"Hi everyone! My name is Jake Picker and I make "edutainment" videos about bartonellosis, mast cell activation syndrome (MCAS), SIBO, and other related conditions. Unfortunately, I have been suffering with bartonellosis symptoms for over ten years but became debilitated by those symptoms in August of 2018.
Almost every single minute that I feel well enough, I spend researching, writing, filming, and editing my videos for Bartonella Babe. The best way to support me is to shop my Bartonella Babe merch at www.teespring.com/stores/bartonella-babe. I have chosen to donate 25% of all proceeds to the Bartonella Project at the North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine.
If you are looking for support, please join our Facebook support group called Breaking Down Bartonella. To stay updated with my life, make sure to subscribe and hit the notification bell. Also, follow me on Instagram @bartonella_babe and on Facebook (Bartonella Babe). Thanks Bartonella buddies!"
This YouTube Edition should work!
Here is the 'on the fly' video of our encounter with Master Lu.
Jan wore the gut monitor for the short session in Oceanside.
She followed up with a much longer (1 hour) session with Master Lu two days later.
She was able to walk without a cane for the first time during those sessions. Subsequently she has been able to walk (in PT) barefoot without a cane.
"About Us
Co-founded in 2005 by Robert Redford and his son and board chair, James Redford, The Redford Center harnesses the power of film, video and new media to engage people through inspiring stories that galvanize environmental action.
Drawing on the family's multi-generational expertise in filmmaking and activism, we produce, fund and fiscally sponsor impact-driven productions that showcase stories of individuals taking action to protect and restore the planet."
Here is the 'on the fly' video of our encounter with Master Lu.
Jan wore the gut monitor for the short session in Oceanside.
She followed up with a much longer (1 hour) session with Master Lu two days later.
She was able to walk without a cane for the first time during those sessions. Subsequently she has been able to walk (in PT) barefoot without a cane.
"This video presents "Eight Pieces of Silk Brocade", the ancient Chinese qigong exercises. Practiced daily, it can slow down the aging process and improve health.
0:57 Warm up swinging arms
1:46 Ex 1 Two hands upholding the sky
3:46 Ex 2 Pulling the bow
6:53 Ex 3 Crane spreading its wing
10:14 Ex 4 Looking backward
12:53 Ex 5 Left and right swing
14:10 Ex 6 Up and down stretch
15:55 Ex 7 Diagonal knock
19:17 Ex 8 Toe and heel bounce"
Dr. Diane E. Meier is Director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC), a national organization devoted to increasing the number and quality of palliative care programs in the United States. In this video, Dr. Meier discusses 10 important steps in palliative care from over a decade of research. This video will serve as a valuable training tool and guide for medical professionals and their families.
Under her leadership the number of palliative care programs in U.S. hospitals has more than doubled in the last 5 years.
"SPACES is a first-of-its-kind musical collaboration created for everyone with a disability by the SMA community. Each creative component of the program - song, music video and album art - was led by someone with SMA. It uses the universal language of music to elevate the many voices of this community and celebrate our individuality. We're excited to share this with the world."
"We've built a learning experience from the ground to develop these essential skills. There's something for everyone: expert videos, engaging activities, the Mood Meter tool, personal reflections, and much more."
it will force us to reconsider who we are and what we value, and, in the long run, it could help us rediscover the better version of ourselves.
has the potential to break America out of the 50-plus year pattern of escalating political and cultural polarization
the “common enemy” scenario, in which people begin to look past their differences when faced with a shared external threat
second reason is the “political shock wave” scenario
enduring relational patterns often become more susceptible to change after some type of major shock destabilizes them
now is the time to begin to promote more constructive patterns in our cultural and political discourse. The time for change is clearly ripening.
The COVID-19 crisis
has already forced people back to accepting that expertise matters.
move them back toward the idea that government is a matter for serious people.
the end of our romance with market society and hyper-individualism.
We could turn toward authoritarianism
reorient our politics and make substantial new investments in public goods—for health, especially—and public services.
to allowing partial homeschooling or online learning for K-12 kids has been swept away by necessity.
the social order it helps support—will collapse if the government doesn’t guarantee income for the millions of workers who will lose their jobs in a major recession or depression
de-militarization of American patriotism and love of community will be one of the benefits to come out of this whole awful mess.
