Saturday, July 9
Palace of Palenque
If you are an individual that feels comfortable getting off the beaten track, then the ruin of the ancient city of the Palenque in Chiapas Mexico is a must-see sight for you.
Although the most well-known ruins include the Mayan structures throughout the Mexican Peninsula, the Palenque was located in an ancient Mayan city-state, and today it offers travelers some of the most exquisite and intricately designed architecture in all of Mexico. While the site is still being unearthed there is much you can learn by visiting it.
During your visit, you will get to experience the Mayan world and walk in the footsteps of the ancient priests and rulers of the time.
There are several pyramids located within the city most of which were used for ceremonies and rituals. The tranquility of the site will be lost in the emotions you may feel when you visit Palenque ruins and imagine its distant inhabitants who vanished off the Earth.
The Mayan Ruins of Palenque are a Mesoamerican site in southern Mexico in the Chiapas state of Mexico. They are believed to have been built sometime between the 7th and 8th centuries AD, although the exact date is uncertain.
These Mayan ruins were once the center of the Mayan city of Palenque founded by an ancient Maya ruler known as Pakal the Great, who ruled from 615 to 683 AD.
The site was first settled in the Early Classic Period, and the earliest evidence of Mayan occupation at the site comes from around 600 CE.
By the Late Classic Period, Palenque had become one of the most powerful Mayan city-states, and its influence extended throughout Mesoamerica. Archaeologists date the ruins of Palenque back to the year 226 BC. The city was smaller than Chichen Itza and Tikal. READ MORE...
Children That Don't Give Up
A raging pandemic, gun violence, climate change — as an educational psychologist, I’ve seen firsthand how the troubling events of today are taking a toll on our children.
“It’s hard to stop thinking about bad stuff,” an 11-year-old told me recently. “Sometimes I worry about waking up.”
Without the right tools to handle adversity, hopelessness can set in and kids’ overall well-being can decline. Hope is what energizes them to stay mentally strong during tough times, and it’s what sets them apart from those who give up easily.
Research shows that hopefulness can dramatically reduce childhood anxiety and depression. Hopeful kids have an inner sense of control. They view challenges and obstacles as temporary and able to be overcome, so they are more likely to thrive and help others.
Yet despite its immense power, hope is largely excluded from our parenting agendas. The good news? Hope is teachable. One of the best ways to increase this strength is by equipping children with skills to handle life’s inevitable bumps.
Here are nine science-backed ways to help kids maintain hope — especially during tough times: READ MORE...
Giant Heads Found in Tanzania
In 2018, archaeologists made a staggering discovery in Swaga Swaga Game Reserve in central Tanzania: 52 previously undocumented rock shelters, deliberately painted with rock art. Weathering had mostly destroyed all but a handful; but of those that were preserved, one was an absolute enigma.
The site, named Amak'hee 4, was elaborately painted with a frieze of figurative art – including three mysterious, anthropomorphic figures with extremely oversized heads.
These could be, according to archaeologist Maciej Grzelczyk of the Jagiellonian University in Poland, a clue to figuring out what other, similar trios of figures found in other rock art panels might be.
The Amak'hee 4 panel is difficult to date, but in 2021 Grzelczyk was able to gauge that it's at least a few hundred years old. It's painted almost entirely in red pigment, except for five figures in white.
The weathering on this pigment, and the absence of domestic animals, suggests that it's fairly old, dating back to the time of hunter-gatherer societies in the region. READ MORE...
Friday, July 8
Qualities of a Leader
After 45 years of working in the marketplace holding a variety of positions and jobs, such as:
- laborer
- waiter
- operator
- customer service rep
- technician
- supervisor
- teacher
- instructor
- course writer
- professor
- dean
- director of education
- president
- owner
- vice president
- CEO
- consultant
- director
- manager
- executive director
- a good communicator (written, verbal, presentation)
- must have the ability to lie as well as tell the truth
- must be at least 6 feet tall and not overweight or obese (attractiveness is optional but desireable)
- must be good with numbers, forecasts, and projections
- must be willing to take risks
- must be willing to empower people
- must be willing to hire direct reports that are just as capable
- must be willing to take responsibility for failures and successes
- must have the desire to learn and a keen ability to retain
- must be willing to remove obstacles so that all employees can do their jobs to the best of their abillities
- must hire employees with a pre-determined but desireable mindset
- must be willing to pay for performance
- must have a well-defined career path for employees
- MUST BE ABLE TO CREATE THE VISION for the company and EXECUTE THE VISION
- must be a proponent of continuous improvement
- must be patient and tolerate and be able to teach
- must be able to manage stress, work, and home life simultaneously
- must be able to know when to say NO and not just say NO arbitrarily
- must be kind and generous with praise and gratitute
- must be willing to stand up to the stockholders if their wishes go against the company in the long term
- must understand the psychology of work in order to motivate
- must understand that true motivation comes from creating the environment that allows people to motivate themselves
- must be clean cut and well dressed but not always a suit and tie
- must have the ability to play chess as well as 3 dimensional chess
- must understand the competition or trust someone who understands the competition
Let me say that not all positions automatically create leaders... Joe Biden is the President of the United States and he is very far away from being a leader... Joe Biden, not only just does what the party wants him to do and not what is in the best interest of the country, but he blames others for the failures of his decisions.
