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  • She-Ra "Alexford" - It really works.Um this stuff really works! It does smell like cloves until you wash it off, but I like cloves so no big for me. And don't shave before you use it or it will sting. I have been using it for about a month, apply it ever 5-7 days, amazing!
    It works so well that I have decided to take a week break from it only b/c it freaks me out a little bit to not let my body sweat. It seems to work for stress sweat and regular sweat.
    Anyway, I read the reviews and was very skeptical, but it works. I wish they made it in a spray...
  • ecclectic ear - The best rock album ever madeI am constantly telling people who have grown up in the "post-rock era" or who have never been Pink Floyd fans because they were scared away by subliminal messages and drug references like I still am turned off by them, that this is by far the best album ever made in the rock era. I am a huge Beatles fan but I would still tell anyone to this day that this album is so head and shoulders over Seargent Pepper that it's pitiful and that to me Seargent Pepper may have been "The Wall" of it's time but in my opinion only paved the way for the concept, artistry, and awesome studio production and musicianship of this masterpiece called "The Wall" (oh, and by the way I always thought Magical Mystery Tour was always a better album than Seargent Pepper anyway). I actually started off hating Pink Floyd as I was growing up because my older brother kept hitting me over the head with constant, constant playings of "Dark Side of the Moon" coming out of his room, and coupled with the fact that Pink Floyd released probably the most lame song on the album "Money" as it's main single which has always been played ad nauseum for 30 years on classic rock stations didn't help either. The sound of that album even did begin to grow on me as I got older but it wasn't until high school when a fellow student and huge fan of Pink Floyd would hijack the huge high school choir room's awesome high fidelity stereo system and blast "The Wall" throughout the halls of the music department that I really began to like that album. I wasn't wild about it at first but I would see the (future Minnesota State Senator)'s enthusiasm while he cranked up the wall, especially on the part which goes "when we grew up and went to school, there were certain teachers who..... with it's great bass guitar and helicopter sound effects that I began to like the album, and it wasn't until after I graduated and looked back to the "Floyd" lunch hours as some of the "happiest days of our lives" that I began to really see how awesome that album really was and enjoyed all of the classic rock airplay of the hits on that album over the years, many until later I didn't even realize were all on "The Wall". Because of this album I became a major Gilmour-guitar fan and was lucky enough to see the Floyd in concert before they went dormant, and I even developed an appreciation for Roger Waters' musical concept of the world and although he doesn't have the greatest voice and that a lot of people hate his "concept" I think some people's voices and perspectives absolutely fit the unique kind of music that they do perfectly. I've only found 2 other albums that have the same effect on me musically as "The Wall" because they have the same type of somewhat dark, etherial, conceptual, and sophisticated studio production and feel as The Wall, and that is "Hounds of Love" by Kate Bush and "So" by Peter Gabriel and parts of "Tales of Mystery and Imagination" by Alan Parsons Project, if you haven't heard these albums and are a big "Wall" fan it would be definitely worth a listen to you. And finally I want to give props to a Floyd man who I think was so instrumental in making the wall and some other Floyd albums so awesome is Michael Kamen who died this past year. If you don't know who he is just listen to Gilmour's great guitar solos over the violin/orchestral parts of "Comfortably Numb" and you'll hear the orchestral arranging genious of Michael Kamen.
  • Lynn Ellingwood "The ESOL Teacher" - A Look At Boys From a Psychologist's PerspectiveRosalind Wiseman has written a book on girls' psychological make up in the United States and now looks at boys. She interviewed boys from across the US in various economic groups and school settings. She found out some valuable information from them. Why boys are so obsessed with video games, hate parental questioning and attempts to extract information from them, how they deal with girls and bullies, etc. I thought the information was very good and food for thought even though I don't think it is the last word on boys, I think this book is a good start.
  • KB "kathy" - very interestingThis book is BIG,but very well written and interesting. I never found it tedious or repetitive - which a lot to say considering how large the book is. I hated when I became so sleepy I had to stop reading. As far as accuracy who knows, its not scandalous and reads true but what bio is? I found all the recording music industry aspects very compelling. It's just refreshing to find something so readable about MJ.