View allAll Photos Tagged unlearn
One of the most chilled of the #Dygio_ Moto`s, Dash could be your childeren's first bike and then their siblings as well.
A colour to suit the most fashionable mini me’s, the is the hippest thing to happen to young kids development since the development of schools!
The Dygio Moto`s wooden bike`s allows your child the freedom to explore and have fun while nurturing the development of balance, coordination and gross motor skills. A retro and very stylish package, a perfect first bike... Dash could be the first bike of your generation…. create your own very cool heirloom, leave your own mark. Storm , Is one of the world’s favorite wooden balance bike`s - Dygio Moto but without pedals, designed for pre school age children to master balance, steering and motor skills beyond their years. Tots can now experience the exhilaration and freedom of a bike on a ‘Dygio Moto`s wooden bike are pedal free so as soon as your child can touch the ground they can propel, brake and stabilise. They start slowly at first and quickly gain the skills and reflexes to transition to a regular bike without fear or training wheels.With a Dygio Moto wooden balance bike the rider learns balance first, pedaling last. In contrast, with a normal bicycle fitted with training wheels, where the rider learns to pedal first, balance last. It is generally agreed that a bicycle with pedals is too difficult for most very young children and that training wheels may encourage the rider to learn some bad habits which later must be unlearned.
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
America Ferrera is stunning on the March cover of Redbook, but her appearance is far from the top of her mind.
Inside the magazine, the 32-year-old actress opens up about “unlearning” Hollywood’s standard of beauty, and...
www.photosreview.com/america-ferrera-radiates-on-cover-of...
Apply to the premier educating institute Asian College of teachers for doing the TESOL English course online. Grab the TEFL certification course to unlearn best teaching tips for a lucrative global career.
In order to ponder the order of things,
one must first learn to unlearn.
Yet knowing is often best suited for dreams
where waking life's rules don't concern.
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
Paper Art infused with Stop Motion Film, focusing on the project, Moral Issues.
A series of photographs of my friend with an abused look created by using makeup and the Paper Art element of the ‘Rock On’ hand saying “Unlearn Sexism, End Rape Culture, Slay the Patriarchy.”
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
For those who believe in God, most of the big questions are answered. But for those of us who can't readily accept the God formula, the big answers don't remain stone-written. We adjust to new conditions and discoveries. We are pliable. Love need not be a command or faith a dictum. I am my own God. We are here to unlearn the teachings of the church, state, and our educational system. We are here to drink beer. We are here to kill war. We are here to laugh at the odds and live our lives so well that Death will tremble to take us.
Charles Bukowski
This is my first poem at buzznet today, I will no more be posting at at PH I was incomplete .. they read my words without seeing my pictures and I decided it was time a take a long sabbatical from live poets and unlive poetry .
I want to begin unlearning poetry..
my pictures are the soul of my poetry
apertured thoughts at shuttered speed
mother hood
begs on the street
a husband
who impregnated her
ran away
single mother
battling
all odds in defeat
leprous lachrymose
her bad luck
her good luck unseat
a child
who will one day
become the father
of man
at her feet
mother hood
the diadem
of a womans womb
i repeat
my poem no 1 at buzznet
dedicated to all single mothers..
even those with husbands
the mother in the picture is a leper.. the child is normal.
this was when I deleted my poems at poem hunter and began posting at buzznet
"The first step towards getting somewhere is to decide that you are not going to stay where you are."
- J. Pierpont Morgan -
How to Motivate Yourself: 21 Quotes to Help You Refocus and Renew www.abeautifulrippleeffect.com/2010/07/how-to-motivate-yo...
The sponge has been around for an awfully long time; 600 million years! That is since the Precambrian period of our planet's history. With approximately 8,550 different described species of sponge, there are a lot to pick from. Found from shallow water to 3.1 miles deep and in saltwater and freshwater systems, these critters are specialized and diverse animals that are often overlooked. These critters deserve more credit than they get.
First the Stats...
Scientific name: Porifera
Weight: Up to 20 lbs.
Length: Up to 6 feet
Lifespan: Up to 5,000+ years
Now on to the Facts!
1.) Sponges act as a kind of gill, in that they filter the surrounding water and extract plankton and other nutrients to feed itself.
2.) The sponge is the simplest known multicellular organism.
3.) Their various colorations are to help protect them from the harmful effects of ultraviolet light.
4.) Even though they are classified as animals, they lack a head, eyes, brain, nerves, legs, arms, ears, muscles, or even organs.
5.) The only known predators of sponges are some species of fish, some sea turtles, and some invertebrates.
But wait, there's more on the sponge!
6.) In the nutrient-depleted coral reefs, there are certain sponges which are thought to make carbon biologically and readily available by excreting a form of feces (poop) that other organisms rely on to survive. Living on sponge poop. There's a thing you can't unlearn.
7.)
Our mind is shackled by the surrounding media. It is hard to break free, it is hard to come to rest. On every corner we are fed with headlines, scandals, and terrific news. We unlearned our ability to think free, we forgot the spirit of the Age of Enlightenment and we set ourselves boundaries that were promoted by ads, shows and social media.
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
Love is what we are born with. Fear is what we learn. The spiritual journey is the unlearning of fear and prejudices and the acceptance of love back in our hearts. Love is the essential reality and our purpose on earth. To be consciously aware of it, to experience love in ourselves and others, is the meaning of life. Meaning does not lie in things. Meaning lies in us. (Marianne Williamson)
Photo by Uiler Costa-Santos.
Indigenous, African, and European influences blend to create a unique culture within Brazil that includes religions like none other in the world. Afro-Brazilian religions have played an important contribution to Brazilian culture for generations; however, they are often pushed into the shadows and suffer from widespread misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and prejudice.
With practitioners of these religions forming a massive but disconnected community, Jayro Pereira de Jesus, Ashoka Fellow, saw an opportunity: organize across marginalized religious groups to not just gain the power to emerge into the mainstream, but to be able to demand respect. In a country dominated by European standards, these groups have often felt the pressure to uphold themselves to these standards in order to gain acceptance. According to Jayro, community is power. Through community building, practitioners unlearn these internalized attitudes and uplift their own culture as a moral compass.
The Afro-Brazilian religions with which Jayro works hold a distinct framework for problem solving than dominant Western religions. For example, there tends to be less of a dichotomy between good and evil within their belief systems. With these religions finally gaining the respect they deserve in the mainstream, Jayro is opening new pathways toward an Everyone A Changemaker world.
the actual ramble goes like this....
flags will fly at half mast today, but not for the death of anyone.
they will fly half as high because when I think of 9-11 there is no feeling.
no nationalistic pride or gut-wrenching sadness boiling in my heart.
there are talking points. a chance to fill one's pockets. gold and glory. war and death and unimaginable cost.
but no feeling.
no love or hate or anger. no forgiveness.
I have become desensitized. My feelings gone, killed by necrophiliacs.
and I fly flag no flag for them.
...if you noticed there were no "big" bills included...don't think to hard...it was not meant as a "hollar" to the little guy but mearly because I had nothing more than two ones and one five in my wallet...some would be so lucky.