Sunday, 27 February 2011

apple stories (article)


(NaturalNews) Apples are an important source of phytonutrients. These plant-derived chemical compounds are associated with positive health effects. Many of the phytonutrients found in apples are strong antioxidants, fighting free radicals. When people in the United States consume fruits, 22% of antioxidant compounds (also called phenols) come from apples. This makes apples the greatest source of phenols in the American diet.
You have heard the old saying: "An apple a day keeps the doctor away." The original version of that is actually: "An apple before going to bed makes the doctor beg his bread." In our day with out-of-control health 'care' costs, the picture this saying evokes is an attractive one (not that we wish anyone ill).
Apples have many benefits. They are not hearty suppliers of many of the well known nutrients, like vitamin C or folic acid. However, they are a good source of fiber, antioxidants, and potassium. In fact many old herbalists recommended apple cider vinegar precisely for the benefits of its potassium content.
They are an excellent source of antioxidants (phenols). Compared to many other commonly consumed fruits in the United States, they have the second highest level of antioxidant activity. Perhaps more importantly, they have the highest ratio of free phenols. Free phenols are not bound to other compounds in the fruit. That allows them to be more available for absorption into the bloodstream.

Whole apples, especially with their peels, have been found to have a number of powerful antioxidant effects. The total antioxidant activity of 100 grams of whole apple is equivalent to the antioxidant effect of about 1500 mg of vitamin C. However, 100 g of apples has only about 5.7 mg of vitamin C. Clearly, the antioxidant activity of apples comes from other nutrients like quercetin, catechin, phloridzin, and chlorogenic acid.

Studies have found numerous health benefits related to the consumption of apples:
★ Apple's two types of fiber help regulate the movement of the bowels – in both directions. Both insoluble fiber and soluble fiber (pectin, found primarily in the skins) help relieve constipation. The insoluble fiber works like roughage, sweeping debris from the digestive tract. Pectin acts as a stool softener, drawing water into the stool, increasing stool bulk, and making it easier to pass. On the other hand, because pectin firms up an excessively loose stool, it's also used to treat diarrhe
a.

★ Both soluble and insoluble fibers in apples have cancer-protective activity since they relieve constipation and send potentially toxic substances out with the stools. Pectin grabs toxins (heavy metals like lead and mercury), and flushes them out of the body.

★ Quercetin (a flavinoid or pigment which gives apples their color) from apples has shown in studies to inhibit growth of cancer cells in the lungs, breast, prostate, liver, and colon.

★ British researchers found that ½ to 1 liter of apple, grapefruit, or orange juice daily, increased urinary pH value and citric acid excretion. These factor significantly decrease the risk of forming calcium oxalate kidney stones.

★ Animal studies show that apples lower LDL ("bad") cholesterol. At the same time, they raise beneficial HDL cholesterol. The laboratory animals studied produced less cholesterol. They also excreted more cholesterol in their feces when fed apples, pears and peaches. Apples, however, had the greatest cholesterol-lowering effect.

★ Daily consumption of quercetin from apples and cloudy apple juice may help reduce the damage caused by the "bad" type of cholesterol and protect against heart disease by slowing the oxidation process involved in the build-up of arterial plaque.

★ The two types of fiber in apples provide a double whammy on cholesterol. Insoluble fiber latches onto LDL cholesterol in the digestive tract, sweeping it out of the body. Its soluble fiber (pectin) reduces the amount of LDL cholesterol produced in the liver.

★ Apples' antioxidants protect VLDL and LDL ("bad") cholesterol from oxidation. Adding just one large apple (about 2/3 of a pound) to the daily diet has been shown to decrease serum cholesterol 8-11%. Eating 2 large apples a day has lowered cholesterol levels by up to 16%!

★ Apples derive most of their natural sweetness from fructose (not the same as in high fructose corn sweetener). Natural fructose is a simple sugar, but one which is broken down slowly. This property, especially when combined with apples' hefty dose of fiber, helps to keep blood sugar levels stable for type 2 diabetics.

★ When researchers put together a mixture containing only the currently identified bioactive compounds in apple juice (chemicals like proanthocyanidins and quercetin). The chemical mixture was ineffective in inhibiting the growth of colon cancer cells.

★ Quercitin, one of the most important antioxidant flavonoids in apples, was tested by itself in laboratory animals. It had no protective effect.

★ Apple flesh and apple juice were tested separately. They provided less than a tenth the benefit of the whole apple.

★ A combination of apple pectin and apple phenols lowered cholesterol and triglycerides to a much greater extent than either apple pectin or phenols a
lone in recent studies.



A review study looks at the results of many other studies. One such study published in Nutrition Journal analyzed 85 studies. Apples appeared most consistently linked to reduced risk of cancer, heart disease, asthma, and type 2 diabetes as compared to other fruits and vegetables. Eating apples was also associated with increased lung function and increased weight loss.
Apples' protective effects against free radical damage to cholesterol reach their peak at three hours following apple consumption and drop off after 24 hours, providing yet another good reason to eat a whole fresh apple a day. In many studies, apples worked in a dose-dependent manner: the more apples eaten, the more protection.
So add an apple (or two, or even three) to your daily regimen and reap the benefits.


Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/025013_apple_apples_fiber.html

winding road...my favourite song....

me,ean,,being influenced a lot by j-pop music,,,there's a lot of japanese songs that really moved me..although i don't understand the lyrics, still, them touched me,,,it doesn't matter about the lyrics, just hearing the music, i feel that i am totally lost in new world...My favourite j-pop musician are Scandal ( i really love their song called Shoujo S,  Yumemiru Tsubasa and BEAUteen!!) . I also enjoy songs from B'z (incibu zenbu), Yui (Rolling Star,  Goodbye Days, Tomorrow's Way), Aqua time ( Velonica, Sen no Yoru wo Koete, Niji, Stay Gol,  Plumeria ~Hana Uta~), nana mikashima (glamorous sky) and more..
                                                    AQUA TIME
                                                   SCANDAL
                                              YUI
                                                   PORUNO GRAFITTI
usually, i got to know the songs by watching Japanese anime,,.they usually use the songs for original soundtrack...my opinion,, Japanese songs are more artistic and nice to hear,,they also inspirational besides their unique style of fashion,.no wonder they known as the music power house after America. i also into in Japanese dramas.. 


Lately, i kept playing a song again and again,,why??,,i don't know either,
somehow, i feel that this song courageous me when i am in sad mood. There is a story behind this song..Actually , i want to download other songs but mistakenly downloaded this song. first  time i heard this song, i felt this song was boring and lame, but after listen it in several times, i felt in love with this song and addicted to it..it feel so relaxing and calm every time i listen to it..when i hear this song , i thought this song is about giving hopes for people who despair but then, i'm shocked after know the real mean of this song..This song is called WINDING ROAD by Poruno Grafitti, here,i would like to share the translation of Winding Road lyric:



Winding Road
On this long, long journey, I fell in love with you
The rainy moon of the changing seasons softly wets my heart
If time could change something, please, please
Quietly stop when I'm just walking with you
Do we really suit each other
Walking under that single, sad umbrella
On the winding road continuing near the waterside?
Because I still love you, without honestly reacting to
This rain pouring on me, I laugh again, this is all a lie
Our deeply, deeply entwined fingers quietly separate
As my final show of strength for you
But truly, I don't want to go
From now until forever, I doubt I'll ever forget
This eternity which we definitely felt
Even if you or I fall in love
Though my feelings contain no lie, I just love you
We ran past each other someplace
And our buttons became so that they didn't undo
Winter is almost here
Before our fingers numb with frostbite
It would be nice if we separate at last
We're no match for this chilly wind
So if we have any warmth left, let this be where we stop


this lyrics impress me with the beautiful words used, but in the same time it gives a sad feeling because it is about a love with sad ending...hope you guys enjoy it like me...sayonara for now...




MY WINDING ROAD



Friday, 25 February 2011

Basho (article)

Published: February 2008


 On the Poet’s Trail
Footsteps fall softly
Following the path
Of Japan’s haiku master.


By Howard Norman
 “Each day is a journey, and the journey itself home,” the poet Matsuo Basho wrote more than 300 years ago in the first entry of his masterpiece, Oku no Hosomichi, or Narrow Road to a Far Province. The words are on my mind as I prepare to walk in the footsteps of this revered poet, along his narrow road—the 1,200-mile route he followed through Japan in 1689. I confess that even to imagine doing so is a bit daunting. My late friend Helen Tanizaki, a linguist born and raised in Kyoto, told me, “Everyone I went to school with could recite at least one of Basho’s poems by heart. He was the first writer we read in any exciting or serious way.” Today thousands of people pilgrimage to Basho’s birthplace and burial shrine and travel parts of Basho’s Trail. After three centuries his Narrow Road, in print in English and many other languages, still speaks to readers around the world.Given the pernicious clamor and uncertainties of our own times, it’s easy for a modern reader to identify with the vague unease that Basho sometimes complained of. Whatever its source—Basho lived a turbulent life in a changing Japan—his melancholy was an intensifying element in much of his writing and an important part of what, in the end, propelled him on his journeys.Few details are known about Basho’s early life, but he is thought to have been born in 1644 in the castle town of Ueno, southeast of Kyoto. His father, a minor samurai, may have earned his keep teaching children to write. Many of Basho’s siblings probably became farmers. Basho, however, acquired a taste for literature, perhaps from the son of the local lord, whose service he joined. He learned the craft of poetry from Kigin, a prominent Kyoto poet, and early in his life was exposed to two lasting influences: Chinese poetry and the tenets of Taoism. After his master died, Basho began spending time in Kyoto, practicing a form called haikai, consisting of linked verses.In Basho’s time, the first verse in haikai was evolving into a poetic idiom of its own—haiku, whose unrhymed phrases of five, seven, and five syllables are meant to capture the essence of nature. Basho published his first haiku under various names, each having some personal significance. One, Tosei, or “green peach,” was an homage to the Chinese poet Li Po (“white plum”).In 1680 one of his students built the poet a small house near the River Sumida, and soon after, when another presented him with a stock of basho tree (a species of banana), the poet started writing under the name that has endured: Basho. Credible accounts of his life hold that during this period he was plagued with spiritual doubt and took up the study of Zen Buddhism. His despair only deepened in 1682, when his house burned to the ground in a fire that obliterated much of Edo. He wrote:

