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WHEE Spotlight
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WHEEKLY ARTICLE
WHEE for Pregnancy, Labor and Delivery – Part 1
Daniel J. Benor, MD, ABIHM
A grand adventure is about to begin. - Winnie the Pooh
WHEE can be of enormous help in pregnancy, labor and delivery.
Having a baby is a very sp...
WHEE TESTIMONIALS
Personal Use Of WHEE
Dear Dan, I am continually amazed with the results of the WHEE session you did with me in Phoenix. Every time I revisit the event of losing my beautiful home - I see it as a beautiful memory forever filed in my consciousness as an achievement, to have known, felt and experienced.&n...
FEATURED THERAPIST
Featured Practitioner (July 2010)
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Photo #2 (January 2008)
INFRARED ANDROMEDA
We are born inside the gates with the power to create life And to take it away The world is our temple The world is our church Heaven's here on earth
If we have faith in humankind And respect for what is earthly And an unfaltering belief In peace and love and understanding This could be heaven here on earth
Heaven's in our heart
- Tracy Chapman, Heaven's Here On Earth (CD)
 Credit: Pauline Barmby (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA) et al., JPL, Caltech, NASA
Our Milky Way Galaxy is but one of countless galaxies with even more countless stars, with even more countless planets in this amazing universe. Life will survive - somewhere - if we destroy planet Earth.
I shudder that I am looking for such consolations, as global heating looms nearer and closer, while general indifference and self-interest prevail.
This wide, detailed Spitzer Space Telescope view features infrared light from dust (red) and old stars (blue) in Andromeda, a massive spiral galaxy a mere 2.5 million light-years away. In fact, with over twice the diameter of our own Milky Way, Andromeda is the largest nearby galaxy. Andromeda's population of bright young stars define its sweeping spiral arms in visible light images, but here the infrared view clearly follows the lumpy dust lanes heated by the young stars as they wind even closer to the galaxy's core. Constructed to explore Andromeda's infrared brightness and stellar populations, the full mosaic image is composed of about 3,000 individual frames. Two smaller companion galaxies, NGC 205 (below) and M32 (above) are also included in the combined fields. The data confirm that Andromeda (aka M31) houses around 1 trillion stars, compared to 4 hundred billion for the Milky Way.
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