Posts Tagged ‘marketing to baby boomers’

The Holly and the Ivy and the Blow Up Plastic Flashing Santa

Friday, December 11th, 2009
BoomerYearbook.com
BoomerYearbook.com

Articles from Boomeryearbook.com explore the fascinating and varied behavioral patterns that occur when families are affected by outside events, or by the impact of the modern World; the challenges faced in the new age and the hurdles that must be addressed: The Boomeryearbook.com Guide and Coaching Strategy for the baby boomer generation.

Psychological Articles by Dr. Karen for BoomerYearbook.com

Christmas decorations in pre baby boomer years were mostly home made; paper chains and prickly holly wreaths the mailman complained about as he tried to squeeze Christmas cards through the letter box, getting skewered on the holly in the process!

Christmas stockings pinned to the mantel were actual old stockings, washed and patched and pressed into Christmas service; childish drawings were used for Christmas cards and sprinkled with glitter which spread all over the house each time an open door or window created a breeze! Our modern day decorations are sophisticated and undeniably gorgeous.

Those of us who aspire to discreet Christmas decorations are at variance with the ‘Christmas tackiness brigade’ and the clash of interests can be interesting at this time of year, according to psychological articles.

Some people have a flair for decorating their home at Christmas time. There is no doubt about it that some baby boomers have perfected the art of classy Christmas adornment. The door wreath is perfect and fragrant with just the right amount of color; the staircase is decked with evergreen and color matched bouquets to compliment the décor; the tree is correctly balanced with fat bows of wide Christmas ribbon, wired to produce the best effect and stay in shape; the Christmas lights are the tiniest and brightest, winking cosily in the firelight. No trace of tattering! No angel hair drunkenly wafting around the sitting room – no red or green foil hanging lanterns!

Other baby boomers have a different agenda when it comes to Christmas cheer. They deliberately seek out the worst possible clashing colors and Christmas novelties to deck the house with the noisiest and most intrusive crackerjack pendants; red and white painted Santa faces; spray on snow that adheres to the windows and won’t come off no matter how you scrape and rub; racing roof lights that make the house resemble a highway truck stop diner.

The worst possible tacky Christmas decoration must be the blow up plastic flashing Santa; the bouncing red and white clad effigy of Father Christmas, usually super sized, crawling up the side of the house or positioned to look as if he is about to topple down the chimney. He is large; he is garish; he is ugly; he has no trace of good taste about his person; he is irresistible to baby boomers on a mission to destroy every vestige of good taste in Christmas decoration!!

Psychological articles claim that people with a conflict of taste, not only in décor but also in Christmas trimmings, clash horribly at this time of year and fail to agree on just about every aspect of Christmas, from the size of the tree to the color of the candles on the table!

If you live in a house with a tasteless magnet, try to exercise a little tolerant diplomacy this year – even flashing Santas need love!

The Psychological Article on The Holly and the Ivy and the Blow Up Plastic Flashing Santa is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of baby boomers psychological coaching tips and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

byb-ChristmasCard

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Token Gifts for Christmas: The Gifts We Never Gift Wrap

Friday, December 11th, 2009
Token Gifts for Christmas: BoomerYearbook.com

Token Gifts for Christmas: BoomerYearbook.com

Articles from Boomeryearbook.com explore the fascinating and varied behavioral patterns that occur when families are affected by outside events, or by the impact of the modern World; the challenges faced in the new age and the hurdles that must be addressed: The Boomeryearbook.com Guide and Coaching Strategy for the baby boomer generation.

Psychological Articles by Dr. Karen for BoomerYearbook.com

There are some things that come at a very high price: personal loss; bereavement; divorce; financial hardship. We can do nothing about many of the worries our friends and family are struggling to cope with this Christmas. Or can we?

Psychological articles that teach us about pride tell us that paying our Grandmother’s heating bill is a kindness but it can also lead to her experiencing a loss of dignity and distress at having to resort to a ‘hand out’ to help her out of trouble. Baby boomers with a genuine desire to help might also run into difficulties when trying to alleviate suffering for someone else.

