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Posted in: Today's Chili— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.
A British family may be $85,000 richer after finding a good-sized chunk of what they believe is rare whale vomit.
Alan Derrick, 67, and his son Tom, 39, were strolling along a beach in Somerset, U.K., when they spotted what Alan described to South West News Service as a “smelly, rubbery” rock.
“What do you think this is, Dad?” Tom Derrick asked, according to SWNS. The chunk weighs about 2.5 pounds and has a very pungent smell.
“It smells terrible. It smells like walking into a very old damp building,” Alan Derrick said.
Derrick said he suspects the object is ambergris ― hardened intestinal slurry believed to originate in the digestive tracts of sperm whales ― and told his son to “guard it with your life.”
Ambergris takes years to form and is believed to protect whales from any hard or sharp objects they may eat. The substance, often used in fragrances, commands a premium price. A British dog walker found a chunk about the size of the Derrick’s last year and sold it for $14,500.
The Derricks, hoping to confirm they really do have a prized piece of whale vomit, have sent samples to experts in Italy, New Zealand and France. They are auctioning off the chunk on eBay for a minimum bid of $85,000.
”We’re not getting too carried away about the money,” said Alan Derrick, who plans to put the proceeds in a safety deposit box for his 2-year-old grandson, Matthew.
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When it comes to matters of race and ethnicity, things can get very complicated. Thankfully, Franchesa Ramsey is always ready to decode everything.
In a new episode of MTV News, the host of “Decoded” tackled the question “Are Hispanics white?” The answer is, unsurprisingly, complex.
As an ethnicity, there’s a limitless amount of racial identities that can live within the Latino community. That means Latinos can be asian, black, mixed race and, yes, even white.
“If you ever hear anyone say, ‘This is America and 77 percent of it is white.’ Whether they know it or not, they’re including a very large number of people who identify as Hispanic or Latino,” Ramsay says in the video as she breaks down “Hispanic” isn’t a racial category in the census.
Ramsey also enlisted the help of YouTube vlogger Kat Lazo to help further break down the difference between Hispanic and Latino (or the gender neutral term Latinx), plus explain the differences between race and ethnicity.
“The reason this gets so confusing when we’re talking about Latinx in America is that there’s a broad ethnic Latinx identity that has a complex history with lots of different racial groups living together,” Lazo explains. “Latinx isn’t a race but we’re definitely racialized as a people, which is confusing and I’m the one who said it.”
Indeed it is. Check out their full breakdown of the topic in the video above.
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When kids go back to school at various ages, new demands pile on parents very quickly. New schedules, new homework, new teachers, and new schools are just the beginning. Increasing energy and stamina by parents are needed to cope with all the changes along with their kids’ range of emotions about the impending school year. The households that fare the best are when the parents prepare to work together to share the wide range of responsibilities.
20 Co-Parenting Tips
1. Decide which responsibilities each parent is best at and enjoys the most and divide them up.
2. Support each others’ emotions as the kids begin this new academic and social year.
3. Make a priority list of the tasks that need to be done before school starts such as clothes shopping, learning about bus pick-ups, and school supplies.
4. If both parents are working outside the home, agree on child care arrangements that work for kids and parents alike. Remember what didn’t work the previous school year, so the same mistakes aren’t repeated. Also, repeat what worked!!
5. Counsel each other on the kinds of worries each child may have, so you are prepared for the concerns you will need to assuage.
6. Decide which parent has an easier times talking about difficult topics with each child. Spend time alone with that child without pressure just having loose conversations about school life to field possible questions and worries.
7. Decide which parent should help each child organize their rooms so they are all set for the new blast of homework assignments. Be easy going about it, so you’re child is reassured they are prepared.
8. Make sure all computers and printers are in good working order.
9. Visit new schools with your kids to acquaint them with the layout of classrooms, cafeteria, lockers, and maybe even get a chance to meet some teachers.
