This is the second most common type of cancer in men, which can lead to death. However, with the improvement of medicine, survival rates in patients have improved considerably. The cause of prostate cancer has never been found out, however, there are some ri...
It may take some work to find new ways to say something youve relied on clichs to say for you. Two exercises I have used for this is to pick a vocabulary list and only use words on that list to compose a thought. Its amazing how creative you can get when forced into a narrowly defined list of words. The second exercise is to simply remove a letter from the alphabet and provide ground rules that say the letter g (or any other letter you choose) can not be used in the thought you are working through.
It used to be that the best way to build a home theater or a home studio was to construct new wall within the existing room and then build what we call a Room within a room. Though this method of soundproofing is still quite effective, it is costly and eats up a lot of wall space in your already cramped theater room. A better suggestion is to work with your existing walls by applying a new layer of drywall to the existing walls and ceiling but applying a layer of a product called Green Glue on the new drywall and sandwich it in between the existing wall and the new drywall.
Yes, you literally steal ideas and twist them a bit to make them fresh make them yours. That leads to another question, how do you make old ideas yours so that theyre fresh, new and dare I say revolutionary?Actually, its not as tough as you may think. Heres a quick and easy formula I use for turning old content into something new:1. Find an old text. Dust off articles, books and home-study courses from your industry and find content that may be useful to your audience. I know what youre thinking.
The eye on the wall spots the selfish gene. A simple experiment in a typical office kitchen takes us inside the human mind, writes Ian Sample. HONESTY may well be the best policy, but it often deserts us when no one is watching, psychologists say. Experiments with an honesty box to collect payments for hot drinks reveal that people are better at paying up when under the watchful gaze of a pair of eyes. The surprise is that the eyes were not real, but photographed. The finding, which researchers believe sheds light on our evolutionary past, could be turned to practical use.