"When I was a young man, I wanted to change the world. I found it was difficult to change the world, so I tried to change my nation. When I found I couldn’t change the nation, I began to focus on my town. I couldn’t change the town and as an older man I tried to change my family.Now, as an old man, I realize the only thing I can change is myself, and suddenly I realize that if long ago I had changed myself, I could have made an impact on my family. My family and I could have made an impact on our town. Their impact could have changed the nation and I could indeed have changed the world." ~ Rabbi Israel Salanter __________________________________ KEY TAGS: Torah Tisha Baav funny Technology Science Literature Quote Gaming Art Music Poetry Shabbat Commentary Video recipe MISCELLANEOUS TAGS: Adventure Time Audio Awesome ASOUE Book Books Cute Cool Comics Doctor Who interesting Harry Potter Jewish Link Links Lemony Snicket Merlin Muppets Poem Song Star Trek Star Wars Sherlock Story
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Don’t tell me...
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I love that you think people will take you seriously when you have a john green quote in your description.
I don't think anyone will take me seriously, so it's working out pretty great.But it has been about 8 years, so I’ll change the quote.
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Super Simple Overnight Oats

¾ cup Gluten Free Oatmeal
½ cup Greek Yogurt
½ cup almond milk
½ tsp Chia Seeds
Fresh or frozen fruit of choice
Nut butter of choice
Directions:
1. In a serving bowl combine, oatmeal, yogurt, and milk.
2. Sprinkle chia seeds.
3. Top with fruit and nut butter.
4. Tightly seal with cover or plastic wrap.
5. Store in refrigerator overnight.
6. Next morning… remove from refrigerator, add honey (optional), and enjoy! :)
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make with almond milk.
Hi Welcome to OMUISUBI
Third episode is one of the easiest bread recipes I've seen, just extra buttery - Butter Buns!!!
Watch the full episode on YouTube!!!
Dough
150g Bread Flour / 150g 強力小麦粉
60ml Fresh Milk / 60ml ミルク
40ml Warm Water (40°C) / 40ml ぬるま湯
2g Activated Yeast / 2g ドライイースト
8g White Sugar / 8g 白砂糖
2g Table Salt / 2g 塩
15g Unsalted Butter / 15g バター
Egg Wash & Topping
1 Egg / 1 卵
2 Tbsp Milk / 大さじ 2 ミルク
5g of Butter (x8 pieces) / 5g バター (8個)
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Vegan miso soup
With perfect little bites of tofu, mushroom, and seaweed in every mouthful, this heartwarming and delightful vegan miso soup goes well with any Japanese meal.
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Modern Art
Duchamp’s “urinal” is one piece of art that certainly typifies the Modernist movement in the art world. This piece reflects how a perspective or a definition can change merely because of a label of “art,” or because something normal is turned on its head, turning a urinal into a “fountain,” merely by changing its name.
Another way of thinking about this is that Duchamp’s “Urinal” only has power as a piece of art, as opposed to a piece of trash, in that it is paid attention to and observed. In the study of physics, there is something called “the observer effect” (often confused with the Heisenberg principal, which doesn’t apply here). In the observer effect, there is a “...disturbance of an observed system by the act of observation.” The act of giving this piece an audience makes it into a work of art. Without the audience to validate and observe it, Duchamp’s work is no longer art. What is significant about this is that his work now only exists as a photograph, underscoring this idea.
Moreover, it leads to an ideology that exemplifies that one’s own art may be whatever one wishes it to be. There is a question within analyzing art as to whether the meaning of a piece is in the mind of the artist, on the canvas itself, or in the mind of the reader. Modern art typically utilizes a technique in which something is implied, an idea or image, but is not explicit on the canvas.
According to Terry Eagleton’s What Is Literature, literature evolves over time with the audience’s definition and standards as opposed to remaining timeless within the artist’s intent.
Modern art is like poetry, as opposed to literature; as John Stuart Mill stated, “Eloquence is heard, poetry is overheard…Poetry is feeling confessing itself to itself in moments of solitude, and embodying itself in symbols which are the nearest possible representations of the feeling in the exact shape in which it exists in the poet’s mind.”

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