Walk barefoot in the grass, remember the way this feels. Now put your shoes back on, you do not want the thing to touch your toes.
Go outside in the dark, scream at the moon. She is listening, it is okay.
Allow her to comfort you, she means well.
If you hear other people screaming, do not fret, they are just as apathetic as you, let them feel.
If an elderly woman comes and stands near you, thank her. Listen to what she has to say, she knows best.
If you see an animal that does not belong, leave. Go home, and sit in a room in the dark. If you don’t, go home and have a good night’s sleep
Do not fall asleep.
If you hear whispers, it is okay.
Remember rule number 7 and 10. Leave at sunrise. Lock the door behind you. Feel.
More guides
Escaping angelic prison
How to confirm whether or not you are a changeling
If you are a researcher or adventurer and want to share a guide, join our subreddit!
You know those weird horizontal pupils that goats have?…. they get a lot weirder. Other places to see my posts: INSTAGRAM / FACEBOOK / ETSY / KICKSTARTER
If you were captivated by August’s total solar eclipse, there’s another sky show to look forward to on Jan. 31: a total lunar eclipse!
Below are 10 things to know about this astronomical event, including where to see it, why it turns the Moon into a deep red color and more…
1. First things first. What’s the difference between solar and lunar eclipses? We’ve got the quick and easy explanation in this video:
2. Location, location, location. What you see will depend on where you are. The total lunar eclipse will favor the western U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, and British Columbia on Jan. 31. Australia and the Pacific Ocean are also well placed to see a major portion of the eclipse, if not all of it.
3. Color play. So, why does the Moon turn red during a lunar eclipse? Here’s your answer:
4. Scientists, stand by. What science can be done during a lunar eclipse? Find out HERE.
5. Show and tell. What would Earth look like from the Moon during a lunar eclipse? See for yourself with this artist’s concept HERE.
6. Ask me anything. Mark your calendars to learn more about the Moon during our our Reddit AMA happening Monday, Jan. 29, from 3-4 pm EST/12-1 pm PST.
7. Social cues. Make sure to follow @NASAMoon and @LRO_NASA for all of the latest Moon news leading up to the eclipse and beyond.
8. Watch year-round. Can’t get enough of observing the Moon? Make a DIY Moon Phases Calendar and Calculator that will keep all of the dates and times for the year’s moon phases right at your fingertips HERE.
Then, jot down notes and record your own illustrations of the Moon with a Moon observation journal, available to download and print from moon.nasa.gov.
9. Lesson learned. For educators, pique your students’ curiosities about the lunar eclipse with this Teachable Moment HERE.
10. Coming attraction. There will be one more lunar eclipse this year on July 27, 2018. But you might need your passport—it will only be visible from central Africa and central Asia. The next lunar eclipse that can be seen all over the U.S. will be on Jan. 21, 2019. It won’t be a blue moon, but it will be a supermoon.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.
(The playlist you need to play when you feel like you need 50 strippers backing you and angels with hair as high as the heavens (hair metal bands)) (This also works great to drive to)
1) Wild Side–Mötley Crüe
2) Hunger–King Kobra
3) Breathless–Quiet Riot
4) The Wild and the Young–Quiet Riot
5) Shout at the Devil–Mötley Crüe
6) Girls, Girls, Girls–Mötley Crüe
7) Sumthin’ for Nothin’–Mötley Crüe
8) Highway Tune–Greta Van Fleet
9) Uncle Tom’s Cabin–Warrant
10) Nobody’s Fool–Cinderella
11) Cherry Pie-Warrant
12) Kickstart my Heart–Mötley Crüe
13) Push, Push–Cinderella
14) Gypsy Road–Cinderella
15) Dancing on Glass–Mötley Crüe
16) Still of the Night–Whitesnake
17) Shake Me–Cinderella
18) Let’s Get Crazy–Quiet Riot
19) St. John–Aerosmith
20) All in the Name Of…–Mötley Crüe (Even though the lyrics are quite questionable)
21) Looks that Kill–Mötley Crüe
22) Ten Seconds to Love–Mötley Crüe
23) Hell on Wheels–Cinderella
24) Somebody Save Me–Cinderella
25) Put Up or Shut Up–Quiet Riot
What to do this super blue blood moon!
So pretty much every witch has been talking about this rare occurrence, with a pretty confusing name, and so lots of people don’t know what to do on January 31st (night of the full moon)
Well first thing is to learn the correspondences
This moon will have a strong effect on your personal power, as the moon is closer to earth creating a stronger gravitational pull.
