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Asif Khan (Teac helps international human rights.

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There was once a businessman who was sitting by the beach in a small Brazilian village.
As he sat, he saw a Brazilian fisherman rowing a small boat towards the shore having caught quite few big fish.
The businessman was impressed and asked the fisherman, “How long does it take you to catch so many fish?”
The fisherman replied, “Oh, just a short while.”
“Then why don’t you stay longer at sea and catch even more?” The businessman was astonished.
“This is enough to feed my whole family,” the fisherman said.
The businessman then asked, “So, what do you do for the rest

You Have A Choice

by Asif Khan (Teac on February 28, 2012

You Have A Choice

Well, everyone knows that and i still hear people saying”i have no choice”. You know, we are living in a modern days where most things we want to do we can have it and it’s all up to us to make the choices. We are the one who make the decision that will affect out entire lives.

Look at someone behavior and listen to what they talk most it can be about politics, government, jobs, or even people. That is what they are going talk about for the rest of their life. That is the choices they have made and how they think but don’t get me wrong, people change without you realizing. You never know the next time you meet them, they will be a total different person.

Ultrasound : May Stop Sperm'

A dose of ultrasound to the testicles can stop the production of sperm, according to researchers investigating a new form of contraception.

A study on rats published in Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology showed that sound waves could be used to reduce sperm counts to levels that would cause infertility in humans.

Researchers described ultrasound as a "promising candidate" in contraception.

However, far more tests are required before it could be used.

Snake Wine (Vietnam Liquor)

Snake wine and Scorpion wine are Asian beverages that can be found in some Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam, Thailand, Laos Cambodia, but also in Korea, and Japan. Do you think what the hell are these Snake wine and Scorpion wine? I’m pretty sure this will be an amazing news if you didn’t hear about Snake wine or Scorpion wine before.
Snake wine A Vietnam Liquor 1 Snake Wine (Vietnam Liquor)

As I mentioned before Snake wine and Scorpion wine are Asian beverages that can be found in some Southeast Asian countries. To prepare this incredible beverage a cobra snake and/or some scorpions are put into a bottle fulfilled with transparent rice wine liquor and some herbs are added before the drink is left to ferment for months (sometimes it includes some other species too). The venomous cobra snake used to make Snake wine is preserved to have the snake poison dissolved in the rice wine, but because snake venoms are protein-based they are inactivated by the denaturing effects of ethanol, and no more dangerous, but this makes a healthy liquor with many health benefits.

According to the records this drink is firstly consumed in China. Many types of snake drinks can be found all across Asia, but the most famous one and the only original one can be found in Vietnam, Thailand, and Laos, the famous Snake wine.

Girl Addicted to Eat Soap & Washing Powder

The 19-year-old girl Tempestt Henderson Addicted To Eating Soap And Washing Powder with a dangerous compulsion. Doctors say it could kill her because of it’s toxic compulsion.

But this 19-year-old girl claims she is hopelessly addicted… to eating soap and washing powder.

Girl Addicted To Eating Soap And Washing Powder 1 300x198 Girl Addicted To Eating Soap And Washing Powder

My bizarre compulsion: Tempestt Henderson, 19, says she is addicted to eating soap - and can go through five bars a week

A rare medical condition has left Tempestt Henderson, from Florida, eating up to five bars of soap a week – and washing powder too.

‘I remember the first time I dipped my fingers into the washing powder,’ she said.

‘I dabbed the powder onto my tongue and it tasted so sweet, and salty…it just felt so right. I was hooked straight away.’

The nursing student says she knew eating soap was dangerous, but ignored the warning labels on the box in favour of licking the deadly powder daily, from the minute she woke up in the morning.

Soon she had moved onto licking the bubbles of soap in the shower, too, a habit that was getting her through up to five bars of soap a week.

‘In the shower, I like to lather up a green bar of soap, and lick the bubbles. And as the soap disintegrates, I pop a tiny amount of the soap into my mouth and suck it. It’s heavenly.

‘I love the clean feeling it gives me. Eating soap feels so much cleaner than just washing with it.’

After six months of eating soap, unhappy Tempestt decided to be brave and seek medical advice. She was diagnosed with a rare disorder called PICA, which doctors told her is characterised by an appetite for substances that are largely non-nutritive.

Sufferers have been known to compulsively eat metal, coins, chalk, batteries and even toothbrushes. It can often be caused by a mineral deficiency, which explains why pregnant women often crave eating coal when needing iron.

But in Tempestt’s case doctors believed

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