Childhood Prayers, a Copy!

I love early mornings. Waking up early always seems exciting to me. Here in Australia the nights are getting rather cold now as we are approaching winter. These days when I wake up at five it is still dark outside. Sometimes I think it is better not to get up straight away. So I may tell myself to stay in bed for one more hour or so. Occasionally I am still a bit tired and go back to sleep after a little while. But usually I stay awake the whole time, lying in bed thinking about what I plan for the day or perhaps saying a few prayers. Often I remember my childhood prayers!

The family I grew up in was not very religious. During my whole childhood I remember being taken to church only once. This was for a service on Christmas Eve in 1943. Lots of familiar Christmas songs were being sung then. I thought this was wonderful!

Now what about prayers? Strangely enough there are some childhood prayers that I often remember when I wake up early in the morning. Then I am that child again who was being told to say these prayers before going to sleep.

The first prayer I learned was just saying that I am small and my heart is pure with only Jesus in it.

When I was a bit older I learned another prayer. saying that I was tired,  closing my eyes and asking the Lord to watch over my bed.

Mum also told me to ask God for the protection of all my loved ones. In the reciting of all the names there was always Dad included who was on the Eastern Front at this time of WW II.

Here are the prayers as I remember them in German:

“Ich bin klein,
mein Herz ist rein;
soll niemand drin wohnen
als Jesus allein.”

or

“Müde bin ich geh’ zur Ruh
schliesse beide Augen zu.
Vater lass die Augen dein
über meinem Bette sein.”

And I would say:

“Lieber Gott, behüte Mutti und Vati, Bodo und Peter, Tante Ilse, die Omi und Renate und alle die ich lieb habe.”

I wrote and published the above on May 3, 2014

Early Mornings

This German saying did just come to my mind:

“Morgenstunde hat Gold im Munde!”

https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morgenstund_hat_Gold_im_Mund

The Early Bird catches the Worm

There is a saying that the morning hour has gold in its mouth . It says that getting up early is worthwhile because it is easy to work in the morning and early risers can achieve more. It is the verbatim translation of the Latin textbook sentence aurora habet aurum in ore . This refers to the personified dawn (Latin: aurora ) that wears gold in the mouth and in the hair.

In earlier times, the Latin proverb aurora musis amica (the morning hour is the friend of the muses), which means as much as study in the morning, was first documented in a letter from Erasmus of Rotterdam to his student Christian Northoff one best

The Military Failures of General George Washington

I think it is fascinating to study a bit American history!

stuartbramhall's avatarThe Most Revolutionary Act

Frederick Kemmelmeyer (1755-1821) , General George ...

A Skeptic’s Guide to American History (2012)

Episode 4: Washington’s Failures and Real Accomplishments

Film Review

Rarely taught in public schools, General George Washington’s military shortcomings during the US War of Independence are the main focus of this presentation.

Unlike most US generals, Washington wasn’t a professional soldier. A Virginia* planter and slave holder, he joined the Virginia colony militia in 1754 and inadvertently started the French and Indian War.**

The Continental Congress chose Washington to lead the Continental Army because they hope the involvement of a high profile Virginian would inspire other Southern colonies to support what began as a New England insurrection in 1775.

The first of Washington’s major military blunders included his 1775 order for his best general Benedict Arnold to take Quebec. More than a third of Arnold’s men were forced to turn back due to their inexperience navigating Canada’s swampy tangle of lakes, streams and…

View original post 457 more words

Meeting my Friends while Strolling in the Park

I have lots and lots of friends in the park. There are probably hundreds around close to my humble abode. I keep thinking I should really count all these friends and remember everyone’s pecularities. But so far I haven’t attempted yet to count them all. There is a cluster of them right between a few soccer fields. These are my special friends, and I know them pretty well. But I don’t really know exactly how many there are. I assume there would be at least one dozen, maybe more in that cluster.

What would I say to them, if I could talk to them? I might perhaps say the following: I love it, that you are there. I thank you for letting me hug you. I wish you a very, very long life. I love you so much!

https://wollongong.nsw.gov.au/explore/sport-and-recreation/sportsgrounds/list-of-sportsgrounds/lakelands-oval

Lakelands Oval, Dapto

Status: Open

Status last changed: 13 Jul 2021 9:16am

Location: Lakelands Drive, Dapto

A beautiful Morning again

I love the early mornings, when the sun is just coming up again. I have a SPAGHETTI BOLOGNESE in the oven. This is one of my favorite meals! 🙂

This meal is meant to be for one person, but it lasts me for two meals because I have a few extra things on the side.