There is a long list of opportunities for those discreet and silent gifts that are never gift wrapped and never mentioned before other people. Paying the car insurance; fixing the roof; paying the school fees; helping to make home made gifts for a friend who cannot afford to buy any this year; driving an elderly friend to the shops so they can do their own shopping; baby sitting for a pal so she can spend a rare evening out on a Christmas treat with her husband.

These things are never gift wrapped yet always appreciated so much more than the standard box of chocolates or a bottle of perfume. They might be unorthodox gifts but they are sometimes more appreciated as they produce that warmth of feeling we all love. Baby boomers adore Christmas and being a social bunch, love the trappings of Christmas more than any other generation. We invented the tackiest Christmas decorations ever!

For people who are having a hard time this year, the silent and unwrapped gift is the best option. Psychological articles observe that a favor or kindness to a friend can create positive emotions for both the giver and the receiver. Taking a friend with financial problems out to lunch is thoughtful but not always appropriate – the friend might feel ‘compromised’ if they cannot reciprocate – but
going on a forest hunt for pine cones to make a home made Christmas wreath will produce the same warm companionship and not embarrass anyone. Especially if it is followed by a guilty sharing of hot chocolate topped with marshmallows!

Holiday Love: BoomerYearbook.com

Holiday Love: BoomerYearbook.com

It is always better to adopt some tact and diplomacy when dealing with elderly people who need help at this time of year. Financial help is an especially touchy area and baby boomers feeling a cash gift is the only sensible option should be as casual as possible and do not make it a big production – the more fuss made, the worse the person will feel.

Try presenting cash gifts in a festive card – baby boomers are resourceful enough to know how to make a money gift acceptable for people who need the financial help more than another Christmas gadget.

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The Psychological Article on Token Gifts for Christmas: The Gifts We Never Gift Wrap is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of baby boomers psychological coaching tips and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Getting Back to Normal After Christmas: Coping with Post Christmas Loss After the Kids Go Back to College

Friday, December 11th, 2009
Post Christmas Blues: BoomerYearbook.com

Post Christmas Blues: BoomerYearbook.com

Articles from Boomeryearbook.com explore the fascinating and varied behavioral patterns that occur when families are affected by outside events, or by the impact of the modern World; the challenges faced in the new age and the hurdles that must be addressed: The Boomeryearbook.com Guide and Coaching Strategy for the baby boomer generation.

Psychological Articles By Dr. Karen of BoomerYearbook.com

Christmas is the favorite time of year for so many of us and it’s no wonder! Whether we live in a hot or cold climate during the festive season, there is something about the traditions of Christmas that brings out emotions in all of us and sends us running to the shops for tinsel early December, no matter how hard we try to be cynical!

Christmas festivities are usually left to the lady of the house, although there are a few gentlemen baby boomers who undertake plenty of Christmas preparations such as hauling home the Christmas tree and buying the biggest turkey in the free world. However, psychological articles tell us that the more we do to make our family Christmas the best ever, the harder we come down to earth when the festivities are all over and it is time for visiting family to return from whence they came…

It is the eternal ‘Cinderella’s pumpkin’ effect – sooner or later, the pretty baubles and the nodding Santa on the porch and the evergreen with twinkling lights that make the hearth look so beautiful must come down and be replaced with the trappings of normality. The silk Christmas roses are carefully re-folded and returned to their tissue-lined boxes; the chandelier is carefully stripped of mistletoe; Christmas ribbons and crystals are rolled up and packed away till next year; the delicious left over festive foods in the refrigerator are hastily eaten before they spoil.

Psychological articles claim that the very worst aspect of post Christmas blues is the disappearance of loved ones back to work, or college, or elderly baby boomer grandparents travel back to nursing care homes, or their comfortable ‘apartment for one’ in the city. We wave them off, knowing we will probably not see them again until the next special occasion. Baby boomers are great at entertaining family and talented at making other people feel comfortable and in the holiday spirit – it’s not easy to come to terms with the anti climax of early January!

How do we cope with it? Perhaps we should stop them from leaving! Well – perhaps not… Lives have to be lived, after all! The best way to cope with the post Christmas blues is to stay focused and busy and turn to the tasks put off before Christmas to occupy our time and take our minds off missing absent family. As psychological articles inform the sharpest sense of loss is certainly felt by Mom baby boomers saying goodbye to kids leaving for college after the winter break. Mothers conquer their ‘empty nest’ emotions with some difficulty when their children leave home to be educated elsewhere. Those feelings of loss return after a long holiday period; especially Christmas when so many happy celebrations take place to enhance the holiday mood.

