Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 2, 2018

Waching daily Feb 26 2018

My outfit today is incorporating some of my favorite types of materials and designers.

One of them being patent leather done by Georgia Tordini and Gilda Ambrosio from Attico.

I'm also wearing these stilettos from Paul Andrew.

These beautiful earrings by Monica Sordo, an incredible Peruvian jewelry designer.

These are her next season.

I have these really cool sunglasses and it's not a metal or silver, therefore you can wear

it with jewelry and it won't clash.

What I'm wearing under this coat is a pinstripe shirting dress by Raf Simmons for Calvin Klein.

The jeans I'm wearing are Re/done and I chopped the bottoms because I love a frayed hem.

In addition, I am wearing Wolford tights.

You cannot go through a cold fashion week without some tights.

The type of jewelry I really like has to deal more with metal and stone.

This one is Kamushki.

It's a fishbone and this one actually does have some diamonds in it and a pearl.

This ring is Svelte from a designer in California.

Voila.

I love coming to the February shows because it's freezing outside but we get to see a

lot of bright and colorful Spring fashion.

Today I'm wearing my new Burberry coat that I've had my eye on for the last few months.

Underneath it I'm wearing kind of a sheer feminine Zimmerman dress.

They're great for traveling to Europe for the shows because they don't wrinkle and you

can pack like 3 or 4 of them.

These boots are Gianvito Rossi and they are the perfect heel height.

I love Altuzarra bags because of all the details that he does.

This is actually a couple seasons old.

I'm not exactly sure where my sunglasses are from.

In fact I think they may be vintage.

Lastly I'm wearing a gold hoop by Aurélie Bidermann.

She's a French designer.

Everything she does has a touch of whimsy.

I'm excited to be attending New York Fashion Week.

I'm wearing Veja sneakers.

I bought them on Editorialist.com.

They were best buy of the season for me.

The pants are Valentino and I hem everything I wear because I'm 5'3 and I hem them for

sneakers so I can wear them more often.

The top I'm wearing is Céline and it's also super versatile.

And the coat is Max Mara.

It was gifted to me but it was actually two sizes too big on me.

I had it tailored which was my big investment but totally worth it.

My bag is Céline and was one of the first things I bought after joining Stitch Fix because

now I have to carry a computer everywhere I go.

My glasses are Oliver Peoples.

For more infomation >> What an $8,000 Outfit Looks Like At NYFW | This Look is Money | Harper's BAZAAR - Duration: 3:23.

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The Canon 80D is STILL 2018's best Vlogging Camera! - Duration: 4:21.

so it's already February 2018 and if you're looking to start or even upgrade

your vlog game this year you've got to do it now

so what canon camera should you purchase to do so which one's versatile enough to

produce a vlog but still affordable say under 1,500 bucks let's find out hey

welcome back to espresso full mug media's value pack tidbit series I'm

your host Kane Nash and today we're going to be talking about why you should

be vlogging with the canon 80D, and if at any point during the show you're

curious about anything I mentioned, want to check out the prices or specs

individually of anything I've talked about check out the links in the

description I've got it all down there or our write-up of this video on medium

to start off we're just gonna run through the list of specs it's got a 24

megapixel aps-c sensor whoo not to mention that dual pixel autofocus with

45 points of autofocus this is a really big thing for vlogging it's got an

articulating touchscreen it can capture 1080p at 60 frames a second which means

you can do some of that buttery slo-mo not quiet hundred and twenty one-DX but

you can still do some pretty good slo-mo it's got a beautiful weather resistant

body and it's got Wi-Fi and NFC built in so if you don't have an SD card slot on

your MacBook or a MacBook you can just Wi-Fi drop the stuff to your phone now

just rapid-fire a couple of reasons I really like the 80D for vlogging reasons

I think it's superior it's got an extra headphone jack so that if you're

recording audio to use it later like say you find a street band you're gonna use

their music as the music for your whole vlog but you don't want to record crappy

audio you can plug in headphones and monitor what you're recording while

you're recording it to make sure that the levels sound good it's great, My T6i did not have that and when I upgraded to the 80D that was my favorite

feature aside from the 45 points of autofocus though that is just buttery

and amazing another thing I like about the 80D is it's heavy enough to get good

b-roll and by that I mean you can get good b-roll with like smaller cameras

like GoPros and black magics but for me there's something about the weight in my

hands and I have the battery grip on my Canon 80 d so I've got like some extra

weight going on there at a Joby Gorillapod like this one right here you

basically got a rod coming down off your camera to weigh it down so you can kind

of get those smooth cinematic movements without having to have things like

steadicams and gimbals always with you and obviously this is a no-brainer but

if you're somebody who's looking at something like a point-and-shoot for

your vlogging setup the reason I would say go DSLR above point-and-shoot is

interchangeable lenses you can do all kinds of stuff which means if I want a

really wide angle look I can use something like this wide lens right here

which is great for vlogging by the way it's the lens casey neistat shot

most of the vlog on to show way more of your surroundings to really make your

viewer feel like they're in the shot whereas if you use something like the 50

millimeter prime that we reviewed a couple of days ago you're gonna have a

lot less room to work with and also that's a fixed prime lens so you can't

like zoom you have to move with your camera to change shots and positions but

you can get some really really amazing creamy shots out of it like we talked

about in that video if you haven't seen the links in the description and article

links in the description we got all kinds of links people but anyway so if

you've gotten a little bit of extra budget I would go for something like a

DSLR that has an interchangeable lens system so in conclusion the Canon 80D is

still the best vlogging camera in February 2018 because of its amazing

autofocus that articulating touch screen and Canon colorscience

Canon color science if you're curious about anything else or want to go more

in depth I'll put some more links in the description or you can check out the

article write-up of this video on medium I will see you guys next time I hope you

guys liked the video please share it with someone who would get some value

out of it this has been full mug media please leave us a comment in the comment

section down below and we'll get back to you soon as humanly possible we keep

notifications on so we're gonna get back to you guys FOMA media don't play

For more infomation >> The Canon 80D is STILL 2018's best Vlogging Camera! - Duration: 4:21.

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Fat Boy SSE is Not Very Funny - Duration: 11:52.

hey how's it going everybody it's your boy Connor Howe welcome back to the channel today

we're gonna be talking about something that I really haven't heard a lot of people

talk about today it's a little bit of breaking news if you want to hit that

drop

yeah so I've been out perusing around the internet turns out Lele pons isn't

funny Lele pons isn't funny Lele pons is remarkably unfunny Hannah stocking is

remarkably unfunny Lele pons teaches me how to stand up to my bully let's

examine Lele pons content roasting Lele pons' trash comedy Lele pons the worst

of Instagram lele pons hit a new low Instagram community taking over Lele

pons dude check out your favorite commentator if you think lele pons

is funny cuz turns out she's not but today we're gonna be talking about

Instagram comedian before I get in the video

have any of you guys taken a

flight and you get stuck in the middle seat and you're just like dang I'm in

the middle seat

in the middle

she's black she's black but many was quiet

Oh

what a knee-slapper guys but in case you couldn't tell that is the Instagram

comedian known as the name on his chain no not boobies it's FatBoy so his

name's FatBoy sse don't really know what the SSE stands for and really too

lazy to do the research on that come at me Kavos for not being researched

can't wait to hear what you're gonna say about my lack of research but today

we're gonna be talking about fatboy sse in case you guys haven't watched my boonk

video from a couple weeks ago it's full of gang shit guys whole lotta gang shit

all right chock-full of a whole lot of gang shit a whole lot but I would say

that Fat Boy is kind of what you would get if boonk and DJ Khaled made

love and had a baby he has kind of the the personality of a

DJ Khaled but the the savageness savage level of a boonk the credit card scares

back in the day when they go for you so let the new wears leather socks but make

it this is that this is when I'm trying to come to my crib you don't bring them

new friends around I don't know this figure my middle

what's up with you you wanna move into some are crazy I don't know him I don't

know him I don't know I don't know don't bring this to my dream oh you know I

clown on videos critiquing Lele pons earlier but I think a lot of these

commentators talking about Lele pons not being funny kind of have the same you

can make the same point with Fatboy that boy thinks that loud is funny

I personally don't think that loud is funny I think that having like just a

little bit of substance is kind of my cup of tea more of the the Instagram

comedy that is comedy I guess is what I was more looking for but since since

we're on the subject uh FatBoy is like boonk an aspiring SoundCloud rapper slash

social media personality who fakes videos at fast-food places and like

supreme patty eats drugs because that's comedy this dude really hasn't been the

subject of a lot of criticism on YouTube and again with these videos that are

making I'm not trying to tell you that fatboy or boonk or anyone else

is really like the worst person on the internet like none of these people are

daddyofive none of these people are even logan paul for that matter and

logan paul is not like half the bad guy that people make him out to be and

don't like logan paul but the point of all this is that like he's just

a guy entertaining people on social media and so with that you're gonna have

people who like him and people who don't like him and look whether you think fatboy

sse is funny or not and i think most of us probably kind of know who he is at this

point but whether he's funny or not you got to respect the hustle okay he's not

on the streets he's not doing this stuff like he's not slinging drugs and

shooting people like i'm alright with that you're not hurting people

you're not doing stupid stuff i mean you're doing stupid stuff you're not

doing that stupid stuff you know i mean so i don't know i guess this video loses

a little bit of punch for me not being like screw this guy but i don't have the

energy for it and i I'm not like full I I feel like I'm not full of crap you

know I'm not trying to say other commentators are full of crap but in this

certain instance when you're like screw this guy he's like

ruining the internet like video I think you're kind of full of crap let's just clown on fatboy a little bit alright let's just have some fun guys it's fatboy alright he's a little fat, a little boy he's a fatboy when you make that video what can I say he's a bit of a fatboy you know he's what you get when you

take fat take a boy put them together fatboy

and he's an aspiring soundcloud rapper

god help us dude god help us sorry you know if you thought that was

funny my apologies but uh you know if you know if you thought it was funny and

I'm wrong for thinking that wasn't funny sue me sue me please don't I don't have

money but I don't it I I might have a patreon soon so donate to my patreon if

you're I don't know if you're mad at me just please don't do anything you guys

i guess you can tweet at me or leave mean YouTube comments like this guy who's obsessed with

