Jenny Harward Votre Vie

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VotreVie the long goodbye A DOCTOR WHO TREATS PATIENTS WITH ALZHEIMER’S NOW HAS TO TREAT HIS FATHER

HOW TO MANAGE FEAR CONQUER FEAR AND ANXIETY ONCE AND FOR ALL

HEALTH BENEFITS OF BERRIES

ESSENTIAL OIL HEALING PROPERTIES

THOUSANDS OF YEARS HEALING & PURIFYING


VOTREVIE

Features

19 the dark side of the lens Mickey Smith allows us to explores his world of documenting, wave riding, and the dramatic seascapes of Ireland. By micky smith photography by micky smith

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sunshine daydream How convenient Citrus, the cheeriest of fruit families, hits its seasonal peak just in time to lift us out of winters slump. By jocelyn c. zuckerman recipes by shira bocar

13 the long goodbye A geriatric physician in San Antonio has spent the past thirty years battling against the gradual decline of my Alzheimer’s patients. Now the disease is stealing his own father. By Jerald Winakur Illustration by jenny harward

COVER ILLUSTRATION BY Jenny Harward

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VOTREVIE

Contents

DEPARTMENTS

5

7 Health

9 Food

Beauty

Vitalite

Saveur

Fraiche

5 how to manage fear

7 berry benefits

9 essential oils

Conquer fear and anxiety once and for all with these four simple strategies.

They may be small, but they are big on antioxidants.

Thousans of years of healing and purifying for your skin.

58 get to know your...

38 key ingredient

36 we love

Heart - what it does and how to make sure the beat goes on.

Honey: The golden syrup that’s both a welcome extra and an end in itself.

salts, oils, gels that stave off the drying effects of a long hot soak in the tub.

40 hot topics

37 cure this

Our health experts give advice on winter depression, vinegar’s role in wirght loss, and more.

Lick lips into shape with tips for healing a chapped pout.

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Health

Vitalite


How to Manage Fear Conquer fear and anxiety once and for all with these four simple strategies. By Keely Savoie

Does the thought of flying make your palms clammy? The results: “People who verbalised their emotions showed How about starting a new job or speaking up in a meeting? Anxiety plagues as all in different ways, but new research from the University of California suggests that conquering fears could be as easy as naming them. Researchers asked 88 people who were afraid of spiders to get close as they dared to a captive tarantula, touching it if they could. They were then divided into four groups. Group one was asked to verbalise their emotions, group two to describe the spider neutrally, group three to talk about something else entirely and group four to say nothing at all. They were then asked to approach the tarantula again a week later.

decreases in their physical fear response,” says study author Katharina Kircanski, PhD, now a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University. They were able to get closer to the spider than the others and had significantly less hand sweat, which is a good measure of fear. Why? “When people get better at identifying what they are experiencing – positive or negative – it give them mental space to process their emotions, rather than be controlled by them,” explains anxiety expert Doug Mennin, PhD. Ready to tame your fears? Try these effective tricks.

Ready to tame your fears? Try these effective tricks. 1. Be completely present. “Anxiety

pulls you into a certain future,” Mennin says. The more aware you are of your senses and emotions in this moment, the less power anxiety will have over you.

2. Understand that knowledge is not destiny.

“Knowing what you feel is important, but doesn’t mean that those feelings are truth,” adds Mennin. Having a complete picture of your emotions gives you more power to act appropriately in any situation.

3. Give your fears a voice. By

simply naming your emotions you create space to feel them, removing the immediate impulse to act. The upshot? You feel calm, confident and in control.

4. Put a face on it. Create characters to

personalize and externalise your emotions, such as a yellow monster for anxiety. “By giving your emotions form and externalizing them, you can confront them without being overwhelmed,” Mennin explains.

