... At the same time I get tired of your constant grandiose self promotion ...
A couple "negative" folks here are displaying a very common health problem.
They are afflicted with what is commonly referred to as "small beam syndrome." They are suffering, obviously, by the anxiety caused by thinking that their handheld beams are too small.
Small-beam syndrome sufferers have hope, though. Urologists Kevan R. Wylie of Royal Hallemshire Hospital and Ian Eardley of St. James Hospital in Leeds, England, review the literature on this syndrome in a recent issue of the urology journal, BJU International. They urge Web site owners and educators not to laugh away these very real worries over an imaginary defect.
"It is very common for men to worry about the size of their beams," Wylie says in a news release. "It is important that these concerns aren't dismissed as this can heighten concerns and anxieties."
For more information - and help - I offer this valuable online resource:
So excuse me, but I have work to do. I am preparing another presentation that will be given to a club on the East Coast - as I surpass 80 such talks on the satellites. And I am preparing another satellite article for publication in a national magazine. And I have to reply to another email request for a presentation ...
Oh, that loud, hysterical laughter you just heard from afar just now? I happened to be on the phone with my accountant, and I told her that I was being accused of "grandiose self-promotion," and knowing my expenses versus income for performing the educational activities that I do, she nearly fell off her chair ...
And so it goes ...
Clint Bradford K6LCS http://www.work-sat.com
Here we go again...I, Me, My.
Dave-KB1PVH
Sent from my Verizon Wireless Droid RAZR On Feb 14, 2014 3:11 PM, "Clint Bradford" clintbradford@mac.com wrote:
... At the same time I get tired of your constant grandiose self
promotion ...
A couple "negative" folks here are displaying a very common health problem.
They are afflicted with what is commonly referred to as "small beam syndrome." They are suffering, obviously, by the anxiety caused by thinking that their handheld beams are too small.
Small-beam syndrome sufferers have hope, though. Urologists Kevan R. Wylie of Royal Hallemshire Hospital and Ian Eardley of St. James Hospital in Leeds, England, review the literature on this syndrome in a recent issue of the urology journal, BJU International. They urge Web site owners and educators not to laugh away these very real worries over an imaginary defect.
"It is very common for men to worry about the size of their beams," Wylie says in a news release. "It is important that these concerns aren't dismissed as this can heighten concerns and anxieties."
For more information - and help - I offer this valuable online resource:
So excuse me, but I have work to do. I am preparing another presentation that will be given to a club on the East Coast - as I surpass 80 such talks on the satellites. And I am preparing another satellite article for publication in a national magazine. And I have to reply to another email request for a presentation ...
Oh, that loud, hysterical laughter you just heard from afar just now? I happened to be on the phone with my accountant, and I told her that I was being accused of "grandiose self-promotion," and knowing my expenses versus income for performing the educational activities that I do, she nearly fell off her chair ...
And so it goes ...
Clint Bradford K6LCS http://www.work-sat.com
Sent via AMSAT-BB@amsat.org. Opinions expressed are those of the author. Not an AMSAT-NA member? Join now to support the amateur satellite program! Subscription settings: http://amsat.org/mailman/listinfo/amsat-bb
participants (2)
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Clint Bradford
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Dave Webb KB1PVH