me but I know I like I would say that he's not funny

and if there's nothing wrong with that there's nothing wrong with thinking that

a fat guy isn't funny fat's not always funny loud's not always funny you know

in fact let's let's see what fatboy has to say about his own comedic style

he got a creative style what I've called he dynamic like me I'm raw I'm

just straight blunt get to the point let's do it the video will have to be

one minute let the video be 20 second let people get to the point you know

people with attention spans like that I don't know if that's me misinterpreting

but like that just sounds like he doesn't think he's funny he how do these

people get Instagram famous man I don't understand and I'm not being like oh I

should be Instagram famous or YouTube famous cuz I'm the poop like dude I have

a long way to go and I get that I just I don't understand how these people man

how does this guy have more followers than like BionicPig who's like one of

the funniest people on YouTube or Willy Mac dude the guy who just collabed with me

that dude is funny as hell wavywebsurf even wildspartanz wild

Spartanz is funnier than this dude I guess that's just one of the mysteries

of the universe as much as I clown on the fat boy I'll leave it at this okay

dude's got 4.3 million subscribers and tonight literally tonight as I record

this video homeboy is hanging out with Fetty WAP I'm pretty sure Fetty WAP let

me check damn what do all these Instagram comedians have such a long snapchat

stories he was London on the track dude London on the track let me look that

up London on the track otherwise known as American record producer

songwriter and former rapper who's collaborated with young thug

birdman kodak black Waka Flocka gucci mane drake 21 savage like you get the

picture this dude might actually become mainstream man if this guy

becomes mainstream god help us god help us I know that's not comedy okay me

saying god help us isn't comedy but God help us please Lord send up a prayer

send up a prayer so that fat boy who's hanging out with Fetty WAP tonight you

see that Fetty WAP he's hanging out with fetty WAP dude send up a

prayer dear Jesus please don't do this please don't do this I hope he has a

prosperous life just maybe not as an Instagram comedian dude that's gonna be

it for days video guys I don't really know what to say if you want a

haunter you want a what the hell is this card seviper seviper seviper i

don't know but if you want that card one of those cards maybe i'll steal one of

them from my roommate send them to you guys only if I hit a thousand subs all

right hit give me a thousand subs I'll send random stuff to you guys I don't know

I'm doing a patreon if you donate to my patreon maybe I'll send you guys random

stuff if you donate a certain amount of money I'm also gonna start live

streaming guys give me a thousand subs I'll start live streaming I play call

of duty quickscopes only guys if you if you don't quickscope get the poop out of

here alright subscribe like this video alright guys this video not that bad connor

howe not that bad but maybe that's my catchphrase guys I need like a

catchphrase something to like set me apart connor howe not that bad

he's alright so until next time guys hope you enjoy the video thanks for

watching guys all right I love you guys I really do so until next time

I wanna make love to Michelle Obama I wonder for Michelle Obama

I wanna make love to Michelle Obama well I'm selling away in the White House

For more infomation >> Fat Boy SSE is Not Very Funny - Duration: 11:52.

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JUDGE KAREN'S PATIENCE IS GONE..."WHY AM I HERE","WHY AM I HERE"...HERE COMES THAT FAN...LOL - Duration: 4:53.

For more infomation >> JUDGE KAREN'S PATIENCE IS GONE..."WHY AM I HERE","WHY AM I HERE"...HERE COMES THAT FAN...LOL - Duration: 4:53.

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Intellectual Salon Home Is where the blank is - Duration: 1:08:49.

okay, my name is Joe Medeiros and I am the editor of the Sierra College

press and we do ebooks on the Sierra Nevada and I'm also the archivist here

I'm a retired biology teacher and just I didn't want to leave Sierra College like

a lot of students who just don't want to move on gets too comfortable here or

something but I work within the library and we like to do these intellectual

salons please come on intellectual salons where we pick a topic and we kind

of analyze it from multi and multi-directional multidisciplinary

approach this is our fourth beginning our fourth year of salons we've done

three others we did a year both semesters on the topic of time and that

was very very enjoyable very complex and very mind-bending we did a year two

semesters on the topic of love the same a year of two semesters on the topic of

fear and we landed on the topic, home this time, we kind of got into this

four-letter word role and and so if you have some other four-letter words that

are printable and usable and so on that we might springboard from let us know I

welcome you all here our our salons are co-sponsored and I want to make sure

that you share what you what you experienced today with others so that

you might come back the next time if you can see this our next salon is coming up

in a month there's not a very important topic and it's more historical than

today driven from there homes and our faculty provocateurs will

be Ralph De Unamuno , Jay Hester Amy Myers and Matt Archer from numerous

disciplines just for the heck of it you know if you were driven it peoples that

have been driven from their homes what comes to mind straight away in your

experience what people's sorry refugees but I mean what yeah Native Americans

just just to start all right what else Jews

others even eviction well I'm thinking about peoples that have been driven

evicted have become refugees

well just about everybody and ejected rejected forcibly out or whatever but

interestingly nobody came up with African Americans for Africa although

the entire African slave trade and so on so that would be next month in in April

I'll do one with two other biologists and this one's going to be called

there's no place like home we're gonna get out of the human focus of home and

look at a biological focus you know clearly anthropomorphic you know what is

a home and biology is that a nest is it a den this and that is it permanent as a

temporary is it is it a territory all these different kinds of things and then

in May just before the end of the semester we'll have Michelle Johnson

who's right here with her classes all of our English classes go through three

major papers where they focus on different aspects of home so students

will be here to recite their works their perspectives and their heartfelt

interpretations of this whole concept of home so our provocateurs for the day

or me and Jason here I have an old file a photo of Jason things have changed so

I updated his so I'm good so I don't know Photoshop yet you know I'm still no

Jason if you have one word to describe home to yourself what would it mean say

say you know I as I have become a grandfather home to me is with my wife

my family and my grandkids and so on but I actually think that if I had a

physical place and that was home maybe would be the Sierra Nevada that's one of

the reasons I haven't left California yet and Jason I want you to know that

you know I tend to be bearded, but you don't want to go back, just don't want to go

back so Deb, the vice president of college screamed when I walked into her

office and said Jerry Springer get out of my office

so that was the last time that ever happened the last shave job so, home what is it

there's no place like home, is there? As a biologist I go back as an ecologist I

like to look at the root word ecos which is Greek it means a house and we take

our two words ecology as the study of the home economics as the study of the

management of the home and so on so this is a but it's still kind of a physical

thing in those matters so our sub title for our talk today or our so on today as

home is where the what is and that's really kind of I think where we where we

want to start we like to look at what is at home or where is a home who is at

home or what is this thing called home so Jason you want to come on up with me

and see if we can't well let me say to the the Joe's been thinking about this

for a long time and I've been talking with him for about over a month probably

about this series and what Joe had in mind for today is not for him or I or

anybody else to lecture but really to solicit thoughts and an opinion so

really what Joe and I ideally don't want to say anything but ask you guys to

start a conversation and and that we can listen to so really I we don't want to

talk very much we would like to hear from you and every single one of you

here about your thoughts on these issues I had a, I know some of your in

my Humanities two classes, we talked about in class on on Tuesday and it was

it was kind of really impressed by the variety of thoughts and perspectives and

points of view on on this on this topic and so we just kind of want to open that

want you guys talk to us each other about maybe I should tell you that I

asked Jason to do this as a professor in the Humanities Department, this is, this

word is really kind of a human word but yet as a biologist we really do include

it in in biological ways too so these are just these are just prompts and the

idea of a salon is to engage in a conversation right and so we really do

want to be the ones that talk less, so maybe we could start with the question

that I asked Jason if you had one word to describe home to you what might it be

raise your hand or just speak it out yes stability emotional or structural yes

others yes comfortable being comfortable yeah what is that what is comfort

alright alright I mean comfort can be I'm warm but I think you're talking

about something bigger than just English yeah for sure I think we all probably

come on I know this is a simple for your children if you if you can ask you a

question if you had your kids and their cats but you were moved to a different

physical environment would it feel like home to you it's so different or how

would you care well I mean

so I just have one but I think if I were to relocate right that that it would be

a starting point it would it would provide a sense of stability and comfort

that I didn't necessarily had it have if I had to be by myself so it provides

that support as we navigate this new space potentially I mean I you know now

I think about it because I've rescued so many cats from Sierra College you're the

crazy cat lady I am I just like that but I think about I I think I can't leave

this house because there's no place that in your like I couldn't move into an

apartment because of my cats right so that that idea that the cats in many

respects now are sort of structuring the kind of home that I want to keep right

because anyone say that having responsibilities as part of your

conception of home having responsibility for the

I don't know that it would factor it in there but I mean I can I could certainly

make an argument for sure I'll bet those cats if they were asked where his home

they would say Michelle Johnson yeah well I don't know cats go where the food

is yeah exactly

family this is very interesting work we're really hanging in on human

connections here more than structure even though we use this we're home as it

as a physical place yes

we invested like you said

so

yes it's just

my understanding of life

so it's just

mm-hmm can I ask you then a personal question what's your home then don't

have this so I am am i understanding you to say that home is where your where

your interests are passion is lie

because

my responsibility

and can we bounce - can you guys respond to each other that would be really cool

yeah yeah I guess thinking about what I considered how I move around a lot State

country and think the picture of Joe and the Sierra Nevada is what they for me is