But how do an Easter people observe their holiest day if they cannot rejoice together on Easter morning?
How do Jews celebrate their deliverance from bondage when Passover Seders must take place on Zoom
Can Muslim families celebrate Ramadan if they cannot visit local mosques for Tarawih prayers
All faiths have dealt with the challenge of keeping faith alive under the adverse conditions of war or diaspora or persecution—but never all faiths at the same time.
Contemplative practices may gain popularity
One group of Americans has lived through a transformational epidemic in recent memory: gay men. Of course, HIV/AIDS
Plagues drive change.
awakened us to the need for the protection of marriage
People are finding new ways to connect and support each other in adversity
demand major changes in the health-care system
COVID-19 will sweep away many of the artificial barriers to moving more of our lives online
uptake on genuinely useful online tools has been slowed by powerful legacy players,
collaboration with overcautious bureaucrats
Medicare allowing billing for telemedicine was a long-overdue change
s was revisiting HIPAA to permit more medical providers to use the same tools the rest of us use every day to communicate, such as Skype, Facetime and email.
The resistance
we will be better able to see how our fates are linked.
near-impossible to put that genie back in the bottle in the fall
college
forcing massive changes in a sector that has been ripe for innovation for a long time.
Once companies sort out their remote work dance steps, it will be harder—and more expensive—to deny employees those options.
Yo-Yo Ma
Perhaps we can use our time with our devices to rethink the kinds of community we can create through them
This is a different life on the screen from disappearing into a video game or polishing one’s avatar.
breaking open a medium with human generosity and empathy
Not only alone together, but together alone.
The rise of telemedicine
Out of necessity, remote office visits could skyrocket in popularity as traditional-care settings are overwhelmed by the pandemic
they’ve been forced to make impossible choices among their families, their health and financial ruin.
This crisis should unleash widespread political support for Universal Family Care
single public federal fund that we all contribute to, that we all benefit from, that helps us take care of our families while we work, from child care and elder care to support for people with disabilities and paid family leave.
potlight on unmet needs of the growing older population
The reality of fragile supply chains for active pharmaceutical ingredients coupled with public outrage over patent abuses that limit the availability of new treatments has led to an emerging, bipartisan consensus that the public sector must take far more active and direct responsibility for the development and manufacture of medicines.
resilient government approach will replace our failed, 40-year experiment with market-based incentives
Science reigns again.
Truth and its most popular emissary, science, have been declining in credibility for more than a generation
Quickly, however, Americans are being reacquainted with scientific concepts like germ theory and exponential growth
Unlike with tobacco use or climate change, science doubters will be able to see the impacts of the coronavirus immediately
for the next 35 years, I think we can expect that public respect for expertise in public health and epidemics to be at least partially restored
Congress can finally go virtual.
We need Congress to continue working through this crisis, but given advice to limit gatherings to 10 people or fewer, meeting on the floor of the House of Representatives is not an especially wise option right now
nstead, this is a great time for congresspeople to return to their districts and start the process of virtual legislating—permanently
Lawmakers will be closer to the voters they represent
sensitive to local perspectives and issues
A virtual Congress is harder to lobby
Party conformity also might loosen with representatives remembering local loyalties over party ties.
Big government makes a comeback.
Not only will America need a massive dose of big government
we will need big, and wise, government more than ever in its aftermath.
The widely accepted idea that government is inherently bad won’t persist after coronavirus.
functioning government is crucial for a healthy society
most people are desperately hoping
a rebirth of the patriotic honor of working for the government.
the coronavirus crisis might sow the seeds of a new civic federalism, in which states and localities become centers of justice, solidarity and far-sighted democratic problem-solving.
we will see that some communities handled the crisis much better than others.
success came in states where government, civic and private-sector leaders joined their strengths together in a spirit of self-sacrifice for the common good.
The coronavirus is this century’s most urgent challenge to humanity.
a new sense of solidarity, citizens of states
The rules we’ve lived by won’t all apply
pandemic has revealed a simple truth:
many policies that our elected officials have long told us were impossible and impractical were eminently possible and practical all along.
student loans and medical debt
evictions were avoidable; the homeless could’ve been housed
Trump has already put a freeze on interest for federal student loans
Governor Andrew Cuomo has paused all medical and student debt owed to New York State
Democrats and Republicans are discussing suspending collection on—or outright canceling—student loans as part of a larger economic stimulus package
It’s clear that in a crisis, the rules don’t apply
an unprecedented opportunity to not just hit the pause button and temporarily ease the pain, but to permanently change the rules so that untold millions of people aren’t so vulnerable to begin with.