Cheer up, Mom – they’ll be home again soon, dragging three months laundry behind them and begging for a bigger allowance!

byb-ChristmasCard

The Psychological Article on Getting Back to Normal After Christmas: Coping with Post Christmas Loss After the Kids Go Back to College is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of baby boomers psychological coaching tips and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Homemade Gifts for Christmas – The Gift of Your Time

Friday, December 11th, 2009
Home Made Christmas Gifts: BoomerYearbook.com

Home Made Christmas Gifts: BoomerYearbook.com

Articles from Boomeryearbook.com explore the fascinating and varied behavioral patterns that occur when families are affected by outside events, or by the impact of the modern World; the challenges faced in the new age and the hurdles that must be addressed: The Boomeryearbook.com Guide and Coaching Strategy for the baby boomer generation.


By Dr. Karen for BoomerYearbook.com

There are so many wonderful things you can make with so little skill it hardly seems necessary to venture into the shops at all but the truth is that these gifts cost in other ways – blood, sweat and tears and also that precious commodity psychological articles tell us everyone has so little of – TIME!

One of the really beautiful gifts that can be home made are salt dough figures that can be baked in the oven to harden and then painted with paint and glitter to make gorgeous Christmas decorations – a great gift for grandparents who are baby boomers and annoyingly seem to have everything else. If you have a local market where you can buy wicker tubs or baskets, they are really the most beautiful gifts when filled with not just goodies but FAVORITE goodies, decorated with your little salt dough trims.

Make beautiful gift ties out of old necklace beads and crystals and baby ribbon – they look super expensive and require five extra minutes. Baby boomers always have old costume jewelry hiding in the attic – make use of all that hoarded history and turn it into great gift garnish! If you have run out of ribbon rosettes or bows, cut a sprig of evergreen from somewhere in the garden and tie some brightly wrapped candy with string around the sprigs before taping them to your parcels. For extra effect, sprinkle with glitter.

Home made chocolate truffles taste the best when they are home made and especially if they come in those cute home made gift boxes – you can get patterns free online from craft pages and keep the kids quiet for hours making them. Home made preserves should be finished with brightly colored gingham lid covers and tied with pine cones, cinnamon sticks and bright red or green ribbon to look inviting and delicious.

Psychological articles teach us that the aroma of Christmas food is heady and has associations with childhood. Cakes; Christmas mulled wine; fudge; coconut ice; Turkish delight; gingerbread cookies; shortcake; rum and raisin toffee and fruit cake are all things that can make great gifts and appreciated far more than a ‘here today gone tomorrow’ plastic gadget. The gift of your time is so much more precious.

A bottle of wine for older baby boomers is a lovely present but if it is wrapped imaginatively it can look like a work of art – buy and wash some second hand doll’s clothes and dress the bottle – the results are hilarious! A false moustache and a brightly colored scarf on a bottle of Tequila can make a great present!

Bedroom slippers are great to receive as a gift but a little boring – try making homemade soap (recipes found online) and wrap the slippers with a matching towel and face cloth – it’s fragrant, original and different to anything you find in the shops.

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Photographs are always useful when making homemade gifts, for collages; gracing home made photo frames, adding to key rings and putting inside new wallets or purses. Grandchildren’s photographs can be added to other presents for baby boomers, as part of the gift tag or something extra to enclose with another gift.

There is something rustic and beautiful about home made gifts clustered beneath a Christmas tree. They need not cost the earth but they mean the World.

 

The Psychological Article on Homemade Gifts for Christmas – The Gift of Your Time is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series of baby boomers psychological coaching tips and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Baby Boomers Guide to The Worst Christmas Gifts Ever – What NOT to Buy

Friday, December 11th, 2009
Worst Christmas Gifts for Male Baby Boomers: BoomerYearbook.com
Worst Christmas Gifts for Male Baby Boomers: BoomerYearbook.com

Articles from Boomeryearbook.com explore the fascinating and varied behavioral patterns that occur when families are affected by outside events, or by the impact of the modern World; the challenges faced in the new age and the hurdles that must be addressed: The Boomeryearbook.com Guide and Coaching Strategy for the baby boomer generation.

