Chitika

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Christmas Tune: ChiDynma – All IWant For Christmas (Naija Mix)

Yay! Christmas is here.
We hope that you are enjoying the holiday
season so far.
It is the season of giving, sharing and
caring. Take some time out to spend quality
time with your loved ones and also give
back to those who are in need.
ChiDynma has just released a cover of
Mariah Carey’s Christmas classic, “All I Want
For Christmas“. This isn’t any old cover, it
has been switched up! Harmattan, Father
Christmas and lots of ‘Naijaspiration’ has
been infused into the track.

The Unofficial Christmas Party2010 – December 28th

So how has the year been for you? Surely,
it ’s been great, tough, or both! Here’s a
timely avenue for you to relax in company
of like-minded and fun-loving folks! It ’s a
suitable event to help you end the year on a
high note and say a BIG THANK YOU to all
those clients who have made the year
worthwhile for you OR even host new
clients to a great evening out. Away from
the office premises, classy suits and ties,
your employees who have performed
within and above targets for the company’s
profit deserve to be rewarded at this
Unofficial Christmas Party that promises to
be the biggest corporate event of the year!
Some of Nigeria’s hottest artistes, including
MI, Ice Prince, Banky W, Tiwa Savage and DJ
Jimmy Jatt will be on hand to make it a
memorable end-of-the-year event!!!
Date: Tuesday 28 December 2010
Time: 6PM
Venue: The New Expo Hall, Eko Hotel &
Suites, Lagos
Tickets available at Silverbird Galleria and
Eko Hotel & Suites
Visit www.theunofficialchristmasparty.com
for more details!

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Model/Activist Noella Coursaris-Masters is building schools andchanging lives in Congo

Model Noella Coursaris-
Masters left the
Democratic Republic of
Congo when she was
just 5 years old. Her
father had just died and
her mother did not have
the resources to take
care of her.
Growing up in Europe, Noella longed to visit
her motherland, as time passed, she
blossomed into a beautiful teen and began
her modelling career.
When she was 18, she went back to the DRC
to visit her mother, at that point she knew
she had to do something to impact her
world, specifically for the young girls and
women in Congo.
Noella strongly believes in the power of
education, in her CNN interview, she shared
that “I believe that if my mother had an
education at the time my father died, she
would have been able to support me and
keep me.“
On the subject of underage pregnancy
which is a major issue in the DRC, “At a
young age they got pregnant, got married,
so how do you resolve the problem of a girl
being pregnant at 12 years, if she’s at
school, if she cuts her education?…If we
give her power to have education I believe
she won’t be a mother at a young age.”
Noella says.
Noella founded the Georges Malaika
Foundation (named after her father);
The Georges Malaika Foundation is
dedicated to the advancement of African
communities by providing educational
opportunities to young girls, aged 5 to 18.
Its vision is to mobilize the resources
necessary to overcome the insurmountable
obstacles a young girl faces to obtain an
education in the Democratic Republic of
Congo. GMF will provide assistance that
paves the way for opportunity, generates
greater choice and empowers girls to make
informed decisions. GMF endeavors to
permanently alter the cycle of illiteracy and
poverty within the D.R. Congo.
The foundation’s current focus is the
construction of an ecological school for 100
children in the Katanga province in the
south of the DRC. This the area where
Coursaris was born and spent her early
childhood. Most of the young girls who will
be enroll in the school when it is completed
have been abandoned, sexually abused or
accused of witchcraft.
Noella is totally committed to the cause and
is optimistic that her young son, Mapendo
gets to experience the DRC is a completely
new light. According to her, “When he is my
age I want him to see a new Congo, with a
strong leadership, with a lot of schools all
over Congo.” We pray so too!

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Where Does Fear Come From?

