Articles

  • Nov 16, 2024 | mcall.com | Christine Nelson

    I saw him do it. I heard her say. What they did is so wrong, I can never forgive them. What they think is so irrational, I can’t be around them anymore. We identify a reason not to love someone. We feel superior because we believe we hold the higher moral ground or logical position. This is the human pattern: making someone else the problem and not us. Revenge enters early into the human experience as Cain accuses the Lord of liking brother Abel’s gifts best. I have bad news for all of us.

  • Jul 13, 2024 | mcall.com | Christine Nelson

    When I was in college, I had an encounter that redirected my life. I was working in Chautauqua, New York at the oldest wooden hotel in America along with about 30 other waitresses. One day I woke up and felt the weight of the world on my shoulders. It was a physical presence. I worked through the day, but I couldn’t shake this feeling that something was happening deep inside me; something was changing but I couldn’t put my finger on it. It just was there.

  • Apr 25, 2024 | nature.com | Christine Nelson |Hong-Su Park |Cindy Luongo |Shirin Munir |Peter D. Kwong |Kennichi Dowdell | +3 more

    AbstractImmunization via the respiratory route is predicted to increase the effectiveness of a SARS-CoV-2 vaccine. Here, we evaluate the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of one or two doses of a live-attenuated murine pneumonia virus vector expressing SARS-CoV-2 prefusion-stabilized spike protein (MPV/S-2P), delivered intranasally/intratracheally to male rhesus macaques.

  • Nov 27, 2023 | pm360online.com | Christine Nelson

    I started my Insights career at a medical devices division of one of the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies. A significant shake-up at the company marked the start of my tenure: a newly appointed CEO with a consumer-packaged goods (CPG) background introduced a new Chief Marketing Officer (also from CPG) and an influx of global marketers from renowned companies such as P&G, Kraft, and Coca-Cola.

  • Nov 18, 2023 | mcall.com | Christine Nelson

    In the 1950s in Bangkok, Thailand a huge clay statue of the Buddha began to crack due to intense heat and drought. Monks arrived to examine the damage. They were surprised. A gleam of gold shone out from beneath the inches of gray clay. No one knew this ordinary statue was actually a solid-gold Buddha. Six hundred years previously it had been covered with plaster and clay to protect it from invading armies.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →