According to Yahoo News, Courtney Sanford updated her status moments before the crash. Pic: Facebook
A driver has died in a head-on collision moments after posting a Facebook selfie and status update from behind the wheel, telling friends how happy she was.
Courtney Sanford added the post to her Facebook timeline at 8.33am as she drove to work.
Police were called to the accident just one minute later.
The 32-year-old's car crossed the central reservation and smashed into a recycling truck before bursting into flames.
The driver of the truck, which hit a tree, was not seriously hurt.
Police said Ms Sanford was travelling along Interstate 85 in North Carolina when the Facebook updates were posted and there was no evidence of drink or drugs.
The link to Facebook emerged after friends of the victim told officers a number of her online posts appeared at around the same time as the accident.
Police said Ms Sanford posted a series of pictures of herself as she drove along the road.
In an apparent reference to Pharrell Williams' latest hit, one update read: 'The Happy song makes me so happy.'
High Point police officer Lt Chris Weisner told WGHP TV the crash was a tragic example of what can happen when motorists 'text and drive'.
'In a matter of seconds a life was over, just so she could notify some friends she was happy,' he said.
'It’s really not worth it. As sad as it is, it's also a grim reminder for everyone ... you just have to pay attention while you're in the car.'
The plastic capsules were found by police on patrol in Manchester and contained around 20 snap bags of heroin and a similar number of crack cocaine rocks
Heroin and crack cocaine were found hidden inside Kinder Egg capsules
Heroin and crack cocaine have been found stashed in Kinder Egg capsules left lying in the street.
The capsules, which are usually found inside Kinder Surprise chocolate eggs and normally contain children’s toys, were discovered by officers patrolling in Manchester.
The plastic shells contained around 20 small snap bags of suspected heroin and more than 20 rocks of what is believed to be crack cocaine.
Officers are now searching for the owner of the Class A drugs and have urged anyone who may know who they belong to, to come forward.
Officers discovered what appeared to be a drug dealer's stash while on patrol in St Mary’s Hall Road in the Crumpsall area of the city.
Placentophagy is becoming popular, thanks to health claims and celebrity advocates. And afterbirth is a surprisingly versatile ingredient – would you give it a go?
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It is mere moments after the birth of my son and, still basking in the euphoria of parenthood, I make the request. The mood changes, the smiles of the midwives melt into looks of bewilderment, then repulsion. It has, however, interested the surgeon who is busy stitching my wife up after her C-section. "How are you going to cook it?" he asks. "With spices?"
Since my wife and I first discussed having a child, the thought of this one-time opportunity to eat human placenta had been rolling around my mind. Being inquisitively omnivorous, I wanted to know how it would taste; in the face of a fresh, still-warm placenta, I was less enthusiastic. The wobbly, knotted mass of fibrous, clot-like flesh was bigger than I expected and somewhat intimidating. While I wavered, a more open-minded midwife suggested taking "just a few cheeky steaks". And so I left the hospital with my wife, our newborn son and a doggy bag.
Many advocates believe that eating placenta can help ward off postnatal depression. Oxytocin, the hormone that helps facilitate childbirth and milk production, is found within the placenta. The organ is also packed full of stem cells, thought by some to aid restoration of the mother's body. But the evidence is anecdotal, and the practice of eating placenta a modern obsession.
Despite its taboo nature, placenta appears to be an incredibly versatile ingredient. Twitter threw up many mothers praising the placenta smoothie, Google returned recipes for lasagne and pizza and even a dedicated recipe book, while, back in 1998, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall made a pâté out of one woman's placenta (resulting in many complaints to Channel 4). I eventually decide to have it raw in a smoothie and cooked in a taco, fried with a little garlic and paprika.
The following morning, my wife sat out of the way in the front room while I set about one of her body parts in the kitchen. It was good to have first-hand knowledge of this placenta's provenance – I cooked a balanced, nutritious diet throughout my wife's pregnancy, interspersed with vast quantities of chocolate digestives. Sadly, none of the biscuity nuances came through in the meat.
The blender looked rank. After 10 minutes of watching a hefty chunk of placenta whirl round the Magimix, it finally broke down into the banana and coconut water. Up front was the distinct flavour of banana, superseded by a metallic, bloody backnote. It had a mineral earthiness to it and tasted exactly like the delivery room had smelled.
I'd read of one mother who felt weird and jittery after ingesting placenta, followed by a frightening phase filled with tears and rage. Fortunately, other than feeling nauseous from the smoothie, my mood was unchanged.
Asking to take home the placenta was the most difficult part of my foray into placentophagy. After all, human offal is no more gruesome than that of livestock. But despite celebrity advocates, an increase in encapsulation services and a list of supposed health benefits, it seems that for many, the idea of eating placenta is just too difficult to stomach.
What do YOU think? Is it a form of cannibalism...or do you think it's worth trying?...Or the mere thought of it got you feeling nauseous?? Your comments below! #theguardian
Aggrieved mothers and other indigenes of Chibok, Borno State, yesterday in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital, staged a protest to demand the immediate rescue or release of the more than 200 secondary school girls abducted by suspected Boko Haram insurgents on April 14.
Some of the protesting women, who were all dressed in black, seemed unimpressed by the senators’ tepid words. A number of the women betrayed their emotion and wept profusely, a few of them rolling on the ground. Some sources in the state have told the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) that some of the abducted girls had been ferried across into Chad where they were being married off for 2000 naira per girl.