Law on Mass Media and Communication First Exercise 10 points with Bonus for an additional 10 points Deadline Sept. 4 Wednesday at 5pm (to give the handling faculty time to check the entries)
The FIRST EXERCISE of the Law on Mass Media and Communication with deadline on Wednesday at 5pm September 4, 2019 (to give the handling faculty time to check the entries) can be posted here (in the comments section). Class members may also submit a bonus post IN ADDITION to the regular post, with the same deadline (the bonus post should be separated: open a separate comment box , and indicate “BONUS” for ease of recording the points). In order to be fair to class members who work hard, any late post (or posts submitted after 5pm Wednesday Sept. 4) will be considered “forfeit” or for zero points.
The constitutional provision or principle being illustrated should be spelled out in the heading (constitutional provisions and principles that form part of the as the “Introduction to the Constitution” section of the course). The description and required content of the first exercise and the bonus post have been stated in class and in the syllabus.
J101 Fifth Week News Live Tweets (should be breaking news, real time, first-hand, and original).
The news event should be tweeted instantaneously (live) — The deadline to embed them here is between now and Feb. 16, 2019 Saturday 11:59pm (you do not have to embed live here, just tweet live)
Bonus for twice the points: Live tweets of any event of the Lakad-Gunita sa Lupang Hinirang festival of U.P. Diliman. This bonus will apply or can be used until the 7th Week Live Tweets post of March 2, 2019.
(In all cases, the work must be original; any plagiarized work, i.e., work copied from another either verbatim or in substance, will be dealt with accordingly.)
Advance non-commercialized Valentines!
(Photo provided by Pexels of the WordPress Free Stock Photo Library)
Long distance running (for those running 10k or more) :“Run as if you’re running on egg shells and you don’t want to crush them.”
(note: not for sprinters, 100-meter-dashers, “power runners”, etc.. This is for marathon runners or those running 10k and above, and those who are just beginning to run.)
[additional note: Credits: The ancient Chinese did not recommend running as a form of exercise. Some fitness experts say that because it is high-impact, running is the worst form of exercise for putting too much jolt on your bones, causing injuries etc.. So, that’s East and West combined. Plus, my health and wellness consultant (whom i haven’t seen in a long time) advised against running because it has a “jarring effect”. But since i was running anyway, he recommended the book “The Tao of Running”, which i haven’t gotten around to getting, so i googled it. i came upon this article which, more or less, jives with what he said. i also got free running advice from Delle (who ran the Milo marathon, 42 k, today) when i had to change running shoes. Fortunately, according to the running tests of the run consult in Runnr Store (the tradename and trademark of the store is Runnr without an e) in Trinoma (they make you run on a treadmill over and over with inclined mirrors and a video cam at ground level and a TV monitor on the wall, at that time, the video cam wasn’t working though; then, while you’re running like a horse, the run consult with his eyes at ground level or at the level of your shoes will observe)– i’m a midfoot-striker. It jives with ChiRunning (which could be partly found in The Tao of Running, although the latter is more comprehensive). Although… i don’t think i have the form of ChiRunning quite pat. So…. that’s East and West combined. ]
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“ChiRunning aligns body and mind
“ChiRunning combines softer biomechanics and sharp mental focus into a style proponents believe is safer, and more efficient and rewarding
“By Richard Seven
“Seattle Times staff reporter
“Watch this month’s Seattle Marathon and you will see striders and lopers and chuggers. You will also see those who practice “ChiRunning.” They tread softly, as if padding across a sheet of ice.
“The ChiRunning concept, about five years old, requires an aligned body, but with a slight forward lean. It also eschews the usual heel-toe foot strike in favor of landing squarely on the midsole. Instead pushing forward from their feet, ChiRunners let the momentum of their lean do most of the propelling.
“ChiRunning was invented by Danny Dreyer, both a runner and practitioner of Tai Chi, as a way to mix softer biomechanics and sharp mental focus into a style he believes is more efficient, safer and more rewarding.
“Beth Cline, co-owner of 5focus, a South Lake Union wellness studio, is one of eight ChiRunning instructors in the area. She acknowledges that it takes practice and focus to perfect the physical principles, which often seem counterintuitive to veteran runners. First she emphasizes posture and movement concepts like lean, “ankle lift” and proper (controlled) arm swing. The mechanics are about, she says, energy efficiency and injury prevention.
“But the mental-mindfulness component is just as important.
“ “Often, people go out for a run and aren’t even connected to their body,” she says. “ChiRunning really teaches you to connect to what’s going on, to be mindful of any tension, where you’re foot striking, if you have any pain, breathing. … I encourage my students to choose one or two things to focus on each run. That doesn’t mean that their minds can’t wander … but always to bring it back to focus.”
“Jenni Minnis says she suffered through a lot of toe pain — “running on razor blades” — while using the usual running method to finish her first half-marathon.
“ “I was almost crying at the end,” she recalls. “I knew I wanted to run more races, and eventually a whole (marathon) so I started searching for ways to run pain free.”
“She learned about ChiRunning when she went to 5focus for a yoga class, began taking lessons from Cline and says she runs pain-free now. She also says she no longer feels “zapped” of energy after running.
“Instructors such as Cline teach students to begin by standing with feet parallel and hip-width apart and to make sure the knees are not locked. Then, they straighten the upper spine, place a hand on the back of the neck and lift the head high as dancers do. This is intended to stretch the muscles of the back of the neck so the chin stays low and your upper spine straightens. Then, they tilt slightly forward from the hips but most of the lean comes from the ankles.
“ChiRunning requires the runner not only to hit the ground with the midsole, but also to come down either directly under the knee or even behind it — never in front. They are encouraged to lighten the foot strike as much as possible — “run as if you’re running on egg shells and you don’t want to crush them.”
“What ChiRunners must keep it mind, says Cline, is that the body lean is doing the work, not the legs. And the amount of lean can influence your pace.
“The style isn’t for everyone, but it is for Minnis. She plans to run half the Seattle Marathon and plans to complete her first complete marathon in June.
“ “I’m convinced it is a ‘practice,’ ” Minnis says, “and you can feel the difference when your posture is not there, or you are slipping back into the bad habits of running. Now I notice and see why people don’t like to run — because they aren’t using the gravity and their body as a conduit of that.” “