Joe Biden is a politician not a LEADER...
You don't have to be in a powerful position to be a leader.
Better in Britain
Yes, the roads are confusing, the food portions unambitious, the peanut butter not so good, but for this American, life in the U.K. has its compensations. By Yasmeen Serhan
This September marks my fifth year of living in Britain, a milestone that comes with its own special reward: a test.
“Comedy and satire, the ability to laugh at ourselves, are an important part of the U.K. character,” reads one passage from the official study handbook. In another, pubs are described as “an important part of U.K. social culture.
Fixing Shoulder Pain
The typical office worker often has soreness throughout their body as a result of their sedentary desk jobs. Even young individuals may develop shoulder pain, which was previously primarily an issue for elderly people.
Through a collaboration with Professor Hak Soo Choi at the Harvard Medical School, a Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH) research team made up of Professor Dong-Woo Cho, Dr. Suhun Chae, and Jinah Jang, as well as Professor Jinah Jang and Ph.D. candidate Uijung Yong, has developed a complex tissue platform that can repair damaged rotator cuffs.
The international journal Bioactive Materials recently published the findings of this study, which could potentially provide patients with chronic shoulder pain renewed hope.
The study team transplanted this platform in rats that had full-thickness rotator cuff injuries. The researchers observed tissue regeneration and recovery in shoulder function.
Shortest Path to Human Happiness
The researchers created a digital model of psychology aimed to improve mental health. The system offers superior personalization and identifies the shortest path toward a cluster of mental stability for any individual.
Deep Longevity has published a paper in Aging-US outlining a machine learning approach to human psychology in collaboration with Nancy Etcoff, Ph.D., Harvard Medical School, an authority on happiness and beauty.
The authors created two digital models of human psychology based on data from the Midlife in the United States study.
The first model is an ensemble of deep neural networks that predicts respondents’ chronological age and psychological well-being in 10 years using information from a psychological survey. This model depicts the trajectories of the human mind as it ages.
Thursday, July 7
Finding Yourself
- Think back to a time when you really felt comfortable in your own skin
- Mull over your family dynamic
- Get out and try new things
- Start going places by yourself
- Try to figure out what's important to you
- Ditch bad habits
- Learn how to practice mindfulness—and actually do it
- Tell your inner critic to get lost
- Learn to be okay with not being liked by everyone
- Volunteer
- Unplug more
- Identify what makes you different from everyone else
- Consider therapy
Quality of Life - Part IV
Quality of life is defined by the World HealthOrganization as "an individual's perception of their position in life in the context of the culture and value systems in which they live and in relation to their goals, expectations, standards and concerns". Wikipedia
- Position in life
- context of culture
- context of value systems
- goals
- expectations
- standards
- concerns
- My wife and I are debt-free
- My wife and I each have reliable cars
- Our backyard has a 24-foot round pool surrounded by an oversized deck that incorporates a gazebo, a sunning area, and a hot tub
- Our 24oo square foot home sits on an acre of land
- We live in a quiet and safe community
- We walk around the community for exercise
- We have the finances to pay our bills until both are 95
- We are 40 minutes away from UT Medical Center
- We are 50 minutes away from an airport
- We grow our own vegetables each summer
Improve Your Memory
But you don't have to go to bed to improve your memory and recall.
A study just published in Nature Reviews Psychology found that "evn a few minutes of rest with your eyes closed can improve memory, perhaps to the same degree as a full night of sleep."
Psychologists call that "offline waking rest." In its purest form, offline waking rest can be closing your eyes and vegging out for a couple minutes. But offline waking rest can also be daydreaming.
Moon's Permanent Shadows
ON OCTOBER 9, 2009, a 2-ton rocket smashed into the moon traveling at 9,000 kilometers per hour. As it exploded in a shower of dust and heated the lunar surface to hundreds of degrees Celsius, the jet-black crater into which it plummeted, called Cabeus, briefly filled with light for the first time in billions of years.