After breakfast I’ll be going for a stroll in the beautiful and usually extremely deserted park at the back of my house. I have frequent breaks, especially when I’ve been walking a bit too fast for, I get easily out of breath.

When I have a break, I can sit on one of the park benches, or I just sit on my rollator seat for a while in the middle of one soccer field or close to some trees. There are dozens and dozens of great trees spread out all over the park! 🙂

I am so lucky that I have such a wonderful environment in these awful lockdown times. Can’t see my children or grandchildren or great-grandchildren. One daughter can usually give me some essential help about once a week. However, I insist on social distancing. So sad!

Whether she is now allowed to continue seeing me for essential help is doubtful for she lives about ten kilometers away! Maybe she needs some special permission from now on. We don’t know yet.

So, now I’ll go and enjoy my all heated up SPAGHETTI BOLOGNAISE! 🙂

Vioxx.

https://www.google.com/search?q=Vioxx.&rlz=1C1CHZN_enAU956AU956&oq=Vioxx.&aqs=chrome..69i57j0i30l9.4213j0j7&sourceid=chrome

Vioxx is a COX-2 selective nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID). Vioxx is also related to the nonselective NSAIDs , such as ibuprofen and naproxen. Vioxx is a prescription medicine used to relieve signs and symptoms of arthritis, acute pain in adults, and painful menstrual cycles.30 Sept 2004

How many deaths did Vioxx cause?By the time Vioxx is withdrawn from market, an estimated 20 million Americans have taken the drug. Research later published in the medical journal Lancet estimates that 88,000 Americans had heart attacks from taking Vioxx, and 38,000 of them died.10 Nov 2007

https://www.ucsusa.org/resources/merck-manipulated-science-about-drug-vioxx

Merck Manipulated the Science about the Drug Vioxx

Published Oct 12, 2017

Scientists from the pharmaceutical giant Merck skewed the results of clinical trials in favor of the arthritis drug, Vioxx, to hide evidence that the drug increased patients’ risk of heart attack. FEATURE

The Disinformation Playbook

Five tactics business interests use to sideline science, deceive the public and buy influence at the expense of public health and safety.

To increase the likelihood of FDA approval for its anti-inflammatory and arthritis drug Vioxx, the pharmaceutical giant Merck used flawed methodologies biased toward predetermined results to exaggerate the drug’s positive effects. Internal documents made public in litigation revealed that a Merck marketing team had developed a strategy called ADVANTAGE (Assessment of Differences between Vioxx And Naproxen To Ascertain Gastrointestinal tolerability and Effectiveness) to skew the results of clinical trials in the drug’s favor. As part of the strategy, scientists manipulated the trial design by comparing the drug to naproxen, a pain reliever sold under brand names such as Aleve, rather than to a placebo.

The scientists highlighted the results that naproxen decreased the risk of heart attack by 80 percent, and downplayed results showing that Vioxx increased the risk of heart attack by 400 percent. This misleading presentation of the evidence made it look like naproxen was protecting patients from heart attacks, and that Vioxx only looked risky by comparison. In fact, Vioxx has since been found to significantly increase cardiovascular risk, leading Merck to withdraw the product from the market in 2004.

Merck’s manipulation of the science around Vioxx also included a pattern of ghostwriting of scientific articles. Internal documents reveal that in 16 of 20 papers reporting on clinical trials of Vioxx, a Merck employee was initially listed as the lead author of the first draft; on the published versions, an outside academic was listed as the primary author. In one draft of a Vioxx research study that did not yet have a prominent outside name attached, Merck officials listed the lead author only as “External author?” A Merck scientist was also found to have removed the evidence of three heart attacks among patients in a dataset from the results presented.

