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Cadets from 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, hang out after completing the Confidence Course, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. The Cadets were waiting to rotate with Delta Company and attempt the Rappel Tower. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

Cadets of 7th Regiment, Advanced Camp stand by as safeties while their squad mates descend the rope ladder of the “Tough One,” an obstacle of the Confidence Course at Fort Knox, KY, on July 8, 2021. | Photo by Griffin Amrein, CST Public Affairs.

Experience has taught me that those who seem the strongest are often those who are also the most alone. And it makes sense. To lead is to be alone. So if you ever find yourself tempted to think that such and such a person needs no kindness or friendship because they seem to have it all, you might be turning away the person who needs it most.

Work promotes confidence

Date Created/Published: [New York] : Federal Art Project, [between 1936 and 1941]

Medium: 1 print on board (poster) : silkscreen, color.

Summary: Poster for Works Progress Administration encouraging laborers to gain confidence from their work, showing stylized man holding hammer.

Reproduction Number: LC-USZC2-1018 (color film copy slide) LC-USZ62-59986 (b&w film copy neg.)

Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication.

Call Number: POS - WPA - NY .01 .W76, no. 1 (C size) [P&P]

Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA

Notes:

Work Projects Administration Poster Collection (Library of Congress).

Posters of the WPA / Christopher DeNoon. Los Angeles : Wheatly Press, c1987, no. 1

 

wpa_work promoters confidence_M

"Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,I will fear no evil,

for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me."

Psalm 23:4

 

"Si je traverse les ravins de la mort, je ne crains aucun mal, car tu es avec moi :

ton bâton me guide et me rassure."

Psaume 22.4 (23)

 

"Muss ich auch wandern in finsterer Schlucht, ich fürchte kein Unheil;

denn du bist bei mir, dein Stock und dein Stab geben mir Zuversicht."

Psalm 23,4

  

A Cadet from 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, attempts the ‘High Step Over’ obstacle, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. This obstacle is a part of the nine obstacles of the Confidence Course meant to challenge Cadets physically. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

U.S. Army Cadets with the 2nd Regiment, Advanced Camp, complete a series of obstacles meant to be in a low stress environment at the confidence course at Fort Knox, Ky., June 11, 2023. This event is meant to be fun and create team building among the Cadet platoons. | Photo by Keaton Silver, CST Public Affairs Office

2-10 Brigade Support Battalion, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division (LI) tackles the Confidence Course Aug 11, 2020. Completing the course helped develop the confidence and teamwork of the soldiers.

 

(U.S. Army video by Sgt. Elizabeth Rundell)

 

Dread Naught Photography

Operational Contract Support Joint Exercise 2016 provides training across the spectrum of OCS readiness from requirements and development of warfighter staff integration and synchronization through contract execution supporting the Joint Force Commander. (U.S. Air Force photo by Staff Sgt. Jonathan Snyder/Released)

 

An image of a model at Daegu international Body Painting Festival

Cadet Joshua Nay, Liberty University, from Philadelphia, Pa., 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, attempts the ‘Confidence Climb’ obstacle, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. This obstacle is a part of the nine obstacles of the Confidence Course meant to challenge Cadets physically. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

Learn how to build self confidence quickly using these 10 top tips….

Nothing succeeds like success but until you have it, what can you do to optimize your prospects?

It turns out you can do a lot with how you answer that common, casual question, “Hey, how’s it going? What are you up to the...

 

howdoidate.com/personal-development/build-self-confidence...

Confidence Man @ Hordern Pavilion

Fotografía tomada en el puerto de Ensenada, después de una divertida expedición en lancha. Me sorprendió ver la confianza con las que las palomas comían de su mano, es una escena poco usual y maravillosa a mi parecer. Le hubiera tomado mas fotografías pero después de esta se dio cuenta y huí de la escena.

 

Photography taken in the port of Ensenada, after an entertaining expedition in longboat. I surprised to see the confidence with that the doves were eating of his hand, it is a slightly usual and wonderful scene to me to seem. It had taken more photography but after this one he realized and I fled of the scene.

Asian boy (7-9), wearing rash guard, pulling surf board, looking away.

 

Baler, Aurora

2012

 

Submitted for consideration to Getty Images Flickr Collection.

 

Have a great day everyone!

