#Zylas mention
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crownprincessoftherusalkas · 8 months ago
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Tori: Hey, Robin, think you can make some snacks for the party?
Robin: As long as I make an equal number of snacks for Zylas, possibly.
Tori: A couple of extra bags of chips wouldn't hurt, then.
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Amalia: You know what? I'm going to launch a study to prove that shorter people are more angry than taller ones. It's the only way to explain Zylas. Tori: What about Robin? Amalia: She is, as always, an anomaly. Tori: Right. And you're sure it's not because Zylas is a demon? Amalia: That's too cliché.
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jacuzziwrites · 9 months ago
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Fun Facts #2
Did I mention that this story takes places in a solarpunk society and that Zyla's clothing business works to create accessible/plus size/queer clothing that's long lasting, environmentally friendly, cheap, and based on elements of different pieces of African clothing?
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dfoanthology · 3 years ago
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Vault Interviews #6
Thank you once again to all those who had pre-ordered a zine and merch! We'll keep you posted as we work on shipping your ducky filled goodies out to you! Till then, we hope you continue to support us. Contributor: Zyla Sweetbean
How has your experience with being a contributor been? 
Thrilling. I was super excited to get to participate, and by far one of the best parts is getting to see a community come together to make something incredible!
Have you learned anything new about the Zine process or about your own skill process? If so, what? 
I tend to be a bit longwinded when I write. I actually enjoyed having to write a fully formed, satisfying story within the word count. I feel like it stretched me, and I loved getting to see what fellow writers could do too.
What advice would you give to others about being a contributor? 
Recognize that within a Zine there are limitations in how much you can write, but that doesn't mean you can't create something absolutely incredible.
Anything else you would like to mention? (A thanks or last piece of advice) 
See everyone contribute whether through writing or art made me realize how talented and diverse this community it. It made me really happy.
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sultrysirens · 2 years ago
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I know you mentioned somewhere that you don’t want to write the good scenes between zylas and robin because you don’t want to miss anything but when my adhd gets bad like that I found it’s helpful to write one shots of scenes even if they’re not necessarily important in the long wrong and you probably won’t even use them but food fr thought I guess, I hope you find that motivation you need
I've done that before, and it is kinda helpful, but it also takes away from the anticipation of writing it in chronological order, I've found. And sometimes that anticipation is what I need to drive me forward, y'know?
Ahhh writing is a pain in the rear, it really is...but I love it too much to stop. ;u;
-Nightshade
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marsilainen · 4 years ago
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Take a shot every time the Finnish commentator mentions the pronunciation of Piotr Zyla's name
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dailyskijumping · 4 years ago
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After four World Cup competition weekends and the 2020 Ski Flying World Championships, the 69th Four Hills Tournament (nice) is finally on the horizon. Let’s take a look at some of this season’s statistics to see who we should be keeping an eye on during the Vierschanzentournee!
Granerud on top form...
24-year-old Norwegian Halvor Egner Granerud has certainly been this season’s success story. Scoring only 8 points for a final rank of 61st in the 19/20 season, the first month of competition in the 20/21 has seen Granerud take five wins from seven competitions, as well as a silver medal at the Ski Flying World Championships, leaving him with a total of 600 points and the overall championship lead. You’d be a fool to count him out - a €10 bet on Granerud to win would currently win you only €11.50.
…but Eisenbichler could mount a challenge.
While much attention has been on Granerud and his borderline-miraculous newfound form, Markus Eisenbichler has had a consistent year. The 29-year-old German has challenged for the Four Hills title before, duelling with Japan’s Ryoyu Kobayashi during his all-dominating 18/19 season and ultimately securing second place - which is also where Eisenbichler is currently situated in the World Cup standings. With two wins, two second places, and a bronze in ski flying, he’s no stranger to this season’s podiums. However, Eisenbichler hasn’t been able to replicate the stunning consistency of Granerud (a 28th place in Nizhny Tagil saw him almost out of the point-scoring positions), and so a €10 bet on Eisenbichler to win would currently win you €40.
The top 10, Covid-adjusted
You can’t talk about anything in 2020 without bringing up Covid-19, and this applies in ski jumping just as much as every other part of life. The season has been marred by various cases of the disease forcing athletes into self-isolation, impacting both their rankings and their physical health. Many athletes have missed competitions this season, and so I’ve recalculated the impact on the top 10 by dividing the amount of points they’ve scored by the number of points that have been available to them.
