• Factory farms, also known as concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), have significant environmental impacts due to the large scale of operations and the concentration of animals in a relatively small area. Some of the key environmental issues related to factory farms include:

    Water Pollution: Factory farms produce a massive amount of animal waste, which often contains harmful substances like antibiotics, hormones, and pathogens. When this waste is not properly managed, it can leach into the soil and contaminate water sources, leading to water pollution. Runoff from factory farms can also contribute to algal blooms and dead zones in water bodies.

    Air Pollution: The concentrated animal population in factory farms generates a significant amount of ammonia, methane, and other gases that can contribute to air pollution. These emissions can have negative effects on air quality in the surrounding areas and contribute to respiratory issues in both animals and humans.

    Deforestation: The expansion of factory farms often leads to deforestation as natural habitats are cleared to make space for animal housing, feed crops, and waste disposal facilities. Deforestation contributes to loss of biodiversity, habitat destruction, and climate change.

    Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Factory farms are major contributors to greenhouse gas emissions, primarily through methane production from animal waste and enteric fermentation in ruminant animals. These emissions contribute to climate change and global warming.

    Antibiotic Resistance: The routine use of antibiotics in factory farms to promote growth and prevent disease has led to the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. This poses a significant public health risk and can make it more difficult to treat bacterial infections in both animals and humans.

    Efforts are being made to address these environmental issues associated with factory farms, including the implementation of better waste management practices, promoting sustainable farming methods, and advocating for stricter regulations on animal agriculture.

    https://humane.foundation
    Factory farms, also known as concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), have significant environmental impacts due to the large scale of operations and the concentration of animals in a relatively small area. Some of the key environmental issues related to factory farms include: Water Pollution: Factory farms produce a massive amount of animal waste, which often contains harmful substances like antibiotics, hormones, and pathogens. When this waste is not properly managed, it can leach into the soil and contaminate water sources, leading to water pollution. Runoff from factory farms can also contribute to algal blooms and dead zones in water bodies. Air Pollution: The concentrated animal population in factory farms generates a significant amount of ammonia, methane, and other gases that can contribute to air pollution. These emissions can have negative effects on air quality in the surrounding areas and contribute to respiratory issues in both animals and humans. Deforestation: The expansion of factory farms often leads to deforestation as natural habitats are cleared to make space for animal housing, feed crops, and waste disposal facilities. Deforestation contributes to loss of biodiversity, habitat destruction, and climate change. Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Factory farms are major contributors to greenhouse gas emissions, primarily through methane production from animal waste and enteric fermentation in ruminant animals. These emissions contribute to climate change and global warming. Antibiotic Resistance: The routine use of antibiotics in factory farms to promote growth and prevent disease has led to the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. This poses a significant public health risk and can make it more difficult to treat bacterial infections in both animals and humans. Efforts are being made to address these environmental issues associated with factory farms, including the implementation of better waste management practices, promoting sustainable farming methods, and advocating for stricter regulations on animal agriculture. https://humane.foundation
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  • What if there was a way to approach all our personal ideals as if they were already available in the form of latent potential waiting to be unearthed? Yoga is a system of somatic awareness that presents itself in the yogic, martial, and living arts with a premise of self-accountability, patience, and mastery by practicing just to practice. Weight loss, tone body, clear mind, better coordination, increased strength are not goals of yoga, they are benefits.
    What if there was a way to approach all our personal ideals as if they were already available in the form of latent potential waiting to be unearthed? Yoga is a system of somatic awareness that presents itself in the yogic, martial, and living arts with a premise of self-accountability, patience, and mastery by practicing just to practice. Weight loss, tone body, clear mind, better coordination, increased strength are not goals of yoga, they are benefits.
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  • Advanced Rolfing Fort Worth Dallas and Rolf movement have become an integral part of what Rolfing is, for the simple fact that to fully enable a more integrated being, something must enable the integration of mind/body. Rolfing is about relationships; therefore, structure and function must be congruent and dimensional for the full potential available in each of us to emerge. Rolf Movement provides a strategy that a Rolfer uses to navigate towards achieving biomechanical goals and integration. All movement is a product of the nervous system and the connective tissue matrix; the autonomic nervous system is the biodynamic dance between the parasympathetic/sympathetic branches or "fight or flight" reflexes. Conventional phenomenal data begins at the quantum level then abstracts, or filters, into sensation, e-motion, belief, and then finally into activation or expression. Rolf Movement works within the relationship between the tenets of gravity/structure, coordination/pre-movement, impression/perception, and expression/meaning, known as The Tonic Function Model, to approach and evoke more desirable and efficient movement through sensation. Elements of somatic patterning and the potential to enhance performance and form has always been a resource to athletes when articulating full expression, as well as obvious sport specific benefits.

