Although the World is not black or white, it is often possible (and interesting) to categorise people into groups. I think this sort of exercise can be helpful for posters to examine to people in their own lives, and you may even put your finger on something. Those who are directional, and those who are not. I remember dropping a guy home once from the city centre to the outskirts of the city. I was trying to get him to explain where he lived and couldn't understand what he'd described. So I asked he the house was inside or outside of the main motorway that looped around the city called the M50. He answered "it's on the M50". Now that might be a normal way to describe where the house is in general, but it's a very unusual answer to be question. I said "but it's either on one side or the other" and he just said "ahh, it's on the M50". I joked "oh right, so your house is elevated on stilts over the motorway". My sense of direction can actually hinder me sometimes. I might know the direction some place is as the crow flies, but because of the road network I might need to drive another direction first. I could end up driving in the direction I feel is right and then end up being blocked by giant area of industrial estates or something. Where as someone like that guy I was dropping home would be using google directions or something, which would direct him to where he should be. Blame shifters and blame absorbers People who don't draw the curtains at night when the lights are on inside, and those who feel a bit uncomfortable with it That's all I've got for now. I'm sure they'll be many more.
I taught Geography for many years and my students fell into two groups when talking about how to get from one place to another. One group would say: go South on example road for one mile then turn left and drive East for one mile. The other group would say: drive down the street where Ed lives until you pass the green church then turn towards the mall for a long ways……I am in the first group.
Some drink their piss for health reasons. Some would never. Some drive slow some fast. This is all called duality. It can vary tho into 3rd options.
They are idiots. The kidneys expel body waste and toxins via urine. You are not supposed to put it back in again.
PS. One of the elements that the kidneys keep in balance is Potassium. An excess in the blood plasma can put the patient into flatline cardiac arrest. That was how Harold Shipman killed all his patients. PPS. I hope that I am not going to get into trouble, for giving out difficult to diagnose recipe's for murder.
The kind who wouldn't notice dust or hairs on a plate, and the kind that would. The sister was making vol au vents over the x-mas and didn't at all notice that there were a bunch of dog hairs on the tray that she has the pastries on. I saved her and took them off before they were prepared. She just said "oh that doesn't matter, people won't see them". I still found one when eating!
Yes, but you're not ingesting extra potassium, you'd be restoring the potassium you just lost, an essential element you need to survive. Piss out all your potassium and you will die. Potassium helps you retain water.
What you say about potassium is completely true. Normally we obtain it from dark vegetables such as broccoli and sometimes it is lacking in our diet, so taking the correct dose of supplements can be very beneficial, but our kidneys closely regulate it. Basic heart arrhythmia depends on three metals, working as a primary battery, thus producing the minute electrical charges in three nodes. In turn, these trigger the nerves that contract the heart muscles. The lowest metal is calcium, which works with sodium to create the impulses, finally trimmed by the highest metal which is potassium. An excess will shut the whole lot down. Harold Shipman injected potassium chloride into patients drips, thus bypassing the kidneys. Since a bleed in the kidneys or stomach could have the same effect, putting waste and toxins that the body is dumping back in again, has a lot of risks.