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This discovery may reverse memory loss by decades

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Never forget anything)
Sat Feb 1 23:57:54 2025

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Date: Sun, 2 Feb 2025 05:45:51 +0100
From: "Never forget anything" <Neverforgetanything@purplebrun.za.com>
Reply-To: "Becoming forgetful" <Strugglingtoremember@purplebrun.za.com>
Subject: This discovery may reverse memory loss by decades
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Message-ID: <apjv085nqlp2y8eg-xth1tp3oz7thhpc8-2c395-5176f@purplebrun.za.com>

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This discovery may reverse memory loss by decades

http://purplebrun.za.com/rgv0Yihz1kEYekoiu_caBYkIVTEPw29_FBGTW8e_zMombkpHeQ

http://purplebrun.za.com/zvpQ69iAKRnny4Ypgz69qGdA4PO8kh84wtg6g8qK0ebWkpt9rA

iable sitters in domestic settings, which could offer commissions, were dominant in the exhibitions. The subjects of the paintings were often women interacting with their environment by either their gaze or movement. Cassatt, in particular, was aware of her placement of subjects: she kept her predominantly female figures from objectification and cliche; when they are not reading, they converse, sew, drink tea, and when they are inactive, they seem lost in thought.

The women Impressionists, like their male counterparts, were striving for "truth", for new ways of seeing and new painting techniques; each artist had an individual painting style. Women Impressionists, particularly Morisot and Cassatt, were conscious of the balance of power between women and objects in their paintings – the bourgeois women depicted are not defined by decorative objects, but instead, interact with and dominate the things with which they live. There are many similarities in their depictions of women who seem both at ease and subtly confined. Gonzalès' Box at the Italian Opera depicts a woman staring into the distance, at ease in a social sphere but confined by the box and the man standing next to her. Cassatt's painting Yo

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<body><a href="http://purplebrun.za.com/DBV9N0XKf1oN5wUCsVtFk9BevSHpyBvtNOUk-DymWDkYQi-BKA"><img src="http://purplebrun.za.com/a98fe79875f610ef62.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.purplebrun.za.com/VgdER3qziZHtNwaV6UHQTaw15oy2IsZK4QomA72l7m5pgsEE9A" width="1" /></a>
<div style="font-size: 18px; width: 600px; text-align: left;padding:10px;font-family:Arial;">
<p><strong>If you find yourself more confused lately, forget where you left small things like your phone or your glasses.</strong></p>

<p>Words get stuck on the tip of your tongue or you don&#39;t remember why you walked into a room...</p>

<p><a href="http://purplebrun.za.com/rgv0Yihz1kEYekoiu_caBYkIVTEPw29_FBGTW8e_zMombkpHeQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" style="font-weight:bold" target="blank">&gt;&gt;&gt;Watch this short documentary immediately because it may very well save your memory.</a></p>

<p>New Harvard research reveals <a href="http://purplebrun.za.com/rgv0Yihz1kEYekoiu_caBYkIVTEPw29_FBGTW8e_zMombkpHeQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" style="font-weight:bold" target="blank">this common household toxin</a> wipes out your memory 3x times faster...</p>

<p>Decreasing the blood flow to your brain and <strong>&quot;violently attacking&quot;</strong> your neurons and synapses on the hippocampus...</p>

<p>This is the part of your brain that forms episodic memories, that makes you able to think and remember, literally...</p>

<p><strong>Scientists from the National Institutes of Health warn that over 200 Americans are exposed to this toxin daily...</strong></p>

<p>And it&#39;s the primary reason why every 66 seconds someone in the United States develops Alzheimer&#39;s and 1 in 3 seniors ends up with some form of dementia.</p>

<p>Click below to find out all about it and what you can do to improve your memory:</p>

<p><a href="http://purplebrun.za.com/rgv0Yihz1kEYekoiu_caBYkIVTEPw29_FBGTW8e_zMombkpHeQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" style="font-weight:bold" target="blank">Harvard: This common household toxin triggers memory loss</a></p>
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">iable sitters in domestic settings, which could offer commissions, were dominant in the exhibitions. The subjects of the paintings were often women interacting with their environment by either their gaze or movement. Cassatt, in particular, was aware of her placement of subjects: she kept her predominantly female figures from objectification and cliche; when they are not reading, they converse, sew, drink tea, and when they are inactive, they seem lost in thought. The women Impressionists, like their male counterparts, were striving for &quot;truth&quot;, for new ways of seeing and new painting techniques; each artist had an individual painting style. Women Impressionists, particularly Morisot and Cassatt, were conscious of the balance of power between women and objects in their paintings &ndash; the bourgeois women depicted are not defined by decorative objects, but instead, interact with and dominate the things with which they live. There are many similarities in their depictions of women who seem both at ease and subtly confined. Gonzal&egrave;s&#39; Box at the Italian Opera depicts a woman staring into the distance, at ease in a social sphere but confined by the box and the man standing next to her. Cassatt&#39;s painting Yo</div>

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