6.19.2010

Yvonne Mayer: Marry Me?

limbsandthings1 — June 19, 2010 — http://youtube.com/watch?v=KwDZ76OWrzo 1st Vuvuzela Injury Yvonne Mayer: 4-Hour Blowing Contest Marry Me? http://youtube.com/watch?v=jUJMUj7Asx0 Would you make me the happiest man in the world by marrying me? It was love at first sight. Not kidding! http://youtube.com/watch?v=KwDZ76OWrzo
http://www.youtube.com/user/dominocerise

1st Vuvuzela Injury Yvonne Mayer: 4-Hour Blowing Contest http://youtube.com/watch?v=jUJMUj7Asx0 - In related news: I've asked her to marry me.... http://post.ly/k4Yh Vuvu Loves: Yvonne Mayer of Bloubergstrand (Blouberg, Cape Town), SA could not eat or speak for two days after blowing the vuvuzela in a Vuvuzela blowing-contest caused her to rupture her larynx and simultaneously become the *first FIFA World Cup 2010 Vuvuzela Injury statistic. Mayer blamed her own poor blowing technique and said she was now "a bit nervous" about trying it AGAIN! Dr Scott Barker of Tableview Medi-Cross Clinic, , interviewed here, said: "The Continuous Blowing AFTER(!) the initial tear resulted in the wound becoming bigger." (I've set up an account at Zoopy TV, Yvonne. http://www.zoopy.com/mrjyn Please contact me!) It seems the Vuvuzela simply cannot catch a break during the Fifa World Cup 2010 After the match the soccer supporter said her throat started burning even more. It felt as if a bubble had become stuck in her windpipe, she said. The next day her doctor explained that the pressure in her windpipe had become too much, resulting in part of her throat rupturing. Air entered the tissue through the wound. Although Mayer was not admitted to hospital, she had to be monitored to prevent infection. As with any wind instrument, continuously blowing on it for a few hours consecutively could result in an inflamed throat or even worse, a swollen lip. She joined the impromptu competition on the opening day of the World Cup in Cape Town. At the time, she thought the burning sensation in her throat was a cold. After the match, her throat started burning even more, and the next day she went to the doctor. "The doctor was really enjoying it, he just kept laughing at me and said it was his first vuvuzela injury," said Mayer. Her physician, Scott Barker, said the wound worsened because she kept blowing after the initial tear. Mayer blamed her own poor blowing technique and said she was now "a bit nervous" about trying it again. The instrument drew fierce criticism for drowning out fans' singing in stadiums, hindering communication between coaches and teams, and for dominating television coverage. Experts also said it could cause permanent damage to hearing. World Cup: Vuvuzela contest causes woman to rupture her throat As if any further proof were needed that the infernal things are not only a nuisance but a health hazard, a South African woman has ruptured her throat while taking part in a vuvuzela-blowing contest. Yvonne Mayer of Cape Town told the South African Press Assn. that she first thought the burning sensation in her throat was the result of a cold, but it got worse and she went to see her doctor, who found a small tear. "He just kept laughing at me and said it was his first vuvuzela injury," Mayer then said: "vuvuzela "Vuvuzela Injury" "vuvzela throat" "vuvuzela joke"
Category: People & Blogs
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vuvuzela vuvuzuela vuvu vuvazela sa vuvuzelas horn Yvonne Mayer vuvuzella Marry Me marriage wedding honeymoon ring diamond blood South Africa Blouberg Bloubergstrand injury love Woman larynx first Cape Town Afrikaans Afrikaner sokker blow blows blowing wind instrument fan swollen lip oral windpipe mouth 2010 FIFA World Cup world cup mrjyn yt:quality=high whatgetsmehot youweirdtube limbsandthings1

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