GRANERUD, Halvor Egner (600/700, 0.86)
EISENBICHLER, Markus (463/700, 0.66)
ZYLA, Piotr (238/500, 0.48 - actually ranked 4th)
GEIGER, Karl (141/300, 0.47 - actually ranked 11th)
HUBER, Daniel (182/400, 0.45 - actually ranked 9th)
KUBACKI, Dawid (205/500, 0.41 - actually ranked 7th)
STOCH, Kamil (178/500, 0.35 - actually ranked 10th)
JOHANSSON, Robert (244/700, 0.35)
LANISEK, Anze (219/700, 0.31)
PASCHKE, Pius (212/700, 0.30)
SATO, Yukiya (193/700, 0.27)
This is bad news for Johansson, who is leapfrogged by five jumpers and pushed from third to eighth. We can only hope that the Four Hills will be able to run smoothly and safely for everyone.
Who else has a chance?
While it seems like the fight for the Four Hills title will come down to Granerud and Eisenbichler, there are still plenty of chances for other jumpers to achieve podiums throughout the four competitions.
Karl Geiger, the fourth-ranked jumper in our Covid-proof standings, is unlikely to make it to at least the first days of the 4HT, which overlap with his Covid-19 self-isolation period (not to mention the first weeks of his newborn daughter Luisa’s life!). Therefore, it falls to the trio of Poles (Żyła and previous 4HT winners Kubacki and Stoch), Huber, Johansson, and Lanišek to fight among themselves for podium positions and tournament rankings. Further surprises might materialise - a hard-earned first podium for German stalwart Pius Paschke, for example, or a podium for Slovenia’s Bor Pavlovcic or Poland’s Andrzej Stękała, who aren’t too well-established on the World Cup scene but put in creditable performances for their national teams at the Ski Flying World Championships.
No matter who wins, the Four Hills Tournament will certainly provide a bright spot at the end of a thoroughly bleak year, and make sure that ski jumping fans are able to kick off 2021 with a bang!
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Kit: So how is Zylas handling the holiday season?
Robin: Oh it's terrible, there's sweet pastries in almost every store and he tries to swipe them all. I can't keep up.
Kit: Oh, I thought, like, the religious stuff, y'know-
Robin: ??
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Robin: Oh, they gave me the wrong drink. Amalia: Just go ask them for another one, then. Robin: No, this is fine. Amalia: Let me get this straight, you will talk to a demon but not to a barista? Robin: Well, yeah, Zylas actually keeps people from talking to me. Amalia: Robin: It's a net positive effect. Amalia: Robin: Or would it be net negative?
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jacuzziwrites · 9 months ago
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Zyla's Backstory
Tw: Sexual coercion and NSFW mention
As I mentioned earlier Zyla comes from a wealthy fashion conglomerate. She was supposed to be her father's successor so she trained day and night.
She was engaged with her father's right hand man when she was 19 and they were in a "happy" relationship.
However, throughout their relationship he kept coercing her into having a physical relationship with him despite her hesitancy. Constantly insisting that she'll get used to it if she does it more.
She believes him and thinks that it's normal because she's been sheltered as well as this being her first relationship.
One day she walks in on him cheating on her and he blames her for him cheating. So she runs away. (Don't know why she ran just yet)
She finds a "cave" and is taken in by the head of the BDSM club. The woman teaches Zyla that her previous relationship was toxic (as well as general sex education) and helps her get the help she needs.
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ryoyuftw · 5 years ago
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Though, if you only take ski jumping then it's SLO 7x and NOR 4x... (if I counted correctly). Who is responsible for the suits anyway? A commentator was making it sound like it was all Marius fault and I wanted to hit him so hard because no one blames my puppy (unless it is his fault... Which I don't believe).
Close, it’s Slovenia 5 times and Norway 4 times in men’s ski jumping. It’s weird how the issue only seems to arise in the media when a Norwegian is disqualified. They make it seem like it only happens to Norway, which is clearly not the case. Like all the talk about Lindvik in Predazzo, but nothing about Klimov who was disqualified the next day. Or when 3 Norwegians were DSQed in Ruka, the media barely even bothered to mention 2 Slovenian DSQs in the same competition.
In the interview with Siegmund, he went on about how bad it is that Lindvik was disqualified for the second time this season, and that FIS should consider punishments like suspending him for a month, and that the Norwegian team was “ruining the sport” etc. He acted like Lindvik is the only one who has been DSQed twice this season, but it has also happened to Semenic (and several non-Norwegian women and combiners). It was all just so sensationalized and blown out of proportion, and the focus seemed to be on blaming Norway instead of tackling the frequent DSQs as a whole.
