While reading all the studies of pharmaceutical brochures (known as Vademecum), I noticed the word “excipient” in all or nearly all of them. It is so common that we cannot see it. The excipient provides consistency and flavor to pharmaceuticals, among other qualities. But it is an inert substance, that is, it does not produce chemical reactions. According to the dictionary, an inert thing is something inanimate, inert, lazy, lazy. It does not remove or add anything to the pill, capsule or syrup. Yet it is the common feature of the substances from which the syrup, capsule or pill is made. It becomes the sauce of all therapeutic stews. My favorite ingredient in the kitchen is flour, which I usually add a tablespoon of to clam stew, as well as to bean stew. Thanks to that spoon, the sauce is “fattening” as my mother used to say. It gives consistency, that is, it thickens, thickens, curls. But it is not noticeable. No one realizes that with the chorizo, there is a tiny bit of magic powder in these beans that can combine the food that makes up the stew.
Maybe it’s a bad cook’s trick, I don’t know, but I can assure you it works.
This is what is lacking in today’s societies: something to prevent the fragmentation that we are unwittingly subjected to. You look through the newspaper, it doesn’t matter, and you get the impression that you are living in a shattered world, a shattered world, a world where every part goes its own way, just like in bad times. Lentil stews here, bacon there and meat there, all swimming in some sort of washed aguachirri, colorless and tasteless.
We need a paste that can put these parts together. I guess it’s the Chinese who glued the broken vase pieces together with molten gold. Gold is its auxiliary material for ceramics. We’d settle for less. Perhaps with a universal basic income that will ensure everyone’s basic needs are met. In the end, it will turn out that the helper, which apparently does nothing, does everything.
Source: Informacion

Dolores Johnson is a voice of reason at “Social Bites”. As an opinion writer, she provides her readers with insightful commentary on the most pressing issues of the day. With her well-informed perspectives and clear writing style, Dolores helps readers navigate the complex world of news and politics, providing a balanced and thoughtful view on the most important topics of the moment.