I grew up in the East Bay so not only is most of my family there and that's kind

of what I seeas home, but it's also like, the smells of the Bay Area like

when I smell the bay when I go home the saltiness of the marshes are there also

the prevalence of wild fennel, so it's the smells, but also geography the

bay itself and my family, who all live there. to kind of echo off that as well,

growing up in the military we moved every two years and I think that because

growing up and moving every two years that I think it at least for me it's

sort of it forced me to not put so much primacy on a physical location as much

as the people who are in it and and so as long as that that unit stayed with

each new base right it that was the constant the house wasn't

and so I think for me you know which is ironic too because moving all around you

would think that that would have continued that sort of migratory

existence but it didn't you know I've lived in the house that I've lived in

now for 20 years you know and I have no desire to leave right, because of my cats,

but I but I you know what I mean I think sometimes you know because I think about

like with its students you know some students who who don't have that that

stability of a place then they find their definition of home in the people

and the relationships that are formed so that whether they're living in a house

or in a barracks, or in a tent or you know out in the wilderness right as long as

these certain constants are created then then they're able to move forward but

when that's disrupted in many ways that's I think when they become there or

they might feel homeless yes so I'm sure just that

I haven't considered so my parent when I you know

so that's pretty interesting is like I don't know exactly what the plans but

using that can home is where your heart feels it

belongs

and that can be both physical and emotional right yes yeah I think

all right would that be like like I would like a physical which would be

more important to you like a physically safe home like a comfortable place to be

or or the relationships there I know they're both true but for you which one

would be more uppermost

you think that I'm sure it's different thank you

I feel like it is magnificent place they think about

and I think to sort of back you up on that a little bit you know they say that

the five most stressful times of person's life are like marriage divorce

death changing jobs and moving but not in that order and help of two very

strange but moving repeat these people are moving you're not moving your

relationships you're keeping all the relationships presumably the same but

just the active physically relocating your your physical environment is

incredibly stressful. I remember my parents having the biggest fights right before moving,

just I think it makes it when when we think about sort of our privilege if we

do have a home you know a place that we know we can go it allows us to be more

abstract and sort of Moochie about the idea that if you don't actually have a

physical location lacking that privilege and how that changes the conversation

dramatically . I totally agree with that,

that was one of the cool things to come out of the conversation in class yesterday was that point I was like,

oh my gosh, that's, I think that's really true I think that what you just mentioned is it

feels different to me then asking the question what is home

because moving is stressful and anyone that has moved who knows that but that

more has to do with many times the nitty-gritty details of moving and and

not so much that you necessarily feel like a place is home although that those

kinds of moves I don't know if anyone here has experienced that but when you

move from a place that you do feel like is home it's it adds another layer for

sure so I feel like those don't necessarily mean that home is having a physical

location I just feel like they're a little bit different

I think if moving is coupled with divorce or family members separating or

something like that and that just adds another another layer you have no idea

what we adults feel like when you children move away from from our home

and they never call their father's house at home and I know

pictures but at my house you know they have their

bed and but they get to do whatever they want

make sure they can change them every day

that's their space that's their home so they asked their teacher to draw their

home they draw their bed because that's their stable place move

and they've been ups and downs of moving and relationships and then out of their

their lives that for them that's their stability you know that's I think

interesting is that their phantom bedroom David you know what having lived

in a foreign country also spending time behind the Iron

Curtain during the time that Germany come on raised its head, and it's communistic

designs I have to tell you that after having been away for many years and then

coming back flying over the Statue of Liberty, I was coming home I have no idea what's going on

expected to have such an emotional reaction its psychological come on

rendering of just how wonderful this place would feel to be back in the

States yeah I love being in the other countries

don't get me wrong but I mean just to come back to I wonder what it is with

people that that are so different because I've traveled in a number of

different places and met people who are Americans who live 35 40 years in

America moved now they're living someplace else they're happy as a clam

as a clam, don't you miss no no no it's just like how could you feel that way you

know but there are others that can just travel anywhere and find that home

whatever it is that was a question back there

the language

mm-hmm

right

yeah I think it changes its I think it affects if I understand you rightly and

I think it affects it really significantly right I mean being at home

in your house and being at home in the wider environment of your city or state

or country they interrelate with each other don't they I mean that they're

they're not they're not different distinct I mean here a lot of the

similar theme here you know as you

understand about which you can see right at the beginning of the semester and so

being able to you know zero it and something that is tangible is a lot of

students to sort of grapple with the idea what does this word

me but as we advanced through the semester we get into the more sort of

metaphorical and the abstract right of how you know it's often more than that

physical location it becomes more of what is internalized as a result of the

experiences that are formed in shape in those spaces and then you know

invariably what will happen is the students will say well it just depends

and it really does just depend I think when it gets frightening for people is

when especially if you think about this observation about you know communism you

know war or things like that where you have some power some force trying to

tell you and define for you what your understanding of home is in the case of

Native Americans obviously right so that idea of being told also sort of reinvents

your understanding of what home means right so it becomes again I think coming

back to that idea of privilege when we were privileged and we have the security

and the freedom to do and come and go as we please

we have probably a more romantic view of it, but when things become

stressed or you don't have choice in that definition or someone is defining

it for you that's that's when I think it gets

complicated and that's I think the things that we don't like to talk about

right we would rather not talk about that because I'm always pushing students

because they go to that the safe space which is you know comfort and love and

all the mushy gushy stuff which is important right but at what cost is that

mushy gushy stuff yeah on maslows hierarchy of needs, the mushy stuff is

not the base right exactly exactly you know in part it would involve personal

disclosure of the people zones background and people maybe not want to

talk about stuff like that, or may be they do but I had some really awesome students

in class yesterday opening up and talking about some of that stuff and

some of the big that came out was they just didn't like their parents

environment it was just it was, it was stressful and damaging and whatever and

to just have a physical place where they can just own the environment then it

relationship right I mean it's that's the first thing that needs to be stable

and set before the mushy stuff can start coming here and I thought that was

really profound and early I just think that's really true so so

maybe we can flip this just a little bit in, and like these examples what what

makes the word home distasteful to you what takes away the safety the security

is and so on I think it's I would say arguing arguing in a home really for me

makes it feel like not home I'd like to argue with that yeah yeah uncertainty

like suppose it could be anything from

or if you can't pay the rent you don't know it

or part of your household on fire what happens now

what if the home disappears like you're you can't lose your you can't pay your

rent you lose your apartment or some you know they sell it out from underneath

you or every two years home is where the u-haul takes me right Mayflower

yeah well you were government subsidized any other thoughts about stripping the

beauty of home away from

you know put together then I feel like it's not

yeah

please

my wife was raised in a very dirty environment too, so she's obsessive

like this and I mean the things you know if I dropped something it doesn't even

make it to the floor before it's scooped up and put someplace else so yes

the Salt Lake

place two years

for years

each one of the places that I went to felt like home,

just go so much moving

comfortable with it.

four times two years

so we rented a place together

renovate rent for more and just recently go

kind of situation it's it is really I mean

to not have that security and then it does go back to me

Sierra Nevadas

also being

don't get me wrong the Sierra Nevada would be nothing without my wife and my

grandkids and kids and all of that - yeah as I look at these things you know

I think we we've covered a lot of this territory that it is in fact physical it

is emotional it is secured or unsecured or whatever if you were if we were can

we move a little bit, got a hand, I'm sorry, yeah

because she's manipulative and emotionally abusive and she like what

her my dad got divorced and then I never saw that or I don't see him

hurt my still just don't feel like you even though that's the house I was

raised in that's it's always been my mother's house and

when you know like but it's just never felt like

and so your home is and you want one or don't want one or see all these new

places and to me I guess maybe that's what makes me go home if that's what

makes me feel peaceful and comfortable and I'll have a moment each time I go

anywhere there's just that I was like completely happy so I went to Colorado a

month ago and I was snowmobiling in the Rockies about halfway up the mountain oh

just like I just so at peace right now in this moment I'm just so

comfortable right here and so I think that that's like more I don't think a

certain place or anything I think it's a feeling that I think it's about like

definitely have the personal connection because I travel with my fiance

and so I could imagine but just that comfort feeling and just

the sensation of that's kind of the yin and the yang where you could have a

physical home but you don't and it helps you evolve into a different

well here that sick would it be safe to ask you the question actually being away

from your mother I mean I don't know if I look at it that

way because I do still see my mom on occasion and everything so it's not like

it's just I just never felt safe or comfortable or you know went in that

house she also had she's also a drug addict so that's going to, you know

the dirtiness no loudly

and just to sort of you know add on to that but we have literature you know a

whole tradition of literature of being at home on the road and thinking of Jack

Kerouac right away but there are many others who have talked about the road as

a home as as travel experience as being where their heart feels most at ease and

most alive and so I think there's we're going to talk about that, Jan,

Jim

people could have a difference

and being stable

like you have autonomy in your life in the organization in your life

bro and that's what we do

what's what's your home how would you define home for yourself when you're

creating and that's not dependent on place or relationships

these Portuguese what makes you what makes you say asked that question to me

don't take the bait I was just joking about yeah well I I

used to argue quite a bit until I met my wife your blood pressure went down you

quality of life went up, yeah, know if I had a bumper sticker it would say I gave up

and I feel better already

no I don't like to argue

this chaos

need t o establish some solution Way to break through it

say that that is when your home just keeps getting stronger and stronger when

you can argue or discuss you know does anybody watch Madam Secretary on TV the

Secretary of State and her husband who works for the FBI or whatever they argue

so well they're always in love with each other and they get through all this crap

but you know it doesn't seem like that really exists there at all but it sure

is a great way but no I think you know you can I think the arguments you're you

know others are talking about these awful destructive hateful arguments

there are so much a part of humans you know

in a glass case

right

as young people most of you I'm sure that you've experienced that with you

know the inability to grow in your own family the inability to have a voice

have a vote you know at all you're just told what what to do right

even the birds have that right at some they go, this nest sucks, yeah so I

wanted to move into something else here I don't like you to consider putting a

suffix on home or a prefix on home,

like home depot

hometown homegrown homeland are these all sounding kind of snugly so

far right somebody said homebody did you say homebody homebody that that one

doesn't sound like that sounds like someone oh he's just they stay at home

all the time right isn't that a isn't there a syndrome for vanity but I mean

the word itself what I mean is the word itself character kind of a

what I'm okay let's try this let's make home negative by putting a prefix or

suffix broken broken home,

home less

I'm just gonna put them

just individuals

why is homely and I want I'm complete this is there's homie yeah but that's

like yeah that changes it to I'm just worried why can you be a homely homie I

really don't

yeah does anyone want to continue this ridiculous discussions matter job how

about making effort putting a prefix in front of home and making it negative

what happens when you get old and they put send you to the old folks home or

the retirement home mental home right yeah so I could be the last places you

would want to ever consider a home yeah boarding homes or orphan or foster homes

orphanages and things like that so we try to make this the situation or venue

or whatever nice by giving it a nice word when there's just nothing nice

about him at all tremendous support while I was going to school as a single

mom the woman who helped watch my daughter when I was at school I'm her

eldest had trouble with mental health issues and she for whatever reason it

was in a home that generated tremendous

disease and anxiety for her and so she felt at home when she was living in her

car and and and again I you know I think about sort of the narratives that are

put out about what it means to be at home and how you know it's a house in

suburbia, a picket fence and the 2.2 children, the cat in the yard of those

those things that it were sold and we quest after and for those who struggle

with mental issues like the idea of trying to achieve that very thing

creates and generates such anxiety that they do feel more security and more

sense of stability not trying to maintain that thing that somehow or

another has been sort of passed down but that's that's what it means to be

successful and an adult is to have those things but if your brain doesn't

necessarily process in that way the idea of trying to maintain that is

more anxiety-ridden than actually living maintain it or even portray it I mean

how much energy is spent on pretending that your home is better than it

actually is relationships or anything else the perfect couple the perfect can

yea pastors kids have to go through that really bad because their parents are

like you know the ministers or whatever and they're supposed to be yeah but you

know they're viewed by the community as being this ideal kind of thing but then

they see the reality of it that they're no different from anybody else and

there's a kind of sort of us at least in church circles and I'm familiar with

there's kind of a sense of wanting to put up a bit of a facade that everything

is really wonderful and great when but the kids were always the funnest we know

for sure yeah they wanted to rebell

yeah convalescent home group home yeah just exactly opposite so I'd like to

move again here just just a little bit and we we've we've kind of described

what our our thoughts of homes are and so on but since the beginning right

weren't we thrown out of our home right stricken from the Garden of Eden and so

on and sent out homeless right someplace you believe well yeah

but well you can do you you can believe this the early hunters and gatherers

right hey I'm the hunter you're supposed to be the gatherer, well he was standing on

