Showing posts with label Milk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Milk. Show all posts

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Photos: Meet These Ethiopia Men Who Drink Milk And Blood To Be Crowned Fattest Man And Be Hero Until Death.





Ethiopia – Slim might be trending elsewhere in the world, but for Ethiopia’s Bodi (or Me’en) people, bigger is always better. The tribe, which lives in a remote corner of Ethiopia’s Omo Valley, is home to an unusual ritual which sees young men gorge on cow’s blood and milk in a bid to be crowned the fattest man.

Six months after starting the regime, the men emerge to show off their newly engorged physiques, and for a winner to be chosen. The champion fat man is then feted as a hero for the rest of his life.



The Ka’el, or the New Year, ritual and the Bodi’s traditional way of life is under threat from the Ethiopian government who plan to resettle 300,000 people from all over the country on their lands. For now, the tribe continue as they always have, and still celebrate Ka’el in traditional style each.



The contest begins six months before the ceremony. Every family is allowed to present an unmarried man for the challenge, who, after being chosen, retires to his hut and must not move or have sex for the duration.

Food comes in the form of a cow’s blood and milk mixture, served regularly to the men by women from the village.


The cows are sacred to the Bodi tribe, so they are not killed. The blood is taken by making a hole in a vein with a spear or an axe, and after that, they close it with clay.


Because of the scorching temperatures, the men have to drink the two-litre bowl of blood and milk quickly before it coagulates. But not everyone can handle drinking so much at speed. The fat men drink milk and blood all day long. The first bowl of blood is drunk at sunrise. The place is invaded by flies. The man must drink it quickly before it coagulates, but some cannot drink everything and vomit it.

photo - The Bigger, The Better: These Men Drink Milk And Blood To Be Crowned Fattest Man And Be Hero Until Death (PHOTOS)

Because of the scorching temperatures, the men have to drink the two-litre bowl of blood and milk quickly before it coagulates. But not everyone can handle drinking so much at speed. The fat men drink milk and blood all day long. The first bowl of blood is drunk at sunrise. The place is invaded by flies. The man must drink it quickly before it coagulates, but some cannot drink everything and vomit it.
photo - The Bigger, The Better: These Men Drink Milk And Blood To Be Crowned Fattest Man And Be Hero Until Death (PHOTOS)

On the day itself, the men cover their bodies with clay and ashes before emerging from their huts for the walk to the spot where the ceremony will take place.

 The Bigger, The Better: These Men Drink Milk And Blood To Be Crowned Fattest Man And Be Hero Until Death (PHOTOS)

Thanks to the weight gain, many of them find covering the short distance tougher than the weeks spent fattening up.

photo - The Bigger, The Better: These Men Drink Milk And Blood To Be Crowned Fattest Man And Be Hero Until Death (PHOTOS)

The ceremony itself involves spending hours walking in a circle around a sacred tree, watched by the other men and helped by the women who ply them with alcohol and wipe away the sweat.

Once the fattest man has been chosen, the ceremony ends with the slaughter of a cow using a huge sacred stone. Village elders will then inspect the stomach and the blood to see whether the future will be a bright one or not.



photo - The Bigger, The Better: These Men Drink Milk And Blood To Be Crowned Fattest Man And Be Hero Until Death (PHOTOS)

After the ceremony, the men’s lives return to normal, and most lose their enormous bellies after a few weeks of eating sparingly. But a few weeks later, the next generation of competitively fat Bodi men will be chosen and the cycle will begin again.


Source: Dailymail

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Woman without un*dies breaks into home to snack on cookies and milk



A woman was arrested and charged with theft related charges after she allegedly broke into a home in order to get herself some free cookies and milk, according to police reports in Oklahoma.

Oklahoma Police said that a woman received a rude awakening on Friday morning, after hearing what she thought was her children making a noise in the kitchen. However, when she reached the kitchen she saw a complete stranger.
Kelly found Michelle Stephens in her kitchen eating milk and cookies.
oklahoma_michelle
“Someone was standing there with the door open. Then, I said: ‘Who are you and what are you doing in my kitchen?’ She said: ‘My name is Michelle and I’m just having cookies and milk,’” Kelly said.

Continue after the break.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Revealed: The Bacteria In Women's Breast Milk



"We are excited to find out that bacteria can actually travel from the mother’s gut to her breast milk. A healthy community of bacteria in the gut of both mother and baby is really important for baby’s gut health and immune system development.”
-Said Professor Lacroix

Scientists have discovered that important ‘good’ bacteria arrive in babies’ digestive systems from mother’s gut via breast milk. Although this does confirm that when it comes to early establishment of gut and immune health, ‘breast is best’, a greater understanding of how babies acquire a population of good bacteria can also help to develop formula milk that more closely mimics nature.
Continue After The Break.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Reasons Some Ladies Don't Have Enough Milk In Their Br-éast




Why do so many ladies have difficulty making enough milk to bréastfeed when they give birth? A new study by scientists at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Centre and the University of California Davis adds to their previous research implicating insulin’s role in lactation success.

The study is the first to describe how ladies boobs becomes highly sensitive to:
Insulin during lactation. It is also the first study to get an accurate picture of how specific genes are switched on in the human mammary gland during lactation.

The researchers used next generation sequencing technology, RNA sequencing, to reveal “in exquisite detail” the blueprint for making milk in the human mammary gland, according to Laurie Nommsen-Rivers, PhD, RD, IBCLC, a scientist at Cincinnati Children’s and corresponding author of the study, published online in PLOS ONE, a journal of the Public Library of Science.
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