Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Gamma Knives Out

The Guardian covers contemporary psychosurgery - in their "Life and Style" section, believe it or not -
A radical treatment for Obsessive-compulsive disorder patients
The treatment being "gamma knife" lesions in OCD. Surgeons use a gamma knife to destroy part of the brain by aiming several beams of gamma rays at it from different angles. At the point of the target the beams overlap, and the total radiation level is intense enough to kill cells. Other parts of the brain only get hit by one beam, which is, hopefully, harmless. It's quite a clever technique, although it's not exactly brain surgery. (Sorry...)

Unlike actual surgery, the gamma knife doesn't involve cutting holes in people. This makes it safer, because any neurosurgery carries risks of infection or haemorrhage. But functionally, it's exactly the same as physically removing the tissue with a scalpel. It's hardly "non-invasive", which is what the Guardian call it (twice). Maybe technically, in the sense that it doesn't break the skin, but it does permanently destroy a substantial part of the brain. That's rather more invasive than, say, getting a tattoo, if you ask me.

Lesioning the brain to treat severe OCD has a long history. In the past couple of decades, it's been done on some dozens of patients at a few hospitals such as the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, Brown University in the US, Spain, China and South Korea.

Does it work? Some reports say that about 60% of OCD patients experience a good response others put the rate at more like 40%. So it doesn't work for everyone although given that the patients who get psychosurgery are severely ill and have not benefited from other treatments (medication and therapy), it's not so bad. But it's impossible to know how much of the improvement is a placebo effect, because there's never been a placebo controlled trial of any kind of psychosurgery for OCD, including gamma knife. This is something that the Guardian unfortunately doesn't mention.

*

Newspapers at the moment are pretty keen on neurosurgery for mental illness. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been getting positive coverage for years, and psychosurgery is also becoming popular nowadays. The NYT recently ran a cautious, but generally positive, piece on it.

There seems to be an unwritten rule that every such article has to include a bit reassuring us that today's psychosurgery is Not Like In One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Hence The Guardian:
The technique certainly could not be further from the brutal lobotomies made famous by Ken Kesey's novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. While the frontal lobotomy essentially destroys part of the brain, Gamma Knife is highly accurate and non-invasive, damaging only a minute area - 100 millimeters square - of brain tissue. It is usually done as an out-patient procedure. Some might experience a mild headache afterwards, but most report no physical problems at all.
And the NYT:

In the early days of psychosurgery doctors published scores of papers detailing how lobotomy relieved symptoms of mental distress. But careful follow-up painted a darker picture: of people who lost motivation, who developed the helpless indifference dramatized by the post-op rebel McMurphy in Ken Kesey’s novel “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”... The newer operations pinpoint targets on specific, precisely mapped circuits, whereas the frontal lobotomy amounted to a crude slash into the brain behind the eyes, blindly mangling whatever connections and circuits were in the way.
This old bad, new good message is simplistic and misleading. The old (1930s-1940s) psychosurgery didn't consist of "blindly mangling" the brain. At least at first, it was targeted as precisely as the technology and neuroanatomy at the time allowed. And although some psychosurgeons used it in a cavalier way, there is no doubt that it often seemed to produce dramatic benefits; the contemporary testimonials of patients and their families are proof of that.

Today's surgery allows more accurate (and smaller) lesion placement, thanks to advances in stereotactic techniques and now the gamma knife. But we still have no solid understanding of the brain circuits underlying mental illness. We still don't know why destroying certain frontal white matter pathways in the brain alleviates symptoms. We still don't know why it works in some people and not others.

There's not even much agreement on which parts of the brain to hit; the most popular surgical target for OCD is the anterior limb of the internal capsule (capsulotomy) although cingulotomy has also been used, and for depression there are a handful. To say that "The newer operations pinpoint targets on specific, precisely mapped circuits" is true only in the sense that if a modern surgeon tries to destroy the anterior limb of the internal capsule, they will probably do it.