The second full moon in a month. It enhances the connection between the realms (or in my belief the 9 worlds) and any spell work done has long-term effects
A lunar eclipse, an excellent time to welcome new beginnings or to let go of old feelings or unwanted items
* Now depending on where you live the moon falls on Wednesday which is a good day for creativity and change *
⭐ Curses, specifically trump. Always trump
⭐ Long term spells, Money, Love, ect.
⭐ Cleanse your crystals
⭐ Perform a blessing or ritual
⭐ Dedicate the night to a deity or nature
⭐ Make an offering
⭐Meditation
⭐ Collect moon water
⭐ Scrying (or other forms of divination)
⭐ Kitchen Magick (create a soup or pie for dinner 😊)
These are just a few ideas, please feel free to tell me your own
旅行 [りょこう] - travel, trip 旅 [たび] - travel, trip, journey 観光 [かんこう] - sightseeing, tourism 休み [やすみ] - holiday 旅行する [りょこうする] - to travel 乗客 [じょうきゃく] - passenger 旅行者 [りょこうしゃ] - tourist 外国人 [がいこくじん] - foreigner 国 [くに] - country 言語 [げんご] - language 通貨 [つうか] - currency 文化 [ぶんか] - culture 旅行先 [りょこうさき] - travel destination 旅行日程 [りょこうにってい] - itinerary 旅行代理店 [りょこうだいりてん] - travel agent, travel agency パンフレット - pamphlet, brochure 旅行保険 [りょこうほけん] - travel insurance 注射 [ちゅうしゃ] - injection 予約する [よやくする] - to book, to reserve キャンセルする - to cancel 遅れる[おくれる] - to delay 乗り換える [のりかえる] - to change; to transfer 借りる [かりる] - to rent 荷造りする [にづくりする] - to pack 荷物 [にもつ] - luggage, baggage 手荷物 [てにもつ] - hand luggage, carry-on bag パスポート - passport ビザ - visa チケット - ticket 地図 [ちず] - map 飛行機 [ひこうき] - airplane 電車 [でんしゃ] - train, electric train 列車 [れっしゃ] - train 汽車 [きしゃ] - train, steam train 新幹線 [しんかんせん] - bullet train 地下鉄 [ちかてつ] - subway 車 [くるま] - car バス - bus タクシー - taxi 船 [ふね] - ship, boat フェリー - ferry 自転車 [じてんしゃ] - bike バイク - motorcycle 空港 [くうこう] - airport 便 [びん] - flight パイロット - pilot 客室乗務員 [きゃくしつじょうむいん] - cabin crew, flight attendant エアライン - airline 航空会社 [こうくうがいしゃ] - airline company ターミナル - terminal ゲート - gate 時刻表 [じこくひょう] - timetable, schedule 到着[とうちゃく] - arrivals 出発[しゅっぱつ] - departures 税関 [ぜいかん] - customs チェックイン - check in 搭乗券 [とうじょうけん] - boarding pass, boarding card 保安検査 [ほあんけんさ] - security control セキュリティチェック - security control 入国審査 [にゅうこくしんさ] - passport control 手荷物受取所 [てにもつうけとりしょ] - luggage reclaim インフォメーション(カウンター) - information (counter) 両替 [りょうがえ] - money exchange 駅 [えき] - station 切符売り場 [きっぷうりば] - ticket window, ticket booth, box office 券売機 [けんばいき] - ticket machine (プラット)ホーム - platform 停留所 [ていりゅうじょ] - stop 港 [みなと] - harbour 駐車場 [ちゅうしゃじょう] - parking space 宿泊 [しゅくはく] - lodging ホテル - hotel 受付 [うけつけ] - reception desk, information desk フロント - reception チェックイン/チェックアウト - to check in/out 部屋 [へや] - room 旅館 [りょかん] - ryokan ゲストハウス - guesthouse ホステル - hostel コテージ - cottage コインロッカー - coin-operated locker ガイド - guide 通訳者 [つうやくしゃ] - interpreter 観光案内所 [かんこうあんないじょ] - tourist information office 観光名所 [かんこうめいしょ] - sightseeing spot, tourist attraction ツアー - tour カメラ - camera 写真 [しゃしん] - photo お土産 [おみやげ] - souvenir ポストカード - postcard 時差ぼけ [じさぼけ] - jetlag 乗物酔い [のりものよい] - motion sickness
I have been led to this article twice in the past few months and I think it’s proof I just need to stop making excuses and start taking steps to make the things I want to happen a reality.
