#untried mani 47
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/303f0ae74d41b97a22fffcde341d3429/1fdfd4a530f99d17-2d/s540x810/8f47d04919d67c8f473a9af5831bda9ce786cd2a.jpg)
Christine’s Nail Art Therapy 💅🏻💅🏻💅🏻
My A2Z Untried Challenge in the Wild!
Mani # 47 Last of the C Brands
Cuticula Link in the Park
Kingdom of Legend, 2021
Perfect backdrop for monstera leaves
🪴 Stamping Plate
Hit the Bottle Match It Up
Clear Jelly Stamper 129
🪴Stamping Polish
Maniology Lilypad
Painted Polish Midnight Mischief
#notd#nailsofinstagram#naturalnails#nailstamping#nailsoftheday#nailart#supportindies#untried#my a2z untried challenge#untried mani 47
13 notes
·
View notes
Link
Partial list:
1. 100-year-lifespan We’re more likely than ever to live past a century. Whether this becomes a blessing or a curse for society and business depends on how much we can prepare for it.
2. 5G Self-driving cars, robotics and smart cities, to name a few, will be supercharged through the 5G wireless network. It’s the next step in mobile internet connectivity – and it’s here. Almost.
4. Algorithmic justice More machines than ever can recognise us, but they inadvertently discriminate on race, gender and more. People like Joy Buolamwini are trying to fix these built-in biases.
6. Autocomplete We’re starting to trust AI systems to write our emails for us. Is this time-saving tool changing how we communicate?
7. Automated hiring – and firing AI can screen your job application – the question is whether it should also be allowed to scan your social media, analyse your facial expressions and even fire you.
8. Biohacking Fasting, micro-dosing, supplements, some go to great lengths to boost productivity – even if the validity of such approaches is unproven.
12. Car-free cities Oslo is the latest city to make its central zone car-free. Though some diehard drivers and business owners have been sceptical, the benefits are substantial.
18. Degrowth movement Economic growth is leading to over-consumption and climate change. Degrowth argues that shrinking our economies can have benefits.
28. Flygskam Domestic air travel has dipped in Sweden as climate-conscious travellers opt for the train. If ‘flight shame’ becomes the norm, it could have significant consequences for business travel.
34. Gig reality Self-employment is more common than ever, but some are finding that the freedom of being your own boss comes with a price.
38. Hidden disabilities Some 700 million people have dyslexia – but innovation in website design and devices like smart pens could make workplaces more accessible.
41. Humanics More jobs will be automated as artificial intelligence advances. Here’s why embracing a learning philosophy may help you stay employed.
47. JOMO As the antithesis of FOMO, the ‘joy of missing out’ symbolises relief from the breathless and guilt-laden need to be perennially switched on and constantly productive.
55. Longevity economy The idea of ‘oldness’ stifles business thinking. Embracing elderly workers alongside younger generations could combat what economic doomsayers call a ‘demographic time bomb’.
60. Microbreaks Taking regular miniature pauses from intensive work – even if they last just seconds – can yield big benefits.
63. Nanoinfluencers Big-name influencers can connect with millions in a single post, but there’s a whole new industry evolving for creators with much fewer followers but who have a more authentic or approachable voice.
72. Platform co-operatives Tech giants like Uber and Deliveroo rely on gig workers, but draw heavy criticism for shifting risk onto their armies of independent contractors. A global movement is trying to build alternatives, combining the platform model with established principles of worker ownership.
79. Radical candour A way of giving feedback that draws a happy medium between the blunt, harsh management of the 1980s and the touchy-feely compassion of the 21st Century.
80. Remote workforce Some cities are paying people to move in, hoping new remote workers can boost local economies and populations.
81. Reverse mentoring There’s plenty for older generations to learn from their younger counterparts. But some cultures are more resistant to the idea than others.
82. Right-to-repair movement Many companies make it hard for you to fix the gadgets you buy from them. Some people want to change that.
88. Soft skills Employees need abilities computers and automated systems don’t have – like creativity, adaptability and persuasion. Yet recruiters are struggling to find these kinds of candidates.
90. Superapps Wildly popular in Asia, apps that can do everything from ordering rides to paying for everything are changing the way that people live and do business.
91. Superjobs If you already feel like you’re doing three jobs at once, the superjobs of the future will make certain it stays that way.
92. Telepresence Rather than giving a robot the smarts to do a task by itself, it’s easier to let someone guide a dumb robot from afar. This move is going to upend who does what jobs where and when.
96. Universal Basic Income A no-strings-attached income has been advocated by Thomas More and others. The idea has gained new popularity amid the automation of jobs, but it’s still untried on a major level.
98. Unretirement Pensioners are re-entering the workforce – some out of choice and some out of necessity. But can their need for jobs be accommodated?
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Real Madrid: Is Zinedine Zidane struggling second time around? - Guillem Balague column
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/real-madrid-is-zinedine-zidane-struggling-second-time-around-guillem-balague-column/
Real Madrid: Is Zinedine Zidane struggling second time around? - Guillem Balague column
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/f3c2dbb9e61bd8927df8768103821e91/8b47b2c66500def4-2e/s500x750/617607becddb4be8fc1885b5f4c00c5e9acd5f63.jpg)
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/f3c2dbb9e61bd8927df8768103821e91/8b47b2c66500def4-2e/s500x750/617607becddb4be8fc1885b5f4c00c5e9acd5f63.jpg)
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/a6b807cf1e1d4bcf9cb18489dcd8aaff/8b47b2c66500def4-1e/s500x750/13cfab4abe2d8a2f8bedb6054ca7bed527f98c51.jpg)
Zinedine Zidane played for Real Madrid from 2001 to 2006 and originally managed them from 2016 to 2018
At the press launch of a TV series about himself last week, Sergio Ramos joked with journalists: “I have more seasons now with Amazon than I do with Real Madrid.”
The Spain centre-back has two years left on his contract at the Bernabeu but his club are not looking to renew it.
And while Ramos has been a constant presence at Real for 14 years, the uncertainty surrounding his future only adds to the increasing sense of instability around a club which has won four of the past six Champions Leagues.
Since Zinedine Zidane returned as manager towards the end of last season, his win percentage is below 50% and there has been little to suggest improvement since the start of this season.
Real still look unsettled and they are still inconsistent, worrying signs as they enter a two week-period in which they will face Paris St-Germain in the Champions League, as well as leaders Ateltico Madrid and Champions League qualifiers Sevilla in La Liga.
Moments such as these are nothing new at Real Madrid, a perennial soap opera providing tales of conspiracy, intrigue and passion and never failing to serve up one cliff-hanger after another, both on and off the pitch.
But as Europe’s perennial winners get their latest European campaign under way, is Zidane struggling to make the impact this time around, and is there a danger the Frenchman might not even be there come the next Champions League final?
