Thứ Năm, 20 tháng 7, 2017

Waching daily Jul 20 2017

The Synchronicity Is Really Strong At The Moment, Who Is Feeling It

By Luke Miller Truth Theory

This year has felt like an uphill battle since the start of January, it was an intense few

months in November and December, but as soon as the new year hit, it was like someone removed

the metaphorical power plug.

I have been having a lot of conversations of late with lots of different people all

over the world and something that is happening with those I am attracting is a real synchronization

in feelings, actions and thoughts.

This started to happen around the time the mayan calendar ended, but really started to

increase in intensity in the last 2 and a half years.

It has manifested in synchronistic events that have landed me my job I am currently

working at, placed me in the Peruvian jungle with a shaman that I communicated with in

a vision and had me seeing owls up to 20 times a day for 3 months straight (weird I know

but stay with me).

The most miraculous thing that has happened to me personally is an overnight learning

of how to interpret number codes.

This was something that happened as a result of my jungle excursion to Peru, and has a

story behind it, but in a nutshell- I woke up and the language of numbers made perfect

sense to me.

It is interesting to note that the Schumann resonance has been rising over the last few

years.

The Schumann resonance is a measurement of the magnetic frequencies within the Earth�s

electromagnetic spectrum.

It is said to be generated by changes that happen at the earth�s core.

As long as records go back the Schumann resonance sat at a steady 7.83Hz with just small fluctuations,

recently this has changed with it spiking at over 36Hz- meaning the rhythm of the planet

is actually changing.

The different lines in the chart represent different locations- up until November in

the most active areas it was sitting for the most part between 7Hz and 12Hz with occasional

spikes (highest 24Hz).

Since November it has started to consistently pulse between 10Hz and 24Hz.

From the middle of January up until now it has been rapidly swinging between 11Hz and

36Hz.

What is causing this is debatable, it could be intentional interference, global warming,

an act of god or a mixture of the 3.

But whatever is going on (and I can only go on my own experience) it is having a visible

effect on myself and the people who I keep company with.

This article was actually inspired by a Facebook post in which I said �The synchronicity

is strong at the moment, really strong, who is feeling it!?!?� in which I got inundated

with responses, messages and comments from people all feeling the same thing.

It is almost as if I entered the internal conversation everyone was having simultaneously.

My personal experience with all the synchronicity has been- me thinking of people and they message

me, thinking about a subject and someone will start talking about it, seeing number codes

repeatedly and even planning trips abroad, only to find out countless people from different

friend circles are going to be in the same place, at the same time.

But it is not only synchronicity, it is the ability to predict events before they happen,

dreaming in an unspoken language, having prophetic dreams and being able to enter altered states

and travel to different realms.

I know there is a good chance that many will not make too much sense of what I am speaking

about in this article, but it is very real, and being experienced by a very large group

of people simultaneously.

One explanation for this could be that of quantum entanglement, which is the process

when 2 sub atomic particles interact and become entangled.This is a physical phenomenon which

occurs at the microscopic level when a pair or group of particles are generated, or interact

in ways such that the quantum state of each particle cannot be separated.

Meaning once the 2 particles become entangled, they can be separated by infinite distance,

and when one is altered the other will instantaneously also be altered.

Something that Einstein called �spooky action at a distance.�

According to theoretical physicist and cosmologist Lawrence Krauss, in the first billionth of

a billionth of a billionth of a billionth of a second after the big bang we went through

a period called cosmic inflation, in which our universe blew up from the size of an atom,

to around the size of a basketball.

What this means is all we are now, came from this single atom, we have just evolved and

been diluted in different ways.

Should the theory of the big bang be true, it seems obvious that people would share entangled

particles within their DNA.

Maybe those particles have been entangled at different levels, in different people and

species- but ultimately everything that is or ever was exists in all of us.

Meaning we literally are all the same thing, a house brick and a sea turtle come from the

same source, as do fire and water.

We are �all one� no matter which way you look at it.

I don�t claim to have all the answers, but I do know that the world is waking up to something

significant.