Getty Images|My Blog

Bochum-Wattenscheid

 

Cadet Theo Van Lieshout, Loyola University, 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, perseveres over the ‘Inclining Wall’ obstacle, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. This obstacle is a part of the nine obstacles of the Confidence Course meant to challenge Cadets physically. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

Josie is a very good friend of ours - we love being around her. She is an awesome young lady, gorgeous, fun, adventurous, and all around sweet. Josie was at our Romance Saturday shoot but I barely had a chance to shoot with her. Bummer. After almost everyone left for the day, we had some energy yet and went to the garage for about 10 minutes to get these shots. Josie was dressed as Cupid and looked stunning. Life is good!

 

I took these photos in Star, Idaho in January 2020.

This is a work one, this is a print job I've just completed and have ready to send. Great simple use of gold foil looks really elegant.

Taken while sitting on top of Willie, my ranch gelding. I was surprised that her first encounter with a horse was "no big deal".. She's 8 weeks old here. Actually, I think she liked being up high where she could see more.

 

Photoshopped to bring out her personality. So much was hidden in the shadows, you couldn't really see her eyes. Many of my pictures are taken quickly, as in the case of this one, without much time to worry about light, settings, etc.

 

© All rights reserved

Cadets from 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, attempt the ‘Six Vault’ obstacle, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. This obstacle is a part of the nine obstacles of the Confidence Course meant to challenge Cadets physically. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

It seems that Honda has enough confidence in its little jet that it has launched an enlarged derivative (roughly the size of a Cessna Citation II) and approved plans to expand its Greensboro, NC factory.

St John the Baptist, Thaxted, Essex

 

The best church in Essex, and one of the best in England. The great spire rises above the gorgeous, prosperous little town, the big church surrounded closely on all sides by its busy life and a reminder that, like Lavenham in Suffolk, this was once a much more important place.

 

One of the touchstones of 20th Century Anglo-catholicism, with an influence which even today reaches out over adjoining parishes, this is a church full of light and space in the full confidence of its late 15th and early 16th Century rebuilding. The high, wide aisles extend to the full length of the chancel creating three parallel sanctuaries separated by the yawning of leaping, delicate arcades. The gathered paraphernalia of the Anglo-catholic tradition is shunted into corners and set boldly before pillars.

 

And yet, this does not feel like an urban church. Here, the wide spaces seem not to notice what has happened elsewhere. There are earlier details as well as later ones, among them late medieval glass and splendid 17th Century continental stalls brought here from the chapel of Easton Hall, but the overall impression is of serious High Church worship set within the frame of late-medieval Perpendicular harmony. And, perhaps also a sense of remoteness and distant loss, a recognition of what happened here once in another world, the world of lost Catholic England, an open airy emptiness which, as Pevsner observed, comes from the dearth of monuments as much as anything else. There is a sense here that there has not for a long time been a class in possession, and all in all it is a church which is much greater than the sum of its parts.

 

Like most of north Essex, the church and its town fell into a long sleep in the 18th and 19th Centuries, especially during the long agricultural recession in the second half of the latter century, but in 1910 a young London Priest called Father Conrad Noel was appointed to the living of Thaxted. He was a man of enormous energy and talent, and transformed Thaxted town and church into a maelstrom of political and cultural activity. He remained vicar of Thaxted until his death in 1942.

 

Conrad Noel set about galvanising the little town, making it a national centre for the English Crafts movement. When Arthur Mee visited Thaxted church in the 1940s he found the church hung and carpeted with colour, its tapestries, banners and vestments being the magnificent work of modern craftsmen inspired by the enterprise and fine judgement of the late incumbent (Conrad Noel) and his wife. Some of them we have all seen, for they were exhibited at the Wembley Exhibition (the Empire Exhibition of 1921). The surviving banners, now kept in storage to preserve them, are occasionally displayed and used in the church.

 

The parish became a centre for other revived English traditions. Fr Noel's undoubted charisma, and his insistence that Christianity was about beauty and ritual, attracted many well-known artists, musicians and folklorists to Thaxted. The folk revival was happening across Europe in the 1920s and 1930s, and it is no coincidence that the Morris Ring found a friendly home in the town. English Morris Dancing still sees Thaxted as its home.

 

The composer Gustav Holst moved to Thaxted, and Holst and Noel collaborated on musical events, creating the Thaxted Festival which still takes place every summer. Holst regularly played the organ at Mass in Thaxted church, and his compositon Thaxted, a reworking of the Jupiter theme in his Planets Suite, is best known today as a setting for the words of I Vow to thee my Country. When it was reused by the BBC for the Rugby World Cup anthem World in Union, the royalties went to Thaxted church.