Never go back? Zidane struggling to inspire on his return
Zidane and his family live in Madrid, which was one of the reasons he found it difficult to reject Perez’s request for him to return as manager
Zidane wrote himself out of the Real Madrid storyline when he quit after somehow winning the Champions League at the end of the 2017-18 season – his third title in a row. He felt there were big changes to make at the club and that he was not going to receive the backing he needed to implement them.
He might have chosen this time of self-imposed footballing exile as an opportunity to reflect on a fine career as both a player and a coach. He probably didn’t come across the words of poet Felix Dennis:
Never go back. Never go back.
Never surrender the future you’ve earned.
Keep to the track, to the beaten track.
Never return to the bridges you burned.
Nor did he take similar advice from people close to him. In March, he returned at the request of president Florentino Perez, who had previously tried to entice Mauricio Pochettino from Tottenham and the unemployed former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte.
Zidane took the job before the end of last season because they told him that, if he didn’t, Jose Mourinho would be the chosen one (more on that later). He was also promised he would be a major player in deciding who came in and who left. And that there would be plenty of changes.
There needed to be. Zidane’s last Champions League success flattered to deceive in a season when his side finished 17 points behind La Liga winners Barcelona.
But things have not improved. Since coming back, he has won seven of 15 league games, a win rate of 46.7%. Santiago Solari, the man he replaced, won 22 out of 32 games in charge, a win rate of 68.8%. That was significantly higher than Zidane’s but not high enough to earn the president’s confidence and the Argentine was dismissed after just four and a half months.
Key injuries to vital players such as Marco Asensio and Eden Hazard, a summer signing who found himself sidelined before kicking a ball for the club, have played their part in the lacklustre start.
But so have Zidane’s changeable tactics.
Only left-back Ferland Mendy, who joined from Lyon, looks to have hit the ground running. Luka Jovic – who arrived from Eintracht Frankfurt, where he was scoring for fun – has not looked like he has the quality to be an automatic starter. At least not in the opinion of Zidane, who has started him only once and then replaced him with midfielder Luka Modric after 68 minutes.
Real also signed some youngsters for big money – Eder Militao, 21, (£42.7m from Porto) and 18-year-old forward Rodrygo (£40.2m from Santos). The latter has been injured since pre-season, while the former has yet to feature.
Why Zidane appears to be losing his trump card
Zidane has never been considered a footballing Einstein as a coach, but his trump card at Real Madrid has always been the relationship he has enjoyed with his players. It is perceived by many as a rosy, peaceful, harmonious co-existence.
But there are signs those relationships are crumbling.
In deciding who should stay and who should go, the 47-year-old has not endeared himself to many of the Madrid faithful. They will see the sale to Atletico of Marcos Llorente, the nephew of the great Gento and a Blanco to the bone, as a sort of betrayal.
They will also be unimpressed with the loaning out to Sevilla of Reguilon, another product of the La Fabrica academy who could have slotted into the position held by Marcelo, who was 11kg over his optimum weight last season and has been struggling on that front ever since. And then there was the loan departure of Dani Ceballos, who could certainly be doing a job for the club in midfield, to Arsenal.
Zidane’s obsession with bringing in compatriot Paul Pogba has not been pretty to witness, not least because Manchester United never had any intention of selling him and Perez never seemed that keen on actually buying the 26-year-old.
The club had agreed terms with Tottenham’s Christian Eriksen and Ajax’s Donny van de Beek, but Zidane stopped the moves because Pogba was the midfielder he wanted.
The reality is that Zidane and the club were hoping to sell Isco, Gareth Bale and James Rodriguez, but no offers were forthcoming. For many, his use of those players is little more than a stick he is using to beat the president with by saying, basically: “You didn’t get me the player I wanted so now I’m going to have to use the players you wanted.”
Bizarrely, Bale’s lack of rapport with the manager has provoked precisely the kind of reaction that Zidane would have hoped for, with the Wales forward putting in some “I’ll show you” performances that have brought him two goals and one assist in three games. The downside is that it has also earned him a red card – thanks to two yellows collected in less than two minutes – and a one-match ban.
And finally, the club’s decision to sell goalkeeper Keylor Navas to Paris St-Germain was never something Zidane wanted either.
The general opinion at the Bernabeu is that the relationship between Zidane and Perez is not the best. A division between them is being created by their differences on Pogba and Navas, by the club’s failure to get rid of players the Frenchman did not want, and by the confusion over tactics – with the team lining up for one game with three at the back, the next in a 4-3-3 set-up and another as a 4-4-2.
Perez is frustrated at the lack of game time for some big-money signings and, for the first time in a while, the president feels he is not in complete control and the manager is not doing as he would like.
Zidane cannot be happy either, now finding himself with a squad of veterans combined with players untried at this level.
As a consequence, the Madrid media close to Perez are beginning to make mischief with criticisms of the coach.
When that happens, Zidane should know drastic things can happen.
Mourinho waiting in the wings
Florentino Perez (left) and Jose Mourinho were all smiles when they met at a Fifa congress in June
The name of Mourinho, who has rejected at least one big offer from China, has inevitably re-emerged in relation to the Real job.
Around the end of 2015, just as Rafael Benitez was struggling to win hearts and minds at the Bernabeu and before Mourinho joined Manchester United, Perez spoke to him with a view to discussing a return to the club.
Iker Casillas, one of the previous thorns in the side of the prickly Portuguese coach, was already gone. The goalkeeper was a sacrificial lamb, unceremoniously given away to Porto after a career that had, until then, been dedicated to two sides – his club and his country.
Only two problems remained: Cristiano Ronaldo and Ramos, the two players Mourinho blamed for his departure from Madrid.
Get rid of them, he told Perez, and we can talk.
Ronaldo is now at Juventus. One down, one to go.
I would not wager much on Ramos receiving a contract extension any time soon.
Read More
0 notes
Photo
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/d43ccc69431884f66d469502c81967d3/tumblr_prlqerO6OK1y9h4kzo1_540.jpg)
New Post has been published on https://quoteswithpicture.com/90-success-quotes-you-ought-to-have-tattooed-on-your-arm/
90 Success Quotes You Ought to Have Tattooed On Your Arm!
![Tumblr media](https://64.media.tumblr.com/d43ccc69431884f66d469502c81967d3/tumblr_inline_prlqer1Mhj1wbavqb_540.jpg)
Today we have 90 of the Beefiest Success & Motivation Quotes you should have tattooed on your body.
Add these quotes on your wallpaper, iPhone, or anywhere else you’d read through them and live by these religiously. Without a doubt these quotes are also ideal for tattoos to motivate you for extreme success!
Below are 90 Success Quotes You Should Have Tattooed On Your Arm:
1. “When it looks impossible and you are ready to quit, victory is near!” ��� Tony Robbins
2. “Today I will do what others won’t, so tomorrow I can accomplish what others can’t.” – Jerry Rice
3. “Losers quit when they’re tired. Winners quit when they’ve won.” – Unknown
4. “The Man Who Has Confidence In Himself Gains The Confidence Of Others.” – Hasidic Proverb
5. “To get something you never had, you have to do something you’ve never done.” – Unknown
6. “Some people dream of success… others stay awake to achieve it.” – Unknown
7. ”You miss 100 percent of the shots you don’t take” – Wayne Gretzky
8. “Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life.” – Steve Jobs
9. “Some people want it to happen, some wish it would happen, others make it happen.” – Michael Jordan
10. “It took us so long to realize that a purpose of human life, no matter who is controlling it, is to love whoever is around to be loved.” – Kurt Vonnegut
11. “There are only two ways to live your life. One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle.” – Albert Einstein
12. “You may be disappointed if you fail, but you are doomed if you don’t try.” – Beverly Sills
13. “Do what you can with what you’ve got wherever you are.” – Theodore Roosevelt
14. “Use what talents you possess; the woods would be very silent if no birds sang except those that sang best.” – Henry Van Dyke
15. “It is not length of Life, but depth of life.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
16. “See the Invisible, Believe the Incredible, Achieve the Impossible.” – Joel Brown
17. “You build walls & boundaries when you give into your mind. Fear nothing & take control of who you are & who you are meant to be” – Joel Brown
18. “We all take different paths in life, but no matter where we go, we take a little of each other everywhere.” – Tim McGraw
19. “Laughter is the music of life.” – Sir William Osler
20. “In the province of the mind, what one believes to be true either is true or becomes true.” – John Lilly
21. “Experience is the hardest kind of teacher. It gives you the test first and the lesson afterward.” – Unknown
22. “Friendship makes prosperity more shining and lessens adversity by dividing and sharing it.” – Cicero
23. “In the giving-is the getting.” – David Matoc
24. “The impossible is often the untried.” – Jim Goodwin
25. “Anyone can become angry-that is easy, but to become angry with the right person, to the right degree, at the right time, for the right purpose, and in the right way-that is not easy.” – Aristotle
26. “Character, in great and little things, means carrying through what you feel able to do.” – Goethe
27. “Don’t let yesterday use up too much of today.” – Will Rogers
28. “My religion is very simple, my religion is kindness.” – Dalai Lama
29. “The important thing is to not stop questioning.” – Albert Einstein
30. “It’s not your circumstances that shape you, it’s how you react to your circumstances.” – Anne Ortlund
31. “The best thing about the future is that it only comes one day at a time.” – Abraham Lincoln
32. “Peace comes from within. Do not seek it without.” – Buddha
33. “It takes strength to be gentle and kind.” – Stephen Morrisey
34. “A hero is a person who does what he or she can.” – Roman Rolland
35. “What lies behind us and what lies before us are small matter compared to what lies within us.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
36. “Where there is unity there is always victory.” – Publilius Syrus
37. “The greatest mistake you can make in life is to be continually fearing you will make one.” – E. Hubbard
38. “The only thing standing between you and your goal is the bullshit story you keep telling yourself as to why you can’t achieve it.” – Jordan Belfort
39. “Never regret. If it’s good, it’s wonderful. If it’s bad, it’s experience.” – Victoria Holt
40. “It’s not denial. I’m selective about the reality I accept.” – Calvin
41. “The great thing about getting older is that you don’t lose all the other ages you’ve been.” – Madeleine L’Engle
42. “We ourselves feel that what we are doing is just a drop in the ocean. But the ocean would be less because of that missing drop.” – Mother Teresa
43. “I like nonsense,it wakens up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope and that enables you to laugh at life’s realities.” – Dr. Seuss
44. “A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.” – Herm Albright
45. “Nothing is worth more than this day.” – Goethe
46. “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has.” – Margaret Mead
47. “If at first you don’t succeed, you’re running about average.” – M.H. Alderson
48. “Life is like a ten speed bike. Most of us have gears we never use.” – Charles Schultz
49. “There is nothing permanent except change.” – Heraditus
50. “The miracle is this; the more we share, the more we have.” – Leonard Nimoy
51. “Out of clutter, find simplicity; from discord, find harmony; in the middle of difficulty, lies opportunity.” – Albert Einstein
52. “Hope is like a road in the country. There never was a road; but, when many people walk together, the road comes into existence.” – From the National Organization for Rare Disorders, Inc.
53. “Never give up on a dream just because of the time it will take to accomplish it. Especially when that time will pass you by anyway.” – Unknown
54. “Dreams come true; without that possibility, nature would not incite us to have them.” – John Updike, 1989, U.S. author & critic
55. “Our greatest glory is not failing, but in rising every time we fail.” – Confucius
56. “Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are.” – John Wooden
57. “Happiness is inward, and not outward; and so, it does not depend on what we have, but on what we are.” – Henry Van Dyke
58. “A wise man should have money in his head, but not in his heart.“ – Jonathan Swift
59. “The pain you feel today is the strength you feel tomorrow.” – Unknown
60. “Worry is as useless as a handle on a snowball.” – Mitzi Chandler
61. “The strongest oak of the forest is not the one that is protected from the storm and hidden from the sun. It;s the one that stands in the open where it is compelled to struggle for its existence against the wind and rains and the scorching sun.” – Napoleon Hill
62. “It’s not the load that breaks you down; it’s the way you carry it.” – Lena Horne
63. “Keep you face to the sunshine and you cannot see the shadow.” – Helen Keller
64. “If you don’t go after what you want, you’ll never have it. If you don’t ask, the answer is always no. If you don’t step forward your always in the same place.” – Nora Roberts
65. “A good hand and a good heart are always a formidable combination.” – Nelson Mandela
66. “There are two ways of exerting ones strength; one is pushing down, the other is pulling up.” – Booker T. Washington
67. “Life is 10% of what happens to me and 90% of how I react to it.” – John Maxwell
68. “A person that values it’s privileges above its principles soon loses both.” – Dwight Eisenhower
69. “It is difficult to say what is impossible, for the dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality of tomorrow.” – Robert H. Goddard
70. “Never deprive someone of hope; it may be all they have.” – H. Jackson Brown Jr.
71. “We make a living by what we get; we make a life by what we give.” – Sir Winston Churchill
72. “It is better to look ahead and prepare than to look back and regret” – Jackie Joyner-Kersee
73. “We all have a few failures under our belt. It’s what makes us ready for the successes.” – Randy K. Milholland
74. “Don’t count every hour in the day, make every hour in the day count.” – Anonymous
75. “If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion.” – The Dalai Lama
76. “A difficult time can be more readily endured if we retain the conviction that our existence holds a purpose – a cause to pursue, a person to love, a goal to achieve.” – John Maxwell
77. “Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow.” – Albert Einstein
78. “The faintest ink is better than the best memory” – Unknown
79. “Every dog must have his day.“ – Jonathan Swift
80. “Dear tomorrow, do whatever you want to do. I have already lived my today and I am not afraid of you anymore .” – Unknown
81. “The Pessimist Sees Difficulty In Every Opportunity. The Optimist Sees Opportunity In Every Difficulty.” – Winston Churchill
82. “Don’t Let Yesterday Take Up Too Much Of Today.” – Will Rogers
83. “You Learn More From Failure Than From Success. Don’t Let It Stop You. Failure Builds Character.” – Unknown
84. “It’s Not Whether You Get Knocked Down, It’s Whether You Get Up.” – Vince Lombardi
85. “If You Are Working On Something That You Really Care About, You Don’t Have To Be Pushed. The Vision Pulls You.” – Steve Jobs
86. “People Who Are Crazy Enough To Think They Can Change The World, Are The Ones Who Do.” – Rob Siltanen
87. “Failure Will Never Overtake Me If My Determination To Succeed Is Strong Enough.” – Og Mandino
88. “Entrepreneurs Are Great At Dealing With Uncertainty And Also Very Good At Minimizing Risk. That’s The Classic Entrepreneur.” – Mohnish Pabrai
89. “We May Encounter Many Defeats But We Must Not Be Defeated.” – Maya Angelou
90. “Imagine Your Life Is Perfect In Every Respect; What Would It Look Like?” – Brian Tracy
Which one of these quotes do you like the most?
0 notes
Text
Real Madrid: Is Zinedine Zidane struggling second time around? – Guillem Balague column
Zinedine Zidane played for Real Madrid from 2001 to 2006 and originally managed them from 2016 to 2018
At the press launch of a TV series about himself last week, Sergio Ramos joked with journalists: “I have more seasons now with Amazon than I do with Real Madrid.”
The Spain centre-back has two years left on his contract at the Bernabeu but his club are not looking to renew it.
And while Ramos has been a constant presence at Real for 14 years, the uncertainty surrounding his future only adds to the increasing sense of instability around a club which has won four of the past six Champions Leagues.
Since Zinedine Zidane returned as manager towards the end of last season, his win percentage is below 50% and there has been little to suggest improvement since the start of this season.
Real still look unsettled and they are still inconsistent, worrying signs as they enter a two week-period in which they will face Paris St-Germain in the Champions League, as well as leaders Ateltico Madrid and Champions League qualifiers Sevilla in La Liga.
Moments such as these are nothing new at Real Madrid, a perennial soap opera providing tales of conspiracy, intrigue and passion and never failing to serve up one cliff-hanger after another, both on and off the pitch.
But as Europe’s perennial winners get their latest European campaign under way, is Zidane struggling to make the impact this time around, and is there a danger the Frenchman might not even be there come the next Champions League final?
Never go back? Zidane struggling to inspire on his return
Zidane and his family live in Madrid, which was one of the reasons he found it difficult to reject Perez’s request for him to return as manager
Zidane wrote himself out of the Real Madrid storyline when he quit after somehow winning the Champions League at the end of the 2017-18 season – his third title in a row. He felt there were big changes to make at the club and that he was not going to receive the backing he needed to implement them.
He might have chosen this time of self-imposed footballing exile as an opportunity to reflect on a fine career as both a player and a coach. He probably didn’t come across the words of poet Felix Dennis:
Never go back. Never go back.
Never surrender the future you’ve earned.
Keep to the track, to the beaten track.
Never return to the bridges you burned.
Nor did he take similar advice from people close to him. In March, he returned at the request of president Florentino Perez, who had previously tried to entice Mauricio Pochettino from Tottenham and the unemployed former Chelsea manager Antonio Conte.
Zidane took the job before the end of last season because they told him that, if he didn’t, Jose Mourinho would be the chosen one (more on that later). He was also promised he would be a major player in deciding who came in and who left. And that there would be plenty of changes.
There needed to be. Zidane’s last Champions League success flattered to deceive in a season when his side finished 17 points behind La Liga winners Barcelona.
But things have not improved. Since coming back, he has won seven of 15 league games, a win rate of 46.7%. Santiago Solari, the man he replaced, won 22 out of 32 games in charge, a win rate of 68.8%. That was significantly higher than Zidane’s but not high enough to earn the president’s confidence and the Argentine was dismissed after just four and a half months.
Key injuries to vital players such as Marco Asensio and Eden Hazard, a summer signing who found himself sidelined before kicking a ball for the club, have played their part in the lacklustre start.
But so have Zidane’s changeable tactics.
Only left-back Ferland Mendy, who joined from Lyon, looks to have hit the ground running. Luka Jovic – who arrived from Eintracht Frankfurt, where he was scoring for fun – has not looked like he has the quality to be an automatic starter. At least not in the opinion of Zidane, who has started him only once and then replaced him with midfielder Luka Modric after 68 minutes.
Real also signed some youngsters for big money – Eder Militao, 21, (£42.7m from Porto) and 18-year-old forward Rodrygo (£40.2m from Santos). The latter has been injured since pre-season, while the former has yet to feature.
Why Zidane appears to be losing his trump card
Zidane has never been considered a footballing Einstein as a coach, but his trump card at Real Madrid has always been the relationship he has enjoyed with his players. It is perceived by many as a rosy, peaceful, harmonious co-existence.
But there are signs those relationships are crumbling.
In deciding who should stay and who should go, the 47-year-old has not endeared himself to many of the Madrid faithful. They will see the sale to Atletico of Marcos Llorente, the nephew of the great Gento and a Blanco to the bone, as a sort of betrayal.
They will also be unimpressed with the loaning out to Sevilla of Reguilon, another product of the La Fabrica academy who could have slotted into the position held by Marcelo, who was 11kg over his optimum weight last season and has been struggling on that front ever since. And then there was the loan departure of Dani Ceballos, who could certainly be doing a job for the club in midfield, to Arsenal.
Zidane’s obsession with bringing in compatriot Paul Pogba has not been pretty to witness, not least because Manchester United never had any intention of selling him and Perez never seemed that keen on actually buying the 26-year-old.
The club had agreed terms with Tottenham’s Christian Eriksen and Ajax’s Donny van de Beek, but Zidane stopped the moves because Pogba was the midfielder he wanted.
The reality is that Zidane and the club were hoping to sell Isco, Gareth Bale and James Rodriguez, but no offers were forthcoming. For many, his use of those players is little more than a stick he is using to beat the president with by saying, basically: “You didn’t get me the player I wanted so now I’m going to have to use the players you wanted.”
Bizarrely, Bale’s lack of rapport with the manager has provoked precisely the kind of reaction that Zidane would have hoped for, with the Wales forward putting in some “I’ll show you” performances that have brought him two goals and one assist in three games. The downside is that it has also earned him a red card – thanks to two yellows collected in less than two minutes – and a one-match ban.
And finally, the club’s decision to sell goalkeeper Keylor Navas to Paris St-Germain was never something Zidane wanted either.
The general opinion at the Bernabeu is that the relationship between Zidane and Perez is not the best. A division between them is being created by their differences on Pogba and Navas, by the club’s failure to get rid of players the Frenchman did not want, and by the confusion over tactics – with the team lining up for one game with three at the back, the next in a 4-3-3 set-up and another as a 4-4-2.
Perez is frustrated at the lack of game time for some big-money signings and, for the first time in a while, the president feels he is not in complete control and the manager is not doing as he would like.
Zidane cannot be happy either, now finding himself with a squad of veterans combined with players untried at this level.
As a consequence, the Madrid media close to Perez are beginning to make mischief with criticisms of the coach.
When that happens, Zidane should know drastic things can happen.
Mourinho waiting in the wings
Florentino Perez (left) and Jose Mourinho were all smiles when they met at a Fifa congress in June
The name of Mourinho, who has rejected at least one big offer from China, has inevitably re-emerged in relation to the Real job.
Around the end of 2015, just as Rafael Benitez was struggling to win hearts and minds at the Bernabeu and before Mourinho joined Manchester United, Perez spoke to him with a view to discussing a return to the club.
Iker Casillas, one of the previous thorns in the side of the prickly Portuguese coach, was already gone. The goalkeeper was a sacrificial lamb, unceremoniously given away to Porto after a career that had, until then, been dedicated to two sides – his club and his country.
Only two problems remained: Cristiano Ronaldo and Ramos, the two players Mourinho blamed for his departure from Madrid.
Get rid of them, he told Perez, and we can talk.
Ronaldo is now at Juventus. One down, one to go.
I would not wager much on Ramos receiving a contract extension any time soon.
Source link . More news
via wordpress https://ift.tt/2QhiuQ3
0 notes
Text
50 Quotes to Spark a Culture of Change
An inspiring quote is a great tool for changing a mindset. I made a personal collection of 50 outstanding quotes on change and innovation. Use them to inspire others to start a culture of change, to think different and to prioritize change and innovation at the start of 2017.
1. Nothing is stronger than habit. [Ovid]
2. If you always do what you always did, you will always get what you always got. [Albert Einstein]
3. Status quo is Latin for, ‘The mess we’re in.’ [Ronald Reagan]
4. Change is inevitable. Except from a vending machine.[Robert C. Gallagher]
5. When the rate of change outside is more than what is inside, be sure that the end is near. [Azim Premji]
6. Details matter, it’s worth waiting to get it right. [Steve Jobs]
7. The future is already here — it’s just not very evenly distributed. [William Gibson]
8. It’s tough when markets change and your people within the company don’t. [Harvard Business Review]
9. Even if you are on the right track, you’ll get run over if you just sit there. [Will Rogers]
10. They always say time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself. [Andy Warhol]
11. We cannot solve a problem by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them. [A. Einstein]
12. Necessity is the mother of invention. [Anonymous]
13. Learning and innovation go hand in hand. The arrogance of success is to think that what you did yesterday will be sufficient for tomorrow. [William Pollard]
14. When all think alike, then no one is thinking. [Walter Lippmann]
15. The biggest room is the room for improvement. [Anonymous]
16. Minds are like parachutes; they work best when open. [T. Dewar]
17. He who sees things grow from the beginning will have the best view of them. [Aristotle]
18. The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man. [George Bernard Shaw]
19. The future is not what it used to be. [Anonymous]
20. There are no old roads to new directions. [The Boston Consulting Group]
21. You cannot discover new oceans unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore. [Andre Gide]
22. Innovation is anything, but business as usual. [Anonymous]
23. The best way to predict the future is to invent it. [Alan Kay]
24. Promotions may win quarters, innovation wins decades. [former P&G CEO Bob McDonald]
25. If at first the idea is not absurd, then there will be no hope for it. [A. Einstein]
26. The more original a discovery, the more obvious it seems afterwards. [Arthur Koestler]
27. An idea that is not dangerous is unworthy of being called an idea at all. [Oscar Wilde]
28. A discovery is said to be an accident meeting a prepared mind. [A. von Szent-Gyorgyi]
29. Managers say yes to innovation only if doing nothing is a bigger risk. [Gijs van Wulfen].
30. Innovation is the ability to convert ideas into invoices. [L. Duncan]
31. Small opportunities are often the beginning of great enterprises. [Demosthenes]
32. Luck is where the crossroads of opportunity and preparation meet. [Seneca]
33. Two roads diverged in a wood, and I took the one less traveled by and that has made all the difference. [Robert Frost]
34. Stay hungry. Stay foolish. [Steve Jobs]
35. The only way to discover the limits of the possible is to go beyond them into the impossible. [A. Clarke]
36. The key to success is for you to make a habit throughout your life of doing the things you fear. [Vincent Van Gogh]
37. Genius is one percent inspiration, ninety-nine percent perspiration. [Thomas Edison]
38. The impossible is often the untried. [J. Goodwin]
39. Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all. [Dale Carnegie]
40. The biggest risk in innovation lies in sticking too closely to your plans. [D. Hills, Walt Disney Company]
41. Ideas are useless unless used. [T. Levitt]
42. If you are not willing to risk the unusual, you will have to settle for the ordinary.[Jim Rohn]
43. It is not how many ideas you have. It’s how many you make happen. [Advertisement of Accenture]
44. The best ideas lose their owners and take on lives of their own. [N. Bushnell]
45. It’s kind of fun to do the impossible. [Walt Disney]
46. Only those who risk going too far can possibly find out how far one can go. [T.S. Eliot]
47. If you want to go fast – go alone. But if you want to go far – go together. [African proverb]
48. Everything is possible. The impossible just takes longer. [Dan Brown]
49. The person who says it cannot be done, should not interrupt the person doing it. [Chinese saying].
50. You can invent alone, but you can’t innovate alone. [Gijs van Wulfen]
Note : This post was originally posted on LinkedIn
Gijs van Wulfen
Gijs van Wulfen is a recognised authority and keynote speaker on innovation and Design Thinking. He was chosen as one of the first LinkedIn Influencers and as of 2017, 300.000 people across the globe are following his notably engaging, prolific and insightful posts. In 2016 Gijs came number 2 in the international Top 40 Innovation Bloggers. In 2017 his book ‘The Innovation Maze’ was elected ‘Management Book of the Year’.
50 Quotes to Spark a Culture of Change was originally published on Shenzhen Blog
0 notes
Text
Hávamál-The words of Odin the high one from the Elder or Poetic Edda(Sæmund's Edda) translated by Olive Bray
Wisdom for Wanderers and Counsel to Guests
1. At every door-way, ere one enters, one should spy round, one should pry round for uncertain is the witting that there be no foeman sitting, within, before one on the floor
2. Hail, ye Givers! a guest is come; say! where shall he sit within? Much pressed is he who fain on the hearth would seek for warmth and weal.
3. He hath need of fire, who now is come, numbed with cold to the knee; food and clothing the wanderer craves who has fared o'er the rimy fell.
4. He craves for water, who comes for refreshment, drying and friendly bidding, marks of good will, fair fame if 'tis won, and welcome once and again.
5. He hath need of his wits who wanders wide, aught simple will serve at home; but a gazing-stock is the fool who sits mid the wise, and nothing knows.
6. Let no man glory in the greatness of his mind, but rather keep watch o'er his wits. Cautious and silent let him enter a dwelling; to the heedful comes seldom harm, for none can find a more faithful friend than the wealth of mother wit.
7. Let the wary stranger who seeks refreshment keep silent with sharpened hearing; with his ears let him listen, and look with his eyes; thus each wise man spies out the way.
8. Happy is he who wins for himself fair fame and kindly words; but uneasy is that which a man doth own while it lies in another's breast.
9. Happy is he who hath in himself praise and wisdom in life; for oft doth a man ill counsel get when 'tis born in another's breast.
10. A better burden can no man bear on the way than his mother wit; 'tis the refuge of the poor, and richer it seems than wealth in a world untried.
11. A better burden can no man bear on the way than his mother wit: and no worse provision can he carry with him than too deep a draught of ale.
12. Less good than they say for the sons of men is the drinking oft of ale: for the more they drink, the less can they think and keep a watch o'er their wits.
13. A bird of Unmindfulness flutters o'er ale feasts, wiling away men's wits: with the feathers of that fowl I was fettered once in the garths of Gunnlos below.
14. Drunk was I then, I was over drunk in that crafty Jötun's court. But best is an ale feast when man is able to call back his wits at once.
15. Silent and thoughtful and bold in strife the prince's bairn should be. Joyous and generous let each man show him until he shall suffer death.
16. A coward believes he will ever live if he keep him safe from strife: but old age leaves him not long in peace though spears may spare his life.
17. A fool will gape when he goes to a friend, and mumble only, or mope; but pass him the ale cup and all in a moment the mind of that man is shown.
18. He knows alone who has wandered wide, and far has fared on the way, what manner of mind a man doth own who is wise of head and heart.
19. Keep not the mead cup but drink thy measure; speak needful words or none: none shall upbraid thee for lack of breeding if soon thou seek'st thy rest.
20. A greedy man, if he be not mindful, eats to his own life's hurt: oft the belly of the fool will bring him to scorn when he seeks the circle of the wise.
21. Herds know the hour of their going home and turn them again from the grass; but never is found a foolish man who knows the measure of his maw.
22. The miserable man and evil minded makes of all things mockery, and knows not that which he best should know, that he is not free from faults.
23. The unwise man is awake all night, and ponders everything over; when morning comes he is weary in mind, and all is a burden as ever.
24. The unwise man weens all who smile and flatter him are his friends, nor notes how oft they speak him ill when he sits in the circle of the wise.
25. The unwise man weens all who smile and flatter him are his friends; but when he shall come into court he shall find there are few to defend his cause.
26. The unwise man thinks all to know, while he sits in a sheltered nook; but he knows not one thing, what he shall answer, if men shall put him to proof.
27. For the unwise man 'tis best to be mute when he come amid the crowd, for none is aware of his lack of wit if he wastes not too many words; for he who lacks wit shall never learn though his words flow ne'er so fast.
28. Wise he is deemed who can question well, and also answer back: the sons of men can no secret make of the tidings told in their midst.
29. Too many unstable words are spoken by him who ne'er holds his peace; the hasty tongue sings its own mishap if it be not bridled in.
30. Let no man be held as a laughing-stock, though he come as guest for a meal: wise enough seem many while they sit dry-skinned and are not put to proof.
31. A guest thinks him witty who mocks at a guest and runs from his wrath away; but none can be sure who jests at a meal that he makes not fun among foes.
32. Oft, though their hearts lean towards one another, friends are divided at table; ever the source of strife 'twill be, that guest will anger guest.
33. A man should take always his meals betimes unless he visit a friend, or he sits and mopes, and half famished seems, and can ask or answer nought.
34. Long is the round to a false friend leading, e'en if he dwell on the way: but though far off fared, to a faithful friend straight are the roads and short.
35. A guest must depart again on his way, nor stay in the same place ever; if he bide too long on another's bench the loved one soon becomes loathed.
36. One's own house is best, though small it may be; each man is master at home; though he have but two goats and a bark-thatched hut 'tis better than craving a boon.
37. One's own house is best, though small it may be, each man is master at home; with a bleeding heart will he beg, who must, his meat at every meal.
38. Let a man never stir on his road a step without his weapons of war; for unsure is the knowing when need shall arise of a spear on the way without.
39. I found none so noble or free with his food, who was not gladdened with a gift, nor one who gave of his gifts such store but he loved reward, could he win it.
40. Let no man stint him and suffer need of the wealth he has won in life; oft is saved for a foe what was meant for a friend, and much goes worse than one weens.
41. With raiment and arms shall friends gladden each other, so has one proved oneself; for friends last longest, if fate be fair who give and give again.
42. To his friend a man should bear him as friend, and gift for gift bestow, laughter for laughter let him exchange, but leasing pay for a lie.
43. To his friend a man should bear him as friend, to him and a friend of his; but let him beware that he be not the friend of one who is friend to his foe.
44. Hast thou a friend whom thou trustest well, from whom thou cravest good? Share thy mind with him, gifts exchange with him, fare to find him oft.
45. But hast thou one whom thou trustest ill yet from whom thou cravest good? Thou shalt speak him fair, but falsely think, and leasing pay for a lie.
46. Yet further of him whom thou trusted ill, and whose mind thou dost misdoubt; thou shalt laugh with him but withhold thy thought, for gift with like gift should be paid.
47. Young was I once, I walked alone, and bewildered seemed in the way; then I found me another and rich I thought me, for man is the joy of man.
48. Most blest is he who lives free and bold and nurses never a grief, for the fearful man is dismayed by aught, and the mean one mourns over giving.
49. My garments once I gave in the field to two land-marks made as men; heroes they seemed when once they were clothed; 'tis the naked who suffer shame!
50. The pine tree wastes which is perched on the hill, nor bark nor needles shelter it; such is the man whom none doth love; for what should he longer live?
51. Fiercer than fire among ill friends for five days love will burn; bun anon 'tis quenched, when the sixth day comes, and all friendship soon is spoiled.
52. Not great things alone must one give to another, praise oft is earned for nought; with half a loaf and a tilted bowl I have found me many a friend.
53. Little the sand if little the seas, little are minds of men, for ne'er in the world were all equally wise, 'tis shared by the fools and the sage.
54. Wise in measure let each man be; but let him not wax too wise; for never the happiest of men is he who knows much of many things.
55. Wise in measure should each man be; but let him not wax too wise; seldom a heart will sing with joy if the owner be all too wise.
56. Wise in measure should each man be, but ne'er let him wax too wise: who looks not forward to learn his fate unburdened heart will bear.
57. Brand kindles from brand until it be burned, spark is kindled from spark, man unfolds him by speech with man, but grows over secret through silence.
