Watch “How the Mexican cartels are making profits now” on YouTube
18 Friday Oct 2024
Posted in drugs
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18 Friday Oct 2024
Posted in drugs
≈ Comments Off on Watch “How the Mexican cartels are making profits now” on YouTube
16 Wednesday Oct 2024
Posted in culture, Developmental Psychology, Health and wellness, Psychology, Research, Science
≈ Comments Off on Is there a genius in all of us?
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Great article about research on where and how people become geniuses. It’s the nurturing that makes the nature of things.
From the BBC article: “Where do athletic and artistic abilities come from? With phrases like “gifted musician”, “natural athlete” and “innate intelligence”, we have long assumed that talent is a genetic thing some of us have and others don’t.”

Taken with my phone looking south.
But new science suggests the source of abilities is much more interesting and improvisational. It turns out that everything we are is a developmental process and this includes what we get from our genes.
14 Monday Oct 2024
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on music from: Riff Cohen – A Hole In The Heart ∙ ריף כהן – חור בלב
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13 Sunday Oct 2024
Posted in About
≈ Comments Off on Brokenness of Others
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I am a deeply spiritual, mildly autistic, and overly optimistic person. That’s not just how I define myself, for decades that’s what people have been saying and occasionally labeling me as.
Mrs Fenimore was my 4’th grade teacher. Born and raised in South Carolina, she had the sweetest accent I had ever heard in my young life up to that point. Later on, as a teen I heard a Quebecois womyn calling my name and for a brief moment I felt like I was floating on air. But that’s another story for another day.
You see, in the middle of the fall term in Mrs Fenimore’s class a new kid joined. ‘Jay’ must have been one of the last kids in early 1960’s America that had contracted polio. Jay had a limp, wore a special shoe on one foot, and used a cane. This freaked me out.
Meeting this kid was my first and unexpectedly deep experience of the brokenness of others outside of my own family. I wept for Jay. Literally wept for this kid. I kept thinking, why him? Why not me? Why did this happen?
I think that as a kid asking these deep questions came from a place of sincerity, compassion, and confusion. They came from a place of ego too. What with my autistic tendencies and being diagnosed with a heart condition at a very young age, here was someone who seemed to be more broken than me….
Mrs Fenimore was soothing and encouraging, mainly to redirect me back to school work. She encouraged me to become friends with this new lad, which was challenging for me as he was an outsider and was constantly made fun of and taunted.
I distinctly recall suddenly realizing that my class mates were treating him in the same way my family treated me. With that realization I made the choice to become friends with ‘Jay’ and the other shunned kids in my class. We united in our brokenness.

“Wounding and healing are not opposites. They’re part of the same thing. It is our wounds that enable us to be compassionate with the wounds of others. It is our limitations that make us kind to the limitations of other people. It is our loneliness that helps us to find other people or to even know they’re alone with an illness. I think I have served people perfectly with parts of myself I used to be ashamed of.” Rachel Naomi Remen
11 Friday Oct 2024
Posted in Wellness
≈ Comments Off on 2025 Medicare Advantage and Part D Star Ratings | CMS
“Ensuring that Medicare works for seniors and people with disabilities, and that people with Medicare have access to robust, stable, high-quality, and affordable options for the coverage they need, are top priorities for the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).”
11 Friday Oct 2024
Posted in Rural America
≈ Comments Off on Brookings Institute: Watch Advancing inclusive development in rural towns
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“Brookings Metro and the Local Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) will bring together national, state, and local leaders from rural America to discuss community-centered and bottom-up approaches to inclusive economic development. The event will spotlight the experiences and lessons learned from an in-depth Brookings and LISC-led “Learning Lab” deployed in three rural Indiana towns, which was devoted to advancing economic inclusion by linking disinvested rural districts to broader regional growth strategies. It will also offer concrete policy recommendations for how state,local, and federal governments can better advance inclusive access to opportunity, quality of place, and quality of life in rural America.”
09 Wednesday Oct 2024
Posted in news
≈ Comments Off on Charter for Compassion
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07 Monday Oct 2024
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on watch music from: Ÿuma – Bin Thara | بين الثرى
04 Friday Oct 2024
Posted in people
≈ Comments Off on Watch: Mud flat mailman | DW Documentary
02 Wednesday Oct 2024
Posted in Psychology
≈ Comments Off on Seeing Time
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Imagine if you could see time laid out in front of you, or surrounding your body. And you could physically point to specific dates in space.
Important dates might stand out – birthdays, anniversaries. And you could scan a visible timeline – to check if you were available – whenever you made plans. No actual diary necessary.
According to Julia Simner, a psychologist from the University of Edinburgh, there is a reasonable chance you can. And that you may use the experience, unconsciously, every day. MORE FROM THE BBC
30 Monday Sep 2024
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on Top Songs I Listened to in 2023: The Molokans – “The Lord Almighty says”
27 Friday Sep 2024
Posted in CarFree
≈ Comments Off on CityNerd: Detroit
27 Friday Sep 2024
Posted in Wellness
≈ Comments Off on Watch: Why you need to STOP microwaving plastic
25 Wednesday Sep 2024
Posted in news
≈ Comments Off on Shockingly, Hedgehog joke wins comedy prize
• 1) Dan Antopolski – “Hedgehogs – why can’t they just share the hedge?”
• 2) Paddy Lennox – “I was watching the London Marathon and saw one runner dressed as a chicken and another runner dressed as an egg. I thought: ‘This could be interesting’.”