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Food

Saveur

Small Berries

with Big Benefits

They may be little, but boysenberries, blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, blueberries, and cranberries are big on antioxidants By Joy Bauer

The antioxidants in ber- conditions like rheumatoid ries can help your body fight arthritis.Vitamin C is another oxidative stress caused by free radicals that can lead to illness. Eating a diet rich in antioxidants can help improve your health, protect your skin and hair, and prevent certain diseases. All fruits and vegetables contain antioxidants, but nutrient-rich berries are some of the absolute best sources. There are several powerful antiox idants that appear in berries, including anthocyanins, quercetin, and vitamin C. Anthocyanins give berries their vibrant color, reduce inflammation, and may help prevent and manage arthritis. Anthocyanins work together with quercetin to help slow age-related memory-loss. Quercetin can also decrease the inflammatory effects of chemicals in the synovial fluid of the joints for people with inflammatory

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strong antioxidant found in berries. It is largely responsible for the health of collagen, which helps maintain cartilage stores and aids in joint flexibility. Eating vitamin C– rich berries will contribute to radiant skin and healthy hair, and may reduce the risk of arthritis, cataracts, and macular degeneration. In addition to antioxidants, berries are “juicy foods,” which means they contain mostly water. Juicy foods are great for losing weight because they fill you up quickly, since their high water content bumps up the volume while driving down the calories. Berries also contain fiber and folate. Fiber aids in weight loss and helps lower cholesterol and blood pressure. Folate may protect against cardiovascular disease and age-related memory.

Cranberries

Raspberries

have more than 85 percent water along with a hefty dose of fiber, Both fresh and dried cranberries are a good source of anthocyanins, antiinflammatory antioxidants that can help with arthritis and age-related memory loss.

are composed of more than 85 percent water along with a hefty dose of fiber, which makes them a great fruit to eat if you’re trying to lose weight, lower cholesterol, or manage type 2 diabetes.

Blackberries

Strawberries

compose more than 85 percent water with a hefty dose of fiber, perfect for if you’re trying to lose weight, lower cholesterol, or manage type 2 diabetes. They are a good source of B vitamin.

90 percent water and fiber, lower cholesterol or manage type 2 diabetes. They are a good source of B vitamin helping maintain healthy hair and may reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and mood disorders.

Blueberries consist of 85 percent water, which makes them a great fruit to eat if you’re trying to lose weight. They also contain potent antioxidants that can help with arthritis, agerelated memory loss, and cataracts and other eyesight problems.

Boysenberries are a cross of raspberries, blackberries, and loganberries, and they look like a jumbo version of a blackberry. Boysenberries contain anthocyanins, which are potent antioxidants that can help with arthritis and agerelated memory loss.



Beauty

Fraiche

Essential Oil Skin Care Essential oils have been used for thousands of years for their healing and purifying effects on the body. By Dr. David Jockers


There are 188 references to these precious oils in the Bible. They have always held extreme value by ancient doctors and medicine men that used them for aromatherapy, consumption, and skin application. Research has now revealed the remarkable healing properties within these essential oils. Essential oils are powerful anti-oxidant concentrates. These come from raw plant material such as flowers, leaves, wood, bark, roots, seeds, and peels. These plant ingredients are put into a distiller and placed over water. As the water is heated, the steam penetrates the plant material and vaporizes the volatile compounds. These vapors then travel through a coil and condense back to a liquid which is collected in a receiving vessel. Although there are many powerful essential oils some of the best include lemon, orange, cinnamon and clove. The citrus essential oils have very unique properties that enhance microcirculation throughout the body. Cinnamon and clove are the most anti-oxidant dense essential oils. These oils can be diluted in water, used for aromatherapy or put on the skin surface to derive the benefits.

Citrus essential Oils Lemon and orange essential oils come from the peels themselves and have very powerful antimicrobial properties that destroy pathogenic bacteria, viruses and fungi. They also contain concentrated forms of citrus bioflavonoids known as Vitamin P. This improves microcirculation into deep capillary beds to enhance tissue oxygenation. This helps the body respond to stress and recover from exercise more effectively. This function of enhanced circulation also makes it especially useful for promoting healthy DOSAGE LEMON 10 Drops ORANGE 5-10 Drops GRAPEFRUIT 1-5 Drops LIME 10 Drops doTERRA Essential Oils 15 ml $34

skin care. It is known to help cleanse skin, shed off dead skin cells and reduce wrinkles. Other benefits include brightening pale, dull complexions and enhancing the quality and smoothness of the skin. Lemon oil is cold-pressed from the lemon rind. Dr. Jean Valnet estimates that it takes about 3,000 lemons to produce one kilo of oil. Dr. Valnet also believes essential oil of lemon to have adaptogenic qualities that support and balance the body’s natural stress response. This reduces the cortisol cascade and the overall negative effects of stress on the bodily systems. Orange essential oil is known to be a powerful anti-spasmodic. This refers to its ability to reduce muscular spasms by providing mega-doses of electrlites.