58. He must rise betimes who fain of another or life or wealth would win; scarce falls the prey to sleeping wolves, or to slumberers victory in strife.
59. He must rise betimes who hath few to serve him, and see to his work himself; who sleeps at morning is hindered much, to the keen is wealth half-won.
60. Of dry logs saved and roof-bark stored a man can know the measure, of fire-wood too which should last him out quarter and half years to come.
61. Fed and washed should one ride to court though in garments none too new; thou shalt not shame thee for shoes or breeks, nor yet for a sorry steed.
62. Like an eagle swooping over old ocean, snatching after his prey, so comes a man into court who finds there are few to defend his cause.
63. Each man who is wise and would wise be called must ask and answer aright. Let one know thy secret, but never a second, -- if three a thousand shall know.
64. A wise counselled man will be mild in bearing and use his might in measure, lest when he come his fierce foes among he find others fiercer than he.
65. Each man should be watchful and wary in speech, and slow to put faith in a friend. for the words which one to another speaks he may win reward of ill.
66. At many a feast I was far too late, and much too soon at some; drunk was the ale or yet unserved: never hits he the joint who is hated.
67. Here and there to a home I had haply been asked had I needed no meat at my meals, or were two hams left hanging in the house of that friend where I had partaken of one.
68. Most dear is fire to the sons of men, most sweet the sight of the sun; good is health if one can but keep it, and to live a life without shame.
69. Not reft of all is he who is ill, for some are blest in their bairns, some in their kin and some in their wealth, and some in working well.
70. More blest are the living than the lifeless, 'tis the living who come by the cow; I saw the hearth-fire burn in the rich man's hall and himself lying dead at the door.
71. The lame can ride horse, the handless drive cattle, the deaf one can fight and prevail, 'tis happier for the blind than for him on the bale-fire, but no man hath care for a corpse.
72. Best have a son though he be late born and before him the father be dead: seldom are stones on the wayside raised save by kinsmen to kinsmen.
73. Two are hosts against one, the tongue is the head's bane, 'neath a rough hide a hand may be hid; he is glad at nightfall who knows of his lodging, short is the ship's berth, and changeful the autumn night, much veers the wind ere the fifth day and blows round yet more in a month.
74. He that learns nought will never know how one is the fool of another, for if one be rich another is poor and for that should bear no blame.
75. Cattle die and kinsmen die, thyself too soon must die, but one thing never, I ween, will die, -- fair fame of one who has earned.
76. Cattle die and kinsmen die, thyself too soon must die, but one thing never, I ween, will die, -- the doom on each one dead.
77. Full-stocked folds had the Fatling's sons, who bear now a beggar's staff: brief is wealth, as the winking of an eye, most faithless ever of friends.
78. If haply a fool should find for himself wealth or a woman's love, pride waxes in him but wisdom never and onward he fares in his folly.
79. All will prove true that thou askest of runes -- those that are come from the gods, which the high Powers wrought, and which Odin painted: then silence is surely best.
Maxims for All Men
81. Hew wood in wind, sail the seas in a breeze, woo a maid in the dark, -- for day's eyes are many, -- work a ship for its gliding, a shield for its shelter, a sword for its striking, a maid for her kiss;
82. Drink ale by the fire, but slide on the ice; buy a steed when 'tis lanky, a sword when 'tis rusty; feed thy horse neath a roof, and thy hound in the yard.
83. The speech of a maiden should no man trust nor the words which a woman says; for their hearts were shaped on a whirling wheel and falsehood fixed in their breasts.
84. Breaking bow, or flaring flame, ravening wolf, or croaking raven, routing swine, or rootless tree, waxing wave, or seething cauldron,
85. flying arrows, or falling billow, ice of a nighttime, coiling adder, woman's bed-talk, or broken blade, play of bears or a prince's child,
86. sickly calf or self-willed thrall, witch's flattery, new-slain foe, brother's slayer, though seen on the highway, half burned house, or horse too swift -- be never so trustful as these to trust.
87. Let none put faith in the first sown fruit nor yet in his son too soon; whim rules the child, and weather the field, each is open to chance.
88. Like the love of women whose thoughts are lies is the driving un-roughshod o'er slippery ice of a two year old, ill-tamed and gay; or in a wild wind steering a helmless ship, or the lame catching reindeer in the rime-thawed fell.
Lessons for Lovers
90. -- Let him speak soft words and offer wealth who longs for a woman's love, praise the shape of the shining maid -- he wins who thus doth woo.
91. -- Never a whit should one blame another whom love hath brought into bonds: oft a witching form will fetch the wise which holds not the heart of fools.
92. Never a whit should one blame another for a folly which many befalls; the might of love makes sons of men into fools who once were wise.
93. The mind knows alone what is nearest the heart and sees where the soul is turned: no sickness seems to the wise so sore as in nought to know content.
Odin's Love Quests
95. Billing's daughter I found on her bed, fairer than sunlight sleeping, and the sweets of lordship seemed to me nought, save I lived with that lovely form.
96. "Yet nearer evening come thou, Odin, if thou wilt woo a maiden: all were undone save two knew alone such a secret deed of shame."
97. So away I turned from my wise intent, and deemed my joy assured, for all her liking and all her love I weened that I yet should win.
98. When I came ere long the war troop bold were watching and waking all: with burning brands and torches borne they showed me my sorrowful way.
99. Yet nearer morning I went, once more, -- the housefolk slept in the hall, but soon I found a barking dog tied fast to that fair maid's couch.
100. Many a sweet maid when one knows her mind is fickle found towards men: I proved it well when that prudent lass I sought to lead astray: shrewd maid, she sought me with every insult and I won therewith no wife.
Odin's Quest after the Song Mead
102. I sought that old Jötun, now safe am I back, little served my silence there; but whispering many soft speeches I won my desire in Suttung's halls.
103. I bored me a road there with Rati's tusk and made room to pass through the rock; while the ways of the Jötuns stretched over and under, I dared my life for a draught.
104. 'Twas Gunnlod who gave me on a golden throne a draught of the glorious mead, but with poor reward did I pay her back for her true and troubled heart.
105. In a wily disguise I worked my will; little is lacking to the wise, for the Soul-stirrer now, sweet Mead of Song, is brought to men's earthly abode.
106. I misdoubt me if ever again I had come from the realms of the Jötun race, had I not served me of Gunnlod, sweet woman, her whom I held in mine arms.
107. Came forth, next day, the dread Frost Giants, and entered the High One's Hall: they asked -- was the Baleworker back mid the Powers, or had Suttung slain him below?
108. A ring-oath Odin I trow had taken -- how shall one trust his troth? 'twas he who stole the mead from Suttung, and Gunnlod caused to weep.
The Counseling of the Stray-Singer
110. Of runes they spoke, and the reading of runes was little withheld from their lips: at the High One's hall, in the High One's hall, I thus heard the High One say: --
111. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: rise never at nighttime, except thou art spying or seekest a spot without.
112. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: thou shalt never sleep in the arms of a sorceress, lest she should lock thy limbs;
113. So shall she charm that thou shalt not heed the council, or words of the king, nor care for thy food, or the joys of mankind, but fall into sorrowful sleep.
114. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: seek not ever to draw to thyself in love-whispering another's wife.
115. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: should thou long to fare over fell and firth provide thee well with food.
116. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: tell not ever an evil man if misfortunes thee befall, from such ill friend thou needst never seek return for thy trustful mind.
117. Wounded to death, have I seen a man by the words of an evil woman; a lying tongue had bereft him of life, and all without reason of right.
118. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: hast thou a friend whom thou trustest well, fare thou to find him oft; for with brushwood grows and with grasses high the path where no foot doth pass.
119. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: in sweet converse call the righteous to thy side, learn a healing song while thou livest.
120. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: be never the first with friend of thine to break the bond of fellowship; care shall gnaw thy heart if thou canst not tell all thy mind to another.
121. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: never in speech with a foolish knave shouldst thou waste a single word.
122. From the lips of such thou needst not look for reward of thine own good will; but a righteous man by praise will render thee firm in favour and love.
123. There is mingling in friendship when man can utter all his whole mind to another; there is nought so vile as a fickle tongue; no friend is he who but flatters.
124. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: oft the worst lays the best one low.
125. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: be not a shoemaker nor yet a shaft maker save for thyself alone: let the shoe be misshapen, or crooked the shaft, and a curse on thy head will be called.
126. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: when in peril thou seest thee, confess thee in peril, nor ever give peace to thy foes.
127. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: rejoice not ever at tidings of ill, but glad let thy soul be in good.
128. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: look not up in battle, when men are as beasts, lest the wights bewitch thee with spells.
129. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: wouldst thou win joy of a gentle maiden, and lure to whispering of love, thou shalt make fair promise, and let it be fast, -- none will scorn their weal who can win it.
130. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: I pray thee be wary, yet not too wary, be wariest of all with ale, with another's wife, and a third thing eke, that knaves outwit thee never.
131. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: hold not in scorn, nor mock in thy halls a guest or wandering wight.
132. They know but unsurely who sit within what manner of man is come: none is found so good, but some fault attends him, or so ill but he serves for somewhat.
133. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: hold never in scorn the hoary singer; oft the counsel of the old is good; come words of wisdom from the withered lips of him left to hang among hides, to rock with the rennets and swing with the skins.
134. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: growl not at guests, nor drive them from the gate but show thyself gentle to the poor.
135. Mighty is the bar to be moved away for the entering in of all. Shower thy wealth, or men shall wish thee every ill in thy limbs.
136. I counsel thee, Stray-Singer, accept my counsels, they will be thy boon if thou obey'st them, they will work thy weal if thou win'st them: when ale thou quaffest, call upon earth's might -- 'tis earth drinks in the floods. Earth prevails o'er drink, but fire o'er sickness, the oak o'er binding, the earcorn o'er witchcraft, the rye spur o'er rupture, the moon o'er rages, herb o'er cattle plagues, runes o'er harm.
Odin's Quest after the Runes
138. None refreshed me ever with food or drink, I peered right down in the deep; crying aloud I lifted the Runes then back I fell from thence.
139. Nine mighty songs I learned from the great son of Bale-thorn, Bestla's sire; I drank a measure of the wondrous Mead, with the Soulstirrer's drops I was showered.
140. Ere long I bare fruit, and throve full well, I grew and waxed in wisdom; word following word, I found me words, deed following deed, I wrought deeds.
141. Hidden Runes shalt thou seek and interpreted signs, many symbols of might and power, by the great Singer painted, by the high Powers fashioned, graved by the Utterer of gods.
142. For gods graved Odin, for elves graved Daïn, Dvalin the Dallier for dwarfs, All-wise for Jötuns, and I, of myself, graved some for the sons of men.
143. Dost know how to write, dost know how to read, dost know how to paint, dost know how to prove, dost know how to ask, dost know how to offer, dost know how to send, dost know how to spend?
144. Better ask for too little than offer too much, like the gift should be the boon; better not to send than to overspend. ........ Thus Odin graved ere the world began; Then he rose from the deep, and came again.
The Song of Spells
146. A second I know, which the son of men must sing, who would heal the sick.
147. A third I know: if sore need should come of a spell to stay my foes; when I sing that song, which shall blunt their swords, nor their weapons nor staves can wound.
148. A fourth I know: if men make fast in chains the joints of my limbs, when I sing that song which shall set me free, spring the fetters from hands and feet.
149. A fifth I know: when I see, by foes shot, speeding a shaft through the host, flies it never so strongly I still can stay it, if I get but a glimpse of its flight.
150. A sixth I know: when some thane would harm me in runes on a moist tree's root, on his head alone shall light the ills of the curse that he called upon mine.
151. A seventh I know: if I see a hall high o'er the bench-mates blazing, flame it ne'er so fiercely I still can save it, -- I know how to sing that song.
152. An eighth I know: which all can sing for their weal if they learn it well; where hate shall wax 'mid the warrior sons, I can calm it soon with that song.
153. A ninth I know: when need befalls me to save my vessel afloat, I hush the wind on the stormy wave, and soothe all the sea to rest.
154. A tenth I know: when at night the witches ride and sport in the air, such spells I weave that they wander home out of skins and wits bewildered.
155. An eleventh I know: if haply I lead my old comrades out to war, I sing 'neath the shields, and they fare forth mightily safe into battle, safe out of battle, and safe return from the strife.
156. A twelfth I know: if I see in a tree a corpse from a halter hanging, such spells I write, and paint in runes, that the being descends and speaks.
157. A thirteenth I know: if the new-born son of a warrior I sprinkle with water, that youth will not fail when he fares to war, never slain shall he bow before sword.
158. A fourteenth I know: if I needs must number the Powers to the people of men, I know all the nature of gods and of elves which none can know untaught.
159. A fifteenth I know, which Folk-stirrer sang, the dwarf, at the gates of Dawn; he sang strength to the gods, and skill to the elves, and wisdom to Odin who utters.
160. A sixteenth I know: when all sweetness and love I would win from some artful wench, her heart I turn, and the whole mind change of that fair-armed lady I love.
161. A seventeenth I know: so that e'en the shy maiden is slow to shun my love.
162. These songs, Stray-Singer, which man's son knows not, long shalt thou lack in life, though thy weal if thou win'st them, thy boon if thou obey'st them thy good if haply thou gain'st them.
163. An eighteenth I know: which I ne'er shall tell to maiden or wife of man save alone to my sister, or haply to her who folds me fast in her arms; most safe are secrets known to but one- the songs are sung to an end.
164. Now the sayings of the High One are uttered in the hall for the weal of men, for the woe of Jötuns, Hail, thou who hast spoken! Hail, thou that knowest! Hail, ye that have hearkened! Use, thou who hast learned!
0 notes