    How you think is how you move, and how you breathe is how you live. Movement manifests from a pre-movement or an automatic override response, which is an organic compound of a collective body of experiences acquired throughout life. From the moment of conception, a human being is shaped and formed from a genetic code that has been further conditioned by a conscious/sub-conscious overlay. Consciousness and subconscious overlays are the sum of object relations or relationship to "other," and this subject-object relationship fosters the subsequent emergence of the deeper dualities that drive our structure and function. As a result of our relationship with our environment and primary care giver, our original perceptions were birthed that would form the way we would move in the world. Corticalized movement is that which is done consciously or voluntarily; sub-cortical movement is sub-conscious, or involuntarily. Ironically, the first physiological structure to form in embryo is the primitive streak that quickly evolves into the central nervous system, the heart then mushrooms out of brain and digresses to its known position where the respiratory diaphragm emerges and resources to form the fascial matrix of the body. The fascial matrix is what gives the body its structural and functional orientation of space in gravity. So, the primary contributors of a sustaining life force manifest first; energy, breath, blood, or thought, word, action. Therefore, as the being grows and is conditioned in thought or perception, he or she is subsequently being conditioned to move or express because of the role of the autonomic division of the peripheral nervous system, hence, as a man thinketh so is he.

    Everyone breathing has experienced some situation or environment that has either caused them to breathe rapidly or hold their breath. This impulse comes from the way you perceive the environment, and this perception is based on a collective body of experience that has already calculated and decided for you in advance of what you would do in this type of situation. Again, this is based on the primary dualism of a subject-object relationship in which certain somatic preferences were adhered to and compounded into consciousness that is sensory activated. This is why just thinking about someone can either cause a calm, pleasant response, or an anxious, negative reaction, or walking into unfamiliar territory causes reason for processing if the environment is threatening. This constancy is a necessity for survival and is part of a feedback loop reflex of the nervous system. (What might not be necessary is the specific response or reaction that emerges.) The parasympathetic and sympathetic divisions of the nervous system are in a constant ebb and flow dance to keep the body safe, vertical, and expressive in gravity given certain virtues, anomalies, and asymmetries. The position of a Rolf Movement Practitioner is to consider the premise of the structural differential that states that conventional phenomenal stimulus bombards the sensory division of the peripheral N.S., filtering into sensation before e-motion, belief, and finally expression. A shift in sensation can mean a shift in resource. This shift is nothing less than the potential sum of a person's symbolic imagery about himself and his world shifting and manifesting as potential uninhibited, dimensional, and supported movement.

    Breath is expression (or meaning manifest), and all the diaphragms of the body are constantly self-regulating according to perception, coordination, and gravity. This self-regulation is again based on the collective body of experience known as your consciousness integrating with new stimulus to either produce or inhibit breath. This ability of the body is so very vital to movement. Diaphragms are viewed as laterals that serve as fluid containers strategically placed at the primary and secondary curves of the body. These thickened pressurized fascial valves regulate and stabilize the flow of the fluid body and breathe to foster or inhibit movement. Keeping in mind effecting sensation can change the whole context or meaning of a movement allows the trained Rolfer to evoke a new resource for the client seeking more ease, which translates into less suffering in most cases. The way a Rolfer seeks added resources and potential that is sensory stimulated is viewed from the context of The Tonic Function Model.

