Thứ Hai, 8 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 9 2017

Birds' Hill Cottage, Amazing Small House Design Ideas

For more infomation >> Birds' Hill Cottage, Amazing Small House Design Ideas - Duration: 4:25.

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The Sasquatch Are Real And Have Been Contacting Humans For Decad - Duration: 4:29.

The Sasquatch Are Real And Have Been Contacting Humans For Decades

Kewaunee and Kelly Lapseritis are well known in Washington State for their studies and

contact with the Sasquatch, more commonly known as �Bigfoot�.

They were speakers at In5d�s Lifting the Cosmic Veil Conference on March 18, 2017 in

Seattle, WA.

Kewaunee showed actual pictures of the Sasquatch and explained how and when he first came to

telepathically communicate with them.

He also explains how you can comunicate with them too!

Kelly shared quotes from the Sasquatch which give messages to humanity about the times

that we are in right now on the planet.

She shares how the Sasquatch actually brought her and Kewaunee together.

The Sasquatch are intelligent, multidimensional beings that have always been able to stay

several steps ahead of humanity.

In case you are interested in the entire conference summary:

Part 1: Michelle opens up the conference by discussing raising your vibration, disembodied

entities and implants, waves of energy, what we can do to find our life purpose, the importance

of community, finding your star family, and how lifting the veil to see the beings in

the astral realm will truly cause a �game over� scenario.

Emma Louise Living Soul spoke at our conference about her visions of the New Earth.

Emma and Michelle met in Finland at the Dreamers Conference and also spent time together the

week before at the Galactic Wisdom Conference in Olympia, WA and at a retreat in Port Orchard,

WA.

Emma describes the New Earth according to her visions and tells why she was shown these

visions.

Emma takes questions at the end.

Here is the link to Part 1.

Part 2 features Kewaunee and Kelly Lapseritis, who are E.T. and Sasquatch contactees.

Kewaunee begins with the story of his experience as a Sasquatch contactee of 60+ years, and

describes how he healed his cancer.

He also shares astounding photos of real sasquatch and elders!

Kelly shared the most profound spiritual messages from Kamooh as transcribed through Sunbow,

and all of the slides are shared in this video.

Part 3 is with Eric Raines, which was thankfully shot by Siara Loveless since Michelle�s

computer crashed at the beginning of his speech and then had 21,000 updates to run through!

His camera stopped recording 3 times on it�s own but not much was lost.

Part 4 is with the Reality Whisperer Brad Johnson who channeled his higher self, Adronis

and Code Name Randall, a being from the future with a southern accent.

Adronis took many questions from the audience.

Michelle also wraps up the conference with questions and Brad gives an interesting answer

about Antartica that you�ll want

to hear!

For more infomation >> The Sasquatch Are Real And Have Been Contacting Humans For Decad - Duration: 4:29.

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Los Angeles Trust Litigation Attorney | Asking the Right Questions - Duration: 3:36.

Every week at Hackard Law, we receive fifteen to twenty new calls from prospective estate,

probate, and trust litigation and elder financial abuse clients, many of them from the Los Angeles

area.

This is a process that we both enjoy and learn from.

Given the volume of calls, it is important that we ask questions that get right to the

heart of the matter.

Our prospective LA clients often say that "I don't know where to start" and this

is "really complex," when explaining a trust dispute or how someone took financial

advantage of their elderly loved one.

We've found that the best way to deal with this complexity is to break down voluminous

facts into simple-to understand-categories.

We use the "Five Ws" to simplify this process.

"The Five Ws ... are questions whose answers are considered basic in information gathering

or problem solving."

The five questions we ask when interviewing clients in Los Angeles trust, estate and elder

financial abuse litigation matters are:

1.

Who is the decedent or the victim of elder abuse?

Who is the trustee?

The elder abuser?

The beneficiaries?

The heirs?

2.

What happened?

What is it that caused the prospective client to call me?

Is the concern over a parent?

A wrongdoing sibling?

A caretaker?

Abuse of a power of attorney?

Substitution of an untrustworthy trustee?

3.

When did this happen?

When was a trust made?

When was the elder first abused?

When were the elder's assets taken?

