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    BROtox

    April 24th 2012

    We have over a 30% male patient clientele..who receive all kinds of plastic surical treatments, eg eyelid surgery, liposculpture, to antiwrinkle injections.

    in the SMH, march 20th 2012….

    They call it “Brotox” – slang for Botox treatments for guys.

    Evan Lo Balbo had never heard of the word until his girlfriend suggested they do something to fight the mean signs of ageing on their faces.

    But there he was, a manly man, sitting in a reclining chair, Dr Richard Castellano pushing needles into his forehead.

    “I’ve popped zits that hurt more than that,” he said afterward. “It wasn’t bad at all.”

    Lo Balbo is among a growing number of guys getting Botox injections and facial fillers to improve their looks.

    The term “Brotox” isn’t new, but got a boost in January when Good Morning America did a profile on women who think their men need Botox and give it to them as gifts. For those versed in mash-up lingo, “Brotox” went mainstream, joining “bromance” and other “brocabulary” spoken from one “bro” to another.

    Men get Botox to look younger and gain confidence. They might be competing for a new job or trying to score a date. Too often, perhaps, people have told them that they look tired.

    “Today’s man is evolving,” Dr Castellano said. “Guys are feelling more comfortable with improving their appearance. They aren’t as scared.”

    Guys prefer Botox over face-lifts and other more extreme, expensive procedures because it’s quick without many side effects, he said.

    “They can come in for a few shots, then go back to work. And if they don’t like the results, they aren’t permanent,” the doctor said.

    Last year, more than 300,000 men in the US got Botox, according to figures from the American Society of Plastic Surgeons – a 10 per cent increase from the previous year – and numbers are also on the rise in Australia.

    Castellano’s office in Florida, has seen even more. The 39-year-old facial plastic surgeon estimates Botox use among his male clients has doubled. He uses it himself.

    Like their female counterparts, more men are starting treatments at a younger age. They prefer not to wait for visible signs of ageing in their 50s and 60s. They want to prevent them.

    Lo Balbo said he didn’t like what he saw in the mirror: new lines on his forehead and around his eyes. A graphic designer, he wants to look presentable for clients. Squinting at a computer all day only worsens the situation.

    But when his girlfriend, Heather Knox, recommended they both try some cosmetic pick-me-ups, he refused. What would his friends think? What would he tell people? A little more prodding and Lo Balbo changed his mind. He wanted to support his 31-year-old girlfriend and figured he might like the results.

    Getting the news past his roommate, an electrician, was the toughest part. “He was like, ‘Really’”

    About two weeks after the Botox and facial fillers, Lo Balbo had no regrets. His girlfriend praised his smoother forehead. No one noticed a big change.

    A year after starting Botox, Scott Gass, 38, said the differences are subtle but noticeable enough to come back for more every six months.

    “I’m getting up there in age a little bit,” he said. “Unfortunately, lines come. I just want to look my best,” Gass said.

    Gass considers himself a masculine guy with metrosexual tendencies. He’s single, eats healthy and works out daily. He takes care of himself.

    Not many of his friends know he gets Botox, but he doesn’t avoid the subject. He likes calling it Brotox. It sounds macho, even hip. He wouldn’t frown upon recommending it to his bros.

    We keep our men looking like men, just more defined, and fresh.

    Dont try this at home!For your safety…

    June 2nd 2011

    If you keep up with the news, you’re familiar with the recent story about the California mother who admitted to injecting her daughter with Botox for a beauty pageant. If you aren’t, Google it, the story has bloggers and reporters all over the country in an uproar, rightfully so.

    A similar story has just surfaced here about a woman who has become disfigured after having a friend inject her face with injectable substances she bought online. In an effort to warn others, the woman submitted graphic and grotesque pictures of herself to the press of her infected and swollen skin. The woman, who is in her early 30s, has chosen to remain anonymous and is currently under treatment. However, at this stage, it is unknown if she will fully recover.

    Apparently, it’s easy to score Anti wrinkle injection knockoffs and “dermal fillers” online, which may contain dangerous and unhygienic do-it-yourself injection kits. We warn that these kits may not be sterile and the substances can be toxic, which can lead to infections, scarring, disfigurement and long-term illness.

    Most of the time these are made in Lithuania or China.

    So if you think you can cook like Neil Perry….or drive like Lewis Hamilton etc etc

    so as Forest Gump would say-

    Stupid is , as stupid injects.

    Just leave it to the professionals, and trust us with your health and safety.

    100 benefits of meditation

    February 28th 2011

    Physiological benefits:
    1- It lowers oxygen consumption.
    2- It decreases respiratory rate.
    3- It increases blood flow and slows the heart rate.
    4- Increases exercise tolerance.
    5- Leads to a deeper level of physical relaxation.
    6- Good for people with high blood pressure.
    7- Reduces anxiety attacks by lowering the levels of blood lactate.
    8- Decreases muscle tension
    9- Helps in chronic diseases like allergies, arthritis etc.
    10- Reduces Pre-menstrual Syndrome symptoms.
    11- Helps in post-operative healing.
    12- Enhances the immune system.
    13- Reduces activity of viruses and emotional distress
    14- Enhances energy, strength and vigour.
    15- Helps with weight loss
    16- Reduction of free radicals, less tissue damage
    17- Higher skin resistance
    18- Drop in cholesterol levels, lowers risk of cardiovascular disease.
    19- Improved flow of air to the lungs resulting in easier breathing.
    20- Decreases the aging process.
    21- Higher levels of DHEAS (Dehydroepiandrosterone)
    22- prevented, slowed or controlled pain of chronic diseases
    23- Makes you sweat less
    24- Cure headaches & migraines
    25- Greater Orderliness of Brain Functioning
    26- Reduced Need for Medical Care
    27- Less energy wasted
    28- More inclined to sports, activities
    29- Significant relief from asthma
    30- improved performance in athletic events
    31- Normalizes to your ideal weight
    32- harmonizes our endocrine system
    33- relaxes our nervous system
    34- produce lasting beneficial changes in brain electrical activity
    35- Cure infertility (the stresses of infertility can interfere with the release of hormones that regulate ovulation).