Psychological Articles by BoomerYearbook.com

The worst present buyers ever are men, is the general belief, but women can buy some howlers too.

One of the most difficult groups to buy gifts for is older men. Older female baby boomers can always find pleasure in a hand tied bouquet delivered to the door or a ticket to the ballet or the latest bestselling bodice ripping novel and festive bookmark. Men, true to form, can be quite a bit more difficult to please when it comes to the gift department.

The very worst possible gift for male baby boomers, according to countless surveys conducted over many Christmases, is the economy pack of socks or underwear, usually packed in jolly Santa cardboard sleeves and sporting some terrible Christmas jingle played on a recording that sets itself off during board meetings at ten minute intervals. Ditto for the novelty reindeer tie or waistcoat; garish, undeniably festive, yet absolutely unacceptable.

Cologne and after shave lotion or shaving balm is nice but so difficult to make the right choice for someone else and how awful to have to plough through a bathroom cabinet of unwanted gifts for the rest of the year! Gentleman baby boomers are old enough to need a whole closet in the bathroom by the time they reach their sixties! No, no, no…give it a miss this year!

A great gift for men that is always appreciated is a bottle of something delicious, but ONLY if you have first done your research to find out what the man likes to drink – getting a bottle of the one thing you really cannot stomach is the most chilling Christmas present imaginable!

BoomerYearbook.com

BoomerYearbook.com

The tool kit and the garage always seem an obvious place to start to buy gifts for men but in fact the array of tools and power accessories on the market can leave you reeling. Do not under any circumstances ask a store assistant’s advice in a hardware store – you’ll be there till next Christmas listening to the advantages of the bigger horse power version of whatever, and you might die of tedium while you wait.

Unless your man has stipulated a yearning for something particular – don’t go there! You can wander around the DIY department till sundown wondering whether to buy something that cuts, sucks or makes holes of different sizes in MDF. The other disadvantage of buying such gifts is that they weigh a ton to carry home – it’s all too stressful and psychological articles recommend we avoid the strain on our emotions; and try our best not to stereotype the men in our lives!

On the list of ‘don’t’ is also the game ticket for one! Never buy one ticket for a spectator sport (nobody to shout with; nobody to argue with and nobody to get drunk with). Buy two and he will be oh, so much happier!

Psychological articles on the male boomer psyche tell us that gadgets are always a good idea for men but, like the little boys most boomer males may still be, they are hard on batteries. Make sure gadgets run on rechargeable batteries or may be electrically recharged unless you want to see your expensive gift land in the gift graveyard by January.

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As worthwhile as charitable causes are, psychological articles inform us that most male baby boomers rarely have the same feel good attitude as female baby boomers regarding adopting a polar bear or saving a few whales to celebrate the festive season. If you want to see your husband or boyfriends’ facial expression fall down a yard, give him a gift to improve his soul and help save the planet…better to keep this as a joint gift for the two of you and follow the advice of psychological articles making sure he gets something he can drink, fly, play, eat or make a noise with!

Psychological articles say that Christmas comes but once a year – the rest of the time we spend wondering what to buy to celebrate it!

The Psychological Article on The Worst Christmas Gifts Ever – What NOT to Buy is part of Boomer Yearbook’s continuing series ofbaby boomers psychological coaching tips and how to alleviate elderly problems. We believe knowledge is power. We’d love to hear what you think.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!
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How to attract new relationships?

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
BoomerYearbook.com

BoomerYearbook.com

By Dr. Karen for BoomerYearbook.com

Relationships are an integral part of life. Some fill our lives with love and joy while others cause a lot of heartbreak. Some relationships last a lifetime and unfortunately a few die prematurely. Love them or hate them, it’s difficult to live without them. However, sometimes in life, love and friendship turn elusive. Try as we might loneliness doesn’t seem to leave us alone! We might call it fate, God’s will or just life, but the truth is by doing that we simply let go of our power to change our lives. We have the power to attract new and fulfilling relationships. All we need to do is to banish old patterns of thinking and living, which perpetuate the state of loneliness.

“How can I attract new relationships?”