10. Discuss together who is the best helper with different academic subjects should your kids need a hand with homework and especially long term projects.
11. If tutors are needed, find out their schedules now so that you can fit them into your kids and your own routines.
12. Discuss how you can work together to find some family time. With extra-curricular activities and kids at different ages, it’s sometimes hard to all get together once a day like for a family dinner. Don’t fret, just find some time during the week when you can share a family meal or movie to keep the family members connected.
13. Discuss the amount of outside of school activities you both agree on are reasonable without having you and your kids always rushing about. Divide up the driving activities or arrange who else will be taking care of those duties.
14. Spend some time together before school starts just the two of you. It helps a great deal to feel like partners beginning a new year of adventures without losing sight of your own relationship.
15. If you are a divorced parent, make contact with your ex-spouse to discuss routines and schedules so they are in place before school begins. This way you and your kids are prepared for the transitions between houses and which parents are in charge of what activities. They also see you are both working together to help them start the year off well.
16. If you are a single parent, find other single parents who can share the load of responsibilities. Share driving, homework helping tips, and discuss together potential worries about academics and kids’ social lives. Plan when you can regroup together so you feel emotional support as a parent.
17. If you are parents who live together, reassure each child that you both believe in them including their abilities to make new friends and handle new assignments. Let them know you both are behind them as they seek new opportunities. They’ll feel good knowing their parents are united behind them.
18. Plan together how each family member will have some down time each day. The hustle and bustle can run away with you, so that you never feel relaxed. Make this a priority. It increases productivity and everyone’s well-being and mental health stay on course.
19. Begin readjusting bedtimes for parents and for kids as the new schedules probably demand earlier wake up times. Get alarm clocks in order and decide if anyone is waking each other up. Also plan on shower times and breakfast plans.
20. Above all, remember once again you have a partnership that doesn’t even include your kids. Think ahead how you will find time to talk every day, at least once a day, to support each other emotionally and share your devotion to each other regardless of the successes and mishaps of each day.
Laurie Hollman, Ph.D., is a psychoanalyst and author of Unlocking Parental Intelligence: Finding Meaning in Your Child’s Behavior found on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Familius and wherever books are sold.
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by Dawna Jones, Connecting Decisions to Creating Prosperity
Monday, August 8th, 2016 we used up all the resources generated by Earth in a year. Humanity’s annual demand for what nature can generate for our existence has been exceeded. Out of what Earth generates, according to the “World Resources Institute (WRI), roughly one-third of all food produced worldwide, worth around US$1 trillion, gets lost or wasted in food production and consumption systems.” Reliance on a linear model of production has resulted in an estimated $70 billion worth of rare earth minerals in landfill from discarded electronics. In the U.S. 58% of energy produced is wasted. Concurrently, as if hypnotized, companies strive to make quarterly revenue targets wasting even more energy: Nature’s and human potential. Expanding leadership consciousness to create workplaces where people can contribute full throttle is the highest leverage for business to do better for society, the economy and for all of life. Business leadership and commitment could do much to create prosperity and abundance.
In Seizing the Executive Imperative to Expand Consciousness I described the leadership consciousness gap as a chasm between an old view of the world, where linear and analytical thinking worked to make sense, and today’s reality, where business faces bigger, more complex issues. Decisions are still being made using habits and beliefs that resist innovation and constricted by fear. Yet in forward thinking companies of all ages, a higher order of thinking and caring is being activated.
Humungous planetary and social issues are propelling business smack into a collision course where seeing systems is a requirement, not optional. What skills do leaders at every level need to redefine company value and contribution as a measure of its capacity to sustain life on the planet as a whole?
At the World Economic Forum in Davos 2015 the top ten innovation skills were contrasted with what will be needed for 2020. Not surprisingly, it looks like a conventional HR list because it came from surveying Chief HR and Strategy Leaders from top employing companies. It is also what you would expect to see from a conventional view of business. However, reality is changing fast. Conventional companies are failing faster, losing out to exponential companies: companies that have a small number of fully engaged people collectively creating high value and fast. The worldview of how to conduct business that makes a positive contribution to societal and planetary well-being is transforming.