the stuff I wanted to gather or whatever so what didn't we all start homeless so

to speak of course we did we were hunters and

gatherers and where was home to these people home is where the buffalo roam is

right at home is where the food is home is where the resources are there for the

most part what do we what are we gonna call these people they're nomads right

do you think their level of happiness was as high as ours in terms of what I'm

seeing no and and yes you're right well do you

think their level of happiness I mean let's let's say what was home to them I

mean Chris and I had a little argument about this yesterday is is home a

construct is it a human construct or is it a real real thing whatever the word

was back then there must have been times when things were great they were full it

was plenty of game there the kids were playing they weren't screaming this and

that and the other and so there must have been some kind of sphere that made

them happy about what they were doing and we did this as humans for tens of

thousands years right and there are still people

today who prefer that Mongolian nomads

Amy Meyer just left, but she gave me this one the xiongnu or something

like that in near China and so on that lived for centuries and centuries during

the Han Dynasty and they were nomadic people the Arabic bedouins all over

Europe and in North Africa and Asia the chum of Siberia these people's lives

does that look like an unhappy family there you see pictures of Mongolian kids

and the red cheeks in there smiling or the nupiats or Eskimos or wherever it

happens to be Romani gypsies old and modern right

they prefer this so can I ask a question why are they moving in this picture it's

probably pretty simple they're following resources right food game seasons they

could be latitudinal movements they could be altitudinal movements they were

probably a lot closer to nature in terms of their understanding of seasons and

all of us and so on but some of those others before why are they moving it's

just it's it's part of their culture their DNA their families move they may

move thousands of miles a year or at least hundreds of miles there then all

the trappings that you know some of us were talking about I hate to move you

know because the longer you stay in the place the more you know what you collect

and the more you've got to move and so on I just came back from visiting

my daughter in in Portland, who I've offered I'll buy you a home if you come home to, Auburn, you know

but lives up there and she lives in a six hundred square foot house, happily. Will you adopt me? material crop beans we might have our we

no different it sounds like from my experiences one of the things I heard

here is relationships maybe meeting up with other kin or clan make people move

that's why I've moved in the past and also, I might not be following

seasonal resources but certainly most of my moves have been economic following

the whims of the market Southern California wasn't panning out, the bay area wasn't panning out,

was moving around so well I might not be moving after buffaloes or salmon or

polar bear I am moving because the ability to buy buffalo and yeah it has

shifted under me and I am still, in many cases, still governed by those larger

forces that we don't have control over, forces us to move. Yeah you think about climate,

well espe cially think about the storms that we had, you know, Miami going under,

and Puerto Rico, those types of things there you're having to move not necessarily because

of choice because nature is saying well am in Puerto Rico you know a two-month

long camping trip with no water the power I'm still camping

yeah alright but I'm trying to think of how these people still continue to move

now while you say the Ice Age was kind of the end of the major you know

latitudinal migrations and so on these people still move because of because of

resources you know throughout the world this is a really interesting group of no

nomads in the Himalaya who moved their entire town or village or whatever moves

every time there's a death in the village

it's unsacred, it's not home anymore so they moved the entire village as some

some somewhere else if you've studied any biology the word Linnaeus comes up

all the time and Linnaeus as an adult he was a

botanist and the originator of scientific naming and all that kind of

thing but he spent his whole adult life wearing clothes like the Lapps war

because he was so infatuated with these people whose entire life was following

the reindeer and their migration and the reindeer were

by the way domesticated but they still followed them along wherever they may

work now we call them the Sami Sami people so yes well that's a very very it

I do not have faculty or provocateurs to cover this but I think the structure of

the home in place or moveable is really worth a fun salon I don't know exactly

who and how we're going to be able to do it yet but if you you know if you want

to just go check out the website Nomad landia, Nomad landia, this is just

the simplest but that contraptions that people come up with to live in because

they do not want the trappings of a home they want to be able to pick up and go

someplace or another huge population that exists in just even just the United

States with inability to ability to work and travel migratory labor wise and so

on with the inability to buy a home inability to even rent a house so they

literally are modern-day nomads and on the lower right some people that just

want to live as hunter-gatherers they find them in this Sierra and in the

Rockies yeah Alaska lasts for water

no series yeah because yeah yeah Alaska the last frontier yeah so could

you live like that why Oh too cold you don't have to be in

Alaska you can

yeah there are people in the Pacific Crest Trail that go from Canada to

Mexico and there's a number of people that do it

yo yo in the same season touch Canada and then go back to Mexico after and

then there's at least a handful of people that have done it three times

their home is essentially and I'll have to share that my wife and I did the John

Muir Trail 200 and some miles twice and we spent 30 days out there off off-grid

then it was the best the best months of our lives you know especially because

without the traffic no no we dehydrated food, no, we yeah we did I did it all

our food and I caught a lot of fish and I tried to eat them before my wife would eat them. That reminds me of something, a few years back, my wife and I took a cruise

and ended up in Fort Lauderdale, and it was interesting because I was part of a

larger cruise that started actually in Australia came through the Pacific

Hawaii down the coast of California and there

are quite a number of retired people from around the world with many of them

from the US that they live on cruises because it's too expensive for them to

live in the United States they collect either a pension retirement Social

Security but they had constant access to health care on the cruise and there is

this one guy I talked to he had won the lottery in New York he was like a cab

driver, in his 7o's, won the lottery, but he was telling me when he like factored his

costs per year in terms of buying early on one of these worldwide you know in

the old days, there were hotels a hotel with something someplace that you

went for weeks if not the summer right, and you lived in nice

accommodations and you dined every meal you know in the hotel you know okay Could

any of you live at a hotel I guess it depends upon the hotel yeah Gary shaken

his head, yeah or do everything or do we want to retreat to our home to cook our

own meals to sleep in our own beds and things like that like I recommend 30

days on the John Muir Trail by the way we called up the JMT 30 diet we both

lost a lot of weight but when you reduce your trappings to all that you need for

you know food and comfort and sleeping and

and some first aid and things like that hopefully nothing bad happens boy

something else something else happens that doesn't exist in our lives normally

and that's this magical nebular spirituality whatever you want to call

it but your physical needs are met your mental needs are relaxed and then

something else shows up and you get to identify with that but when we at the

end of the trail we sat at the top of the pass headed back down and we just

sat there and practically cried because we were so comfortable for so long

things were working out for so well you have to go with the right partner oh

yeah yeah but we had we had responsibilities you know yeah you young

people without so many responsibilities do it do it now before yeah

so what you know we have a few more minutes left can we shift to what is

your idea of a physical home, no I just I wanted to bring up something that was

really interesting to me in my conversation with Joe yesterday my

grandparents which would have been the greatest generation the world war II

generation when they built homes in my hometown of fresno they were like really

tiny if you go to these older neighborhoods and almost built in the

50s or whatever they're not big there are little bedrooms in a little den,

kitchen one bathroom people share and something happened between between the

50s and 60s and now and now these houses are just well they're really even the

average houses are ridiculous if you really think about it that's it seems

like a huge change that that homes used to be very close and

communal and now they're more spread out and do you think it's because more I

mean you know I know it's easy to sound nostalgic, you know wax

about the way things used to be about playing outside and things but because

we've become more screen oriented more online we need to have what used to be

provided by the outside on the inside so we make the houses bigger because we

don't leave our houses as much as we used to and so we need distance from

these people that we would have normally enjoyed going outside

very interesting, to escape possibly that sounds insightful of me that's an

interesting thing I would never work that's what year my wife and I looked at

the VW bus in Europe we hit near a hippie to everybody it was one of the

most fun experiences we've ever had we live in a house it's one that we still

look back on that time in Europe and say never you know we had just this small enclosure,

okay we were able to do our laundry and everything else you know whatever

places where we live that's where we stayed but the some

effect on that experience we concentrated all of our time okay

together visiting places, not having to worry about all the other stuff that

often times really create some kind of problem

you have storage problems with your home, so I would recommend it to everybody

when young young don't be to suggest we were to flower children but we just any

other thoughts about sizes, sizes of homes, by the way the average I checked on this

last one I taught it just a few years ago when I was teaching an environmental

studies class the average garage the average garage in Placer County is

900 square feet that average garage garage is 900 that means there are some

much bigger and I feel a little bit smaller but the house that you're

talking about was maybe 1100 square feet or something like that yeah Lynn and I

just moved, and my our walk-in closet is bigger than my bedroom was when I was a

kid

you can't David can you find your wife in the house now is 4,000 square feet, yeah one

thing in inspection we're talking about the spaces when I travel it could either

be places like Europe or Latin America hotel or doing air B&B and I realize

like how much space I expect there to be in terms of inside of some like someone

flat in Paris where they just have a small hot plate they have a small living

room hanging I feel like a big American yes lemon seeing so it's also

interesting people feel they need their space

right by the way growing up in Fresno did you have air conditioning swamp

coolers swamp coolers yeah all of us all folks we lived without air conditioning

air conditioning in a car was rolling the windows down and going as fast as

you as you could and some just thought well how about did you live in a home

like that you know

well that? Is that Mar a lago yeah oh my god and that's the more longer

Versailles Trump yeah right so a few years ago I led a group to Tanzania and

the Messiah in both Kenya and Tanzania and this is a this is a Chiefs home the

biggest one in the in the village and because I was leading this group I was

the chief of my group and Lynn and I were invited in as the chief you know

and through an interpreter we asked questions about his home there was a

little bed for the baby there was a bed for the newborn goat or

calf or whatever there was a little cooking fire with two or three utensils

all of your clothing you wear at all times you show all of your wealth or all

your riches all the time so there's no other set of clothes or drawers no need

for any of that kind of thing so after this amazing treat to learn about this

man's home the largest in the village the interpreter said he wants you to

describe your home now and and I just honestly didn't know how I could do that

without being thought of as the most foolish man in the world

there's a great book I can't think of the person is a photographer for a book

it's called material world and the photographer went around the world and

photographed families with all of their possessions and it's an incredible

it's an incredible work you go to Saudi Arabia and and the sheer wealth is

abundant and then they also had in Bosnia and Kosovo during the conflict

and what they had right and and it's really interesting and they came out

with a later edition which looks at the material world from a woman's

perspective and you can probably I don't know you might even have it on the

shelves but it's a really interesting for people who are visual learners to

get an opportunity to see that idea of how oftentimes home is associated with

the stuff that you have not even necessarily the structure but the

content inside of it yeah and and you're mentioning the Masai warrior and how

they wear everything that they have you know a very minimalist shot seriously

yeah but if I were to tell them just what is in my garage

first off I'd have to know what's in my garage I stumbled all over the place yeah

