and debbie decked out as she sings in the rain. fisher captured the photo this is a beautiful love story to witness in my 58 years. i miss them both so much. love is everlasting. a lot of people have said debbie must have died of a broken heart. we wondered is that possible? cbs2's dr. max gomez has the answer. reporter: she was america's sweetheart dancing her way into all our hearts. could it have been a broken heart that took her life? you can actually die of a reporter: she has studied cardiomyopathy medical language for broken heart syndrome. she says it is medically conceivable the sudden death of reynolds dr. carrie fisher could have caught her death. we think of broken heart syndrome may be a real surge of adrenaline that is toxic to the heart muscle itself or perhaps mediated in other ways through the arteries going to spasm. the heart muscle does not move as well as it is supposed to. and it feels like a heart attack to doctors. and it is a form of heart attac...
have you ever thought about how awesome thewhole world seems when you’re smitten with a guy? it’s like a better, more beautifulplace where everything is pleasant and less bothersome. all of this quickly changes thoughwhen you fall out of love or have your heart broken. the world seems dark and bleak, andalmost anything can bring you to tears or piss you off. this only goes to show us thatour world is as bright or as gloomy as we make it out to be, and how quickly we canjump between feelings when love is involved. in the beginning of romantic relationshipswe often fear love because we know the pain it’s capable of inflicting. sadly, heartbreakis something that most people go through in their lives; it’s a near-universal partof the human experience. think about how many films, books and songs are dedicated to love’saftermath - our culture thrives on it. my name is amy north, i’m a relationshipcoach from vancouver, canada and today i’m going to talk about the five stage...
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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