     Tired of cherry,
     Tired of this whole world,
     I sit facing muddy sake
     And black rice.
In 1694, the year of Basho’s death, the famed calligrapher Soryu wrote in an epilogue to the Narrow Road: “Once had my raincoat on, eager to go on a like journey, and then again content to sit imagining those rare sights. What a hoard of feelings, Kojin jewels, has his brush depicted! Such a journey! Such a man!” . Basho is said to have told a student that he often “held forth” with great Chinese and Japanese poets of the past, calling one such occasion a “conversation with ghost and ghost-to-be.” For over a year now I’ve been thinking of my journey as a kind of portable séance, an ongoing dialogue with Matsuo Basho. I will pray for decent weather (I’ll be traveling during typhoon season), good moon viewing, and quiet hours to fill notebooks. And step by step I will happily define myself as a ghost-to-be.
Howard Norman’s fiction includes The Bird Artist and Devotion, published last year. Michael Yamashita has photographed 20 stories for National Geographic, many from East Asia.This article was taken by  me at http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/02/bashos-trail/bashos-trail-interactive.html

What is Japanese Anime? (article)

In its simplest sense, anime refers to a cartoon television series or movie made in Japan. The word anime is derived from the word animation. In a Japanese anime series, the characters traditionally have extremely large, doe-like eyes and spiky or long hair. Anime is, however, more than just a "cartoon" to its fans. While traditional cartoons in the United States often rely on either humor or simplistic "good versus evil" plots, the typical anime series offers characters who evolve as the series moves along and deals with complex issues, including the reality and acceptance of death. Anime offers insight into the Japanese culture and often plays upon assorted Asian myths, symbols, and the martial arts.


Anime is an art form not intended simply for children. While some anime series are directed towards youngsters, most anime series are intended for adult audiences. The word, "Manga" is often used when discussing anime, but they are by no means the same. Manga refers to Japanese comics. In essence, manga is the book form of anime, and many popular anime series started out as manga. The word, "otaku," is often used to describe die-hard fans of anime and manga, meaning that these hard core fans live and breath to read Manga and watch anime.
The popularity of Japanese anime has spread world-wide. Fans across the globe now collect their favorite anime series in VHS and DVD form. These cartoons are available in a dubbed version, or with the original Japanese language and subtitles. While anime deals with serious issues, there are often humorous, perverse, and light-hearted moments in each series. Such scenes are often referred to as "ecchi."
The first anime television series, "Tetsuawan Atom" (The Mighty Atom), was released 1963 and ran in the United States that same year as "Astro Boy." The popularity of anime and manga has spread to other areas as well. The video gaming industry sells millions of games every year that are based on anime and manga characters. On toy shelves across the United States, popular anime and manga characters can be found in action figure form as well.  For more information,you can visit this site, http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-japanese-anime.htm. I hope u enjoy it.

Wednesday, 23 February 2011

1st time blogging...

me..clueless!!
"You have to create your own blog for your individual assignment",,,soon after my lecturer finished his words ,there are many things pop-up in my mind..Firstly, making blog might took a lot of my time. There are plenty others thing to do.Second, i am a kind of person who doesn't like to share my personal life with public, hence, blogging seems to reveal my thought and what's in my heart.Third, my English vocabularies and grammars are limited and not so well..even now, i don't know whether i use the correct grammar or not..so sorry for my badness..Lastly, i'm not really into with social networking like others teenagers,,,i admit that i do have Facebook and email,but i am quite passive using it...so,i found it quite hard for me to blogging for the first time. Luckily, my friends and our lecturer support and help me. All of us are in the same boat...Then, i found that blogging quite interesting since i started doing it although confusing at the beginning. Thanks to my lecturer  for giving us such an interesting assignment...i really hope that i do well for my blog. 

Tuesday, 22 February 2011

i wonder....

I wonder why the grass is green,
and why the wind is never seen.


who taught the birds to build a nest,
and told the trees to take a rest?


oh, and when the moon is not quite round,
where can the missing bit be found?


who lights the stars when they blow out,
and makes the lightning flash about?


who points the rainbow in the sky,
and hangs the fluffy clouds so high?


why is it now, do you suppose,
that dad won't tell me, if he knows?

This lovely poem by Jeannie Kirby reminds me childlike innocence and the natural curiosity a child has about the things he sees around him. In this poem, nature is seen through the eyes of a child who imagines trees taking a rest. He also believes that someone splashes lovely colours on the rainbow and hangs it up on fluffy clouds in the sky. When we were young, we probably thought about many things too. But, as we grow older, we began to take these things for granted. This is because most of us full of daily activity which make  us  forget to think about nature importance. This situation also happened to me, i never really care whatever happen around me,especially nature disaster, but then, after i read this poem, realize a lot things has changed from i was kid until i growing up as adult teenager. Now, have to start again to think and be responsible to nature environment which is give me a lot of great imagination.