None of this means that psychosurgery doesn't work. It probably does - or rather, it certainly does, and it's probably not just a placebo. (For one thing the fact that accidental brain damage to the same regions also seems to reduce emotional distress is very promising.) But it's not so different to what was going on in the 1930s. It's still, basically, a stab in the dark.

Link: The Lobotomist and Last Resort are excellent books on the history of psychosurgery.

Gamma Knives Out

The Guardian covers contemporary psychosurgery - in their "Life and Style" section, believe it or not -
A radical treatment for Obsessive-compulsive disorder patients
The treatment being "gamma knife" lesions in OCD. Surgeons use a gamma knife to destroy part of the brain by aiming several beams of gamma rays at it from different angles. At the point of the target the beams overlap, and the total radiation level is intense enough to kill cells. Other parts of the brain only get hit by one beam, which is, hopefully, harmless. It's quite a clever technique, although it's not exactly brain surgery. (Sorry...)

Unlike actual surgery, the gamma knife doesn't involve cutting holes in people. This makes it safer, because any neurosurgery carries risks of infection or haemorrhage. But functionally, it's exactly the same as physically removing the tissue with a scalpel. It's hardly "non-invasive", which is what the Guardian call it (twice). Maybe technically, in the sense that it doesn't break the skin, but it does permanently destroy a substantial part of the brain. That's rather more invasive than, say, getting a tattoo, if you ask me.

Lesioning the brain to treat severe OCD has a long history. In the past couple of decades, it's been done on some dozens of patients at a few hospitals such as the Karolinska Institute in Sweden, Brown University in the US, Spain, China and South Korea.

Does it work? Some reports say that about 60% of OCD patients experience a good response others put the rate at more like 40%. So it doesn't work for everyone although given that the patients who get psychosurgery are severely ill and have not benefited from other treatments (medication and therapy), it's not so bad. But it's impossible to know how much of the improvement is a placebo effect, because there's never been a placebo controlled trial of any kind of psychosurgery for OCD, including gamma knife. This is something that the Guardian unfortunately doesn't mention.

*

Newspapers at the moment are pretty keen on neurosurgery for mental illness. Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been getting positive coverage for years, and psychosurgery is also becoming popular nowadays. The NYT recently ran a cautious, but generally positive, piece on it.

There seems to be an unwritten rule that every such article has to include a bit reassuring us that today's psychosurgery is Not Like In One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Hence The Guardian:
The technique certainly could not be further from the brutal lobotomies made famous by Ken Kesey's novel, One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. While the frontal lobotomy essentially destroys part of the brain, Gamma Knife is highly accurate and non-invasive, damaging only a minute area - 100 millimeters square - of brain tissue. It is usually done as an out-patient procedure. Some might experience a mild headache afterwards, but most report no physical problems at all.
And the NYT:

In the early days of psychosurgery doctors published scores of papers detailing how lobotomy relieved symptoms of mental distress. But careful follow-up painted a darker picture: of people who lost motivation, who developed the helpless indifference dramatized by the post-op rebel McMurphy in Ken Kesey’s novel “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”... The newer operations pinpoint targets on specific, precisely mapped circuits, whereas the frontal lobotomy amounted to a crude slash into the brain behind the eyes, blindly mangling whatever connections and circuits were in the way.
This old bad, new good message is simplistic and misleading. The old (1930s-1940s) psychosurgery didn't consist of "blindly mangling" the brain. At least at first, it was targeted as precisely as the technology and neuroanatomy at the time allowed. And although some psychosurgeons used it in a cavalier way, there is no doubt that it often seemed to produce dramatic benefits; the contemporary testimonials of patients and their families are proof of that.

Today's surgery allows more accurate (and smaller) lesion placement, thanks to advances in stereotactic techniques and now the gamma knife. But we still have no solid understanding of the brain circuits underlying mental illness. We still don't know why destroying certain frontal white matter pathways in the brain alleviates symptoms. We still don't know why it works in some people and not others.

