9.27.2021
Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting (VIPP) animated film
Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting (VIPP) animated film
The Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust4,976 viewsMay 30, 2019
Find out more: https://tavistockandportman.nhs.uk/ca...
To be trained in VIPP, visit: https://tavistockandportman.nhs.uk/tr...
Video-feedback Intervention to promote Positive Parenting and Sensitive Discipline (VIPP-SD) was originally developed by some of the world’s leading attachment researchers from Leiden University in Holland.
In VIPP-SD the practitioner works primarily with caregivers and young children, and the non-intrusive use of video and video-feedback is its defining component. It is based on attachment theory but also uses some behavioural principles to aid sensitive discipline.
VIPP-SD has been shown via randomized control trials to be extremely effective with a variety of groups (eg under 5’s, adoptive parents, childcare) and its successes have been extensively reported in many peer reviewed journals.
Miraculously, this miraculous vehicle has no lethal weaknesses, except maybe one, or two.
If there is one it is that in cold weather even with this lifepo4 battery does not heat enough during the day to stay above freezing by morning and we're Outdoors all the time. This is the biggest concern. There are heating pads from Walmart, there are oil pan heating pads and maybe the solution is as simple as cutting away the insulation on the sides of the battery, applying the heating pad then re applying the external installation, securing the wiring, and using it then sometimes in the winter time as needed. That it may be this thin enough that it won't interfere with the cranks.
If there is a second vulnerability it may be that the geometry of the otherwise game-changing rear trike wheel hub motor yields too much leverage on the internal bearing that it fails as it seems to have done. In two days it is hoped that back up bearings are secured. It is not known for certain that they will fit. It is not known for certain that they are the reason that there is now a wobbling play in the rear axle tho very slight and it may be that James will hold off on finalizing the diagnosis by opening the motor until he arrives at a place where it has labeled back up if that's still available. Or maybe he will dig right in. We'll see. If it turns out that the proper size replacement bearings can be secured then if it is necessary to replace the bearings every 3000 miles or so that's fine. If not, James needs to come up with a different Hub Arrangement, maybe the dd45 with proper adjustments, but never failed before.
The greatest expression of political and moral Authority since Martin Luther King Jr? Extraordinary. Well done.
https://www.salon.com/2021/09/20/rev-william-j-barber-ii-america-is-now-at-the-most-critical-time-between-life-and-death/
9.26.2021
9.25.2021
I have no family, and that's totally fine, and when I go want to be a burden to no one. Also well I'm going.
When I'm gone, I'm gone. That's it. Peace. And I wish to be a disturbance to no one in any way. 0. The prospect of being otherwise is a horror to me. I hope to figure out how to do that, and maybe donating my body is a way to do that according to this article.
Updated travel plans.
As several items have been sent to the post office a hundred and forty miles south of here just South of Roanoke Virginia. By Monday or Tuesday some important bearings and a backup motor might be there. And some other items as well. So that's my direction, it's not urgent, but that's the direction. I'm feeling a little bit better than I was this morning so I think I'll continue another 14 miles south and stay in the Walmart on the west side of town and hopefully continue on tomorrow morning.
The Anti-consumption Weirdos of Nomadland https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/05/nomadland-oscars-1960s-consumerism/618822/?utm_campaign=the-atlantic&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/05/nomadland-oscars-1960s-consumerism/618822/?utm_campaign=the-atlantic&utm_medium=social&utm_source=facebook