Just for today I will try to live through this day only, and not tackle all my problems at once. I can do something for 12 hours that would appall me if I felt that I had to keep it up for a lifetime.
Just for today I will try to strengthen my mind. I will study. I will learn something useful. I will not be a mental loafer. I will read something that requires effort, thought, and concentration.
What do you want to become? Do you have a plan for how you can achieve your life purpose? Pick any of the suggestions above, or come up with some of your own. Then, decide what you are willing to do, just for today.
Tao means different things to different people in different times. Indeed, we might say that the Tao of today leads in unprecedented directions. We have to adapt, but being contemporary should not be an excuse for adulteration and shortcuts. Once we find the true path of today, we must walk it with the same determination as the ancients.
Just for today I will try to live through this day only, and not tackle my whole life problem at once. I can do something for twelve hours that would appall me if I felt that I had to keep it up for a lifetime.
Just for today I will exercise my soul in three ways. I will do somebody a good turn and not get found out; if anybody knows of it, it will not count. I will do at least two things I don't want to do-just for exercise. I will not show anyone that my feelings are hurt; they may be hurt, but today I will not show it.
Just for today I will be agreeable. I will look as well as I can, dress becomingly, talk low, act courteously, criticize not one bit, not find fault with anything, and not try to improve or regulate anybody but myself.
As World War II ended in Europe, the United States led the effort to seek a measure of justice in the form of restitution or compensation for individuals whose assets were stolen during the Holocaust. The effort began while Allied troops were liberating Europe and continues to this day. In 2009, the United States and 46 other countries committed to rectify the consequences of these wrongful asset seizures and to promote the welfare of Holocaust survivors around the world by endorsing the Terezin Declaration.
The report reflects the importance the U.S. government places on finding a measure of justice for Holocaust victims, survivors, and their heirs and is intended to encourage reflection on best practices that might be employed to fulfill commitments countries took upon themselves by endorsing the Terezin Declaration. We hope that Congress finds this report useful in determining how it can engage on unresolved issues that can directly benefit Holocaust survivors and their families, many of whom live in the United States.
Overall, the report is descriptive rather than prescriptive. It provides an objective account of what countries that endorsed the Declaration have done to implement their commitments in the ensuing decade. Indeed, while it provides indications that some countries have done better than others in living up to their commitments, it also underscores that all can do more to deliver a measure of justice nearly 75 years after the end of the Holocaust.
Nearly 75 years after the end of World War II (WWII), and 10 years after the Terezin Declaration, much work remains to be done to provide a modicum of economic justice to Holocaust survivors and heirs for property wrongfully confiscated by the Nazis and their collaborators or nationalized by the Communists in the period after World War II.
One reason some countries have held back is concern about the magnitude of property left heirless by the Nazi extermination of Jews in their countries and the potential cost of a compensation settlement. In that regard, individual reports show the variety of mechanisms countries have taken in partnership with local Jewish communities. This includes in some cases settling for a fraction of the value of heirless and certain other remaining property and applying those funds toward endowments and foundations that assist needy survivors and reinvigorate the small Jewish communities left in their countries. Many survivors and heirs of Holocaust victims are at pains to point out that restitution is more of a moral than a financial issue, related to securing a measure of justice for their loved ones. For others, the goal is to obtain resources for survivors so that they may live out their lives in dignity.
Recalling the Washington Conference Principles on Nazi-Confiscated Art as endorsed at the Washington Conference of 1998, which enumerated a set of voluntary commitments for governments that were based upon the moral principle that art and cultural property confiscated by the Nazis from Holocaust (Shoah) victims should be returned to them or their heirs, in a manner consistent with national laws and regulations as well as international obligations, in order to achieve just and fair solutions,
Recognizing the urgent need to identify ways to achieve a just and fair solution to the issue of Judaica and Jewish cultural property, where original owners, or heirs of former original Jewish owners, individuals or legal persons cannot be identified, while acknowledging there is no universal model,
While most people probably associate Rudy Giuliani with politics and not pronouns, researchers James Pennebaker and Thomas Lay of the University of Texas found that he started using more I pronouns at press conferences after going through a painful and public divorce, suggesting his processing of a newly single identity. In a different study, people who were still using we to talk about themselves and their ex after a breakup were found to be less adjusted to their split than those who used the more othering he or she.
