Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Friday, April 26, 2019

Coping With Grief And Loss

We have to develop our own coping mechanism and we have to build on it while everyone is around us. 

by Ruwantissa Abeyratne-25 April 2019
 
Grieving allows us to heal, to remember with love rather than pain.
It is a sorting process.
One by one you let go of things that are gone and you mourn for them.
One by one you take hold of the things that have become a part of who you are and build again.
—Rachael Naomi Remen. MD
 
No matter what one would say about coping with grief and loss, the fact remains that the experience is intensely personal and subjective. Denial, anger, and a deep sense of personal disorientation are the natural corollaries to losing a loved one, particularly in unexpected and sudden circumstances. Many questions arise: does a part of the person left behind die with the deceased; would the person left behind ever smile again; or be able to pick up the pieces eventually and get on with life?
 
There are many theories - some seemingly practical and eminently sensible. J. William Worden recommends four stages which he calls “dynamic tasks”: to accept the reality of the loss; to work through the emotions associated with the loss; to learn how to cope with practical tasks of living without the support of the deceased; and to find a new place in one’s emotional relationship with the deceased. Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook who co-authored the book Option B: Facing Adversity, Building Resilience, and Finding Joy with Wharton Professor Adam Grant, lost her husband Dave Goldberg suddenly and unexpectedly in 2015 in the midst of a loving relationship. Both were young at that time. The book was about how she coped with her unbearable loss. Sandberg is quoted as saying: “A childhood friend of mine who is now a rabbi recently told me that the most powerful one-line prayer he has ever read is: "Let me not die while I am still alive." I would have never understood that prayer before losing Dave. Now I do. I think when tragedy occurs, it presents a choice. You can give in to the void, the emptiness that fills your heart, your lungs, constricts your ability to think or even breathe. Or you can try to find meaning. These past thirty days, I have spent many of my moments lost in that void. And I know that many future moments will be consumed by the vast emptiness as well. But when I can, I want to choose life and meaning”.
 
There are people among us like Sheryl Sandberg with an abundance of intelligence and strength of character who would eventually embark on a Plan B after the loss of a loved one. I have no such claim to pretension of my own fortitude, courage and intelligence. Without these attributes I am at a loss as to how I would react or face life after an inheritance of loss. In my destitution of these noble characteristics, I find solace in another approach that may well prepare me for loss. Amanda Taub, writing in The New York Times quotes Michelle Goldberg (no relation to Dave Goldberg) who wrote in New York Magazine: “Not long ago," she writes, "I learned the Arabic word Ya'aburnee. Literally, 'you bury me,' it means wanting to die before a loved one so as not to have to face the world without him or her in it."
 
Taub writes on: “Goldberg realized that those words captured her feelings for her husband, and that having a child would be a way to bring more of him into the world — and a way to hold on to part of him if someday she lost him. Goldberg and her husband now have two children, and they have enriched her life, she writes, in ways she would never have believed possible. "Before there was one person in the world for whom I would use the word Ya'aburnee, and now there are three."
 
In essence, the Sandberg approach and the Goldberg approach are one and the same where both built family around them to (subconsciously) prepare for the inevitability of loss. Only, while Sandberg had to build on the life she built with her husband and children after the fact, Goldberg has all three in her life. The principle remains the same: that the love they found in their lives amply compensates for their inevitable loss.
 
The Hand on the Mirror: A True Story of Life Beyond Death is a book by Janis Heaphy Durham in which the author writes about the death of her husband Max Besler, who died of cancer at age 56. They had lived together (until Max’s death) with the same abiding love that Sheryl Sandberg and Michelle Goldberg shared with their spouses. But Heaphy Durham’s book is different in that it speaks of a life that does not end but keeps coming back at her through manifestations of her dead husband. Alison Fraser who reviewed the book says: “This launched Heaphy Durham on a journey that transformed her spiritually and altered her view of reality forever. She interviewed scientists and spiritual practitioners along the way, as she discovered that the veil between this world and the next is thin and it's love that bridges the two worlds”.
 