yeah my wife will explain yeah we have a closet that's bigger than your house for

just our clothes and then I love space for mine

know that I mean you know you must travel

you must go someplace in small quarters you must find someone that you can

communicate and be with a loved one a good soul mate okay and you must go you

must go see they're all used to tell my students you must take a soils class and

you can learn about what all living thing all life is all about you must

take some geography you must travel don't save for a new car say for some

jet fuel and get out there and and go see the world for sure next

next presentation is by ralph from history and Native American Studies J

Hester from African American Studies Amy Meyer from world history and Matt Archer

from anthropology and we're gonna it was gonna it's kind of hurt because we're

going to talk about some of the most ruthless removals of peoples on earth

and to feel how homes both physical and emotional and so on can be torn from

from your life and talk about PTSD it goes on and on and on for sure after

that in April we'll have some more fun

what's home to a tick what's home do an intestinal parasite like a like a

tapeworm it's okay what's all do a snail what's home to a hermit crab you know

ecosystems niches and so on so please come back and and join us do you have

other thoughts that just didn't make it out we really appreciate your input

today but this is this is fun so we hope to see you next time Jason thank you

very much any parting remarks thank you so much and have a good balance of the

day you homely bunch of people.

For more infomation >> Intellectual Salon Home Is where the blank is - Duration: 1:08:49.

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Did you know Louisiana is the second-most lightning prone state? - Duration: 1:33.

For more infomation >> Did you know Louisiana is the second-most lightning prone state? - Duration: 1:33.

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Pu'er Teereise - How Pu'er tea is made – Tea discovery travel [eng sub] - Duration: 14:07.

Don't climb any further up.

Alright, no further up.

Pick some tea leaves.

Hello and welcome at Let's Tea Talk!

As we love drinking Pu'er tea we wanted to know how this tea is produced.

So we got on a plane to Yunnan, a south west province in China, because Pu'er tea originates from Yunnan.

Follow us on our tea travel tour and learn with us how Pu'er tea is produced.

We are in a village of the Bulang people.

Consuming tea has a long history among the ethnic groups living in Yunnan.

The Hani, Bulang and Dai people of Yunnan for example, have been growing, picking and consuming tea for ages.

We visited the villages of these people during our trip and learned a lot about Pu'er tea from them.

The Bulang people live in this village.

We learned from the village people that the Bulang worship the tea spirit at a nearby altar.

Even today, the Bulang people still worship the tea spirit here.

The tea altar is located in the middle of a tea tree forest.

The small bushes and trees on the left and right are indeed wild growing tea trees,

that can be classified as Camellia Sinensis var. Assamica.

The tea trees are not cut back to the size of bushes like it is done

in India, Sri Lanka or on Chinese green tea plantations.

Tea trees are cut back to the size of bushes there.

And are kept small on purpose to ease picking.

However people here believe the older or higher or bigger the tea tree the better the tea.

Alright, after a short hike we have arrived at the tea altar.

Even today, the Bulang people still worship the tea spirit here.

They show respect and deep appreciation for the tea spirit, mother nature,

the ancient tea mountains and their ancestors

by presenting offerings on the altar and praying during the ceremony.

Monks and the village elders stand in the middle of the altar,

kneel on the floor, light bee wax candles and pray.

The tea altar creates a very mystical and spiritual atmosphere.

On the next day...

On the next day we visited another village

and were allowed to stroll through a tea farmer's wild tea garden.

The tea farmer in particular is very proud of this huge tea tree which is several hundred years old.

In order to pick the tea leaves one needs a bamboo scaffold.

I want to see what's like to climb up there.

Don't climb any further up.

Alright, no further up.

Pick some tea leaves.

Turn around.

Back in the village we saw how the tea leaves are spread on bamboo mats for withering after picking.

Withering reduces the moisture content in the tea leaves and the leaves become softer

which is beneficial for the next processing step.

Next, the tea leaves are heated up in a big pan.

The heat kills the enzymes in the tea leaves that cause oxidation.

This process is called shaqing in Chinese which enables the tea leaves to stay green.

The tea master has to skillfully flip the tea leaves to prevent them from burning.

As soon as the tea leaves are soft enough and when nice tea fragrance fills the air,

the tea leaves are taken out of the pan.

The tea leaves are incredible fragrant!

The tea leaves are now spread on bamboo baskets and shaken up to reduce the temperature of the tea leaves.

The next step is kneading and rolling.

The ladies exert light pressure on the tea leaves in order to gently press some tea oil out of the tea leaves.

The tea oil coats the tea leaves and releases its aroma to the water when the leaves are brewed.

Afterwards the tea leaves are dried in the sun.

When strolling through the village

we discovered a school that had tea leaves spread out for drying on the school yard.

The tea leaves can now be called mao Cha, meaning unfinished tea.

From here mao Cha can go different ways.

As soon as the tea leaves are dried, they are packed together.

Undesired tea leaves, e.g. the ones that are not well enough twisted are sorted out on a sorting table.

Well crafted and well sorted mao cha can be directly brewed and drunk.

It is still a little bit astringent,

but if good tea leaves were picked

and the subsequent processing steps were well made,

it tastes pretty good and can be called san de sheng pu'er, meaning loose unripe/raw pu'er.

Pu'er tea has its name from the Pu'er prefecture which was founded by the emperor Yongzheng in 1729.

Pu'er tea was invented in that prefecture.

You can store the san de sheng pu'er at home and let it age/ripen.

Over time it will lose its astringency and become better and better.

Mao cha can also end up on the wholesale tea market.

Tea is traded by the sackload on the wholesale markets.

Tea buyers hunt for the best raw material for their tea press in order to produce pressed tea cakes.

To produce pressed tea cakes, the loose tea leaves must first be steamed

to soften the dry leaves so that they don't break during the pressing process.

After steaming the tea leaves are wrapped in a cloth, pressed and then air dried.

A pressed cake like this is called sheng pu'er respectively sheng pu'er bing.

Sheng means raw, unripe and bing cake.

Pressed tea needs only little space for storage and is not as fragile as loose tea leaves.

This tea will get tastier over time,

as it will slowly naturally oxidize and the astringency and bitterness will cease.

After a storage/aging time of 5 years sheng pu'er should not be too astringent and bitter anymore.

The market price for this tea will increase with each year.

In some teashops one can buy 30 years old/aged tea!

Mao cha could also take a different path and be processed to shu pu'er.

In that case mao cha is treated under controlled climatic conditions to artificially accelerate oxidization.

But this is another story.

For today we have learned enough about tea.

Now it is time to celebrate the water splashing festival with the Dai people from Yunnan

with a feast, music and dance.

See you next time at Let's Tea Talk.

Bye!

For more infomation >> Pu'er Teereise - How Pu'er tea is made – Tea discovery travel [eng sub] - Duration: 14:07.

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How To Pray 🔥 THIS IS MY MOST POWERFUL PRAYER (PAUL WASHER MOST POWERFUL PRAYER) - Duration: 3:28.

You know what the most powerful prayer I feel like in my arsenal of Prayer?

It's times when it just seems everything is so lost and so gone and so hopeless and my

sin is over my head and I just can't go on.

And then what's even worse is you got to go preach to 5,000 people in 15 minutes.

And you just sit there broken, disintegrated and look up to Him and say "YOU KNOW" "YOU

KNOW" "YOU KNOW" "You know everything" "I hide nothing from You" "I pretend nothing

before You" "You know me God"

Or When the situation is totally out of your control and no man can help you and you get

on your knees in the dark and you just say "God you know" And then you

can go to sleep.

He knows and He is a compassionate Father.

I just wish the Spirit of God would sweep down on this place not necessarily to give

you power, or this or that, but just to demonstrate to you how much He loves you if you are in

Christ.

How much He loves you.

If there is one thing you cannot exaggerate, you can twist it but you cannot exaggerate

it and that is the love of God for you.

Guys this is not about a God who's keeping score, that's what we do, that's what I do.

This is about a God who threw the score book away.

It was nailed to a tree(i.e the cross of Christ)

For more infomation >> How To Pray 🔥 THIS IS MY MOST POWERFUL PRAYER (PAUL WASHER MOST POWERFUL PRAYER) - Duration: 3:28.

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This Morning's Ruth Langsford drops filthy overshare: 'One ball is never enough' - Duration: 3:01.

This Morning's Ruth Langsford drops filthy overshare: 'One ball is never enough'

The 57-year-old made quite the statement as she sat on the This Morning sofa next to hubby Eamonn Holmes.

The couple opened Fridays show by talking about dogs that bring large sticks for their owners – and obviously this topic opened the floodgates for dirty innuendos.

The mum-of-one began cheeky chat when a picture of a pooch named Dolly popped up on the screen.

For Dolly, one ball just isnt enough, Ruth began.

She continued: Quite right, Dolly. The pair also went on to talk about how Eamonn wouldnt be able to hold a big stick her mouth, but Ruth would.

Naturally, jaw-dropped viewers were stunned by the duos conversation so early in the morning.

One person asked: So is Ruth admitting she is good at having a big stick in her mouth?.

"For Dolly, one ball just isnt enough" Ruth Langsford Im with Dolly.

One ball is never enough, added another.

But a third wasnt too please to hear the pairs commentary.

Eamonn and Ruth talk about themselves far too much, get on with it, they blasted.

This isnt the first time Ruth and Eamonn have made cheeky comments on the daytime show.

Just last week, Eamonn appeared to have some saucy thoughts on his mind, and announced live on air Im a swinger. The shocking confession came after the 58-year-old was seen swinging around on his stool.

Naturally, Ruth gobsmacked by his remark.

Catch This Morning weekdays from 10:30am on ITV.