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Beauty

Fraiche DOSAGE SUNBURNS LAVENDER 4 - 5 Drops doTERRA Essential Oils 15 ml $34

Lavender Essential oils Lavender is the most popular of plants for its healing properties. It is a natural analgesic, anti depressant and anti inflammatory agent. Lavender originated in the Mediterranean basin but because of its fragrance and medicinal benefits, it has moved with migrating people and is now found worldwide. Lavender oil is the most important medical component of the plant and contains several distinct chemicals with healing properties that complement one another. It is one of the few essential oils that can be applied directly to the skin undiluted but should never be taken internally.

essential oil skin care products

COOL TROPICAL CITRUS Lip balm by Live Beautifully Body glides on leaving you with a fresh, zesty blended tingle.

$15 etsy.com

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CITRUS BLISS BATH BAR This Invigorating bath bar combines citrus blends of therepeutic ingredients providing a cleansing and uplifting moisturising experience.

$25 doterraspa.com

PROVENCE A body milk with essential oils of lemon, artemisia and cypress, create a delicious texture that leaves your skin soft and supple.

$40 panierdessens.com



Goodby As a geriatric physician in San Antonio, I’ve spent the past thirty years battling against the gradual decline of my Alzheimer’s patients.

Now the disease is stealing my own father. By Jerald Winakur Illustration by jenny harward

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ye


February 24, 2006, is my parents’ sixtieth wedding anniversary. My family plans a

brunch for them in their home. We are keenly aware that this may be the last anniversary my parents will celebrate together. It won’t be an elaborate party, just a bittersweet one. Seven years earlier, my father was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, and he has gone steadily downhill. At 87 years old, he is now a prisoner of his mind. His agitation and paranoia arise from distorted memories, nightmares he can no longer separate from reality. A few days before the brunch, my mother calls me in a panic. My dad is bellicose and paranoid, accusing. Summoning Yiddish profanities he has not uttered in 75 years, he curses at Yolanda, the caregiver who holds everything together in my parents’ household. He will not be bathed or shaved. He will not eat, refuses his medications. He is raving. “Dad,” I say when I visit their house that afternoon, “what is it? What’s wrong?” “I want to go home. Please, take me home!” “But, Dad, you are home.” “I don’t know where I am. Please, Jerry-boy, take me home. You know the way . . .” “I don’t know where else to take you, Dad. You’ve lived here for twenty-nine years.” “You go to hell! You’re in with them!” There is no walking away now. He is an abandoned child. He searches for his boyhood home on Boarman Avenue, in Baltimore, or perhaps our first family home there, on Forest Park Avenue. He hears voices but can’t decode what is being said, and his mind assumes the worst: My mother is insulting him, planning to run off; his sons are belittling him, his mother scolding

1 in 8 Americans over the age of 65 have Alzheimer’s Disease That’s almost 10% of all grandparents in the United States. Nearly half of all Americans over the age of 85 have Alzheimer’s or another form of dementia.

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him, his older brothers and sisters teasing him. He is lost, with no father of his own to turn to. I see that he has wet himself; a dark ring marks his place on the couch. As a geriatric physician in San Antonio for the past thirty years, I have been through this before. I have been cursed, spit on, bitten, and punched by demented old folks over the decades. A poor woman threw a shoe at me when I stepped inside her hospital room. The day before, she thought I was the devil.

