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Care For 4 Exiting Paintball Playing Tips?

  • Posted on July 2, 2009 at 2:21 pm

Paintball in the Olympics?

Many paintball players feel that paintball should be a sport played in the Olympic Games. Paintball is a very competitive sport that includes both strategy and teamwork. Some people look at many sports in the Olympics, and in comparison to paintball, they seem like a walk in the park. However, these sports have something that paintball has yet to accomplish, and that is international recognition and governing. There must be some sort of organization that defines and regulates the sport. A set of rules and regulations that is recognized by all countries that play the sport must also be in place. Paintball, even though it is one of the most rapid growing sports today, is mainly an American sport and does not yet have international recognition. This must happen before paintball will be considered for participation in the Olympics.

Getting Enough Players to the Paintball Field

Team sports are a lot of fun, but only work if there is an adequate amount of players. If you plan to play a winner-take-all paintball game, you will want at least four players. For team games, you should try to have at least six people. One way to make sure you have enough people to play is to plan the game early. Try to alert people to the game a week or two ahead of time, and then call as a reminder a few days before the game. Making sure you have enough players makes this process absolutely worth the effort. Once you and several other players have been able to make games on a consistent basis, you can start designating a couple times to meet every month.

What to Wear to a Paintball Game

There are some recommendations you may want to consider when it comes to clothing at a paintball game. Clothing that covers your arms and legs helps prevent bruising. Avoid bright clothing to increase your stealth. Obviously, you do not want to wear nice clothes to the game, since they will inevitably get paint and dirt on them. The most important thing is that you have fun. Wear comfortable clothes that you can run in.

How to Set Up Target Practices for Paintball

Target practice is one of the best things that you can do during your paintball practice. Target practice can involve expensive props and materials, but in reality you do not need these to have an effective practice session. As with any sport, practice will go best if you master the basics before moving on. Begin with having a single target that you shoot at from a standing or kneeling position. After this skill is perfected, you can progress to other positions and targets. These skills will be ones that you will frequently use as you participate in paintball games. Repetition is key when establishing yourself as an accurate shooter. Therefore, if you need to learn how to take a running shot, then practice for a week or so taking many running shots at a moving or a stand-alone target.

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Trichotillomania: And that is?

  • Posted on July 1, 2009 at 9:04 pm

Trichotillomania (TTM), what I’ll call “trich,” is a fascinating, albeit brutal, mind variance (my stigma-reducing term for “mental illness”). Now, if you’ve elected to read an article addressing treatment you more than likely have a pretty good idea as to just what trich is. But to make sure no one’s left in the dark I’m going to offer some details.

The DSM-IV-TR, the book of formal psychiatric diagnoses, categorizes trichotillomania as an impulse control disorder. That would make it akin to pathological nail-biting, fire-setting, stealing, gambling, skin-picking, and explosive behavior. But some would categorize trich as an anxiety disorder, similar to obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Others believe trich is a tic disorder, even an addiction. It’s interesting that trichotillomania has been recognized as a “disorder” for only about twenty years.

Okay – hair is where it’s at for those dealing with trich. And that means hair – anywhere. The preferred sites are the scalp, eyebrows, and eyelashes. But hair on the face, nose, pubic and perirectal areas, chest, arms, and legs are fair game. At its worst, pulling behavior can become so intense and chronic that it leads to very noticeable bald spots. And in some ten percent of trich cases the pulled hair is eaten (trichophagia) causing what’s called a bezoar; a fancy medical term for, in this case, a hairball. These may require some pretty heavy medical intervention. Most often used in the act of pulling are fingers, tweezers, pins, and other creative “pullers.”

A trich episode is often induced by a stressful event or mood situation. However, an episode may also emerge in the midst of calm. No matter how you slice it, the end result is an “urge.” And quite often a sense of relief is realized after the urge has been acted upon. Though trich behaviors can be conscious acts, they’re very frequently performed unconsciously, almost as though the individual is in a trance. In most cases, trich doesn’t result in a significant compromise in mental and emotional functioning; however, the social ramifications may be severe. I mean, we’re dealing with bald spots and, perhaps, wigs, funky hairstyles, and some very creative make-up schemes. Needless to say, peers and friends may run from a trich sufferer, resulting in a head full of very low self-esteem. And for the record, because of stigma and the potential for alienation cases of trich are highly under-reported.

Trich’s average age of onset is between the ages of nine and fourteen and it’s much more prevalent in the first twenty years of life. It presents 75-95% of the time in females. Though, again, reporting of trich is a dicey proposition it’s thought that up to 5% of the world’s population is affected. As with many mind variances, heredity is a major factor.