Maybe this is simply a result of frequency changes which is awakening something within

those sensitive enough to feel it.

Whatever the case- many are now feeling these shifts!

Please share this article!

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For more infomation >> The Synchronicity Is Really Strong At The Moment, Who Is Feeling - Duration: 6:55.

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Free 10-Day Personal Development Masterclass with Satori Prime - Duration: 2:41.

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For more infomation >> Free 10-Day Personal Development Masterclass with Satori Prime - Duration: 2:41.

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Hazrat Dawood Alaihis Salam ki Qaom k 12000 Insan Bandar Ban Gaye پورا واقعہ in Urdu - Duration: 4:44.

For more infomation >> Hazrat Dawood Alaihis Salam ki Qaom k 12000 Insan Bandar Ban Gaye پورا واقعہ in Urdu - Duration: 4:44.

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Cómo Dibujar a GOKU SSJ DIOS AZUL | How To Draw GOKU SUPER SAIYAN BLUE | FeLipeArt - Duration: 16:36.

For more infomation >> Cómo Dibujar a GOKU SSJ DIOS AZUL | How To Draw GOKU SUPER SAIYAN BLUE | FeLipeArt - Duration: 16:36.

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EP-0016 - How to Make a Mosaic Stitch - cross stitch x-stitch needlepoint tutorial flosstube - Duration: 7:57.

Hello, and welcome to the Stitching Kitchn.

Today in the Stitching Kitchen, we are going to learn how to do a Mosaic Stitch.

I cooked this stitch up out of my stitching notebook and I'm going to show you how to

do it.

A lot of people have emailed me and asked me why I would teach a needlepoint stitch

like the Smyrna Cross if I'm talking about cross stitching.

But, there are many different samplers out there that, as you know, have different stitches

on them.

So, that's why I'm teaching these stitches.

So.

The Mosaic stitch.

I looked it up under several different ways on Google.

I'm not having much luck on Google folks.

"Mosaic" Nice little over-two stitch.

Blank.

"Origins of Mosaic stitch" Nothing.

So.

Mosaic.

M-O-S-A-I-C.

Mosaic.

I'm going to draw you the chart first and then I'm going to stitch it for you.

Here's our Stitching Kitchn paper, which you can download on the www.StitchingKitchn.com

website and it's free.

And you can have all the good paper that you want.

So, here.

I'm going to spell it again.

M-O-S-A-I-C.

Now this stitch is done over two threads by two threads.

And it's done on the diagonal.

We can't stitch it horizontally or vertically.

So watch me now.

Here is over one.

Over two.

And then we move over one thread.

And do another one.

And then we're going to do.

Drop down one thread.

And go over two.

Move over one thread to the right and go over one.

Now, I don't know if you've noticed that, when you do stitches, you always come up on

an odd number and go down on an even number.

I can put little arrows on here.

So you can see how that progresses.

Now.

How do other stitch how does that stitch fit into itself?

Well, wherever there is a two ... a one, you would be going over two threads.

And where there is a two, you would be going over one thread.

And vice versa.

So it does make a nice little row of stitches.

How can you use these on your cross stitch patterns?

Well, sometimes if you're doing buildings.

Or you're doing skirts on dresses.

Or even lawns, there might be a nice block of color.

And if you can get a few Mosaic stitches in there, you will be able to make some texture.

So.

Here's the 18-count fabric.

Linen.

And here's my needle and thread.

And there's my waste knot.

We're going to remind ourselves that that's what we're doing.

I'm going to go to the back of the fabric with the waste knot on the surface.

And, yes I'm repeating myself but it never hurts.

So, I'm going to find a vertical thread.

And then I am going to go up one thread.

And over one thread to the right.

And there's my over one stitch.

Then I'm going to come down one thread.

And just to count until I learn how.

I'm going to go over one thread, over one thread, and up two.

So, there is the second stitch.

And now I'm going to go over one thread to the right and make a little over one.

Like a half cross stitch.

Isn't that cute?

And it's in my favorite, one of my favorite colors of green too.

