View allAll Photos Tagged change."
Ths sky is changing and the glow mixes with the dark clouds still in the sky, reflected on the lake at Colwick country park, Nottingham. It is a mixing of serenity and dark broiling anger.
We are like the clouds changing form reacting to events in our lives but what we are is more than we choose to show and we show more than we aware of for those with the discerning eye.
House being constructed in the forests for local collectors and tourists.
Photo by Icaro Cooke Vieira/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Sharjah, UAE Oct 10 2010
In Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, participants in a climate festival formed a giant '350' to urge politicians to pass clean energy policies.
This was one of over 7,000 climate action events taking place in in 188 countries around the world on 10/10/10 as part of “The Global Work Party.” This synchronized international event is organized by 350.org, and is expected to be the largest day of environmental activism in history.
Photo Credit: 350.org/Ahmad Al Reyami
Copyright info: This photo is freely available for editorial use and may be reproduced under an Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 3.0 license.
Plan Canada Sponsor a Child:
plancanada.ca/NetCommunity/Page.aspx?pid=265
Change the world and sponsor a child with Plan Canada.
Help fight children's poverty, secure children's rights, and feed the children around the globe through Canada's leading children's charity.
Remembering Rebecca Beaty, who, on this day* in 1792, "changed her mode of existance [sic]".
*There's a bit of confusion about Beaty's death date as "second day of the, week November, the 4th" might mean the second day of the fourth week of November. Also, the year carved into the stone is 1702, which is decades before Europeans settled in Bedford. The stem of a 9 only lightly scratched into the stone.
Ancestry.com has a Rebecca Ewalt Beaty listed as being born in 1756, which is consistent with her being 36 in 1792, but that Rebecca Beaty's death date is given as November 22nd, 1807.
Photo is from my drive across Pennsylvania a couple of weeks ago, not last year's trip on US 6. Thanks to the gentleman and Bedford civic booster who was out for a walk with his mother and suggested I visit the cemetery.
A chance shot on Oxford Street London. I'm not sure if the message was metaphorical or they didn't like the double denim I was wearing...
he surprised me with his discussion of the ice and water cycle and reversible change......we had not discussed this in a year?
we were outside and some icicles fell and he wanted to bring in snow, so i brought in some icicles for a lesson in volume, but he turned it into reversible change
he was also discussing how to save the icicles, we should put them in the fridge......i told him the fridge was not cold enough, he said, "well we could try and see if it works! natural icicle popsicle"
we were discussing the icicles outside so when i broke some off, i decided to bring some in to show him the volume of water contained as it melted.....he ended up showing me, how to use it as a lens/prism.......a wand, a lesson in reversible change and then breaking off pieces and blowing them in pools of water with his breath....wind energy.....he knows way more than me!
I was watching pbs kids with him recently and realized.....this was something he learned from sid the science kid......reversible change......but i swear he had not seen the show in at least 6 months....then about a month after i videotaped this we saw the episode again......aha moment
video link
pbskids.org/sid/videoplayer.html?OnPenguinPond
great show and channel, pbs kids, no commercials, lots of music and physical activity encouraged during the shows and this particular show is called sid the science kid.....perfect age appropriate science investigation encouragement, i see lots of long lasting learning from the 30 minutes he sees maybe 2x a week
“A slender and restricted diet is always dangerous not only in chronic
diseases but also in acute diseases.” Hippoctates 400B.C. Nutrition support
in critically ill is obligatory and least prioritized till date in this part of world. But
there has been a revolutionary change across the globe in last few years
since nutrition care is an essential and integral part of first line ICU protocol.
Nutrition care in the ICU presents several challenges because the usual
control mechanisms such as hunger and thirst may be missing. Despite the
huge body of evidence that Nutrition support is essential in ICU we face lots
of impediments to provide early and optimal Nutrition support. Throughout
ICU course patients and attending doctors faces cascades of challenges which more complicates the already fragile issues relating demands Vs. supply. Now a days it is not
uncommon to encounter patients who spend days and months in ICU struggling multidisciplinary
approaches. Most of well designed studies have suggested that both under and over feedings are
dangerous in critically ill hence the need to develop nutrition care plan which should be dynamic and
flexible enough to take care of all subsequent challenges.
Nutrition screening and assessment
The first step in providing appropriate nutrition therapy is to identify patients at risk and diagnose
nutritional problems. Nutritional screening and assessment are fundamental to an effective nutrition
therapy program. These should be routinely undertaken by appropriately trained and skilled nutrition
specialist. Screening and assessment have similar goals: to identify patients at risk of malnutrition or
patients who are malnourished. The first step in identifying risk factors for malnutrition is to observe
and interview patients. Questions that are commonly asked during screening should be easy and
include information about body weight changes within a given time frame and amount of oral intake .
By consensus and validations there is an urgent need to roll down our own assessment tool with an
Indian perspective.
Nutrition support
There are lots of myths about Nutrition support in ICU such as bowel sounds are absent , large
gastric residuals , diarrhea , proteins are restricted in ARF and so on. There are plenty of unmet
needs and there is an urgent need to change the dogmatic picture. Many a times critically ill patients
receive even less than half of the actual caloric needs.
Since there is no true biomarker of adequacy of nutritional status we solely rely on tools and
clinical skills. There is no doubt that starvations is bad for both community dwellers and critically
ill patients.Even well nourished critically ill patients passes through cascades of metabolic and
immunological events which ultimately affects host defense and both short and long term
outcome.
“ We can’t solve problems by using same kind of thinking we used them when we created them.”