To the average observer, it would
seem that 44-year-old patient
"SM" was just another typical
mother of three: she scores
normally on IQ tests, has good
language skills and a decent
memory. But, according to a
paper by neurologists at the
University of Iowa, SM is
profoundly unusual. Because of a
degenerative condition that left
her with damage in certain brain
structures, researchers say, SM is
incapable of feeling fear.
The researchers know, because
they spent several days trying to
scare her silly. They exposed SM
to snakes and spiders at a pet
store, showed her clips of horror
movies like The Shining and The
Blair Witch Project, and took her
through a haunted house in a
former sanatorium. SM's fear
response? Nonexistent.
In fact, she relished cuddling
snakes and had to be stopped
from reaching for a tarantula.
SM has a genetic condition that
has disabled, in both
hemispheres, a brain region
known as the amygdala, which is
involved in processing emotional
memories and fear. She has been
studied by neurologists for 20
years because her case is so
extreme, and has so far been
shown to be unable to read
social situations that involve fear
or to recognize evidence of fear
on the faces of others.
SM says that she hasn't felt afraid
since a childhood incident
involving a snarling Doberman
pinscher. The research team —
including Justin S. Feinstein, Ralph
Adolphs, Antonio Damasio and
Daniel Tranel — theorizes that
her condition hadn't yet
destroyed her amygdala at the
time. But what's more interesting
is her life experience since then,
which has often been frightening
and dangerous. Her lack of fear
has many times caused her to
place her own life in danger. The
authors write in their case study,
published on Dec. 16 by the
medical journal Current Biology:
As it turned out, SM has
encountered numerous
events that would be
considered fear-inducing or
even traumatic in nature. For
instance, she has been held
up at knife point and at gun
point, she was once
physically accosted by a
woman twice her size, she
was nearly killed in an act of
domestic violence, and on
more than one occasion she
has been explicitly
threatened with death.
What stands out most is that,
in many of these situations,
SM's life was in danger, yet
her behavior lacked any
sense of desperation or
urgency. Police reports
obtained from the local
police department further
corroborate SM's recollection
of these events and paint a
picture of an individual who
lives in a poverty-stricken
area replete with crime,
drugs, and danger. Of note,
SM has never been convicted
of any crime, but rather has
been the victim of numerous
crimes. Moreover, it is
evident that SM has great
difficulty detecting looming
threats in her environment
and learning to avoid
dangerous situations,
features of her behavior that
have in all likelihood
contributed to her high
incidence of life-threatening
encounters.
Take, for example, an anecdote
reported by the Associated Press:
A man jumped up from a
park bench, pressed a knife
to her throat and hissed, "I'm
going to cut you."
SM, who heard a church
choir practicing in the
distance, looked coolly at him
and replied, "If you're going
to kill me, you're going to
have to go through my God's
angels first."
The man suddenly let her go.
She didn't run home. She
walked.
"Her lack of fear may have
freaked the guy out,"
Feinstein said.
But it also got her into that
situation in the first place, he
noted. SM had willingly
approached the man when
he asked her to, even though
it was late at night and she
was alone, and even though
she thought he looked
"drugged out."
The authors note that SM's
response to what would normally
be considered fear-inducing
situations was not characterized
simply by a lack of
responsiveness, but rather a
heightened arousal and interest.
In other words, she practically
courted danger.
Just as she felt curiosity instead
of fear in the face of scary
situations, so her memories of
frightening experiences also
diverged from the norm: when
asked about her emotional
response to such past incidents,
she reported feeling angry, but
didn't show the enduring
distress, panic and aversions that
typically characterize survivors of
similar violence.
These findings give researchers
some hope that they can
someday figure out how to
stimulate the amygdala in
survivors of violence to help
prevent them from suffering
post-traumatic stress disorder
later on.
The researchers stress that SM's
condition is more a curse than a
blessing: "[SM's] behavior, time
and time again, leads her back to
the very situations she should be
avoiding, highlighting the
indispensable role that the
amygdala plays in promoting
survival by compelling the
organism away from danger.
Indeed, it appears that without
the amygdala, the evolutionary
value of fear is lost."
Courtesy: Time Magazine