The issue is, no one mentioned in this essay lost everyone in their family all at once and lived on to face the world alone. This bring to bear the metaphysical sense behind Worden’s practicality: that the one left behind has to find a new place in his or her emotional relationship with the deceased. This is easier said than done. The world does not move in a set pattern of expected results. All of us are “fooled by randomness” as author Nassim Nichola Taleb said in his book of the same title. All we can do is to prepare ourselves for what may come to us with no warning. We have to develop our own coping mechanism and we have to build on it while everyone is around us. That does not mean that we should have no emotion. As Taleb indicated: “emotions give us energy and they are actually critical to life in the day-to-day world. In other words, the goal here is not to become a robot who can analyze everything with perfect logic”. But a certain degree of preparedness could help.

UK Food Bank Network Distributed Record Number of Emergency Parcels in 2018


The rise represents an 18.8 percent year-on-year increase - the main reasons for people needing emergency food are benefits consistently not covering the cost of living (33 percent), and delays or changes to benefits being paid.
 25.04.2019
A record 1.58 million emergency food parcels were distributed to UK citizens by the Trussell Trust food bank network in 2018 — over 577,000 of them children — as benefit cuts, universal credit delays, and rising poverty fuelled the charity's busiest year since its founding in 1997.
Many claimants simply don't have the necessary savings to subsist over a month without income, putting them in rent arrears as a result. A third of referrals to food banks last year were as a result of "low income", with claimants unable to meet the cost of living, the majority as a result of inadequate benefits income — most working-age benefits have been frozen since 2016.
Our figures only show the tip of the iceberg but here’s how many emergency food parcels were handed out across the UK last year. We know – find out how here > https://www.trusselltrust.org/news-and-blog/latest-stats/end-year-stats/ 
Universal Credit is not the only benefit payment people referred to food banks have experienced problems with, but issues with moving onto the new system are a key driver of increasing need — 49 percentof food bank referrals made due to a delay in benefits being paid in UK were linked to Universal Credit.
The Department for Work and Pensions has challenged the trust's claim universal credit was driving food bank use, although Rudd had seemingly admitted the two were linked earlier this year. It argues that advance loans available to claimants when they claim universal credit mean no one should go hungry for lack of cash. However, Trussell says that having to repay a chunk of the advance each month leaves many claimants unable to meet living costs for long periods, and that this continues to drive them to food banks.
Trussell Trust chief executive Emma Revie said it was "unacceptable" anyone should have to use a food bank in the first place, and "no charity can replace the dignity of having financial security". She urged the Government to ensure benefit payments "reflect the true cost of living and work is secure", in order to end the reliance of so many on food banks.
Today’s figures show that 2018-19 was the busiest year for in our network since we first opened. Of the 1.6m food parcels handed out to people unable to afford the basics, 550,000+ of these went to children. We know . More here > https://www.trusselltrust.org/news-and-blog/latest-stats/end-year-stats/ 
"What we are seeing year-upon-year is more and more people struggling to eat because they simply cannot afford food. This is not right. Enough is enough. We know this situation can be fixed — that's why we're campaigning to create a future where no one needs a food bank. Our benefits system is supposed to protect us all from being swept into poverty. Universal Credit should be part of the solution but currently the five week wait is leaving many without enough money to cover the basics. As a priority, we're urging the government to end the wait for Universal Credit to ease the pressure on thousands of households," she added.
The charity also challenged claims by work and pensions secretary Amber Rudd that long waits for universal credit payments were "absolutely not" causing claimants to use food banks — a claim the minister herself seemingly acknowledged in February.
It’s unacceptable that more people than ever before are having to use a for help - our benefits system should anchor people from being swept into . We believe
A woman who was forced to use food banks herself and now volunteers for Trussell Trust compared her experience to being "thrown into an unknown world".
"I didn't have any money for three months while waiting for Universal Credit. I couldn't pay my rent and I had to work out whether to eat in the morning or the afternoon because I didn't have enough money for the basics. The food bank got me back on my feet and offered me hope that things would get better. I'm a great believer in giving back and that's why I volunteer my time at Southwark Foodbank. People shouldn't feel embarrassed if they're forced to use a food bank — they are there to help you," she said.
The number of annual uses of Trussell Trust food banks stood at a mere 41,000 in 2010 — although the total number of individual Britons making use of food banks is unknown. A 2014 estimate suggested the Trussell Trust's food banks account for around half (420) of the food banks in the UK, suggesting the actual number of food parcels handed out across the UK, and the number of users of food banks, will be far higher than the charity's own figures. Nonetheless, the number of food banks has also increased since 2010 so far more people have access to food banks, meaning it's difficult to precisely attribute the increase in usage to an increase in demand, rather than availability.

