My slice of Pi

It is no secret that 2013 was the most emotional year of our lives.  Having lost my father at a time when I was questioning my existing relationships kicked off the year. And it was mostly downhill from there.

The week before my father died, I watched a movie on my own for the first time after a very long time.  I remember feeling hurt, confused, and more than ever, clueless.  This Ang Lee film was showing then, and I heard nothing but praises for its cinematography and perfect adaptation.

I walked out enlightened and braver, as if I needed it because in five days, I will lose the man who loved me the best.

Life of Pi

These words more than lifted my spirit.  And I believe my faith strengthened as each trial came.

Because this point in my life is exactly where I have always hoped for and prayed to be.

Have a great weekend.

A personal favorite

I am thoroughly enjoying the National Poetry Month theme in this blog.  Working for an industry with rigid standards and never-ending rules quite dulled my creative senses.

But I have never ever forgotten Desiderata.  Written by Max Ehrmann in 1927, it wasn’t until my sophomore high school teacher read this out loud did I hear about it.  Since then, I’ve been so completely enamored by it.  I believe this is one of those pieces that I memorized in just a few hours.  The truth, honesty and beauty of every single word in it resonates, and whenever I feel dejected, discriminated, rejected — basically all time lows — this piece of art never failed to bring me back to solid ground.

My favorite line:

Go placidly amid the noise and haste, and remember what peace there may be in silence.

I am a very talkative person, a constant multitasker, and more often than not, I forget to silence my mind.  This is such an eloquent reminder.

I hope you enjoy this as much as I do.

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Photo from Kayholdsworth.com

Hope for Alzheimer’s

I don’t very often feature news in this blog, but this one is feature-worthy.

I woke up to the best news this week:  Scientists reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s.

As someone who has a family background of this illness, this is probably one of the better news ever.  I am now itching to look up and read what they did with their gene therapy experiment.  I am just overjoyed.

I hope this paves the way for the development of a drug or a cure to Alzheimer’s.  As much as I agree that pictures last longer, memories mean more.  And this is just… amazing.

Thank you for the good news, AFP and Rappler!

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Scientists reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s

The gene therapy study is hoped to lead to the development of new drugs to treat the incurable disease
Agence France-Presse
Published 11:11 AM, Apr 24, 2014 | Updated 11:11 AM, Apr 24, 2014

GENE THERAPY. Spanish scientists injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer’s, into the hippocampus in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

GENE THERAPY. Spanish scientists injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer’s, into the hippocampus in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

MADRID, Spain – Spanish scientists have for the first time used gene therapy to reverse memory loss in mice with Alzheimer’s, an advance that could lead to new drugs to treat the disease, they said Wednesday, April 23.

The Autonomous University of Barcelona team injected a gene which causes the production of a protein that is blocked in patients with Alzheimer’s into the hippocampus – a region of the brian essential to memory processing – in mice that were in the initial stages of the disease.

“The protein that was reinstated by the gene therapy triggers the signals needed to activate the genes involved in long-term memory consolidation,” the university said in a statement.

Gene therapy involves transplanting genes into a patient’s cells to correct an otherwise incurable disease caused by a failure of one or another gene.

The finding was published in The Journal of Neuroscience and it follows 4 years of research.

“The hope is that this study could lead to the development of pharmaceutical drugs that can activate these genes in humans and allow for the recovery of memory,” the head of the research team, Carlos Saura, told Agence France-Presse.

Alzheimer’s, caused by toxic proteins that destroy brain cells, is the most common form of dementia.

Worldwide, 35.6 million people suffer from the fatal degenerative disease, which is currently incurable, and there are 7.7 million new cases every year, according to a 2012 report from the World Health Organization.

In 2010 the total global societal cost of dementia was estimated to be $604 billion, according to Alzheimer’s Disease International, a federation of Alzheimer associations around the world. – Rappler.com

Mouse image from Shutterstock