#and he's integral to a 1 round Bedrock
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I've finally finished this little fella: Rabbid Luigi. Started in 2023, but I spent a lot of 2024 working on other projects, so I wouldn't say it was a super long make in terms of actual time taken.
Massive shout out to https://plushify.net for being the only reason I could figure out such a (for me) complicated pattern. I learnt a lot.
The clothes are added over the top of a basic rabbid body and are technically removable, though it relies on stretching the neck of his tshirt which I don't want to do super often. The hat's a bit big, but I think it suits his aesthetic.
Rabbid Luigi is a good character in Sparks of Hope and I will die on this hill.
#rabbid luigi#plush#mario + rabbids#sparks of hope#mario + rabbids sparks of hope#smb#rabbids#things made by me#if you haven't used aquanox on a max-target discruptor#i don't know what to tell you#it's incredibly satisfying#and he's integral to a 1 round Bedrock#plus being generally useful for Wiggler and Metalheads
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Fred McFeely Rogers was a shy, somewhat awkward, and sometimes bullied child growing up in the 1930s. After going to college for what he called his “first language”—music—he prepared to enter seminary and study for the ministry. But on a visit home for Easter, he saw television for the first time. He hated it—people on the program were throwing pies in each other’s faces, and Fred found that demeaning. Nonetheless, he sensed instantly television’s capacity for connection and enrichment. That moment changed his life—and the lives of millions of Americans.
Fred Rogers, of course, went on to create Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, which aired nationally for over 30 years. Beginning in 1968 and continuing until (and beyond) the end of production in 2001, untold millions of children grew up under Mister Rogers’ steady gaze and faithful care. Those children now make up much of the American public, and now many of them are flocking to theaters to see the documentary of Misters Rogers’ life, Won’t You Be My Neighbor?
Somehow, over 15 years after his death, we seem unable to stop turning back to Mister Rogers again and again—with a feature film that will begin filming in Pittsburgh this fall, and a biography that will be released in September. It seems we sense that Mister Rogers, whom we used to know so well, who used to seem to know us so well, may have something to say to us in our divided, contentious, often-painful cultural and political climate. Here are some of Mister Rogers’ teachings that could help us weather today’s ups and downs, stand up for what we believe in, and come together across our differences.
1. It’s okay to feel whatever it is that we feel
From 1955 to 1961, Fred Rogers was puppeteer and organist for The Children’s Corner, a popular, live, local Pittsburgh show that he co-created with Josie Carey. During his years on that show, Fred often spent his lunch hour taking classes—first at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary (then called Western Theological Seminary) and later at the University of Pittsburgh, where he studied child development. It was through his studies that he met child psychologist Dr. Margaret McFarland, a member of the Pitt medical school faculty.
Margaret and Fred became good friends, and Margaret worked as chief psychological consultant for Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood from the time it began until her death in 1988. It was Margaret who helped Fred get in touch with his own childhood memories, who helped him anchor the scripts, songs, and set of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood in child development theory, and who said to him repeatedly, “Anything human is mentionable, and anything mentionable is manageable.”
In other words, whatever we feel, it’s okay to feel it—even if our feelings seem chaotic and complex. And naming our feelings, speaking them out loud, and exploring them with those we love are all good ways, as Mister Rogers might say, of growing on the inside.
2. But our feelings aren’t an excuse for bad behavior
The famous video of Mister Rogers’ 1969 testimony before a Senate subcommittee shows up on my social media feeds every time government funding for PBS or NPR is threatened. But while my friends and I are busy trying to score political points, it’s easy to miss the substance of the testimony itself.
The young Fred, just a year into the national run of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, doesn’t talk, as I once assumed, about ensuring that educational television is equally available in all zip codes. He sits calmly, speaks slowly, and talks about feelings.
Specifically, he talks about anger. He quotes, at length, his song, “What Do You Do with the Mad That You Feel?” which gives suggestions for how to channel anger: “punch a bag,” “pound some clay or some dough,” “round up friends for a game of tag.” His favorite part of the song, it seems, talks about what he calls the “good feeling of control”:
It’s great to be able to stop when you’ve planned a thing that’s wrong,
and be able to do something else instead and think this song: I can stop when I want to, can stop when I wish.
