#learning something new
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redrikki · 2 days ago
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Younger writers. Please, just know that you could not skip to different songs on a cassette tape, that’s CDs. With tapes you pressed fast forward or rewind and prayed.
Also, VHS tapes did not have menu screens. Your only options were play, fast forward, rewind, pause, stop, or eject.
Y’all are making me feel like the crypt keeper here, I’m begging you 😭
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littlepawz · 8 months ago
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Photographer Tony Austin was at the tail-end of a 3-hour nature walk recently when a murder of crows landed nearby. When one of the crows started “acting strangely,” Austin began photographing it.
Unbelievable but true!
Anting is a behavior in which crows land on an anthill and allow ants to infest their feathers. The ants then spray formic acid on their feathers. This acid will act as an insecticide, fungicide, and bactericide that will rid the bird of all its disease-causing pathogens!
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sweetbunpura · 4 months ago
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The eating hearts and livers thing technically belongs to the Korean Gumiho, or Kumiho, not the Japanese Kitsune, and are almost always seen as evil so......
Oh.
Oh, I can see how they would've gotten interchanged like that. They are closely related.
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wondermutt20 · 6 months ago
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"Try to learn something about everything and everything about something."
Thomas Henry Huxley - (1825-1895) - English Biologist and Anthropologist
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in-out-left-right · 3 months ago
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08/10/24
what i want to do: start learning how to sew
what's stopping me: i'm afraid of injuring myself with the sewing machine (that thing goes FAST), i'm afraid of wasting fabric, i'm afraid that i won't just 'get it' on the first try (i remember trying to sew years ago but i couldnt sew straight, couldn't keep my work neat, etc), i need a 'perfect' first project
why those reasons are stupid: it's not like the machine has one speed setting - i can just lightly step on the pedal and it'll go slow. we've got plenty of scrap fabric, i can practice on that, and i can probably unpick the stitches to use the fabric again. i may not 'get it' on the first try but i won't 'get it' at all if i never even start, because that's literally how you learn new things. any first project is 'perfect', bc all of them are firsts. just start!
what i'm starting with: minimal machine sewing experience and no idea what i'm going to make/how i'm going to start learning. however, my mom sews, so i've got access to all the materials i need (i think) and someone that can help me
reblogging with results/progress before the end of the day!
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h2llish · 1 month ago
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there are so many types of gull's what the hell
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ridiculous-hibiscus · 2 months ago
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Studies of pearls
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spitefullysweet · 4 months ago
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🪡👻 What a difference the proper stabilizer makes. 👻🪡
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fictional-whore-06 · 7 months ago
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congrats on doing a thing today! is it something you'd like to talk about?
Hi! Thank you! I'd love to talk about!
I started learning how to skateboard! I had bought an electric long board to help me get outside and get some more exercise. And even though it's electric and moves forward on its own, its still take some skill to learn. And today I started learning! I got all the way to turning without assistance. Tho it's still hard to get up on it without holding on to something.
I am very proud of myself for starting!
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toasty-draws-stuff · 1 year ago
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ISRAEL AND PALESTINE
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Yes, i know that conflict is going on and so I drew both of them!
I support Israel but whoever is a palestine supporter than, I hope all of our problems will be solved.
The government is just in their perspective, or as i could say their POV.
Everyone haves a reason why they do it. We just have to understand it in their own perspective.
One example is H!tler. We can see that hes the worst dictator but in reality all he wanted to do is to make his country better. He wanted to show that his country can be change instead of DEMOCRACY, what caused his country to corrupt . He wanted to be a historical firgue, which he is but in the bad side.
We shouldn't hate each other saying that one is wrong and the pther is right. Is just we have different perspective and POV.
If any of followers of mines are palestine-supporters, I don't mind and i will not hate you. We just have different opinións. I will not Block or Report you, I am just going to respect and share the love of God to you.
May you guys have a nice day/night!
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aestheticera · 6 months ago
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Blossom 🌸🌊 28 Days Challenge #1
Start date : 29 June 2024
🌪️🪐🌷
Physical 🏋️
Wake up at 7 am and go to bed at 11 pm.
Exercise 20 mins (>70%)
Drink 3 bottles
Mental 🕯️
Journaling Day and Night 🌃
Read 10-12 pages every day with notes.
Learn English Advance ( 1-2 tasks)
1 podcast everyday with notes up Or article .
Start the course on 1 skill of your liking.
Spiritual 🌷
Yoga class everyday.
Meditation 2 times (Joe dispenza) + youtube one .
Breathwork 5-10 mins in morning.
Affirmations 369
Pray + Grateful 🫧.
More tips ☕
Limit the screen time as much as you can.
Be aware and mindful of everything you do.
Remember discipline over regret.
This time is precious so don't lose it.
It's possible and we can do this .
And like this we will blossom, blossom into the best of our versions with the feathers and free will to fly as far as we can .🦋
💟🌸🕯️
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starqueen87 · 1 year ago
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Solomon Brown: First African American Employee at the Smithsonian Institution
Solomon G. Brown (c.1829–1906) was the first African American employee at the Smithsonian Institution, serving for fifty-four years from 1852 to 1906. During his time at the Smithsonian, he held many titles and performed many duties in service to the Institution. He served under the first three Smithsonian Secretaries, Joseph Henry, Spencer Fullerton Baird, and Samuel P. Langley. He formed a deep personal friendship with Baird which is evident in the letters featured on this page. He also served his community in Anacostia, a part of Washington, DC, and was a prominent advocate of African American progress.
"I have engaged in almost Every Branch of work that is usual and unusual about S.I.," Solomon G. Brown.
These words, written to Secretary Baird on August 12, 1862, encapsulate his long and eclectic career at the Smithsonian Institution. In 1902, he wrote a poem commemorating his fifty years at the Smithsonian —spanning the Institution's formative years. Brown, born a free man when slavery was legal in Washington, DC, joined the staff of the Smithsonian shortly after it was founded in 1846.
Born around 1829, Brown was one of six children. With the unfortunate death of his father in 1833, Brown's chance of attending school and receiving a formal education was over. However, Brown began working for Lambert Tree, assistant postmaster with the DC post office. It was in this capacity that Brown first met Joseph Henry, the Smithsonian's first Secretary. Tree detailed Brown to work with Henry, Samuel B. Morse, and Alfred Vail, while they developed the first magnetic telegraph that ran from DC to Baltimore, Maryland.
In 1852, Brown was hired as a general laborer by the Smithsonian under Henry. Initially, he built exhibit cases, cleaned and moved furniture for the Institution, and shortly became the supervisor of a small group of Smithsonian workers. While working, Brown developed a close relationship with then Assistant Secretary Baird, a naturalist and later second Secretary of the Institution. The two worked together until Baird's death in 1887. Baird trusted Brown implicitly and when out of town, relied on Brown to be his "eyes and ears" of the Institution. Brown and Baird frequently corresponded about the operations of the Smithsonian, city events, and their personal lives, sharing a wry sense of humor about life. From these letters we learn that Brown entertained visitors, handled the mail, made travel arrangements, performed clerical duties, and paid the household staff for the Baird family in addition to his other numerous Smithsonian duties.
Brown also wrote to Baird during the Civil War, reporting on the events occurring around DC and the effects felt by the Smithsonian Institution. He described the dangers to Baird's property and delays in communication from Washington. In 1864, Brown wrote of the Confederate march on the city and his own exemption from the military draft. These letters provide the unique views of a free, African American man on the progress of the Civil War as it raged around him.
Although he lacked a formal education, Brown was considered a Renaissance man. While working for Baird, he educated himself in the field of natural history. He illustrated maps and specimens for many of Baird's lectures, as well as his own talks on topics such as "The Social Habits of Insects," and delivered them to church organizations and civic groups. Not only did he excel as a naturalist, but he was an illustrator, lecturer, philosopher, and poet. Brown also read his poetry, which focused on religion and the social issues of the day, to local audiences and civic organizations. After Baird's death in 1887, Brown served as a clerk for the Smithsonian International Exchange Service, distributing scholarly publications around the world.
Brown's activities also reached beyond the walls of the Smithsonian. Within his own Anacostia (Hillsdale) community, Brown was viewed as a leader. Brown and his wife Lucinda hosted picnics for their local community, one of which was attended by Frederick Douglass. He was elected to the DC House of Delegates, served as superintendent of the Pioneer Sabbath School and the North Washington Mission Sunday school, and was a trustee of the 15th Street Presbyterian Church. He was committed to bettering education and gaining opportunities for African American citizens.
A man of limitless energy, Solomon G. Brown continued to work at the Smithsonian, write and draw, as well as serve his community until his retirement on February 14, 1906. Not long afterward, Brown died at his home on June 24, 1906. Over a century has passed, yet Brown's devotion to the foundation of the Smithsonian is still remembered today. In 2004, several trees were planted around the National Museum of Natural History in his honor.
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aid-xenostar · 9 months ago
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Hey! In my experience, sessions are usually about 3 hours or so, but you can check with the person running the game (DM) to see if that's how long theirs will be as well. You will usually be continuing the same story throughout each session, and the "endpoint" is usually just when the story seems to reach a satisfying conclusion. It takes quite a while. What sort of unfamiliar terms are you finding?
I think the most common I've seen is homebrew; Some games allow it, others don't. I think there was another term like a West server or something, but I don't even really remember what I saw. And the amount of different systems from other rpgs seems REALLY big.
Didn't realize people play Tabletop for overall "long term" and I assume friend groups are maybe common (or to be formed) considering they're playing a story together on multiple sessions.
I've rested so I'm not as overwhelmed BUT the plus is I've found a game. We plan to discuss details this coming week, not sure what to expect but will probably be intimidated again😁. So that's nice and I do appreciate the help.
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in-out-left-right · 2 months ago
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14/10/24
what i want to do: honestly, just to stop doomscrolling. i'm thinking to do this by doing some language learning
what's stopping me: i've been doomscrolling for hours, it's getting late, the perfectionism and fear of failure has been kicking in lately and i'm so scared of actually finding it hard
why those are stupid reasons: it's not actually 'getting late', i have at least 2 hours before i sleep. 3 hours, realistically. perfectionism and fear of failure - do i even have to say anything? learning is supposed to be hard & that's what makes it worth it, i'm not going to learn shit if i don't learn shit, and if it IS too hard for me then getting an early start at learning little parts will ALWAYS get me further than not learning at ALL.
what i'm starting with: literally infinite resources out there. live laugh internet. for reference i'm learning japanese (advanced beginner to low intermediate i think) and swedish (complete beginner).
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elitheaceofalltrades · 1 year ago
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New Skill Series - Crochet Part 6
Hello everyone!
Life is less hectic now which means I have had time to crochet! So we're back to our regularly scheduled programming.
This is Crochet Lesson 5 Take 2! In case you missed it, Take 1 was a bit of a mess. Things went wrong and I had no clue where things went wrong or how to fix them. Thankfully, I do not exist in a vacuum! Both @legendarycollectionjellyfish3 and @caseyscozycorner were kind enough to comment and let me know their thoughts. You were both right! My core problem was my tension. I didn't have to go up a hook size but as seen below I was able to crochet a successful Moss/Linen stitch sample! The reason my first attempt curled was that because my stitches were so tight, I couldn't tell the difference between my chain space and my SC space so I was putting the hook in both instead of just the chain space, therefore dramatically increasing the number of stitches. At least I think that's why it curled. Thank you again for taking a moment to comment on my post because it really encouraged me to relax and try again!
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So yeah, here's Linen/Moss stitch take 2! I'm glad I got some outside perspective from more experienced crocheters because I genuinely thought this was going to end up as like 3 failed attempts and then giving up to come back to at a later time. Mainly because I couldn't figure out what went wrong. It's wild to think how much tension makes a difference in a piece. I think I have a better grasp on tension for crochet now but I guess we'll find out as time goes on!
~Eli
Ace of All Trades, Pro at None😆
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