What Is The First Thing People Notice About Your Personality?

Everybody is different. We all have qualities that set us apart from everybody else. Usually we know them, but it is also true that the way we see ourselves is not the way that others see us.

Let’s have some fun and discover at the same time what is the first thing that people notice about us.

voicesTake now this fun quiz and find out what is the first thing people notice about your personality!

What Is The First Thing People Notice About Your Personality?

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Leave a comment below to tell us what you’ve got!

The post What Is The First Thing People Notice About Your Personality? appeared first on Change your thoughts.

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Guests of London’s Ace Hotel can now scale a Patternity-designed climbing wall



London Design Festival 2016: Patternity has added a graphic climbing wall adorned with monochrome contours to the basement gym inside east London’s Ace Hotel (+ slideshow). (more…)

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New York City – New York – USA (by Sergey Galyonkin)

New York City – New York – USA (by Sergey Galyonkin)

Proposition for a New “Border City” Between US and Mexico Premiers at London Design Biennale


Courtesy of fr*ee

Courtesy of fr*ee

One of the most public and politically relevant debates about spatial borders, that of the United States and Mexico, has been probed in a project currently being exhibited at the London Design Biennale. Helmed by Fernando Romero and his team at fr*ee, “Border City” puts forward the idea of a binational city on the border, a place where cultures “both clash and blend to create something altogether unique.”  

The states along the border of these two countries now have a population of over 100 million people – ample to facilitate the introduction of a new city. fr*ee explained: “Border City is the first integrated masterplan for a binational city conducive to both sides of the border, employing tools of enterprise such as special economic zones to argue for its viability.” The masterplan is unrolled in detail at the London Design Biennale, as seen in the video below. The exhibition is open from the 7 – 27 September. 


Courtesy of fr*ee

Courtesy of fr*ee

The proposition stemmed from contemporary discussions around issues of immigration, border control, and free trade, and the inflammatory ways in which people sensationalize the problems without looking for viable solutions. The concept is rooted in the long history of places where frontiers meet, places like Hong Kong, Andorra, Baarle Hertog/Baarle Nassau, and Stanstead/ Derby Line. 


Courtesy of fr*ee

Courtesy of fr*ee

fr*ee explained in a press release: Economic, social, cultural and environmental sustainability are urban assets and organizing principles for the proposal’s design. Challenging “border situations” are likely to multiply across the world as populations grow, migration increases, and economies continue to globalize. Romero introduces an urban prototype, with a hexagonal plan, that might offer a new model for a rapidly developing world.


Courtesy of fr*ee

Courtesy of fr*ee

The first proposed city is situated on the cusp of New Mexico, Texas and Chihuahua. The research and ideas put into the concept design would be transferable to other binational cities, but in order to give physical form to these concepts, a specific city had to envisaged. 


Courtesy of fr*ee

Courtesy of fr*ee

This junction of states was seen as a highly fruitful area due to the completion of the new inland port of Santa Teresa, the I-10 highway connecting east and west coasts, and the 7 existing border crossings in the area. Each of these represent an extraordinary opportunity for logistics and transportation of products in the area, and combine to form the critical infrastructure needed for a plan such as this.


Courtesy of fr*ee

Courtesy of fr*ee

For more information, head over to the fr*ee website, and check out the video of Border City at the London Design Biennale below.  

  • Architects: fr*ee
  • Design Team: Fernando Romero, Sergio Rebelo, Unai Artetxe, Jessica Wang, Daniela Gallo, Ruoting Wang, Joao Urbano, Pedro Ramírez de Aguilar, Gaia Cella, Aleksandra Lukianova, Romain Thijsen, Luis Torres Lira, Yuri Jeong, Francisco Rocha, Rigel Davila, Qingyi Chen, Moss Palmer. David Forsyth, Filipe Jose Lacerda Neto, Osmin Josue Lopez Avalos, Dante Baldassin, Tracy Guzikowski, Gabriel Maese, Turku Colak, Yanni Wang, Yuan Liu, Yueming Zhao, Xiao Gu
  • Engineers: BuroHappold Engineering
  • Consultancy: Pentagram
  • Area: 290000000.0 sqm
  • Project Year: 2016
  • Photographs: Courtesy of fr*ee

News via fr*ee.

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Anya Hindmarch presents Spring Summer 2017 collection on amphitheatre catwalk



A giant illuminated disk hung above a set of circular steps to form the set for designer Anya Hindmarch’s collection during this season’s London Fashion Week (+ slideshow). (more…)

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💙 Sundown and island on 500px by Kristian Tuhkanen,…

💙 Sundown and island on 500px by Kristian Tuhkanen, Lahti,… http://ift.tt/1SLxqez

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Steven Holl Wins 2016 Daylight Award in Architecture


Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art. Image © Petri Virtanen

Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art. Image © Petri Virtanen

Steven Holl has been awarded the 2016 Daylight Award in Architecture, which honors architects “who have distinguished themselves by realizing architecture or creating urban environments that showcase a unique use of daylight, for the benefit of overall quality of life, its impact on human health, well-being and performance, and its value to society.” 


