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WEEKLY WRAP UP #79 - Duration: 14:54.
Hey guys, it's Kirsti. Welcome back to my
channel and welcome to another weekly
wrap up. This one is for the 26th of February through to
the 4th of March and this week I read a total of
ten books and 2,956 pages.
Although technically I guess I read nine
books and DNFed one, but we'll get to that
in due course.
The first book that I finished this week
is The Year We Fell Down by Sarina Bowen.
This is a new adult contemporary novel
that is I believe the first in a series
called the Ivy Years? I think that's what
it's called? But this one tells the story
of a girl named Corey who is starting
freshman year at college but she's not
starting freshman year the way that she
anticipated. She was an accident at
the beginning of the previous year and
as a result she now has a spinal injury
and she basically can't feel her legs
below about mid-thigh, so she alternates
between using a wheelchair and using
crutches with braces on. So she totally
expected that she would be going in
freshman year playing on the college
hockey team just like her older brother
did and instead she's using the disabled
dorm room on the ground floor. There is
another disabled dorm room across the
hall from her and it turns out that the
occupant of that dorm room is this boy
named Adam Hartley, who plays on the ice
hockey team but he's broken his leg
above the knee and below the knee, so he's in,
like, a full leg cast or something. And
he's on crutches, so he can't get
upstairs to his dorm room, so he's been put in
there. So the two of them kind of bond
over ice hockey and having some kind of
disability, temporary or otherwise, and
they just kind of muddle through things
together. So as far as new adult books go,
this one was pretty solid. I'm usually
a bit hit or miss with new adult stuff, but
this one I did end up thoroughly
enjoying. The relationship is really cute,
I really really loved how much Corey's
disability was woven into the story and
how she's still adjusting to life with a
disability. That it was still a very sex
positive book and that discusses people
with disabilities having sex and the
complications around that. I love that
she's still going to physical therapy,
that she's still kind of getting her head
around her new life. Obviously as somebody
who is able bodied, I can't speak to the
authentic nature of that stuff, but it did
seem to me like it was really really
well handled and it was great to see
disability represented in a new adult
story. However. There is quite a lot of
ableist language used and I don't know
if it makes it any better that the
ableist language is coming from Corey in
regards to her disability, and
kind of this jokey thing that she and
Hartley end up doing with each other where
they're sort of joking with each other using
ableist language. I don't know if that
makes it any better, but that did make me
pretty uncomfortable at times. The one main
thing that I really despised about this book
is that any time
Corey looks at Hartley and she kind of
has feelings for him but doesn't really
know how to process that yet, she calls it
her Hope Fairy. I really really could have done
without her bullshit Hope Fairy, because I was
about to stab that bitch in the face. In case
you're wondering, here is an actual quote
from this book for you: "My Hope
Fairy, dressed in a bikini, did a quick little
cheer with silver pom-poms."
What. Why? Why? Why is that necessary?
So anyway, I did enjoy this book a lot,
particularly for a new adult book, and it
was pretty solid in terms of diversity
representation. But that fucking Hope Fairy.
My God, I just... I wanted to punch her in
her stupid tiny little face. So I ended up
giving this book 3.75 stars. Book number
2 this week is Promising Azra
by Helen Thurloe. This book has been sitting
on my shelf for like six months now and
I finally got around to picking it up. So
this is an Australian contemporary YA
book that is set in Sydney and it follows
the story of a teenage girl named
Azra who is in year 11 at school and
she is a Pakistani immigrant, she's also
Muslim and her family aren't really
supportive of her dreams of going to
university and studying chemistry. She makes
the school team for a state competition
and really really wants to participate
in that and then her family get wind of
this and start arranging a marriage for
her. So the whole arranged marriage
thing is mentioned in the blurb but it
doesn't come up in the story until
probably two-thirds of the way through.
So the whole way through, I just kept
waiting for that part of the story to
happen and it didn't and it didn't and
it didn't. So the bulk of this book, really, is
her balancing her family's expectations
with her desires in terms of education.
So really, I feel like I would've enjoyed
this a lot more if I hadn't just read
Written in the Stars by Aisha Saeed and
Does my Head Look Big in This by Randa
Abdel-Fattah. Because I feel like both
of those books did the things that this
book was trying to do, but in a much
stronger way. So I ended up
I liked this one but I didn't love it. I
also felt quite disengaged from the
characters at times. But yeah. On the
whole, this one fell a little bit flat
for me and I
gave it 3 stars. The third book that I
finished this week was a reread and that
is The Beekeeper's Apprentice by Laurie R.
King. This is the first book in the Mary
Russell series and basically the gist of
this series is that in his retirement,
Sherlock Holmes takes on an apprentice
of sorts in this teenage girl named Mary
Russell. I read all of these books when I was
in high school I think? Maybe early
university? But I think the bulk of them I read
during high school, and I remember really
really loving them. So when this was a
Kindle deal with the day like sometime
last year, I was like "Yeah, I'll buy that! I'll reread it,
it's only a dollar" or whatever it was.
So I bought it and then I put off rereading
it forever but I finally picked it up this
week and it was a little bit rough. I did
enjoy the mysteries that crop up in the
course of this story. But I think the problem
with this for me is that elements of the
story feel very much like grooming,
because when the book starts Mary
Russell is 15 and she's very very
unhappy in her life. She meets retired Sherlock
Holmes, who at that point is 54, so he's very
very nearly 40 years older than her. And
it's supposed to be this huge, like,
meeting of minds and all of this kind of stuff. But,
like, working in a school and having done
a lot of training around grooming of
teenage girls, there was a lot of stuff
in there that just made me like super
uncomfortable with the way that that
relationship developed. So I did enjoy
this one, but I didn't love it and I don't
know that I will continue rereading this
series. So I ended up giving this one 3.5 stars.
Book number 4 this week was a really short
quick novella that I picked up kind of
basically as a palate cleanser. And that
is Openly, Honestly by Bill Konigsberg. So I
said a few weeks ago in my most
anticipated books for the first quarter
of 2017 that one of my most anticipated
books this year is Honestly Ben by
Bill Konigsberg, which is the sequel to
Openly Straight. I read Openly Straight
clears good and really enjoyed it and
i'm super excited to see how the story
progresses from here openly honestly is
the point five books so if the one of a
kind of bridges the gap between those
two stories
it is literally 50 pages long so there's
not really a whole lot of time for like
character development or any real sort
of plot it is literally just basically
interchanging vignette of what then and
right
did during their winter vacation before
coming back to school and coming into
contact it's not a whole lot happens in
this story and it really is just hey
here's what's happening to them in
between books and here's where their
mental state is that I love this because
it was just basically getting my shit
back into this world and into these
characters and now i'm so excited to
read honestly been at the infamous photo
i really enjoyed this one it was really
quick it was really sweet
it was just feel the and adorable and I
love these charges a lot and i
interrupting this one fourth of the
first book that I finished this week is
beloved by toni morrison and I had a
really rough time with this book so this
book is an American classic and it is
set in the post-civil war era and tell
the story of one african-american family
and it gets a little bit magical realism
me towards the second half of the book
the writing is absolutely beautiful that
was definitely a lot of poignant moments
in it but I think for me the format that
i've read this book in his huge impact
on the way that I have reacted to this
book about this book through overdrive
from my local library and formatting of
the overdrive file was completely
received so I don't even know if you
guys can see this but like the font was
was really quite small and it was huge
solid blocks of text so I kept losing my
place when i was reading it didn't help
that i was reading this book like one or
two chapters tonight before I like to
sleep it just struggled with this book I
didn't entirely understand a lot of what
was going on because i don't have a huge
knowledge of like the post-civil war
here are in America particularly with
slavery is concerned I just don't have
the understanding of that historically
to kind of put this book into context
and in fact that there was a lot of
medical really a minute and medical
rivers and I have a very complicated
relationship where I tend to dislike it
most of the time
yeah i just i struggled with this book
but i do feel like if I reread it in
digital form with like actual paragraph
breaks and things like that that I might
have an easier time with it so it's one
that i will probably revisit at some
point in the future I did not love this
and
ends up being three stops okay six this
week is another 1i have been interesting
for quite a while now and that is a
tragic kind of wonderful by Erica
Linstrom that tragic kind of wonderful
story of this teenage girl and now she
has bipolar disorder and she's not
feeling well with the fact that her
brother died sometime prior to the
beginning of the book it has huge
ramifications on her friendships and on
her education and on her mental health
obviously so this is basically her
dealing with one very short for specific
period in her life where mental health
is again influx of friendships are again
in flux and she makes a point David but
she's not quite sure what their
relationship is and what is working
towards so i intercepted i really
enjoyed this book i think the portrayal
of bipolar disorder was really really
effective and the way that Mel discusses
her bipolar disorder is really
interesting again I can't speak to how
accurate portrayal of iPolitics way is
but I did it really really enjoy that
side of story
ultimately though I think the story will
prove to be a little bit forgettable
but yeah I enjoyed this one but I doors
that it will be one that i re-read in a
hurry if ever so I enjoyed it but I
didn't love it and I gave it 3.5 stuff
what kind of seven this week is 94
gambits by you and Holly I was super
super excited to read this for I know
that Katie from calif street and jane
from its Miss Jane logs Facebook and
said it was one of the favorable classic
2016 so i was pretty excited to read
this one particularly as it is the
sci-fi book featuring almost exclusively
everything characters i think and
written by an asian or that which I'm
trying to read more of this year but i
didn't understand this book like the
books that throwing straight into the
action which usually i love with fantasy
of eyewear then pulls that a little bit
of the world building but I just felt
like I never knew anything about this
world and i didn't know anything about
why any of this was happening and
understand the society that this world
is spinning because there was like
almost no world-building for me I mean
maybe it was there and I just wasn't
reading the text closely enough maybe I
don't know I feel like this is the kind
of book that you need to give your
undivided attention to and the way that
i was reading that like reading it on my
commute and reading it in my brain class
groaning interrupted by students every
five minutes I don't think that was the
ideal way of reading this book is up I
B&S this on about page 140 when I
realize I still had literally no idea
what was going on or why these
characters were doing any of the things
that we're doing or even really who the
characters were so and may go back to
this one that probably in some set of
school holidays when I have time to get
my undivided attention but for the
moment i dinna this one after the
experience of Nighthawks again but i
felt like i needed some kind of like
fast-paced action packed palate cleanser
so i picked up a thriller and that is
actually put me into a mood where I want
to read like nothing about thrillers so
if you have recommendations to throw it
please let me know so i picked up the
ice winds by FK Tremaine which is
insisting on making door for like
fucking me announce that is one of the
story of a married couple named Angus
and Sara through the side that after the
death of one of their identical twin
daughters but they're going to move to
Angus family probably on a remote island
in the north of Scotland except when
they get their one remaining border stop
acting really strangely and insisting
that no she's the daughter through died
and not the daughter that I thought
survive and then like holy shit may be
wrong about which could survive because
they were like the most identical of
identical twins so really psychological
thriller with some kind of paranormal
elements thrown in
so I absolutely sped through this book I
wrote a cover in a couple of hours
really and for the most part I enjoyed
it and it was pretty creepy love the
first I did not like they're offering
the rights the bulk of the story she was
kind of being a true jump to conclusions
at the drop of the hat so I really
really would not a fan of her and that
means i was fun with synthetic to Angus
when his like ordered chapters came up
on the whole idea enjoy this one but
like it didn't set the world on fire so
again I end up in this one is 3.5 stars
after finish that when I still felt like
I needed some kind of palette time to
pick up an old favorite and that is
redwood in violation great painter which
is the second book in the world series
i'm not going to say a huge amount about
this one because as I said when I reread
well they're probably Who I am going to
do a full series review of this series
all you need to know is that it is super
weird and super quickly and super
adorable and
this book is like 900 since word it is
just the cutest most adorable
slow-burning romance you will ever read
and reread I've counted up to five stars
because that is how much i love these
characters and this world and finally
books intense week was another river and
that is the screaming staircase by
Jonathan stress which is the best in the
Lockwood and Coast series so actually
borrowed this 4-3 in a couple of
explosions like I want to able to scary
on my cool i just simple for you and
that you had knew that is too scary but
that's okay
already did insist this is set in a
world where ghosts exist about only kids
and teenagers can see them so basically
there are all these agencies all over
London and the UK that hunt close and
you bring them up nice and a bunch of
kids out to your house to track down the
ghost killer basically so all of these
agencies are run by adults with this one
exception and that is Lockwood and cold
just run by like 15 16 year-old Anthony
Lockwood and the agency is made up of
grand total of three people you have
Lockwood you got George who does all the
kind of historical research II sort of
stuff and then you've got the narrator
Lucy who has just joined the agency and
she is struggling to adapt to life in
this agency were also hiding a lot of
stuff about the past and it's just
really really fun i mean the mystery is
a little bit predictable at times but on
the whole it's just a really fun series
occasionally is slightly terrifying
theory like having residents i'm pretty
sure I shouldn't have recommended my day
seeing as how she's got 1100 on all i
really enjoyed the plant and i'm pretty
excited to pick up the rest of the books
in the series because i think the fourth
book came out fairly recently so
beginning that at work and I want to
rate all these illustrates that etc so i
enjoyed this one a lot and I gave four
starts so they have friends that have
all the books that are finished this
week if you have read any of these and
have for them please let me know down in
the comments that would love to talk
about somebody
thank you guys so much for watching a
lovely faces and we'll see you on
Wednesday is
-------------------------------------------
A Scientific Explanation of the Human Mind | Daniel Siegel - Duration: 5:35.
