Species: C. majalis Traditionally described as very quieting to the History heart and good for the heart generally. Useful in epilepsy, dizziness, and convulsions of all kinds. Good for palsy and apoplexy. Strengthens the Lily of the valley has been used since the brain and makes the thoughts clearer. Useful for Middle Ages when they were popular in bridal 19th century ilustration dropsy. Large doses may cause nausea vomiting
8 minutes may be fatal in 50...100% of exposures, – concentrations > 100,000 ppm causes visual disturbances 6...8% and tremors and has been associated with loss of 4...5 minutes recovery with treatment. consciousness (Lipsett et al, 1994) 4...6% Coma in 40 seconds, convulsions, respiration ceases. • Standard EN 15251:2007→ in office rooms 850…1000 ppm. 3 Ensuring optimized values Design/planning measures (position of working rooms) Lighting – Hot departments to different naves in the building
powers, such as the ability to fly or to see into the future. Inhalant - An inhalant, such as glue or gasoline, is sniffed or "huffed" to give the user an immediate rush. Inhalants produce a quick feeling of being drunk - followed by sleepiness, staggering, dizziness, and confusion. Narcotic - A narcotic dulls the body's senses (leaving a person less aware and alert and feeling carefree) and relieves pain. Narcotics can cause a person to sleep, fall into a stupor, have convulsions, and even slip into a coma. Certain narcotics - such as codeine - are legal if given by doctors to treat pain. Heroin is an illegal narcotic because it is has dangerous side effects and is very addictive. Stimulant - A stimulant speeds up a person's body and brain. Stimulants, such as methamphetamines and cocaine, have the opposite effect of depressants. Usually, stimulants make a person feel high and energized. When the effects of a stimulant wear off, the person
People's Temple would result, Jones sought to control the end of the Temple in his own way. He gathered the entire community around him and issued a call for each person's death to be done in a unified act of self-destruction. The first response was that of a young woman who calmly approached the now famous vat of strawberry-flavored poison, administered one dose to her baby, one to herself, and then sat down in a field, where she and her child died in convulsions within four minutes. Others followed steadily in turn. Although a handful of Jonestowners escaped and a few others are reported to have resisted, the survivors claim that the great majority of the 910 people who died did so in an orderly, will- ful fashion. News of the event shocked the world. The broadcast media and the papers pro- vided a barrage of reports, updates, and analyses. For days, conversations were full of the topic, "How many have they found dead now
For me, it was like skydiving--I felt powerful, vulnerable, am lucky to have done it, and I probably won't do it again." The David Blaine Method : This is for informational purposes only. Do not attempt in water or without proper DISCLAIMER supervision. Here's how we all did it. First and foremost, the disclaimer is not a joke. David himself has almost died on several occasions. See the video in "Tools and Tricks" for a visual warning: you will watch rsthand as David goes into convulsions underwater. The notes that became this chapter were taken on a scrap of paper while performing the exercises. Much of it was written after I lost almost all sensation in my hands following the purging exercises, and after colors began to morph. After 3 minutes and 20 seconds, I was shaking. FYI, the above side effects are all common. DEFINITIONS Deep breathing: Taking a big breath in through the mouth, holding for one second, and then