There's not even much agreement on which parts of the brain to hit; the most popular surgical target for OCD is the anterior limb of the internal capsule (capsulotomy) although cingulotomy has also been used, and for depression there are a handful. To say that "The newer operations pinpoint targets on specific, precisely mapped circuits" is true only in the sense that if a modern surgeon tries to destroy the anterior limb of the internal capsule, they will probably do it.

None of this means that psychosurgery doesn't work. It probably does - or rather, it certainly does, and it's probably not just a placebo. (For one thing the fact that accidental brain damage to the same regions also seems to reduce emotional distress is very promising.) But it's not so different to what was going on in the 1930s. It's still, basically, a stab in the dark.

Link: The Lobotomist and Last Resort are excellent books on the history of psychosurgery.

HOJE TEREMOS UMA POSTAGEM DIFERENTE!!!

Sim, é algo diferente. Mas, ESPECIAL.
AMIGO SECRETO NA INTERNET.
PROMOÇÃO DA LINDA VANESSA.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_DNJx_ZaOONE/SgTo-piA2gI/AAAAAAAABCg/xcQ-jsfRQ2A/S1600-R/o+fio_480x86.jpg

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_DNJx_ZaOONE/SybQg1qqOlI/AAAAAAAAB1c/6UToi9DYeAE/s320/presente.jpg
Fala do nosso Amigo Culto. Ou melhor Amigo Secreto.
A Vanessa, do blog
http://fio-de-ariadne.blogspot.com/, me convidou eu aceite. Fiquei pensando, como será o tal Amigo Secreto. Mas a proposta é de fazer uma Resenha desse Amigo. Melhor dizendo, do seu Blog.
E agora, José? Como fazer uma resenha do Amigo, se nem o conhecia. Mas enfim, topei a parada.
Após muitas interrogações a ela, e quase deixa
ndo-a louca, resolvi aceitar e participar dessa aventura. E aqui estamos, para realizar mais uma bela brincadeira, Mas agora de Natal.
Amei. E o grande dia chegou.
Então vamos a ele
Meu Amigo Secreto, é uma pessoa maravilhos
a.
Cheia de novidades, incrível, com tudo o que faz e realiza.
Conheço ele bem pouquinho. Já participamos
de algumas coletivas juntas. Ele até já veio no blog Interação de Amigos. Pois é lá que todas as Coletivas acontecem.
Mas ao viajar pelo Blog, encontrei um Selo da Curiosa que me deixou bem Feliz.
Meu Amigo Secreto, é mais ou menos assim
.......
Já participou de várias Blogagens Coletivas, principalmente da
Fio de Ariandne, da Ideias de Milene, do Orgulho de Ser, assim como eu.
Mas nunca nos encontramos, a não ser numas das coletivas, proporcionadas pela Mylla.
Tem muitos amigos virtuais, dos quais eu também sou amigas de alguns deles.