Let go of your past

Sometimes new relationships stay away from us because of our tendency to live in the past. We get so engrossed in old memories that we let go of opportunities to create new ones. Sometimes we keep comparing every new person we meet with someone we loved in the past. This perhaps is because of lack of acceptance of the fact that the past is long gone.

The following therapies can help you let go of the past so that you can start afresh:

-Psychological counseling: If your problem is deep rooted, for instance if you’ve faced a childhood trauma or can’t accept a loved one’s death you may need psychological counseling.

-Clinical Hypnosis: Clinical hypnosis is another therapy which can help you in breaking free from your past. Sometimes past events become so firmly embedded in our subconscious that it becomes difficult to let go, forgive and forget. If you agree to undergo this therapy, a trained hypnotherapist will be able to delve into your subconscious and release painful memories stored in it.

Open yourself to accepting good

Sometimes life is unable to bring us all the goodies in store for us because we create barriers in its way with our negative thought process. We either live in the belief that perhaps we don’t deserve good things to happen to us or are too scared to imagine ourselves in a happy state for the fear of disappointment. Either way, we end up bringing suffering to our own life. The following are some simple exercises which can help up you change your thought process:

Positive Affirmations: Practice the following affirmations in front of a mirror everyday:

“I Love and approve of myself”

“I now express love to all those I meet”

“I am open to receiving and giving love”

“I attract loving, generous and caring people into my life”

“I feel safe and secure and trust life to bring me the best”

“I deserve love”

Whatever you tell yourself repeatedly with full conviction becomes your belief. That’s how affirmations work. When you tell yourself repeatedly that you are open to love, eventually you’ll start believing it and your unconscious actions and thoughts will start reflecting your belief.

Visualizations: Take 5-10 minutes in a day and imagine yourself in a loving and beautiful relationship. See yourself laughing and glowing with love. Feel the joy of giving and receiving love. See yourself surrounded by people who genuinely love you.

Visualization is an extremely powerful technique which can help you attract whatever you want into your life. You must have heard of athletes and sportsmen visualizing excelling in their game, before the important event. They do it because visualizing prepares the mind and body for the task at hand. If you visualize achieving success, your thoughts and actions unconsciously push you in the direction of success.

Apart from these steps you will also need to make some conscious decisions, such as figuring out old relationship patterns. Look at your old relationships objectively and see what you did wrong. Make conscious attempts not to repeat old mistakes. Use affirmations and visualizations to help you overcome your shortcomings so that you can attract and enjoy fulfilling relationships.

Want more tips on attracting new relationships? Have a comment or question you’d like to share? Come join others at Boomer Yearbook for simple and effective coaching tips and strategies.

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Life expectancy on the up and up

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

byb-breadwinner boomer-jan

Dr. Karen for BoomerYearbook.com

Would you believe that as close as the early twentieth century, the average life expectancy was just 30-40 years?

Imagine the kind of progress that has been achieved over the last hundred odd years. Most of this progress has been achieved in the last few decades. The boomer generation has been extremely health conscious and that has rubbed off on the entire population of America. Though considered to be the obesity capital of the world, America is also the most health conscious nation on the planet. If you are a boomer, in your 50s or early 60s now, chances are that you are in excellent health and will live on for several more decades. The kind of medical facilities available in the country today have made sure that disorders that were life threatening a hundred years ago are treatable without surgery today.

And not just disorders. The boomer generation has done a lot of research into the way the body functions, and what keeps us going. This has resulted in a lifestyle that is a lot healthier than before. Of course, there are a lot of aspects that have made our life more dependant on artificial stuff that is considered unhealthy, but to counter that, we now have isolated vitamin and mineral remedies. The big challenge we face is a pretty sedentary lifestyle for everyone in the corporate rat race. Still, thanks to the tremendous progress in health care, there is an increase in life quality and expectancy.

Today, it is a not an oddity to see someone over the age of 100. In the next few decades, it is certain to become even more common place. In fact, if someone does not live to beyond 80, they will be seriously mourned!
So, plan ahead, and think what you are going to do with those years ahead of you!

Boomer Yearbook is a Social Network and Psychological Articles for Baby Boomers. Connect with old and new friends, or expand your mind and ward off senior moments and elderly problems with dream analysis and online optical illusions and brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join other Baby Boomers to stay informed, receive weekly Newsfeeds, and let your opinions be heard. Baby boomers changed the world. We’re not done yet!