Copenhagen Gateway. Image © Stevn Holl Architects

Copenhagen Gateway. Image © Stevn Holl Architects

Organized by non-profit, private charitable foundations Villum Fonden, Velux Fonden, and Velux Stiftung, the award puts specific emphasis on the interrelation of theory and practice.


© Sifang Art Museum

© Sifang Art Museum

I am deeply honored to have been selected as the laureate for Daylight in Architecture, said Holl. Space is oblivion without light. A building speaks through the silence of perception orchestrated by light. Luminosity is as integral to its spatial experience as porosity is integral to urban experience.


Shenzhen Art Museum and Library. Image © Stevn Holl Architects

Shenzhen Art Museum and Library. Image © Stevn Holl Architects

Past recipients of the award include Jørn Utzon, Henning Larsen, and Peter Zumthor.

News via Steven Holl Architects. 

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“Sleeping in a dumpster more comfortable” than Zaha Hadid-designed hotel room says Moby



Musician Moby has hit out at architects “who think about stuff that can be photographed well, but who never actually plan on spending time in the spaces they create”. (more…)

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10 Moments When Being a Freelance Writer Sucks

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Rose is a Freelance Writer but frankly, it wasn’t all rosy from page one. In her lowest moments she sank deeper than a sub. She’d cry and sob. She even contemplated burning her old typewriter.

Tales like hers abound around, resonating with hundreds who nearly or eventually quit freelance writing out of frustration.

Today we explore 10 of those moments when being a freelance writer really, really sucks.

1. Coming Out

You just read Bamidele Onibalusi’s story and you’re thinking you can make a living writing like Carol Tice or making 6 figures like Gail Mercer MacKay! Feeling fired up, you drive to the Café to meet your loving fiancée and break the I’m-gonna-be-a-freelance-writer news. Somehow, it felt like an obituary announcement.

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See Also: How To Change Careers Without Losing Your Mind 

2. Warned you, didn’t we?

You hand in your resignation at work. Getting home, your fiancée hands you hers too and fast forward to where you’re at today — 100,000 miles from making your first 10 dollars two months after becoming a freelance writer, your pitches unreplied, savings depleted, bills mounting, motivation at sub-zero levels.

Your friend at your ex-organization bump into you at the street corner with that we-warned-you- didn’t-we look on their faces. And you remember her last words…

3. Writer’s Block

writers-block

Writers Block is not the choicest place to live in but every once in a while most of us stop by, some for a couple of minutes or hours, some for days and others for weeks on end without a shining spark of imagination. You try all the tricks in the book.

They all fall flat and you wonder where in space did your Muse go? Like Titanic after she hit the iceberg, you begin to sink into a sea of depression.

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See Also: How To Find Great Ideas For Writing A Story 

4. Aha, Content Mills

They evoke images of Pharaoh’s taskmasters holding whips eager to spread them all over bent Israeli backs. You ’ve been there, done that.

You’ve experienced writing for a quarter of peanuts until it drove you nuts! You know how it is to do all those hours of research, typing, editing, proofreading, and having to wait days to get paid and dealing with some rude, thieving clients . It felt like slavery and you felt like Kunta Kinte.

5. Your PC Crashes

computer-crash

As a writer, your PC is one of your biggest assets containing all your files and documents including client jobs at various stages of completion. It also gives you access to the internet for all your research and client communications. Then, it suddenly crashes one fateful morning and your 10TB back up hard drive is still unopened in its nice pack!

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6. You Forgot to Ctrl+S

You’ve written such a great piece. Even your ex admits it’s the bomb. The draft was awesome and now the finished work even better. It’s a Michelangeloic masterpiece!

You sit back, stare at the screen in self contentment and read your 3,000 word write up again and again. However, you forgot to connect your PC to backup power and your ageing device shuts down. Belatedly, you also remember your MS Word autosave function was turned off.

7. Very Negative Comments

You finish writing an article, spend 2 hours formatting it in the blog’s CMS, hit the publish button, and share it on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. And then here comes a flood of commenters who think you’re a fraud and attack you in the most vicious manner literally possible until you feel like breaking your pen and going to mend with your ex.

8. Copyright Infringement

You wrote a lovely post, sourced images randomly and forgot to attribute the owners or even check their copyright policy. They spot it, red flag it and send you a please-take-it-down email threatening legal action in 7 days.

After 14 days, you’re served with a court notice. You hurriedly check your inbox and there’s the email you somehow missed sitting and smiling in your Spam folder!

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And the blog’s policy says you’re responsible for whatever you post!

9. Delayed Payment

You’ve done a stellar job. Editors and blog subscribers love it.

It’s been shared 50,000 times, comments have been pouring in and they’ve been 99% positive. But, there’s a glitch.

It’s now 3 months and the Prince of Persia has delayed your check. Meanwhile your bills have been on time every time. Now you have to write the fifth please-pay-me reminder!

10. Adultery

It’s metaphorical adultery when you can’t give your loved ones all the time and attention they demand because you have to split it with clients and assignments. And they won’t let you take calls, or reply to your Whatsapp or Facebook chats either. You start feeling guilty because you’re seeing another lover called Freelance Writing!

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Sounds familiar right? What is YOUR being-a freelance-writer-sucks moment?

 

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