Monsters & Critics / Counting Sheep Coffee Foodie Heaven: Natural Products Expo 2015, What We Loved! March 18, 2015

Our favorite food convention has left SoCal, but we have had a week to regroup and highlight our taste-tested picks for you to seek out and try in the grocery store! (more…)

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The All Day Coffee Break / Counting Sheep Coffee Counting Sheep Coffee: A Different Kind of Coffee March 18, 2015

Who would have thought there was such a thing as coffee that could help you sleep? Coffee is looked at as something we use to keep us up at night or wake us up in the morning. Counting Sheep Coffee has stormed onto the scene to change how everyone thinks about coffee. Their line of coffee is geared towards helping people who like coffee get to sleep at night. (more…)

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Washington Post / Dr. Gail Gross Narcissism in children has many causes, but it can be addressed March 13, 2015

A study released this week contends that parents who “overvalue” their children, teaching them that they are entitled to special treatment, are more likely to produce narcissistic children.

But psychologists know that narcissism in children can stem from a number of causes, including genetic and environmental ones. Though a narcissistic child may have parents who overvalue him, he can, on the other hand, be a child of abuse, both emotional and physical. A narcissistic child may employ tactics of superiority, self-love and inflation, when in reality he feels emotionally unstable and insecure.

At the core of narcissism is a form of sociopathy. So a narcissistic child may have heightened emotions, depression, criminal tendencies and an unrealistic sense of self. And because a narcissistic child overcompensates for feelings of inadequacy, he is profoundly invested in maintaining a persona of perfection and self-aggrandizement.

[How parents create narcissistic children]

Though a narcissistic child may have received parental messages that he is special, he also may have been punished by neglectful and abusive parents.

A parent of a narcissistic child may overcompensate for his own childhood’s narcissistic injuries, seeing the child as a reflection of himself. His self-worth becomes wrapped up in or projected onto the child. Or he might overcompensate for the guilt he feels, for disliking the child, by overprotecting him. According to Freud, “parents who over-evaluate are under a compulsion to ascribe every perfection to the child.”

The narcissistic child, therefore, develops a personality that must maintain his feeling of being special, having special talents and being entitled to special treatment. His need for attention and entitlement can lead to exaggerated emotional responses when those needs are not met. He is easily bruised emotionally and sensitive to any form of criticism, blame or shame. He is not empathetic and can become a bully, or act out in dangerous and aggressive ways.

[Seven ways to nip narcissism in the bud]

A narcissistic child also may have problems with intimacy. His lack of empathy and his need to be the center of attention impedes his capacity to relate to others, to see another’s point of view or to feel compassion. Unable to sustain a healthy social relationship, he may experience feelings of depression and anxiety and think about self-destruction.

But there is hope, because empathy can be taught. It requires psychotherapy, group therapy and family therapy. Narcissistic children respond especially well to group therapy, which creates an environment in which they are exposed, in a therapeutic manner, to other children like themselves.

Since the personality develops along with cognitive, social and language skills, it’s important to intervene therapeutically early and consistently, so that a narcissistic child can live a happy, self-confident and productive life. Wait too long and he will refuse therapy. His world view tells him that he must be right and perfect. He will be unable to see the perspective of others.

Gail Gross is a nationally recognized family, child development and human behavior expert, author and educator. She has hosted “Let’s Talk,” a nationally syndicated PBS program. Her books include “The Only Way Out is Through” and “How to Build Your Baby’s Brain.”

Original Article

Dr. Gail Gross

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Monsters & Critics / Counting Sheep Coffee Counting Sheep Coffee to Showcase Specialty Nighttime Coffee at Natural Products Expo West March 4, 2015
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Courant / Dr. Constantino Mendieta Apparently, We Like Big Butts, Plastic Surgeons Report March 4, 2015

Kim Kardashian

The rump, the bum, the keister, the booty, call it what you will, but it’s growing on us.

Yeah, once the butt of many jokes, the butt is getting the last laugh.

And if you have not been blessed with sufficient acreage in this area, well, fret not. You have options, increasingly popular man-made options.

These trend lines were for both types of butt enhancements, silicone implants, and procedures in which fat is transplanted from other areas of the body.

“I’m seeing women 17 all the way up to 70,” Miami surgeon Dr. Constantino Mendieta recently told NBC News. “It’s big in the nursing homes.”

Oh My.

Unlike Lopez and Azalea, who possess other talents, Kardashian was only famous for being famous until her backside caught fire, so to speak. A recent magazine photo shows her standing almost erect while a champagne glass is balanced on her protruding asset. (Don’t try this at home.)

The whole backside enhancement trend caught me by surprise. For as long as I can remember, women have always been trying to keep that address as a single zip code. Now there are these things called “pump parties” where clients go and let amateurs shoot them full of silicone and self image.

It is, of course, dangerous. An uncertified woman from Philadelphia who bills herself as the “Michelangelo of the buttocks,” is currently standing trial for murder after a dancer she injected died.

What I don’t understand is why those looking for a wider beam don’t just go the old-fashioned, time-tested route and overeat. I mean, an ingestion of Ben and Jerry’s seems a heck of a lot more pleasant than an injection of industrial grade silicone.

Anyway. There is, I think, good news in this tokus trend for men. Might the six pack abs give way to the one-pack beer belly.

Original Article

Dr. Constantino Mendieta

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