The crash was no accident. NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) mission aimed to see what would be kicked up from the lunar shadows by the impact. A spacecraft trailing the rocket flew through the dust plume to sample it, while NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter observed from afar. The results of the experiment were astonishing: Scientists detected 155 kilograms of water vapor mixed into the dust plume. They had, for the first time, found water on the moon. “It was absolutely definitive,” said Anthony Colaprete of NASA’s Ames Research Center, the principal investigator of LCROSS.
The moon isn’t an obvious reservoir of water. “It’s really weird when you stop to think about it,” said Mark Robinson, a planetary scientist at Arizona State University. Its lack of atmosphere and extreme temperatures should cause any water to almost instantly evaporate. Yet about 25 years ago, spacecraft began to detect signatures of hydrogen around the moon’s poles, hinting that water might be trapped there as ice. LCROSS proved this theory. Scientists now think there’s not just a bit of water ice on the moon; there are 6 trillion kilograms of it. READ MORE...
King Arthur's Tomb
According to popular lore, Arthur’s Stone, a roughly 5,000-year-old tomb in the West Midlands of England, boasts ties to King Arthur, the mythical leader of Camelot. One legend holds that Arthur found a pebble in his shoe while marching to battle and threw it aside, at which point it grew in size out of “pride [at] having been touched by [him],” per Atlas Obscura. Another story suggests that Arthur clashed with a giant whose elbows left massive impressions in the earth when he fell in battle.
Myths aside, the Neolithic tomb has long mystified experts and the public alike. Now, reports James Thomas for the Hereford Times, the first-ever excavation of the site is poised to shed light on its enigmatic history.
Researchers from the University of Manchester and English Heritage, the charity that cares for the monument, are unlikely to unearth the remains of the legendary king. But they do hope to find traces of the actual Neolithic Britons who built and used the chambered tomb. Though archaeologists initially suspected that Arthur’s Stone formed part of a wedge-shaped stone cairn like those found in South Wales and the Cotswolds, recent excavations indicate otherwise.
“I think it has considerable potential,” Julian Thomas, an archaeologist at the University of Manchester, tells the London Times’ Jack Blackburn. “It’s a monument of an entirely different kind to the one that we’d imagined.”
Per a statement, only the inner chamber of the tomb—made up of nine upright stones topped by a massive capstone weighing more than 25 tons—survives today. A previous dig conducted outside of the monument showed that Arthur’s Stone extended into a field to the south and underwent two distinct phases of construction. READ MORE...
Wednesday, July 6
Twice as Much
The problem with inflation is that expenses go up but income does not... For many of us, we are making sufficient income that while inflation is annoying, it is not a financial problem... therefore, we just ride it out and try not bitching about the small stuff in our lives...
For those who are wealthy, it is not even annoying because they are comfortable with paying more than something is really worth and expect to be over-charged for goods and services...
But for the rest of us, inflation is a problem and has a negative impact on every single member of our families... and yet, those in power and/or those in a leadership position, don't seem to give a shit about how inflation may be harming some Americans...
- We want to BITCH about ABORTION
- We want to BITCH about the gays and lesbians and trans not getting what they deserve
- We want to BITCH about slavery and how blacks were treated
- We want to BITCH about WHITE SUPREMACY and advantage
BUT WE DON'T GIVE A RAT'S ASS ABOUT THE POOR PEOPLE
88% of Americans Say US On The Wrong Track
Nearly 9 in 10 Americans say the country is headed on the wrong track, according to a survey from Monmouth University Poll released on Tuesday.
The survey found that just 10 percent said the country is headed in the right direction — an all-time low since the pollster began asking the question in 2013 — while 88 percent said it is on the wrong track.
The proportion of respondents who said the country is on the wrong track jumped by 9 percentage points from when the question was asked in May, which was also a record at the time.
Only 6 percent of Republicans said the country is headed in the right direction, compared to 18 percent of Democrats. Ninety-two percent of Republicans said the country has gotten off on the wrong track, as do 91 percent of independents and 8 in 10 Democrats.
Older Americans were more likely to believe the country is headed in the right direction.
Sixteen percent of those aged 55 and older said the U.S. is headed in the right direction, compared to 8 percent of those aged 35 to 54 and 5 percent of those aged 18 to 34.
Monmouth conducted interviews both before and after the Supreme Court voted late last month to overturn Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey, ending the constitutional right to abortion. READ MORE...
Are You Experienced?
Qualilty of Life - Part III
There are serveral key terms in the quality of life description from Part I... and, we explored three of them in Part II, and now we will explore the remaining ones:
- Position in life
- context of culture
- context of value systems
- goals
- expectations
- standards
- concerns
- Do we have enough money to do this?
- Have we saved enough money?
- How healthy are we?
- What are COVID?
- What about terrorism?
- What about crime and violence?
