 

Working with them was Percy Dearmer, another left-wing Priest and musicologist. He was responsible for popularising Anglo-Catholic forms of liturgy and worship based on his research into the music and liturgy of the medieval church. He was also editor of the Oxford Book of Carols which almost single-handedly reintroduced the idea of Christmas carol services to English churches.

 

Other musical figures who became associated with Thaxted included the composers Ralph Vaughan Williams and Martin Shaw. Vaughan WIlliams already had a considerable track record in collecting English folk tunes and working them into his own compositions. Shaw, best known today for hymn tunes like Little Cornard ('Hills of the North Rejoice') and Bunessan ('Morning has Broken'), wrote an Anglican Folk Mass for Thaxted church.

 

Another prominent figure in the Thaxted Movement was Joseph Needham, Cambridge professor and expert on Chinese Medicine, whose intellectual rigor gave a backbone to the folk tradition which Noel was allowing to live and breathe in his parish. Needham and his wife Dorothy were promoters of the Gymnosophist movement, in which young gymnasts would perform their routines naked, as in Ancient Greece. Gymnosophy was very popular in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s, but perhaps it is as well that it did not catch on in Thaxted.

 

Conrad Noel had been one of the founders of the Church Socialist League in 1906, but he left it in 1918 to found the Catholic Crusade. Like several Anglo-catholic Priests, Noel was also a member of the Independent Labour Party, and in 1911 he became a founding member of the British Socialist Party. In the 1920s, his most notorious action was to hang the Socialist Red Flag, the Irish Tricolor and the English Flag of St George side by side in the south transept.

 

It is worth saying that, even today, hanging the Flag of St George in a parish church is unusual, and in Noel's day it was considered suspicious, for the more usual flag to be hung in parish churches is the Union flag as a sign of the protestant credentials of the Established Church. The flag of St George was considered evidence of Anglo-Catholic sympathies. The Irish Tricolor was even more controversial of course, for Ireland, although not yet a republic, was a newly independent nation which had broken away from the Union, an aspiration which some in the Thaxted Movement held for their beloved England.

 

Flying the red flag was an act of provocation, and flying the three flags together was quite outrageous, and unforgiveable. On at least one occasion, Cambridge undergraduates travelled to Thaxted church to remove the flags, ceremoniously pulling them down, sparking off fist-fights and other disturbances. Noel himself was accused of sedition in the House of Commons. Eventually a consistory court ruled against his displaying the three flags, and Noel obeyed the ruling. Conrad was inevitably dubbed "The Red Rector" by the popular press as a result of his actions and beliefs.

 

Conrad Noel is almost forgotten today outside of church circles, but his influence on English culture and the revival of tradition in the 20th Century was immense. If England ever becomes a nation independent of the Union again, I hope that someone will remember him and put his face on the bank notes.

A Cadet from 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, attempts the ‘Swing Stop and Jump’ obstacle, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. This obstacle is a part of the nine obstacles of the Confidence Course meant to challenge Cadets physically. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

Jazmyn contacted me wanting to take a set up from the previous fashion styled shoots that we had done. She wanted to do something that would give her self-confidence a boost, so we combined outfits and shadowy lighting to create shots with a feminine and sensuous feel.

Cadet Andrea Neal, Arizona State University, from Tucson, Ariz., attempts the ‘High Step Over’ obstacle, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. This obstacle is a part of the nine obstacles of the Confidence Course meant to challenge Cadets physically. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

AEC Routemaster Park Royal brought straight from London Transport RM655

Melinda Hicks in "Test Subject”

 

The tests cause pain, but thru pain they say there is healing.

 

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** Warning ** These are shots used for giving starting actors and models a look to get roles in the Horror genre.

 

** Disclaimer ** No Children ( Or Parents ) was harmed in this photoshoot, all prop use, Outfits, and poses was done with strict parental supervision.

 

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Cadets with the 3rd Regiment Cadet Initial Entry Training (CIET) negotiate the high ropes course while building confidence in moving about 30 feet above the ground at Fort Knox, Ky., June 21. Photo by: Trent Taylor

Cadets from 1st Regiment Advance Camp, Charlie Company, hang out after completing the Confidence Course, Fort Knox, Ky., May 29, 2019. The Cadets were waiting to rotate with Delta Company and attempt the Rappel Tower. | Photo by Kyle Crawford, CST Public Affairs Office

This young fellow illustrates an important trait in dealing with women-confidence. Though she towers over him , he leads with self assurance. You know he asked her to dance.

Of course, you can shoot

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