NOT POWER BUT FEAR!




24 April 2019

(1)   Aung San Suu Kyi, the Nobel Peace Prize Winner once said: “It is not power that corrupts but fear.  Fear of losing power corrupts those who wield it and fear of the scourge of power corrupts those who are subject to it!!!”  No words could describe more poignantly the situation prevailing in our country today!!!  We need to take pragmatic cognizance of the issues that plague our motherland under the guise of democracy!!!   Looking at the picture as a whole, we see that the underlying reasons for our problems are the erosion of democracy, the total absence of respect for justice and fairplay, the exploitation of the masses, the unsolved murders; the list goes on and on!!!  The demolition of democracy threatens us all for we are subject to those who wield power; yet, we cannot continue to be silent spectators at this disgusting show!!!

(2)  Liberty of expression

Meetings of high powered commit tees and, detailed talks on eliminating polls violence have already begun!!!  Representatives of the contesting parties are assured the liberty of expression to campaign in an atmosphere of justice and freedom!!!  The hopes of each and every representative are singularly equivocal, but the tenacious minds that fashion and cushion the exalted virtues of free and fair elections are multipronged!!!  The question is, do we believe in this???

(3) Cannot  hope to survive

Strategies fashioned in unimaginable depths of degradation will eventually surface and be carried out on the blood-soaked altars of ambition!!!  The stage is being set but we cannot even begin to write epitaphs for freedom because of the autocratic manner in which assaults are launched on individuals and institutions that seek to protect freedom.  A government which is not responsive to the people’s will and propounds change only from platforms cannot even hope to survive!!!  A government which is inflexible and static, that refuses to meet changing conditions and consistently refutes the inalienable right for free and fair elections is past its use!!!

 

(4) Bikes for students

As we said last week, the Grade 5 Examination being made non-mandatory has given rise to much speculation!!!  Children from the rural areas looked on that examination as their sole stepping stone to a decent school in Colombo!!!   What we fail to realize are the grim realities that those poor children have to contend with in their day to day lives!!!  Most of them have no money to go to school, no money for books and other basic necessities; so you see them standing along the roads trying desperately to sell a bundle of gotukola, some murunga, or any other vegetable that has been grown in their gardens!!!  The heartbreaking reality is that they have no means of getting to their schools other than walking there; no matter what the distance, these poor kids have to walk, come rain or shine!!!  Instead of offering them WiFi, Laptops, IPads etc., why don’t the authorities think of giving them something practical, something useful like push bicycles that will get them to school, even a school bus, bags for use in school and perhaps even a small meal allowance or a meal that will help sustain them!!! These practical issues are what should be uppermost in the minds of the authorities; how best to alleviate the suffering of these poor children!!!  THEY ARE ALSO OUR CHILDREN AND NEED TO BE LOOKED AFTER EVEN MORE THAN THOSE WHO HAVE!!! 

 

(5) Paddy farmers concerned


A New Year has dawned and with it the hopes and aspirations of the people are once again reignited; but to no avail!!!  According to paddy farmers, the end of the paddy harvesting season and the dawn of the New Year did not herald the guaranteed price promised to paddy farmers!!!  As a result, paddy farmers claim their state of livelihood has declined very badly and they have no choice but to sell to wholesale traders at a price lower than the guaranteed price!!!  According to News First “The farmers have no choice but to sell their crops to wholesale traders at a price lower than the guaranteed price.  While the farmers in Galenbidunuwewa are suffering in this way, the farmers in Karuwalagaswewa, Puttalam are left with no choice but to store their harvest in their houses.”   Saddest of all, the farmers say “There is no new year for us this year.  Look there is no space for a visitor to come and sit inside our house.  There is paddy everywhere.”  Another one says: We have been made very helpless.  My husband sleeps outside the house.  The children and I sleep in the kitchen.”  How sad, how bleak!!!   News First also says the Paddy Marketing Board is the main government body responsible for purchasing, selling, supplying and distributing paddy and rice!!!  However, the Paddy Marketing Board is only purchasing less than 3% of the country’s annual harvest!!!  So, what happened to what was once the Granary of the East???