One aspect of the mind, beyond subjective experience, consciousness, maybe even information
processing, these are facets of the mind that are good descriptions, let's just put those
to the side for now.
This fourth facet of the mind has a definition, not just a description.
This facet of the mind can be defined this way: the emergent self-organizing embodied
and relational process that regulates the flow of energy and information.
And if we take that apart step-by-step we can see that the system we're talking about
is called a complex system, that means it's open to influences from outside of itself,
it's capable of being chaotic and it's non-linear meaning small inputs have large and difficult
to predict results.
When you have those three characteristics math says that system is a complex system.
And once we're in the realm of complex systems we find that these complex systems have what
are called emergent properties, the interaction of the elements of the system give rise to
these properties that cannot be reduced to the singular elements that are interactions
give rise to them.
The notion that complex systems have emergent properties is sometimes responded to by various
scientists or even the general public as very confusing, sometimes even ridiculous.
What I do in the book Mind is I actually put some quotes from some scientists who actually
see emergence as not only a scientific property of complex systems but as a necessary way
of understanding what it is that emergence, for example, why clouds have the beautiful
ways that they unfold across the sky.
That's an emergent property of water molecules and air molecules that form of the clouds
and the emergent property there is self-organization that's determining how it unfolds.
So when you come to the emergent property of self-organization then you also get people
saying well that just doesn't feel right, it doesn't feel intuitive and I totally share
that initial response.
Self-organization has a strange reality where number one, as an emergent property it's the
interaction of the elements of the system, in this case energy and information flow that
is giving rise to it that's what an emergent property means.
It can't be reduced to the singular elements.
But as a self-organizing emergent property it means it's arising from something, that's
the emergent part, but then it's turning back and regulating that from which it is arising,
which is completely non-intuitive.
That's called a recursive feature.
Recursive means it has a feedback loop, it a feedback system, it feeds back on itself.
So even there as I'm speaking to you I'm doing an assessment of what's going on I say feedbacks,
no it's feeds back.
So, what that means is that arising from the system is self-organization, it then regulates
the interaction of the elements of the system so that self-organization is then continuingly
influencing itself, which is completely the counter intuitive.
So here's the amazing thing, it's a proven property of our universe that complex systems
have this recursive property to it.
It's probably why people have not really gone to these emergent properties because especially
self-organization it's not intuitive.
The second reason I think people haven't gone here is because this definition of the mind
as the emergent self-organizing embodied and relational process that regulates the flow
of energy information is placing the mind in "two places at once", within your body
and between you and other people and you and the planet.
So this irritates people because first of all many people point to their head when they
talk about their mind and they place the mind inside the skull.
Fine.
But even if you kept the mind only inside the skin encased body you'd feel okay with
the word embodied and many people do.
However, once you say it's both embodied and relational you get into this really interesting
new way of thinking because you say how could one thing, mind, be both within and between
in two places?
Well, here's a way to think about it: our fundamental element we're proposing is energy
and information flow.
Now, if you think about that the skull nor the skin are impermeable boundaries for energy
and information to flow.
So you may think of them as two places but it's one system, energy and information flow,
and it's happening in many different locations.
-------------------------------------------
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dead mouse decomposition in stomach acid (hydrochloric acid)
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SOURDOUGH STARTER - Introduction to Bread Making - Duration: 10:19.
Hi a huge welcome to Steve's kitchen
we're going to start a new series on the
basics of bread making and I'm kicking
off with something a lot of you might
think is a little complicated it's a
sourdough starter but iIthink actually
you might have some fun and the reason
I'm starting with this is it isn't
actually that complicated and it also
will put you in touch with the process
of bread making we're looking at wild
yeasts which are all around us. Now throughout
this series I am going to be using some
digital scales I really advise that
rather than using cup measurements
you use weight measurements when using
bread. Now if you don't fully understand
why maybe I'll do a video about that at a later
date but I think most people are
starting to understand that cups are not
accurate and you just end up with dry or
wet doughs and never is that more
important than when you're working with
sourdough starters
Now what is a sourdough stater well if
you've seen yeast you've seen dried yeast
going into bread and you may have used
block yeast as well
Sourdough starters are natural yeasts
they're all around us they're on our skin
there on flour, thery're in the air what
we're going to do is capture those in a
flour water mixture and over time
they're going to develop a beautiful
strong yeast that has a slight sour note to
it and it creates those wonderful
sourdough breads. You're going to want a
container I'm going to show the
measurements, very simple steps. I'm
going to do it a little bit different
than some people on the first stage of
this I'm going to let the yeast
develop in a closed environment.
I'll show you that in a moment so let's
get on and measure out our flour and
water. Now in order to capture wild yeast. we
need to actually feed them and they feed
off the starches and proteins that are
in flour. Now unlike a lot of people
yeast are not flour snobs so you can
pretty much use any flour you like I
like to start with a strong bread flour
I think it creates a great sourdough
starter, you could add some whole grain
flours in with that as well so you can
start with almost any amount of flour
and for those of you want to know
I'm going to start with a hundred
twenty-five grams, I'm going to measure
it into a cup just to give you an idea
but as I say cups vary from country to
country and they're depending on whether
you compact them in or not, it can make a
lot of difference. So I've gone for a loosely
packed there, I'm going to put the flour
into a kilner jar or a mason jar and you
can see that's about 122g I am going to
be pernickety and I'm going to put a little
bit extra flour in to make it up to 125g
Now a common mistake would be to use the
equal amount of water we are going to
use the equal amount of water but by
weight and don't use water straight from
the tap that may have chlorine which
could affect your yeast so we're going
to have 125 grams of mineral water and
sometimes it is quite nice to mix up a
stone-ground flour and bread flour if
you decide to do a different flour
comment down below let me know what you
choose
Now we're going to give that a mix
together until we get a nice batter . Now
I could seal this but the gases that
build up in here could create pressure
so what I'm going to do is cover the top
over with some plastic wrap
Many times when you start a yeast like
this you leave the lid open so the
atmosphere can get round it, I found it
doesn't make a huge amount of difference
and I want to the water not to evaporate
so I'm popping this cellophane on the
top there and also we are not going to
touch or feed this for 48 hours just
going to leave it on the side keep an
eye on it and you'll start to see some
activity probably within the first 12 to
24 hours. So you patiently waited 48
hours and in that time hopefully the
flour and the natural yeast within the
flour have started to bubble like this
one has here, can you see all the
activity on the surface and it's a very
loose airy batter so you can see despite
covering this with this little bit of
plastic wrap
we've still developed a wonderful yeast
and the starting of a beautiful
sourdough starter. It is also important
to get used to the smell of your sourdough
in this early stage
there's almost a sort of hopsy beer
smell coming out of it which is
absolutely perfect
sometimes you'll get a little bit of a
brown scum on top don't worry about that
that's quite natural. The wild yeast thats
in there now is super hungry we're not
actually going to be discarding any of
the dough at this point we're just going
to be feeding it. Again I'm using my
scales we're going for about half a
cup, should be about 60 grams which is
about 2.1 ounces we'll add that flour
over the top of our starter and now weigh
out 60 grams that's about 2 ounces again
of water for that in on top of the
flour, then I'm going to take my spoon
and we give this batter a little mix
through. Now it's always good practice to
clean the sides down after you finished
this time we're not actually going to be
sealing in our sourdough, you can pop
the lid on loosely don't actually seal
it down, you could cover it with a sieve
or maybe even a little bit of
cheesecloth. Now for the next 4-5 days
we're going to take care of this dough
we're going to feed it when we get up in
the morning and before we go to bed at
night
roughly every 12 hours you don't have to
beat yourself up about it and in a day
or so the volume is going to get quite a
bit more so we're going to have to
discard some but i'll show you that when
we do it.
