anything under the moon

the moonJune 19, 2008 10:05 pm

Sexual attraction to and preference for members of one’s own sex is known as homosexuality. The rampant increase of the population of the third sex has become of major issue. There are groups that have worked to influence public opinion and legislation towards the acceptance of homosexuals.

I made a major research about Lesbians and Gays. Homosexuals share the same sentiments. They feel despised and looked down by the society. They tend to show to people that they are strong and that they are confident because they feel they have a dreaded disease that people are so aloof with them.

After talking to some lesbians and gays, I cant help but understand their plight. They told me they never purposely chose to  belong to the Third Sex. Others think that they are normal! The only difference is that they wanted to be the exact opposite of what they really are. 

the moonJune 13, 2008 8:09 am

The Creator must have the power to work a mircale from the very factthat the creature has no such power. For if God can never rise above the plane on which a creature acts, then it is a natural inference that he is nothing but a creature himself. If a thing that is impossible for a person is impossible for God also, If a thing that is impossible for a person is imposisble for God also, what is the difference between God and man?

"Belive, therefore," says Tertullian, "that the creator is able to work a miracle, for the very reason that the creature cannot." The Apostle Paul said to King Agrippa, "Why shoud it be thought a thing incredible with you, that God should raise the dead?" Our Lord Jesus sad, "The things which are impossible with men are possible with God."

The Supreme Being can do anything, and watever he does is wise and good. Whether the laws of nature work for or against the promised result is a matter of not the slightest consequence, provided that the Autor of nature, who "taketh up the isles as a very little thing" and has "measure the waters in the hollow if his hand" has said that it shall verily come to pass. 

the moonJune 9, 2008 5:16 am

At the first sign of alarm, chemicals released by the pituitary and adernal glands and the nerve endings automatically trigger thses physical reactions to stress:

  • Heart rate incrases to move blood to the muscles and brain.
  • Blood pressure goes up.
  • Breathing rate incrases.
  • Digestion slows down.
  • Perspiration increases.
  • Pupils dilate.
  • You feel a rush of strength.

You are experiencing the "fight or flight" phenomenon - your body is tense, alert, and rady for action. After this reaction to a real or perceived threat, our bodies stay on alert until we feel the danger has passed. When the stressor has gone, the brain signals an "all clear" and our body gradually returns to normal. Problems with stress occur when the brain fails to give the "all clear" signal. If the alarm state lasts too long, you begin to suffer from the consequences of constant stress. This is why unrelieved stress can lead to many health problems.