Revived trust in institutions.
oronavirus pandemic, one hopes, will jolt Americans into a realization that the institutions and values Donald Trump has spent his presidency assailing are essential to the functioning of a democracy—and to its ability to grapple effectively with a national crisis.
government institutions
need to be staffed with experts (not political loyalists),
decisions need to be made through a reasoned policy process and predicated on evidence-based science and historical and geopolitical knowledge
we need to return to multilateral diplomacy,
to the understanding that co-operation with allies—and adversaries, too—is especially necessary when it comes to dealing with global problems like climate change and viral pandemics.
t public trust is crucial to governance
1918 flu pandemic
the main lesson from that catastrophe is that “those in authority must retain the public’s trust” and “the way to do that is to distort nothing, to put the best face on nothing, to try to manipulate no one.”
Expect a political uprising.
Occupy Wall Street 2.0, but this time much more massive and angrier.
Electronic voting goes mainstream.
how to allow for safe voting in the midst of a pandemic, the adoption of more advanced technology
To be clear, proven technologies now exist that offer mobile, at-home voting while still generating paper ballots.
This system is not an idea; it is a reality that has been used in more than 1,000 elections for nearly a decade by our overseas military and disabled voters.
hould be the new normal.
Election Day will become Election Month.
The change will come through expanded early voting and no-excuse mail-in balloting, effectively turning Election Day into Election Month
Once citizens experience the convenience of early voting and/or voting by mail, they won’t want to give it up.
. Some states, such as Washington, Oregon and Utah, already let everyone vote at home.
Voters already receive registration cards and elections guides by mail. Why not ballots?
First, every eligible voter should be mailed a ballot and a self-sealing return envelope with prepaid postage.
Elections administrators should receive extra resources to recruit younger poll workers, to ensure their and in-person voters’ health and safety, and to expand capacity to quickly and accurately process what will likely be an unprecedented volume of mail-in votes.
In the best-case scenario, the trauma of the pandemic will force society to accept restraints on mass consumer culture as a reasonable price to pay to defend ourselves against future contagions and climate disasters alike.
In the years ahead, however, expect to see more support from Democrats, Republicans, academics and diplomats for the notion that government has a much bigger role to play in creating adequate redundancy in supply chains—resilient even to trade shocks from allies. This will be a substantial reorientation from even the very recent past.
pressure on corporations to weigh the efficiency and costs/benefits of a globalized supply chain system against the robustness of a domestic-based supply chain.
other gap that has grown is between the top fifth and all the rest—and that gap will be exacerbated by this crisis.
In this crisis, most will earn steady incomes while having necessities delivered to their front doors.
other 80 percent of Americans lack that financial cushion.
will struggle
A hunger for diversion.
After the disastrous 1918-19 Spanish flu and the end of World War I, many Americans sought carefree entertainment, which the introduction of cars and the radio facilitated.
The economy quickly rebounded and flourished for about 10 years, until irrational investment tilted the United States and the world into the Great Depression.
human beings will respond with the same sense of relief and a search for community, relief from stress and pleasure.
Less communal dining—but maybe more cooking
many people will learn or relearn how to cook over the next weeks.
ikely there will be many fewer sit-down restaurants in Europe and the United States. We will be less communal at least for a while.
A revival of parks.
Urban parks—in which most major cities have made significant investments over the past decade—are big enough to accommodate both crowds and social distancing.
Society might come out of the pandemic valuing these big spaces even more,
A change in our understanding of ‘change.’
Americans have said goodbye to a society of frivolity and ceaseless activity in a flash
Our collective notions of the possible have changed already
The tyranny of habit no more.
Maybe, as in Camus’ time, it will take the dual specters of autocracy and disease to get us to listen to our common sense, our imaginations, our eccentricities—and not our programming.
and environmentally and physiologically devastating behaviors (including our favorites: driving cars, eating meat, burning electricity)
echarged commitment to a closer-to-the-bone worldview that recognizes we have a short time on earth