Now I'm going to take you through a
feeding but not every feeding we fed
this last night with equal flour and
water by weight thats 60 grams about two
ounces of flour 60 grams about two
ounces of water, mix it in, clean down the
sides and now I'm going to give this
another feed but today I'm going to take
a little bit out and the reason behind
that is twofold - one, if you just keep
feeding this you're going to eventually
have a yeast that will just overflow out
of your jar but secondly also we're
actually wanting to grow yeast not just
spent flour so we're going to be taking
a little bit of spent flour out each
time and you don't have to discard it
completely you could make pancakes with
it you could add it into a cake mixture
it's perfectly fine but we're just going to take
a little bit out today
Now you'll see a little bit of brown
liquid on the top that's quite common
not to worry about that the smell is
still a little bit sour little bit yeasty
I'm going to take about half a cup of my
sourdough mixture out of here I'm
going to measure that out into half a
cup like I say you can discard this
turn it into lovely sourdough
pancakes, pop it onto the compost
whatever you like. I'm going to measure out
my flour that's about 60 grams 2
ounces that's the feed for my wild yeast
and 60 grams of mineral water again it's
about two ounces so you can see by
weight the water is the same but by
volume it's not. Just as important as the
flour that goes in as well it's already
starting to bubble in there. I'm going to
give that a good mix through into a nice
smooth batter and I'm going to clean
down the side of my jar as I always do
and then this evening I may discard a
little bit more and feed it again. I'm
going to keep doing that the next three
or four days until I start getting a
lovely frothy culture
Now I'm super pleased with the way this
sourdough starter is going it's almost
all bubblesW when we fed it last night
it was down here it's risen up so
there's heaps of activity in there
just take a look at this you can see all
the bubbles and activity on the top if I
break it open like that you can see it's
very light and airy it's already
starting to bubble up again is a nice
sour note coming off of there. If you've
been joining me on this
this is about five days in now from the
first 24 hours plus five days and I'm
going to feed this now for the last time
and then we can use this sourdough
starter to start baking. Now to be honest
at this point it hardly needs discarding
but I'll take a bit off because I fancied
some sourdough pancakes this morning
I'm just going to pop maybe about half a
cup into a bowl separate like this
I've got my strong flour here which I'm
just going to use to feed the starter
and that was 60 grams of flour so I'm
going for the same in weight of water
and that's a tiny little bit over but it
won't matter too much, add the water get
the moisture levels right and we'll give
this a stir through, now you can see
that's knocked the batter back down to
half its former volume and that will
increase to double its size probably
within the next few hours and if you're
using this starter everyday for baking
you can just keep replenishing and using
I hope you're following along because I
can't wait to start using this
in some recipes on my channel. Now one more
feed tomorrow and it'll be ready
and you do want to get used to the smell
of your sourdough, this is just a little sour
but very fresh smelling. Now if you
decided to follow along and make your own
sourdough with me you'll be enjoying what we're
making with this on the bread series of
Steve's Kitchen
Join me next week we're not doing
sourdough next week but we'll be
starting this introduction to bread
making basics So I will see you then
share the love, comments down below
actually I'd love to hear it down below
if you are making sourdough starter so I
can help you and we can see how it progresses
be good, see you next time
Now if you've joined me on the series
about making sourdough starter you've
got your beautiful sourdough starter Now
what are you going to do with it, well if
you're baking regularly just keep them
aside feed each day make your bread, if
you're only making sourdough every week
or so......Those of you that have been
following along making the sourdough
starter will be anxious to get on and
make something with it. Now this is
looking beautiful and light and bubbly
it smells delicious and we going to use
it or we're going to let it help us make a
sourdough baguette so this is a no knead baguette
very simple to make, yeast is doing all
the work
let's get on and make it
-------------------------------------------
FOOT FETISH BOYFRIEND SEXUALLY ASSAULTED MY FOOT-THE GUY I LIKE HAS A FOOT FETISH P.12 - Duration: 2:25.
FOOT FETISH BOYFRIEND SEXUALLY ASSAULTED MY FOOT-THE GUY I LIKE HAS A FOOT FETISH P.12
-------------------------------------------
Learning Swedish -- Day 7 (Speak in a Week course) - Duration: 0:13.
Hello!
My name is Cornelia and I'm Canadian.
I like music and math, and I love cats.
Nice to meet you.
Goodbye!
-------------------------------------------
Young Garry's Videogame review - Duration: 1:05.
Ah hahahaha!
oh ho hahaah
It is may 10 and it's
HII!!!
ummm it's raining it's poring the ole man is..
Hi uhh this is the second film of..
Legend of zelda the Mazzoras..
Legend of Zelda mazzoras mask
And so ummm
as I was saying...
...really fast Gibberish...
Yaaa it's it's it's terrible
"Creepy man laughing"
He's searching for you
-------------------------------------------
Bikepark Beerfelden RAW - Gravity Line variation - Duration: 1:18.
shall we?
I go first right?
-------------------------------------------
📦 February ScrawlrBox Unboxing + Challenge 🎨 - Duration: 7:14.
Hello everyone and welcome back to my channel!
You may have noticed that I changed the name of my channel,
"I'm Doing Stuff and Things" wasn't really me anymore so I picked a new, more simple, name.
Speaking of new things, let's open the latest Scrawlrbox I received, and find out what's inside!
So first thing that I see, a heart shaped lollipop, some brushes,
a big marker, a mechanical pencil
some paints, the usual sticker and the supplies card.
Below there's the featured art of the month, the illustration is made by Annatomix.
Next is a sort of palette… that is printed.
And at the very bottom there is two pieces of paper.
That's it for the overview, now let me zoom you a little closer.
First are the Amsterdam Acrylic Paints. I got four tubes.
The colours are Raw Sienna, Nickel Titan Yellow, Vermillon, Lamp Black.
They are 20ml and dry quickly.
Next is the Toma Acrylic Marker, basically paint in a pen
The chisel tip is meant to work on every surface and the paint is odourless.
To apply the paint I also got brushes, this a synthetic set by Seawhite.
I got a number 2, 4, 8 and 10.
To sketch, they provided the Pentel Fiesta Mechanical Pencil.
It has an eraser on one end, and a lead that can extend on the other end.
Last item is this Fabriano Pittura Paper, designed for acrylic paints.
Scrawlrbox also created a paper palette to mix the paint on.
By cutting one corner you get a little tool to help you blend the colours.
Now, let's test the supplies!
The pencil is pretty standard, it works well but I'm not fond of the eraser.
I like the acrylic marker, the black is very deep but the paint spilled a little bit at the beginning,
maybe because I shook the marker too much.
I tested the paints dry, just to see the colour payoff.
I'm already quite familiar with the brand but I'm not really into acrylics so I'm not sure I will use them a lot again.
But still, it's nice to try different techniques once in a while.
Now, let's move on the challenge part of the video, the scawlr challenge!
This month, the prompt is: New beginnings!
So I sketched a very simple piece, with a single blooming flower above the ground,
with its roots visible. And then… started to paint!
Like I said, acrylics is not exactly my forte, but it's always interesting to paint once in a while.
The rest of this video is a speed painting, so I will see you at the end!
And I'm done!
! I really enjoyed making this piece, I'm not used to acrylics so I had to go back and forth in several places.
I wouldn't say it's my best work, but overall, I think I did okay.
The supplies were nice, the only thing that I didn't really like were the round brushes.
But I think it has more to do with the fact that I'm not used to them than their quality.
So that's it for today, thank you so much for watching!
Don't forget to like and subscribe to my channel if you liked this video, I will see you next week, bye!
-------------------------------------------
MONEY - Duration: 0:34.
Money
What is "goodi"
we don't "havi"
////WATCHAAA SAY INTENSIFIESSS///
Oh, wow, lil raf in the credits
.....waiting
-------------------------------------------
Valkyrie OTK is fair & balance!!! | PvZH Little Pony Clips #2 - Duration: 5:13.
God Damn it I want weed spray...
this is not going to be good...
bounce wall nut wtf
shoot I shouldn't play unlife of the party
basic zombie wtf...
oh great :(
stop Citron
Oh shit I thought that snap dragon has 1 health
Please let me win game!
NOICE
FUCK YOU GAME
OTK IS FAIR & BALANCE!!!
Alright the next mission walkthough is comming soon.
Please be patient.
I need time to edit.
and time to render.
I almost finish recording it.
Cya
-------------------------------------------
Grow fresh food indoor in small space | My indoor small space garden - Duration: 3:59.
Hello, Joydeep here, with another exciting episode
on organic gardening and growing your own food.
Today I will show you my small space indoor garden.
This is the space where I grow my salads and seedlings.
And you can also grow your own food indoor like me.
1st I show you what I grow in this 40 cm x 40 cm space.
This one is a LETTUCE plant which I grow from seed
1 week ago and planted in a recycled plastic pot.
Here in this cardboard egg box, I have 6 bell peppers &
1 lettuce plants, which I planted from seed a week ago.
The video link is on TOP RIGHT (how I used an egg box).
These 6 are yellow bell peppers.
This one is a lettuce.
In these 3 empty spot, I was growing 3 more lettuces.
But those were chopped off by rats/mice.
This one is another lettuce (all are of Lollo Rossa varity).
This one is growing in an empty recycled yogurt pot.
This is a pineapple top that I cut from store bought fruit.
I am trying to save the top in hope to have a plant.
This is another Lollo Rossa lettuce.
This one is a orange marigold (genda in hindi/bengali).
I have more bell peppers in this empty yogurt pot.
Here I am growing another orange marigold.
So this is my small space indoor garden.
Basically, it is only 40 cm by 40 cm in area.
I am using an energy saving cool white light bulb,
which has 1600 K luminescence.
I turn it on for 10-12 hours every day.
The plants look so far ok growing under this light.
So, I wanted to show that even if you have a small free
space, that will be great for indoor gardening.
Even all the pots are recycled, such as :
empty yogurt pots, peanut cans.
I hope I am able to demonstrate you that using recycling
technique you can grow your own organic food indoor
even in smallest place like mine.
I hope you get ideas about small space gardening.
If you LIKE my video, please LIKE and
SUBSCRIBE to my channel.
Thanks for watching! Till next time.
-------------------------------------------
How To Use Accelerated Learning Techniques To Learn Any New Skill Quickly - With Jonathan Levi - Duration: 39:45.
Olly: Jonathan, welcome to the show, I'm super excited to have you here.
I've been wanting to pin you down so we could have a proper chat for quite some time now.
Why don't you just take a second and tell people who is Jonathan Levy.
Jonathan Levy: First off, thanks for having me, Olly, it's always a pleasure to kind of
mind meld and chat with you, so I'm really looking forward to the call.
Who is Jonathan Levy?
I ask myself that every day, because it seems to be a dynamic answer.
Essentially, I'm a lifelong entrepreneur, a serial entrepreneur.
Currently, my current life's work is teaching people accelerated learning.
I struggled as a student, I was always kind of a problem child.
I was sort of, kind of diagnosed with ADD.
My parents didn't want to actually send me in, but basically diagnosed with ADD by a
special education teacher when I was eight years old.
That was kind of the point when I realized that I was a little bit different and other
kids seem to get this stuff and I don't.
That kind of culminated or led to me being pretty heavily medicated for most of my adolescent
life, bouts with depression, anxiety, low self esteem, just because I wasn't learning.
It wasn't just classroom learning, it was pretty depressing that other kids were getting
good grades and I wasn't, but it was also learning around different social skills and
learning around sports.
I never seemed to be able to learn as quickly as other people, and I thought that was odd,
because I knew I was a smart kid.
People told me I was smart, but I didn't seem to be successful academically.
Medication was great, and if anyone out there struggles with ADD the way that I did, medication
in many ways saved my life, at least academically and professionally.
I still would forget everything as soon as I left the exam room, and that all changed
for me in 2011.
I had kind of packed up, gone to this venture capital firm, and I was doing an internship
before starting my Master's degree.
I don't know about you, but I suffered through my undergraduate degree.
I went in as Environmental Economics, that was too hard, I was trying to also run a business
on the side.
That was too time consuming, too much reading, had to dumb it down.
Then I went to Anthropology, that was too hard.
So, I ended up changing my major three times, because I couldn't get through the reading.
I ended up on Sociology, which was kind of light reading and more writing than reading,
I was always an okay writer.
I knew this time I wasn't going to be able to do that, I was going for a Master's in
a specific subject.
I wasn't going to be able to cop out in the middle and change my major if it was too hard.
It was a condensed program, so eight months to do two years of material.