 

(6) Think of the less fortunate

With the dawning of the New Year, all people naturally hope that there will be true peace, goodwill, sincerity and prosperity in our land!!!  Most of all that those who have, particularly those who have wealth and prosperity in abundance will spare a thought for our less fortunate brothers and sisters; but more than that for our less fortunate children!!!  Some of them don’t even have clothes to cover their nakedness, leave alone dress for the New Year!!!  In other countries you hear of self-made millionaires and billionaires, some of whom had even gone without meals and clothes to wear but who persisted with inflexible strength of purpose and made it to where they are today!!!  They are the ones who stop to think of the less fortunate, to feed, and to clothe; they have sincerity of purpose; what they do is free from pretense, deceit and hypocrisy because it comes from the core of their hearts!!!  All our society women who only want to be seen at the ‘IN’ parties or lunches and high teas, our gentlemen who would rather spend money on a race horse than feed a poor child; this is the heartless, inhumane, raucous society we live in today; the ‘IN’ SCENE AS IT IS KNOWN AND APPLAUDED!!!

 

(7) Develop a greater deeper moral sense

For Buddhist, Hindus, Christians, new vistas have opened, new eras beckon!!!  Let us try to make them fruitful, worthwhile and overflowing with humanity!!!  For a change, let us see some orphanages, elder’s homes, hospitals particularly children’s hospitals being looked after by those who have and being given the publicity they deserve!!!  Let them be proud to be associated with these humane activities instead of wanting to be continuously seen as part of the ‘IN SCENE’ – HOW MUCH MORE REWARDING THAT WOULD BE, NOT JUST IN THIS LIFE BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY IN THE NEXT!!!  It is ALL THAT YOU WILL TAKE TO THE NEXT WORLD, not your furs, clothes, jewels, scrumptious cuisines etc.,  We all need to develop a greater deeper moral sense, we need to move from SELFISH TO SELFLESS, to acknowledge THE PRICE OF PROGRESS AND IF IT IS REALLY AND TRULY WORTH IT???
THE VOICE

Cyclone kills one, leaves trail of destruction in Mozambique

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JOHANNESBURG/LUANDA (Reuters) - Cyclone Kenneth killed at least one person and left a trail of destruction in northern Mozambique, destroying houses, ripping up trees and knocking out power, authorities said on Friday.

Emma RumneyStephen Eisenhammer-APRIL 26, 2019

The cyclone brought storm surges and wind gusts of up to 280 km per hour (174 mph) when it made landfall on Thursday evening, after killing three people in the island nation of Comoros.

It was the most powerful storm on record to hit Mozambique’s northern coast and came just six weeks after Cyclone Idai battered the impoverished nation, causing devastating floods and killing more than 1,000 people across a swathe of southern Africa.

The World Food Programme warned that Kenneth could dump as much as 600 millimeters of rain on the region over the next 10 days - twice that brought by Cyclone Idai.
One woman in the port town of Pemba died after being hit by a falling tree, the Emergency Operations Committee for Cabo Delgado (COE) said in a statement, while another person was injured.

In rural areas outside Pemba, many homes are made of mud. In the main town on the island of Ibo, 90 percent of the houses were destroyed, officials said. Around 15,000 people were out in the open or in “overcrowded” shelters and there was a need for tents, food and water, they said.

There were also reports of a large number of homes and some infrastructure destroyed in Macomia district, a mainland district adjacent to Ibo.

A local group, the Friends of Pemba Association, had earlier reported that they could not reach people in Muidumbe, a district further inland. Earlier in the week the government expressed concern that five rivers and coastal waterways could burst their banks.