“The pills are often as much a part of the problem as the cure. “ As a doctor, I know what to do; as a son, I am uncertain. So I assume my doctor role, retreating into the armor of my starched white coat. I walk to the kitchen and check his daily pill slots to make sure he’s been getting his regular medications. Sometimes my mother, unable to see due to macular degeneration, inadvertently leaves pills in the plastic containers I fill every couple weeks. But everything seems in order. The pills are often as much a part of the problem as the cure. My father takes eight medications a day; my mother, who is 82, fourteen. They are both on vitamins and minerals, blood pressure medications, diuretics, and cholesterollowering drugs. My father also takes two pills for his heart. My mother takes drugs for her diabetes, a thyroid disorder, osteoporosis, and depression. This is not unusual for folks their age. I spend my doctoring days prescribing medications for my patients, reshuffling the ones they’re on—a tiny dose change here, a retiming of administration there. By now I have written or refilled hundreds of thousands of prescriptions, but my constant goal is to cut back on medications, stop them altogether if I can: Less is usually more. Every geriatrician knows this. Looking through my father’s pills, I recall a patient of mine, Lilly, a woman who first came to see me


carrying a brown paper shopping bag crammed with pill bottles—at least forty different drugs prescribed by a dozen physicians. “This one’s for the high blood,” she had said, “and this one’s for the sweet blood, and this one’s for the low blood. These three are for my bad knees, and this one’s ’cause I’m sad a lot, and this one’s ’cause I don’t sleep too good, and this one’s ’cause I’m tired all the time. I can hardly keep ’em straight, but I got a big list at home tacked to the wall, over the phone in my kitchen. Last month the company cut off the service when I couldn’t pay the bill. All these medicines and still I feel so bad. That’s why I come to you now. That and all these other troubles.” She had handed me a list of symptoms, pencilscrawled on a ragged piece of paper. I spent two hours with Lilly, hearing one story loop into another: bad marriages, kids in jail, ER visits, surgeries, strange diagnoses mostly selfmade. I knew what was happening to Lilly, what happens to many people like her in a medical encounter. The physician begins to drown in a sea of conflicting information, feels powerless to alter the circumstances of this person’s life. A wave of helplessness washes over doctor and patient both, and he reaches for his prescription pad. “Here, try this,” he says. “I think it will help.” Then he steps into the hall, picks up the next chart, and moves on, hoping the drug he has prescribed helps but doubtful it will. I could not change the circumstances of Lilly’s life, couldn’t make up for her poverty or lack of education or the poor choices she had made. But she improved significantly when, after some lab work and many more hours of listening, I was eventually able to whittle her medication list down to three. Prescribing for the elderly is complicated. They don’t metabolize drugs at the same rate as younger, healthier patients. The main workhorses of drug excretion—the liver and kidneys—decline in function with age, as do all our organ systems. The elderly, like my parents, are often on multiple drugs (including over-the-counter preparations the doctor might not even know about), and the incidences of unforeseen interactions begin to mount. We know so little about these interactions. Indeed, the pharmaceutical companies are infamous in geriatric circles for not including our elderly patients in drug trials. These days, between the Food and Drug Administration and Big Pharma, I hang suspended in a

10 of Alzheimer’s Warning signs

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Memory loss that disrupts daily life, forgetting recently learned information Challenges in planning or solving problems Difficulty completing familiar tasks at home, at work or at leisure Confusion with time or place Trouble understanding visual images and spatial relationships New problems with words in speeaking or writing Misplacing things and losing the ability to retrace steps Decreased of poor judgment or decision-making Withdraw from work or social activities Changes in mood and personality

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5 Steps to help prevent Alzheimer’s Disease 1. Eat Smart Follow a Mediterranean diet, Avoid trans fats and saturated fats, Eat a heart-healthy diet, Get plenty of omega-3 fats, Enjoy daily cups of tea

2. Get Moving 30 minutes of aerobic exercise five times per week to get your heart rate up: walking, swimming. Even routine activities such as gardening, cleaning, or doing laundry count as exercise.

3. Stress Management Stress takes a heavy toll on the brain, leading to shrinkage in a key memory area of the brain increasing your risk of Alzheimer’s disease and dementia. Yet simple daily tools can minimize its harmful effects.

4. Active Social Life Volunteer, join a club or social group, visit your local community center or senior center, take group classes, connect to others via social networs, get to know your neighbors.