When did the relative pass away?

When was there a diagnosis of dementia or Alzheimer's?

When did the client receive notice of the trust?

4.

Where did this happen?

Where did the relative pass away?

Where does the trustee live?

Where does the wrongdoer live?

Where are the decedent's assets?

Where do the beneficiaries live?

If an action is pending where is the action?

5.

Why did this happen?

Was the elder vulnerable?

Why was the wrongdoer able to get close to the elder?

Why is the wrongdoer impaired – if he or she is impaired?

Why is a copy of the trust or will missing?

If you have a Los Angeles-area estate or probate litigation matter, a trust lawsuit, or a case

of elder financial abuse and you want to see if you have a litigation option, call us at

Hackard Law: (213) 357-5200.

Our attorneys regularly protect client interests at the Stanley Mosk Courthouse and at other

venues throughout LA.

We'll talk about the "Five Ws" and how we might go about helping you.

Thank you.

For more infomation >> Los Angeles Trust Litigation Attorney | Asking the Right Questions - Duration: 3:36.

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Chloe And Maze Pretend To Be Trixie's Moms | Season 2 Ep. 15 | LUCIFER - Duration: 1:26.

You're Trixie's moms, right?

Mm-hmm.

I'm the event coordinator here.

I just want to tell you that we'd be so happy to have

you as part of the family.

Mid-afternoon yoga always needs more volunteers.

Oh, I would love to.

But mid-afternoons, I'm at my job.

Oh.

She's a homicide detective.

She has a gun and everything.

Real pistol in the sack too.

Oh.

Ha ha.

Jokester.

I wish I had time for a job.

But you know what they say, exceptional child, exhausted

mom.

Mm.

Mm-hmm.

I've never heard anyone say that.

It don't make sense.

Mazi, look at everybody.

Look at these parents.

Who has a kid, and is this put together?

Use those detective skills, Decker.

Get out of your own head.

Look around.

All right.

That entire table over there is just waiting for that couple

to go nuclear.

When that woman walked in, the entire room started

commenting on her cheek filler.

They're miserable and waiting to tear each other apart.

Actually, reminds me of home.

For more infomation >> Chloe And Maze Pretend To Be Trixie's Moms | Season 2 Ep. 15 | LUCIFER - Duration: 1:26.

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Empathy Heartbeat Training — It Helps You Read Other People's Minds - Duration: 5:53.

Empathy Heartbeat Training � It Helps You Read Other People's Minds

You really should listen to your heart.

People who are more aware of their heartbeat are better at perceiving the emotions of people

around them.

What's more, improving this ability might help some people with autism and schizophrenia.

Can you feel your heart beating softly against your breastbone?

Or perhaps you feel hungry, thirsty or in pain?

If so, you are perceiving your internal state � a process called interoception.

It's thought that to generate emotions, we first need to interpret our body's internal

state of affairs.

So if we see a rabid dog, we only feel fear once we recognise an increase in our heart

rate or perceive a sweaty palm.

Some people with conditions that involve having poor interoceptive abilities also have trouble

interpreting their emotions.

But researchers have also speculated that interoception is important for understanding

what other people are thinking, and even guessing what they think a third person might be thinking

� known as theory of mind.

The idea is that if we have trouble distinguishing our own emotions, we might also find it hard

to interpret the emotions � and corresponding mental states of others.

Empathy Test

To investigate in their study, Geoff Bird, now at the University of Oxford, and his team

asked 72 volunteers to count their heartbeats, but without using their fingers to take their

pulse � a measure of interoception.

The participants then watched videos of various social interactions.

After each clip, they were asked multiple-choice questions that tested their ability to infer

the characters' mental states.

For instance, one scene showed a man called Tom trying to flirt with a girl called Gemma,

who was clearly interested in a second, shyer man, Barry.

Some questions required the participants to understand the emotions of a certain character

� for instance, "Is Gemma feeling annoyed?"

Participants who were better at counting their own heartbeat performed better on such questions.

"They were more empathetic," says Bird.

But there was no link between interoceptive abilities and accuracy on theory of mind questions

that didn't involve any emotions, such as "What does Barry think Gemma thinks Tom's

intentions are?"

