Survivalist Pro
Photo: cottonbro studio
Survivor's motto: 'Triumph through your trials and look good while doing it'
Work Sharp Culinary tested thousands of kitchen knives to find the ideal edge for performance over durability and found 17 degrees to be our ideal...
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The study participants, who were all aged 60 and older, were taught to play Super Mario 64 and spent 30 minutes a day, five days a week with the...
Read More »Growing up in Slidell, Louisiana, Rachel Paul Owens considered herself a tomboy. She loved running and chasing other kids, especially if it included shooting hoops or taking swings in the baseball batting cage her dad built in their backyard. Rachel knew she was a heart defect survivor – the puffy scar in the middle of her chest, often visible above her shirt collar, announced it to everyone. Yet she didn't know the significance of it. In fact, she considered it so normal that she described the remarkable fact of having undergone open-heart surgery at age 1, and again at 15, with the same tone as telling someone she's right-handed. Even after a life-threatening bout with heart failure at 22, Rachel still considered her heart status as nothing more than one of the ingredients in the gumbo of her life. Then she became pregnant with her second child. Doctors detected a heart problem. He turned out to have the same two defects she was born with – and more. He underwent his first heart procedure at 2 months. Then open-heart surgery at 15 months. And another months later. February is American Heart Month, a time of heightened awareness surrounding the No. 1 killer of Americans, and the No. 1 killer of women, claiming more lives than all forms of cancer combined. Sharing stories such as Rachel's is one of the ways my organization, the American Heart Association, seeks to inspire others to pay more attention to heart health. Rachel is a survivor. She's the mother of a survivor. She's a daughter who lost her dad to heart disease. Yet, through it all, she's maintained a plucky spirit. It's an attitude best expressed by her motto: "Triumph through your trials and look good while doing it."
*Never keep your bread in the fridge. The starch molecules in bread recrystallize very quickly at cool temperatures, and causes the bread to stale...
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Characteristics of only child syndrome The belief is that they'll grow into selfish individuals who only think about themselves and their own...
Read More »At work, Rachel kept feeling like she was about to pass out. She also had stomach pains. Her Lafayette cardiologist couldn't find anything wrong, so he sent her to a gastroenterologist. That doctor prescribed acid reflux medicine. It hardly helped. She changed her diet, yet the problems persisted. It got so bad that she couldn't walk to class. Her then-boyfriend, Troy Owens, drove her to the front door of each building. One day, she was taking a hot shower when she again felt like she might pass out. The next thing she remembers is being on the ground. Second-degree burns on her shoulder indicated she'd been out for quite a while.
For example, if a hunter goes in and hunts the same stand day after day, for the entire season, it becomes susceptible to stand burnout. This...
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If you accidentally take two PrEP pills in one day, it's OK. Taking two PrEP pills is not harmful.
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The Wii's motion control gimmick was just enough to get people to buy the console, but proved too shallow for good games to support it. The...
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On March 27, 1964 at 5:36pm local time (March 28 at 3:36 UTC) an earthquake of magnitude 9.2 occurred in the Prince William Sound region of Alaska.
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According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, falling bullets can hit the ground at speeds greater than 61 metres per second...
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Godzilla: King of the Monsters - When battling King Ghidorah in Mexico, Godzilla rips off his right head, causing it to spill out black blood. In...
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