|
-
April 27th, 2006, 12:32 AM
#1
flatulence-free beans

Beans at the Beeb
Venezuelan scientists develop flatulence-free beans
_____________________________________________

It is my pure and virtuous heart that
gives me the strength of ten!
-
April 27th, 2006, 04:52 AM
#2
Registered User
 Originally Posted by houseisland

Beans at the Beeb
Venezuelan scientists develop flatulence-free beans
_____________________________________________
It is my pure and virtuous heart that
gives me the strength of ten!
What a waste of time.Did they save the gas for autos?
If I may add-What will guys do without original?
Farts are like loud burps guys need them to express themselves.
Good old hydrogen sulfide for sending away unwanted guests.
-
April 27th, 2006, 06:07 AM
#3
Registered User
....raises eyebrows ....
I don't think this is a suitable place for a sweet little English gal ... !
-
April 27th, 2006, 07:42 AM
#4
Intel Mod
Ah Mags, the genteel seldom enjoy the company of the flatulent, but the flat eel is fond of the gent you lent... a fiver to...
(Oh dear, is that the weakest pun I've ever sunk to?)
-
April 27th, 2006, 02:59 PM
#5
Registered User
It makes me proud to see my county's learned scientists distinquish themselves in the fields of science, nutrition and legumes! If only they could develop a BS remover! Sigh!
-
April 28th, 2006, 12:32 PM
#6
Registered User
But what will happen to the old "Pull my finger" ploy?
-
April 29th, 2006, 12:38 AM
#7
Registered User
Flatulence is part of the fun of eating beans. Actually, I'm eating beans right now
-
April 29th, 2006, 04:11 AM
#8
Intel Mod
 Originally Posted by Magic Marker
I'm eating beans right now 
Run for your lives!
-
April 29th, 2006, 08:09 AM
#9
Registered User
 Originally Posted by Magic Marker
Flatulence is part of the fun of eating beans. Actually, I'm eating beans right now 
Totally agree my kids have a ball after they have beans for lunch.. they have farting competitions and wet themselves laughing..... Of course i don't play.. cos well hrmm...... i dont fart.....
-
April 29th, 2006, 11:14 AM
#10
Registered User
 Originally Posted by Mayet
Totally agree my kids have a ball after they have beans for lunch.. they have farting competitions and wet themselves laughing..... Of course i don't play.. cos well hrmm......  i dont fart.....
Uh huh Two kinds of people in this world~People that fart without mercy, and people that lie about it
-
April 30th, 2006, 06:34 AM
#11
Registered User
Dr. Fart speaks Part 1
Everything you want to know about flatulence, and some things you don't.
By Stephen G.
When I told my wife I was going to write a story about farts, she said that if I mentioned her name I was dead meat. Fact is, there is nothing to be ashamed of. Everyone farts. The amount of gas and the volume at which a fart is expelled are another issue. My wife does fart and she farts loudly but, thank God, her farts are mostly odorless. This is not the case with mine.
To understand the nuances of farting, or flatulence, I called upon Dr. Michael D. Levitt, a gastroenterologist and associate chief of staff at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Levitt, 64, could well be called Dr. Fart because he is the world's leading authority on flatulence. He has had 275 articles printed on flatulence in medical journals, as either the principal author or the co-author.
In fact, Levitt's career could only happen in America. "In other countries, no way would a scientist study farts. But for reasons I can't completely figure out, farting is considered wrong in America and people are worried about it. Farts have been good to me. I've done very well, thank you."
Levitt works with four assistants out of a small laboratory on the third floor of the V.A. hospital, about a mile west of the Mississippi River. Every day he receives at least one long-distance phone consultation from a worried farter, almost always a man whose wife has prompted her husband to find out why he cuts the cheese so often.
Levitt's job doesn't end when he leaves the hospital at night, either. "Every cocktail party I go to, I always get at least one wife who comes up to me and complains about her husband's farts."
To clear the air (there will be no more puns in this story), Levitt says that his research has shown that on average the normal number of flatulatic occurrences a day is 10.
Levitt notes that if you have on average more than 22 separate flatulent occurrences a day, then you may want to consider several things: what you eat, how fast you eat it and how much air you swallow when you eat or drink.
In his 40-year career, Levitt has seen only two patients (both men) who farted upward of 140 times a day, but these extraordinary cases were lactose-intolerant individuals and, once dairy products were cut out of their diets, they returned to the normal range of acceptability. "These two were the biggest farters of my career. One of them complained that his sex life had been ruined by his chronic farting," Levitt says.
There are four possible reasons why some people fart more than others: They eat a lot of carbohydrates; they swallow air when they eat; the bacteria in their intestines are more efficient in turning carbohydrates into gas; or, conversely, the bacteria in their intestines don't consume carbohydrates efficiently, and therefore produce gas.
Levitt says an average male fart is made up of about 110 milliliters of gas (almost half a cup), with 80 milliliters for a woman's (a third of a cup). That adds up to a lot of gas -- 38 ounces during a single day for men, 27 ounces for women. Although some women claim they never fart, Levitt says that's not true. They just fart less because they are smaller.
Gassy food is gassy food for everyone, says Levitt, with a crucial caveat. Some people are able to absorb and tolerate the gas they produce better than others. The single most gas-producing food for most everyone, Levitt says, is -- no surprise -- baked beans. The musical fruit is made up entirely of simple carbohydrates, which are not absorbed in the intestines. Once inside the intestines, the sludge that was once beans is broken down by bacteria and enzymes, and then ferments. In that process, the thick, gooey substance can produce potent gases that have nowhere to go but down -- and out, thank goodness.