- Albert Einstein
As I have mentioned previously, I am a fan of architecture in many forms - Roman to modern. This building is on the campus of The University of Texas at Austin, and I came across it while on a solo photowalk this past summer. It is interesting how photography makes you look at things differently than you did before you caught the bug - and even look at things you would never waste a glance on before. In this case, I was really enjoying all the different patterns, colors and textures in this scene though as a college student I walked by this building probably every day and never noticed any of it. I guess photography really does change you - or at least change what you look at. Which reminds me of a quote from Wayne Dyer that I am a fan of: "When you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change". So true.
from the blog at www.nomadicpursuits.com
It's hard to imagine looking at it now, but this corner (North Avenue at Kingsbury Street) was, up until recently quite industrialized. The Milwaukee Road's Chicago & Evanston (C&E) Line went through here.
When Kingsbury Street was heavily rebuilt in the 1980s, it was done so with a single track with spurs in order to serve the remaining customers here. MILW's successors Soo and CP continued to operate here until about the late 1990s. However, according to Tom Burke, "In 2007 Chicago Terminal spotted a boxcar on the former spur to Midwest Zinc to help assert its rights to this section of the former Milwaukee Road Chicago & Evanston,"
“During the rains, the haffir filled up. Many years we have water shortages but we do not think this will dry up before the rains come again," says Halima. As rainfall patterns become more erratic, haffirs, which collect and filter the rain, will help to ensure that women do not carry an unfair burden of climate change. Before this haffir was rehabilitated, women would have to collect water from neighbouring villages, often 10-12km away. The drudgery of this essential task has been drastically reduced. With access to this water source, what once took a whole day can now be completed in an hour. Some 700 families benefit from this technology, which represents the main water source in the area.
Photograph: Practical Action
Find out more about how DFID is tackling climate change at:
The Turf challenge Wrexham Football Club to cut their carbon footprint by cycling to the pub. Please credit www.workingwordpr.com
If you would like to use this photo, for any reason, you will need my
permission first.
What does the word Change mean to you? What does it reflect in you? What sort of Change do you wish you could see, in the world today? What is the smallest thing you could do to scratch the surface of that goal? Can you at least say that you have tried? A lot of people want change, but all they do is talk about it, and how great it would be without ever getting their hands dirty or taking a step!
For me, I wish I could change A LOT of things. For this picture I am trying to capture how we view others, how we treat others, and on the flip side how self-conscious/self-centered we can be and how we can treat others as though they don't exist, yet hate when someone treats us with disrespect.
Treat others with as much love and respect that you desire to receive. And BE the Change you wish to see in the world!
Item Title: Changing of clothes
Description/Notes: A kneeling woman lifts a heavy padded cloth. She wears a gray kimono patterned with flying birds, grasses and a river and underneath this three white under robes, which show at the front and back openings of her long sleeves. Her orange obi is patterned with clouds and dragons. Her piled-up hair is held with a single white cord and ornamented with a long hair stick.
Original Collection: Chikanobu and Yoshitoshi Woodblock Prints
Item Number: 54.1.141
Permissions: For more information on copyright or permissions for this image, please contact Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery.
Click here for the original item.
See the Chikanobu and Yoshitoshi Woodblock Prints for the original collection.
I changed tires of my working car, from normal to studless tire for winter.
Yesterday and today, we have snow, little bit.
Winter came on.
Poniendo de antecesor todas las civilizaciones y culturas que han pasado y dejado huella astronómica, matemática científica, medica, artística, y religión.
En este muy joven milenio.
No solo es decir "Mexico tiene que cambiar"
Se trata de su gente y educación, mucho tambien de su gobierno.
En estos momentos estas sintiendo el cambio que tu mismo necesitas y que estas haciendo para aportar a Mexico y al Mundo.
Solo tu pones el ejemplo para ti y para todos.
toletequita.juanrojo
Feel free to use this image or the larger higher resolution linked to above
for your website or blog as long as you agree to the following-
You include photo credit with a clickable (hyperlinked) and do-follow link to -
No Derivative Works - You may not alter, transform, or build upon this work.
Built as Hermann Göring´s Air ministry in the 1930s, it became the House of Ministries in the communist GDR, and is now, since reunification of the two Germanys, Ministry of Finance. Picture taken from across the street at a very early morning in 2012. I can´t remember why it was lit green.
My LED doorbell project from 2005. This uses an Atmel Attiny12 to drive a single 5mm, 4-lead RGB LED embedded in the doorbell switch (I drilled into it to remove the original incandescent bulb). Power is taken parasitically from the doorbell transformer (16 VAC, if I remember correctly) in the attic of the house somewhere, and the switch shorts the whole thing, ringing the bell and resetting the microcontroller. The color cycle starts with pure white upon reset, providing a visual indication the ring has occurred.
Unfortunately, the switch itself only lasted for a few years, and now I have to rebuild the thing, maybe with capacitive touch instead!
For more description and photos, visit: eikimartinson.com/index.php?/categories/4-Inventions/P3.html
My first stop for Restaurant Week was the beautiful Sea Change in the lower level of the new Guthrie Theater. This sustainable seafood restaurant is the work of chef Tim McKee who won the James Beard award for best chef in the Midwest in 2009. The 3-course menu included mixed greens with herbed goat cheese, arctic char with white bean & artichoke giardiniera, and a frozen passion fruit soufflé with hibiscus granite & hazelnut crisp. All for $30.
Sea Change. Minneapolis, Minnesota.