I think the “blame” can be shared between the jumper and the service man responsible for sewing the suits. There are different circumstances around every DSQ. For instance, Deschwanden in Oberstdorf was disqualified because he “fixed” something on his suit before the jump (after the control on the top), which is obviously his own fault. The air flow, on the other hand, is fully the service man’s fault imo, because the jumpers have no say in that part of making and fitting the suit. When the suit is too big, on the other hand, I personally just see it as bad luck. Because no one is trying to cheat that way, the suit always fits when they measure it themselves, but then the body can change 1mm or they might stand in the wrong position during the control, which will disqualify them on small, meaningless margins.
Tom Hilde recently talked about DSQs in a podcast, and he had ‘extreme’ but real examples like: “if you are waiting to jump after the control and feel like you have to scratch your body, you can’t do it otherwise there’s a high chance you’ll get DSQed for ‘manipulating the suit’. Or, something that happened to Zyla a couple of years ago, he was DSQed in the 1st round of a team competition because of the suit, and then he went back up in the 2nd round and was allowed to jump with the same suit. He was only DSQed in the 1st round because he stood in the wrong position during the first control, he hadn’t changed anything about the suit in the 2nd round but still he passed the control. It’s all just so marginal🤷‍♀️
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michaelgogins · 6 years ago
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Reflections on ICMC/NYCEMF 2019
Looking back at the combined International Computer Music Conference/New York City Electroacoustic Music Festival held July 16th through the 23rd on and near the campus of New York University, I here offer my reflections as one of the organizers, as a composer with a piece in the conference, and as an audience member for many of the concerts. 
I was also a referee for music, but that does not enter into my remarks.
First, I will briefly mention pieces I liked well enough that I would probably go out of my way to hear them again. Please note, I did not attend all the concerts, I do not mention pieces for which I was a referee but that I did not hear in concert, and I have my own biases and predilections in the field of electroacoustic music. I am mainly but by no means only interested in algorithmic composition and in through-composed music for fixed media, what we used to call "tape music." 
Where possible, I provide hyperlinks to online renderings of the pieces.
Concert 3, Monday June 16, 16:30, Hebrew Union College sanctuary
Ewan Stefani, black drums rolled, fixed media. Complex and accomplished collage of sampled/processed sounds.
Concert 7, Tuesday June 18, 16:30, Hebrew Union College sanctuary
Angelo Bello, Ricercar, fixed media. Builds on years of experiment based on the algorithmic synthesis/composition methods of Iannis Xenakis. I have heard a number of Bello's pieces and this one was by far my favorite, especially as there was a change of texture towards the end of the piece where melodic whistles and glissandos introduced a different mood.
Concert 12, Wednesday June 19, 20:00, Loreto Theater
Naotoshi Osaka, Kakekagami, with Kourtney Newton on cello. A lot of interesting goodies in the sounds.
Natasha Barrett, Dusk's Gait, fixed media. My interest in this spatialized, hyper-realistic pseudo-collage of "natural" sounds never flagged.
Concert 16, Thursday June 20, 20:00, Loreto Theater
Mara Helmuth, Sound Dunes, with Esther Lamneck on tarogato. Harpies skirling wild and free.
Orlando Garcia, separacion, with Enzo Filippetti on soprano saxophone. Very nice drone that kept me listening through over 12 minutes.
Manuela R. Blackburn, Snap Happy, fixed media. Glitchy, bass ostinato, musical.
Zurine F. Gerenabarrena, Barne, with Patti Cudd on percussion. Frankly this was mostly just Cudd playing with the electronics providing some sonic decorations and fillips. But what playing! Virtuosity on Cudd's level is totally engaging.
Concert 22, Saturday June 22, 20:00, Grand Hall of the Kimmel Center.
Russell Pinkston, Zylamander, with Mark Zyla on French horn. Jazz harmony, rhythmic, an engaging mix of electronic and acoustic sounds and processes.
Concert 24, Sunday June 23, 16:30, Grand Hall, Kimmel Center
Dafna Naphtali and Jen Baker, Clip Mouth Unit, with Jen Baker on trombone and Hans Tammen on blippo box, processed vocals by Dafna Napthali. Slushy sludge, slipping and sliding with lots of processing, musical. Note: the hyperlink is to a different performance from this group.
Concert 25, Sunday June 23, 20:00, Loreto Theater
Mario Davidovsky, Synchronisms No. 11, with Ross Wrightman on double bass. Just good.
