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Stuck in a rut

By Gregor Klevže
6,631 views 10 replies
Anonymous avatar
Anonymous
Member
OP
Hmmm.. What immediately comes to mind (though I only take photos, I do not create things on a PC) is to take a break and go back to it. Sometimes that will offer a fresh new approach and in doing so, possible new ideas... <br /> <br />:grin <br />
mickeblue avatar
mickeblue
Member
Maybe you should try making a more solid looking skin for a change... metallic or something... and do a range of colours for wall integration. <br /> <br />( Like I can talk, I can&acute;t get my head around anything graphical at the moment LOL )
sed avatar
sed
Member
Drink lotza Brandy!! 😁
aberneth avatar
aberneth
Member
Problem solved. My friend told me that he&acute;d bite my right index finger off if I made another similar skin. Also, the brandy helped. LOL
etype2 avatar
etype2
Member
I&acute;d like to see you do minimal Rainlender and Rainmeter skins like your iGadget. No boarders,just digets and text. :Happy 👏
netwolf56 avatar
netwolf56
Member
when I feel I have something down pat...it&acute;s time to learn something new. Keep learning...keep adding to your knowledge, the sum is always way better than the parts.That&acute;s the great thing about graphics, computers, software, applications, cameras & equipment, skinning, walls, etc etc....it&acute;s endless in what you can learn! <br /> My thoughts!
kchristine avatar
kchristine
Member
Try chocolate. It cures what ails ya. ❤️
mickeblue avatar
mickeblue
Member
Sally has the right idea... <br /> <br />The medicinal use of cacao, or chocolate, both as a primary remedy and as a vehicle to deliver other medicines, originated in the New World and diffused to Europe in the mid 1500s. These practices originated among the Olmec, Maya and Mexica (Aztec). The word cacao is derived from Olmec and the subsequent Mayan languages (kakaw); the chocolate-related term cacahuatl is Nahuatl (Aztec language), derived from Olmec/Mayan etymology. Early colonial era documents included instructions for the medicinal use of cacao. The Badianus Codex (1552) noted the use of cacao flowers to treat fatigue, whereas the Florentine Codex (1590) offered a prescription of cacao beans, maize and the herb tlacoxochitl (Calliandra anomala) to alleviate fever and panting of breath and to treat the faint of heart. Subsequent 16th to early 20th century manuscripts produced in Europe and New Spain revealed >100 medicinal uses for cacao/chocolate. Three consistent roles can be identified: 1) to treat emaciated patients to gain weight; 2) to stimulate nervous systems of apathetic, exhausted or feeble patients; and 3) to improve digestion and elimination where cacao/chocolate countered the effects of stagnant or weak stomachs, stimulated kidneys and improved bowel function. Additional medical complaints treated with chocolate/cacao have included anemia, poor appetite, mental fatigue, poor breast milk production, consumption/tuberculosis, fever, gout, kidney stones, reduced longevity and poor sexual appetite/low virility. Chocolate paste was a medium used to administer drugs and to counter the taste of bitter pharmacological additives. In addition to cacao beans, preparations of cacao bark, oil (cacao butter), leaves and flowers have been used to treat burns, bowel dysfunction, cuts and skin irritations. <br /> <br /> <br />My favourite chocolate vendor is now available in the US LOL ~ http://www.hotelchocolat.com/ ~ trust me USians, this is the best chocolate you will EVER taste... I&acute;ve been buying from these people for more than 5 years, and if there was a prize for chocoholics I&acute;d win hands down.
kchristine avatar
kchristine
Member
Checked the links out and now all I need is the money to pay for it. ❤️
etype2 avatar
etype2
Member
I think your on to something here Mick. My Doctor prescribed 70+ cacao for my borderline high blood pressure. ❤️ that link. <br /> <br />A cure for all that ales ya, plus &quot;Jack&quot; 😁 👏
wary109 avatar
wary109
Member
*-*..
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