Pills, Teas, and Songs


Book Description

According to the Pew Research Center, half of the general American public has tried alternative medicine. Nguyen dares to ask, how often do people do so without understanding the culture where those medicines originated? Pills, Teas, and Songs: Stories of Medicine around the World is a collection of stories to deepen respect, inspire understanding, and spark curiosity. This book is dedicated to educating readers who are interested in incorporating different medicinal systems into their lives and to preserve the evolving legacy of healthcare. This book delves into... What cultural appropriation looks like in healthcare and wellness If Eastern and Western medicine are truly opposites Why immigrants and diasporic populations favor traditional medicine and heritage products The history behind Black midwifery in the US And much more Told through colorful stories of history and culture, Pills, Teas, and Songs: Stories of Medicine around the World is a timely reminder that, despite our differences, the human race has much more in common than we realize.




The Yellow Pills Book


Book Description







My Song to Sing


Book Description

Music, physics, or ice hockey . . . or maybe all three? This singular question perplexes Adam Brock as he exits the stage at his high school graduation. Although he leaves home for college with a set of structured plans for the future, Brock faces an even more daunting proposition after his first few months at Temple University: is he ready to embrace change and embark on his first trip to Europe? My Song to Sing describes Brock's transformational journey through high school and college. This coming-of-age memoir details his search for a compromise between passion and profession that ultimately sets him on a trajectory he never envisioned. With an ice hockey stick in one hand and clarinet in the other, Brock guides the reader through his experiences in young adulthood and highlights themes and wisdom from this transformative period in his life. Discover how we all have the power to take a leap of faith on our ambitions and transform today's uncertainty into the future we desire.




Comprehending Drug Use


Book Description

Comprehending Drug Use, the first full-length critical overview of the use of ethnographic methods in drug research, synthesizes more than one hundred years of study on the human encounter with psychotropic drugs. J. Bryan Page and Merrill Singer create a comprehensive examination of the whole field of drug ethnography-methodology that involves access to the hidden world of drug users, the social spaces they frequent, and the larger structural forces that help construct their worlds. They explore the important intersections of drug ethnography with globalization, criminalization, public health (including the HIV/AIDS epidemic, hepatitis, and other diseases), and gender, and also provide a practical guide of the methods and career paths of ethnographers.




Plain Songs


Book Description




Multidimensional Music Therapy


Book Description

An immediately usable guide to the many ways Music Therapy can be used on its own and in combination with other disciplines. Based on the author's 24 years of experience, this book gives many concrete examples of innovative programs and their results. They involve Music Therapy on its own, and also combined with Speech Therapy, drama, costume, visual aids, recording, instrument making, and song writing. These proven blends are applicable to adults with a variety of conditions including Multiple Sclerosis, stroke, Parkinsons, Lou Gehrig's, dementia, Cerebral Palsy, Huntington's and brain injury in adults age 25 to 100 years plus. Details of a specially designed software application used as an aid in organizing repertoire are included. "It is a goldmine of information, inspiring case studies, practical, creative ideas throughout." - Liz Moffitt, MTA, Instructor, Capilano College. " I am so impressed with your book. It is very well written and informative"- Annette Altman, A.R.C.T, B. Music and Music Ed., RMT.







Sing Backwards and Weep


Book Description

This gritty bestselling memoir by the singer Mark Lanegan of Screaming Trees, Queens of the Stone Age, and Soulsavers documents his years as a singer and drug addict in Seattle in the '80s and '90s. When Mark Lanegan first arrived in Seattle in the mid-1980s, he was just "an arrogant, self-loathing redneck waster seeking transformation through rock 'n' roll." Little did he know that within less than a decade he would rise to fame as the frontman of the Screaming Trees and then fall from grace as a low-level crack dealer and a homeless heroin addict, all the while watching some of his closest friends rocket to the forefront of popular music. In Sing Backwards and Weep, Lanegan takes readers back to the sinister, needle-ridden streets of Seattle, to an alternative music scene that was simultaneously bursting with creativity and dripping with drugs. He tracks the tumultuous rise and fall of the Screaming Trees, from a brawling, acid-rock bar band to world-famous festival favorites that scored a hit number five single on Billboard's alternative charts and landed a notorious performance on Late Night with David Letterman, where Lanegan appeared sporting a fresh black eye from a brawl the night before. This book also dives into Lanegan's personal struggles with addiction, culminating in homelessness, petty crime, and the tragic deaths of his closest friends. From the back of the van to the front of the bar, from the hotel room to the emergency room, onstage, backstage, and everywhere in between, Sing Backwards and Weep reveals the abrasive underlining beneath one of the most romanticized decades in rock history-from a survivor who lived to tell the tale. Gritty, gripping, and unflinchingly raw, Sing Backwards and Weep is a book about more thanjust an extraordinary singer who watched hisdreams catch fire and incinerate the groundbeneath his feet. It's about a man who learnedhow to drag himself from the wreckage, dust offthe ashes, and keep living and creating. "Mark Lanegan—primitive, brutal, and apocalyptic. What's not to love?" —Nick Cave, author of The Sick Bag Song and The Death of Bunny Munro




Models.Behaving.Badly.


Book Description

Now in paperback, “a compelling, accessible, and provocative piece of work that forces us to question many of our assumptions” (Gillian Tett, author of Fool’s Gold). Quants, physicists working on Wall Street as quantitative analysts, have been widely blamed for triggering financial crises with their complex mathematical models. Their formulas were meant to allow Wall Street to prosper without risk. But in this penetrating insider’s look at the recent economic collapse, Emanuel Derman—former head quant at Goldman Sachs—explains the collision between mathematical modeling and economics and what makes financial models so dangerous. Though such models imitate the style of physics and employ the language of mathematics, theories in physics aim for a description of reality—but in finance, models can shoot only for a very limited approximation of reality. Derman uses his firsthand experience in financial theory and practice to explain the complicated tangles that have paralyzed the economy. Models.Behaving.Badly. exposes Wall Street’s love affair with models, and shows us why nobody will ever be able to write a model that can encapsulate human behavior.