Kang Shinae, Aruna, fixed media. The sounds were a bit muddied, perhaps from over-processing, but very musical and with spiritual content.
Timothy Sapp, There Is a Piece Missing, interactive electronics. Wonderful and inventive. The multiple controllers actually contributed to and drove the music.
Rainer Burck, Lamento industriale, fixed media. Really enormous sounds, like a foundry in Heaven (or Hell), musically coherent.
It has been a continuing topic of discussion among the organizers of the NYCEMF how best to present this music. Currently the festival is funded almost exclusively from registration fees. In order to generate enough revenue to pay for theaters etc., a large number of composers must be registered. This has several effects: the audience consists mostly of the composers and some of the performers (and associated friends and family), many pieces are scheduled, and the overall quality of the pieces is, I think, somewhat watered down compared to a festival where a smaller number of pieces would be selected with an eye towards attracting a wider audience.
If the concerts consisted exclusively of pieces on the level of those above, there should be no trouble attracting a wider audience, not to mention more critics and music journalists. But then the difficulty of finding, renting, and running theaters becomes greater.
If someone out there wants to generously assist the future of music in New York City, please grant sufficient funds to the New York City Electroacoustic Music Society to rent, on an annual basis, a suitable venue for the festival. I will spell it out. The venue should have two or more theaters, each seating at least 200, both suitable for the diffusion of electroacoustic music which means a dry sound without a lot of echo and preferably a square shape, acoustically isolated from street noise. The festival has been borrowing really good speakers from Genelec, as normally music theaters do not have speakers adequate for the demands of electroacoustic music, but an exception would be delightful. And there should be a room or so for installations and just generally hanging out and talking. Ideally, this venue will be located where the life in the city is, which means lower Manhattan, Williamsburg, East New York, or such.
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zylahealth · 2 years ago
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Diabetes cure | How to get rid of Diabetes?
“My reports are here, and it says that I have Diabetes. I feel so helpless and sad. I will never be able to eat my favourite foods again. Doctor, is there a way to reverse or cure it? How to get rid of Diabetes? Can diabetes be cured?”, said a patient who was newly diagnosed with Diabetes.
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I understand what you must be going through right now, however, it is important for you to know that diabetes is not reversible. But wait, do not lose hope yet! This is something that we can control throughout our lives in order to prevent its complications.
Diabetes does not only cause physical stress to the body but the amount of mental tension the person goes through in just accepting it is quite challenging.
Mental health experts confirm that stress can also be a factor for the development of diabetes, so yes, before we proceed further, take a few deep breaths, relax, and smile.
Great, you are relaxed now! Read on and find out if there is a cure for diabetes or not.
Diabetes causes physical and mental stress, both!
The short answer-
Just like the patient here in the above story, there are several people who google, “How to get rid of Diabetes? Can you get rid of diabetes?”… Who wants to reverse diabetes or cure it, but do we really have a permanent cure for diabetes? The answer is ‘NO’.
But don’t feel bad yet! You must have heard, “where there is a will, there is a way”. This is true here as well. Although there is no permanent cure for diabetes, there are treatments for diabetes which can help in the management of your blood sugar levels and prevent its complications.
The treatment for this disorder has progressed far from what it used to be, experts believe that in a few years there will be immunotherapies at least for Type 1 Diabetes.
Immunotherapy is an emerging form of therapy that activates or suppresses the immune system, this field of study has also been used for developing therapies for cancer.
Did you know? Several studies have been done and it is an established fact that prediabetes is reversible but diabetes is not.
Now you must be thinking about how is that possible and what exactly do we need to reverse prediabetes — just the three warriors — exercise, diet and managing stress.
Prediabetes takes about three-six years to completely transform into diabetes, so that is quite a lot of time to make the necessary changes required.
So when are you planning to get moving on your feet, eating healthy and nutritious foods and living your life to the fullest?
Get started with your health journey today. Download the Zyla app for the right guidance or visit our website- Zyla.in.
What is diabetes and who should care?
Diabetes Mellitus is a metabolic disorder where the hormone insulin is either not prepared or utilised completely. The former usually refers to Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus and the latter is the case with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
In either of the above cases, the person’s lifestyle changes completely, they have to constantly monitor their eating and exercise patterns as well as their sugar levels. Some people are able to do this effortlessly and some find it very hard, especially while being in social surroundings.
