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Tuesday 14 February 2017

HIGH FIVE’S OF THINKING

1. Find a Place to Think Your Thoughts
If you go to your designated place to think expecting to generate good thoughts, then eventually you will come up with some. Where is the best place to think? Everybody’s different. Some people think best in the shower. Others, like my friend Dick Biggs, like to go to a park. For me, the best places to think are in my car, on planes, and in the spa. Ideas come to me in other places as well, such as when I’m in bed. (I keep a special lighted writing pad on my nightstand for such times.) I believe I often get thoughts because I make it a habit to frequently go to my thinking places. If you want to consistently generate ideas, you need to do the same thing. Find a place where you can think, and plan to capture your thoughts on paper so that you don’t lose them. When

I found a place to think my thoughts, my thoughts found a place in me.
2. Find a Place to Shape Your Thoughts
Rarely do ideas come fully formed and completely worked out. Most of the time, they need to be shaped until they have substance. As my friend Dan Reiland says, they have to “stand the test of clarity and questioning.” During the shaping time, you want to hold an idea up to strong scrutiny. Many times a thought that seemed outstanding late at night looks pretty silly in the light of day. Ask questions about your ideas. Fine tune them. One of the best ways to do that is to put your thoughts in writing. Professor, college president, and U.S. senator S. I. Hayakawa wrote, “Learning to write is learning to think. You don’t know anything clearly unless you can state it in writing.”
As you shape your thoughts, you find out whether an idea has potential. You learn what you have. You also learn some things about yourself. The shaping time thrills me because it embodies:
Humor: The thoughts that don’t work often provide comic relief.
Humility: The moments when I connect with God awe me.
Excitement: I love to play out an idea mentally. (I call it “futuring” it.)
Creativity: In these moments I am unhampered by reality.
Fulfillment: God made me for this process; it uses my greatest gifts and gives me joy.
Honesty: As I turn over an idea in my mind, I discover my true motives.
Passion: When you shape a thought, you find out what you believe and what really counts.
Change: Most of the changes I have made in my life resulted from thorough thinking on a subject. You can shape your thoughts almost anywhere. Just find a place that works for you, where you will be able to write things down, focus your attention without interruptions, and ask questions about your ideas.
3. Find a Place to Stretch Your Thoughts
If you come upon great thoughts and spend time mentally shaping them, don’t think you’re done and can stop there. If you do, you will miss some of the most valuable aspects of the thinking process. You miss bringing others in and expanding ideas to their greatest potential. Earlier in my life, I have to admit, I was often guilty of this error. I wanted to take an idea from seed thought to solution before sharing it with anyone, even the people it would most impact. I did this both at work and at home. But over the years, I have learned that you can go much farther with a team than you can go alone. I’ve found a kind of formula that can help you stretch your thoughts. It says,The Right Thought plus the Right People in the Right Environment at the Right Time for the Right Reason = the Right Result
This combination is hard to beat. Like every person, every thought has the potential to become something great. When you find a place to stretch your thoughts, you find that potential.
4. Find a Place to Land Your Thoughts
Author C. D. Jackson observes that “great ideas need landing gear as well as wings.” Any idea that remains only an idea doesn’t make a great impact. The real power of an idea comes when it goes from abstraction to application. Think about Einstein’s theory of relativity. When he published his theories in 1905 and 1916, they were merely profound ideas. Their real power came with the development of the nuclear reactor in 1942 and the nuclear bomb in 1945. When scientists developed and implemented Einstein’s ideas, the whole world changed. Likewise, if you want your thoughts to make an impact, you need to land them with others so that they can someday be implemented. As you plan for the application phase of the thinking process, land your ideas first
with Yourself: Landing an idea with yourself will give you integrity. People will buy into an idea only after they buy into the leader who communicates it. Before teaching any lesson, I ask myself three questions: “Do I believe it? Do I live it? Do I believe others should live it?” If I can’t answer yes to all three questions, then I haven’t landed it.
Key Players: Let’s face it, no idea will fly if the influencers don’t embrace it. After all, they are the people who carry thoughts from idea to implementation.
Those Most Affected: Landing thoughts with the people on the firing line will give you great insight. Those closest to changes that occur as a result of a new idea can give you a “reality read.” And that’s important, because sometimes even when you’ve diligently completed the process of creating a thought, shaping it, and stretching it with other good thinkers, you can still miss the mark.
5. Find a Place to Fly Your Thoughts
French philosopher Henri-Louis Bergson, who won the Nobel Prize in literature in 1927, asserted that a person should “think like a man of action—act like a man of thought.” What good is thinking if it has no application in real life? Thinking divorced from actions cannot be productive. Learning how to master the process of thinking well leads you to productive thinking. If you can develop the discipline of good thinking and turn it into a lifetime habit, then you will be successful and productive all of your life. Once you’ve created, shaped, stretched, and landed your thoughts, then flying them can be fun and easy.

ELECTRON THEORY OF ELECTRICITY

Many different theories have been advanced regarding the nature of electricity but no one can just explain what electricity really is. Today is generally accepted the electron theory.
This theory proposes that all matter (earth, rocks, minerals, elements, etc.) consist of tiny particles called molecules. These molecules are made of two or smaller particles called atoms. The atoms are divided further into smaller particles called protons, neutrons and electrons. Protons, neutrons and electrons are the same in all matter like gases liquids or solids. The different properties or characteristics of all these matters are to see according to the arrangement and number of protons, neutrons and electrons to build in the end a specific atom.
The proton has a positive charge of electricity naturally
The electron has a negative charge of electricity naturally.
The neutron has no charge at all, but adds the weight to the matter.
Central core of an atom:
Protons and neutrons form the nucleus (central core) of the atoms. The electrons revolve around the Nucleus
The simplest atom is the hydrogen
atom (see above). It consists of one positive charged proton and one negative charged electron.
Other atoms are much more complicated. For example a copper atom has 29 electrons revolving around the nucleus in four different orbits.
Size of atoms
0,000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 000 911
To understand the size of an atom is really difficult.
And for an atom let’s use another example.
If we would think the size of a proton from a hydrogen atom could has the size like a football and could be located in Victoria Falls then its orbit would reach from the Atlantic coast of West Africa to the Pacific coast of East Africa. Now think about a piece of copper: 10 mm thick, 10 mm long and 10 mm wide. Such small pieces
mean, atoms and also electrons and protons are extremely small and relatively vast distances separate them. There should be a clear understanding when we speak about the flow of electrons! Insulators and Conductors Insulators
In most of the elements the nucleus is surrounded by closely held electrons that never leave the atom. These are called bound electrons.
If these bound electrons are in the majority in an element or compounded material then the material is called an insulator (non−conductor of electricity).
Conductors
In other types of material the nucleus is surrounded by electrons that can move freely from one atom to another one if they are forced by applied electricity.
These electrons are known as free electrons. Materials made with these atoms are called conductors of electricity.

MUSE ONE A MOONBEAM

Twinkle you don’t
but glow you do
not yellow not white
through my window.

Half the month I see you
riding above my maple
and I mostly ignore you
because you’re steady
and I’m busy with trivia.
I file you under L
for later.

Since muses unused dry up
in the dark of the moon
(or so some poets fear),
tonight I welcome your light
as a loving underflow
beneath my busy overflow.

Tuning into your glow
far beyond the maple
yet as near as here,
I let my writing listen.

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