After all, many people are interested in getting started with strength training and want to know what workout routine to follow. Now, developing a workout routine for yourself can be scary, but it’s really not too difficult and kind of fun once you understand the basics.
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follow back
me continuing to make terrible posts about my extremely niche interests instead of anything people actually followed me for:
Get a job
Learn guitar
Learn piano
Study a new language
Purchase new study materials for the next semester (i.e new notebooks, a new pencil bag, a new backpack, new pencils, pens, or highlighters – 10/10 would recommend Crayola SuperTips they are extremely cheap!)
Clean your room
Clean your apartment/home
Make your bed
Make a list of your goals
Exercise
Write
Find a new podcast (for my pre-law friends, I recommend Think Like A Lawyer)
Read a new book or read all of the books you have bought but not been able to read yet
Clean out your closet - donate clothes you do not wear anymore to Goodwill
Clean out your car/wash your car (actually necessary to ensure that dirt does not accumulate in its parts - TRUST ME)
Be a tourist in your own city - find a new coffee shop you might like to study at when classes resume
Try new recipes - learn to cook by watching Youtube videos
Start a new skin care routine (I recommend Noxema {app $4} for your face wash, follow it up with Witch Hazel {app $6} and finish with Tea Tree Oil {app $8}!)
Start a new blog (or check out my new blog @tiny-personal-aesthetics-thing I know I’m shameless)
Volunteer at local animal shelters, retirement homes, hospitals, libraries, Habitat for Humanity, etc.
Redecorate your room - try moving your bed or furniture around and see how it changes the fung shui (if you are into that)
Learn about photography
Work on your mental and physical health
Take your dog for a walk - I’m sure they would appreciate it
Ride a horse
Create a budget for yourself
Start a bujo
Draw
Paint
Watch a documentary
Create goals for next semester
Reflect on this past semester
Learn self-defense
Visit a museum or a park
Sell items you don’t want anymore on apps such as Letgo or via the Facebook Market
Start gardening
Call friends/family you haven’t heard from in awhile
Write friends/family you haven’t heard from in awhile
Go for a hike
Improve your vocabulary using resources such as: vocabulary.com, or enhancemyvocabulary.com
Fix your sleep schedule (!!!)
Learn about your family history
Utilize Khan Academy videos to brush up on math, science, or humanities
Clean out your email inbox
Get a test prep book for the LSAT/MCAT/GRE
Talk to an adultier adult in the field you wish to enter regarding your career options
Work on your resume
Increase your typing speed using websites such as: typing.com, typeracer.com, or rapidtyping.com
Write thank you notes to professors/instructors/advisors that you found particularly helpful - or to friends/family/mentors that also helped you out
Get your planner organized for the new semester (or buy a planner if you haven’t already)
Find and price the textbooks and access codes you will need for the coming semester
Jazz up/update your social media accounts (Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn) to reflect more on your professionalism (if you have those)
Update your style - new semester, new clothes, new you
Go swimming - nice low impact exercise
Find a professional to shadow
Find an internship
Find scholarship opportunities (create a new email account to specifically use for scholarships!)
Get a head start on the classes you will be taking by self-studying (a plethora of free information exists on the internet)
Be a mentor - tutor high schoolers/junior high students for SAT/ACT prep, or generally for whatever subjects they need help in
Do manual labor - fix something, build something, mow the yard, clean the gutters
Do yoga
Work on breathing exercises
Treat yourself
Learn to say no
Go on graduate school tours
Travel (can be near or far, cheap or expensive - know your budget)
Do your own research project
Take an online sample course via edX,or Coursera
Start your graduate school application
Pet sit for someone
House sit for someone
Start your own Youtube channel
Work on your handwriting
Try sculpting
Attend networking events
Attend leadership events
Start a fundraiser for a cause
Learn to code
Study abroad - or solidify a study abroad trip
Create a four year plan for your degree
Visit family
Visit a friend
Get letters of recommendation
Get crafty
Take a practice test for the LSAT/ MCAT/ GRE
Take all of your loose change to a CoinStar and exchange them for cash
Learn about where your food comes from
Drink more water
Find an audio book to listen to when you are in the car or on the bus
Catch up on your laundry
Forge new good habits such as utilizing a planner or making your bed every day
Start a compost pile
Grow your own herbs
Start meal prepping/meal planning
Play basketball
Play tennis
Get a haircut
Organize your desk
Organize your laptop
Learn about astronomy
Rest, relax, and recuperate for the semester to come
Happy New Year! And happy supermoon! Tonight, the Moon will appear extra big and bright to welcome us into 2018 – about 6% bigger and 14% brighter than the average full Moon. And how do we know that? Well, each fall, our science visualizer Ernie Wright uses data from the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) to render over a quarter of a million images of the Moon. He combines these images into an interactive visualization, Moon Phase and Libration, which depicts the Moon at every day and hour for the coming year.