    Psychological benefits:
    36- Builds self-confidence.
    37- Increases serotonin level, influences mood and behaviour.
    38- Resolve phobias & fears
    39- Helps control own thoughts
    40- Helps with focus & concentration
    41- Increase creativity
    42- Increased brain wave coherence.
    43- Improved learning ability and memory.
    44- Increased feelings of vitality and rejuvenation.
    45- Increased emotional stability.
    46- improved relationships
    47- Mind ages at slower rate
    48- Easier to remove bad habits
    49- Develops intuition
    50- Increased Productivity
    51- Improved relations at home & at work
    52- Able to see the larger picture in a given situation
    53- Helps ignore petty issues
    54- Increased ability to solve complex problems
    55- Purifies your character
    56- Develop will power
    57- greater communication between the two brain hemispheres
    58- react more quickly and more effectively to a stressful event.
    59- increases one’s perceptual ability and motor performance
    60- higher intelligence growth rate
    61- Increased job satisfaction
    62- increase in the capacity for intimate contact with loved ones
    63- decrease in potential mental illness
    64- Better, more sociable behaviour
    65- Less aggressiveness
    66- Helps in quitting smoking, alcohol addiction
    67- Reduces need and dependency on drugs, pills & pharmaceuticals
    68- Need less sleep to recover from sleep deprivation
    69- Require less time to fall asleep, helps cure insomnia
    70- Increases sense of responsibility
    71- Reduces road rage
    72- Decrease in restless thinking
    73- Decreased tendency to worry
    74- Increases listening skills and empathy
    75- Helps make more accurate judgements
    76- Greater tolerance
    77- Gives composure to act in considered & constructive ways
    78- Grows a stable, more balanced personality
    79- Develops emotional maturity

    Spiritual benefits:
    80- Helps keep things in perspective
    81- Provides peace of mind, happiness
    82- Helps you discover your purpose
    83- Increased self-actualization.
    84- Increased compassion
    85- Growing wisdom
    86- Deeper understanding of yourself and others
    87- Brings body, mind, spirit in harmony
    88- Deeper Level of spiritual relaxation
    89- Increased acceptance of oneself
    90- helps learn forgiveness
    91- Changes attitude toward life
    92- Creates a deeper relationship with your God
    93- Attain enlightenment
    94- greater inner-directedness
    95- Helps living in the present moment
    96- Creates a widening, deepening capacity for love
    97- Discovery of the power and consciousness beyond the ego
    98- Experience an inner sense of “Assurance or Knowingness”
    99- Experience a sense of “Oneness”
    100- Increases the synchronicity in your life.

    Wow, lets all start meditating!

    No anger lines= no anger

    July 15th 2009

    “Smooth the brow, brighten the eye … ” the pioneering psychologist William James wrote in 1890

    Have you ever had the experience of smiling to be sociable at a party, even though you don’t feel especially chipper, and finding that the smile actually makes you feel happier? Or of making a frown, perhaps when you’re in a meeting where layoffs are announced (even though your job is safe), to show that you are in sync with others, and even though you did not feel angry before you frowned the facial expression makes you feel mad? The phenomenon was first noticed by Charles Darwin, giving rise to his “facial feedback hypothesis”—but Darwin didn’t know anyone who’d had B.

    Scientists therefore ran a cool little study in which they compared people before and after they had B treatments that immobilized their frown muscles. One mystery that still surrounds the facial-feedback effect is whether the feeling of happiness or anger induced by smiling or frowning is due to the brain activity that causes the muscles to move, or to the actual muscle movement that, presumably, sends feedback to the brain. If only the brain activity sending the command “smile!” or “frown!” matters, then the fact that the immobilized muscles don’t move shouldn’t matter; people should still feel the emotion.

    In a paper in the March issue of the journal Cerebral Cortex, scientists led by Andreas Hennenlotter and Bernhard Haslinger of the Tcchnische Universitat Munchen and the Max Planck Institut für Kognitions (Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences), both in Germany, note that when people imitate facial expressions, their brain’s emotion regions become more active. To tease apart whether the actual muscle movement is causing the effect, they studied 38 women who received B(botulinum toxin) injections to their frown muscles (to reduce lines in their forehead).

    Before B, imitating pictures of sad or angry facial expressions caused a large increase in activity in the amygdala, a key emotion region for, especially, anger and anxiety. But after B, imitating the angry expressions caused a much lower level of activity in the left amygdala. (The British Psychological Society did a nice write-up of the study here.) This suggests that making an angry face affects the amygdala through feedback from the facial muscles and skin (the latter being absent for the b-injected women). There was no difference in amygdala activation pre- and post-B when the women imitated sad expressions, reinforcing the idea that muscle movement is key to inducing the emotion; their B shots did not immobilize muscles that make a sad face.

    The scientists conclude that “during imitation of angry facial expressions, reduced feedback due to [B] treatment attenuates activation of the left amygdala . . . . These findings demonstrate that facial feedback modulates neural activity within central circuitries of emotion during intentional imitation of facial expressions.” Any thoughts on whether immobilizing the smile muscles takes away the ability to feel happiness when you make yourself smile—or, in the case of B’ers, try but fail to smile?

    So less angry expressions= less anger felt in the brain, quite simple, so lets all smile more, and stop the anger!