Tem um marcadores de temas, maravilhoso, que vale a pena conferir. Tem grandes
CLÁSSICOS, seja em livros, filmes ou músicas.
Temas
IMAGENS muito significativas, e que nos fazem refletir, sobre vários conteúdos e contextos. Dá um valor muito grande aos seus Jornais. Pois é um grande fonte de comunicação e informação. Fala dos LIVROS, esse tão amigo e companheiros dos amantes das leituras.. Até questiona dos mais vendidos e curiosos. Pois sabemos, que a leitura é algo muito precioso, na vida das pessoas. Nós o conhecimento, que ninguém os tira.Ele é a fonte de nossa sabedoria.
AH, os
MEMES E SELOS, são tão fofinhos. Fui ai, que eu me encontrei. Visitei esta sala e vi que eu estava lá também..Que xique. Me senti muito feliz em estar lá também. Fazendo parte desse arsenal.
E as
MEMORABILIAS- Essas, sempre vão existir em nossas vidas. Não tem como fugir delas.
Em qualquer momentos da nossa vida, vamos estar lá, fazendo parte delas.
E as
MÚSICAS. Sim cada um de nós tem as suas prediletas. E aquelas que marcaram e marcam a nossa vida.
Notas- Pois, é. Anotamos tudo para não esquecer...Ou então deixamos uma nota de comunicação para alguém. Notas, são notas em qualquer situações. São recados curtos que passamos para alguém. Comunicando, o que está acontecendo.
Ah! ele também relata o
DIA.
O dia que iniciou o seu blog, o dia que iniciou a sua Faculdade,. E o dia, inclusive, o dia que terminou a a Monografia. UFAAA!!!!! Que alivio, não é mesmo amigo. Essa tal de Monografia, acaba com agente. Haja leitura, escrita, pesquisa, releitura, reestruturação. Nossa, que loucura. ainda bem que já passou, não é mesmo.
Fala das
REVISTAS. Outra fonte de informaçãoes, muito importante.E como todo bom trabalhador, não podia deixar de mencionar os SERVIÇOS. Este todos nós precisamos.
TV. A companheira de todo o Cidadão brasileiro e do Mundo. Aqui temos as noticias do mundo inteiro e um pouco mais. Como todo bom menino e Homem que é, ele não podia deixar de gostar de jogos. Tai os GAMES. Se deu o direito de expor o que gosta e o que não gosta.Lembrei do meu filho. É louco por Games. Que loucura.
E os
DOODLES. Te confesso, que só sei fazer rabiscos. Não sei desenhar muito bem, não, amigo. Embora adoro artes.
FILMES, quem não gosta. Um bom filme, comendo, pipoca, dando boas gargalhadas, ou se emocionando, com um bela cena, seja de amor, tristeza ou decepção.E para não fazer feio, que tal lembrar do GOOGLE. Um parceiros que abre caminhos.
POSTAGENS!!! Nossa tem as mais diversas, possíveis. Falou do QUASE, DO QUASE I, DO PONTO FINAL, de UM ANO E DOS TECNORATIS. Esse cara é o CARA.

Conseguiu chegar lá. Terminou a Faculdad
e, a sua Monografia, reconstruiu o seu Blog. Está ficando lindo. Pois assim, como muito de nós, estamos com os Espantalhos, rondando os nossos Jardins Coloridos, lá também passou e consumiu todos os seus comentários. XÔ,XÔ, ESPANTALHO!!!!
Está superando todos os obstáculos.
Além de tudo isso ele ainda tem a ARTE NA CAPA E CRÔNICAS NA MONTANHA DA MONTANHA (vale a pena conferi)

BEM, MEU AMIGO SECRETO. ACREDITO QUE COM TODO ESTE DESENROLAR DE PALAVRAS, VOCÊ JÁ DESCOBRIU QUE É QUE TE PEGOU, NÃO É MESMO??

MEU PRESENTE PARA VOCÊ, ESTA LINDA
RESENHA.
COM MUITO CARINHO, DESEJO A VOCÊ
UM FELIZ NATAL E PRÓSPERO ANO NOVO. ESPERO QUE TENHA GOSTADO.
GOSTEI DE TER PEGO VOCÊ LUCIANO A. SANTOS.


LUCIANO!
LEMBRANÇA DO AMIGO SECRETO. 15.12.09


A MENSAGEM É LUCIANO:
QUE AS BENÇÃO DO NATAL, LHE TRAGAM MUITA PAZ, AMOR, FRATERNIDADE, SAÚDE, ALEGRIA E SUCESSO.

(imagem da net.)

VENHA NESSE CANTINHO E DESCUBRA QUEM TIROU O MEU NOME:
Meus Mimos!

Monday, December 14, 2009

Baking Galletas

Today My Dad and I baked galletas. Cookies. :) I asked him last night. He was excited like me. Mi abuelitas helped us too! We had lots of fun! My Dad is off of work too. He doesn't have to go back until January! All week we are going to do things together.