Out is important. While Levitt says he has never treated someone who held a fart in too long, there are dangerous side effects (including dizziness and headaches). Your colon becomes bloated, and theoretically, the methane and other lethal gases could add enough toxins to your blood to poison you. Levitt does not recommend holding in farts.
Dr. Fart speaks Part 2
But what if you don't eat lots of veggies and carbs and you still exceed 10 explosions a day on the fart-o-meter scale that Levitt says is normal? There could be several reasons:
Drinking too many carbonated beverages. The fizz in most carbonated beverages comes from carbon dioxide, which is dissipated by the time it reaches your intestines. But many soft drinks contain fructose, a sugar the intestines have a difficult time absorbing, thereby causing flatus, the medical term for farts (which comes from the Latin meaning "the act of blowing").
Drinking through a straw. If you sip air when you swallow, then the air has to come out some way, often through your butt.
Eating too fast, and eating too much fast food. Chew your food slowly. The act of eating quickly tends to induce the diner to take in air, thereby bloating the colon, as well as turning the air inside deadly.
Chewing gum. When you chew gum, you swallow air, and that means more of the above.
Not enough exercise. Exercising helps the body absorb gases in the colon, thereby dissipating them by the time they reach your anus.
Speaking of silent but deadly, Levitt doubts their existence. "Noisy farts can smell just as bad as silent ones," he says. "That's another myth that needs to be put to rest."
Whether silent or musical, all farts are made up of a variety of gases. The majority are made up of nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen and methane -- all odorless. Hydrogen causes the fart to waft quickly upward.
So, now that we know what's in them, how do we make them go away? Levitt says that over-the-counter items like Bean-O and Gas-Ex rarely work. Bean-O does, though, have a 24-hour toll-free hot line, (800) 257-8650 (no, it doesn't spell out F-A-R-T), and has a nifty collection of promotional materials, including a fanny pack and yellow windbreaker (get it?). Antacids work on some people, but Levitt stresses that for the best results, users should take no more than four tablespoons or tablets a day.
For odor, about the only thing that Levitt says works is a fart cushion made of charcoal, called the Tooter Trapper,
Forget Glade or Airwick, or even matches, to eradicate fart smells. The thing that works best is opening a window. Lighting a match may camouflage the smell but will not dispel it, says Levitt.
And as for masking the sound, Levitt says that depending on the anatomical peculiarities of a person's anus, sounds can vary when gas is squeezed through such a tight opening. The larger the volume of gas expelled and the greater the pressure exerted, generally the greater the noise, although Levitt says that standing usually tends to minimize the sound over sitting, which can amplify the toot.
Besides food, antibiotics occasionally cause some people to fart more, Levitt says, because the medications can disrupt the natural flora of the colon, thereby making it more difficult to break down certain foods, and thus leading to more flatus.
Americans are probably the most supercilious about farts. Other cultures are less squeamish about them. The British explorer and linguist Sir Richard Francis Burton, who first translated the "Kama Sutra" in 1883, contends in one of his many books that a tribe of Arabian Bedouins created a language of arcane codes and warnings through a series of intricately nuanced farts.
Farting came out of the closet in the United States in the breakthrough 1974 film "Blazing Saddles," in which Mel Brooks plays Gov. Le Petomane, who serves up baked beans around the campfire one night and hears the results from a bivouac of cowboys. Actually, Brooks' character was named after Joseph Pujol, known as Le Petroman (which translates to the "Fartiste"), who in 1892 debuted at the Moulin Rouge in Paris with a show that featured Pujol paying a flute, smoking a cigarette, blowing out candles, even singing La Marseillaise from anus air. Pujol extinguished candles from 2 feet away and became famous for his imitations of thunder, cannons and 2 yards of calico fabric being ripped. Pujol opened his own theater (the Pompadour), in which he starred for two decades before dying in 1945.
Levitt says Pujol probably was able to aspirate through his anus, that is, suck air in through his butt, and with that air performed his assortment of tricks. So it really wasn't Pujol's farts that amazed his audiences, but merely air that traveled a wee distance, instead of the longer, more arduous trip from mouth to colon to buttocks.
Farts, of course, predate Pujol. The Aristophanes play "The Clouds" contains a reference to farts. In Dante's "Divine Comedy," flatulent demons in the eighth ring of Hell make "trumpets of their asses." Hieronymus Bosch's "The Garden of Earthly Delights" shows a young woman with red roses shooting out from her derrire. And in 1776, Benjamin Franklin published a book of bawdy essays called "Fart Proudly."
Franklin wasn't the only one who knew that farts are funny. For a host of complex cultural reasons, farts render 10-year-old boys silly, not to mention more than a few grown men who still get amused for some reason by anal gas. It's a strange thing, though, farts. Take, for example, the expression "old fart." It's a term of insult when spoken in the third person, but one of pride when spoken about oneself.
And for those of you who must have an Internet fart connection, there are plenty of places. My personal favorite is farts.com, which offers an audio sampling of scores of farts, and allows viewers to rate the flatulence on several criteria, including verisimilitude, pitch, duration and volume.
Good old DR.FART!!
Similar Threads
-
Replies: 1
Last Post: March 19th, 2006, 05:34 PM
-
By confus-ed in forum Tech-To-Tech
Replies: 10
Last Post: January 17th, 2006, 04:59 PM
-
By bazcook in forum Spyware & Antivirus - Security
Replies: 2
Last Post: January 28th, 2005, 06:42 PM
-
By TechZ in forum Other Software Applications
Replies: 3
Last Post: December 28th, 2004, 05:34 AM
-
By TechZ in forum Other Software Applications
Replies: 0
Last Post: November 11th, 2004, 04:24 AM
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks