Elena Hills's

Storyteller

One World One Taekwondo : Come to 2017 Muju

Korea Taekwondo is Loved!


 Did you watch
google doodle today?
 
It is about a
2017 World Taekwondo
Championships Muju, South Korea




 2017 World Taekwondo Championships
is now going on!
 
 
 Preview_2017 World Taekwondo Championships
in Muju, Korea on June 24-30


Here is a message

 


 
 


 
My friend Jenny from UK
is interested in Taekwondo
So, She is learning Taekwondo
in her town with groups
 
I sent a youtube video to her
She really liked to hear that news!
I hope you like it too XD
 
I love this cute image!!! XD
I hope to learn
Taekwondo someday!

Hope peace and unity
all over the world :D

 
 
One World One Taekwondo :
 Come to 2017 Muju

Leamington Peace Festival 17th & 18th June 2017

http://peacefestival.org.uk/


Do you know
'Leamington spa'?
It is one city in UK.
My friend Jenny living in UK
gave me the letter.
Have you ever heard
Leamington Peace Festival?
As I am an peace supporter,
Happy to hear that news!
Lemington Peace Festival
17th & 18th June 2017
Coming Soon!

http://peacefestival.org.uk/


Every year in June, Leamington Spa hosts its own Peace Festival which brings together a diverse mix of causes, entertainers and traders.

This vibrant and enjoyable weekend is back again for two days on Saturday 17th and Sunday 18th June 2017 and is totally free to attend!

Get involved by becoming a volunteer at the Peace Festival, or performing or hosting a stall.
Gallery
If you want to see more, visit




The peace bus
Peace grafiti


Press Clippings




I hope to visit that city,
Leamington Spa someday!

I heard it is famous for 'Spa'
It is called Spa because of the name.

Let us go to
Peace Festival!

Watch Coldplay's Chris Martin with Lianne La Havas


I love Coldplay's song and
Lianne La Havas's too :D
Feel the music~!!!

 
Chris Martin, Lianne La Havas duet
on heartwrenching 'Parade' ballad,
 
"Sometimes It Snows in April"
 
 
Coldplay's Chris Martin delivered a devastating cover of Prince's "Sometimes It Snows in April" alongside singer Lianne La Havas.
 
 
Coldplay welcomed British singer Lianne La Havas onstage in Copenhagen Wednesday for a stunning, understated cover of Prince's "Sometimes It Snows in April."
 

The performance featured just La Havas and Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, with the former plucking out the tender ballad's simple, stirring guitar part. Between the stripped-down arrangement and split vocal duties, Martin and La Havas imbued "Sometimes It Snows in April" with an extra bit of space and emotional power, which peaked beautifully when the pair came together to sing the song's heartwrenching final line.
 
"Sometimes It Snows in April," originally appearing on Prince's 1986 album Parade, has become a touchstone song for both fans and musicians since Prince's death in April.

The song recently received a bump on several international charts, while Gotye has covered it and D'Angelo notably performed it on The Tonight Show with Maya Rudolph and Gretchen Lieberum.
 
 News by Rolling Stone
 
I listen to it again n again!!!
Have a good day~!
See ya :D
 

How frustration can make us more creative | Tim Harford


 
Do you know Tim Harford ?

by timharford.com
 
 
Tim is an economist, journalist and broadcaster. He is author of “Messy” and the million-selling “The Undercover Economist”, a senior columnist at the Financial Times, and the presenter of Radio 4’s “More or Less” and the iTunes-topping series “Fifty Things That Made the Modern Economy”. Tim has spoken at TED, PopTech and the Sydney Opera House. He is a visiting fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford and an honorary fellow of the Royal Statistical Society.
 
Tim was Economics Commentator of the Year 2014, winner of the Royal Statistical Society journalistic excellence award 2015, won the Society of Business Economists writing prize 2014-15, and the Bastiat Prize for economic journalism in 2006 and 2016.


Messy: How To be Creative and Resilient in a Tidy-Minded
 
World celebrates the benefits that messiness has in our lives: why it’s important, why we resist it, and why we should embrace it instead. Using research from neuroscience, psychology, social science, as well as tales of inspiring people doing extraordinary things, I explain that the human qualities we value – creativity, responsiveness, resilience – are integral to the disorder, confusion, and disarray that produce them.
 
In Messy, you’ll learn about the unexpected connections between creativity and mess; understand why unexpected changes of plans, unfamiliar people, and unforeseen events can help generate new ideas and opportunities as they make you anxious and angry; and come to appreciate that the human inclination for tidiness – in our personal and professional lives, online, even in children’s play – can mask deep and debilitating fragility that keep us from innovation. The book is an exploration of the real advantages of mess in our lives.
 
As I wrote the book, I grappled with the way Martin Luther King’s speechmaking style evolved from careful preparation to impromptu genius. I tried to tease out the connections between the brilliant panzer commander Erwin Rommel, Amazon boss Jeff Bezos, and the primary campaign of Donald Trump. I interviewed Stewart Brand about the world’s most creative messy building – and Brian Eno about the way David Bowie would reject perfection in favour of something flawed and interesting every time.
 
I loved writing this book.
 
Ranging expertly across business, politics and the arts, Tim Harford makes a compelling case for the creative benefits of disorganisation, improvisation and confusion.
 
His liberating message: you’ll be more successful if you stop struggling so hard to plan or control your success. Messy is a deeply researched, endlessly eye-opening adventure’
–  Oliver Burkeman
 
‘Tim’s best and deepest book.’  – Tyler Cowen
 
‘Every Tim Harford book is cause for celebration.’ 
Malcolm Gladwell
 
Take a look at my Messy-inspired reading list, and for a taste of  the ideas and the storytelling in the book, try this:



 
 
‘“Messy” masterfully weaves together anecdote and academic work.’ – The Economist
 
‘Harford’s argument goes beyond aesthetics, resurfacing over and over in his engrossing narrative.’
Maria Konnikova, The New York Times Book Review
 
 
 
‘[MESSY] plays to Harford’s prodigious strengths: the ability to tell engrossing human stories, and the ability to use those stories to convey complex, statistical ideas that make your life better. I had encountered many of the ideas in this book before, but Harford pulls them together into a coherent narrative that helped me understand the relationship between disparate ideas’
Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing
 
‘Wonderfully easy to read.’
Susie Mesure, The Evening Standard

 
‘A book that presents itself as an impossibly simple account of the virtues of a messy workspace, then builds to something extraordinary.’ – The Age
 
‘This absorbing book offers a different approach from instructional decluttering manuals by celebrating the successes derived from the unplanned, unscripted, and unknown.’ – Library Journal
 
‘His best book since The Undercover Economist… excellent.’ – Inside Higher Ed
 
‘Mr Harford has set his sights higher… deeply researched… highly readable.’ – Business Standard, India
 
 
‘Entertaining and insightful.’The Times
 
‘Brilliant book.’The Times of India
 
‘Embrace chaos to tap into your true creative potential… Harford deftly weaves together real-life examples.’ – Fortune
 
‘Vindication at last!’ …a highly organized argument for chaos.’ –  Time


I like his book :)
If you are interested in it,
Read and share
your thinking with me!
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