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Have Scientists Now Confirmed Stem Cells As A Possible Treatment For Stroke?

Sunday, December 6th, 2009
BoomerYearbook.com

BoomerYearbook.com

By Dr. Karen for BoomerYearbook.com

Six years ago, scientists showed that stem cells had promise in treating strokes. They tracked the body’s own stem cells during brain repair; learned how to target stroke-damaged regions; expanded tests on animals; further refined their methods; and finally we have today’s study, in which the cells finally behaved with the reliability and safety that scientists need to achieve in people.

Stem cells have the potential to regenerate body parts. In prior stroke studies on animals, stem cells injected into the brain or bloodstream migrated to sites of damage, apparently drawn by signals from damaged cells. This migration may happen because the repair pathways initiated by the damaged cells are similar to pathways triggered during embryonic development, where stem cells are key, explains Re Neuron co-founder and chief scientific officer John Sinden. A major concern about stem cells centers on how unstable they can become when grown in the lab. Re Neuron can generate large numbers of stable cell lines by engineering cells with a modified version of the gene c-myc. This gene promotes cell division while activating genes that prevent chromosomal abnormalities. The scientists can switch c-myc on or off by introducing or withholding a synthetic compound.

Re Neuron developed cells for brain damage by splicing their modified c-myc into human fetal brain tissue obtained from a U.S. cell bank. They tested 120 neural stem cell lines in the lab for stability and robustness and in animals for the capacity to engraft with minimal immune rejection. Two lines showed potential: ReN001, which Re Neuron is aiming at stroke, and ReN005, which is under research for Huntington’s disease.

In studies with rats that experienced stroke, ReN001 significantly improved sensory and motor function. The stem cells probably did not replace the massive number of cells lost during stroke, Sinden clarifies. Rather the cells most likely pumped out chemicals that activated repair pathways, resulting in new blood vessels and brain cells.

If their Phase I clinical trial to test the safety and preliminary efficacy of this therapy gains approval, University of Pittsburgh researchers will test the therapy on 10 patients who suffer from chronic ischemic stroke–the most common form, in which clots block blood flow. Ten million to 20 million cells will be implanted directly in the brain through a small hole in the skull, and patients will be monitored over 24 months. Re Neuron has partnered with BioReliance in Glasgow, Scotland, to scale up cell production; the company has roughly one million ReN001 doses currently on hand, Sinden estimates.

Past clinical trials of stem cell therapies for chronic stroke patients used cells derived from tumors in humans and brain tissue from fetal pigs. Re Neuron’s fetal cells “are closer to the neurons in [healthy] people than others used before, so they might be more effective,” Zivin says. “What Re Neuron has done to create this cell line is ambitious and well thought out,” adds neurologist Sean Savitz of Harvard Medical School. Savitz notes, however, that c-myc is associated not only with stem cells and development but also with cancer. “This is definitely not to say that it will promote tumors,” he says, but the researchers “will have to continue to convince the scientific community that the cells will not divide unchecked the way they do in tumors.”

So can our stem cells be used to treat or even prevent us from stroke? At this point it is not perfectly clear, but only time will tell as the study continues.

We at Boomer Yearbook are excited and thrilled by the prospect of this type of stroke treatment. We’d love to hear your thoughts.

BoomerYearbook.com is a social networking site connecting the Baby Boomer generation. Share your thoughts, rediscover old friends, or expand your mind with brain games provided by clinical psychologist Dr. Karen Turner. Join today to discover the many ways we are helping Boomers connect for fun and profit.

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An Opinion on Social Security

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

By Joseph J Kusnell

 

BoomerYearbook.com

BoomerYearbook.com


 
There is no way to tell today whether Obama will be in office for four years, eight years or perhaps indefinitely. I personally believe if he wins in 2012 he is going to be with us at least as long as Roosevelt was and that was 16 years. If so, there are going to be many changes made to our way of life. 
 
Here is one that is only a  thought away. I believe in the next two years, you are going to begin to hear talk about tying social security payments to a “means test”. A means test, as you probably know, is where they determine if you really NEED your social security check or not. That will be dependent on your other assets. If they feel you can generate enough income from your investments (other than your house) to equal or approximately equal your social security payment, they will reduce your social security payment proportionately. Call it indexing social security. 
 
