic (Language of Ireland) Gaeilge (Irish Gaelic):

Tá mé i ngrá leat (literally: Am I in love with-you / meaning: I'm in love with you)

Pronounced: taa may ee ngraw lat

Tá grá agam ort (literally: Is love at-me on-you / meaning: I love you)

Pronounced: taa graw aggam orret

Is grá liom thú (literally: Is love with-me you

meaning: You are love in me)

Pronounced: es graw lom who

(The Irish language is generally a very idiomatic and metaphorical one.)

Gàidhlig (Scots Gaelic):

Tha gaol agam ort (literally: Is love at-me on-you / meaning: I love you)

Pronounced: ha gewl aggam orsht



German Ich liebe dich (classic & conservative)

Ich hab dich lieb





Swiss (German) Ch'ha di ga"rn
Greek S'ayapo (spoken s'agapo)
Greenlandic Asavakit
Hawaiian Aloha wau ia oi

Aloha wau ia oi nui loa (I love you very much)



Hebrew Ani ohevet otcha (female to male)
Ani ohev otach (male to female)
Hindi (language of northern states of India) Mai tumase pyar karata hun (male to female)

Mai tumase pyar karati hun (female to male)

Hungarian Szeretlek
Icelandic Eg elska thig (pronounce "yeg l-ska thig")
Indonesia Saya cinta padamu

Saya cinta kamu

Saya kasih saudari

Italian Ti amo (relationship - lover or spouse)

Ti voglio bene (between friends)

Ti voglio (strong sexual meaning of desire)

Irish (see also Gaelic) Taim i' ngra leat
Japanese Kimi o ai shiteru

Aishiteru

Chuu shiteyo

Ore wa omae ga suki da

Watashi wa anata ga suki desu

Suki desu (used at the beginning of a relationship - no intimacy yet)

Korean Dangsinul saranghee yo

Saranghee

Joahaeyo

Norul sarang hae

Kurdish Ez te hezdikhem
Lao Khoi hak jao
Latin Te amo
Latvian Es tevi milu (pronounced "es tevy meelu")
Lebanese Bahibak
Lithuanian

Luganda (language of Uganda)

Tave myliu (pronounced "ta-ve mee-lyu")

Nkwagala Nyo

Luo (language of Kenya) Aheri
Luxembourgish Ech hun dech ga"r
Macedonian Te sakam (a bit stronger than "I like you")

Te ljubam (I really love you)
Malay (Indonesian) Saya cintakan kamu

Saya cinta pada mu (best and most commonly used)
Moroccan Kanbhik
Norwegian Jeg elsker deg (Bokmaal)

Eg elskar deg (Nynorsk)
Pakistani Mujhe tumse muhabbat hai

Muje se mu habbat hai
Polish Kocham cie

Kocham ciebie

Ja cie kocham


Portuguese Eu amo te (pronounced "eiu amu chee")
Punjabi (language of N. Punjab, India) Main tainu pyar karna

Nai taunu pyar karda
Romanian Te iubesc

Te ador
Russian Ya tyebya lyublyu
Samoan Ou te alofa outou
Serbian (familiar) Volim te


Slovene Ljubim te
Slovak Lubim ta
Somali Waan ku gealahay
Spanish Te amo

Te quiero

Te adoro (I adore you)

Te deseo (I desire you)

Me antojis (I crave you)
Srilankan Mama oyata arderyi
Swahili Nakupenda

Naku penda (followed by the person's name)
Swedish Jag a"lskar dig
Syrian/Lebanese Bhebbek (male to female)

Bhebbak (female to male)
Tagalog (a dialect of the Philippines) Mahal kita
Tahitian Ua here au ia oe

Ua here vau ia oe
Thai (language of Thailand) Chan raak ther
Tunisian Ha eh bak
Turkish Seni seviyorum
Ukranian Ya tebe kokhayu

Ja pokokhav tebe
Urdu (spoken in Pakistan and India) Main tumse muhabbat karta hoon

Mujhe tumse mohabbat hai

Kam prem kartahai
Vietnamese Anh ye^u em (male to female)

Em ye^u anh (female to male)
Welsh (language spoken in Wales, UK) Rwy'n dy garu di
Yiddish Ikh hob dikh lib

Ich libe dich

Ich han dich lib
Yugoslavian Ja te volim
Zulu Mena tanda wena

Ngiyakuthanda


Say " I Love You " In 89 Different Languages

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

Pesky Buffalo Invade Canada Town


Residents of Fort Providence in Canada's Northwest Territories are having a cow about their latest pest-control problem.

Several wild buffalo have invaded the small northern town, rubbing siding off houses, head-butting trucks, and even scaring kids off the playground.

The nuisance bovines have been roaming Fort Providence since May, according to a report from the AFP news service. Officials believe the buffalo, which are part of a wild herd of about 2,400, were drawn to the town's manicured lawns and lack of predators.

"You're sure to run into one when you walk to the corner store for milk," the town's resource officer Darren Campbell told AFP.

"One of them kicked a vehicle. Try and get an insurance claim done after your car was kicked by a buffalo," Campbell said. "The adjustor will just laugh at you."

At least one buffalo in Canada discovered the ease of suburban living a few years back. This photo from April 2004 shows a trained buffalo named Bailey eating a meal with rancher Jim Sautner at his home in Spruce Grove near Edmonton, Alberta.

Meanwhile, most of Fort Providence's pesky critters have started moving back into the surrounding forests to search for mates. But two "trouble" buffalo were shot in mid-July for refusing to vacate. The town is now seeking buffalo-control officers to gently encourage the rest of the animals to leave.

Pesky Buffalo Invade Canada Town

Monday, August 07, 2006

Sun


The Sun is the most prominent feature in our solar system. It is the largest object and contains approximately 98% of the total solar system mass. One hundred and nine Earths would be required to fit across the Sun's disk, and its interior could hold over 1.3 million Earths. The Sun's outer visible layer is called the photosphere and has a temperature of 6,000°C (11,000°F). This layer has a mottled appearance due to the turbulent eruptions of energy at the surface.

Solar energy is created deep within the core of the Sun. It is here that the temperature (15,000,000° C; 27,000,000° F) and pressure (340 billion times Earth's air pressure at sea level) is so intense that nuclear reactions take place. This reaction causes four protons or hydrogen nuclei to fuse together to form one alpha particle or helium nucleus. The alpha particle is about .7 percent less massive than the four protons. The difference in mass is expelled as energy and is carried to the surface of the Sun, through a process known as convection, where it is released as light and heat. Energy generated in the Sun's core takes a million years to reach its surface. Every second 700 million tons of hydrogen are converted into helium ashes. In the process 5 million tons of pure energy is released; therefore, as time goes on the Sun is becoming lighter.

Sun

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