Ok, I'm going to do a few of these.

So you can.

See how they look in a row.

And, by the way, you can also do these in the opposite direction.

You can stitch from the right corner down to the left corner.

You don't always have to do them.

Left to right.

Oh no no no.

Not a knot.

OK.

Alright.

So there's a few of those stitches right there.

And let me start up here and go up top and show you how they fit together.

So, now I'm just doing an over one.

Except I put that in the wrong place because I'm only human.

Alright.

There we go.

Alright.

And this one.

Because I can't see.

There.

Alright.

I keep saying alright.

That's because I'm trying to convince myself I'm doing okay.

Did it again.

By the way.

This is good.

Real quick.

I have a few minutes here.

See this stitch?

It's going vertically is it not?

Well, it's not going at an angle.

Unless I can't see that.

It's going vertical.

So.

The stitch is laying on the surface.

So I can remove it like this.

If you back your needle and thread out of that hole.

You're going to puncture that thread.

And then you're going to have a mess on your hands.

So let me thread this up.

And get down here closer.

So I'm going to go up one.

And over one.

And there I am in the right position.

And also, as I'm coming up in a shared intersection, I want to make sure that I'm not puncturing

anything.

So, if I feel any hesitation whatsoever, I need to stop what I'm doing and withdraw my

needle and double-check.

Otherwise, you could have a thread.

Now look at that.

See?

It's a really fun stitch to do.

And you can practice it.

And remember it's called the Mosaic Stitch.

And I'll have another stitch cooked up for you in no time.

So, please remember to subscribe and like our page because we want you to see a Stitching

Kitchn video all the time.

Thank you!

(And forward it to all your friends!)

And.

Forward it to all your friends!

And don't forget.

We have lots of videos up there!

You're going to like them all!

Am I begging?

OK.

That's enough.

We're doing the cross-stitch episode!

Finally!

After all these weeks.

I have a piece of 18-count linen.

Over here.

In white ...

For more infomation >> EP-0016 - How to Make a Mosaic Stitch - cross stitch x-stitch needlepoint tutorial flosstube - Duration: 7:57.

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World Cinema - Part 1: Crash Course Film History #14 - Duration: 10:16.

News flash: the world's a big place. WHAT!?!?!

Huh!

And humans have been making films in almost every corner of it for more than a hundred years.

While Hollywood dominated the global film market in its first six or seven decades,

lots of profoundly influential film movements arose all over the world.

Now, there's way too much to cover in just two videos.

But, hopefully, these overviews will inspire you to explore more on your own.

To start, let's look at a few key movements and filmmakers throughout Asia that were born

out of intense political change and had a lasting impact on world cinema.

[Intro Music Plays]

During the 1930s, the Japanese government

placed stringent controls over domestic film production through its Ministry of Propaganda.

They censored content that didn't uphold the values of the Imperial government, and

promoted movies that celebrated the Japanese military.

After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Ministry of Propaganda borrowed a page from the Nazi

playbook and actually took over the country's ten largest film studios.

Then, they consolidated these studios into two main production companies and forced them

to make pro-war movies.

Now, real battle footage from the Pacific was hard to come by, so these wartime Japanese

filmmakers got really good at creating special effects.

And that experience would come in handy after the war, when they were given more artistic freedom.

Yasujiro Ozu is widely acknowledged as one of the masters of classical Japanese

cinema, a period that stretched from 1926 to the 1950s.

Ozu began his career making quiet, humanistic films about family relationships and intergenerational conflicts.

He grew up admiring American studio films, especially those by Ernst Lubitsch and D.W. Griffith.

Ozu's first film to achieve wide acclaim was a comedy called I Was Born, But….

The film follows a pair of brothers who lose faith in their father when they discover he's

not standing up to his boss.

A lot of Ozu movies embed this kind of gentle social critique into their very personal stories.

Aesthetically, Ozu is known for his long, wide shots that allow entire scenes to play

out, sometimes very slowly.

This is often considered to be a reflection of the power of ritual in traditional Japanese life.

He also innovated the use of offscreen space, having characters exit the frame for surprisingly

long periods of time, and letting the camera linger on the now-empty space.

These moments echo certain Zen aesthetics about emptiness and patience.

And they root Ozu's films in ancient Japanese customs and beliefs, even though his stories

take place in what was then the present day.

After the war, Ozu went on to make three masterpieces: Late Spring, Early Summer, and his most famous

film, Tokyo Story.

Now, the end of the war brought profound changes to the Japanese film industry.

Much of the country was scarred, both physically and psychologically, having suffered a massive

firebombing campaign and atomic explosions at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

One kind of postwar Japanese cinema dealt with the aftermath of these atomic bombs in

very direct, explicit ways.

It's impossible to watch Ishiro Honda's 1954 film Godzilla and not see the parable

underneath the sci-fi monster movie.

...and also not try to mimic Godzilla's noise.

Craig: ahhhh... ahhhh Nick: You're not doing a very good job.

No, I'm not doing a very good job.

The creature is unleashed by careless atomic

explosions, and the human characters spend the movie wrestling with the potentially apocalyptic

consequences of scientific research.

Godzilla and its sequels also show off the sophistication of the Japanese special effects

industry, as all that work during the war was now beginning to pay off.

After the war, General Douglas MacArthur led the American Occupation forces which oversaw

the "democratization" of Japan from 1945 to 1952.

And this brought a new kind of censorship to Japanese films.

They were forbidden from glorifying imperialism, feudalism, and militarism.

The Occupation forces rounded up and destroyed hundreds of films that were deemed anti-democratic.

Under the Occupation, the state-run film companies were broken up to foster competition, and

filmmakers were encouraged to make movies that celebrated democratic values

and personal freedoms.

One filmmaker who flourished in this postwar period was Akira Kurosawa, who would go on

to become one of the most influential filmmakers in the history of cinema.

For real. He's a big deal.

Kurosawa became an international star with his 1951 revolutionary film Rashomon.

It tells the story of the murder of a samurai warrior through the eyes of four unreliable

narrators.

We see the events of the film four times, each time from a different point of view.

And the film never tells us which version of events actually happened.

Kurosawa seems to imply that truth and reality are subjective, in both cinema and life, and

that our only hope is to be as good to one another as we possibly can.

YA, NICK!

Unlike Ozu, Kurosawa kept his camera moving,

a style he would bring to many of his later samurai films.

And he was often borrowing stories from other cultures.

His samurai movie Yojimbo was based on an American detective novel by Dashiell Hammett.

Throne of Blood was a Japanese re-telling of Shakespeare's Macbeth.

And he used King Lear as the basis for his samurai epic Ran.

In turn, Kurosawa inspired many foreign films based on his work.

George Lucas famously lifted elements of Kurosawa's The Hidden Fortress for the first

Star Wars film.

And Kurosawa's masterpiece Seven Samurai has been remade twice in the United States

as The Magnificent Seven.

I guess that makes it the "Magnificent Fourteen." *giggle*

From anime to horror and period dramas to Kaiju films, stories from the Japanese movie

industry continue to resonate around the globe.

Now, in mainland China, the film industry also underwent some significant changes because

of political pressures.

The first domestic films emerged in 1905.

And within five years, a stable industry began to form, starting in Shanghai and spreading

to other coastal cities.

Sound was introduced in 1929 and China's film industry continued to grow, until the

Japanese invaded in 1937, occupied Shanghai, and shut down domestic production until the

end of the war.

When Mao Zedong's Communist Party took over the country in 1949, they placed control of

film production under the Minister of Culture.

During the 1950s, the Chinese government built a dozen major film studios throughout the

country and produced a lot of pro-Communist films.

In the early 1960s, the government censors relaxed enough to allow film adaptations of

several operas and novels.

Before this, works like Su Li's Third Sister Liu and Early Spring in February by Xie Tieli

would have been considered too bourgeois to produce.

Then in 1966 came the Cultural Revolution, a violent, decade-long purge of most cultural

and economic institutions in China.

