Payday loan business

Posted under money,payday by on March 15, 2010 8:20 am

You need money. In five days, on payday you could repay the entire payday loan without having dog food for supper for the next two weeks. Online, you’ll find some payday loans funded practically immediately during regular business hours. For others, or if it’s after banks are closed, you have to wait until the next day when the virtual “paperwork” is processed. Surprised? After all, these are loans for emergencies. And, true emergencies require assistance right now. You need a lender with a good reputation. Throughout life, you need good, reliable professionals who do what they say they’ll do, won’t cheat you, and treat you like a good customer. Although they’re doing you a “favor,” they are in the payday loan business, with the emphasis on business, and you are the customer. Check with your friends, the Better Business Bureau and your state’s attorney general, to find out.

Getting fast cash personal loans is easy

Posted under cash advance,money by on 8:14 am

It is easier than you think to get online cash advance loans. One of the best aspects about getting these type of cash advance loans is that you do not have to subject yourself to a credit check. Many people today are suffering from low credit scores through no fault of their own. Foreclosures and job layoffs have put an increasing number of people in debt. To make things even worse, banks are hanging on tight to the money that they have and are not willing to lend it easily. Because of the current financial situation, many people cannot get credit cards, which used to be a reliable way to help you get to the next paycheck. Many people are over the limit on their credit cards and an increasing number of people are in bankruptcy. Needless to say, this has affected the credit scores of many individuals. Those with poor credit will find it difficult if not impossible to borrow money from banks. However, getting fast cash personal loans is easy and does not require a credit check.

Praying is good for your health

Posted under beleifs,health,religion by on March 2, 2010 7:19 am

THE RHYTHMIC CHANTING USED WHEN SAYING THE ROSARY PRAYER OR PERFORMING A YOGA MANTRA SEEMS TO HAVE A CALMING EFFECT ON THE HEART, STUDY FINDINGS SUGGEST.

The rosary might be viewed as a health practice as well as a religious practice, according to study lead author Dr. Luciano Bernardi, of the University of Pavia in Italy and his colleagues.

To investigate, the researchers measured the breathing rates of 23 adults while they either prayed the rosary in the original Latin or recited a yoga mantra. The rosary is a repetition 50 times of the Ave Maria, or the Hail Mary prayer, with the whole 50 repeated three times. For comparison, the researchers also measured the study participants respiration during free talking, and during spontaneous and controlled slow breathing exercises.

When the participants breathed spontaneously, their respiratory rate was about 14 breaths per minute, which slowed down to almost 8 breaths per minute when they engaged in regular conversation, the investigators report in the December 22/29th 2001 issue of the British Medical Journal, During recitation of the Ave Maria or the yoga mantra, however, their respiratory rate was about 6 breaths per minute.

A slow respiration rate of 6 breaths per minute has generally favorable effects on cardiovascular and respiratory function, the researchers note.
Furthermore, breathing rate was irregularly reduced during free talking, but was significantly more regular during recitation of the Ave Maria and the yoga mantra, similar to during the 6 minutes of controlled respiration,

Bernardi’s team reports. This indicates that these methods could stabilize the respiratory rate as effectively as precisely timed control, the authors write.
What’s more, recitation of both the Ave Maria and the yoga mantra similarly synchronized all the heart rhythms, the investigators found.

The similar effects produced by the two seemingly different cultural practices may not be merely coincidental. In fact, Bernardi and colleagues suggest, the two practices may have similar origins.

It is known that the rosary is related to the Christian religion, but it was actually introduced by the crusaders “who learnt a similar technique from the Arabs who in turn learned it from the Indian and Tibetan masters of yoga,” according to Bernardi.

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