5. Stay Mentally Active Those who continue learning new things throughout life and challenging their brains are less likely to develop dementia Learn something new, practice memorization, enjoy strategy games, puzzles, and riddles.

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netherworld of prescribing angst. The FDA has pulled more than twenty drugs off the market in the past two decades, drugs they first assured me were safe to use but then ended up damaging livers or kidneys or hearts. I have always tried to protect my patients, wait if I possibly can for aftermarket studies to bring more data to light. It is one thing, I tell my patients, to judge a drug’s benefits and risks after it has been given to a few thousand patients in clinical trials; it’s quite another after it has been prescribed to hundreds of thousands upon its general release. In the parlance of the technology and pharmaceutical industries, doctors like me who are cautious, who do not immediately jump on the company bandwagon every time it trumpets its “latest and greatest” product, are known as “slow adopters.” Now these industries have figured out a way to circumvent my judgment should I fail to join the chorus of cheerleaders for their newest breakthrough. On television, in magazines, they promise an end to arthritis pain, a good night’s sleep, a cure for incontinence, a firm erection. My phone rings off the hook with patients who worry that I may have blocked their path to the Fountain of Youth when I decline their drug requests. Some even change doctors. I have no sympathy for Big Pharma. I resent its intrusion into the doctor-patient relationship, resent the constant introduction of new—often rushed—products into a marketplace crowded with me-too drugs. Big Pharma is right where it has always wanted to be—smack-dab in the middle of my decision-making process as it tries to influence consumers who also happen to be my patients. And yet here I am, in my parents’ home, rummaging through a basketful of medicines I take down from a high shelf. This is where I store the unused pills—all the psychoactive drugs prescribed by my father’s physician for his recurrent bouts of anxiety or agitation, for his depression and his insomnia, for his memory loss and lethargy, for his confusion and paranoia, for his belligerence and sadness. I take down a dozen orange plastic pill bottles with white, almost-impossible-to-remove lids. My father’s name is on every label: Some are six months old, some several years. We have been dealing with this for a long time. Haloperidol and risperidone. Olanzapine and quetiapine. Paroxetine and citalopram. Alprazolam and trazodone. Donepezil and rivastigmine and memantine. Organic molecules, various combinations of carbon and hydrogen and nitrogen, oxygen


and sulfur—the atoms of which we are all made—bioengineered to slip across the bloodbrain barrier, to stimulate one receptor or block another, precipitate a rush of ions through neural membranes, flood synaptic gaps with potent neurotransmitters, flip a switch here, throw a breaker there, block a surge somewhere else. I settle on the bottle of risperidone. Although I am reluctant to use this drug—any drug—in treating my father, I know that he has taken it before with success. It has worked. It has settled him down, albeit with an added degree of cognitive impairment. My hope is that by continuing to use this drug judiciously, I can maintain the status quo and keep my father at home for a bit longer, delay the decision to relegate him to a long-term facility where I know he will only deteriorate faster. I bring my father a bisected tablet and a cool glass of his nutritional drink. “Here, Dad, take this. I think it will make you feel better.” His eyes, still wild, stare at me. “What’s this for?” “Dad, you’ve got shpilkes,” I say. I use this Yiddish word, retrieved somehow from my own memory, because my father has lately been interspersing his speech with snippets of this language, his mother tongue—the mamaloshen—the first words he ever heard and therefore the last ones to abandon him. He smiles. “Az ich habe shpilkes,” he says. And he swallows the pill. “For the shpilkes,” my mother and Yolanda tell him when it is time for the next dose. Before long he is back to his usual demented but pleasant self. This time I have made the right decision. Three days later, on my parents’ anniversary, those of us who love them assemble in their home. My wife brings a dozen yellow roses and arranges the table. My brother stops at the grocery store for a side of sliced smoked salmon, some cream cheese, a few tomatoes, and a red onion. I drive over to the bagel bakery, and pick up a dozen—onion, poppy seed, and sesame— just out of the oven. It is a small gathering. Family-oriented to the

point of insularity, my parents have made no close friends in all the years they have lived in San Antonio. Everything is ready, and I wheel my father into the living room. “What’s the fuss about?” he asks as he enters, seeing all these faces he recognizes but cannot place. For a moment he is frightened. “Dad,” I say, speaking into his good ear, “today is a special day. You and Mom have been married for sixty years.” He searches for my mother’s face in the small crowd around him. “Really? Is that true, Mom?” “Of course it’s true,” she says. “Do you think we made this up?” “It doesn’t seem like sixty years,” he says. “It seems like a hundred to me,” she says. We, the assembled family, laugh nervously. My brother leans in and asks our father, “So what do you think about all this?” “I just want to say that I love Mom more today