Professionals of all kinds, including filmmakers, were driven from their jobs and homes by the

Chinese government, and sent off to be "re-educated" in the countryside.

As a result, film production came to a halt in 1967 and wouldn't resume for another

three years.

And even then, only amateur filmmakers were allowed to make movies at first.

Eventually, through fits and starts, professional filmmakers emerged from their re-education

camps or graduated from new film schools and began making movies again.

One of the most notable directors from mainland China is Zhang Yimou.

His first film, the sumptuously shot Red Sorghum, won the top prize at the Berlin Film Festival in 1987.

Known for his striking visuals and painterly style, Zhang made several notable martial

arts films in the early 2000s – movies like Hero and House of Flying Daggers – before

overseeing the Opening Ceremonies for the Beijing Olympics in 2008.

Zhang has even worked with American movie stars.

Matt Damon and Willem Dafoe play lead roles in his 2017 film The Great Wall.

This collaboration may be the first of many, since well-financed Chinese production companies

have begun to partner with American studios to make films for audiences in both countries

and beyond.

Outside of mainland China, Hong Kong has a long tradition of kung fu and swordplay films.

I just kung fu'd the eagle.

Its film industry elevated these violent genres to art in the 1960s and '70s, through precisely

choreographed action and rapid editing.

Figures like Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan popularized this authentic martial arts cinema outside

Hong Kong.

And directors like John Woo even went on to make blockbusters within the American studio

system – films like Face/Off and Mission: Impossible II.

Wong Kar-wai is another superstar director from the Hong Kong film industry.

His elliptical, post-modern films often examine unrequited love and the deep interior lives

of their characters.

From the dreamlike lyricism of In the Mood for Love, to the martial arts grandeur of

The Grand Master, his films have had a profound influence on filmmakers throughout the world.

As big as China and Hong Kong loom on the world stage, the largest film industry in

the world is located in India.

All told, the country produces eight- to nine-hundred movies a year,

roughly a quarter of the world's films.

So India had a growing film industry under British Colonial Rule in the early part of

the 20th century, prior to winning their independence.

They ran into trouble, though, when sound film arrived.

Because India makes films in more than sixteen languages!

When you hear the term Bollywood, for instance, that refers to film production centered in

Bombay.

These Hindi-language films make up 25 percent of Indian cinema.

Bengali-language film production occurs mostly in Calcutta, while facilities in Madras produce

Tamil-, Kannada-, and Telugu- language films.

Despite the language differences, what unifies most Indian films is their style.

Most Indian cinema consists of lavish musicals or mythological romances, all following relatively

strict formulas.

For the musicals, the saying goes, all you need is "a star, six songs, and three dances."

The Indian star system actually resembles the American studio era of the 1930s.

Actors are chosen and groomed by the film studios, and plugged into movies built around

their personas.

Now, the most profitable movie ever produced in India is Ramesh Sippy's 1975 film Sholay.

It's an action-adventure film heavily influenced by Hollywood westerns, but also has its share

of over-the-top song-and-dance numbers.

The film was so popular when it was released that it ran continuously in movie theaters

for five years! I can't even hold a job for five years.

Meanwhile, the universally-acknowledged master

of Indian cinema was Satyajit Ray, whose style was different than most Indian films.

After studying as a painter, Ray found his filmmaking inspiration in Italian Neo-Realism,

especially Vittorio De Sica's classic The Bicycle Thieves, the intimate story of a father

and son struggling to survive poverty in post-war Italy.

In 1955, Ray made his first film, The Song of the Road, which tells the story of a young

Bengali boy coming of age.

Unlike the spectacle of most Indian cinema, Ray's film focuses on the emotions of its

fully-realized characters, and intimate moments of everyday life.

The film became a surprise international hit and won the Jury Prize at the 1956 Cannes

Film Festival.

In his next two films, 1957's The Unvanquished and 1959's The World of Apu, Ray continued

to follow the main character from his first film as he matured into adolescence.

These three films together are known as the "Apu Trilogy" and cemented Ray's international

reputation and low-key, contemplative style.