A damaged building is pictured after Cyclone Kenneth swept through the region in Cabo Delgado province, Mozambique in this image obtained from social media. UNICEF via REUTERS
Mark Lowcock, United Nations under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, warned the storm could require another major humanitarian operation in Mozambique.

“Cyclone Kenneth marks the first time two cyclones have made landfall in Mozambique during the same season, further stressing the government’s limited resources,” he said.

Antonio Carabante, relief delegate with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), highlighted the risks from expected heavy rainfall.

“While attention is often given to wind speed, we know from experience that it is rainfall - and subsequent flooding and landslides - that can be even more dangerous from a humanitarian perspective,” he said.

The IFRC said it had teams in Mozambique providing first aid and preparing for potential flooding. Mozambique’s National Institute of Disaster Management (INGC) also has teams out assessing the impact.
Shaquila Alberto, owner of the beach-front Messano Flower Lodge in Macomia, said there were many fallen trees there, and in rural areas people’s homes had been damaged. Some areas of nearby Pemba had no power.

“Even my workers, they said the roof and all the things fell down,” she said by phone.

Further south, in Pemba, Elton Ernesto, a receptionist at Raphael’s Hotel, said there were fallen trees but not too much damage. The hotel had power and water, he said, while phones rang in the background. “The rain has stopped,” he added.

In the days after Cyclone Idai, heavy inland rains prompted rivers in central Mozambique to burst their banks, submerging entire villages, cutting areas off from aid and ruining crops.

Damaged properties are pictured after Cyclone Kenneth swept through the region in Cabo Delgado province, Mozambique April 26, 2019 in this image obtained from social media. Picture taken from inside a vehicle. UNICEF via REUTERS
Slideshow (5 Images)

There were concerns the same could happen again in northern Mozambique.

Before Kenneth hit, the government and aid workers moved around 30,000 people to safer buildings, however authorities said that around 680,000 people were in the path of the storm.

The area which bore the brunt of Kenneth is not as densely populated as the one where Idai struck.
Additional reporting by Manuel Mucari in Maputo and Alexander Winning in Johannesburg; Writing by Emma Rumney; Editing by Janet Lawrence, Alexandra Zavis and Raissa Kasolowsky



Australian researchers looking into using psychedelics to treat mental illness





25 Apr 2019
AN estimated one in ten Australians were taking antidepressants in 2015. That’s double the number using them in 2000, and the second-highest rate of antidepressant use among all OECD countries.
Yet some studies have found antidepressants might be no more effective than placebo.
Not only does this mean many Australians aren’t experiencing relief from their psychological distress, but some may also be contending with adverse side effects from their medications.
Also, the provision of these medications is costing Australian taxpayers millions of dollars through the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
Australia needs a paradigm shift in the way we treat mental illness. Scientific research is increasingly pointing to psychedelic drugs like psilocybin and MDMA (methylenedioxymethamphetamine, more commonly known as Ecstasy) as viable options.
While social stigma and academic conservatism have seen Australia lag behind other countries in this area of research, we are on the cusp of the first Australian trial of psychedelic drugs for mental health.
This research is going to look at psilocybin-assisted therapy for anxiety and depression among terminally ill patients.

