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| | photo results | I lOVE HAMSTERS | My heart is set on getting a hamster.. | |
|  DancingFeather (196) |
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 | A wrinkle | A wrinkle is a ridge or crease of a surface. It usually refers to folds on fabric or clothes, or on the skin of an organism; the folds are generally random and do not exhibit any repeating pattern. In skin or other foldable material a wrinkle or fold may be permanent if the material is folded the same way each time.
Skin wrinkles typically appear as a result of aging processes such as glycation or, temporarily, as the result of prolonged (more than a few minutes) immersion in water. Wrinkling in skin is caused by habitual facial expressions, aging, sun damage, smoking, poor hydration, and various other factors. With prolonged water exposure, the outer layer of skin starts to absorb water. The skin doesn't expand evenly, however, and this causes your skin to wrinkle. Depletion of water in the body, as occurs with dehydration, can also cause this puckering of the skin. | |
|  tirtha9 (306) |
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 | Memory and Ageing | Memory is involved in remembering to do things in the future, as well as in remembering what happened in the past. Some studies have found that older adults are worse at prospective memory than younger adults are, yet studies that examine prospective memory in naturalistic contexts often find that older adults are better than younger adults (Henry et al., 2004).
It is important to note here that the ability of older adults to remember future events changes depending on the type of task. Studies in the laboratory in which older adults cannot remind themselves with environmental cues suggest impairments to prospective memory, but when the memory skills of older adults are considered in their naturalistic environment the results show they can perform as well as younger adults. For example Maylor (1995)performed a study in which she asked 222 individuals to remember to call her every day for a week. Those that remembered tended to utilize conjunction cues (remember to make the call every day after breakfast) or external cues (set the cooking timer, put the envelope they had been given near the phone, etc.). When such cues were used the ability to remember could match that of younger counterparts. Thus there is reason to believe that older people can easily compensate for some aspects of memory decline. | |
|  tirtha9 (306) |
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 | Kids clothes | There'll be time that our kids no longer like the clothings we buy for them.
When that happens, it's a realization that they have grown-up and have developed
tastes of their own. | |
|  moolahmagnet (1616) |
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 | me at 62..with red hair! | Who can guess that I am 62 in this picture? No one I bet>! | |
|  DancingFeather (196) |
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 | my real age | guess i'm older than i thought. | |
|  applefreak (1123) |
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 | Age do not Protect you from love | Love has no age. A babi can love, a old man man can love.THeir is no age limit to love someone. | |
|  mayankbargali (49) |
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 | Happy Birthday Dorian and Gianni | 38 year old mistaken for 18???? Her birthday is today. | |
|  sudalunts (1210) |
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 | Cheeks | Cheeks (Latin: buccae) constitute the area of the face below the eyes and between the nose and the left or right ear.
It is fleshy in humans and other mammals, the skin being suspended by the chin and the jaws, and forming the lateral wall of the human mouth, visibly touching the cheekbone below the eye.
In vertebrates, markings on the cheek area (malar stripes/spots/...), particularly immediately beneath the eye, often serve as important distinguishing features between species or individuals.
"Buccal" means relating to the cheek. In humans, the region is innervated by the buccal nerve. | |
|  tirtha9 (306) |
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