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  • Answer Upon - Our Physical Environment Reinforces Our Sense Of Self

    The Test of Testing
    As much as I loathe standardized testing, I have to admit that I'm relieved by the California State Supreme Court's decision to reinstate the high school exit exam. For those of you who may not have heard, yesterday the high court suspended an Alameda County Superior Court Judge's prior ruling which prohibited schools from withholding diplomas of students that failed the exit exam. I'm saddened to think that the 46,000 high school seniors who haven't passed the test yet won't be donning caps and gowns with their classmates next month; howev
    clearly patterned framework that sets the stage for greater and greater self-understanding. In our own lives, we select the sets and props of different "acts" (or periods of life) in order often unconsciously to display images of ourselves and to learn by reflection of the environment around us" (Cooper Marcus, C., House as Mirror of Self: exploring the deeper meaning of home, 1995).

    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    "...we hypothesize that individuals also select and craft physical environments that reflect and reinforce who they are" (Gosling, S., Sei, J., Mannarelli, T., Sapient, M., Journal of Personality and Social Pathology, 2002).

    Notice where you sit when you’re working and what you’re surrounded by. What is it reminding you about you? As you move through your home, look at w

    President States That Marriage is Indeed Between a Man and a Woman
    We all know that marriage is between a man and a woman although the gay and lesbian community wishes to change all that you see. Recently in an online forum a debate about gay marriage became rather heated due to the fact that I mentioned that the real problem with the gay marriage thing is that it is so; In your face at times.After having the riot act read to me I find out the debater on the other side of the gay marriage controversy is not what I expected so I said; thank you for letting us know that you are married to a transsexua
    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    In mythology, film, literature, and daily living, setting is important: Zeus on Mt.Olympus, Poseidon in the sea, Hades in the underworld, Artemis in the forest, and Hestia at the hearth inside the temple. In film, as in literature and in daily life, the words "don't move," when uttered in a doctors' office versus in a jungle, or onstage, or in a dark deserted alleyway, conjure different meanings because of the setting. Being in a basement or a ballroom, a church or a courtroom, a library or a subway station, each setting has its own distinct effect on a person. Setting signal behaviors, impart information about the users or occupants, invite our projections and imaginings, stir our feelings, and engage our unconscious.

    Settings and the Gods The ancient Romans paid a great deal of attention to setting. When entering a setting, one might pass through a vestibule, (named for the Roman Goddess Vesta, whose Greek counterpart was Hestia, keeper of the hearth, or "focus" in Latin), and pass three different gods of the doorway (the door, the threshold, and the hinges). These gods prevented bad luck from entering the ancient home. Juno (or Hera in Greece) oversaw the "psychic and material well-being of the household."

    What gives a place its identity, its persona?

    What is a place? What gives a place its identity, its persona? These questions occurred to the physicists Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg when they visited Kronberg Castle in Denmark. Bohr said to Heisenberg:

    “Isn't it strange how this castle changes as soon as one imagines that Hamlet lived here? As scientists we believe that a castle consists only of stones, and admire the way the architect put them together. The stones, the green roof with its patina, the wood carvings in the church, constitute the whole castle. None of this should be changed the by the fact that Hamlet lived here, and yet it is changed completely" (Tuan,Y., Space and Place: the perspective of experience, 2002).

    We have never been separate from our setting:

    In the Handbook of Environmental Psychology, Brian R. Little (1987), author of the "Personality and Environment" chapter, notes "The interdependence of human personality and the surrounding milieu is so complete that human thought about environment was most likely coterminous with the emergence of consciousness."

    Setting has a "major claim on behavior":

    "In contrast to perspectives that assumed that the major causal influences on behavior were endogenous to the organism (e.g., motivational state, perceptual set), Barker insisted that the behavior setting itself has a "claim" on the individual that deserved serious psychological examination" (Little, B., Personality and Environment, 1987).

    People respond immediately and unconsciously to an environment:

    "When people encounter an environment, they respond immediately and unconsciously to its rather general features" (Zajonc 1980; Ulrich 1983; Orians and Heerwagen, Journal of Cultural Geography, 1992).

    Our setting displays our image and teaches us back:

    Objects, like people, come in and out of our lives and awareness, not in some random, meaningless pattern ordained by Fate, but in a clearly patterned framework that sets the stage for greater and greater self-understanding. In our own lives, we select the sets and props of different "acts" (or periods of life) in order often unconsciously to display images of ourselves and to learn by reflection of the environment around us" (Cooper Marcus, C., House as Mirror of Self: exploring the deeper meaning of home, 1995).