Indian cinema is more than just fun Bollywood spectacle.

It's a multifaceted film industry that, along with all these Asian film cultures,

has profoundly shaped modern filmmaking today and for generations to come.

Today, we talked about post-war Japanese cinema from Kurosawa's samurai to Hondo's Godzilla.

We scratched the surface of Chinese cinema, from mainland epics to the martial arts film

traditions of Hong Kong.

And we looked at India, home to the largest film industry in the world.

Next time, we'll tackle indigenous cinema from Africa and Latin America, to maverick

filmmakers in the Middle East.

Crash Course Film History is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.

You can head over to their channel to check out a playlist of their latest amazing shows,

like Eons, Coma Niddy, and PBS Space Time.

This episode of Crash Course was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Crash Course Studio

with the help of these ministers of propaganda and our amazing graphics team is Thought Cafe.

For more infomation >> World Cinema - Part 1: Crash Course Film History #14 - Duration: 10:16.

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Putin at MAKS-2017: Russia retains its leadership in military aircraft, missile & space industry - Duration: 4:29.

Good afternoon, friends, ladies and gentlemen,

It is a pleasure to welcome all of you to the opening of the International Aviation and Space Salon.

It is a pleasure to welcome all of you to the opening of the International Aviation and Space Salon.

It was first held 25 years ago, back in 1992.

Since then it has established itself as a high-profile event,

but we all know that this recognition did not come right away.

Building on the persistence and talent of its organisers

and with comprehensive support from the state,

MAKS has definitely reached new highs,

becoming an anticipated event for all those interested in aerospace technology.

Russians have always taken a keen interest in the development of aviation technology and space exploration.

It has to be said that this is an important element of our shared

culture, and the history of Russian cosmonautics and aviation is a matter of national pride, and rightly so.

We are proud of the outstanding achievements by prominent engineers Sergei Korolev, Nikolai Polikarpov, Pavel Sukhoi, Andrei Tupolev and Sergei Ilyushin.

Our goal today is to build on the traditions they established.

Over the next few days, Zhukovsky, Moscow Region, will be hosting a large exhibition where

leading Russian and foreign companies will present their products,

conferences and workshops will be held on matters that are currently relevant for the industry,

and where a number of talks are scheduled to take place and major contracts to be signed.

We hope that all this activity will help step up industrial cooperation,

foster international ties

and promote Russian products on the domestic and foreign markets.

We have much to offer.

In recent years the aerospace industry benefited from substantial government support:

its production assets underwent substantial upgrades,

projects to create new, competitive civilian aircraft are underway,

including the Ka-62 helicopter and the MC-21 aircraft.

Let me also note that Russia retains its leadership in military aircraft, as well as missile and space manufacturing.

We will continue developing these sectors.

Of course, I have to say a few words about the flying displays, which is one of the most spectacular parts of the MAKS Salon.

The show will feature the best Russian and foreign pilot groups,

whose mastery is not just respected but admired.

Congratulations to the International Aviation and Space Salon MAKS on its anniversary.

I wish all the participants fruitful work, and good weather and a spectacular experience to its guests.

Thank you for your attention.

For more infomation >> Putin at MAKS-2017: Russia retains its leadership in military aircraft, missile & space industry - Duration: 4:29.

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See your views with Realtime Report - Duration: 0:57.

In this video, we'll show you how you can use YouTube's Realtime report to track the activity of your videos.

To get started, click your channel icon at the top of any YouTube page.

Now click "Creator Studio".

Next, click "Analytics"

then click "Realtime".

On this page, you will be able to see two graphs, one showing the latest hour-by-hour estimated views of your videos, and the other showing the latest minute-by-minute estimated views of your videos.

Below those graphs, you will see the estimated real-time views from your latest published videos.

You can also see where you're viewers are watching from, what kind of device they're viewing your videos on, and also what kind of operating system they're using.

Here's a tip - if you want to see the estimated real-time analytics of a specific video, just use the search bar at the top to find it.

And that's it!

Subscribe to our channel for more tips and tricks.

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