We made biscochos and wedding cookies. Those are my favorite. My Dad wanted chocolate chip cookies too. He made some sweet bread. We have lots of good things to eat now. Mi abuelitas are excited to have some galletas with their coffee. I think they will like them.

I tried some wedding cookies. We made them small. But they are still my favorite. :) They were messy too! I was covered in powder sugar. But they are really good. My Dad couldn't find his recipes. But he remembered them. He's got a good memory. Maybe he will let me post his recipe. I just have to ask him to write it down for me. :) C

In the Brain, Acidity Means Anxiety

According to Mormon author and fruit grower "Dr" Robert O. Young, pretty much all diseases are caused by our bodies being too acidic. By adopting an "alkaline lifestyle" to raise your internal pH (lower pH being more acidic), you'll find that
if you maintain the saliva and the urine pH, ideally at 7.2 or above, you will never get sick. That’s right you will NEVER get sick!
Wow. Important aspects of the alkaline lifestyle include eating plenty of the right sort of fruits and vegetables, ideally ones grown by Young, and taking plenty of nutritional supplements. These don't come cheap, but when the payoff is being free of all diseases, who could complain?

Young calls his amazing theory the Alkavorian Approach™, aka the New Biology. Almost everyone else calls it quack medicine and pseudoscience. Because it is quack medicine and pseudoscience. But a paper just published in Cell suggests an interesting role for pH in, of all things, anxiety and panic - The amygdala is a chemosensor that detects carbon dioxide and acidosis to elicit fear behavior.

The authors, Ziemann et al, were interested in a protein called Acid Sensing Ion Channel 1a, ASIC1a, which as the name suggests, is acid-sensitive. Nerve cells expressing ASIC1a are activated when the fluid around them becomes more acidic.

One of the most common causes of acidosis (a fall in body pH) is carbon dioxide, CO2. Breathing is how we get rid of the CO2 produced by our bodies; if breathing is impaired, for example during suffocation, CO2 levels rise, and pH falls as CO2 is converted to carbonic acid in the bloodstream.

In previous work, Ziemann et al found that the amygdala contains lots of ASIC1a. This is intriguing, because the amygdala is a brain region believed to be involved in fear, anxiety and panic, although it has other functions as well. It's long been known that breathing air with added CO2 can trigger anxiety and panic, especially in people vulnerable to panic attacks.

What's unclear is why this happens; various biological and psychological theories have been proposed. Ziemann et al set out to test the idea that ASIC1a in the amygdala mediates anxiety caused by CO2.

In a number of experiments they showed that mice genetically engineered have no ASIC1a (knockouts) were resistant to the anxiety-causing effects of air containing 10% or 20% CO2. Also, unlike normal mice, the knockouts were happy to enter a box with high CO2 levels - normal mice hated it. Injections of a weakly acidic liquid directly into the amygdala caused anxiety in normal mice, but not in the knockouts.

Most interestingly, they found that knockout mice could be made to fear CO2 by giving them ASIC1a in the amygdala. Knockouts injected in the amygdala with a virus containing ASIC1a DNA, which caused their cells to start producing the protein, showed anxiety (freezing behaviour) when breathing CO2. But it only worked if the virus was injected into the amygdala, not nearby regions.

This is a nice series of experiments which shows convincingly that ASIC1a mediates acidosis-related anxiety, at least in mice. What's most interesting however is that it also seems to involved in other kinds of anxiety and fear. The ASIC1a knockout mice were slightly less anxious in general; injections of an alkaline solution prevented CO2-related anxiety, but also reduced anxiety caused by other scary things, such as the smell of a cat.