As soon as I was admitted, they gave me 1107 pages of reading.
I was like; what the hell am I going to do?
I got really lucky, because at that time I met someone who was a speed reader and a memory
expert.
It turns out he and his wife had developed these techniques for teaching children with
learning disabilities, and it's a lot of the stuff that probably your audience knows.
It's the basic speed reading stuff that you've probably heard a million times, or maybe haven't
heard at all, and mnemonic techniques.
I've always been a hacker, I've always been really interested – I've got photos from
when I was 18 years old of me hooking myself up to metabolic machines and trying to find
out what my VO2 max is.
I've always been interested in that, and I tried speed reading a few different times
and it never worked, I never absorbed anything, but opening up this whole world of mnemonic
techniques was like magic to me.
Suddenly I could remember things, I could read things.
I ended up going on to do this MBA and be able to just power through reading.
Essentially to make a long story somewhat shorter, I found myself making a career out
of reteaching these skills, which I had been taught in Hebrew.
Translating them to English and finding a way that everyone could learn them, not just
people who were able to afford expensive private tutoring.
Olly: There's so many questions I want to ask you just stemming from that.
Let me ask you this; as a kid were you aware of the challenges that you were facing?
Sometimes when you're young, the problems that you face you don't necessarily understand
what they are.
So, were you aware at that time I've got a learning problem, or I've got ADD?
Were you aware of that, of what you were facing?
Jonathan: Yes.
I kind of knew in first grade, because I started getting report cards that my parents had to
have serious conversations with.
I recently went back, because you know we have this tendency, especially in the industry
you and I are, to look back at our biography and be like it all makes sense, but I went
back and said did it all make sense?
Along about the time I did my TED talk, I really asked myself the question and I pulled
it out and first grade it was Jonathan needs to pay more attention, Jonathan needs to understand
that being the class clown is not a way to get ahead, Jonathan needs to sit still, Jonathan
is falling behind the class, and they just got worse and worse.
Olly: So you knew it was a problem.
Jonathan: Oh, I knew, and also I had this tendency where I'd have to go in and have
– I remember the first thing that I fell behind was reading a clock.
So, in first grade you learn how to read a non-digital clock, and I remember I just couldn't
get this.
I remember it was so bizarre, it says 10, how is that 50 minutes?
I didn't get it, and I had this kind of tendency where I'd have to go in, someone would have
to explain something to me, the next thing that was really hard for me was multiplication
tables, and then I had in this moment – I don't know if you've ever had this, I don't
know if normal people have this – when someone would explain it to me and it would click,
I would almost start like laughing and crying, because it would be like oh, and my eyes would
well up.
It was like oh, my God, it took me so long to get to this point of understanding, and
just overwhelmed with emotion of why couldn't I have gotten this the first time, why did
I have to ask all these questions and figure it out this way.
Olly: I'm trying to relate that to my story.
I was pretty good at school, I didn't have any particular – my grades were always good
and I was always conscious that I was capable of doing this stuff, but I just was always
resisting putting the work in that I needed to.
If I knew I had an essay to hand in, I wouldn't start two or three weeks before like I should,
I'd wait until the last evening.
I was always kind of like questioning myself, because I knew I was capable of it, but I
just couldn't bring myself to do it.
I see a lot of parallels between the Olly who didn't do as well as he could have done
in his history essays and the Olly who, these days, could be so much better at language
learning if he could just be strict enough with himself to say, "At 6:30 a.m., you
sit down, you study for an hour.
It's not hard, that's what you do".
So, I see a lot of parallels with that.
In many ways, I guess I haven't changed, but you have.
You've kind of had this realization that many people never get to in their life, and you've
learned these techniques, which you could easily not have done.
Everything could be very different.
In a nutshell, we'll get into these specific things in a minute, but could you give us
some like visceral examples of things you've been able to do in your life as a direct result
of the accelerated learning techniques that you mentioned?
Jonathan: Sure.
So, I go through ebbs and flows, and by the way, I also want to comment that I have that
discipline problem.
Because I am a professional learner, I think we're all professional learners, but I make
a living by demonstrating how effectively I learn, I take on so much stuff.
Olly: Do you ever find like maybe you spend more time actually talking about how to do
it than actually doing it?
It seems like an occupational hazard.
Jonathan: Definitely.
It's definitely true.
I tend to bite off a lot of learning projects, and I used to beat myself up about it.
At any given time, right now I'm learning Russian, improving Hebrew, maintaining Spanish,
learning piano and guitar, because one instrument isn't enough and I'm already 30 years behind
all these child prodigies who play piano, acro-yoga, Olympic weightlifting, aerial photography,
copy writing, marketing funnels, advertising.
I'm learning like 100 different things at once, and I used to beat myself up about it
because of exactly what you said, I should buckle down and talk the talk.
I realized the more I learn, the more I'm able to learn, and that by harnessing exactly
that ADD and by jumping from subject to subject, something that I learned in copy writing – that's
maybe a bad example, but something that I learned in my fascination with Benjamin Franklin
can dramatically alter the way I write copy, and something I learned in Olympic weightlifting
can dramatically alter the way that I do acro-yoga.
You kind of have to take advantage – a lot of the techniques that we teach are for taking
advantage of that passion and figuring out a way to be passionate about things that you
maybe don't actually want to learn, and I've learned that you just have to take advantage
of that and roll with it.
Those are some of the things I've been able to learn.
I've been able to learn public speaking which, obviously, I use pretty regularly.
I've been able to learn – I'll give you a classic example.
October of 2013, I said to myself – I had figured out that this online learning thing
was going to be pretty successful, I'd taken some online courses myself and I was like
this is a really cool way to distribute knowledge and it's a lot more profitable than writing
a book, and it's a lot more engaging, I think this is going to be big.
So, I decided I'm going to build an online course, and I said to myself, "How does
one build an online course?"
I sat down, I opened 42 browser tabs, and over the course of two days, I knew how to
build online courses.
I knew how to record video, I knew how to edit video, I knew how to structure the content,
I knew what was important, I knew a lot about how these ranking algorithms work on marketplace
websites.
Within three weeks of launching, we had one of the best selling courses on Udemy, and
within a few months of just doing the stuff that I'd learned over the course of a few
days, we had one of the best selling courses of all time.
Olly: For those that don't know, Udemy is an online course marketplace, where you can
go and learn pretty much anything.
Your course went on to be taken by 60,000 students, is that right?
Jonathan: Up to today, 85,000.
Olly: Wow, that's pretty amazing.
It's interesting hearing you say all these things that you've been able to do, because
there's tons of stuff I want to do in my life, I couldn't even begin to name those things.
I'd like to learn how to make chocolate, I'd like to be able to illustrate children's books,
that's something I thought would be super cool.
Why don't I do that?
The reason is that I don't really have a framework for deciding on and learning that skill and
taking the action required to do it.
I think it's because part of it is the discipline problem for me, but also it's like not having
the confidence necessarily that I would be able to learn that skill quite quickly.
Jonathan: That's such a big thing, I want to jump in right there actually, because I
just recorded a video about this.
One of the kind of beautiful things about what I do is I learn, so I'm always improving.
We've had to redo our course numerous times, and we constantly improve, and over the last
year or so in kind of helping students and diagnosing their issue, I've come up with
what I call the memory Pygmalion or memory golem affect.
So the Pygmalion effect/golem effect are sides of the same coin.
I learned about this in that business school program I talked about, if you're a manager
and you believe that the employee is highly skilled, intelligent, capable, going to be
successful, all things being equal, even if you hide your cards, that employee will be
successful.
However, the golem effect, if you believe the employee is dishonest, so on and so forth,
you will actually make them dishonest.
There's a lot of debate about how this actually works, but it works.
People say it's tone of voice, or it's facial expression, or it's subtle little communication
cues, whatever it may be – you could call it law of attraction, you could call it energy
– it actually works.
What I've realized is the same is exactly true of ourselves.
One of the coolest things about these techniques, and I think it's very similar to what you
do, is I give students these tools and they use these tools and these tools are really
powerful, but guess what, even when they don't use these tools, their memory improves and
they become better learners.
How can that be?
They now go around in the world saying, "I'm an exceptional learner, I have a phenomenal
memory".
I'll tell you a little secret, I use the actual mnemonic techniques that I teach about 40%
of the time, and yet I remember nearly everything.
People give me an address, I don't even need to use mnemonic techniques.
I could convert it and say that the 77 is a cake and create memory paths, I don't even
need to.
If I memorize a credit card I might do it, 16 digits, but if I'm memorizing five digit
numbers, I don't even need it.
It's simply because of this memory Pygmalion effect.
I think so many people go around saying, "I suck at languages, I'm terrible at math, I'm
a really slow reader".
Guess what?
That is a self fulfilling prophecy.
I think the power of these tools is putting that tool in your back pocket so that you
can say, "Yes, if I want to go learn chocolate making, that's a one day thing, I can go learn
that".
Olly: Let's dive into some specifics here.
From what I've heard, the two main things that you've mentioned are memory improvements
or memory techniques and speed reading.
Can you take maybe one of the skills or activities that you've already mentioned and give us
an example of how both of those things, the speed reading and the memory techniques could
be used to help you learn that thing faster?
Jonathan: Sure.
So, where I think a lot of courses go wrong and a lot of people have tried speed reading,
myself included, and failed is they forget to build the infrastructure up front.
If you're going to read an entire book in two and a half hours, you better have a pretty
incredible way of storing that, and storing it in this auditory, language processing area
of the brain is not going to work.
You need to store it in a way that world memory champions store 56 decks of cards back to
back, store one deck of cards in 26 seconds, and that's by the same tried and true mnemonic
techniques that have been around for 2200 hundred years, with modification and adaptation.
It's visual memory, it's creating mnemonic techniques, and then it's the memory palace.
If any of these things are foreign to people, I can kind of go into more depth, but it is
basically creating these visual mnemonics.
When you pair that on top of speed reading, you're now able to read things very quickly,
take a quick pause, generate these very vivid markers and examples.
Then it's ultimately deconstructing knowledge into core principles that can be visualized.
Olly: Let's pause right there so I can see if I can summarize what you said.
The speed reading, I guess it's fairly obvious, if you've got to learn stuff and you're learning
that stuff from a book, you can read it faster if you can read quicker.
It stands to reason.
The second part though is actually retaining what you have read.
When I was reading about your various courses and talks and things earlier on, there was
one phrase out of everything that stood out to me.
You know what that was?
Jonathan: Tell me.
Olly: Retain things you read.
Now, I guess different elements of this will stick with different people, but for me personally,
I get very excited when I read a book.
I read slowly, I'm a slow reader.
The idea of reading a book in two and a half hours is like how would my life change if
that was possible.
You know, I get very excited when I read a book.
I've just been reading a great book called Deep Work by Cal Newport, which is very well
known at the moment, but as I'm reading that book, I'm thinking to myself by this time
tomorrow, I will have forgotten this stuff.
I'm going to read this book and enjoy it, get all excited and then not retain it.
So, that's why that particular phrase, retain the things you read, really stood out to me.
Could you talk a little bit about the significance of that and how you go about doing that?
Jonathan: I'll back pedal a little bit and talk just a little bit of light neuroscience,
specifically evolutionary neuroscience as I like to call it.