    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    "...we hypothesize that individuals also select and craft physical environments that reflect and reinforce who they are" (Gosling, S., Sei, J., Mannarelli, T., Sapient, M., Journal of Personality and Social Pathology, 2002).

    Notice where you sit when you’re working and what you’re surrounded by. What is it reminding you about you? As you move through your home, look at wh

    Tanning The Natural Way
    This is a call to everybody. Save your skin, now before it’s too late! Having a tan makes you look more healthy and gorgeous. But how do you do it without bad consequences?There are a lot of people who would like to have golden brown skin. It is not a new sight when people go to the beach to lie almost naked under the sun just to have an equal tan. But, it is not so safe to do just that because of the super harmful UV rays. Instead of getting only a perfectly golden skin, one might suffer a serious case of skin cancer later, too.
    mans paid a great deal of attention to setting. When entering a setting, one might pass through a vestibule, (named for the Roman Goddess Vesta, whose Greek counterpart was Hestia, keeper of the hearth, or "focus" in Latin), and pass three different gods of the doorway (the door, the threshold, and the hinges). These gods prevented bad luck from entering the ancient home. Juno (or Hera in Greece) oversaw the "psychic and material well-being of the household."

    What gives a place its identity, its persona?

    What is a place? What gives a place its identity, its persona? These questions occurred to the physicists Niels Bohr and Werner Heisenberg when they visited Kronberg Castle in Denmark. Bohr said to Heisenberg:

    “Isn't it strange how this castle changes as soon as one imagines that Hamlet lived here? As scientists we believe that a castle consists only of stones, and admire the way the architect put them together. The stones, the green roof with its patina, the wood carvings in the church, constitute the whole castle. None of this should be changed the by the fact that Hamlet lived here, and yet it is changed completely" (Tuan,Y., Space and Place: the perspective of experience, 2002).

    We have never been separate from our setting:

    In the Handbook of Environmental Psychology, Brian R. Little (1987), author of the "Personality and Environment" chapter, notes "The interdependence of human personality and the surrounding milieu is so complete that human thought about environment was most likely coterminous with the emergence of consciousness."

    Setting has a "major claim on behavior":

    "In contrast to perspectives that assumed that the major causal influences on behavior were endogenous to the organism (e.g., motivational state, perceptual set), Barker insisted that the behavior setting itself has a "claim" on the individual that deserved serious psychological examination" (Little, B., Personality and Environment, 1987).

    People respond immediately and unconsciously to an environment:

    "When people encounter an environment, they respond immediately and unconsciously to its rather general features" (Zajonc 1980; Ulrich 1983; Orians and Heerwagen, Journal of Cultural Geography, 1992).

    Our setting displays our image and teaches us back:

    Objects, like people, come in and out of our lives and awareness, not in some random, meaningless pattern ordained by Fate, but in a clearly patterned framework that sets the stage for greater and greater self-understanding. In our own lives, we select the sets and props of different "acts" (or periods of life) in order often unconsciously to display images of ourselves and to learn by reflection of the environment around us" (Cooper Marcus, C., House as Mirror of Self: exploring the deeper meaning of home, 1995).

    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    "...we hypothesize that individuals also select and craft physical environments that reflect and reinforce who they are" (Gosling, S., Sei, J., Mannarelli, T., Sapient, M., Journal of Personality and Social Pathology, 2002).

    Notice where you sit when you’re working and what you’re surrounded by. What is it reminding you about you? As you move through your home, look at w

    Work From Home in 3 Easy Steps
    Does the drive to and from work wear you out? Do you wake up depressed because you are going to a job you hate, come home depressed because you did a job you hate, and go to bed dreading going back to a job you hate? It may be time to consider a new approach to your career. In three easy steps you could be working from home, enjoying your family and friends with free time and a mind free from the bitterness and depression that come from having a hateful job.The first step to a work from home lifestyle is to research your options f
    here? As scientists we believe that a castle consists only of stones, and admire the way the architect put them together. The stones, the green roof with its patina, the wood carvings in the church, constitute the whole castle. None of this should be changed the by the fact that Hamlet lived here, and yet it is changed completely" (Tuan,Y., Space and Place: the perspective of experience, 2002).

    We have never been separate from our setting:

    In the Handbook of Environmental Psychology, Brian R. Little (1987), author of the "Personality and Environment" chapter, notes "The interdependence of human personality and the surrounding milieu is so complete that human thought about environment was most likely coterminous with the emergence of consciousness."

