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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
47 w News & Oppinion

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WEATHER WARFARE: Dane Wigington explains Hurricane Helene GeoEngineering and Weather PSYOPs!
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
47 w News & Oppinion

rumbleRumble
The TRUTH About Hurricane Helene you WON'T Hear in any Mainstream
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
47 w

DIDDY's PARTIES - Its not 'BABY OIL', it's the drug GHB!
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DIDDY's PARTIES - Its not 'BABY OIL', it's the drug GHB!

More DIDDY info comes out
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w Politics

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The Joe Pags Show 10-1-24
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
47 w

92-year-old former ballet dancer with dementia wrote a poem that has us all wrecked
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92-year-old former ballet dancer with dementia wrote a poem that has us all wrecked

Humans have been writing poetry for thousands of years, communicating feelings and ideas in beautiful, powerful ways that prose just can't quite reach. Poetry can be hard to define, but you know it when you see it—or rather, when you feel it.Emily Dickinson once wrote, “If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry.” A poem hits you somewhere—your brain, your heart, your gut. And one poem that packs an incredibly moving punch has come from an unlikely source—an elderly woman with dementia.Poet Joseph Fasano shared a message from a fan who shared that they had brought his book, "The Magic Words: Simple Poetry Prompts That Unlock the Creativity in Everyone," to their mother, a 92-year-old former ballet dancer living with dementia. The mother was excited to write a poem, and they slowly worked through a prompt from the book together aloud. This poem was the result: — (@) "Let the days be warmLet the fall be long.Let every child inside me find her shoesand dance wildly, softly, toward the world.I have a story I have never toldOnce, when I was small,I looked up at the sky and saw the windand knew I was a dancer made of song.I am still a dancer made of song."Wow. What a testament to the power of poetry to reach beyond our usual modes of communication, which dementia so cruelly disrupts. In a few simple lines, we're able to see this woman as she might see herself, as the human living under the veils of age and disease: "I am still a dancer made of song." Poetry prompts can help people express themselvesThe person who shared the poem thanked Fasano for "helping people find their voices," which is exactly what his book of poetry prompts was meant to do. "The Magic Words" is a book of poetry prompts from Joseph Fasano.Amazon In the book's introduction, Fasano shares that he'd been invited to speak to a class of second graders in New Jersey in 2022 to share "the craft and magic of poetry." As part of his efforts, he came up with a poetry prompt that could "help guide their imaginations" and "unlock the images, thoughts and feelings inside them, without asking them to worry about how to structure a poem." He called the results "astonishing." When he shared one of the students' poems on social media, it and the prompt took off like wildfire, as people who never thought of themselves as poets felt empowered to share their imaginations within that framework.From 7-year-olds to 92-year-olds, anyone can benefit from the self-expression that poetry facilitates, but many people feel hesitant or intimidated by the idea of writing a poem. Fasano writes, "Poetry is what happens when we let ourselves be," and this idea seems so clear than in the former dancer's poem above. Dementia can create roadblocks, but poetry provides a different avenue of communication. Caregivers try many different ways to communicate with people living with dementia.Photo credit: CanvaThe arts can be a powerful tool for people with dementiaUsing poetry to help dementia patients communicate and express themselves isn't just wishful thinking. Studies have demonstrated that cultural arts interventions, including poetry specifically, can be beneficial for people with dementia. In fact, the Alzheimer's Poetry Project (APP) aims to use poetry as a means of improving the quality of life of people living with dementia by facilitating creative expression. "We do not set boundaries in our beliefs in what possible for people with memory impairment to create," the APP website states. "By saying to people with dementia, we value you and your creativity; we are saying we value all members of our community."Poet Gary Glazner founded APP and shared a story with WXPR radio about how he came up with the idea while studying poetry at Sonoma State University:“I applied for a grant and got a grant to work at an adult care program. The moment I love to share with people is there was a guy in the group, head down, not participating and I said the Longfellow poem. ‘I shot an arrow into the air’ and his eyes popped open and he said, ‘It fell to earth I know not where.’ And suddenly he was with us and participating. It was just this powerful moment to see how poetry could be of use to elders but specifically with people with dementia."Whether we read it, write it, speak it or hear it, poetry has the power to reach people of all ages in all kinds of mysterious ways.You can follow Joseph Fasano on Twitter and Instagram, and find his books on Amazon.
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
47 w

