Nausea Essays

  • Comparing Existentialism in The Trial and Nausea

    559 Words  | 2 Pages

    Existentialism in The Trial and Nausea The Trial and Nausea   Webster's Dictionary defines Existentialism as a "philosophic doctrine of beliefs that people have absolute freedom of choice and that the universe is absurd, with an emphasis on the phenomena of anxiety and alienation." As Existentialism was coming to the foreground of the philosophical world during the 1940's, a group of Existentialist philosophers became well-known public figures in America. Their philosophies were commonly discussed

  • Essay Comparing Change in The Stranger and Nausea

    2141 Words  | 5 Pages

    Comparing Change in The Stranger and Nausea Existentialists mean that we can't rationalize, since we can't explain human fear, anguish, and pain. To rationalize is absurd, because in the final analysis, we will find nothing. Life is absurd. This leads to the term Nothingness. Thus, since we can't find a meaning of life more than what we attempt to create by ourselves, we anguish. Living in the same era, Camus and Sartre individually helped to form the school of existentialism. Of course there

  • Comparing Isolation of the Protagonist in The Trial and Nausea

    669 Words  | 2 Pages

    Isolation of the Protagonist in The Trial and Nausea Kafka and Sartre provide effective settings for their novels by presenting their protagonists in isolated environments. Each character experiences very slight contact with other people, and the relationships they do have with the other characters exist at a superficial level. In The Trial, Joseph K. is placed on trial for an offense about which he is told nothing. As he attempts to discover the reason for his indictment, he experiences a great

  • Comparing Albert Camus' The Stranger (The Outsider) and Jean-Paul Sartre's Nausea

    2127 Words  | 5 Pages

    Albert Camus' The Stranger (The Outsider) and Jean-Paul Sartre's Nausea Nausea, by Jean-Paul Sartre, and The Stranger, by Albert Camus, refuse to impose order on their events by not using psychology, hierarchies, coherent narratives, or cause and effect. Nausea refuses to order its events by not inscribing them with psychology or a cause for existence, and it contrasts itself with a text by Balzac that explains its events. Nausea resists the traditional strategy of including the past to predict

  • Nausea

    1044 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the novel, Nausea, author Jean-Paul Sartre details an existential exploration from the viewpoint of fictional character, Antoine Roquentin, in the form of a personal diary. Throughout the work, the “feeling of adventure” becomes an important motif in Roquentin’s existential understanding and development. The contrast Sartre constructs between the ideas of adventure and “perfect moments” not only defines their interconnected relationship but gives the reader insight into Roquentin’s perception

  • Essay On Hyperemesis Gravidarum

    864 Words  | 2 Pages

    University Billings Hyperemesis Gravidarum Nausea and vomiting are especially common during early pregnancy, particularly within the first trimester. Most women experience nausea and vomiting, commonly referred to as “morning sickness”, which is often attributed to the mother’s reaction to the spike in pregnancy hormones. Although feeling ill is considered normal within the first few months of pregnancy, there are instances of nausea and vomiting that continue on to the second and third

  • Hyperemesis Gravidarum

    954 Words  | 2 Pages

    Differences between Normal and Abnormal According to a research article by Lee and Saha (2013), 70 to 80 percent of all pregnant women experience nausea and vomiting. Nausea and vomiting during pregnancy is believed to be caused by rapidly rising serum levels of the hormones human chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) and estrogen (Cleveland Clinic, 2012). However, when nausea and vomiting becomes severe to the point that it can cause electrolyte imbalances, weight loss, and dehydration (Cleveland Clinic, 2012)

  • Side Effects of Prozac

    1492 Words  | 3 Pages

    earlier forms of antidepressants, such as MAO inhibitors, Prozac and other SSRIs tend to produce fewer and less severe side effects (Hockenbury, 200). According to Prozac's manufacturer, Eli Lilly (2005), side effects caused by Prozac may include nausea, difficulty sleeping, drowsiness, nervousness, weakness, loss of appetite, tremors, dry mouth, sweating, or yawning. Other side effects listed included a change in sexual desire or satisfaction and a formation of a rash or hives. Eli Lilly

  • Marijuana Should Be Legal

    786 Words  | 2 Pages

    the effectiveness of marijuana as a treatment for cancer: “Over 74 percent of the cancer patients treated in the program have reported that marijuana is more effective in relieving their nausea and vomiting than any other drug they have tried.”(Zeese 1990). Chemotherapy for cancer patients often produces nausea and vomiting. Marijuana has been proven to relieve these symptoms and there have been no known side effects recorded (Ad Hoc Group of Experts part 4). The people who would benefit the most

  • Medical Marijuana

    1534 Words  | 4 Pages

    of its general therapeutic applications include: relief from nausea and increase of appetite; reduction of intraocular ("within the eye") pressure; reduction of muscle spasms; relief from mild to moderate chronic pain. Marijuana is often useful in the treatment of the following conditions: Cancer: Marijuana alleviates the nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite caused by chemotherapy treatment. AIDS: Marijuana alleviates the nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite caused by the disease itself

