Friday, December 26, 2008

The Steroid Bible or The Japanese Tattoo

The Steroid Bible

Author: Steve Gallaway

The Steroid Bible Covers Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About Anabolic, Tissue Building, Steroids Including: Long and short term side effects on men, women, and adolescents and how to avoid them.

How to get steroids legally.

Doctor recommended dosages for over 19 different kinds of anabolic steroids. (Including: Fluoxymesterone brand name Halotestin, Oxandrolone brand name Anavar, Methandrostenolone brand name Dianabol, Methyltestosterone brand name Metandren Oreton Methyl, Nandrolone Decnoate brand name Deca-Durabolin, Testosterone Propionate brand name Testex, Testosterone Cypionate brand name Depo-Testosterone, Stanozolol brand name Winstrol, Testolactone brand name Teslac, Dromostanolone Propionate brand name Drolban, Nandrolone Phenpropionate brand name Durabolin, Testosterone Enanthate brand name Delatestryl, Ethylestrenol brand name Maxibolin, Danazol brand name Danocrine, Calusterone brand name Methosarb, Testosterone Undecanoate, Testosterone Cyclohexanecarboxylate, Dihydrotestosterone, Methenolone Acetate brand name Primobolan, Testosterone-trans-4-n-butylcyclohexyl-carboxylate code name 20Aet-1, and more.)

How to pass drug tests for steroids and other drugs.

How professional bodybuilders manipulate dosages, stacks, and cycles to produce maximum increases in mass and strength.

Steroid pellet implants, steroid loaded microspheres, injectable steroids, oral steroids, steroid nasal spray, steroid patches, steroid creams, and other forms of steroid administration.

Why specific steroids are much safer than others.

The truth about "steroid replacements".

Laws pertaining to buying, using, selling, and manufacturing steroids.

Drugs that can cause dangerous chemical reactions when taken with steroids.

Veterinarian steroids, how bodybuilders get them and are they safe for human consumption?

How recently accepted medicinal uses for steroids may make steroids readily available to you.

How to maintain steroid induced gains for as long as possible.

The most widely used steroids among professional bodybuilders.

How to detect steroid counterfeits and much more.

The Steroid Bible also contains comprehensive information on Human Growth Hormone, Insulin, Clenbuterol, and other drugs used by bodybuilders and athletes. In addition, The Steroid Bible lets you in on some of the best kept secrets in bodybuilding by allowing you to examine personal training diaries of top bodybuilders that document drugs used, training routines, diets, and results.

If you are thinking about using steroids, The Steroid Bible will allow you to make an educated decision. If you use steroids, The Steroid Bible will show you how to maximize your physique without sacrificing your long term health. If you want to get off of steroids, The Steroid Bible can help you. The Steroid Bible leaves no question unanswered. For more information on steroids and The Steroid Bible please visit www.AnabolicSteroids.com



Go to: Economic Development or The Professional Paralegal

The Japanese Tattoo

Author: Sandi Fellman

A crimson fish wrestles a man. A horned demon stares menacingly. These vivid scenes are tattoos, created in pain, incised in the flesh of the Yakuza, Japan's feared secret society of gangsters. They are the visions of the Irezumi, the legendary tattoo artists, who spend years creating living masterpieces. Photographer Sandi Fellman describes this strange and violent world both in her text and in her stunning, large Polaroid photographs.

Other Details: 66 large color plates 120 pages 10 x 10" Published 1987

psychotherapy based on the analysis of tattoos. It would not be necessary to associate from dreams; the dreams would be visible. Of course, the personality of the tattooist would be a complicating factor—and therefore an enrichment. Jung, with his emphasis on the archetypal, would have found the irezumi marvelous subjects; Freud would have traced the sadism of the tattooist, the masochism of the tattooed, to the Oedipus complex. The art of irezumi, we learn, may have begun with the branding of malefactors. "These men," Freud might have said, "still wish to be punished for their incestuous and parricidal desires. They would prefer to be flayed—but that will come after their death." Maleness, machismo, coupled with the grotesque . . . that seeming contradiction is built into the myth: the same used to be said of white girls in relation to black men. We return to the mixture of seduction and repulsion, in face of perverse. Most of us, from time to time, use sex as a needle to break through the unfeeling skin of routine existence.

Looking at the woman's back in this book, I know that making love to her would be making love to the tattoo more than to the woman. The wives of the male irezumi, Ms. Fellman suggests, experience that erotic displacement. It is not unlike the fetishist's need to interpose a symbol—fur or leather, garter belt or high-heeled shoes—between himself and his naked lover. Both fetishism and irezumi are largely the preserve of men; but also of magical and creative power: for love can be strengthened by the conjunction of a symbol.

Still, it would not surprise me if, for most irezumi, the deepest relationship is with the master, so tirelessly penetrating them.

I, a writer, an improvisor with words, envy and admire these artists who can bring their work, each day, to a point of completion. Not for them the wastepaper basket, piled high with rejected drafts; they cannot rip off the patch of skin and say, "We'll begin again." Each session must produce the equivalent of a perfect haiku, in which the ephemeral and the universal touch. Do the tattoo masters ever experience the despair of Western artists when things will not go right? Or that rending of the spirit described by Yeats: "The intellect of man is forced to choose/Perfection of the life or of the work"? I suspect they do not. I wish I knew their secret. Sandi Fellman's book does not and could not provide the answer; but it has made me more aware of the question—and of other, equally fascinating, questions—and I am grateful.

Library Journal

American photographer Sandi Fellman used a rare large size Polaroid camera to create these photos of Irezumi Japanese men and women who wear elaborate full-body tattoos. Fellman treats the tattoos as artworks and their creators as artists. Her text touches on the tattooing process, common motifs, the sociology of the tattoo, and relationships between the tattoo masters and their clients. Author D.M. Thomas has contributed two pages of his reactions to these unusual and even disturbing images. The 46 color plates in this volume, most of them whole body nudes, should prove provocative, fascinating, or repellant to a wide variety of library patrons. Kathryn W. Finkelstein, M.L.S., Cincinnati



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