A brief history of psychedelic drugs

Psychedelics are a broad category of drugs that can produce profound changes in consciousness. “Magic mushrooms”, containing psilocybin, have been used by some indigenous communities for at least 1,000 years. Other psychedelics, such as LSD and MDMA, were first synthesised in the laboratories of major pharmaceutical companies early in the 20th century.
shutterstock_1032643477
Some people will take antidepressants for many years. Source: Shutterstock
In the 1950s, psychedelics were considered “wonder drugs”, used with psychotherapy in treating a range of conditions. These included depression, end-of-life anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol dependence.
But, in the 1960s, psychedelics escaped the clinic and became popular among the younger generation. In response to their association with the counterculture movement, a moral panic ensued. Psychedelic drugs were made illegal internationally in 1971.
Research and practice were abandoned, until recent shifts in attitude led to the re-emergence of medical research using psychedelics.
In 2013, we wrote a piece in The Conversation about this international psychedelic science renaissance.
By that time, researchers at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine had shown psilocybin could reliably induce mystical states leading to positive changes in personality such as openness and sociability. Psychotherapists at UCLA harnessed these effects to reduce anxiety and depression in people with terminal cancer.
Meanwhile, researchers across the USASwitzerlandCanada and Israel had achieved promising results treating PTSD with psychotherapy (“talk therapy” guided by trained therapists) assisted by MDMA.
In the past six years, two phase 2 clinical trials have shown psilocybin can improve quality of life for people with terminal cancer.
Another study showed psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy can effectively treat depression. Some 67% of participants showed clinically and statistically significant reductions in depressive symptoms.
Phase 3 trials are now planned. If these confirm the treatments to be effective, MDMA and psilocybin are likely to become approved medications in some countries within the next five years.
Psilocybin even appears useful in treating alcohol and nicotine addiction. And MDMA may ease social anxiety in people on the autism spectrum.

How psychedelics work in the brain

We’re now beginning to understand the neurological mechanisms responsible for the mystical states and creative thinking psychedelics can produce, and how they can aid the treatment of anxiety and depression.
Psychedelics reduce the activity of a neural circuit in the brain called the default mode network (DMN).
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‘Magic mushrooms’ contain psilocybin, a mind-altering psychedelic substance. Source: Shutterstock
The DMN is responsible for our “resting state” sense of self, which can become distorted as depression and similar mental illnesses take hold. By temporarily decreasing the activity of the DMN, psychedelics appear to enable other less direct neural pathways to be established.
These interconnections can reduce the amount we persistently rethink the same thought, which is characteristic of depression. Similarly, they promote the development of fresh perspectives on personal situations and interpersonal relationships.
It also appears psychedelics can promote the physical regrowth of neuronal connections that have withered away in people who experience long-term depression.
The mechanism of this process is not yet understood, but it seems to correlate well with the demonstrated positive mental health outcomes of psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy.
On the other hand, various health conditions for which psychedelics are not suitable are widely recognised. In particular, people with underlying personality disorders or psychiatric conditions such as schizophrenia risk worsening of their symptoms.
People who have medical conditions such as heart or liver disease, or who are using a wide range of medications including antidepressants, are also advised to avoid psychedelics without careful medical supervision.
In all cases, it is stressed that psychedelic therapy should always take place under professional supervision to minimise potential health risks.

An Australian first

Since our last Conversation article, we’ve seen some fundamental shifts in Australia.
Later this year, a phase 2 study of psilocybin-assisted therapy for anxiety and depression in 30 terminally ill patients will begin at St Vincent’s Hospital in Melbourne.
This trial, due to be completed in 2021, will look at the effects of psychedelic psychotherapy in people with terminal conditions other than cancer, in addition to those with cancer.
Meanwhile, a newly established charity, Mind Medicine Australia, is aiming to negotiate Australia’s regulatory framework to have psychedelics reclassified from the most restrictive drug category to one that accommodates prescription medicines.
If the results of our study, and those of others around the world, confirm the promise of the initial trials already completed, there is an excellent chance several of these treatments will be approved for prescription use within three to five years.
But, as well as proving the efficacy of these treatments, we will need to continue to demonstrate their safety, negotiate regulatory hurdles and ultimately convince doctors and the public that psychedelic psychotherapy is a viable approach for mental health treatment.count
By Martin Williams, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Monash University and Stephen Bright, Senior Lecturer of Addiction, Edith Cowan University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Measles cases quadruple in UK – health secretary ‘worried’ about false vaccine information online

It’s been described by the NHS chief as a “public health timebomb.” The number of cases of measles in England has almost quadrupled in the past year, leading the head of the health service to issue a warning about the growing number of parents refusing to vaccinate their children.
An analysis by the charity Unicef found that among high-income countries, the UK had the third largest number of children who had missed their first dose of the measles vaccine.
The Health Secretary said today he was “particularly worried” anti-vaccine fake news was being spread online.
Minnie Stephenson reports.