  • Kidney Stones

    679 Words  | 2 Pages

    Out of every thousand people in the United States, one person can say that they have experienced one of the most painful episodes one can go through. Some have said that compared to this, pregnancy is easy. Over half a million people will experience kidney stones this year, and a third of them will be hospitalized. Kidney stones are hard, crystalline deposits in the kidney. They are usually hexagonal, eighty percent of which are made of calcium. These calcium stones are two to three times more common

  • A Medical And Moral Look At Ectopic Pregnancy

    1466 Words  | 3 Pages

    also settle and embed itself onto the ovary, inside the cervix, or, rarely, in the abdominal cavity. The symptoms are present in the first stages of pregnancy. Missed menstruation is the first sign of the pregnancy as per usual. This is followed by nausea, breast tenderness, vomiting, fatigue, and eventually a lot of pain. The pain can be a dull ache which progresses into a sharp spasmodic pain, usually confined to either the left or the right lower quadrant in the pelvic area or generalized to the

  • Ablutophobia: The Fear of Washing and Bathing

    645 Words  | 2 Pages

    Ablutophobia, defined as the fear of washing, bathing and cleaning is an intense fear that poses no or little danger. Just thinking about bathing could cause a number of symptoms such as: breathlessness, dizziness, excessive sweating, nausea, dry mouth, feeling sick, shaking, heart palpitations, inability to speak or think clearly, a fear of dying, becoming mad or losing control, a sensation of detachment from reality or even an anxiety attack. Most people who are suffering from the phobia

  • HYPNOSIS

    743 Words  | 2 Pages

    and psychotherapy. Uses of Hypnosis Hypnosis can play a useful role in medicine, dentistry and psychotherapy. Thus, it can be used to suppress the pain of the childbirth or of having one’s teeth drilled. It is also useful in reducing the nausea caused by the drugs used in chemotherapy for cancer. Hypnosis can also be used to help people break a bad habit such as smoking. Finally, hypnosis is often used in psychotherapy to help patients discuss painful memories whose inaccessibility

  • Should Ecstasy be legal?

    1263 Words  | 3 Pages

    to let them attend. But do you really know what they are getting into? Those “dances” are known as raves and are one of them ultimate and most popular place to drop ‘E’ ”.Health hazards range from any where to raise in temperature and faintness to nausea and grinding of the teeth .But continued use can result in “holes” in the brain and even liver damage. Yes ecstasy is used at “raves”, but not by everyone. Natural “ravers” (sober ravers), are given a bad rap because their title “raver” is automatically

  • Morning Sickness

    1627 Words  | 4 Pages

    three-quarters of all pregnant women have nausea (and sometimes vomiting) during their first trimester. For some, it's worse in the morning and gets better over the course of the day, but "morning sickness" can strike at any time. The nausea usually starts around 6 weeks but can come on as early as 4 weeks for some women, and it usually tapers off around 13 weeks as you start your second trimester, although queasiness can come and go throughout your pregnancy. What causes nausea and vomiting during pregnancy

  • Poetry Intertextual

    2374 Words  | 5 Pages

    rhythm to the poem, which symbolises the mother’s life. Harwood uses emotive description and olfactory imagery to allow the audience to experience exactly what the woman is feeling. “A pot boils over. As she rushes to the stove too late, a wave of nausea overpowers” Harwood creates the image of a pot of milk boiling over and a horrible odour dispersing from it. The use of olfactory imagery presents the audience with a common smell recognised as a disgusting stench, forcing the audience to feel empathy

  • The Existential Progression of King Lear

    3669 Words  | 8 Pages

    Edgar should not necessarily be looked upon as that of a companion, but rather as catalyst for Lear’s progression. As for Kent, his presence is barely felt by Lear. Lear’s isolation is critical for his progression. Similar to Sartre’s Roquentin in Nausea, isolation and loneliness are the foundations for becoming existentially aware. “The tempest in my mind/ Doth from my senses take all feeling else”(III, iv 13-14)[1] Lear is completely alone in the universe, abandoned by love and cloistered from all

  • Influenza

    607 Words  | 2 Pages

    Influenza Influenza, normally called “the flu”, the influenza virus causes an infection in the respiration tract. Even though the influenza virus can sometimes be compared with the common cold. It also can cause a more severe illness or death. During this past century, pandemics took place in 1918, 1957, and 1968, in all of these cases there where unfortunately many deaths. The “Spanish flu” in 1918, killed approximately half a million people in the United States alone. It killed around 20 million

  • The Drug Codeine

    632 Words  | 2 Pages

    that triggers coughing, and as an anti-diarrheal drug, because it slows down muscle contractions in the intestinal wall. There are possible adverse effects. The most frequently observed adverse reactions include lightheadedness, dizziness, sedation, nausea, vomiting, and sweating. These effects seem to be more prominent in ambulatory patients and in those who are not suffering severe pain. Other adverse reactions include the following: (1) Central Nervous System- Euphoria, dysphoria, weakness, headache