as-salamu alaikum qur'an weekly, we are on the twentieth juz now, alhamdulilah,we are in the twenty's, and this is surah al-qasas on one of my favorite ayat of thissurah, talking about the mother of musa (alayhi as-salam). i picked this ayah because it'sactually very close to my heart for many reasons, most important of which is, all human beingswill suffer emotionally traumatizing experiences. we're going to be hurt because of loved ones,because of the loss of loved ones, because of sickness, because of the pain our lovedones will cause us, like the hurtful things our parents will say to us or we will sayto our parents. or what our children will say to us, or the wife and the husband willsay to each other, or friends will say to each other. and we're going to go throughtraumatic experiences in life, like you know, job loss or home loss, or even worse. howmany people in the world are living in really horrific situations that we cannot imaginesuffering? children...
we’ve all heard love is like a drug. sodoes that mean heartbreak is like withdrawal? hello lovers, lissette here for dnews. ifyou’ve ever fallen in love, this also means you’ve probably experienced heartache. breakupsare so painful that they can lead to feelings of loneliness, anger, and even clinical depression.and they affect more than just your feelings. we’ve already done an episode on how heartbreakliterally hurts your heart. and you probably also know that emotional pain, especiallywith rejection, can activate the same neurological regions as physical pain. yep. to your brain,getting accidentally hit by a rogue baseball on your shoulder is the same as hearing, “it’snot you. it’s me.†so what is really happening in your brain when you’re experiencing heartbreak? to really get a full grasp of this, we haveto first look at what’s happening in the brain when we are in love. it’s not justone thing going on. turns out, there are many processes involved that t...
so i ran 18 miles thismorning, and i'm wearing heels. so i want lots ofapplause at the end. thank you. [applause] so i'm in the americanstudies department, which is something of a-- it'sa very interdisciplinary field. and i use the kinds of insightsfrom history, from literature, and from medicalscience to think about a particulardiagnosis that was in use fromroughly the civil war until world war i. it'scalled irritable heart. and the way that i findout about this illness, the way i learn about notjust the way physicians talked about it, but what patientsunderstood about it is by using pension records. these records come fromthe national archives. and they tell incredible storiesabout civil war soldiers, some of whom were at the frontfor only a few weeks, others who were at the front forthe duration of the war and then went west afterwards. these records include everythingfrom individual medical care to pulses to familystories that can tell us something about what ...
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