We're visual creatures.
We don't realize it, but – first and foremost, we have to think what kinds of things would
provide a survival advantage to homo sapiens wandering the Serengeti for the last one and
a half million years.
It turns out smell and taste, super important.
If you remember what rancid food tastes like, that's a pretty huge survival advantage.
If you remember certain different bitter tastes are poison, that's a pretty big survival advantage.
The next most memorable things are location and visual.
Do I remember the markings on the faces of the friendly tribe versus the not friendly
tribe?
Do you know we can identify someone else's face in about 150 milliseconds?
Why would we develop that, why is that so important?
If you take two seconds to identify if I'm a friend or foe, and I take 150 milliseconds,
which one of us is going to survive the oncoming battle?
So, we remember faces, we remember visual information, the exact shade of the berries
that are poisonous, the exact color of the snake that's edible versus the one that's
probably going to kill me.
We also remember locations.
If you forget where the watering hole is and you're wandering the Serengeti, you're dead.
If you forget where you buried your winter food supply, you're dead.
So, our brains hold this information.
If anyone doesn't believe me and they say, "Well, I'm not a visual learner, I'm an
auditory", yes, but with this much work, just a tiny bit of work, I can reveal to you
that in fact you are a visual, spatial learner just like every other homo sapiens.
The test I like to give people is I want you to imagine your childhood home, even if your
parents sold that home 20 years ago.
I want you to go into your parent's bedroom and I want you, even if you were one of those
kids who were not allowed in Mom and Dad's room, I want you to go to your mother's side
of the bed, I want you to tell me what was on the nightstand.
You may not have been in that house for 20 years, and I can tell you –
Olly: I can do that.
Jonathan: Exactly.
Most people are like it was a red telephone, and I can say, "Was it a touch tone, or
was it not?"
The funny thing is you can not just do that for highly significant places, but if I asked
you about the last hotel you stayed in and I asked you what side of the shower was the
shampoo on, you might just know, and that's something that you haven't even reviewed.
So, we do this naturally.
To come back to your question in long form, where a lot of people go wrong is they read
the words in a book, they hear them as if they were a conversation.
Now I want you to ask yourself, I just said something moderately interesting about hotel
shower soap, but could you play back the exact words that I said?
No.
Could you go back to that visualization if you stopped to think about that hotel, or
could you go back to that image of what's on your mother's nightstand?
Of course.
So, the words themselves are throw away, but the meanings and the visualizations are very
much relevant.
That's essentially the crux of the technique, if you want to retain what you read, you need
to turn it into highly visual, highly imaginative imagery.
That's it.
I mean, I can definitely tell you almost none of the words in Benjamin Franklin's autobiography,
but I can paint for you of him running through the street with a wheelbarrow three to four
times a day with the same bundle of paper, so people would think that he was selling
more newspapers.
I can tell you the image that I have for this hunta, and I can tell you the image that I
have for him getting caught "borrowing" books and why he brought the concept of the
public library to life.
Olly: Is this because you are a visual person and you're kind of imagining what it looks
like as you're reading?
Are you reading the book and then creating that image in your mind?
Jonathan: Yes, we are all visual people.
Olly: Just to finish that, are you – I'm trying to think of the mechanics of how this
works.
So, you're actually reading something in the book, thinking I want to remember this point,
pausing, and then creating and then working on that imagery such that you can remember
it.
Is that what you're doing?
Jonathan: That's what we teach, is that you create kind of micro pauses when you're flipping
a page, try to remember pertinent details, and then at the end of the chapter, you need
to go back as you're flipping through those blank pages and review and play back these
images and string them together, create a structure.
The truth is that over time, and I can't guarantee that this happens to everybody, it certainly
happened to me, over time it just kind of happens.
As I'm reading, the images are just kind of cropping up for me.
Again, I can't promise that, that happens.
The way that we teach it is take a pause, anyway when you speed read, it's extraordinarily
exhausting and most people, though they could theoretically read a book in two and a half,
three hours, you've got to take breaks.
So, during those breaks, you get up, you have a glass of water, you start playing back these
images, and even if you want to have archival, kind of an index knowledge, you can put them
into a memory palace.
Although, I don't personally do that.
I don't think you need to be able to play back, in order, the points in a Malcolm Gladwell
book.
Olly: You know what?
It's absolutely fascinating.
I'm kind of having a bit of an epiphany as I'm listening to you talking, because – let's
see if I can get these thoughts properly structured.
The process you've just described of learning something new in a book, taking note of it,
putting your attention on it, carrying on and then coming back to review it later, regular
listeners of the podcast will know that this is exactly the way that language vocabulary
is acquired.
It's a combination of attention and revision, revision in the sense of reviewing.
Jonathan: Space repetition.
Olly: I don't know if this is an English word, but I think in America people understand revision
to mean changing something, but anyway, I mean reviewing it as in going back to it.
So, we've got a combination of putting your attention on stuff and then going back and
reviewing it later so that your mind can have another opportunity to better structure it
in your head.
I'm seeing all kinds of parallels.
What I hadn't seen up until this point, I hadn't seen those parallels, so I hadn't really
considered the fact that information, in exactly the same way as a new word in a foreign language
makes perfect sense to you when you've just learned it, but then it disappears 30 seconds
later, or the next day when you need it in a conversation, I hadn't really considered
the fact that information that you read in a book actually behaves in the same way.
When you're reading, you think this is so cool, I didn't know that about Benjamin Franklin,
but then you don't have the kind of awareness to think you know what, if I need to remember
this tomorrow, I'm not going to be able to do it.
Jonathan: Precisely.
Well, I mean our brain has two dedicated centers called the hippocampi, one in the left hemisphere,
one in the right hemisphere, and their job is to forget.
They are particularly active during sleep, which is why if we don't sleep we become a
mess, but the brain is a forgetting machine.
It needs to be, because it already consumes 20% of our energy and resources and oxygen,
despite being two percent of the body's mass.
It needs to forget to make it as efficient as it is.
We pay a lot of prices and a lot of costs for having this massive brain.
The entire reason that we stand up and walk the way that we do is to protect this massive
mound of fat, which is by far the most sophisticated super computer known to man.
There are ways to game the hippocampi.
If we learn the rules that they abide by, for example they prioritize visual information,
they prioritize anything that's connected.
So, if you can learn to falsify these connections, and this is the other really big tip to accelerated
learning, too many people treat new information as, in fact, new.
They go okay, let me stretch out.
Don't know how to play a musical instrument, so everything that I learn about this piano
is completely new and foreign to me.
What does that tell the hippocampus?
It says this is completely irrelevant knowledge, it has no connection to anything that I'll
ever learn, or will ever need to learn.
So, basically [audio silence 00:26:37 – 00:26:44] shall we dance in Norwegian and they tell
you, and you say to yourself this is the only thing that I've ever learned in Norwegian,
and your brain goes this is the only thing we know about Norwegian, this must be pretty
damn useless, and throws it out the window.
But if you were to say to yourself okay, this is how this is related to this information,
this is how I'm going to use this information, you can say this sounds like English except
for instead of shall, we say skal, and connect it to visual imagery, maybe a tin can of Skoal
chewing tobacco.
You create the imagery and tell the brain hey, this is relevant, this is related, this
is interesting, new and novel, and then by going back and doing that repetition as you
so correctly said, we're telling the brain I just learned this yesterday, but I've already
reviewed it once, it must be pretty important.
This information keeps coming up, because your brain doesn't know when you relearn something
that it's coming out of an index card or if it's being used in the real world, it has
no idea, it just says this phrase, skal vi danse, has come up twice in the last two days,
that's interesting.
It must be significant . There are all these different ways, and that's basically all we
do, is we trick the brain into determining that things are important.
Olly: Do you think people were efficient learners 100 years ago before radio, TV or internet?
Jonathan: Well, I think about that a lot.
A hundred years ago, you would get a book, most likely the Bible, because the printing
press wasn't what it is today in terms of low cost, people were actually physically
printing books, so there was a high cost associated with books.
Literacy rates were not as high, so if you got a book in your hot little hands, you would
read that book over and over and over again and be able to cite passages from it.
I mean, even in Benjamin Franklin's day, he set up the first public library in North America
and everything, but how many books do you think he really read in his lifetime?
Whereas today, we have I believe in the US there's 300,000 new books published each year.
In China, I believe it's twice that.
We're completely bombarded with information, so we go wide instead of deep.
It's almost really hard to compare, but then you have these guys like Thomas Jefferson,
like Benjamin Franklin, who were very sophisticated in many, true polymaths.
You say to yourself would we all be like that if we weren't distracted by consuming so much
bullshit content, frankly.
Olly: Jonathan, you've studied, is it four languages, five languages?
Jonathan: Studied four.
Olly: How did the techniques that you've learned, that we've been talking about here, how have
those techniques helped you with language learning?
Jonathan: Great question.
As you said for learning vocabulary, these techniques are a game changer.
There's no word too difficult, there's no sound too confusing, because I can string
words and sounds together and put them into a nice little memory palace with a visual
mnemonic, and I almost don't think of vocabulary learning at all as a hurdle anymore, it's
just straight into the brain.
I actually made the mistake, when you're a hammer, every problem is a nail as they say,
so when I started to learn Russian, I was like 1200 most common Russian words, download
them into my flashcard software, create visual images and boom, there we go.
I found myself, I got to about 800 words within a month or two, and then I found the grammar
proved to be way more difficult and I found that these words were useless in Russian because
if you don't add – it's not like in English where if you say, "Me want eat", people
will understand you.
In Russian, they'll go, "Who wants to eat?"
Basically in Russian, if you don't know how to declense the word, not just conjugate but
declense, it loses its meaning.
You could be working on the computer, or the computer could be working on you and you have
no kind of way of knowing that.
So, I've only recently adapted these techniques to learning grammar, and I've kind of figured
out a really bizarro way to hack the Russian grammatical system, but at the very least,
vocabulary has become kind of a non-issue for me.
Olly: What's the super learner approach to a problem like grammar, which is not just
a case of memorizing specific units of information like vocabulary?
Do you approach grammar the same way that you'd approach a book on chocolate making?
How do you approach that?
How do you see the problem, the challenge or the opportunity?
Jonathan: What I see it as is a list of rules, and this is maybe not the right way, but this
is kind of how my mind thinks.
It's a list of rules, so let's take for example in English if it's singular, then the verb
becomes pluralized.
He wants, he goes, she wants, she goes, you want, you go, that's very strange, but let's
go ahead and say they want, he wants.
I need to figure out a way to create that linkage, get those neurons to link together
for something that is a bit weird and strange.
Why isn't it he want?
In other languages – in Hebrew, it's he want, they wants.
It makes more sense intuitively, why is that?
So, what I would do is create a visual image to say, for example, grammar is hard and you
should never have to go it alone, so I would create this image of this person singularly
going, he's going, he goes, but he needs to bring two goes with him.
Maybe it's two arrows, because he shouldn't have to face this grammatical challenge alone.
Whereas if they go, they don't need to bring multiple verbs with them, because they're
together facing this challenge of grammar.
So, I would just remember that it takes three people or more to tackle some grammar.
I just made this up completely on the spot, but I have this visualization of going up
against a wall of grammar, and that way I remember it.
If it's you, I say you, therefore it's you and I, because I'm kind of the observer, the
second person, so we will go and face it together.
