Mayo Clinic Diet
MAY 26, 2021 |
“Make a list of healthy foods to buy, and avoid shopping for food when you’re hungry. Shopping with a grocery list of healthy items will help you curb impulse purchases.” — Adamarie Multari, M.D. | |||||||
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MAY 26, 2021 |
“Make a list of healthy foods to buy, and avoid shopping for food when you’re hungry. Shopping with a grocery list of healthy items will help you curb impulse purchases.” — Adamarie Multari, M.D. | |||||||
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We are thrilled to see some of the restrictions imposed by the governor and the CDC ease a bit, now that so many of us have been able to receive vaccinations against Covid-19. Here are some things that are staying the same in our office, as well as some changes to the way we do things:
Mask Use: The CDC recommends, and Governor Northam has mandated, that while mask use for vaccinated individuals in public places is now optional, it is still required in health care settings, like ours. Please continue to bring and use your mask while in our offices until further notice, regardless of your vaccination status.
Curbside Visits: We will continue to offer curbside visits as long as people are enjoying them. Stopping by our office to pick up supplies? Simply park in the loading dock area and call our office. We will happily run them out to you, so you don’t even have to leave your car on a 98 degree day. Same thing goes for hearing aid cleanings and repairs. If you need a hearing test, we’ll see you inside!
Stringent cleaning protocols: We’re continuing our stringent infection control procedures of sterilizing all surfaces in between patients, to guarantee the cleanest possible environment for the safety of our patients.
Forms and Paperwork online: We are still trying to eliminate extra time in the waiting area by sending new patient forms and updated annual paperwork via email. Please check to make sure we have your correct email address on file, and make sure our emails are landing in your inbox and not your spam folder!
And now, some changes:
Waiting area: While we still want our patients to maintain physical distance whenever possible, we will no longer ask you to call us prior to entering the office. For your comfort, if you prefer an empty space when you enter, you may still call us to verify your provider is ready to see you immediately.
Screening questions: Our screening questions will change prior to your visit in our office. We will continue temperature checks, but if you have received your vaccine, you will have an abbreviated list of screening questions. As before, if you are feeling unwell, kindly reschedule your appointment.
Thank you for taking the time to read this and for helping us keep our patients and staff happy and healthy. We look forward to seeing you soon.
Hearing Associates of Northern Virginia
(15) And to one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another one, to each according to his own ability; and immediately he went on a journey.
New King James Version Change your email Bible version
The talent was not a coin but a weight, and so its value obviously depended on whether the coinage involved was copper, silver, or gold. The most common metal was silver. The original Greek word for “talent” is talantos, which refers to quantity. As Jesus uses it, a talent is not something we possess, but which He possesses and loans to His servants. In the parable, all talents belonged to the lord, who entrusted them to his servants for use in trade.
Spiritually, the talents represent the gift of the complete revelation of God as given in the Bible, including the knowledge of His plan of salvation and the gospel of the coming Kingdom of God. It also includes His spiritual gifts to the church, such as speaking and understanding languages, preaching, teaching, discernment, knowledge, and wisdom, among many others (Romans 11:29; 12:6-8; I Corinthians 12:1-11).
What we “trade” with while He is absent belongs to Him. Our natural abilities are comparatively insignificant and of little value, but God has given us spiritual wealth to use by investing it in supporting the work of God. These talents, then, are not a matter of things we own or of strengths we have, but are part of the grace of God, provided for the church’s benefit.
God’s gifts accomplish much more through some people than they do through others, as is seen in how much the lord bestows on each servant. Every true servant of Christ receives the Holy Spirit, but different servants receive differing amounts of spiritual understanding from God. We do not receive more from Him than we can understand and use. Because God’s servants differ in aptitude, He accordingly bestows His gifts to each servant as He pleases (I Corinthians 12:11).
The lord knew the trading ability of his chosen servants, and he distributed his talents accordingly. Talent and ability are two different things. Talents are the spiritual gifts of the Master, while ability is power from our natural fitness and skill. A person may have great natural ability, yet no spiritual gifts. Natural ability, however, one of God’s physical gifts, is often necessary for the reception of spiritual gifts. This was no reflection on the third servant because he only received one talent; he could not handle more. Each servant of Christ receives for his service all that he needs and can use (Romans 12:4-9; I Corinthians 12:4-30).
This parable teaches us several things. God gives people differing gifts. Work well done is rewarded with still more work to do. The person who uses his gifts will be given more, while the person who does not will lose even what he has. If a person uses a gift, he is increasingly able to do more with it, and a person who does not try is punished. The only way to keep a spiritual gift is to use it in the service of God and one another.
— Martin G. Collins
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