This suggests that our ability to interpret signals from our own body only helps us understand

the thoughts of others when emotion is a factor.

Heartbeat Training "Studies like these show nicely that interoceptive

abilities are engaged in different ways for different tasks," says Anil Seth at the University

of Sussex in Brighton.

"But these relations are likely to be highly complex, so it would be interesting to look

also at other dimensions of interoception, like breathing."

Bird says that interoceptive difficulties probably play a role in a range of symptoms

experienced by some people with conditions such as autism and schizophrenia.

For instance, some people with autism find loud noises and bright lights upsetting.

These things are linked to interoception, making our hearts beat faster and raising

our level of arousal.

"It's purely theoretical for now," says Bird, "but if you're not good at distinguishing

the internal signals that arise from loud noises and bright lights from others that

are related to pain, say, then maybe those signals could be interpreted as painful."

"It's not yet been shown whether training your interoception also improves your empathy,

but it's an experiment we'd like to try," adds Bird.

One way to do this is to get people to listen to a tone that beats in time with their heart

and gets quieter over time.

There's also some evidence that looking in a mirror can improve interoception.

We don't know yet what effect such training might have on our ability to discriminate

between our own emotions and those of other people.

"Could training better interoceptive awareness make it more difficult for people to disentangle

their own feelings from those of others?" asks Lara Maister at Royal Holloway, University

of London.

For more infomation >> Empathy Heartbeat Training — It Helps You Read Other People's Minds - Duration: 5:53.

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J. K Rowling is Starting a Harry Potter Book Club | Wizarding World Book Club - Duration: 1:32.

Some exciting news has come out. J. K. Rowling is starting a Harry Potter Book Club. Pause

for a moment... Super excited about this. It was announced on Pottermore a couple of

days ago that J. K. Rowling is starting a book club entitled the Wizarding World Book

Club. And it has a twitter page @WWBookClub in which its going to be a global re-read

of Harry Potter or reading it for the first time if you've never read the series. The

book club starts in June. Umm.. and they haven't announced all the information but it seems

like the first couple of books you are going to read it in a months time span and then

every week theres going to be a new disccussion topic. I was really exctied when I was reading

the article because they were talking about how it is not only going to be a read through

and a discussion of Harry Potter but also debating some of the things in the book and

I was like oh this is awesome because Harry Potter is my all time favorite series. I love

it. So many people love it and I thinks going to be a lot of fun. So what do you guys think

of this? Are you guys going to plan on participating in the book club? I know that I am very much

considering it and I'm super excited. If you're interested in more bookish related content,

please subscribe to my channel if you're interested and I will see y'all tomorrow. Bye.

For more infomation >> J. K Rowling is Starting a Harry Potter Book Club | Wizarding World Book Club - Duration: 1:32.

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How Big of a Threat is North Korea? - Duration: 7:05.

How large is Kim's nuclear arsenal?

His tyrannical regime now has an estimated 20 nuclear warheads — and is adding a new

weapon to that stockpile every six weeks or so, experts believe.

North Korea has also been steadily upgrading its ballistic missiles.

It has already successfully mounted a small nuclear warhead on a 1,500 km–range Rodong

missile that can reach South Korea and Japan — and is on course to develop 13,000 km–range

intercontinental ballistic missiles targeting the continental U.S. by early next decade,

according to observers at Johns Hopkins University.

President Obama and his predecessor, George W. Bush, allowed North Korea's nuclear escalation

to take a backseat to other threats, like Iran, largely dismissing Kim's threats to

burn Seoul and Manhattan "down to ashes" as bluffs and posturing.

But the U.S. ignores North Korea's growing nuclear arsenal — and the instability of

its erratic leader — at its peril, says Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute

for Strategic Studies.

"Just because Pyongyang wants us to pay attention," Fitzpatrick told The Economist, "that doesn't

mean we shouldn't."

When did North Korea go nuclear?

Kim's father, Kim Jong Il, made the nuclear program central to the dictatorial regime's

identity in the early 1990s, as a way of unifying the country after a devastating famine.