    French Rolfer and Rolf Movement Instructor Hubert Godard, is a dance and movement professor for the University of Paris, France, and is the primary contributor to what is known as the Tonic Function Model. This model suggests that tonic function, or the human being's ability to orient to space in gravity, is affected by four entry points; structure/gravity, coordination, impression/perception, and expression/meaning, with each one possessing the potential to influence tonic function, and one or all the other entry points. In other words, these four elements of the Tonic Function Model are always in relationship working simultaneously to keep the being safe, vertical, and expressive in gravity given all the considerations of the model. Rolfers can work within these relationships initiating changes in sensation to structure, coordination, perception, and meaning to evoke a shift in resource; changing sensation of any one or all of these can evoke the system to orientate to a new resource and ease of movement. Simply bringing awareness and embodiment to specific areas of relationship coupled with a new sensation can promote a shift in ease or efficiency of movement. Injuries can cause an overlay to the structure and inhibit its ability to move, and it is necessary to take injuries into full consideration. Posture or holding patterns can be indicative of movement patterns that have not utilized use of the gravity response system. Proprioception activates the gravity response system, and this activation is in the skin, specifically the hands, feet, and face, and stimulates gamma activity in motor control. The way proprioception influences gamma activity, or the feedback reflex, is why embodiment and awareness of sensation may evoke a change in resource.

    Chiropractic, Physical Therapy, or Massage Therapy are not substitutes for an Advanced Rolfing Fort Worth Ten Series.

    John Barton | Certified Advanced Rolfer ® & Rolfing ® Fort Worth-Dallas | Certified Rolf Movement ® Practitioner

