Mobile massages are all about convenience. They are becoming popular in Atlanta because it is a service that allows you to lower stress levels, relieve muscle tension and improve circulation on demand. Let’s be honest, after a long week at work, the last thing you want to do is sit and wait in a massage parlor. Then, you have to drive all the way home and sit in slow-moving Atlanta traffic. People have been missing out on massages and the benefits they can achieve for the body and mind. That is until now with the availability of mobile massages.
But, where exactly can you have a mobile massage? Are you only able to have them at your home? Is there a limit on how far a therapist will travel? Let’s answer all of these questions and get you better acquainted …
Introduction
New symbols and characters have arisen in the digital era to support various modes of communication. The “arrob,” a unique character with rising popularity, is one example of such a sign. This article delves into the history, traits, significance, and debates around the arrob to reveal its many facets.
What is an Arrob?
The “@” sign, which represents the arrob, is a punctuation mark with several uses in writing and computing. Its original purpose was to indicate weight units, however today this sign is utilized in many contexts.
History and Origin Arrob
The origins of the arrob go back hundreds of years. The arroba, as it was known in mediev…
Winning a woman’s heart slavic bride is a complex issue, a beautiful mixture of vulnerability and sincerity. While every individual is unique, certain timeless principles can help you express your feelings in a way that resonates deeply. With kindness, confidence, and understanding as your guiding lights, let’s explore how to forge a meaningful bond.
Try to Be Authentic
The basis of any strong connection is authenticity. Women often have a keen sense for recognizing when someone is genuine rather than merely putting on a façade. Share who you are — your dreams, fears, quirks, and passions.
This openness creates confidence and invites a lady to share her own stories. When both partners reveal their true selves, a more profound…
The Centres for Disease Control (CDC), which is the leading health agency in the United States, reports that up to 3.8 million people sustain a concussion in that country each year. Of that number, approximately one in five is a sports concussion. The CDC (TBI) as an acquired injury resulting from a jolt or blow to the head or an object penetrating the head.
Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE) and Sports Concussion
Sports present a unique risk because players can suffer from multiple brain injuries if they continue to play the sport. CTE is always a concern among players in any sport who have sustained several concussions. The risk is especially high with contact sports.
CTE is a progressive brain disease that causes degeneration over many years. Common symptoms…
Thalif Deen
UNITED NATIONS, Jun 15 2006 (IPS) – The National Rifle Assocation, one of the most influential pro-gun lobbies in the United States, has philosophically argued that guns don t kill people, only people kill people .
But Oxfam, the international relief organisation based in London, raises that argument to a more realistic level: it s bullets that kill people. The bullet trade is out of control, says Oxfam, and it is fuelling conflict and human rights abuses worldwide.
Oxfam Director Barbara Stocking points out that in June 2003, during the height of the civil war in Liberia, one of the warring factions ran out of bullets and was forced to retreat.
But once a new shipment arrived, they attacked again, this time ferociously, killing many innocent peo…
Kara Santos
MANILA, May 9 2011 (IPS) – In a small women s clinic in the congested community of San Andres Bukid in the Philippine capital, a mother of 11 is availing herself of family planning services for the first time in her life.
Birth control is making a comeback at clinics in Manila after a 2000 city ordinance discouraged the distribution of contraceptives. Cr…
In this column, José Graziano da Silva, Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), writes that in the last 50 years life expectancy has increased almost everywhere but has been accompanied by a rise in so-called non-communicable diseases which are increasingly causing deaths worldwide. The author says that much of the increase can be attributed to unhealthy diets, and takes the diets of Japan and the Mediterranean area as examples to follow for achieving higher life expectancy.
ROME, May 5 2015 (IPS) – In the last half-century, people’s lifestyles have changed dramatically. Life expectancy has risen almost everywhere, but this has been accompanied by an increase of so-called non-communicable diseases (NCDs) – such as cardiovascular diseases, cancer, …
Children from informal settlements in Pakistan’s most populous city, Karachi, are often sent out with large containers to fetch water from taps outside private homes, set up by wealthier residents as an act of charity. Credit: Zofeen T. Ebrahim/IPS
KARACHI, Jun 25 2015 (IPS) – Over 950 people have perished in just five days. The morgues, already filled to capacity, are piling up with bodies, and in over-crowded hospitals the threat of further deaths hangs in the air.
Pakistan’s port city of Karachi, home to over 23 million people, is gasping in the grip of a dreadful heat wave, the worst the country has experienced since the 1950s, according to the Meteorology Dep…
Thanks to PMTCT, three year old Nokuthula Mukonto (pictured) in Shurugwi’s Chida village does not have HIV despite being born to parents living with the virus. Her father, 50-year old Partrick, a high school teacher by profession, has lived with HIV for more than 15 years now while her mother, 43-year old, Mildred, has lived for eight years with the disease, and now an ardent anti-MTCT campaigner. Credit: Jeffrey Moyo/IPS
SHURUGWI, Zimbabwe, Dec 1 2015 (IPS) – With the battle to combat HIV/AIDS intensifying in Zimbabwe, the Prevention of Mother to Child Transmission initiative (PMTCT) has increasingly become a success weapon in the war on transmission of the once dreade…
The following article is part of a series to commemorate World Environment Day June 5
Restoring natural habitats as pictured here in Cuba will help to slow down climate change. A new UN-backed study released May 27 says annual investments in nature-based solutions will have to triple by 2030, and increase four-fold by 2050, if the world is to successfully tackle the triple threat of climate, biodiversity and land degradation crises. Credit: UNDP
UNITED NATIONS, Jun 4 2021 (IPS) – The United Nations has been in the forefront of an ongoing battle against the growing hazards of climate change, including the destruction of different species of plants and animals, the dan…