Creatives thrive when they allow vulnerability to; inform their work, be present for their partner, playful with their kids | BlueSky (Creatives Coaching).
SELF-REGULATION is the big piece of the 'behaviour' puzzle that policy makers fail to make centre-stage. Can we introduce it at pre-natal stages - now PLEASE - so that children are easily pre-school-ready. Below is a great chart that spells out some of how we roll it out.
Infused trauma informed/ responsive principles. Repair after a rupture. Use time in, instead of time out.
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Our aim is to help our young people regulate their nervous system and regulate themselves. It is important how we coordinate our response and sequence our response.
Who else shudders at the idea of a coronation? Feels pretty mad of @aburnhammp not to insist on proving his worth first. And there are so many women I'd include. Angela for starters.
Didn’t see this coming! I was name checked by @CountBinface at the Makerfield by-election as he was being interviewed by… LBC.
LBC: Will you hold onto your deposit?
Count Binface: If I do, I’ll invest it in my ‘What Happened to Sangita Myska Fund?’
I think I saw you, @JujuliaGrace in John Pilger's film; The Dirty War On The NHS. What's happening to the NHS is heart-breaking and underhand. I feel for the staff too - having to juggle the metrics.
French women don’t get fat, and Mireille Guiliano says it’s simple:
They eat for pleasure with all five senses. Slowly. No calorie counting, no low-fat nonsense. Real butter, chocolate, duck fat, in moderation. They rarely snack, skip soft drinks, and prefer walking over jogging.
The numbers back it up: France has one of the lowest obesity rates in Europe at around 10% for adults. The US sits at ~41% for women.
What’s your take, could this pleasure-first, slower approach to eating actually be healthier than constant restriction?
Why put him on the airwaves, at all, when he's this poor. Or is Nigel just clueless on how well informed the 'common man' is in 2026, where he prioritises mouldability. On the upside. I'm encouraged by how badly this went. #bbcqt
The last revolution Robert Kenyon experienced was probably when his office chair turned 360 degrees.
He called it “a historic uprising.”
Then he blamed Labour for the swivel.
By lunchtime, Reform had promised a full inquiry into rotating furniture.
Farage said chairs had “lost control of our borders.”
Tice demanded the castors be deported.
GB News ran a three-hour special called Britain Is Spinning.
Robert then bravely stood up, only to discover the real revolution was gravity.
He has been suspicious of movement ever since.
This is not politics — it is a man being radicalised by IKEA
Is anyone else noticing the mission creep of people being filmed (likely without consent) on Amazon's ring recorder. Not a fan, whatever the cause. It's uncomfortable and patronising.