I can stop, stop, stop anytime.
And what a good feeling to feel like this,
and know that the feeling is really mine,
know that there’s something deep inside
that helps us become what we can.
For a girl can be someday a woman,
and a boy can be someday a man.
Mister Rogers and his Neighborhood constantly affirmed the coexistence of self-expression and respect for self and others, and this was in no way a passing interest—the song that Fred quoted in his Senate testimony appeared in 38 episodes of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood, including an episode filmed 30 years later, in 1999.
Mister Rogers and his Neighborhood constantly affirmed the coexistence of self-expression and respect for self and others.
When Fred was asked in an interview toward the end of his career about television’s responsibility to children, he replied, “To give them everything that we possibly can to help them grow in healthy ways, and to help them to recognize that they can be angry and not have to hurt themselves or anybody else, that they can have the full range of feelings and express them in very healthy, positive ways.”
3. Other people are different from us—and just as complex as we are
In a time when people on the left and the right dread family holidays with each other in equal measure, we’re hyperaware of differences between people. Our media diets, our social media feeds, and even our in-person relationships lock us into silos of agreement, where it’s easy to demonize and oversimplify those with whom we disagree.
But Mister Rogers showed us another way. As if he had spent a Thanksgiving or two around a family table, he wrote a song that said, “It’s the people you like the most who can make you feel maddest. It’s the people you like the most who can manage to make you feel baddest.”
In another song sung frequently on the Neighborhood, he reminded his television neighbors,
Sometimes people are good, and they do just what they should,
but the very same people who are good sometimes
are the very same people who are bad sometimes.
It’s funny, but it’s true.
It’s the same, isn’t it for me…
Isn’t it the same for you?
However tempted we may be to call others “bad,” however tempted we may be to call ourselves “good,” all of us are more than we seem. Fred Rogers’ favorite quote from his favorite book was this: “L’essentiel est invisible pour les yeux.” In English: “What is essential is invisible to the eye.”
4. It’s our responsibility to care for the most vulnerable
Mister Rogers was as gentle and loving in real life as on screen, but he also had an iron will and perfectionistic standards, and he kindly and firmly demanded excellence from himself and from all who worked with and on behalf of children.
Fred Rogers built his life and work on a bedrock of conviction. Though he studied and appreciated many religious traditions, he was, at his center, a Christian deeply committed to the values he read in Christian scripture. He believed in—and worked every day to emulate—a Jesus who welcomes children, loves us just the way we are, and calls us to love self and neighbor.
An ordained Presbyterian minister with a one-of-a-kind charge to minister to children and families through the mass media, Fred took seriously the scripture mandate to care for the most vulnerable. He worked with prisons to create child-friendly spaces for family visitation, sat on hospital boards to minimize trauma in children’s health care, visited people who were sick or dying, and wrote countless letters to the lonely.
In a 1991 speech to the Association of Family and Conciliation Courts, an organization of lawyers, judges, educators, and counselors whose work included arbitration of custody disputes, he said,
“The problem is that when we deal with a group of people—one or more of whom is a child—we just can’t be impartial. None of us who have anything to do with families with young children can.”
Just last month, Megyn Kelly asked Fred’s wife Joanne Rogers what Fred might say to America in 2018. Joanne replied, “It would be about the children. It would be about the immigrants who are having children taken—the children themselves. It breaks my heart, and I know it breaks everybody’s heart.”
5. We can work to make a difference right where we are
As Michael G. Long points out in his book, Peaceful Neighbor: Discovering the Countercultural Mister Rogers, Fred’s work for the greater good did not take the form of marching, rallying, or picketing. He occasionally wrote a note to a member of Congress, and of course he testified before that Senate subcommittee.
More often, however, Fred did his work in and through his own context. Fred didn’t march against Jim Crow; he cast black actors on his program. He didn’t travel to Birmingham or Selma in support of integration; he set up a pool and invited Officer Clemmons (played by black, gay actor François Clemmons) to soak his feet and share his towel.