So, we can use go instead of you goes.
That's just kind of one example where I would say to myself this is how you conjugate.
It's basically, it's creating BS meaning, so that I can tell the brain this is how it
all links together, then I form a visualization.
Olly: I guess mnemonics – you would call mnemonics BS meaning as well, right?
It's just the scaffold or a bridge to get you to the point where your brain can make
sense of it enough to retain it, and then that gives you a path back in later when you
need to get back to it.
Jonathan: Totally.
Olly: My mind is kind of spinning at the opportunities, mostly for things that I could learn.
Not just for – it's not only very, very intriguing the opportunities for language
learning, but also I feel like all these – when I think about earlier I mentioned silly things
like chocolate making and children's book illustrator, things that I just do for fun,
things that I've been putting them off for years, because it's just one more thing.
Stuff that I could do for fun just gets pushed down the list for me, and it's really made
me think if I can learn some of these skills quickly and it doesn't have to be a two year
undertaking, when I start a new language, I consider it to be a multi-year undertaking,
but learning to make nice chocolate, I could learn fairly simple, and it's a question of
remember the steps, remembering the baking temperatures and all that.
So, I'm super inspired, and I'm feeling good.
What can I say?
You run the Super Learner Academy, this is where you teach, this is where you do your
work, and this is where you teach the accelerated learning skills that we've been talking about
today.
Tell us about that.
Who should consider it, what's involved, what do you learn?
Jonathan: So, about a year and some change ago, we decided that we wanted to create the
absolute finest accelerated learning program that money could buy.
The result was something that we call the super learner master class.
It's a 10 week comprehensive program, you can go through it faster, you can go through
it slower, but paced out at about 30 minutes a day, four to five times a week, it is about
10 weeks.
A lot of that 30 minutes is hey, you're going to read your emails, you're going to read
the newspaper, do it in this specific way.
So, it's not all watching videos and stuff like that, I don't expect anyone to watch
that many videos of me.
Essentially what it is, is it starts with a very strong core understanding in memory
and mnemonic technique.
So, all these things that I told you about; how to memorize information, numbers, names,
how to store your information long term, how to review it, or as you said revise it in
a way that is going to allow you to remember it forever, because no amount of mnemonic
technique is going to put it in your brain forever.
You have to kind of be intelligent about the intervals in which you review and how you
review.
Then it goes into speed reading.
So, it's about 70% memory, 30% speed reading.
Once you have that infrastructure, you can then go on and learn anything, and most of
what you're going to want to learn is, of course, in books, although we do talk a little
bit about how do I take on a challenge like Olympic weightlifting, for example, which
cannot really be learned in books, and how do you take on a challenge like acro-yoga,
which definitely cannot be learned in books.
That's it.
It's essentially a comprehensive program.
Of course, we offer a free trial if people want to check it out, where they can sign
up, no credit card required, and do the first entire module of the course.
So, diagnose their reading, diagnose their memory, start to understand some of the fundamentals,
download all the worksheets, set their goals, set their progress, understand exactly what
the hell I'm talking about throughout the course, and really set themselves up.
Then if they want to, they can always upgrade and unlock the other, I believe it's eight
more modules or nine more modules.
Olly: That's great, so you can take the time to get a feel for it.
Certainly what struck me when I went through the course was the quality of the production.
You must have really put your heart and soul into creating this, the quality – I've never
seen anything like it.
Jonathan: Thank you.
As you can see, if people are watching the video, I really believe in super high quality.
In fact, we've now invested in a studio of our own, this studio that I'm in now.
I look back on those videos and I'm like we've got to clean up the audio, we've got to do
this, because we're always trying to push the bar.
If I can get to a point where it's as close to being in the room with me in terms of quality,
that takes that whole distraction of echo in the room, or blurry camera out of the way
and allows the student to really focus in on the content.
It's like if a car is smooth enough, you almost forget you're riding on a bumpy road, and
that's what I want people to experience.
Olly: Wonderful.
Well listen, it's been such a pleasure to talk to you today, I learned a lot as always.
If people want to get in touch with you, where can they do so?
Jonathan: So, they can check my personal website at jle.vi.
They can check out my podcast at BecomingASuperHuman.com.
We've had such illustrious guests as Mr. Olly Richard on this show.
Olly: That was a fun episode, that was a good chat.
Jonathan: That was really fun.
People really enjoyed it as well.
I assume you'll give them a link to get access to that free trial.
Olly: Yes, we'll tell people where to go for that.
Lovely.
Well, thanks very much, and I look forward to the next time, and we'll talk very soon.
Jonathan: Take care.
Olly: Bye, bye.
-------------------------------------------
Soy Luna 2 - Alla Voy |PL| - Duration: 3:06.
For more infomation >> Soy Luna 2 - Alla Voy |PL| - Duration: 3:06. -------------------------------------------
How to get Unreal Engine 4 for Free - Duration: 3:10.
For more infomation >> How to get Unreal Engine 4 for Free - Duration: 3:10. -------------------------------------------
Youtube Drama Queen Makes Reaction Video To Nazi Pewdiepie, Who Plans To Roast The Planet! - Duration: 22:28.
if you think that normal youtube drama is cringey then kids, you aint seen nothing yet!
OH SHIT! RUN FOR YOUR LIVES!!! hush now little ones your old grandpa killeeeeeeeeer keeeemstaaaaar,
has a story for you this is a tale that has been passed down from generation to generation
ever since the fall of civilization this story that I am about to tell you has survived for
centuries it tells of ancient wars and battles that were fought long ago between powerful
entities it is a tale fraught with blood and betrayal it is a story of love violence and
compassion it tells of both the wonders and horrors that can be found within the hearts
of men by the way this story is totally appropriate for you children you can trust ME HEHEHEHEHE
um anyway where was i ah yes it tells of heroes and villains who both fought a terrible conflict
that would determine the fate of all this is the story of how our world came to an end
and how a new world rose from its' ashes this is the legend the epic the saga this is the
story of the youtube drama queen life's but a walking shadow, a poor player, that struts
and frets his hour upon the stage, and then is heard no more; it is a tale told by an
idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing. - some guy if i was at a camping
trip like THAT then I would run the f**** away, I'd rather be eaten by a bear. a long
time ago, in a mental hospital far, far away... (super sad music) *obnoxious sobbing* oh guys
it's so oh god i don't even know how to do this video i'm sorry i i'm trying to follow
this script but I I can't do it I just can't do it guys it's so horrible ok i gotta get
control of myself as you all know a while ago PEWDIEPIE one of the most beautiful people
on youtube no scratch that more than that he the greatest person on youtube no he was
i thought he was the greatest person the greatest being in the entire universe and i it turns
out i just found out that he has done horrible horrible things on youtube horrible things
horrible horrible you understand me horrible horrible horrible things he's i can't do this
i can't do this dude dude calm down calm down I-I can't Edgar I can't yes you can now take
some water ok ok ok ok i'm good i'm good i'm good so it turns out that pewdiepie has i'm
just gonna say it he's a nazi a f****ng nazi *obnoxious sobbing intensifies* i can't say
it without crying oh edgar it's terrible i used to love pewdiepie i loved him he was
my god my idol i was going to start a cult worshipping him but now i cant do it i can't
do it i can't do it i can't believe i'm even making this video i'm no doing it for views
or money or being popular on youtube no i'm being serious about this guys pewdiepie is
a f****ng nazi it's terrible this is the worst thing that's ever happened
why pewdiepie why i think i'm having a heart attack edgar get me to the hospital
we are experiencing some interruptions, we apologize. eeeeeeeeeee! ok ok i'm back i'm
back guys i'm back from the hospital edgar drove me to the hospital took my meds now
ok just need to not overreact like i did last time i must finish this video it's so important
as you all know well i mean probably not none of you have ever seen me before pewdiepie
was he was everything to me he was my idol i wanted to be just like him when i grew up
but now he i i worship the ground he walked on if so much as spat in my direction i would
worship that spittle but now i just can't make this video Edgar I can't dude get ahold
of yourself you need to make this video it's very very important you have to do this you
have to but i can't you can do this the world needs to know the truth and you are the only
one who can get it into the minds of people that pewdiepie is scum i can't do that i can't
tell the world that my idol is a liar i can't do it i still love him even after all this
you have to you have to do this think think of all the people he has wronged the millions
tens of millions of people who will still believe that he is that he is not who he really
is you must do this i you're right I have to look past my former feelings for him he
is clearly not who he really is ok so oh god ok so pewdiepie we all thought he was love
i thought he was love i thought he was life and now just roll the clip edgar just roll
the clip the f**** is this oh god here it comes i don't wanna watch this egar i paid
for this just watch what oh no no no no no no what's with the christmas it's not real
it's not real it's not real i like the editing oh god edgar i don't wanna see this please
don't make me see this just play the stupid video ok ok DUN DUN DUN subscribe to keemstar
*they then do the pewdiepie dance* oh pewdiepie how could you do this kill me subscribe to
keemstar it's undeniable he's a nazi oh god edgar it's happening again take me to the
hospital sorry guys, it happened again. eeeeeee! ok guys i'm back i'm back again edgar drove
me to the hospital again i'm ok i'm ok oh god ok so horrible i mean death to all jews
what the f*** pewdiepie why would you do something like this why would you hire 2 poor indian
guys who don't even speak english i mean actually they do speak english how could you hire them
to hold up a message saying death to all jews and then to subscribe to keemstar keemstar
is jesus i just don't understand pewds i just don't
understand but it's so much worse guys that's right it gets worse worse you understand me
edgar edgar roll the next clip just roll the next clip oh god i don't wanna see this hell
jesus here just wanted to let you all know that hitler did absolutely nothing wrong he
only wanted to act upon god's will now he's getting some homeless guy to dress up as jesus
and make jesus look like a nazi wtf oh pewdiepie this can't be real this just can't be real
it's gotta be some sort of trick oh god it's ok edgar i don't need to go to the hospital
i'm finishing this i'm finishing this baby if i had just one last wish i would like a
tasty fish no no it's ok sparkle it's ok it's ok you don't need to do that thing it's ok
sparkle i appreciate your help but it's ok sparkle you can just swim away it's ok i don't
need you i don't need you anymore i'm good but I appreciate it you were always there
for me ok i'm ready i'm good ok let's finish this so pewdiepie does other stuff to oh he's
done other stuff believe me like this *translation: and now pewdiepie, you shall commence your
epic roast of youtube and the entire world so that everyone knows i'm a little tea cup,
short and stout* and this so high fuhrer with a level 3 flag system don't you think people
might abuse that *translation: how the hell should i know, i'm a big stupid doo doo head
and my name is Heinrich* and this from now on i'm gonna report the news i'm doing the
news now it's just undeniable he's a nazi he's a legitimate
neo-nazi i just how could this happen pewdiepie is supposed to be made of love and swedish
bagels how could this happen i don't understand what is wrong with this world what is wrong
with it what is wrong with this horrible horrible world so in response to all of this disney
that's right disney who by the way Walt Disney was also a nazi by the way that is undeniable
but even disney in all their corporate cruelty cannot stand the sheer immorality that this
guy is is that pewdiepie is emanating i'm sorry he's not just some guy he's pewdiepie
i can't let's just finish this so disney they've completely cut ties with him they cancelled
his wonderful wonderful show let's scare pewdiepie and they it's just undeniable guys disney
has had enough i mean look at this look at this imagery from kingdom hearts 3 that i
stole from a homeless guy and in it you can see mickey and sora and donald and goofy and
all your friends and they are just getting ready to end pewdiepie they have had enough
of his poop and they are ready to take him down take him down guys you can do it and
but it gets worse that's right it can actually get worse you know jk rowling you know the
lady who i don't know WROTE THE HARRY POTTER BOOKS jk rowling she she wrote this on twitter
for those who think fascism is an edgy accessory oh guys not even harry potter can stand him
anymore oh god it's so horrible harry potter is just getting ready to cast some like awesome
level 100 spell that will turn pewdiepie into i don't know a um a peanut and disney is getting
ready king mickey's got his keyblade out and he's ready to slice him to pieces it's just
so horrible the whole world is united against pewdiepie at this point and now i have no
choice but to join them because it's my duty no you know what no i refuse to do this edgar
i can't do this what are you talking about kyle come on you have to do this no i can't
do it edgar i can't it's gotta be a conspiracy it's gotta be it's gotta be a conspiracy it's
gotta be all fake all of it is fake all of it all of it all of it all of it all of it
it's some kind of illuminati conspiracy it's gotta be they framed poor pewdiepie hey what's
this here pewdiepie exposed oh please what possible evidence could they have that a little
to the left dolfy perfect oh my god it's true pewdiepie=hitler confirmed oh no nooooooooooooooo
does this look like the face of mercy NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!! meanwhile, at the LEAST CRAZY part of the
world is it done yes the drama queen has gone to war against pewdiepie excellent exactly
as we anticipated soon all of youtube will turn against lord pewdiepie and then we the
true rulers of the earth shall have dominion over the greatest social media website in
the history of the world and we shall rise as the most powerful group in the world and
soon humanity shall fall under our control *maniacle laughter* we're the good guys oh
god i hate these outros if you if you enjoyed this video then you must be really really
f***ed up in the head to enjoy seeing me roast pewdiepie but if you did then please consider
subscribing so you'll be notified of when i release future videos and if you wish to
support my channel in my fight against the fallen swedish angel that pewdiepie has become
then you can check out my gaming videos i'm currently doing a let's play of mass effect
any support you could offer would be appreciated we have to do whatever we can to defeat pewdiepie
and free youtube from his control and also please leave a like or a dislike if you thought
my video was complete poop which it it probably is but um please share this video with everyone
you know so that everyone knows the truth about pewds and also a comment is always welcome
thank you and goodbye
-------------------------------------------
You Bunged the Wrong Booce (You Reposted in the Wrong Neighborhood) - Duration: 0:41.
