Personal Development, Hindi – Video
Posted: August 8, 2014 at 12:46 pm
Wake Up to This! Ep.3 Personal Development – Video
Posted: at 12:46 pm
Wake Up to This! Ep.3 Personal Development
Just like Self Love, there #39;s no better development than Self Development! Surround yourself with people who have your same mindset and positivity level! Make sure you keep the negativity low...
By:
Simone LaChelleRead more here:
Wake Up to This! Ep.3 Personal Development - Video
"Sneak Peek" for Personal Development Session, "Whatever You Do, Grow You" – Video
Posted: at 12:46 pm
"Sneak Peek" for Personal Development Session, "Whatever You Do, Grow You"
Come hangout with Kashonna Holland and Gail Crowder, from the comfort of your own home, as they share some insight on what to expect when you attend the Personal Development Series, Whatever...
By:
Kashonna HollandThe rest is here:
"Sneak Peek" for Personal Development Session, "Whatever You Do, Grow You" - Video
Oregon State University online foreign language courses – Video
Posted: at 12:45 pm
Oregon State University online foreign language courses
Instructors for Oregon State University share why they love language and how the foreign language courses they teach online benefit their students around the...
By:
OSUEcampusGo here to read the rest:
Oregon State University online foreign language courses - Video
Quality in Online Education – Video
Posted: at 12:45 pm
Quality in Online Education
This video is about the factors important to success of online education.
By:
otavalaSee original here:
Quality in Online Education - Video
Review: ‘I Origins’ finds the balance between science and spirit
Posted: at 11:45 am
Whether soft connective tissue or screeching dissonance, modern cinema seems set on exploring the relationship between science and spirituality.
That exploration is at the heart of the biggest box office hit of all time, Avatar, it fueled the recent Scarlett Johansson hit Lucy, and it rises again this week with the release of the more subtly fascinating I Origins, in which the quest for clear fact becomes a search for more.
The film, written and directed by Mike Cahill (Another Earth), is essentially broken into two parts. In the first, Ian (Michael Pitt), a molecular biologist whose lifelong fascination with eyes drives his work, meets and falls in love with Sofi (Astrid Bergs-Frisbey), an eccentric French model. Meanwhile Ian and his lab partner, Karen (Brit Marling), are on the verge of a major scientific discovery.
Jump ahead some years and Ian and Karen are married and have a child. One day they get a call from a doctor saying their child may have autism; can they bring him in for some tests? They do, but soon realize the tests are bogus. These doctors are looking for something in their child, but it isnt autism.
Its the eyes, of course. Every person is supposed to have a unique iris pattern, like a fingerprint. But their childs pattern matches someone elses. This opens up all sorts of spiritual possibilities and sends Ian first to a remote dairy farm, and then on to India.
If this sounds jumbled, its not, its just that key plot points must be reserved. Cahill spends the entire film bringing a sense of wonder to the desperately rational Ian, and if the film takes on a glow toward the end, that glow feels well-earned.
The tie between the science and spirituality has been made.
GRADE: B+
Rated R for some sexuality/nudity, and language
Running time: 107 minutes
Link:
Review: 'I Origins' finds the balance between science and spirit
Brain’s reactions to symbols suggest we’re hard-wired for God or not
Posted: August 7, 2014 at 10:52 pm
On Longboat Key, they’re the Girls of Summer
Posted: at 8:47 pm
Published: Thursday, August 7, 2014 at 2:43 p.m. Last Modified: Thursday, August 7, 2014 at 2:43 p.m.
No monthly parties.
No weekly bingo games.
No daily rounds of cards.
Many of the residents of the park's 180 units leave during the hottest months of the year. But most of those who stay are women, including several widows.
They gather each morning at the Gulf Shore swimming pool that used to be the Gulf Shore shuffleboard court. They meet for exercise and conversation in what has become the beating heart and liveliest part of summer life in the trailer park.
Water aerobics.
OK, calls out Ellen Laurent, the Massachusetts retiree who leads today's class. Russian dance forward.
Three other women bob up and down the shallow pool. They joke and laugh as they dance in place. They wear swimsuits, sunglasses and a variety of hats.
Margie Tonner of New Jersey is the one with the floppy sun hat. Jackie Winter of Indiana wears a mesh visor. Norma McCarthy Laurent's Boston sister-in-law sports a Red Sox cap.
Read the original:
On Longboat Key, they're the Girls of Summer
Sleep: Youre doing it wrong
Posted: at 8:47 pm
Sleep is the new aerobics. Used to be you never heard much about the importance of sleep; you were either one of those people who got enough and never gave it any thought, or you were one of those people who couldnt fall asleep and complained about it all the time. The dividing line seemed, then, to be caffeine consumption.
Now, you cant read anything about healthy living without reading about sleep. Not just how much, but the quality of it. Last week, there came the news that women fighting breast cancer should sleep in a room so totally dark that even little blinking lights on cell phones should be blanketed. Now, theres word out of Australia that says new mothers are so sleep-deprived in their babies first three months that the physical consequences should be considered medically significant.
This explains a lot. When my daughter was new, neither one of us slept much those first four months. She and I rarely strung two hours of sleep together during the night. I went from an energetic, reasonably coherent and cute woman of 40 to a puffy, grouchy wad of flannel. I gained 15 pounds, (something the doctors now say is linked to sleep deprivation), and the gray hairs took over.
At the time, I didnt blame the loss of sleep; I was too exhausted to think clearly enough to make the connection. But I should have figured it out. All my life I was an excellent sleeper, able to fall asleep pretty much anywhere at any time, including during long viewings in college film class and on the streetcar coming home from working the night shift at a radio station. A double shot of espresso at 9:30 p.m. did not delay the arrival of the Sandman. And napping? Epic. No 20-minute bits of shuteye on the sofa for me. Id check out for two hours when I could, in bed, with the covers pulled up.
Now theyre telling me thats too much napping, that I should save the good sleep for the night.
Next thing I know, theyll be coming for my fan.
I cant sleep very well without some white noise. My bedroom is utterly white with noise: an overhead fan whose metal blades are just unbalanced enough to create a nice, silvery sound, and a small table fan humming away. Others call it a loud racket, but its silence that keeps me awake.
Lately, when Ive found myself in a hotel or a guest room, I miss my white noise. I guess thats why they call that sleeping pill Ambien: it works like the ambience of a nice background hum.
After years of hammering us about exercise, the medical community has moved on to a new cause and its in our beds. The state of the science now says we need seven hours of sleep not eight and not six. Doctors want most of that to be REM sleep, which is the deep kind when you dream. They want total darkness, a cool room temperature, and no snoring. Oh, and to prevent wrinkles, sleep on your back.
Pretty soon theyll be saying naps cause wrinkles, too, or worse. I wonder what theyll say about my fans?
Read the rest here:
Sleep: Youre doing it wrong
Pranayama Yoga For Beauty In Deutsch – Video
Posted: at 8:46 pm
Pranayama Yoga For Beauty In Deutsch
Subscribe For More Video Given Link :- http://goo.gl/kEV95Q How To Yoga Stretches for Low Back Pain Sciatica Relief by Jen Hilman In this video, Jen shares her secrets about how to relieve...
By:
Yoga TubeOriginally posted here:
Pranayama Yoga For Beauty In Deutsch - Video