Ecologist 'burst into tears' seeing endangered gliders using boxes designed to save them
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Ecologist 'burst into tears' seeing endangered gliders using boxes designed to save them

When a team of Australian researchers started checking the high-tech boxes they'd installed to help save endangered greater gliders, they weren't sure what they were going to find. The hope was that the tree-dwelling marsupials would use them for nesting—a replacement for the tree hollows they normally nest in—but no one knew whether or not the creatures would take to them.So when Dr. Kita Ashman, Threatened Species and Climate Adaptation Ecologist at WWF-Australia, found a glider in the second box she checked, she was thrilled. "I just burst into tears, I was so surprised and so happy," she told ABC News Australia.Greater gliders are nocturnal marsupials that live in old-growth forests of eastern Australia. They have large ears, fluffy fur, long tails, and they can glide up to 100 meters at a time. The species is only found in Australia."I grew up looking at greater gliders all throughout the Dandenong Ranges. So they have a really special place in my heart," said Dr. Ashman told ANU.The special nesting boxes were designed and created through a partnership between Australian National University (ANU), Greening Australia and the World Wide Fund for Nature-Australia after bushfires destroyed a third of the greater gliders' remaining habitat. The tree hollows that greater gliders rely on to nest can take over 100 years to form, according to ANU, so it's not like they can just find some new trees to live in when their homes are destroyed.Nesting boxes that are commonly used for wildlife aren't a good fit for greater gliders, as the thin walls and lack of thermal protection can result in gliders overheating. (Heat-stressed gliders will slow their eating, which can be life-threatening, according to ANU.) The high-tech boxes in this project are insulated and include a non-toxic, heat-reflective, fire-resistant coating to keep gliders safe. "I've affectionately been calling this design the Goldilocks box because we hope it will keep greater gliders not too hot and not too cold and will help to increase the species' resilience in a changing climate," Ashman said in July 2022."Producing and installing high-quality nest boxes is costly," added ANU research fellow Dr. Kara Youngentob, "so this project is very important because it will help us understand if expensive interventions like nest boxes are the best use of funding in our urgent mission to save greater gliders."It appears that their efforts are paying off."What we didn't know was whether these boxes worked and whether they have an impact on the glider population," Dr. Youngentob told ABC News Australia. "Much to our delight, within a few months of them going up they are already being used by gliders, so we know the individuals themselves like them and use them."According to Youngentob, greater gliders are the largest gliding marsupial at risk of extinction. More than 200 nesting boxes have been installed in Victoria's East Gippsland and in Tallaganda National Park in New South Wales. Youngentob told ABC News Australia that this project will help researchers learn more about how many of the species are left in the wild. The quiet, nocturnal marsupial faces threats from climate change and deforestation in addition to the wildfires that ravaged Australia in 2020. Their population has fallen by 80% in the past 20 years and the species reached endangered status in July of 2022."They're a treasure for this country." Dr. Youngentob told ANU. "And I think the more people know about them, the more that they will fall in love with them and want to protect them too."This article originally appeared on 1.20.23
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RetroGame Roundup
RetroGame Roundup
47 w ·Youtube Gaming

YouTube
"Get ON My Lawn" Retro Bird Panel PRGE 2024
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w Politics

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MASSIVE: RFK Jr Claims He Will Have Access To All Military And Intelligence Agencies Under Trump
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w Politics

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Doocy NUKES The Biden-Harris Admin Over Alarming New Illegal Migration Numbers
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
47 w Politics

rumbleRumble
WOAH: Five Percent Of all Registered Voters In Arizona Cannot Prove Citizenship
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