good day fleshy mammals
fucking can't
I have to hear that again XDXD
2
to the one
to the one
2, 3
what the fuck 0.0
Igot the LMG
He plays Halo the way
that I play call of dudy
the map's a little dodgy
2, to the one
to the one
2, 3
what kind of advantage
did you give me?
look, so easy
swimming ruined my quad feed :(
BING
-------------------------------------------
Accessible Hyperlink Text - Duration: 8:20.
Hi everyone welcome to the inclusive
access tutorial series from Microsoft
Word. My name is Keshia, and I'll be your
host as we examine this tutorial topic
and document accessibility.
In this episode we're going to examine
hyperlinks and alternative text for
hyperlinks so that you can include them
in your document in an accessible way. As
you know hyperlinks allow the document
creator to direct their reader to
another location, but if you choose to
use them in your document you need to
make sure that they are accessible and
that they will work well with assistive
technology. The key point for
accessibility when it comes to
hyperlinks is that a hyperlink needs to make
sense
contextually within a document. That
means that a hyperlink URL shouldn't be
visible to the user and it should be
masked with alternative text instead.
This is to prevent assistive
technology from reading out a URL link
in full when it comes across them in a
document.
Secondly, I have come across many
examples where someone has used
hyperlinks with alternative text that
simply say "click here" or "follow link".
Click here does not provide that context;
we need to make sure that whatever is
going to happen when the user clicks the
link that that message is abundantly
clear. Failing to provide alternative
hyperlink text forces your reader out of
the document. They have to navigate
through the page in order to find where
the hyperlink ends so that they can
continue reading. We can't assume as
document authors that the reader is
going to want to use the link right away.
They have to be able to move past it
fairly easily and then come back to it
later if they want to.
Now, before we get on to how we add
alternative text or hyperlinks I want to
point out that there is an addition to
this guideline if you're using printed
materials.
While masking a link within a digital
document is fine because we can access
the link at a later time,
print materials don't have that option.
Therefore if you're going to offer your
material in both digital and print all
print materials need to come with an
appendix that include an entire list at
every link that exists in that document
and where they are in the document so
that the reader can go through it and
access that information at a later time.
Now that that's out of the way let's
take a look at how we add hyperlink text
to our documents. If you've never added a
hyperlink to your document you can do it
one of two ways. You can add the link
text to the document and then edit the
hyperlink, or, you can insert a hyperlink
and edit the alternative text in that
same dialog box. I'll show you how to add
a hyperlink to your document with both
methods and then you can decide leader
which one works best for you.
First, we'll add the hyperlink text to
our document. Let's say we want to
include an email address because we're
advertising community classes that are
offered at a local community center. But
for someone to register for a class they
have to contact the instructor directly
and request admission. We need to
remember that when we add alternative
text to the hyperlink we're using it
has to lend context so we can't use "click
here for more information" or "link" and, in
this case "email".
They don't lend the proper context to the
document and our reader needs to know
why it's important for them to click on
this link. Instead, we're going to make
sure that the link text will tell our
reader exactly what we want them to do
when they click on the link. In this
example our instructor's name is Jane
Anna and she's teaching Pottery 101. So,
if someone wants to register for Jane's
class they have to email her to request
permission.
Instead of just adding Jane's email
account to the document we'll add her
email and add alt text to make the
message clear to the user
why they should email her. The first
method we'll use is adding her email
directly to the document. We'll type that
up and once Word recognizes that we've
just added a hyperlink, it will change
the colour of the text and underline it.
We can right click on this link now and
edit from the right-click menu.
The second way that you can add a link
to your document is by going to the
Insert Tab of your ribbon and choosing
hyperlink from the links section.
Alternatively you can press ALT + N
followed by the I (i) key on your keyboard
to open the Insert Hyperlink dialog box.
But, no matter which method you choose
once you're here you need to pay
attention to the options that are on the
left-hand side of this window. You can
choose which type of hyperlink you plan
on having to your document: an existing
file or webpage, a place in this document,
creating a new document, or, adding an
email address. Each of these options will
allow you to insert a specific kind of
hyperlink into your document. And if you
want to learn more about how Microsoft
categorizes these link options I've
added a link to one of the pages from
their website that will describe and
explain all of this to you, but for our
example we are going to choose the email
address option and enter Jane's email
address here into the field that says
email address. Once we've done that we
need to add the masking text, or the
alternative text that we're going to
display instead of her email address.
This is your alt text field. You enter in
all of the alternative text that you
will use in place of your link and it
will be pushed to the document once you
click OK. For our example we could use
"email Jane Anna to register". It's better
than just providing Jane's email address
or saying email Jane, but if we put
"email Jane Anna to register for Pottery 101" it
provides a much better contextual
explanation for why our reader wants to
email Jane in the first place. They know
she needs to be emailed to register for
a class and now they also know which
class they will register for if they
email her. Once you've added the
appropriate alternative text for your
link click on the OK button or tab down
to the OK button and select it. Your
newly added hyperlink is in your
document and the masked text for your
alternative text is already in place.
Now, regardless of what kind of link you
want to add to your document you need
to make sure that your alternative text
clearly tells your reader what the link
will do. They need to know what's going
to happen when they click on it. If it will
move them to an external site relay
that in your text. If the link will move
the reader to another portion of your
document you need to explain that as
well.
Alternative text can be challenging.
I know it's not easy to know exactly
what to say when you're only using a few
words, and it's a fine balance because
too much alt text for your link is just
as bad as two little. Try to limit your
information to approximately one
sentence and remember specificity is
better than generalization. But in time
writing alternative text in your
documents will become second nature.
And that's how you make your hyperlinks
accessible to your readers.
That's all I have for this episode and I
hope that was helpful for you. But if you
have any questions please feel free to
leave a comment in the comment section
or email me directly using the email you
can find in the video description. Thanks
for watching I'll see you next time!
-------------------------------------------
ASMR Ear Exam Role Play - Relaxing Ear Check Up 🌡 - Duration: 18:06.
Hello there!
Hope you are OK.
I just wanna check your ears...
This is good.
Please...
Just relax
Don't worry about your ears
Your ears are just mine right now ;)
So, please just enjoy with this special examination
I can't see any problems right now
Checking your ear...
...your beautiful left ear.
and this is good.
Everything is ok right now!
I wanna check your another ear
Yes, your beautiful right ear :)
looks good
But I wanna be sure about that
I wanna touch them
Don't worry, just be very relaxed!
You're gonna be ok!
No, no no!
No need to be nervous!
Just be relax!
Let's check your right ear!
Yes, everything looks good!
such a great right ear
it's beautiful!
Your ears are simply beautiful!
Especially your left ear :)
But I can check your left ear, again.
again and again...
you have time? right?
a little bit tapping in your right ear
still no any problems..
I think your ears are so healthy!
Yes, you are so lucky!
-------------------------------------------
Bowflex® Dumbbell Workout
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A Pastor's Outburst on CGADB Talks Everything ... - Duration: 14:01.
For more infomation >> A Pastor's Outburst on CGADB Talks Everything ... - Duration: 14:01. -------------------------------------------
Soy Luna 2 - Alla Voy |PL| - Duration: 3:06.
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La Sexta Extinción Masiva - Duration: 8:39.
For more infomation >> La Sexta Extinción Masiva - Duration: 8:39. -------------------------------------------
SOURDOUGH STARTER - Introduction to Bread Making - Duration: 10:19.
Hi a huge welcome to Steve's kitchen
we're going to start a new series on the
basics of bread making and I'm kicking
off with something a lot of you might
think is a little complicated it's a
sourdough starter but iIthink actually
you might have some fun and the reason
I'm starting with this is it isn't
actually that complicated and it also
will put you in touch with the process
of bread making we're looking at wild
yeasts which are all around us. Now throughout
this series I am going to be using some
digital scales I really advise that
rather than using cup measurements
you use weight measurements when using
bread. Now if you don't fully understand
why maybe I'll do a video about that at a later
date but I think most people are
starting to understand that cups are not
accurate and you just end up with dry or
wet doughs and never is that more
important than when you're working with
sourdough starters
Now what is a sourdough stater well if
you've seen yeast you've seen dried yeast
going into bread and you may have used
block yeast as well
Sourdough starters are natural yeasts
they're all around us they're on our skin
there on flour, thery're in the air what
we're going to do is capture those in a
flour water mixture and over time
they're going to develop a beautiful
strong yeast that has a slight sour note to
it and it creates those wonderful
sourdough breads. You're going to want a
container I'm going to show the
measurements, very simple steps. I'm
going to do it a little bit different
than some people on the first stage of
this I'm going to let the yeast
develop in a closed environment.