“My hope is that I can keep my father at home for a bit longer... “

46% increase in deaths attributed to Alzheimer’s disease

46.1% Stroke

-18.2%

Prostate Cancer

-8.7%

Breast Cancer

-2.6%

Heart Disease

-11.1%

HIV

-16.3%

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dark side of the lens

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An awe inspiring piece from renowned photographer, surfer, and bodyboarder, Mickey Smith explores his world of documenting wave riding and the dramatic seascape of ireland. by micky Smith

life

on the road is something I was raised to embrace. Me Ma always encouraged us to open our eyes and our hearts to the world, make up our own minds for experience of being inspired. I see life in angles, in lines of perspective, a slight turn of the head, the blink of an eye, subtle glimpses of magic other folk might pass by. Cameras help me translate, interpret and understand what I see. It’s a simple act that keeps me grin’n. I never set out to become anything in particular, only to live creatively and push the scope of my experience for advenrure, of a passion. Still all of

it means something to me, same as most anyone with dreams. My heart bleeds Celtic blood and I am magnetized of familiar frontiers: broad, brutual, cold coastlines for the right waveriders to challenge. This is where my heart bleeds hardest. I try to pay tribute to that magic through photographs, weathering the endless storms for rare glimpses of magic each winter is both a bless’n and a curse I relish. I want to see wave ride’n documented the way I see it in my head and the way I feel it in the sea. It’s a strange set of skills to begin to acquire. It’s only achievable throuh time spent riding waves, all sorts of waves on all sorts of crafts, means more time learning out in the water. Floating in the sea amongst an ocean swell, you’ll always learn something its been a life long classroom teacher of sorts, and hopefully, always will be. Buried beneath headlands, shaping the coast, mind blowing


images of empty waves, burn away at me. Solid ocean swells powering through deep cold water. Heavy waves… waves with weight. Coaxed from comfortable routine, ignite the imagination, convey some divine spark. whisper the possibilities, conjure the situations I thrive amongst enough to document. We all take knocks in the process: broken backs, drownings, near drownings, hyperthermia, dislocations, fractures, frost bite, head wounds, stitches, concussions, broke my arm… and that was just the last couple of years. Still look forward to getting amongst it each Winter though, cold creeping into your core, driving you mad, day after day mumbling to yourself as you hold position and wait for the next set to come. The Dark Side of the Lens – an art form unto yourself not us: silent workhorses of the surfing world. There’s no sugary cliche. Most folk don’t know who we are, what we do or how we do it… let alone want to pay us for it. I never want to take this for granted, so I try to keep motivations simple, real, positive. If I only scrape out a living, at least it’s a living worth scraping. If there’s no future in it, this is a present worth remembering. For fires of happiness or waves of gratitude… for everything that brought us to that point in life, to that moment in time to do something worth remembering with a photograph or a scar. I feel genuinely lucky to hand on heart to say I love what I do. And I may never be a rich man but if I live long enough, I’ll certainly have a tale or two for the nephews. And I dig the thought of that.