These findings represent further evidence that the human brain is a prediction machine: We continuously try to anticipate what will happen next. In spoken communication, we draw upon prior experience to try to predict what word will follow and adjust these predictions on a talker-by-talker basis: What may be distracting and unexpected for one talker may be conventional and expected for another. Not all disfluencies are created equal.
Hello
I am trying to use ui.vision RPA Extension in Firefox to type todays day in a text box as a number field ( example: 08), then month in a different box (example: 04), then year in a seperate box (example: 2021)
Now, photo tour just doesn't work outside of the app. Maybe try it yourself, if you have it active on your listing? Whichever browser or devices I use, clicking through from my listing page to any photo just shows me a white screen.
At the end of the year, we invest in social media ads to support our business during the tricky winter months ahead. Every year so far, we've filled the slots in the pre-Christmas period. Now, unbeknownst to us, we've been wasting money sending visitors to a page that just doesn't work.
Hi @Dora676 @Steve3444 ! Our super awesome Host @Joelle43 noticed earlier that the blank screen does not appear anymore when using desktop browser. I just double checked your profiles and could see the photo tour.
If you want to delete the double bed, from the photo tour, click on that shared space and under sleeping arrangements, adjust the type of bed to zero. At the very bottom, you'll see "delete room or space" with a bin sign and this will remove this space if this is what you want.
Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing? is a collage by English artist Richard Hamilton.[1][2] It measures 10.25 in (260 mm) 9.75 in (248 mm). The work is now in the collection of the Kunsthalle Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany. It was the first work of pop art to achieve iconic status.[2]
Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing? was created in 1956 for the catalogue of the exhibition This Is Tomorrow in London, England in which it was reproduced in black and white. In addition, the piece was used in posters for the exhibit.[3] Hamilton and his friends John McHale and John Voelcker had collaborated to create the room that became the best-known part of the exhibition.
Magda Cordell has said that "While Richard, of course, put together the well-known poster collage for the group (Just what is it that makes today's homes so different, so appealing?), some of the material in that collage came from John McHale's files, and both Terry Hamilton and I helped gather the images. We often looked for material in the studio John and I shared. Sometimes when I look at that poster, I think it looks a bit like the sitting room in Cleveland Square where our studio was, but this may be only my imagination".[9]
The researchers estimate that if the U.S. has 10% more gasoline cars in 2020, 870 more people will die each year in the U.S. from air pollution. Hybrids, because they are cleaner, will kill just 610 people. But 10% more electric vehicles powered on the average U.S. electricity mix will kill 1,617 more people every year, mostly from coal pollution. The electric car kills almost three times as many as a hybrid.
Of course, electric car proponents would venture that the perceived rapid ramp-up of renewables will make future electric cars much cleaner. This, however, is mostly wishful thinking. Today, the U.S. gets 14% of its electric power from renewables. In 25 years, Obama's Energy Information Administration estimates this will have gone up just 3 percentage points to 17%.
2. Just for today, I will not worry. Worry is a feeling we manifest due to our fear of not being enough or having enough. Once you realize you are enough and have everything you need, worry will disappear, even if just for today.
6. Just for today I will be kind to every living thing. In Buddhism we believe in reincarnation, and that all creatures could have been our mothers in a previous life, so therefore we treat all living creatures in this life time with the kindness and respect we show our mother in this life time. If you really understand that simple but strong thought you will treat all mankind with the same kindness and respect shown to your mother, if just for today.
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