• 3) Sarah Millican – “I had my boobs measured and bought a new bra. Now I call them Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes because they’re up where they belong.”
• 4) Zoe Lyons – “I went on a girls’ night out recently. The invitation said ‘dress to kill’. I went as Rose West.”
• 5) Jack Whitehall – “I’m sure wherever my dad is; he’s looking down on us. He’s not dead, just very condescending.”
• 6) Adam Hills – “Going to Starbucks for coffee is like going to prison for sex. You know you’re going to get it, but it’s going to be rough.”
• 7) Marcus Brigstocke – “To the people who’ve got iPhones: you just bought one, you didn’t invent it!”
• 8) Rhod Gilbert – “A spa hotel? It’s like a normal hotel, only in reception there’s a picture of a pebble.”
• 9) Dan Antopolski – “I’ve been reading the news about there being a civil war in Madagascar. Well, I’ve seen it six times and there isn’t.”
• 10) Simon Brodkin (as Lee Nelson) – “I started so many fights at my school – I had that attention-deficit disorder. So I didn’t finish a lot of them.”
23 Monday Sep 2024
Posted in Music
≈ Comments Off on Top Songs I Listened to in 2023: EMEL – Souty (My Voice)
20 Friday Sep 2024
Posted in Ecopsychology
≈ Comments Off on DW: The corporate war against green policies: Climate lit
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18 Wednesday Sep 2024
Posted in Wellness
≈ Comments Off on watch AMA weekly update: Bird flu update, respiratory disease season outlook …
18 Wednesday Sep 2024
Posted in Creative Art Therapy
≈ Comments Off on Veterans Transition House program uses art as therapy
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For a number of men at the Veterans Transition House, art is helping them work through the struggles and challenges born from their military service.
James Reid, Transition House director, said the Veterans in Transition Art Program is a valuable therapy tool that helps the men relax and tap into their creative side.
"Some may be resistant (to it) at first, but after a while the walls break down. They surprise themselves with what they can do," said Fred C. Macedo Jr., support coordinator at the Transition House.
The two year-old program is being done in collaboration with ArtWorks! Partners for the Arts and Community Inc. and is funded through a Massachusetts Cultural Council grant.
One recent afternoon, 15 men gathered to draw, using oil pastels on black paper for an activity called "Darkness into Light," in recognition of the winter solstice.
"Many of the men here have never done art before. I want them to have the experience of using the materials … In seeing that they can do something, they may see something about themselves," said instructor Mary Harman.
Veteran Joseph Simmons studied the Patriots logo on a hat and copied it onto his paper.
"My wife gave me this hat for Christmas. It was so hard to be away from my family (during the holidays), but I needed to deal with some things. I’m getting better now," said Simmons, who, like many of those at the VTH, is struggling with addiction and psychological issues.
"I didn’t want to do the art class at first, but it helps a lot … I miss my wife, Kelly, so much. We were just married last spring and she has been sticking by me through everything," added Simmons somewhat sadly.
Two other veterans, Jeff Theroux and Jimmy Rogers, were quick to jump in to cheer him up by waving their homages to the Celtics and Red Sox, then talking Simmons into posing with them for a group photo.
"I’m 33 days sober and you can put that in the paper. It’s a celebration. I go to AA meetings every day and do some of this art," said Rogers, who made it though the holidays without taking a drink and plans to return to his barber shop a healthier, happier man.
According to Deborah Smook, education and outreach coordinator for ArtWorks!, the Transitioning Veterans Art Program is a terrific example of how the organization is helping diverse members of the community connect with art.
"A lot of people think that you have to be special or different to do art, but really art is for everyone. It is almost our right. You don’t have to be in a special category," Smook said.
ArtWorks! recently hosted an exhibit of the veterans’ work at its Acushnet Avenue gallery. The exhibit, called "I Don’t Have an Artistic Bone in my Body," showed pieces ranging from pencil drawings to sculptures.
A highlight was a 23-tile mosaic that was a collaborative effort of 60 men who worked on it as they transitioned in and out of the house.
Although the focus of the program is art as therapy, rather than profit or recognition, veteran Mark Hamilton has become known in the area for his portraits and has had numerous requests to paint on commission.
"Art has definitely helped my self-esteem. It has occupied a lot of my time and helped me interact with people, which I don’t like to do," Hamilton said. "Some people call the Veterans Transition House the last stop. For me, it has been the best stop." From SouthCoastToday.com
17 Tuesday Sep 2024
Posted in constitution
≈ Comments Off on Watch: The Soldier and the Constitution
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“The principle of civilian control of the armed forces and the military’s norm of nonpartisanship are bedrock features of democratic governance. While military service members are encouraged to exercise their basic rights as citizens, such as voting, those on active duty face a number of restrictions regarding their political activity. This film helps educate service members on the military’s norm of nonpartisanship and why it’s critical for the military to avoid the appearance of participating in partisan politics, especially during an election year.”
16 Monday Sep 2024
Posted in Social Media
≈ Comments Off on Cybersecurity for Democracy: Facebook
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There are many reasons why I left Facebook and Instagram. One of those reasons is Meta’s continued violations of its stated policies in exchange for more money.
Read the report here. Cybersecurity for Democracy
” ….64% of those Telegram-linked ads appear to have violated Meta’s policies, including some promoting illegal activity.”