The risk factors for Type 1 Diabetes can be:
Family history
Age
The risk factors of Type 2 Diabetes depend on:
Weight
Age
Physical inactivity
Family history
Polycystic Ovarian Disease (PCOD)
Lastly, the risk factors for gestational diabetes mellitus are:
Gestational diabetes during the first pregnancy
Being overweight
Family history of Type 2 Diabetes
Age
Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS)
People who develop Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) usually are not well educated and increase their risk for developing Type 2 Diabetes. Quite often the symptoms go unnoticed or are misdiagnosed, leading to a delay in treatment.
Amongst the two above mentioned types of diabetes, a slightly more challenging type is Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus. Read on to find out more on how to get rid of Diabetes.
Type 1 diabetes cure
As of the recent studies, there is no permanent cure for this diabetes, the person usually has to live on insulin therapy for the rest of their lives.
Since type 1 is more of an autoimmune disorder, the focus for its cure is more towards:
Combination therapy: Using multiple therapies for the treatment of one disease,
Hormone replacement therapy: Hormones given through medicines that alter the hormones within the body and manage symptoms
Immunotherapy: Treatment that uses the person’s own immune system to fight diseases
Treatment of Type 1 Diabetes is a big challenge amongst experts now. A biological cure is under research where an attempt is being made to allow the body to start producing its insulin again, hence restoring the body’s ability to utilise the glucose obtained from food.
Along with understanding the future for the treatment of diabetes in general, the current treatment involves:
Giving insulin externally
Some people may be prescribed oral hypoglycemic drugs along with insulin
Type 2 diabetes cure
Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes is available. It is the fastest-growing metabolic disorder and has started to affect people at the age of 20–25, as well. With time, it can create numerous other complications and challenges.
There are several approaches that are available for the treatment of Type 2 Diabetes, but the answer to “how to get rid of Diabetes?“ is still yet to be discovered. Another approach and rather a simple one involves healthier lifestyle choices including:
Exercise
Healthier eating patterns
Taking best medicines for diabetes as prescribed
Follow up with the doctor regularly in order to manage blood sugar levels
Insulin is mostly prescribed to Type 1 diabetics.
Insulin is mostly used as a treatment of diabetes for patients who are older and cannot adhere to a strict diet.
People who have had a dramatic weight loss have achieved better control over their blood glucose levels, and are present either with minimal or no medicines at all. So the most basic and evident approach towards managing this type of diabetes is to ensure that healthy lifestyle practices are followed.
People with Type 2 diabetes have stopped their medicines completely by improving their lifestyle. They have been able to live a life without any complications that accompany diabetes, but this is a gradual process.
Quite a few of them have also experienced something called remission, where they are able to achieve normal blood glucose levels without medication, only through lifestyle modifications. This was seen in patients for at least 6 months, and if they continued with the same modifications, it went beyond 6 months of the treatment of diabetes.
To learn more about diabetes, medicines and lifestyle, enrol in our program by downloading the Zyla app or visiting our website- Zyla.in.
Now we also have something about gestational diabetes that is as important as the other types, read on to find out more…
Gestational diabetes cure
Just like the other two types, there is no cure for gestational diabetes, however, in most cases, it goes away right after the baby is born, and in cases where the blood glucose levels remain high, the person develops Type 2 diabetes.
The mother should regulate her meal patterns and seek the right guidance regularly.
When blood sugar levels rise beyond control, it can enter the placenta and cause various complications not just to the mother but also to the foetus, some of these are:
Preterm birth of the baby
A baby that weighs more than normal (macrosomia)
Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes later on life for the child
Stillbirth
The treatment for gestational diabetes involves being on oral hypoglycemic agents (OHAs) as well as insulin, right spacing of meals, making healthier choices, regular exercise and also visiting the doctor for regular check-ups to ensure that there is no progression which can further lead to complications.
There are an extensive number of people who suffer from diabetes, scientists are working tirelessly to find a cure, let us read on to find out what is the current research and if we do see a light at the end of the tunnel…
What’s ahead: research and upcoming therapies
Parents and caregivers of children or teens with Type 1 Diabetes struggle to handle the fluctuating sugar levels, they need timely assistance and guidance. Some people are able to afford lifelong management while some find it hard to make ends meet.
Keeping several factors in mind, experts have been thinking of several aspects to manage diabetes and find better strategies.
Here are quite a few interesting approaches how to get rid of Diabetes, you’ll be surprised to find out:
1.Stem cell therapy
The current research for curing Type 1 Diabetes lies in the attempt to get stem cells to the rescue! Yes! Several years of research has gone into understanding how stem cells can be converted into beta cells, the cells that basically secrete insulin and manage blood sugar levels.