You might want to consider this possibility in your long range planning. I do not think they will eliminate social security totally for anyone but they may reduce it seriously for people with net worth of $500,000.00 or more. After all, they are growing government and they need to find increasing ways to pay for these employees.
 
They have just announced they are hiring 1,000,000 employees at $10/20 an hour to count our citizens (census). I would have thought they could use postal employees who are already being paid to take the census. They could easily have suspended mail deliveries to residences one day a week for two weeks in order to allow the carriers to take the census. But then that wouldn’t have put another million people -? – on the payroll. So they will do it this way.
 
Our government has learned they can pretty much do whatever they want to us now and get away with it. So they will. Their goal is to take from those that have and give to those that have not. It certainly buys them a lot of votes.
 
The point of this is, if you have $400,000.00 or more in assets excluding your house, be very careful how much you depend on your social security. The check may be there but the amount may be seriously reduced.

 
Joey

Climate change data dumped

Monday, November 30th, 2009
BoomerYearbook.com

BoomerYearbook.com

November 29, 2009

By Joseph J Kusnell

Climate change data dumped
Jonathan Leake, Environment Editor
SCIENTISTS at the University of East Anglia (UEA) have admitted throwing away much of the raw temperature data on which their predictions of global warming are based.
It means that other academics are not able to check basic calculations said to show a long-term rise in temperature over the past 150 years.

The UEA’s Climatic Research Unit (CRU) was forced to reveal the loss following requests for the data under Freedom of Information legislation. (Otherwise we would never have know that.)

The data were gathered from weather stations around the world and then adjusted to take account of variables in the way they were collected. The revised figures were kept, but the originals — stored on paper and magnetic tape — were dumped to save space when the CRU moved to a new building. (hahaha)

Related Links
The great climate change science scandal
EU figurehead says climate change a myth
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The admission that the original data has been discarded follows the leaking of a thousand private emails sent and received by Professor Phil Jones, the CRU’s director. In them he discusses thwarting climate sceptics seeking access to such data.

In a statement on its website, the CRU said: “We do not hold the original raw data but only the value-added (quality controlled and homogenized) data.” (That means his interpretation of what the ground stations recorded.)

The CRU is the world’s leading Centre for reconstructing past climate and temperatures. Climate change sceptics have long been keen to examine exactly how its data were compiled. That is now impossible

(This would be really funny if it weren’t so serious.)

Here’s some information they aren’t tell us:

PS The raw data they are talking about came from ground collection devices placed around the world. The problem was they had specific rules for upkeep and maintenance of the stations (small boxes) to preserve the quality of their readings. These mandatory maintenance regulations were totally ignored in 3/4 of the world’s countries for years. Any data they collected had to be all but WORTHLESS.

Here are just a few examples:

(1) the stations had louvers on two sides that had to be cleaned of debris every week. That was mandatory. Unfortunately that was not done. In fact, some were uncleaned for months and even years particularly in 3rd world countries and parts of the world where political unrest was present or where people had all the could do just to stay alive. .

(2) it was mandatory that the small ground station devices been repainted WHITE every few months so they would not absorb heat and skew the results. That wasn’t done at all. In some cases, it was never done.

(3) There were stringent rules about where the weather collection stations could be placed. They units couldn’t be under trees, near buildings, near parking garages or automobile parking lots or anywhere except in clean, open, unshaded areas away from any contaminating influences i.e. buildings, cars, shade trees, air conditioning units, lights etc.

Turns out they were placed around the world in places that compromised their readings to such a degree that the readings were actually worthless. (They used them anyway because they liked what they showed – warming. Sure they were warm but the reasons were mechanical not natural.)

Interestingly, they did have weather balloon readings but since they contradicted the global warming results from the contaminated ground stations, they weren’t used. They knew the results they wanted.

This is a deliberate scam and those who perpetrated it belong in jail starting with Al Gore. They have cost the world billions if not trillions of dollars. This European meeting on climate change should be canceled today but it won’t be because it’s really about billions of dollars of American money!!!

There’s a sucker born every minute.