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freshorphresh:
Presenting Horrible Movie Clichés, an illustrated guide, brought to you by the New York International Latino Film Festival.
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Right now, I want you to take out your list of suspects and look at the names. I’ll give you a moment. Okay, the names are: Bret Stiles, Gale Bertram, Raymond Haffner, Reede Smith, Bob Kirkland, Sheriff Thomas McAllister, Brett Partridge. There. See? That’s clever. But fair’s fair, Patrick. You’ve changed the game so there’s new rules now. Eileen Turner is the first of many. I’m going to start killing again. Often. Until you catch me, or I catch you.
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Hugs that last over twenty seconds, release a chemical in your body called “Oxytocin”, which makes you trust the person you’re hugging more.
“We need 4 hugs a day for survival. We need 8 hugs a day for maintenance. We need 12 hugs a day for growth” - Virginia Satir, family therapist
Hugging someone is a way of showing that we care, and for both the hugged and hugger, it feels good. When growing up, we are very sensitive to touch. We recognize our parents initially through sense of touch.
Oxytocin is a neurotransmitter that acts like a hormone and helps promote trust. It’s released in the body when we feel safe. This could be through breast-feeding (when we’re little), holding hands, snuggling, dancing with someone, during a massage or body work out or things that generally make us feel at ease. Hugging is definitely one of the things that make us release oxytocin.
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SIMON BAKER <3
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Poetic Suicide @ Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney
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