lacinia dui, vitae ullamcorper urna elit sit amet nibh. Vivamus eget orci augue, et vestibulum mi. Fusce malesuada ultricies risus eu consectetur. Ut non mauris mauris. Phasellus hendrerit nisl et massa euismod egestas. In elementum, neque vitae scelerisque tempus, elit ligula interdum dolor, in sodales risus neque sed elit. Mauris porttitor lacus tempor lectus dignissim sit amet facilisis est tristique. Etiam est tortor, iaculis sed consequat a, malesuada congue ante. Nulla et ipsum eget odio venenatis varius. Praesent bibendum cursus ligula, facilisis sagittis elit dapibus at. Phasellus sapien mauris, gravida quis pharetra in, dapibus ac orci. Mauris ante eros, aliquet vel viverra sed, hendrerit vel libero. Nunc adipiscing scelerisque sem et ornare. Suspendisse ac lorem pretium magna pretium iaculis. Integer viverra libero et urna fermentum quis elementum magna pulvinar. Morbi justo elit, ultrices quis mattis et, sagittis eu quam. Pellentesque habitant morbi tristique senectus et netus et malesuada fames ac turpis egestas. Integer vitae velit ut mi aliquam luctus. Vivamus enim sapien, mollis congue viverra id, hendrerit vitae ipsum. Curabitur tellus massa, luctus sed iaculis id, blandit nec lacus. Morbi id lacus felis, sit amet sagittis leo. Nam vestibulum mi sed tortor tempus eu placerat quam pharetra. Sed a varius diam. Mauris eu malesuada purus. Phasellus non tortor id sapien tincidunt vulputate. Fusce et posuere ipsum. Cras vel enim rutrum purus egestas facilisis. Morbi in tellus vitae nibh fermentum hendrerit. Fusce imperdiet scelerisque ultricies. Quisque condimentum nulla sed ipsum eleifend lacinia. Nam dui purus, gravida sed hendrerit ac, con-

I see life in angles, in lines of perspective, a slight turn of the head, the blink of an eye, subtle glimpses of magic other folk might pass by.

micky gearing up to photograph his buds surfing in ireland.


heart bleeds “CelticMyBlood. This is where my heart bleeds the most.

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sequat id turpis. Etiam laoreet posuere metus quis gravida. Fusce et posuere ipsum. Cras vel enim rutrum purus egestas facilisis. Morbi in tellus vitae nibh fermentum hendrerit. Fusce imperdiet scelerisque ultricies. Praesent tempus, sapien vel consequat auctor, odio mauris dictum nisi, vitae ornare nibh metus in odio. Praesent sodales ipsum at augue tempor rhoncus. Praesent porttitor mauris sit amet leo scelerisque in lobortis quam lacinia. Ut scelerisque semper erat, vitae vehicula sapien dapibus eget. Sed euismod lectus vitae magna commodo volutpat. Fusce et posuere ipsum. Cras vel enim rutrum purus egestas facilisis. Morbi in tellus vitae nibh fermentum hendrerit. Fusce imperdiet scelerisque ultricies. Curabitur malesuada diam vitae urna pretium suscipit. Aenean ornare scelerisque mi, et tincidunt nisi tempus et. Pellentesque nisi dui, porttitor sit amet volutpat eu, pulvinar nec nisl.

Fusce porta cursus rhoncus. Etiam dui dolor, aliquam nec congue eget, fringilla ut arcu. Aliquam erat volutpat. Vivamus elit tortor, tempus at placerat vitae, sodales eu sem. Vestibulum tincidunt feugiat libero eu luctus. Praesent adipiscing ante eget magna mattis ullamcorper. Cras tempus tortor at ipsum volutpat pellentesque. Etiam dapibus ipsum facilisis leo pharetra tempor. Nunc risus arcu, gravida quis facilisis sit amet, pellentesque ut ligula. Fusce tincidunt viverra elit a bibendum. Quisque. ac arcu ligula, ut mollis velit. Nullam vel orci in tortor vehicula porttitor. Proin viverra congue enim ac dapibus. Proin rutrum sollicitudin sem sit amet interdum. Fusce nibh magna, feugiat sed blandit in, condimentum ac libero. Nunc interdum volutpat semper. Suspendisse quis feugiat tellus. Vivamus sed est lorem, venenatis dapibus augue. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Integer scelerisque tempor eleifend. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae; Vivamus pulvinar metus et nibh pulvinar sit amet suscipit mi volutpat. Maecenas sed turpis at magna laoreet aliquam .

vimeo awards action sports winner of the vimeo 2012 awards. see video here: vimeo.com/ astrayfilms

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