    Setting has a "major claim on behavior":

    "In contrast to perspectives that assumed that the major causal influences on behavior were endogenous to the organism (e.g., motivational state, perceptual set), Barker insisted that the behavior setting itself has a "claim" on the individual that deserved serious psychological examination" (Little, B., Personality and Environment, 1987).

    People respond immediately and unconsciously to an environment:

    "When people encounter an environment, they respond immediately and unconsciously to its rather general features" (Zajonc 1980; Ulrich 1983; Orians and Heerwagen, Journal of Cultural Geography, 1992).

    Our setting displays our image and teaches us back:

    Objects, like people, come in and out of our lives and awareness, not in some random, meaningless pattern ordained by Fate, but in a clearly patterned framework that sets the stage for greater and greater self-understanding. In our own lives, we select the sets and props of different "acts" (or periods of life) in order often unconsciously to display images of ourselves and to learn by reflection of the environment around us" (Cooper Marcus, C., House as Mirror of Self: exploring the deeper meaning of home, 1995).

    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    "...we hypothesize that individuals also select and craft physical environments that reflect and reinforce who they are" (Gosling, S., Sei, J., Mannarelli, T., Sapient, M., Journal of Personality and Social Pathology, 2002).

    Notice where you sit when you’re working and what you’re surrounded by. What is it reminding you about you? As you move through your home, look at w

    Grandparents Can be Health Role Models for Grandkids
    Two weeks from now I will be interviewed on a radio talk show to discuss the health steps I take. Many listeners are on a fitness path and that is not the reason for the interview. I am being interviewed because I am a grandma and model healthy behavior for my grandkids. For example, I walk 10,000 steps a day and track them with a pedometer.On Sunday nights I cook a healthy dinner for my grandkids. They are aware of my efforts. In fact, when they saw a TV commercial for a high-fat product one exclaimed, "Grandma would never buy
    p>

    "In contrast to perspectives that assumed that the major causal influences on behavior were endogenous to the organism (e.g., motivational state, perceptual set), Barker insisted that the behavior setting itself has a "claim" on the individual that deserved serious psychological examination" (Little, B., Personality and Environment, 1987).

    People respond immediately and unconsciously to an environment:

    "When people encounter an environment, they respond immediately and unconsciously to its rather general features" (Zajonc 1980; Ulrich 1983; Orians and Heerwagen, Journal of Cultural Geography, 1992).

    Our setting displays our image and teaches us back:

    Objects, like people, come in and out of our lives and awareness, not in some random, meaningless pattern ordained by Fate, but in a clearly patterned framework that sets the stage for greater and greater self-understanding. In our own lives, we select the sets and props of different "acts" (or periods of life) in order often unconsciously to display images of ourselves and to learn by reflection of the environment around us" (Cooper Marcus, C., House as Mirror of Self: exploring the deeper meaning of home, 1995).

    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    "...we hypothesize that individuals also select and craft physical environments that reflect and reinforce who they are" (Gosling, S., Sei, J., Mannarelli, T., Sapient, M., Journal of Personality and Social Pathology, 2002).

    Notice where you sit when you’re working and what you’re surrounded by. What is it reminding you about you? As you move through your home, look at w

    Reinstall Windows XP
    Instructions for re-installing Windows XP: There comes a time in every computers life were you just want to start over. This article gives you instructions for reinstalling your XP operating system and starting over.Be sure to backup any documents that you have on your system. We are re-installing XP and all data on the drive will be wiped clean. It is also worth mentioning that you can always try to do a system restore in XP.Now that you have backed up all the data you want saved insert you windows XP CD that came with yo
    clearly patterned framework that sets the stage for greater and greater self-understanding. In our own lives, we select the sets and props of different "acts" (or periods of life) in order often unconsciously to display images of ourselves and to learn by reflection of the environment around us" (Cooper Marcus, C., House as Mirror of Self: exploring the deeper meaning of home, 1995).

    Physical environment reinforces who we are:

    "...we hypothesize that individuals also select and craft physical environments that reflect and reinforce who they are" (Gosling, S., Sei, J., Mannarelli, T., Sapient, M., Journal of Personality and Social Pathology, 2002).

    Notice where you sit when you’re working and what you’re surrounded by. What is it reminding you about you? As you move through your home, look at what’s on the walls, the shelves, on the floors and ask how that reinforces your sense of who you are. You may not always like what is being reinforced. The New Year is a good chance to change it! Use your setting as the powerful psychological tool that it is.

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