Marching, writing, calling, and organizing are all good ways to make change, but Fred’s life reminds us that we can work for the well-being of the most vulnerable wherever we may be, in whatever work we do. In other words, “There are many ways to say ‘I love you.’”
Fred’s life reminds us that we can work for the well-being of the most vulnerable wherever we may be, in whatever work we do.
6. It’s important to make time to care for ourselves
Fred was a vegetarian, he didn’t smoke, and he rarely drank alcohol. When he traveled, whether for business or pleasure, he never changed his watch—or his personal schedule—to local time.
Wherever he was, he began each morning with prayer and Bible study, followed by lap swimming at the local athletic club. Swimming, as Mister Rogers sometimes shared with his television neighbors, was a way he could express emotion, especially anger. What he didn’t tell his television neighbors was that he often stood beside the pool and sang a quiet hymn before diving in. Fred also made time, almost every day, to sit and play the piano.
Fred spent his life giving of himself—on screen and off, to those he knew very well and those he met only in passing or in the pages of a letter. But he could only do so because he was absolutely committed to doing what he needed to take care of himself. Making time for self-sustenance meant he had more to give away.
7. We are neighbors
Mister Rogers didn’t call us “acquaintances” or “friends”; he didn’t call us “boys and girls” or “ladies and gentlemen.” He called us neighbors.
When Mister Rogers called us neighbors, when he hosted us in his own Neighborhood for over 30 years, he was calling us—gently but firmly—out of our structures of power and our silos of sameness, into lives of mercy and care for one another.
Admittedly, maybe he was overly optimistic. Maybe he was calling us something better than we actually were. But maybe he believed that if he got to us while we were young, if he told us, again and again, that we were good, that we were lovable, and that we could extend mercy, maybe we could grow into real neighbors to one another.
Maybe we still can.
Lyrics by Fred Rogers provided courtesy of The Fred Rogers Company.
This article was adapted from Greater Good, the online magazine of UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center, one of Mindful’s partners. View the original article.
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The post Seven Lessons from Mister Rogers That Can Help Americans Be Neighbors Again appeared first on Mindful.
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Apple, Health Care, Thingking Different, and Why it’s Matter
Apple Integrated has exploded to become one of the most envied and most useful businesses on the planet. Its items are precious and common by a lot of their customers. The company produced almost $26 billion on profits of $108 million in earnings. While doctors yet others employed in healthcare examine the classes the medical institution may study from these kinds of corporate achievements, the discussions more often than not rotate round the guarantee of data systems, for example digital record-keeping or digital prescription publishing, and also the requirement for improved utilization of these in medical training. Although these systems are essential, the absolute most useful training from Apple’s achievement is just a demo of the following requirement for healthcare companies to psychological relate solely to our people and also the ability of sympathy. It's well known that Wozniak and Steve-Jobs constructed the very first Apple pc in David Jobs’ storage; what's never as well known is the fact that guide and they rapidly introduced a next partner to participate the organization. By composing a-one site declaration titled “The Apple Advertising Philosophy” he started. This viewpoint pressured just three crucial aspects of bedrock organization concepts; most critical and the very first was sympathy. Mister. Markkula acknowledged that nothing might assist Apple succeed around a powerful psychological link between its own goods and its customers. Apple’s professionals decided on a custom to supervise styles for that Apple manufacturer soon after Markkula was triggered panel. His leading theory wasn't the uses function”; instead, and he was Esslinger, and similar to Markkula’s viewpoint, it had been “form uses emotion”. He first of all, attemptedto style items and customers for connecting mentally. This same have to relate solely to our people is shared by healthcare companies. Doctor sympathy is related to decreased sign load, greater individual satisfaction prices, decreased doctor burnout, as well as greater medical results in-patients. For example, acquaintances and Hojat lately confirmed greater diabetes administration in-patients handled by empathic doctors. Within their research, sufferers of doctors with large sympathy ratings were a lot more prone to accomplish great handle of the diabetes than were the sufferers of physicians with lower sympathy ratings (1). Likewise, scientists also have discovered greater diabetes handle, enhanced medication conformity, and eating and workout conduct in diabetics handled by more patient-centered professionals(2). Obviously