The authors conclude by proposing that amygdala pH might be involved in fear more generally
Thus, we speculate that when fear-evoking stimuli activate the amygdala, its pH may fall. For example, synaptic vesicles release protons, and intense neural activity is known to lower pH.
But this is, as they say, speculation. The link between CO2, pH and panic attacks seems more solid. As the authors of another recent paper put it
We propose that the shared characteristics of CO2/H+ sensing neurons overlap to a point where threatening disturbances in brain pH homeostasis, such as those produced by CO2 inhalations, elicit a primal emotion that can range from breathlessness to panic.
ResearchBlogging.orgZiemann, A., Allen, J., Dahdaleh, N., Drebot, I., Coryell, M., Wunsch, A., Lynch, C., Faraci, F., Howard III, M., & Welsh, M. (2009). The Amygdala Is a Chemosensor that Detects Carbon Dioxide and Acidosis to Elicit Fear Behavior Cell, 139 (5), 1012-1021 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2009.10.029

In the Brain, Acidity Means Anxiety

According to Mormon author and fruit grower "Dr" Robert O. Young, pretty much all diseases are caused by our bodies being too acidic. By adopting an "alkaline lifestyle" to raise your internal pH (lower pH being more acidic), you'll find that
if you maintain the saliva and the urine pH, ideally at 7.2 or above, you will never get sick. That’s right you will NEVER get sick!
Wow. Important aspects of the alkaline lifestyle include eating plenty of the right sort of fruits and vegetables, ideally ones grown by Young, and taking plenty of nutritional supplements. These don't come cheap, but when the payoff is being free of all diseases, who could complain?

Young calls his amazing theory the Alkavorian Approach™, aka the New Biology. Almost everyone else calls it quack medicine and pseudoscience. Because it is quack medicine and pseudoscience. But a paper just published in Cell suggests an interesting role for pH in, of all things, anxiety and panic - The amygdala is a chemosensor that detects carbon dioxide and acidosis to elicit fear behavior.

The authors, Ziemann et al, were interested in a protein called Acid Sensing Ion Channel 1a, ASIC1a, which as the name suggests, is acid-sensitive. Nerve cells expressing ASIC1a are activated when the fluid around them becomes more acidic.

One of the most common causes of acidosis (a fall in body pH) is carbon dioxide, CO2. Breathing is how we get rid of the CO2 produced by our bodies; if breathing is impaired, for example during suffocation, CO2 levels rise, and pH falls as CO2 is converted to carbonic acid in the bloodstream.

In previous work, Ziemann et al found that the amygdala contains lots of ASIC1a. This is intriguing, because the amygdala is a brain region believed to be involved in fear, anxiety and panic, although it has other functions as well. It's long been known that breathing air with added CO2 can trigger anxiety and panic, especially in people vulnerable to panic attacks.

What's unclear is why this happens; various biological and psychological theories have been proposed. Ziemann et al set out to test the idea that ASIC1a in the amygdala mediates anxiety caused by CO2.

In a number of experiments they showed that mice genetically engineered have no ASIC1a (knockouts) were resistant to the anxiety-causing effects of air containing 10% or 20% CO2. Also, unlike normal mice, the knockouts were happy to enter a box with high CO2 levels - normal mice hated it. Injections of a weakly acidic liquid directly into the amygdala caused anxiety in normal mice, but not in the knockouts.

Most interestingly, they found that knockout mice could be made to fear CO2 by giving them ASIC1a in the amygdala. Knockouts injected in the amygdala with a virus containing ASIC1a DNA, which caused their cells to start producing the protein, showed anxiety (freezing behaviour) when breathing CO2. But it only worked if the virus was injected into the amygdala, not nearby regions.

This is a nice series of experiments which shows convincingly that ASIC1a mediates acidosis-related anxiety, at least in mice. What's most interesting however is that it also seems to involved in other kinds of anxiety and fear. The ASIC1a knockout mice were slightly less anxious in general; injections of an alkaline solution prevented CO2-related anxiety, but also reduced anxiety caused by other scary things, such as the smell of a cat.