For more infomation >> This Morning's Ruth Langsford drops filthy overshare: 'One ball is never enough' - Duration: 3:01.

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Is Math Lessons for a Living Education Enough? - Duration: 44:44.

Good morning! Now you guys know three main things I'm going to repeat

them all throughout because that's what we do. First of all Math Lessons for a Living

Education. What is this video about? That's what it's about. A Charlotte Mason

inspired math curriculum that is blowing away the math market because there's

just nothing else like it and we're going to talk about it today and what

sets it apart. Secondly, if you are interested, you can get it there's a link

(below) where you can take a placement test scroll down will you see a big button

that says "placement test" that's where you're going to go and find out which

level you want to place your child at. It's not graded it's level based so that

you can find where your child is best going to fit and help them master the

concepts or fill in any gaps that they may have. Also if you do end up

purchasing there is a coupon code (below) that you can use for your purchase to

help save you a little bit because, you know, every bit counts. All right I'm

going to open up my video here so that I can see your guys' questions! Okay so I

was really really hoping to get Angela on with me so you could see her face in

the corner... But alas once again though we tried, it

is not working we have to test it out I think some time on our personal pages

because that needs to happen. But she's going to be replying to your guys' comments in

the comments below as well so I'm going to give my own personal take. There's going to be

times I'm gonna actually defer to her and I'm gonna ask her the questions

I have a list of questions you guys have given me on my Instagram as well as over

on Facebook and wherever else I posted it in the event so we're going to be

using these questions and then what I'll do is once I've given an overview and

gone through these questions I'll go through the live questions in today's video.

So grab yourself some coffee... it's gonna be fast paced, it's gonna be intense and

it's gonna be fun

all right I know 'give us Canadians some love' I'm giving you love from Canada it's

a winter wonderland outside but you have to buy the curriculum

get the PDF if you guys are in Canada, get the PDF version so that you can

download it use it for multiple kids and print it off at Staples, it's the

best and cheapest option for you it's cheaper than even getting an Amazon here

in Canada so just sayin', free tip the day for Canadians. All right so here we go

I'm gonna start off with the overview so here's how the overview is gonna work

Charlotte Mason inspired math if you are not familiar with Charlotte Mason it is

a philosophy of education based off an actual person who came up with this

philosophy of education and it basically takes in the idea of educating the whole

child not just their mind because we focus in education so much on the

brain let's focus on the brain let's "educate our children" the reality is

your child has to choose if they want to be educated. Anyone else have a child that

doesn't seem to be choosing to be educated? So we want to educate the whole

child we want to teach to and inspire the whole child because if we're not

inspiring our children all around then they're not going to be retaining what

we're teaching them because it's just random facts that mean nothing to them.

So the idea behind it is you are often you'll see Charlotte Mason homeschoolers

getting out there, involved in nature, stories, reading together, read aloud's

copywork, narration, it's this whole experience of education rather than a

workbook that you work through. So that is the idea behind a Charlotte Mason

curriculum and we're gonna see those philosophies embedded all throughout

this program. So as you can see I have all six levels in front of me this is a

Christian-based math curriculum. Okay? That's really important for those of you

that absolutely don't want any Christian content; this is full of it! So this is a

Christian-based math curriculum, first off. Secondly it only goes up to grade

six. I'm going to say this right now, or level six, I

guess you could use it for an older child if they're struggling you might want to

go back but it only goes to level six. It is not going any higher it's an

elementary based math program that's what it is. So we'll talk about what you

can use for the later grades for those of you that have been asking cuz that

question has been popping up so let's just, what I'm gonna do is I'm gonna open

it up and I'm going to kind of read through a bit of the scope and sequence

of each one and then show you a picture in the beginning and a picture of the

end and what I want you to understand is that, if you, afterwards I'll post the

link to the actual event page where I was talking about this and in that event

I'm going to create a separate post for each level and you'll see a higher

resolution photo of these levels so if you want to see the scope and sequence

in depth then you want to go to that event and you can scroll through and see.

So I will make sure to post that link after but for now let's just take a pook

pook, pook, that's not a word! Wow. Homeschool win right here!

Peek! We're going to take a quick peek! Okay level one so scope and sequence. Are you ready?

I'm not gonna read them all, cuz, you know, we have lives. You're starting off with learning your numbers

okay they're gonna be identifying number zero to nine they're learning how to

write them they're learning how to form them. This would be you know really good for

Kindergarten/Grade 1 depending on where your child is at. There's a

placement test, like I said, online. You go to patterns you go to circles and shapes

you work with place value level one is really focused on place value and if one

of my kids pop in which does probably be long enough that they will I'll ask them

to bring me my iPad because I forgot about that I can show you a really neat app

that you can use so you're gonna build your own place value village so your kids are

kinesthetically, hands-on, getting to see and build using a place value

village so they can see it in action not just on paper. They learned the symbols

plus, minus, equals, they learn how to add they learn how to subtract and they

it goes into time, skip counting, tally marks, solving for an unknown. They're

learning about skip counting by twos, fives review of numbers and learn all

the way up to 100 so it really is a comprehensive program that's gonna take

them all away from number identification all the way to telling time knowing their

shapes knowing their numbers understanding place value as well as

addition and subtraction. And you guys place value is something that I think

often can be a gap so what happens in math is that we push our kids along and

they don't fully understand place value so now when we get into decimals and

fractions and all different sorts of things they're not grasping this concept

and it's affecting them in all their other math concepts so let's take a look

at the first page exercise one day one. They are going to be learning their

numbers and how to form them and we have to take our time with that. It's done through

copywork as you can see because a lot of kids do things backwards or wrong.

And every week starts off in all the programs with a story. So in the beginning

levels you're gonna read it with the kids and the later levels they read it

independently which brings in connections from the real world around

them so kids are actually building connections with these concepts rather

than just having to memorize them if they're

understanding how these concepts look in real life. Okay so that's... so then you

would have five days of worksheets/ lessons to work through to reinforce the

concepts that you learned in the story. So that's kind of the basis of it. I'm gonna

skip forward to the end so you can see fully and this is day 148 but it does

show you they're already learning true fractions and time so for those of you

that are thinking this is like Kindergarten level this is definitely

more of a grade 1 level. It is recommended for kids ages 5 to 7

and that'skind of the basis of what they're going to be learning. Okay

So that's level one, let's go quickly to level two and then I'm going to get into

the questions. Level two: what they're learning. And the reason I'm going through

this you guys, is because a lot of the questions is "is this comprehensive enough" so I

want to make sure you understand what's included in each level. Level two we're

reviewing: the first section of the book is going through review. We're going

into money, skip counting, addition, double digits plus double digits,

measurement, perimeter, telling time to the minute, place value

to the thousands, addition, carrying to the tens place, subtraction, borrowing

regrouping, thermometers, bar graphs, line graphs

pounds, ounces, measurement, subtracting money, adding money, word problems yeah

okay so that gives you a basic overview let's look on the beginning of the

program. I'm gonna take you here, okay so this is level two, recommended for around

grade two and for around ages six to eight. And then I'm going to skip forward

to the end of the book to give you an idea

of kind of where they will be. That's graphs, word problems...

sorry I'm just trying to find a good indicator page here. Measurements, um okay

here where they're learning about subtracting money! Okay so let's move

forward to level three. Don't worry you guys, I'm going to catch up on comments as well

after. Don't forget! If you're new and just joining on, Math Lessons for a Living Education,

coupon code (below) and share share share, comment, engage because I

will be choosing one person from this video to win one level of this math

program (giveaway ended). All right, level three starts off they're

reviewing and then it goes into column addition, larger numbers, larger number

subtracting, rounding larger amounts of money, division, multiplying,

area, fractions, um place value through the millions, estimation, measurement

concepts, introducing solving for unknowns, which as you guys know, when we say

solving for unknowns we're building the base for algebra, Roman numerals,

estimation, all that kind of stuff and then review. Okay so level three, the

beginning, is this one. And somebody said it only took their child five minutes to do

level three math which we'll go through when I go through the questions

but it definitely takes my kids longer than five minutes. So we'll talk about time.

It's not as long, it's not like it's taking them an hour for math

which I love. They can generally, if they put their mind to it, they can get it

done in you know 20 minutes-ish. Fill in the blanks, equals... I'm just trying

to find

Here we go... okay so level three towards the end

Level four what they're going to cover is review, new fraction

concepts, adding and subtracting like denominators, so now they're

adding and subtracting fractions, multiplication, carrying using elevens and

twelves, geometric concepts, steps of division with no remainders, larger

multiplication, division, checking division, division with a remainder,

so we're talking long division here guys, metric units of measure, mixed numbers,

adding and subtracting with like denominators, equivalent fractions,

decimals and fractions, relationship between fractions, decimals, and percents,

geometry. Okay so that's kind of an overview of what's included. Now I'll

show you, my son started off here, the level four. Okay obviously I've marked

this, so it starts off with review. So if this looks easy that's just because it's

reviewing, right? We're reviewing all the concepts that you would already need

to know. And then towards the end... I'll show you this one. So you're dealing with

fractions, addition ,subtraction, all that kind of stuff. Okay level four. Now we're

into the last two levels here. Level five scope and sequence. Level five starts off

with review and now we're working with two digit divisors, factoring, common

factors, greatest common factor, proper and improper fractions, changing

improper fractions, sums containing improper fractions, least common multiples, finding

a common denominator, adding fractions and mixed numbers with

uncommon denominators, subtracting fractions with common denominators,

adding mixed numbers... just basically: fractions fractions fractions with uncommon

denominators, adding, subtracting, really mastering. Multiplying fractions,

divisibility rules and dividing fractions, dividing decimals, making

change, and then review. So I'm not listing every single thing guys, just

an overview. So in the beginning, this is kind of where they're reviewing what

they're expected to kind of know at the beginning of level 5 which is about a

grade 5 level or for ages 9 to 11 and by the end... this is around what they're

doing. Remember this is still story based so they're reading their story but

they're doing it all independently and it's just helping them to build

connections with the lessons that they're doing. Now level 6 is the only

one that comes with a teacher's guide and the reason for that is because

lesson instruction is built right into the books so for level 1 and level 2

lesson instruction is built in. It's written to the teacher so that you can

read it and do it with your child because children who are in grade 1 and

2 are not reading independently. You have to do it with them anyways so it's

written to you. Level 3 starts off being written to the child so now they can

start to do it more independently and there's an answer key at the back of the

book. The pages are all perforated so you can rip that out if you want to. Now

level 4, 5, 6 they're all written for the child but level 6 is the only one

that has a separate teacher's guide. So in the teacher's guide it has your

student quizzes. It's also the only one that has quizzes. It has your weekly lesson

schedule and your answer key and solution manual so here's an example:

I'll just give you an example of a quiz in the beginning and a quiz at the end because that

will give you a good indication okay what it is at the beginning. Sorry. And let's

go through to a quiz towards the end. The word problems aren't going to show you a

huge amount, just words, but they're covering a lot in those word problems.

okay so this is level six. Now level six scope and sequence

and I'm going to then go right into questions and answers. They're working

with whole numbers, averaging, factors, fractions, review of

fraction concepts, adding and subtracting, multiplying, dividing fractions, it's

advanced fractional concepts now that we're going into. Decimal basics, percents

savvy shopping how it brings it into the real world... and I did one of those! If you

want to watch a funny video, go back and watch where I do one from level six!