A lot of research of diabetes cure is undergoing.
2. Environmental factors
A closer, yet indirect approach is treating the environmental factors that may increase the prevalence of developing Type 1 Diabetes.
Preventing exposure to chemicals that may pose a risk of developing autoimmunity is the main reason behind Type 1 Diabetes. This, however, still requires an extensive amount of research to understand the way this can be incorporated into an actual treatment, or if it can be used as a partner for other treatments.
3. Insulin pumps
Another treatment that is gaining a lot of popularity is the usage of insulin pumps, these however are still being studied in terms of their response to exercise and meals that are taken.
Insulin pumps seem to be more reliable for monitoring blood glucose levels. Although their cost factor becomes a challenge for quite a few.
4. Natural cure for diabetes
A novel approach towards Type 2 Diabetes is slightly more towards finding a natural treatment including bioactive compounds that can restore the ability of the body to utilise the glucose from the bloodstream.
Of course, this attempt is also to make sure that it is low cost and people are able to afford it.
5. Branched Chain Amino Acids (BCAA)
One approach towards finding a cure for Type 2 Diabetes is by utilising Branched Chain Amino Acids (BCAA) which are a group of supplements, that are used to enhance performance in the field of sports.
There is little to no evidence that supports the usage of Branched Chain Amino Acids, but scientists are performing animal studies to see if it actually works.
This is limited to the sportsmen and people who are involved in intense physical activity, as BCAA is known to enhance muscle mass and protein synthesis, which is highly essential for sports performance.
6. Pancreas transplantation
As a drastic approach, scientists have also been considering pancreas transplantation in people with severe metabolic complications. But, the reversal of diabetic complications (like chronic kidney disease) is still not possible with this approach.
Diabetes is usually not just a disturbance in the sugar levels, it comes with several cardiac complications as well, such as hypertension (high blood pressure) and dyslipidemia (disturbed lipid levels).
Diabetic nephropathy (kidney complications), diabetic neuropathy (nerve damage) and diabetic retinopathy (a complication of the retina in the eye) are also some of the common complications seen in diabetes.
The upcoming therapies are focussing on how to get rid of Diabetes i.e. preventing complications as well as curing diabetes.
Diabetes is a disorder that cannot be cured or reversed as of yet, but there are several approaches that are being made to find a permanent cure for diabetes. With regular exercise, set meal patterns and regular guidance on medicines from doctors, we can prevent damage to organs.
Taking the right measures at a young age is very essential, as this not only prevents the development of diabetes for the individual alone but also ensures good health for the coming generations and this way the cycle of being healthy goes on.
One such mechanism that is gaining importance is the remission of diabetes. With sheer hard work and determination, people have been able to manage their sugar levels by just strictly focussing on what they eat, when they eat and also how much they eat and also exercise!
This does not mean they have not been able to eat their favourite foods, they have definitely had their favourite foods, but have largely focussed on making healthier choices.
Seeking mental and medical help as and when needed to manage diabetes has shown good results. The road ahead is quite bumpy but not impossible.
To get personalised treatment from a group of medical experts, you can visit our website Zyla.in and enrol in our Defeating Diabetes Program. You can also download our Zyla app to start your health journey.
Source: https://blog.zyla.in/diabetes-cure-how-to-get-rid-of-diabetes-zyla-health-1d1310df6d88.
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malerek · 3 years ago
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Zyla & Kai | Book Spotlight
🎈 BOOK SPOTLIGHT 🎈 Zyla & Kai, the new YA romance by @kristinaforest_, is a star-crossed love story about first love, getting together and getting back together. #Booktwt #BookBlogger #BookSpotlight #ZylaandKai #TBRBeyondTours @tbrbeyondtours
Title: Zyla & KaiAuthor: Kristina ForestGenre: YA | Contemporary | RomancePages: 480 pagesTrigger Warnings: Mentions of parent’s death & depression Publishing Date: June 7th 2022 A fresh new YA romance novel by Kristina Forest, Zyla & Kai is an epic star-crossed love story about first love and not just the will they, won’t they — but why can’t they?While on a school trip to the Poconos…
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Robin: Oh come on, Zylas would throw himself in front of a moving car for you.
Amalia: Zylas would throw himself in front of a moving car because he moves faster than the car can.
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Zylas, showing Robin a rock: I have this rock now. Amalia gave it to me. Amalia: I threw it at you! Zylas: It is a nice rock. Very solid. *Zylas throws rock at Amalia*
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