    https://www.rolfmovement.com

    https://www.certifiedrolfing.com
    Advanced Rolfing Fort Worth Dallas and Rolf movement have become an integral part of what Rolfing is, for the simple fact that to fully enable a more integrated being, something must enable the integration of mind/body. Rolfing is about relationships; therefore, structure and function must be congruent and dimensional for the full potential available in each of us to emerge. Rolf Movement provides a strategy that a Rolfer uses to navigate towards achieving biomechanical goals and integration. All movement is a product of the nervous system and the connective tissue matrix; the autonomic nervous system is the biodynamic dance between the parasympathetic/sympathetic branches or "fight or flight" reflexes. Conventional phenomenal data begins at the quantum level then abstracts, or filters, into sensation, e-motion, belief, and then finally into activation or expression. Rolf Movement works within the relationship between the tenets of gravity/structure, coordination/pre-movement, impression/perception, and expression/meaning, known as The Tonic Function Model, to approach and evoke more desirable and efficient movement through sensation. Elements of somatic patterning and the potential to enhance performance and form has always been a resource to athletes when articulating full expression, as well as obvious sport specific benefits. How you think is how you move, and how you breathe is how you live. Movement manifests from a pre-movement or an automatic override response, which is an organic compound of a collective body of experiences acquired throughout life. From the moment of conception, a human being is shaped and formed from a genetic code that has been further conditioned by a conscious/sub-conscious overlay. Consciousness and subconscious overlays are the sum of object relations or relationship to "other," and this subject-object relationship fosters the subsequent emergence of the deeper dualities that drive our structure and function. As a result of our relationship with our environment and primary care giver, our original perceptions were birthed that would form the way we would move in the world. Corticalized movement is that which is done consciously or voluntarily; sub-cortical movement is sub-conscious, or involuntarily. Ironically, the first physiological structure to form in embryo is the primitive streak that quickly evolves into the central nervous system, the heart then mushrooms out of brain and digresses to its known position where the respiratory diaphragm emerges and resources to form the fascial matrix of the body. The fascial matrix is what gives the body its structural and functional orientation of space in gravity. So, the primary contributors of a sustaining life force manifest first; energy, breath, blood, or thought, word, action. Therefore, as the being grows and is conditioned in thought or perception, he or she is subsequently being conditioned to move or express because of the role of the autonomic division of the peripheral nervous system, hence, as a man thinketh so is he. Everyone breathing has experienced some situation or environment that has either caused them to breathe rapidly or hold their breath. This impulse comes from the way you perceive the environment, and this perception is based on a collective body of experience that has already calculated and decided for you in advance of what you would do in this type of situation. Again, this is based on the primary dualism of a subject-object relationship in which certain somatic preferences were adhered to and compounded into consciousness that is sensory activated. This is why just thinking about someone can either cause a calm, pleasant response, or an anxious, negative reaction, or walking into unfamiliar territory causes reason for processing if the environment is threatening. This constancy is a necessity for survival and is part of a feedback loop reflex of the nervous system. (What might not be necessary is the specific response or reaction that emerges.) The parasympathetic and sympathetic divisions of the nervous system are in a constant ebb and flow dance to keep the body safe, vertical, and expressive in gravity given certain virtues, anomalies, and asymmetries. The position of a Rolf Movement Practitioner is to consider the premise of the structural differential that states that conventional phenomenal stimulus bombards the sensory division of the peripheral N.S., filtering into sensation before e-motion, belief, and finally expression. A shift in sensation can mean a shift in resource. This shift is nothing less than the potential sum of a person's symbolic imagery about himself and his world shifting and manifesting as potential uninhibited, dimensional, and supported movement. Breath is expression (or meaning manifest), and all the diaphragms of the body are constantly self-regulating according to perception, coordination, and gravity. This self-regulation is again based on the collective body of experience known as your consciousness integrating with new stimulus to either produce or inhibit breath. This ability of the body is so very vital to movement. Diaphragms are viewed as laterals that serve as fluid containers strategically placed at the primary and secondary curves of the body. These thickened pressurized fascial valves regulate and stabilize the flow of the fluid body and breathe to foster or inhibit movement. Keeping in mind effecting sensation can change the whole context or meaning of a movement allows the trained Rolfer to evoke a new resource for the client seeking more ease, which translates into less suffering in most cases. The way a Rolfer seeks added resources and potential that is sensory stimulated is viewed from the context of The Tonic Function Model. French Rolfer and Rolf Movement Instructor Hubert Godard, is a dance and movement professor for the University of Paris, France, and is the primary contributor to what is known as the Tonic Function Model. This model suggests that tonic function, or the human being's ability to orient to space in gravity, is affected by four entry points; structure/gravity, coordination, impression/perception, and expression/meaning, with each one possessing the potential to influence tonic function, and one or all the other entry points. In other words, these four elements of the Tonic Function Model are always in relationship working simultaneously to keep the being safe, vertical, and expressive in gravity given all the considerations of the model. Rolfers can work within these relationships initiating changes in sensation to structure, coordination, perception, and meaning to evoke a shift in resource; changing sensation of any one or all of these can evoke the system to orientate to a new resource and ease of movement. Simply bringing awareness and embodiment to specific areas of relationship coupled with a new sensation can promote a shift in ease or efficiency of movement. Injuries can cause an overlay to the structure and inhibit its ability to move, and it is necessary to take injuries into full consideration. Posture or holding patterns can be indicative of movement patterns that have not utilized use of the gravity response system. Proprioception activates the gravity response system, and this activation is in the skin, specifically the hands, feet, and face, and stimulates gamma activity in motor control. The way proprioception influences gamma activity, or the feedback reflex, is why embodiment and awareness of sensation may evoke a change in resource. Chiropractic, Physical Therapy, or Massage Therapy are not substitutes for an Advanced Rolfing Fort Worth Ten Series. John Barton | Certified Advanced Rolfer ® & Rolfing ® Fort Worth-Dallas | Certified Rolf Movement ® Practitioner https://www.rolfmovement.com https://www.certifiedrolfing.com
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  • Lafzon mein kya likhun use Pak Zaat ki shaan tohfa Mili namaz ki aaka ke Hain ham gulam utani Mili mangne se jitni thi hamari Shan khamoshiyon mein Aksar milta hai bemisal
    Lafzon mein kya likhun use Pak Zaat ki shaan tohfa Mili namaz ki aaka ke Hain ham gulam utani Mili mangne se jitni thi hamari Shan khamoshiyon mein Aksar milta hai bemisal
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