Are the top 10 skills reported in the Future of Jobs report by the World Economic Forum sufficient to surf the big waves of exponential change? Will leaders be able to handle disruption from innovation, economy shifts, and ecological surprises?
The 2020 Innovation Skills tinker with, rather than transform, decision-making/leadership consciousness. Deeper intrinsic skills are needed to provide the depth to wisely handle big complex planetary issues and capacity to initiate or foresee exponential innovation of the kind cultivated by Peter Diamandis and the XPrize Foundation.
Ervin Laszlo, Founder of the Laszlo Institute of New Paradigm Research describes consciousness as “the determining factor of how we see the world, of who we are, what the world is, and what we can do in the world. It is the mindset – the totality of assumptions, intuitions, and information about the world and each other, the possible challenges and opportunities. As such consciousness is the highest leverage point for achieving well-being on all levels.”
5 Ways to Level Up Personal and Organizational Consciousness
A preliminary short list of the transformational skills (meta and micro) to expand from one level of consciousness to another is much longer than is practical here. Instead, here are the macro-meta skills that, through mastery, enable you to self-coach and lead yourself to higher levels. Think of yourself as an App called Human Consciousness 7.0.
Maximize Organizational Intelligence and Agility
Raising your level of consciousness is not a linear experience. Every new context demands choice to personally or organizationally expand. Each event triggers growth and expansion or contraction and fear. Your perception shapes your thinking and can release available energy or deny potential and close the door. Is organizational life made of persistent problem solving? Or is it focused on expanding appreciation? Are big challenges being used to inspire engagement or work harder repeating past practices?
In every person and company, there is a well of untapped innate intelligence that, when awareness and action are applied, can tackle any challenge, large or small, personal, professional, societal or global. Transforming traditional workplaces into great ones that support innovation means changing how you see and interact with the world as it emerges. Commitment to embodying Human Consciousness 7.0 is the highest leverage for successfully adapting.
As the mystics wisely stated: We’re the ones we’ve been waiting for. The solutions definitely lie within.
Dawna Jones sees the underlying forces impacting what you see on the surface. She works with leaders and decision-makers to update skills and expand access to their wider intelligences. Working with individuals, teams, companies or at a global level gives Dawna insights into scaling mindset, innovation and transformation through leadership and decision-making. Contact Dawna: www.FromInsightToAction.com.
If you’re interested in Peace and Justice join reflective thinkers at the Pathways to Peace dialogue, part of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, September, in Denmark. Register here.
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The most controversial thing to happen to the taxi industry was Uber’s introduction of dynamic (surge) pricing. The premise was simple: we are already used to paying based on demand when buying airline tickets, so why should car rides be any different?
They were right. By forcing riders to pay more, drivers earned more and supply self-balanced, making sure that as long as one was willing to pay, one could get a ride, even on New Year’s Eve. For riders and drivers this looks like a win/win, but what does this mean for Uber?
Over the past years, one service after the next has been introduced to the car-on-demand space. While Uber is still more reliable than any of the newcomers, they all offer the same: a dispatch service that gives access to the same drivers, cars and destinations.
Hence, car-on-demand is now a completely commoditized service.
It should be scary to Uber that the main reason I choose it over any of its competitors is out of habit. My affinity for the brand is low, loyalty programs are less than poor and there is no tangible network effect or social aspects that have benefitted me as a consumer.
To address this issue, I believe the future of on-demand taxi travel resides in aggregation.
Similar to shopping for flights, I’ll use a taxi aggregation layer that will give me real-time feedback on how much each service is surging, what is the wait time, and then direct me to the best option to complete my reservation.