I'll show you that in a moment so let's
get on and measure out our flour and
water. Now in order to capture wild yeast. we
need to actually feed them and they feed
off the starches and proteins that are
in flour. Now unlike a lot of people
yeast are not flour snobs so you can
pretty much use any flour you like I
like to start with a strong bread flour
I think it creates a great sourdough
starter, you could add some whole grain
flours in with that as well so you can
start with almost any amount of flour
and for those of you want to know
I'm going to start with a hundred
twenty-five grams, I'm going to measure
it into a cup just to give you an idea
but as I say cups vary from country to
country and they're depending on whether
you compact them in or not, it can make a
lot of difference. So I've gone for a loosely
packed there, I'm going to put the flour
into a kilner jar or a mason jar and you
can see that's about 122g I am going to
be pernickety and I'm going to put a little
bit extra flour in to make it up to 125g
Now a common mistake would be to use the
equal amount of water we are going to
use the equal amount of water but by
weight and don't use water straight from
the tap that may have chlorine which
could affect your yeast so we're going
to have 125 grams of mineral water and
sometimes it is quite nice to mix up a
stone-ground flour and bread flour if
you decide to do a different flour
comment down below let me know what you
choose
Now we're going to give that a mix
together until we get a nice batter . Now
I could seal this but the gases that
build up in here could create pressure
so what I'm going to do is cover the top
over with some plastic wrap
Many times when you start a yeast like
this you leave the lid open so the
atmosphere can get round it, I found it
doesn't make a huge amount of difference
and I want to the water not to evaporate
so I'm popping this cellophane on the
top there and also we are not going to
touch or feed this for 48 hours just
going to leave it on the side keep an
eye on it and you'll start to see some
activity probably within the first 12 to
24 hours. So you patiently waited 48
hours and in that time hopefully the
flour and the natural yeast within the
flour have started to bubble like this
one has here, can you see all the
activity on the surface and it's a very
loose airy batter so you can see despite
covering this with this little bit of
plastic wrap
we've still developed a wonderful yeast
and the starting of a beautiful
sourdough starter. It is also important
to get used to the smell of your sourdough
in this early stage
there's almost a sort of hopsy beer
smell coming out of it which is
absolutely perfect
sometimes you'll get a little bit of a
brown scum on top don't worry about that
that's quite natural. The wild yeast thats
in there now is super hungry we're not
actually going to be discarding any of
the dough at this point we're just going
to be feeding it. Again I'm using my
scales we're going for about half a
cup, should be about 60 grams which is
about 2.1 ounces we'll add that flour
over the top of our starter and now weigh
out 60 grams that's about 2 ounces again
of water for that in on top of the
flour, then I'm going to take my spoon
and we give this batter a little mix
through. Now it's always good practice to
clean the sides down after you finished
this time we're not actually going to be
sealing in our sourdough, you can pop
the lid on loosely don't actually seal
it down, you could cover it with a sieve
or maybe even a little bit of
cheesecloth. Now for the next 4-5 days
we're going to take care of this dough
we're going to feed it when we get up in
the morning and before we go to bed at
night
roughly every 12 hours you don't have to
beat yourself up about it and in a day
or so the volume is going to get quite a
bit more so we're going to have to
discard some but i'll show you that when
we do it.
Now I'm going to take you through a
feeding but not every feeding we fed
this last night with equal flour and
water by weight thats 60 grams about two
ounces of flour 60 grams about two
ounces of water, mix it in, clean down the
sides and now I'm going to give this
another feed but today I'm going to take
a little bit out and the reason behind
that is twofold - one, if you just keep
feeding this you're going to eventually
have a yeast that will just overflow out
of your jar but secondly also we're
actually wanting to grow yeast not just
spent flour so we're going to be taking
a little bit of spent flour out each
time and you don't have to discard it
completely you could make pancakes with
it you could add it into a cake mixture
it's perfectly fine but we're just going to take
a little bit out today
Now you'll see a little bit of brown
liquid on the top that's quite common
not to worry about that the smell is
still a little bit sour little bit yeasty
I'm going to take about half a cup of my
sourdough mixture out of here I'm
going to measure that out into half a
cup like I say you can discard this
turn it into lovely sourdough
pancakes, pop it onto the compost
whatever you like. I'm going to measure out
my flour that's about 60 grams 2
ounces that's the feed for my wild yeast
and 60 grams of mineral water again it's
about two ounces so you can see by
weight the water is the same but by
volume it's not. Just as important as the
flour that goes in as well it's already
starting to bubble in there. I'm going to
give that a good mix through into a nice
smooth batter and I'm going to clean
down the side of my jar as I always do
and then this evening I may discard a
little bit more and feed it again. I'm
going to keep doing that the next three
or four days until I start getting a
lovely frothy culture
Now I'm super pleased with the way this
sourdough starter is going it's almost
all bubblesW when we fed it last night
it was down here it's risen up so
there's heaps of activity in there
just take a look at this you can see all
the bubbles and activity on the top if I
break it open like that you can see it's
very light and airy it's already
starting to bubble up again is a nice
sour note coming off of there. If you've
been joining me on this
this is about five days in now from the
first 24 hours plus five days and I'm
going to feed this now for the last time
and then we can use this sourdough
starter to start baking. Now to be honest
at this point it hardly needs discarding
but I'll take a bit off because I fancied
some sourdough pancakes this morning
I'm just going to pop maybe about half a
cup into a bowl separate like this
I've got my strong flour here which I'm
just going to use to feed the starter
and that was 60 grams of flour so I'm
going for the same in weight of water
and that's a tiny little bit over but it
won't matter too much, add the water get
the moisture levels right and we'll give
this a stir through, now you can see
that's knocked the batter back down to
half its former volume and that will
increase to double its size probably
within the next few hours and if you're
using this starter everyday for baking
you can just keep replenishing and using
I hope you're following along because I
can't wait to start using this
in some recipes on my channel. Now one more
feed tomorrow and it'll be ready
and you do want to get used to the smell
of your sourdough, this is just a little sour
but very fresh smelling. Now if you
decided to follow along and make your own
sourdough with me you'll be enjoying what we're
making with this on the bread series of
Steve's Kitchen
Join me next week we're not doing
sourdough next week but we'll be
starting this introduction to bread
making basics So I will see you then
share the love, comments down below
actually I'd love to hear it down below
if you are making sourdough starter so I
can help you and we can see how it progresses
be good, see you next time
Now if you've joined me on the series
about making sourdough starter you've
got your beautiful sourdough starter Now
what are you going to do with it, well if
you're baking regularly just keep them
aside feed each day make your bread, if
you're only making sourdough every week
or so......Those of you that have been
following along making the sourdough
starter will be anxious to get on and
make something with it. Now this is
looking beautiful and light and bubbly
it smells delicious and we going to use
it or we're going to let it help us make a
sourdough baguette so this is a no knead baguette
very simple to make, yeast is doing all
the work
let's get on and make it
-------------------------------------------
Farming Simulator 17 Rolland Roll Twin 205 manure Spreader - Duration: 5:43.
HI GUYS !!!! Welcome to Farming Simulator 17 Mods Channel in this video i show You a new Manure Spreader The Rolland Roll Twin 205 .
25.800l Capacity 15km/h Working Speed
JCB FASTRAC 3646 BRUTE
JCB 435S AWS
If you enjoy watching my videos... Give thumb up SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE And for any question ( or just for say HI!!) LET comment I will be happy to answer you...... bb
-------------------------------------------
Jornadas Político-Pedagógicas Paulo Freire – Depoimentos dos convidados e organizadores - Duration: 8:13.
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Cachorrinha late para cachorro maior e olha o que deu - Duration: 1:11.
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Thiếu Niên Cẩm Y Vệ | The Young Imperial Guards | Tập 1 - Duration: 22:31.
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ActivInspire Resources - Duration: 2:45.
The purpose of this video is to
demonstrate how to incorporate a few
resources found in Activinspire in three
different content areas. The first
resource, a number great template can be
used in a variety of ways for math
lesson. You can look for and highlight
number patterns or practice skip
counting by a given number.
Using the notes browser you can learn
about other ways to utilize the number
great template found on the page. You can
also hit the clear button to restart
template. The next resource, a Venn diagram
can be used to compare and contrast a variety
of things and various subjects.
Here, we'll compare and contrast whales to
fish. We can say that whales and fish both
live in water, they both have fins, and
they both swim. Whales are different than
fish because they have hair, they give
live birth, and they breathe air. Fish, on
the other hand, have scales, they lay eggs,
and breathe water. The last template, a
word or story web, can be used to
brainstorm fun places to visit in a
writing lesson.
The students will give you the places
and you can add them to the web, such as
Dorney Park, Hershey Park,
Funplex, Ocean City, Maryland, Philadelphia Zoo,
Sahara Sam, and Chuck E Cheese.
Students can then choose which place
they would like to write about.
There are many fun and interesting ways
to incorporate Activinspire resources
into your lessons. Now it's time for you
to give it a try!
-------------------------------------------
How underwear effect on our Penis size - Must watch - Duration: 3:36.
hello guys.
Welcome to natural cure tips.
our today's topic is very important for all my brothers.
that is about tight underwear.
everybody wear underwear, but we should think, is this underwear is harmfull for our health,
or helpful?
i will tell you some facts of tight underwear.
really, there is a health risk of wearing tight underwear.
In case of men, constrictive underwear can hamper their reproductive system.
Experts says, that wearing tight underwear is a bad habit like drinking alcohol and smoking.
It causes almost equal health risks like those habits.
Therefore, don�t fall for the looks.
Check out the fitting well.
Also, try to use branded ones, as those are made of good quality materials.
lets talk about its effects.
1st one is.
Affects Sperm Count.
Wearing such underwear, creates constriction at your groin, which results in lowering sperm
count.
Wearing tight underwear increases temperature, around scrotum, which restrains sperm production.
The theory is that ,if underpants hold your scrotum close to your body, it makes your
testicles too warm, creating a hostile environment for sperm production.
we have to free our testicles, because you can see that our testicles moves slowly slowly,
but if it will tight, then it will be problem.
some experts are of the view that, when boys wear tight underwear, can restrict their outward
penile growth.
When testicles and penis is restricted and compressed in tight underwear, it can affect
blood circulation, which can result in curvature and shrinkage.
When boys get erection, they try to bend their penis to one side to hide their embarrassment.
This can affect the blood flow which can stun the growth of penile tissues.
2nd is.
stop Blood Circulation.
If you wear tight fitted underwear for long time; it can stop proper blood circulation.
Therefore, the nerves on that area can be numbed.
If your tissues don't get enough oxygen through blood flow, tissue death can happen.
3rd is.
Causes Infection.
Too tight thongs can hamper blood circulation to your intimate area, which causes irritation,
and inflammation.
You can also feel tingling sensation there.
Regular habit of wearing tight underwear, can cause serious health problems.
Never ignore these health effects of wearing tight underwear.
So my friends, try to get rid of these tight underwear, these are not affective for our
health.
just use boxer underwear, so that you can make your penis free of any tightness.
when your penis will be free, blood circulation will be proper, and it will grow easily.
after removing the tight underwear, in some days you will see the results.
so guys think about it, i hope you will like this video.
till my next video, take care, and good bye.
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