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Atomoxetine

Atomoxetine and other generic medications similar to the branded drug Strattera are all treatments for a condition called attention-deficit hyperactivity syndrome. Atomoxetine is a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) that has undergone extensive testing before getting FDA approval. Strattera is available in tablet and capsule form.

Atomoxetine 25 mg Pills

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Atomoxetine 18 mg Pills

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Atomoxetine 10 mg Pills

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atomoxetine product descriptio

SPINAL CORD INJURY: SPIRITUALITY AS AN IMPORTANT ASPECT

Although some biblical teachings emphasize punishment for transgression, others stress tolerance for differences and imperfections, forgiveness, and compassion for oneself and others. Even if believing an injury was caused by God because of "bad" behavior, an injured person can see this as an opportunity to change, perhaps by getting more in touch with the sanctity of life and reconnecting with his or her own capacity for goodness. Religious rituals for spiritual cleansing, admission of mistakes, atonement, and repentance (such as the Catholic practice of confession or the Jewish practice of ritual bathing) may help someone to move from guilt or self-recrimination to feelings of self-worth and constructive engagement with the community.
Some religious traditions, such as those of some Native American tribes, meld physical healing with sacred or spiritual rites so that healing and worship experiences are intertwined. Body, mind, and spirit must be in harmony for true wellness to exist. Along with physical rehabilitation, a person must understand the disability or illness in spiritual terms. A process of spiritual change can restore harmony by changing attitudes and responses to the disability, even if the disability itself remains constant.
Writer Hugh Gregory Gallagher expresses a similar notion with the biblical metaphor of Job. The "reality of disability wins . . . and yet somehow . . . the self prevails ... In the great infinite miracle that is life, pain and suffering is trivial. . . What matters is that I am, and it is enough." This spiritual understanding allows the soul or spirit to live harmoniously inside (to "accept") an imperfect physical body, while transcending its limitations.
Carolyn Vash, psychologist, points out that the assumption, shared by various religious traditions, that we "summon to ourselves everything that befalls us" - or put another way, that we are responsible for all aspects of our wellness - does not necessarily imply spiritual deficiency or moral transgression as the cause of adversity. "The soul of a saint may be as likely to summon disability as that of a sinner. For example, my disability may have been summoned ... to expose me to needed life experiences that I could not access in other ways." In this view, the disability has a spiritual reason, not necessarily as punishment but as an opportunity for psychological or spiritual development and change.
A variant of this interpretation sees disability as part of a divine plan: God has chosen an individual to bear adversity (disability) for a particular cosmic purpose. Some people with spinal cord injury have expressed this view in statements such as "It was meant to be," "God works in mysterious ways," or "God did this to me for a reason." Finding the reason becomes a soul search, in which the person can renew or discover a unique sense of purpose or conviction. Sometimes this leads to a special mission to develop one's own potential more fully, to find a way to help other people, or to revitalize connections with family, community, or religious institutions.

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