The authors conclude by proposing that amygdala pH might be involved in fear more generally
Thus, we speculate that when fear-evoking stimuli activate the amygdala, its pH may fall. For example, synaptic vesicles release protons, and intense neural activity is known to lower pH.
But this is, as they say, speculation. The link between CO2, pH and panic attacks seems more solid. As the authors of another recent paper put it
We propose that the shared characteristics of CO2/H+ sensing neurons overlap to a point where threatening disturbances in brain pH homeostasis, such as those produced by CO2 inhalations, elicit a primal emotion that can range from breathlessness to panic.
ResearchBlogging.orgZiemann, A., Allen, J., Dahdaleh, N., Drebot, I., Coryell, M., Wunsch, A., Lynch, C., Faraci, F., Howard III, M., & Welsh, M. (2009). The Amygdala Is a Chemosensor that Detects Carbon Dioxide and Acidosis to Elicit Fear Behavior Cell, 139 (5), 1012-1021 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2009.10.029

BOM DIA A TODOS!!


VAMOS DIZER NÃO AO ESPANTALHO DA VIOLÊNCIA VIRTUAL!!
ELE NÃO PODE PERMANECER ENTRE NÓS. VAMOS ESPANTAR OS ESPANTALHOS DO MAL.
http://nobosqueocidental.weblog.com.pt/Scarecrow.jpg

APÓS MUITO TRABALHO, CONSEGUIR ORGANIZAR O BLOG DE DE NOVO.

INFELIZMENTE, NÃO SE SABE O POR QUE, A MALDADE, POR PARTE DE PESSOAS TÃO INTELIGENTES E SÁBIAS, CONSEGUEM FAZER OS ABSURDOS NOS BLOGS AS PESSOAS BOAS.
ACHO QUE NÃO SÃO NEM INTELIGENTES E NEM SÁBIAS.
PORQUE, SE ASSIM O FOSSE, NÃO USARIAM ESTA MEIO DE COMUNICAÇÃO PARA DESTRUIR O QUE É FEITO COM TANTO CARINHO E DEDICAÇÃO.
MUITAS PESSOAS, JÁ FORAM LESADAS.
NADA É FEITO, OU SE É, AINDA CONTINUAM FAZENDO AS MALDADES.

PESSOAS, ASSIM, DEVERIAM DE SEREM DESCOBERTAS E NÃO TEREM MAIS O DIREITO DE UTILIZAR E INTERNET.
ASSIM COMO TANTAS PESSOAS DE BOAS ÍNDOLE, EXISTEM AQUELAS QUE ESTÃO AI, SÓ PARA ATRAPALHAR.
MAS, CADA UM DE NÓS, QUE SÃO PESSOAS HONESTAS, DEDICADAS, QUE USAM ESTE MEIO PARA COMPARTILHAR, APRENDER E SE SOCIALIZAR, NÃO VÃO SE DEIXAR ABATER, POR TANTO POUCA MESQUINHARIA.
PESSOAS DESUMANAS, QUE USAM DA VIOLÊNCIA VIRTUAL, DEVERIA DE SER RISCADA DESSE MEIO. INFELIZMENTE, AINDA NÃO SE CONSEGUIU CRIAR UMA VACINA CONTRA ESSES DITOS TRANSGRESSORES VIRTUAIS.
POR ISSO ELES ESTÃO AI, PARA ACABAR COM OS BLOGS, EMAIL DE OUTRAS PESSOAS. QUE SÃO HONESTAS, VERDADEIRAS E SINCERAS.

FICA AQUI O MEU PROTESTO CONTRA AS PESSOAS DO MAL.
TEMOS QUE DIZER NÃO A VIOLÊNCIA VIRTUAL...
FORA ESPANTALHO DO MAL.



VAMOS SER FELIZES E COMPARTILHAR MUITAS ALEGRIAS.
SOMOS MAIS NÓS. SOMOS FELIZES UNIDOS.


VENHA CONFERIR:Blog Coletivo-Uma Interação de Amigos


Poetas-Um Vôo Livre

Sinal de Liberdade-uma expressão de sentimento

Meus Mimos!