doctor sympathy may perform with a sizable part in assisting sufferers handle their illnesses better. Not just may specialist sympathy enhance results, satisfaction also enhances. Ellie and his acquaintances in research of 550 individuals exhibited a between doctor sympathy and equally greater individual submission and greater individual satisfaction prices(3). Moreover, Tiny et. al., whilst not concentrating on sympathy, analyzed general-practice sufferers and confirmed that individuals handled by patient-centered practitioners—generally physicians who're empathic—had a lowered load of signs and lower prices of recommendation to professionals(4). This outcome is comparable to that in learning sufferers suffering from melanoma found. Doctor sympathy was related to higher individual pleasure and lower degrees of psychological stress(5). Like an heir myself, of repeated melanoma, I will personally attest to the importance of decreasing stress in working with the good and the bad of the lengthy street with disease and its own affiliation with conformity with prolonged treatment ideas. Like a training doctor, I will also greatly enjoy how the physician encounter additionally enhances. Doctors who show sympathy toward their sufferers are compensated with lower prices of burnout and increased skilled fulfillment. Shanafelt and colleagues analyzed interior medicine citizens and determined “[H]igh psychological wellbeing was related to improved citizen empathy”(6). in training doctors, this affiliation hasbeen seen. Burnout among doctors hasbeen related to equally a sense of meaning in exercise and an inability of loss or psychologically relate solely to sufferers. It’s been shown that treatments to enhance burnout usually additionally enhanced physicians’ capability to empathize using their individuals(7). As you may anticipate, doctors encountering large skilled fulfillment also provide sufferers who experience more pleased with their treatment(8). The hyperlink is sympathy. Empathic doctors garner fulfillment and meaning from their therapy of sufferers while these sufferers that are same experience more attached to their managing specialist and revel in greater fulfillment prices greater therapy results, along with a lower load of signs. Individual relationships and these great results, consequently, provide the managing doctors more fulfillment. In conversations of doctor sympathy, the query that is main element happens to be: could it be discovered, or is an inherited characteristic like their eye-color? When learning the sympathy of students hints for this question arose. Scientists in 2007 documented that pupil sympathy toward sufferers was badly linked with evolving decades of instruction(9). A longitudinal follow-up simply this season, research was subsequently documented. Disturbingly, this research confirmed that students’ capability to empathize really rejected because they advanced through their decades of medical college instruction(10). Leaving the serious concerns this outcome boosts regarding medical training aside, it will claim that empathic capability, atleast simply, is just a discovered (or unlearned) conduct. Riess and her acquaintances subsequently experimented with reply this query more completely by instruction otolaryngologists in empathic conduct, but her research depended on doctors’ evaluation of the empathy rather than the patient’s evaluation of the physicians(11), and doctors are, regrettably, bad judges of the own sympathy. Nevertheless, a far more current study of citizens and guys from surgery, medication, anesthesiology, psychiatry, ophthalmology, and orthopedics unveiled that doctors who obtained simply three 60-minute sympathy education segments were considered more empathic doctors than were the handle physicians within the research(12). Although it can be done this instruction that is empathy simply trained the citizen doctors empathy's external indicators; actually that might be essential as patients’ to managing doctors further psychological reaction may likely alter their possess psychological connection that is doctors’ to their people with time. Based these outcomes, sympathy ought to be seen as a primary proficiency of medical companies on, and its own instruction ought to be a necessity. This could result in a far more psychologically satisfying connection between many doctors as well as their individuals using individual satisfaction prices and its resulting elevated doctor, greater results, and decreased individual signs. Plus, these enhancements is possible without elevated individual screening, or costly new engineering or recommendations. Medical exercise wills enhance and really should be seriously inserted within the tradition of each and every fresh healthcare supply business, such as for example patient-centered medical houses and ACOs. And, healthcare companies must have a comparatively simple period of it. In the end, Apple forges an association to its clients through steel and plastic bits of equipment. We are able to provide a supportive individual connection throughout their occasions of need to sufferers.
There’s many article about Health in Ziekte that make sense to read.
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