Equilibrium Life

0 notes

An "Out-to-Luncher" lady with a golden heart

Our office conducts a training called “Business English at Work” with Mr. Rudolph Jimenez from SpeechPower which started last week. Today, Mr. Jimenez told us that we have 7 types of listeners. As he finished it, I conclude that I am “Out-to-Luncher”. I always daydream, recall past moments, imagine the situations or topics, and think about other things when someone talking to me. After our training, I searched it at the web to verify it. Alas! It was true. I am that kind of person but I try to prevent it. I am a good listener but sometimes I get interrupt on somethings that I don’t understand. I don’t know why… Maybe I think too much… I really don’t know… Maybe I am Leo… Maybe I am stressed… Maybe I am confused? That’s enough for today. Therefore, I will try to stop being “Out-to-Luncher”. Please don’t think that I am not listening to my friends and family because I can listen from my bottom of my heart. I listen when they have problems… I listen when they are jolly… I listen when they are crazy… and I listen when they need comfort… because I AM TRUE TO MYSELF. 

P.S. I would like to say thanks to the writer of said article or blog because she gave me tips. Kindly click the title (of my blog) to be able to see it. :)

Filed under out-to-lunchers listeners speechpower office myself inspiration motivation true

4,434 notes

ikenbot:

Rainbow Star Cluster Sparkles in Stunning Hubble Photo
The globular cluster Messier 9 shines in this new photo from the Hubble Space Telescope. Credit: NASA & ESA
Hundreds of thousands of glittering stars shine in a cluster at the center of our galaxy in a new photograph from the Hubble Space Telescope.
The cluster is called Messier 9, and contains hordes of stars swarming in a spherical cloud about 25,000 light-years from Earth. The object is too faint to be seen with the naked eye, and when it was discovered by French astronomer Charles Messier in 1764, the scientist could only resolve it as a faint smudge that he classified as a nebula (“cloud” in Latin).
Now, though, the Hubble Space Telescope is powerful enough to make out more than 250,000 individual stars in Messier 9, in a new picture released today (March 16). The bluer points indicate hotter stars, while the redder stars are cooler.
Messier 9 is what’s known as a globular cluster, containing some of the oldest stars in the galaxy in a clump that is thought to have formed together when the universe was much younger. These stars, which are about twice as old as the sun, are made of different materials than our star. They tend to lack the sun’s heavier elements, such as oxygen, carbon and iron, which were only present in larger quantities when the universe was older.

ikenbot:

Rainbow Star Cluster Sparkles in Stunning Hubble Photo

The globular cluster Messier 9 shines in this new photo from the Hubble Space Telescope. Credit: NASA & ESA

Hundreds of thousands of glittering stars shine in a cluster at the center of our galaxy in a new photograph from the Hubble Space Telescope.

The cluster is called Messier 9, and contains hordes of stars swarming in a spherical cloud about 25,000 light-years from Earth. The object is too faint to be seen with the naked eye, and when it was discovered by French astronomer Charles Messier in 1764, the scientist could only resolve it as a faint smudge that he classified as a nebula (“cloud” in Latin).

Now, though, the Hubble Space Telescope is powerful enough to make out more than 250,000 individual stars in Messier 9, in a new picture released today (March 16). The bluer points indicate hotter stars, while the redder stars are cooler.

Messier 9 is what’s known as a globular cluster, containing some of the oldest stars in the galaxy in a clump that is thought to have formed together when the universe was much younger. These stars, which are about twice as old as the sun, are made of different materials than our star. They tend to lack the sun’s heavier elements, such as oxygen, carbon and iron, which were only present in larger quantities when the universe was older.

Filed under stars