Tragically, Merck’s manipulation of its data—and the FDA’s resulting approval of Vioxx in 1999—led to thousands of avoidable premature deaths and 100,000 heart attacks. Dr. David Graham, the Associate Director for Science and Medicine in FDA’s Office of Drug Safety, testified in 2004 before the Senate Finance Committee that the FDA’s failure to recall Vioxx earlier had resulted in as many as 55,000 premature deaths from heart attacks and stroke, calling it the equivalent of allowing “two to four jumbo jetliners” to crash every week for five years. Even years after discontinuing use of the drug, patients who have taken Vioxx continue to experience complications.

Further Reading

Share

Related resources

FEATURE

UCS and the Coronavirus

The Union of Concerned Scientists is actively monitoring the coronavirus pandemic and vaccine rollout.FEATURE

Attacks on Science

Our running list of attacks on science—disappearing data, silenced scientists, and other assaults on scientific integrity and science-based policy—provides a representative sample of threats to the federal scientific enterprise.PODCAST

What Traditional Ecological Knowledge Can Teach Us

Dr. Daniel Wildcat explains how Traditional Ecological Knowledge can work in tandem with science.ACTIVIST RESOURCE

Scholar-Advocate Council

Information about the Center for Science and Democracy’s Scholar-Advocate council.SEE ALL

Get email updatesEmailSign up for updates from UCS; unsubscribe at any time.

Get text alerts

Sign up or text “SCIENCE” to 662266. Msg & data rates may apply. Text STOP to opt out. No purchase necessary. Terms and conditions.

Support our work

$25$50$100$250$1000OTHERMake it monthlyDONATESay it with science.VISIT THE STORELISTEN TO THE PODCAST

The Equation

Posts on science, solutions, and justice

All Things Nuclear

A blog on the nuclear threat

© Union of Concerned ScientistsWe are a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.2 Brattle Square, Cambridge MA 02138, USA(617) 547-5552

We use cookies to improve your experience. By continuing, you accept our use of cooki

Eric J. Topol, MD

https://www.aacc.org/community/merit-awards/hall-of-fame/bios/a-to-k/eric-topol

THE WALLACE H. COULTER LECTURESHIP AWARD

Endowed by the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation

Eric J. Topol, MD

Dr. Topol is director of the Scripps Translational Science Institute, chief academic officer of Scripps Health, professor of genomics at the Scripps Research Institute, and co-founder of the West Wireless Health Institute in La Jolla, Calif. A practicing cardiologist, he has led the flagship, National Institutes of Health-supported Scripps Translational Science Institute since 2006, where he works on innovative genomic and wireless digital technologies aimed at reshaping the future of medicine. Prior to his work at Scripps, Dr. Topol’s efforts are widely credited with leading the Cleveland Clinic to become the foremost center for heart care. While at the Cleveland Clinic, he started a new medical school, led many worldwide clinical trials to advance care for heart disease, and spearheaded the discovery of several genes that increase susceptibility for heart attacks. Dr. Topol pioneered the development of many medications that are routinely used in medical practice, including tissue plasminogen activator, Plavix, Angiomax, and ReoPro. He was the first physician to raise safety concerns about Vioxx. He has published 1100 peer-reviewed articles and more than 30 medical textbooks. He recently became editor-in-chief of the website Medscape. The University of Michigan, where he served on the faculty, established the Eric Topol Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine to recognize his contributions. The University of Rochester, where he attended medical school, awarded him its highest honor, the Hutchinson Medal. In 2012, a poll by Modern Healthcare singled him out as the most influential physician executive in the United States. He was elected to the Institute of Medicine and is one of the top 10 most-cited healthcare researchers. His book, The Creative Destruction of Medicine, was published in 2012.

COVID Delta Variant: Our Biggest Challenge Yet with Eric Topol, MD

One of the world’s top scientists shares info on lack of testing in the US, vaccine booster shots, how contagious and dangerous is the Delta variant, and what we can do to protect ourselves from coronavirus infection and hospitalization. (Recorded Aug 11, 2021) Eric Topol, MD is the Founder and Director, Scripps Research Translational Institute; and the Executive Vice President and Professor of Molecular Medicine, Scripps Research. Dr. Topol has published over 1,200 peer-reviewed articles and is one of the top 10 most cited researchers in medicine. He was the first physician researcher to raise questions about the safety of Vioxx and testified against the medication’s manufacturer: Merck. Interviewer: Kyle Allred, Physician Assistant, Producer, and Co-Founder of MedCram.com