Want to see what the Moon will look like on your birthday this year? Just put in the date, and even the hour (in Universal Time) you were born to see your birthday Moon.
Our Moon is quite dynamic. In addition to Moon phases, our Moon appears to get bigger and smaller throughout the year, and it wobbles! Or at least it looks that way to us on Earth. This wobbling is called libration, from the Latin for ‘balance scale’ (libra). Wright relies on LRO maps of the Moon and NASA orbit calculations to create the most accurate depiction of the 6 ways our Moon moves from our perspective.
The Moon phases we see on Earth are caused by the changing positions of the Earth and Moon relative to the Sun. The Sun always illuminates half of the Moon, but we see changing shapes as the Moon revolves around the Earth. Wright uses a software library called SPICE to calculate the position and orientation of the Moon and Earth at every moment of the year. With his visualization, you can input any day and time of the year and see what the Moon will look like!
Check out that crater detail! The Moon is not a smooth sphere. It’s covered in mountains and valleys and thanks to LRO, we know the shape of the Moon better than any other celestial body in the universe. To get the most accurate depiction possible of where the sunlight falls on the lunar surface throughout the month, Wright uses the same graphics software used by Hollywood design studios, including Pixar, and a method called ‘raytracing’ to calculate the intricate patterns of light and shadow on the Moon’s surface, and he checks the accuracy of his renders against photographs of the Moon he takes through his own telescope.
The Moon Phase and Libration visualization shows you the apparent size of the Moon. The Moon’s orbit is elliptical, instead of circular - so sometimes it is closer to the Earth and sometimes it is farther. You’ve probably heard the term “supermoon.” This describes a full Moon at or near perigee (the point when the Moon is closest to the Earth in its orbit). A supermoon can appear up to 14% bigger and brighter than a full Moon at apogee (the point when the Moon is farthest from the Earth in its orbit).
Our supermoon tonight is a full Moon very close to perigee, and will appear to be about 14% bigger than the July 27 full Moon, the smallest full Moon of 2018, occurring at apogee. Input those dates into the Moon Phase and Libration visualization to see this difference in apparent size!
Over a month, the Moon appears to nod, twist, and roll. The east-west motion, called ‘libration in longitude’, is another effect of the Moon’s elliptical orbital path. As the Moon travels around the Earth, it goes faster or slower, depending on how close it is to the Earth. When the Moon gets close to the Earth, it speeds up thanks to an additional pull from Earth’s gravity. Then it slows down, when it’s farther from the Earth. While this speed in orbital motion changes, the rotational speed of the Moon stays constant.
This means that when the Moon moves faster around the Earth, the Moon itself doesn’t rotate quite enough to keep the same exact side facing us and we get to see a little more of the eastern side of the Moon. When the Moon moves more slowly around the Earth, its rotation gets a little ahead, and we see a bit more of its western side.
The Moon also appears to nod, as if it were saying “yes,” a motion called ‘libration in latitude’. This is caused by the 5 degree tilt of the Moon’s orbit around the Earth. Sometimes the Moon is above the Earth’s northern hemisphere and sometimes it’s below the Earth’s southern hemisphere, and this lets us occasionally see slightly more of the northern or southern hemispheres of the Moon!
Finally, the Moon appears to tilt back and forth like a metronome. The tilt of the Moon’s orbit contributes to this, but it’s mostly because of the 23.5 degree tilt of our own observing platform, the Earth. Imagine standing sideways on a ramp. Look left, and the ramp slopes up. Look right and the ramp slopes down.
Now look in front of you. The horizon will look higher on the right, lower on the left (try this by tilting your head left). But if you turn around, the horizon appears to tilt the opposite way (tilt your head to the right). The tilted platform of the Earth works the same way as we watch the Moon. Every two weeks we have to look in the opposite direction to see the Moon, and the ground beneath our feet is then tilted the opposite way as well.
So put this all together, and you get this:
Beautiful isn’t it? See if you can notice these phenomena when you observe the Moon. And keep coming back all year to check on the Moon’s changing appearance and help plan your observing sessions.
Follow @NASAMoon on Twitter to keep up with the latest lunar updates.
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com.