So, now that we have a pretty good understanding as to what trich is, how ‘bout we take a look at some management strategies and techniques. The psychotherapy of choice for trich is a form of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) known as Habit Reversal Training (HRT). Foundational in HRT is helping the sufferer “connect-the-dots” in terms of awareness so they’ll come to understand their hair-pulling is a conditioned response to an event or situation. This is super important because all too often, as was said earlier, the individual may be in what appears to be a trance in the midst of a hair-pulling episode, totally unaware of what it is they’re doing. So, indeed, the individual needs to come to grips with his/her behavior and the environmental circumstances at the time. Pivotal in this endeavor is a detailed behavior/circumstances journal that can reviewed by both the sufferer and his/her therapist.

The next order of business is some body work. First up is learning progressive muscle relaxation techniques, which are to be practiced on a daily basis. And then the sufferer learns techniques of diaphragmatic breathing, breathing at or below the diaphragm instead of up in the chest or collarbones. A muscle tensing activity known as “competing response” is introduced. This is a very cool and precise movement protocol that is the reverse of hair-pulling and considered to be physically incompatible with it. Finally, when the individual is ready all of the body techniques are pulled together to form what’s called a “full habit reversal response.” And it’s all about establishing a life-theme of relaxation to prevent trich behaviors, as well as developing a coping strategy should the urge to pull present.

So much of what we’ve just discussed is related to the Buddhist phenomenon known as “mindfulness,” a clear-minded, in-the-present-moment, self-observational technique that emphasizes viewing self without criticism or judgment. And as we’re talking about the impact of mindfulness on urges, here’s a neat quotation from Buddhist nun and Tibetan Buddhism teacher and author, Pema Chodron. “The root (of mindfulness practice) is experiencing the itch as well as the urge to scratch, and then not acting it out.”

Now, one can incorporate other techniques to supplement HRT, one of these being Stimulus Control (SC). This is a behavioral technique that helps individuals identify, avoid, or change the activities, environments, routines, and circumstances they’ve associated with their hair-pulling episodes. This is a matter of awareness and management, deleting old associations and replacing them with freshly learned connections between urges to pull and non-destructive behaviors. By the way, this paragraph is based in “neuroplasticity,” the neurobiological concept that posits neurons that consistently work together form long-lasting functional bonds. And it’s important to know that neuroplasticity also says not-so-healthy neural bonds can willfully be broken and, indeed, replaced with new and healthier connections.

To add a bit of frosting on the HRT/SC cake, learn and practice techniques of positive self-talk, guided imagery, and visualization. And let’s not forget about medication. The selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants paroxetine (Paxil), sertraline (Zoloft), fluvoxemine (Luvox), citalopram (Celexa), and fluoxetine (Prozac) have provided relief for trich sufferers. As with any mind variance, the combination of psychotherapy and meds provides the greatest knockout punch.

So there you have it, the scoop on trichotillomania – what it is and how to manage it. As you leave this article please engrain in your minds the importance of awareness, daily practice of your management techniques, and coming to the understanding that the reality of life suggests the occasional pulling “oops” will occur. All is not lost!

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Atypical Depression

  • Posted on July 1, 2009 at 7:36 pm

Atypical depression, a subtype of major depression, is the most common form of depression today. People who suffer atypical depression exhibit all the normal symptoms of depression but they also react to external positive experiences in a positive way. Atypical depression sufferers respond to their environment, enjoying the company of friends but slipping back into deep depression when alone or faced with a stressful situation. It is this aspect of atypical depression that differentiates it from melancholic depression in which external positive experiences still result in depressed feelings.

People who suffer from atypical depression also exhibit other symptoms that aren’t normally associated with “normal” depression including:

• Increase in appetite with a weight gain of ten or more pounds.
• Hypersomnia -over sleeping of more than 10 hours per day.
• Leaden paralysis of the arms and legs
• Long term pattern of sensitivity to rejection in personal situations that causes social or work related withdrawal.

In 1998 Dr. Andrew A. Nierenberg, associate director of the depression clinical and research program at Massachusetts General Hospital, published a study that found 42% of participants suffered from atypical depression, 12% had melancholic depression, 14% had both depression subtypes and the remaining did not suffer from depression.

Studies have also found that atypical depression begins earlier in a person’s life than other forms of depression with most sufferers beginning to show symptoms in their teenage years. Those who suffer from atypical depression are also at greater risk of suffering from other mental disorders such as social phobias, avoidant personality disorder or body dysmorphic disorder. Atypical depression is more prevalent in females than males as well, with nearly 70% of it’s sufferers being women.

Treating atypical depression is an ongoing process. Research has shown that MAOIs such as Nardil or Parnate work reasonably well as do the newer SSRI medications (Lexapro, Prozac, Zoloft). Most patients prefer the SSRIs because they do not exhibit the unpleasant side affects of the MAOIs.

It is also important that if you or someone you know suffers from atypical depression that you or they seek psychiatric help. Atypical depression is not easy to diagnose the treatment choices can vary from patient to patient. A general care practitioner does not have the expertise to differentiate between the subtypes of depression and may not know the best course of treatment for their patient.

Andrew Bicknell is a writer and Webmaster of Depression and You.com. Visit his website for more information about Atypical Depression and other depression disorders.

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