Because, whooo! It really brings it into the real world ;)

geometry, maps, graphs, charts, units of measure so let's look at in here. Where

we're at beginning to end and then we're going to go into the question and answer

time. I feel like this is really important because the the main question that I've

seen repeated over and over is is this comprehensive enough and

I really want you guys to understand how these all work and then I'm gonna get

into how comprehensive they are. Okay here we go, question time. And like I said

I'm going to be coming back and looking at the comments as well. Here we go, on

Instagram I'm gonna name your Instagram name because that's all I have and if

you're watching you'll know your username. Becisdomesticbliss asked:

"How much work on money is there" most of what we're talking about in these levels is

adding and subtracting and multiplying with money. Where it gets into the

actual look of money is I believe in level two.

Possibly a little bit in level one as well um so there is some just like there

has to be with any math. For me I'm in Canada so I think you were you were

saying you were in Australia, if I remember correctly, and so that's always

an issue with you with US curriculums and I'm the same Canadian curriculums I mean I

want it to be Canadian money but the reality is is not too much difference

for me in the size of it and I just I just bring in our money and I lay it on

the table and they they go for it that way um so hopefully that helps but most

of it what you're dealing with once they understand the visual concept is adding

and subtracting and all that different stuff with money which should be able to

be applied to no matter what you're doing um okay so 5grubbies, which I

love your Instagram handle, said, "Is your daughter in kindergarten and using the

grade one book?" Yes she is. The reason for that is because she's a keener and she's

absolutely beyond ready. Now I showed you a picture from that was her book for the

level one and you'll see that her threes are backwards her sevens were backwards

often her fives are backwards so she's ready for the content the written work

is is challenging for her she constantly gets it backwards but here's a little

news flash so does my eight year old. My eight-year-old constantly gets his 7s

backwards his 5s and his 3s so I don't think that's necessarily a new

thing and that wouldn't be a reason that I wouldn't use the program. As far as

content and her ability, her pencil grasp all those different things she's

more than ready. She loves the stories she grasps the concepts very well and so

we dove into it. My four world will be five in the spring she would be eligible

technically if I was using that same philosophy to try it she's nowhere near

ready. So again that has to be based on your child. My five-year-old is more

even though she's kindergarten more in a grade one level in everything her

reading everything so I wouldn't take that as like an indicator that this is a

Kindergarten program. It's grade one content but it is working for

my kindergartner because she's advanced. okay pinkLola37 said, "There is only tests for

level 6 and I wish that there were tests for level 3 to 5." Now I'm gonna get

my own take on this but I would love to hear Angela if you could pop on on that

question and respond with what would you recommend for parents that want more of

that review they want to feel like they're testing their children I'm going

to talk about narration and how that plays in but I would really love to hear

your response to that if you have any recommendations for testing or for a

parent to feel that confidence that their child is fully grasping. So we're

gonna wait because I know she's gonna be tip tapping away and we're gonna wait

for her response on that and then I'm gonna I'm come back to it. Next.

Okay Fidelermommy which hopefully I'm saying it right guys said, "Would one

level last a whole school year?" Yes one level will last an entire school year.

let me open it up to level three okay so there's 36 lessons so every

lesson sorry I'm so distracted I'm waiting

this here um there's 36 lessons so you would do one less than a week so you're

gonna read the story at the beginning of the week new concept and then you're

gonna go through into your into your daily worksheets so hopefully that

answers that. It is enough for an entire year. It's a full-year curriculum, in this!

You don't have to buy five different things you just need to buy this, right?

Win-win! Okay here's what I'm going to do, level six. I'm gonna help tackle this question here and for all.

Level 6 and level 6, here is what I did. The questions I'll go

through 'I've heard they're below grade level' 'high level math are they prepared?'

'Does it adequately prepare children for higher math upper level math?' 'What do you do

past level six?' 'How are they prepared?' 'I've heard this not thorough

enough...' Okay. Over and over and over and over again so I'm going to answer all of your

questions at once, here we go. Here's what I did. I went on

First of all what I would personally recommend what I probably will use

unless I see something else, I've got a few years. Maybe some new math is gonna pop up, but

from what I see I really like the idea of Teaching Textbooks but I felt like my

children weren't getting a mastery approach and

they were missing so many things so this has been filling in so many gaps and is

building a mastery approach which I am way preferring and that's why we are

using this curriculum but for higher levels from what I can see that seems to

be probably what we will go to either that possibly Math U See, it might be

hard to jump back into I'm not sure for those of you that are asking what I'm

going to use for higher level, not a hundred percent certain, but that's

probably the direction that I'm going right now is Teaching Textbooks. So what I

did is I went onto their site and I looked at their placement test for for

grade 7. Grade 7 would be what you would do after level 6 and I printed it and I

compared the questions of what they should know before going into level 7

with what they are covering in level 6... par! Completely

point for point! In fact I also went and printed the pre-algebra grade eight

Teaching Textbooks quiz and honestly everything that I am seeing here is here (in MLFLE)

So is your child prepared for upper level math? Go and do the same thing I did

go and print off the the tests okay here is your the page from the placement test

for the grade 8 teaching textbooks okay then if I go to math here if you can clearly

see the dividing with fractions with mixed fractions multiplying I mean

they're doing adding decimals we're multiplying decimals here and then the

division that they're giving I don't even see division here... Oh! 44.45 divided

by 3.5 I mean there is much larger division covered in this one and solve

and check for the unknown. So take a look at this solve and check for the unknown

see right here if you can, I'll post it afterward if I can find it again. Alright, and

then here you can see the same things are covered in the level six and we're

not even at the end of this program so that question... I mean and Angela can

talk more to it about the approach and the design and all those different

things but I can tell you from a homeschool mom that's just saying, "Is my

child prepared?" it's pretty easy to tell. I went and printed off the test I looked

at the content everything that my child needs to know up to grade eight is

covered in the grade six and if you go and you look at the placement test

for level 1, grade 2, grade 3 at Teaching Textbooks or other comparable

math curriculum companies you will find it as comparable with the scope and

sequence that I showed you or told you about in these math programs. So again I

have to clarify that because I feel like this question is the main

question I'm being asked, "Is my child prepared? is this enough?" Yes it is enough!

It is enough, it is enough. And by doing less your child's going to retain more

than when you give them so much information and they're hammered down that

they can't retain what they're learning it means nothing to them and they hate

math! As opposed to let's give you a small amount let's teach it in such a way that

you master it and therefore you only have to do this smaller portion and yet

all the same content is being covered and you're well prepared for any other

math curriculum they're going into. Okay, mic drop. So I'm passionate about

that idea because that idea of people feeling like they have to do so much is

a huge problem in the homeschool community and you know where it comes

from is our own experience with school and we just can't get over it.

The public school expectations the idea that our kids need to be bogged down

with all these language arts and writing and reading and you know all those

things yes of course are important but there's a way to do it without that much

it does not have to be that much okay preach! I know, see my hands are going I'm

preaching. Okay simmer down. NikkiWMullins asked if the curriculum comes

with DVDs, no it does not but it doesn't need it! you're gonna read the story which

is engaging and then they're gonna do the lesson and older kids are gonna do

it all independently. Okay I'm gonna skip through all the upper level math

questions because I definitely covered that. Let's see, spiral or mastery Paula

asked. I found that interesting because I would say mastery approach because it's

fully you're mastering the concepts but I was watching some of the responses

from other people and I saw that Randy had commented, he's from Master Books

which is the publishing company that published the the new rendition of this

that's what else I was gonna say and I don't have a pen or I would write it down

cuz I'll forget. ok um he had said that somebody had reviewed it in the

education, school world and said that it was both because basically is a mastery

approach we're gonna master this concept together with the spiral approach of a

review built right in so as you're mastering you're constantly reviewing

and then you master something else but you're constantly reviewing what you've

learned so it brings in the best of both rather than being one or the other which

is awesome right you don't have to choose you can have your cake and eat it

too that's what I was gonna say see I've already forgotten I'll remember.

Not thorough enough which I've addressed "How does Charlotte Mason differ from public

school?" Public school if you're looking at homeschool styles is is traditional

learning traditional learning of what our culture tells us learning needs to

be where it's bookwork and you sit down and you just do all this book work and

all these worksheets and that's what you do you sit at your desk and you do your

book work and you're tested um whereas Charlotte Mason is different Charlotte

Mason is let's learn through life let's find ways of helping that speak to you

all around let's make it enjoyable let's make it relational learning and that's

what this math brings into it that relational concept of learning and I was

going to say something else about that - testing! Testing you guys. My own two

cents on testing and I know that Angela would agree with me here because it's built

right into this. The Charlotte Mason concept of testing is narration and what we mean

when we say narration is that your child has to explain to you

the concept. If I work with my mathematically challenged daughter and I

talked to her about place value and she's doing place value, she's doing it

correctly. She can say a number 1362 so the understanding is there but is the

mastery there? If I gave her a test she would get it right because she would

write that number correctly or she would understand the place value but if I say

to her tell me why you pronounce that why do you say 1000?

How do you know what each of those numbers represents? what is place value?

she can't tell me because she hadn't mastered place value. Did she know it? yeah she kind of

knew it and was practicing it but has she mastered it? Now if I given her a

test I never would have known that. It's only through narration when, and it's

built right into the program because it will say, 'have your child narrate to you

the connection between division and multiplication' what's the connection

between those? that division is basically just finding the missing number if you

already know your multiplication. Right? So it's finding these connection points

if your child can't say that because they haven't fully mastered what is

multiplication and what is division then they're doing it but they haven't

mastered the concept so rather than testing our kids which can bring stress

and anxiety to your child can make them feel like they're failing and it is not

the best way of finding and identifying where your child is at, we use narration

which helps us fully see in a very quick amount of time, it's fast I don't need to

set no timer and do no 20 minute quiz I can ask my child a question and based

upon their answer or lack thereof I can very quickly identify okay you've

mastered this but you're missing this there's a missing point here that you're

not grasping we need to reinforce this we, I need to do that part of your lesson

with you for a little while we need to go back to using or place-value village so that

you can really understand the concept behind this because I want you to master it.

