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中山大便用力出血了(中山便血是咋回事) (今日更新中)

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2025-06-03 02:14:51
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  中山大便用力出血了   

CHICAGO, Ill. – Ten years ago, Aja McClanahan didn’t think she’d be living on Chicago’s South Side. It also seemed like her family would be forever be in debt.“It was a mountain that I did not think we could ever tackle,” said McClanahan.Her family didn’t owe just a little bit of money. “It was over 0,000,” said McClanahan. McClanahan says everything started with student loans. That was the bulk of her and her family’s debt.“Between my husband and I, we had tons of student loan debt, ,000 between the two of us,” said McClanahan. “Then another ,000 was a mixture of consumer debt, car notes, credit cards, medical bills and things like that.” But the family decided debt was not going to define them forever.“I remember when I had my first child, my daughter, I knew I wanted to stay home with her but when I ran the numbers…we were like between bills rent, debt repayment, student loans, we cannot make this work,” said McClanahan. She says her family wasn’t budgeting before they put a plan together to pay down debt. "We just spent money as it came in and whatever we spent it on,” said McClanahan. “But with a spending plan we could prioritize what is important to us. So, it helped us look at how we were spending our money. And we kind of cut the fat.”They made sacrifices including a move from the suburbs of Chicago to the inner-city South Side neighborhood of Englewood. They inherited a house from a family member. “The first night we were there, we were like this is the stupidest thing we have ever done,” McClanahan said. "It was so noisy. Just the urban soundscape if you’re not used to it. So, it’s like sirens, barking dogs, people yelling and shouting in the alleys. We were like what have we done?”But they settled in and made it their home without paying a mortgage or rent.After about eight years of strict spending, side hustle and chipping away, they finally paid it all off. "The final balance was ,700 or something like that for a student loan or something like that and I remember making the payment or something like that and remember calling my husband and saying we’re debt free,” said McClanahan. McClanahan now works as a speaker and author trying to help other people conquer debt. "I find that a lot of people become hopeless around the holidays when you’re expected to have money to go out to parties to exchange gifts. For some people, they feel powerless and out of control because they don’t have money,” said McClanahan.While money isn’t everything, McClanahan says it can impact's more than just a bottom line.“I feel like money touches every part of our lives and if you can fix that money thing, you can get back more control,” said McClanahan. 2712

  中山大便用力出血了   

Climbing is a sport that's getting more and more popular. For the first time next year, it’ll be an Olympic sport. Additionally, a documentary featuring professional rock climber Alex Honnold took the Oscar win at this year’s Academy Awards!After filming climbers for two decades, filmmaker Peter Mortimer is happy to see more people taking notice. As amazing as it is to see the shots he captures, what may be more breathtaking is what you don’t see: the work behind the scenes. It’s all to bring the world of climbing out of the wilderness and onto the big screen “There's no stadium, there's no arena and nobody really knows what they're doing,” Mortimer says. Mortimer is a climber and the co-founder of Sender Films, the company that produced “The Dawn Wall.” Mortimer and his team followed two men as they attempted to climb a 3,000-foot rock face in Yosemite National Park. The film captured the climbers’ journey from hanging from the wall to even sleeping on the wall. “We knew if they did it, we had to be there,” Mortimer says. “But we also said, for seven years really, were like this is probably never going to happen, but it's worth the risk.” It took the climbers seven years to finally make it. Mortimer and his team were there to capture the moment. Then, the film received more awards than Mortimer ever imagined. One film led to another, and as the climbing industry grew, so did Sender Films. The company has produced more than 40 hours of climbing films, winning two Emmys and putting on a film tour with more than 400 shows around the world. “I thought rock climbing was something that was just a little a little hobby at the time, and I’m just still surprised what it's become,” says Zachary Barr, a director with Sender Films. However, there have been challenges. “I've seen so many of my, you know, really close friends die in the mountains,” Mortimer says. But the filmmaker says he's approached this journey in film, as he would a climb. “No one's climbed that like. That could be an amazing thing, that the path doesn't really exist,” he says. 2085

  中山大便用力出血了   

COLORADO — A 38-year-old father and basketball coach says his life was saved because of a nearby specialist who evaluated him digitally."I literally never once remember talking to a screen or seeing a screen in a room,” DJ Stelly said of a telemedicine robot in an emergency room.The ability for the ER to use a small machine to beam him in to a specialist 15 miles away saved him from having stroke. The specialist made the decision to airlift Stelly to a stroke center, where he spent four days in ICU before making a full recovery.“In my case, it was truly valuable,” he said. “I do think that this is going to be the future of super specialized expert care that’s instantaneously available.”Dr. Chris Fanale started the telemedicine program at Swedish Medical Center in Colorado, near Denver. Stroke specialists have access to more than 50 telemedicine robots in emergency rooms in five states.Fanale says the diagnosis isn’t the difficult part — it’s determining the treatment. And giving an incorrect dose of the stroke medication TPA can be deadly.“As you can imagine, patients as well as other physicians not used to this are a bit skittish at times, making that decision on their own,” Fanale said. “So that’s where we kind of help and augment providing that specialty care.”Fanale said doctors use their cell phones to beam into a patient’s hospital room.“You can see if pupils are being reactive or not,” he said. “Also if there’s any droopiness of the face.”Fanale can zoom in and out, even test verbal skills, saving critical time when every minute counts.“These are just cartoon pictures that will pop up on the camera in place of us and we will just ask them just explanations of naming objects,” he said as he showed the technology to a reporter.He believes the technology will lower costs in addition to leading to better care. 1861

  

CORRECTION: This story has been updated to more accurately reflect the findings of the report. You can view the original story at the bottom of this article.Twenty days of lethal heat per year. Collapsed ecosystems. And more than 1 billion people displaced.Those are all probable scenarios that could devastate societies by 2050 if swift and dramatic action isn't taken to curb 390

  

Democratic Washington Gov. Jay Inslee on Wednesday announced he is suspending his presidential campaign.Inslee made the announcement during an interview on MSNBC.The Washingtonian made combating climate change the fundamental issue motivating his campaign, routinely telling reporters that the climate crisis affects "every issue" facing the country. With that in mind, he released a series of plans that tied the issue to everything from foreign policy to the economy to labor laws.But the governor failed to gain traction in the race to take on President Donald Trump. While the governor did recently reach the donor threshold to qualify for the third Democratic national debate, he had yet to reach the polling threshold and was therefore unlikely to qualify.Inslee was on the trail until the final days of his campaign. The governor released his sixth climate change policy proposal on Wednesday, a plan that tied combating the issue to agricultural policy.Inslee was scheduled to be in New Hampshire on Thursday for a presidential candidate forum at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics.Inslee did qualify for the first two Democratic debates, turning in performances in which he looked to steer the conversation towards combating climate change as often as possible. Inslee also publicly called for the Democratic National Committee to host a debate entirely focused on climate change, knocking the committee for rebuffing his demands."Climate change is not a singular issue, it is all the issues that we Democrats care about," he said at the second set of Democratic debates. "It is health. It is national security. It is our economy."The governor will now return to Washington state, where he is in his second term. Inslee won reelection in 2016 by nearly 10 percentage points and is eligible to run for reelection in 2020. He said during his interview on MSNBC that he will make an announcement on Thursday about his plans.While Inslee made climate change a singular focus, he was not alone in talking about the issue on the campaign trail.Democratic candidates are often asked about the climate crisis, a signal that the issue is top of mind for active Democratic voters. And a CNN poll earlier this year found that 82% of Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents find climate change a "very important" issue, ranking it at the top of the list ahead of universal health care, tighter gun laws and impeaching Trump. 2443

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