President Bill Clinton tried to check North Korea's nuclear ambitions in 1994 with the

Agreed Framework, a pact that exchanged economic aid for the freezing of the country's nuclear

program.

But Pyongyang continued to provoke the West with rocket tests, and after Bush was elected

in 2000, talks broke down when Pyongyang failed to provide verification of its compliance.

In 2003, North Korea quit the Non-Proliferation Treaty and announced it had nuclear weapons,

carrying out its first nuclear test three years later.

Under the leadership of 33-year-old Kim Jong Un, who came to power upon his father's death

in 2011, the pace of nuclear and missile tests has accelerated dramatically — culminating

with a fourth nuclear test, of a supposed hydrogen bomb.

How worried should we be?

It's difficult to say, given the secrecy surrounding the Hermit Kingdom.

Many of its missile and nuclear tests have failed or been hyped.

In January, for example, Pyongyang claimed to have detonated its first hydrogen bomb,

but experts said the tremors were smaller than expected for an H-bomb.

Nevertheless, the Kim regime appears to be compiling all the pieces for a deliverable

atomic device.

Kim recently posed with a miniaturized atomic warhead supposedly light enough to ride atop

a rocket that could span the Pacific.

"Their systems never work first time," says aerospace engineer John Schilling, "but they

persevere."

Would sanctions stop them?

They haven't so far.

The U.N. Security Council has just passed the toughest sanctions in two decades, however

— banning the export of coal, iron, and other minerals that provide vital funds for

the government's nuclear program.

The success of the sanctions will depend almost entirely on China — Pyongyang's most influential

ally, and the nation with which it does 90 percent of its trade.

Beijing officially opposes Kim's bid to become a serious nuclear power, and is becoming more

frustrated by the belligerent ruler every day.

But China's leaders will never risk punishing North Korea so severely that its regime would

collapse, sparking regional chaos and sending millions of North Koreans fleeing across the

border into China.

What else can the U.S. do?

Not a lot, except strengthen its missile defense systems at home and abroad.

Last year, the Obama administration announced it would deploy the new Terminal High Altitude

Area Defense system in South Korea, to reduce the chance of an attack from Kim's regime.

"But that doesn't mean you just build more missile defenses and walk away," says former

White House nuclear adviser Gary Samore.

The system can destroy about 90 percent of what is fired toward South Korea, but if just

one nuclear warhead slips through that net, it could kill and injure an estimated 420,000

people in Seoul.

What are Kim's intentions?

His primary goal is to stay in power, but otherwise, he's a mystery.

Kim's former classmates at his Swiss boarding school have described him as "unpredictable"

and "prone to violence."

South Korea's intelligence agency recently reported that he's obsessed with the fear

that he will be overthrown, and that the 5-foot-9-inch dictator has swollen to 285 pounds because

he copes with his anxiety by bingeing on food and alcohol.

In his paranoia, Kim has presided over several brutal purges in his military; in 2013 he

executed his uncle, Jang Song Taek, calling him a traitor and "despicable human scum."

International security analyst Alexandre Y.

Mansourov of the Nautilus Institute warns that if the volatile tyrant believes he's

about to be attacked, he could do the unthinkable.

"Pyongyang will likely assume the worst," Mansourov says, "and rush to use the nuclear

weapons out of fear of losing them to allied preemption."

What happen if the regime collapse?

One of the biggest dilemmas China faces is trying to rein in its North Korean ally with

economic sanctions — but without tipping Kim Jong Un's regime over the edge.

If the regime collapses, experts agree, there will be absolute chaos.

There would be widespread looting by the country's starving citizens, and violence in the gulags

holding the country's 120,000 political prisoners.

Millions of people would rush the border into China, and South Korean and U.S. troops would

be forced to occupy a devastated and dysfunctional country.

In his final days, Kim might choose to pass the nuclear weapons under his control to terrorists

— or even launch them himself, as a final act of suicidal revenge.

The regime's collapse would probably spark a brutal civil war with very high stakes,

says North Korea expert Andrei Lankov — it is just like Syria with nukes.

Well, Really cool information isn't it?

Leave us a comment down below and let us know what you thought of this video.

Don't forget to give us account subs and watch other amazing videos on our channel.

Thanks for watching!

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