Those are my two cents about for people that are concerned about testing and

again if my child is doing enough because in this program there narrating

throughout they are because they're mastering it. One of the things that when

Angela and I were talking about this of, "is this enough and how do we know that this

is gonna be enough?" is that this has a much longer track record than what

people think. People think this is a brand new program and it just came out

and you know because it's becoming so popular it's hitting the world kind of

thing and people are thinking, 'Well it's new it's not really tested how do we

know that it's enough?' but the reality is this is not a new program this was

published, Angela correct me if I'm wrong, but in 2010 Angela published it. It's

just that is now been picked up by Master Books and is being reformatted

and pushed out again and published under Master bBooks as the publisher so it's

been re-edited, there's a new version of it and it's awesome, color, bright

engaging but the program itself was already there and it has just

testimonial after testimonial after testimonial of children that it's

worked for that have used it all the way through so if you're concerned about

that to keep that keep that in your mind. "How does the cost of printing compare to buying

the books?" if you're in the US it is way better to buy the books. I mean that couple

dollar difference, printing is way more than that. But if you are in Canada then

I would recommend it's probably gonna cost you, if you do it in black and white

it's probably gonna cost you about eight to ten dollars or whatever to

print it and that's gonna be way less than your shipping cost so that's why I

say PDF. Use the coupon code (REBECCASFRIEND) and then print it at Staples here in canada okay so here are

his flashcards that he made so the same idea of he wrote a story for each one

and then he colored it and he illustrated it and he writes the entire

math fact this way so that there are memorizing the whole math facts rather

than just parts of it and then on the other side you write it up and down so

again visually when he sees that he's gonna do it like that because he's

seeing in both directions um okay here's another one that he made. Ii know you

can't really see super well. You can see his coloring though, right? um "There were

seven hummingbirds and two bears and there was nine mooses and the mooses

won." It's all about them building connection with those numbers though and

once he colored this and did it you guys oh my goodness, hi retention on these is

crazy so there's the flashcards um "Are there some kind of hands-on projects?" yes

there are there's a storyline that it follows and there's hands-on projects

in Math three in the beginning they are making... Well, for time I don't

know if you guys ever saw where I did an entire week, I think I did it with level two

I did an entire week with Math Lessons for a Living Education and we

pulled out... he was understanding time okay the concept of time, and so we made

an entire poster for it where we drew out circles and it was included in here

it told us what to do and said take a poster board and draw 12 circles on each

side and they had to make the cloth of 12 o'clock one o'clock two o'clock three

o'clock one side was a.m. one side was p.m. and then he had to draw pictures of what

he was doing at each of those times he rolled that up took it with him

everywhere he went. He called it his life plan from whatever that show is and

he loved it loved it! And he fully grasped the concept he understands time better

than any of my other kids because he did this project.

So yes there are hands-on projects included. It's a story based learning

that breaks it down. Even when they introduced word problems I was blown

away because before we even got into solving word problems we first talked

about word problems and the steps that we should go through of writing down the

different numbers or circling the different numbers that we're talking

about looking for clue words like how many are what's the difference of or we

can add or subtract it broke it down for us so when we got into word problems it

wasn't this huge hard thing it was okay we have a clear step-by-step process

we're gonna work through. yeah Teaching Textbooks is expensive the thing is I

that's why I say like as far as what I'm gonna use moving forward once we're past

level six at this point there were things that I really loved about it but

I just found that as far as the foundation and what was happening was

we had done almost an entire year of it and then we kind of took a

break for summer and we went back to it and my daughter had so many gaps she

hadn't mastered. She had been doing it but she hadn't mastered it and so we

were we were struggling then moving forward because there were so many gaps

in her learning. So because of that, this made a huge difference for us and we

have to continue with this specifically for her because she just has so many

gaps and we have to go through it really slowly so that she can help to reinforce

and build that mastery because there's no point pushing them ahead you guys no

point you keeping up if your kids aren't there if they're not mastering it and we

are failing our kids by pushing them ahead for the sake of being at the same

grade level as their peers. My two cents. Talina, you're terrified of teaching? yeah

seriously you want to laugh? go watch my "Mom tries to do her child's math" I did

the grade six one and I'm glad I didn't do the fractions one I think that I did that

specifically because I would failed I would have failed. You feel like it's

teaching me in a way you never learned yourself. Exactly I love that yeah

With unschooling I think this works really really well because the idea

behind unschooling is child directed learning or

delight directed learning or having your child be interested in it and

passionate about it not just giving our children busy work for the sake of doing

it and because of the story concepts built into this it is engaging and your

kids will want to do it and therefore retain it so much more because it's not

this huge battle to get them to do their math. Yes it won't be an issue to switch

to Teaching Textbooks I mean like I said I did two placement tests and they are

well-prepared well-prepared to go straight into it so

what I found was so this curriculum will walk you through how to build your own

place value village with beans you don't need to spend a whole lot of money on

manipulatives right? It's everything that you have around your house but what I

found was that my space is so small in here it's like this little nook room and

I have no space that I'm working with plus my kids were playing with the beans

a lot so I was contemplating how to continue to use something that was not

that I didn't have a lot of space for and was making a huge mess and I found this really

simple app I don't know if you'll be able to see it because of glare but it's

called place value and it's just it doesn't go thousands so it's not perfect but it

has ones, tens, and hundreds I don't know if you can see it there and basically

what you do try to turn it down for glare is you tap one and it puts the

number up there four, five, six, seven, eigh,t nine, ten and you'll see once I get

to ten it turns red I don't know if you can tell that that's red so that means

that they can't fit so I need to move it over to the tens house now I've got one

ten, zero ones so they can actually write it down they can keep their charts which

looks like let's see if I have it here

but the place value chart they could take it out, here we go

and they could be writing it on their place value chart at the same time as

they're building it with the dots and then when they're done or you want to

reset you just swipe it up and it clears it, isn't that cool? so you can either do

this and build a number to see it okay 144 or you could have them build it and

count all the way up to that number if they really need to grasp the concept

where you're building all the way from ones and then a ten and then building

and then when you have ten tens it'll tell you that's too many and ten tens

you got to move it over to the hundreds house isn't that cool?

So it was 97 cents or something like that it's not perfect but it's a neat

solution if you are if you're chid's struggling with place value. Karla, "you

love it so much what other materials would you recommend to use with this a

learning clock?" it's all built into here so they make their own clocks you can

you can get a learning clock I mean they're like six dollars on on Amazon

that you could try where they can build it along with the lessons it's not

necessary though, everything that you need is at the back, there is a manipulative

section and you would rip out and you can laminate or just use and you can

you know, reinforce everything you're learning there. Of course there's

additional things that you can add to the program and supplement with but it's

not necessary. So it's a way of making it really affordable for families but still

adaptable to be used however you want to. "The best way to retain math facts that's

your biggest hurdle you practice and practice and she just can't remember"

that's our warning you guys five minutes and actually I'm gonna use this as a

warning that in five minutes I'm gonna wrap this up because I think I have

been droning for quite some time yes it's been an hour!

You guys you stuck with me for an hour! If you have been here since the

beginning you're amazing, gold star! So the best way to retain math facts are

these which again is built into the program. It will tell you to work on your

math flashcards your right brained flashcards where you're combining

the logical concept with the creative which is helping your

whole brain to see it as well as you're kinesthetically creating and you're

drawing and you're seeing visually so it builds in and then you're reading it to

yourself you're reading the story or you're reading the seven plus two equals

nine so it's all these connection points helping you to retain and master and

learn that very quickly because you're engaging all of your senses. The best way

are these math flashcards. If they're struggling with multiplication, do these.

If they're struggling with division, do these! They are the best way to retain

math facts when they can be engaged in part of it. It's time-consuming take your

time add it to every day of your math say

"okay we're going to two or three of these a day" so it's not too much and

we're just going to continually add to it and then every day build in time

working through your flashcards spend less time doing this and more time

doing this! If your child is struggling you're wondering about reinforcing you

know helping them where there are gaps and you're continuing to learn new

concepts you can either slow down on the math that you're doing or continue with

that but also do these which is built into the programs you should be doing it

all and if you're not and your child has gaps

it might be worth adding them it's worthwhile time investment it really is

because it's gonna help them master these concepts and it's just a little

bit of day don't overwhelm them a little bit, five minutes with your math

flashcards I want you to flip them around and teach them to your brother

five minutes we're gonna work on our flashcards today and add some new ones

some new ones that we learned or that you're struggling with. "Level six is

geared to what age group?" middle school age level six would be about grade 6

level the reason that we're not boxing it in with grades is because

every child is different and there's gaps and you want to go back if your

child has gaps you're taking that placement test and you're mostly ready

for this but not quite always better to go back always hands down is gonna build

their confidence and bring them an enjoyment in that subject and they can

whip through it fast if they want you and if most of it they get

gonna help them enjoy it a lot more so when they move on they're ready for it

and they don't have a bad taste in their mouth when they're considering that

subject. "Won't they get bored by going back?" again, dependent on your child

because it's not 50 pages, I'm exaggerating, of math that they would be

doing in a day it's a couple pages I would say likely no. Most kids are gonna

go through it and say wow two pages of this and they went through it really

really fast and then they're gonna hit something that they kind of struggle

with and they'll take them or you know they'll have to take more time with but

you can also skip you could skip to where it seems appropriate and I did

that with my daughter who we started a new math book because she fully had

understood everything of hers but we skipped all the beginning and because we were

starting in the middle of the year and we weren't doing a summer

break we didn't need to do all the review so we skipped all the review and

we went right into the new stuff. So adapt it make it work for your family.

All right, that's it guys! All the information I can possibly give you in a

short amount of time. We could talk all day about this and hopefully sometime

soon Angela and I can do a Zoom or a webinar about this where we can talk

from the experience of author and homeschool mom and you know bring it all

together for you guys and answer some of these questions in a different format

where you can see both our faces and hear both of our voices so that's it

that's all I have for you have an amazing homeschool day and I hope to see

you guys again whenever I go live next! Stay tuned watch my page!

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