This will be great for consumers. Riders will always find the best rate and price transparency will slash the margins of the dispatch companies as they fight over the consumer’s wallets. And with a massive market and a single leader who doesn’t yet possess monopolistic characteristics, investors will continue to pour in money in startups that want a piece of the action.
Over the next year, the battleground will be bloody with so many of these companies subsidizing rides with venture capital in an effort to reach critical mass — a goal that might turn out to be a mere mirage.
I believe this price aggregator is a new (as opposed to existing) company because the distribution must be location-based and real-time, suggesting it will be a native app outside of the DNA of today’s leading price search engines. Google Maps would be a strong contender but for some reason, Google has historically been lousy in executing on price search and I see no reason this occasion would be any different. Because the service we procure — a car on demand — will be the same no matter which dispatcher, the aggregation model will look more like the ones for airlines than for hotels (where rooms and locations are different) and similarly it’s likely that there will be more than one strong player in the space.
Where I see my prediction being wrong is in an underestimation of Uber’s — or some else’s — ability to provide strong network effects that will make the consumer experience meaningfully better. Such might be the future development of their Pool program (or Lyft’s Line) that will provide benefits of scale that will push prices and ETAs down and create a massive barrier of entry for newcomers. It could also be proprietary technology for self-driving cars although, given the size of that industry, it’s unlikely that such development would be controlled by a single service provider and might in fact have the opposite effect: it becomes even easier to enter the car on demand market.
On a final note, I believe Uber’s stake in Didi alone is enough to be bullish about its future. While car-on-demand in the Western World might be a zero sum game, I believe that Uber will be a massively valuable company regardless.
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Gina Rodriguez candidly spoke with Latina Magazine for her cover story in the October issue about how powerful she felt the Latino community would be if more people banded together to fight for common causes and lifted one another up.
Though she noted that Latinos are helping one another in Hollywood and, beyond, she felt the community as a whole could be doing better.
“Sadly, our culture has been living the crab-in-the-barrel effect,” she said to Latina. “We’re so afraid there isn’t enough room for all of us that we fight to get to the top. We don’t need to do that. There’s room for all of us. We’re stronger in numbers. As Latinos, we put Barack in office. We could do the same in making sure that Donald Trump doesn’t get in office. We are that strong.”
And the 32-year-old actress has made a concerted effort to practice what she preached.
Rodriguez, who plays Andrea Fleytas in the upcoming film “Deepwater Horizon,” told the magazine that if she didn’t land the role, she wanted to make sure it at least went to another Latina.
“It didn’t need to be me,” she explained. “I told Peter, ‘If it’s not me, it could be Natalie Martinez. It can be Melonie Diaz. It can be Génesis Rodriguez. It can be Stephanie Beatriz. It can be Melissa Fumero. It can be any Latina out there crushing it and killing the game.’”
Rodriguez’s mission to lift others up as she rises in her career isn’t limited to the Latino community; she’s also committed to representing and advocating on behalf of all women.
“A strong leader is one who creates other leaders,” she explained. “So if I am encouraging young girls to take control of their lives, to spread kindness, then I am doing the job God put me here to do. With every attempt we make within the industry, with every project I take, it will be to advance women. Not only women of color but all women and men.”
Read more of Gina Rodriguez’s interview with Latina magazine here.
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A crazed woman trying to sell bugs on the D train last night got heckled, freaked out, and then threw bugs on everyone, as the New York Post reports. If you’re wondering what it’s like to live and commute in the New York City subway system, here you go.
The roboticist behind the creepy snake robot
is back with another snake robot. Only this time it’s a robot that you’re supposed to willingly let slither into your mouth. (For health reasons.)
Amazon has announced a new destination targeted at car enthusiasts called “Amazon Vehicles.” The platform allows Amazon users to explore vehicles using a bunch of different filtering options, such as body type, make and model, mileage ratings, transmission type, and more. It’s the ultimate window shopping for cars, allowing one to find a vehicle, customize it, and see how much … Continue reading