May. 18th, 2006

Nice!

May. 18th, 2006 10:37 am
synnoveaevael: (Rose Grrl)
[livejournal.com profile] wyrdcousin got some awesome pix of the faire last weekend!

Check'em out!

There's a particularly awful one of me and my boyfriend. hehehe

*giggles*

May. 18th, 2006 11:14 am
synnoveaevael: (Kittie - BWAHAHAHA!)
I adore [livejournal.com profile] thebestmarkever's livejournal.

This shit is just too funnie.

Ugh.

May. 18th, 2006 11:32 am
synnoveaevael: (Sometimes I purr)
I felt all dipshitty yesterday.

I went to CVS to pick up my birth control pills, and I got a replacement Extra Care card since I lost the one on my keys.

So as I'm walking towards my car, I'm pulling apart the big plastic piece they attach all the big card and the two key fobs to.

I walk the 20 feet to my car and blink.

I'm suddenly missing a key fob.

I have one I'm working out of the plastic, and the big card, but the mini card is missing.

I look on the ground.

I walk to the store.

I don't see it.

What the fuck?

I start thinking I need to up my thyroid meds. When I'm off of them or the dosage is too low, I get distracted, confused, hungry, tired. I don't FEEL right. I'm not happy. There's someone inside of me begging to have the veil ripped off my brain.

I felt sorta dippy last night. Laughing at everything. Making my roommate smell bad cheese.

This morning I go to take one of my sugar pills, and my thyroid meds. And since I'm on the happy preventative medicine, it says what DAYS I've taken my stuff on.



I missed yesterday's pills.

I came in late (traffic, moving slow, whatever). I THOUGHT I took them but I didn't.

I can't believe missing one day made me all loopie like that.

*sigh*

I feel better today. Of course I'm slightly.. speedie since I took two of everything.

Mew.
synnoveaevael: (Empire - Shoplifter)
THE CONFESSIONAL IS NOW OPEN!

IP loggin' is off.

This will be for today and tomorrow only!! ENJOY!

Orrrr, feel free to ask a question if you have no proper confession :)
synnoveaevael: (Sworn to secrecy)

Don't find fault, find a remedy.




A-fucking-men.

Ahh.

May. 18th, 2006 01:52 pm
synnoveaevael: (Blush)
Relationship advice.

Easy tips from your local intardweb news

QUESTION: My wife says I'm not romantic enough. Frankly, I'm a nuts-and-bolts guy, not the Prince Charming type. What does she mean by "romance"?

How can I add it to my marriage?

*SQUEEEE*

May. 18th, 2006 04:03 pm
synnoveaevael: (TBC - Dance)
Cervical Cancer Vaccine Gets FDA Panel OK

By ANDREW BRIDGES, Associated Press Writer
10 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - A vaccine that blocks viruses that cause most cervical cancer is safe and effective and should be approved, a federal panel recommended Thursday. The drug maker said the vaccine could slash global deaths from the No. 2 cancer in women by more than two-thirds.


A Food and Drug Administration advisory committee voted 13-0 on five separate times to endorse Merck and Co.'s Gardasil. The anticipated cost of the vaccine, administered in three shots over six months, is $300 to $500 — a possible impediment to widespread vaccination campaigns.

The drug protects against the two types of human papillomavirus (HPV) believed responsible for about 70 percent of cervical cancer cases. The vaccine also protects against two other virus types that cause 90 percent of genital wart cases. All four virus types are sexually transmitted.

The FDA is not required to follow the recommendations of its outside panels of experts, but usually does. An agency decision is expected by June 8.

HPV is the most common sexually transmitted disease. It affects more than 50 percent of sexually active adults. The cervical cancer it can cause kills each year about 290,000 women worldwide, including 3,500 women in the United States, where regular pap smears often detect precancerous lesions and early cancer.

"This is certainly a wonderful, good step in addition to our screening processes" in helping eradicate cervical cancer, said Dr. Monica Farley, who heads the advisory panel. She is a bacterial infectious disease expert at the Emory University School of Medicine.

Making their case for approval, Merck officials suggested that development could make Gardasil the biggest advance in preventing cervical cancer since the pap test.

"Gardasil has the potential to meet an unmet medical need as the first vaccine to prevent cervical cancer," Merck's Dr. Patrick Brill-Edwards told the Vaccine and Related Biological Products advisory committee.

Several speakers said the vaccine should not replace screening. Merck said the drug is not intended to do that.

"We would like to see the FDA mandate some sort of labeling or other mechanism to communicate to health care providers and patients the continued need for regular cervical screening," said Amy Allina, program director of the National Women's Health Network.

Merck said the vaccine could be used in females age 9 to 26, but would work best when given to girls before they begin having sex.

Pending action by the FDA, the national Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices will decide in June whether to endorse routine vaccination with the vaccine.

The committee's HPV vaccine group is recommending giving the vaccine to girls 11 and 12. The 15-member committee of experts who advise the government will consider recommendations for females 13 to 26.

The committee's HPV vaccine workgroup is recommending the vaccine be given to girls 11 and 12, and the committee will consider recommendations for females 13 to 26.

Early opposition to Gardasil was based on concerns it could encourage sexual activity in the young. But that largely faded away because of vaccine's potential for reducing cancer.

FDA reviewers said Gardasil appears safe and effective, according to agency documents. One agency reviewer, Dr. Nancy Miller, told the advisory committee that Merck submitted data to support the use of the vaccine in females 9 to 26.

Miller said Gardasil does not necessarily protect against one or more of the four viruses in people already infected before they get the vaccine, and can increase their risk for precursors to cervical cancer.

Also, the drug does not protect against infection from the many other virus strains not included in the vaccine. In addition, the FDA staff highlighted five cases where children with birth defects were born to women who received the vaccine around the time of conception.

Merck, based in Whitehouse Station, N.J., developed the vaccine and tested it in more than 27,000 females and males.

Thursday's discussion focused on its use in preventing HPV-related disease in girls and women, including those as young as 9. But only 250 9-year-old girls and boys received Gardasil in trials.
synnoveaevael: (CSI - 99 bottles)
Got the ol' legs waxed.

Went to the same place as last time with Rajni but had the competent waxer. HA! Who woulda thunk it.

She was great. Even waxed the five hairs on my feet. Fantastic.

ANNNDD!!! I've been seeing gas everywhere for 2.89 and higher.

Down the street from me? $2.77. YOU BET YOUR ASS I made the world's sharpest turn and filled up my tank.

Half a tank cost me $26.18. I HAVE A SMALL TANK! Jesus.

CSI!!!!!

Uhm.

May. 18th, 2006 09:35 pm
synnoveaevael: (CSI - 99 bottles)
Randomness.

I was just made moderator on [livejournal.com profile] csi.

That's some pretty hot shit.

No one told me.

It was just done cause I said "hey, I tard out online 24/7".

HAHAH!

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