All posts by nedhamson

Activist, writer, researcher, addicted to sharing information and facts.

Learning is a Continuous Process

Bloggingwithonie

Whatever you believe, it develops you as a human being, whether you listen to other people’s teachings or adapt what you have learned from them, but it all depends on how you perceive it.

Learning is a continuous process, and sometimes we learn from our mistakes and other people. Then we begin to develop and motivate ourselves to become a better person from all walks of life.

Allowing the teaching of others and applying it into our lives improves our ways of life; it gives us a flow of acceptance to associate in society.

But above all else, when we allow Christ Jesus to operate into our lives, the more it becomes better. Because with God, there is nothing impossible. Suppose you are a Christian believer.

I remember once a fellow who questioned me about God, regarding the situation she is in at that time. She said if there is…

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Lewis Hamilton: ‘Not bad for a boy from a council estate’ — Repeating Islands

A report from the Agence France Presse. Lewis Hamilton cemented his position as one of Formula One’s true greats when the six-time world champion claimed a record 92nd race win on Sunday, another staggering achievement “for a boy from a council house”. His victory at the Algarve International Circuit allowed him to pass the previous […]

Lewis Hamilton: ‘Not bad for a boy from a council estate’ — Repeating Islands

Never Doubt Your Worth

Saania's diary - reflections, learnings, sparkles

We hold a power
That no body can break
A distinctive talent
That no one can take

Let’s stop paying heed
To what people have to say
The path to our dreams
Only we can carve the way

We’re valiant and brave
Let’s stand tall and proud
To the person in the mirror
Let’s say it out loud

Within our struggles
The battles we fight
Nothing in the world
Can ever dim our light

A branch about to break
Isn’t the worry for a bird
For her trust is in her wings
And not on the world

Why do we follow people
To the places they go?
Why do we say yes
When we want to say no?

The dispiriting words of others
We must learn to ignore
For our mind is the one thing
We solely have and can control

– SaaniaSparkle 🧚🏻‍♀️

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Gulab Jamun

Unlocking The Hidden Me

#gulabjamun #indiansweet #foodblog

Gulab Jamun is a very popular Indian sweet, mostly served during festivities, wedding occasions, other celebrations and also when one’s sweet tooth crave for something.

‘Gulab’ and ‘Jamun’ are hindi words translating to ‘Rose’ and ‘berry’ respectively.

These are berry – sized balls made with milk-solid and dipped in sugar – rose water syrup.

Traditionally, these were made with “khoya” or “dry milk solids” but now a days many alternatives are there as “khoya” is not available easily everywhere. Milk powder is an easy option to go by.

Though am not a very big fan of sweets, I tried this for the very first time during a get together at home and to my surprise it turned out to be yummmyy. So, thought to share with you all my version of the recipe and give your taste buds a sweeeeet treat. 😊

Ingredients:

Milk powder –…

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Ciamano Yanomami, Amazonas, Venezuela

As Yanomami spokesman Davi Kopenawa says in the “metal smoke” chapter of his book “The Fall of Heaven”: “This is what our elders who are great shamans say. These are the words of the xapiri, which they transmit to us. These are the ones I want whites to hear … As soon as the miners arrive at our house … They smeared the rivers with yellowish mud and filled them with the smoke of the xawara plague from their engines. I saw them razing the sources of the river to the ground with the greed of hungry dogs. Everything to find gold, so whites can use it to make teeth and ornaments or keep it closed in their homes. … The thinking of these whites is clouded by their lust for gold. They are evil beings. “

Barbara Crane Navarro

Come dice il portavoce degli Yanomami Davi Kopenawa nel capitolo “fumo metallico” del suo libro “La caduta del cielo”: “Questo è ciò che dicono i nostri anziani che sono grandi sciamani. Queste sono le parole degli xapiri, che ci trasmettono. Questi sono quelli che voglio che i bianchi ascoltino … Non appena i minatori arrivano a casa nostra … Hanno imbrattato i fiumi con fango giallastro e li hanno riempiti con il fumo della peste xawara dalle loromotori. Li ho visti radere al suolo le sorgenti del fiume con l’avidità dei cani affamati. Tutto per trovare l’oro, così i bianchi possono usarlo per fare denti e ornamenti o tenerlo chiuso nelle loro case. … Il pensiero di questi bianchi è oscurato dalla loro brama di oro. Sono esseri malvagi.”

NO all’oro nel sangue! – Un messaggio per Davi Kopenawa, Claudia Andujar e Survival con un avvertimento del cacique Raoni…

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Soil fungi act like a support network for trees, study shows

Douglas fir trees in British Columbia grow faster when they have more connections to other trees by way of fungal networks living in the forest soil, according to a new U of A study. (Photo: Getty Images) Though past research has focused on seedlings, these findings give new insight into the value of fungal networks to older trees—which are more environmentally beneficial for functions like capturing carbon and stabilizing soil erosion.

“Large trees make up the bulk of the forest, so they drive what the forest is doing,” said researcher Joseph Birch, who led the study for his PhD thesis in the Faculty of Agricultural, Life & Environmental Sciences.

When they colonize the roots of a tree, fungal networks act as a sort of highway, allowing water, nutrients and even the compounds that send defence signals against insect attacks to flow back and forth among the trees.

The network also helps nutrients flow to resource-limited trees “like family units that support one another in times of stress,” Birch noted.

Cores taken from 350 Douglas firs in British Columbia showed that annual tree ring growth was related to the extent of fungal connections a tree had with other trees. “They had much higher growth than trees that had only a few connections.”

Source: Soil fungi act like a support network for trees, study shows

Daycares in Finland Built a ‘Forest Floor’, And It Changed Children’s Immune Systems

paivakodin pihat Before and after – Compared to other city kids who play in standard urban daycares with yards of pavement, tile and gravel, 3-, 4-, and 5-year-olds at these greened-up daycare centres in Finland showed increased T-cells and other important immune markers in their blood within 28 days.  “We also found that the intestinal microbiota of children who received greenery was similar to the intestinal microbiota of children visiting the forest every day,” says environmental scientist Marja Roslund from the University of Helsinki.

Source: Daycares in Finland Built a ‘Forest Floor’, And It Changed Children’s Immune Systems