![]() ![]() ![]() Joe offers nothing less than a program for stepping outside our physical reality and into a new world. In these pages, you'll explore: - How to free yourself from the past by reconditioning your body to a new mind - How changing your frequency allows you to create reality in the "generous present moment" - The secret science of the pineal gland and its role in accessing mystical realms of reality - How to shift your awareness beyond the limited, predictable material world and move into the quantum field of infinite possibilities - And much more Using tools and practices ranging from state-of-the-art brain imaging to exercises such as a walking meditation, Dr. Joe, author of the New York Times bestseller You Are the Placebo as well as Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself and Evolve Your Brain, draws on up-to-the-minute research in neuroscience, epigenetics, and quantum physics to show how this kind of transformation takes place and what it can mean for our lives. Joe Dispenza offers in this revolutionary book: a body of knowledge and a set of tools that allow ordinary people-people just like you-to reach extraordinary states of being. ![]() and transform your very biology to enable profound healing? This is what Dr. change your brain chemistry to access transcendent levels of awareness. What would it mean to become supernatural? What if you could tune in to frequencies beyond our material world. ![]()
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![]() ![]() ![]() Eventually, Pecola does acquire, or believes she acquires, blue eyes. She knows what she’d find there: judgment of her blackness, her femaleness, the deforming language that has distorted the reflection of her face. Pecola feels, or the world has made her feel, that if she had blue eyes she would, at last, be free-free from her unforgivable blackness, from what her community labelled ugliness long before she could look in a mirror and determine for herself who and what she was. The kind of blue eyes that she imagines lighting up the face of the girl on the wrapper of her favorite candies, Mary Janes. The kind of blue eyes Pecola has seen in pictures of the movie star Shirley Temple. And the dream is this: that someone-God, perhaps-will grant her the gift of blue eyes. Her only escape from the emotional abuse that her family and her classmates heap on her is to dream. ![]() When we meet Pecola, she is eleven years old but already ancient with sorrow. Like all the principal characters in “The Bluest Eye,” Pecola lives in Lorain, Ohio, where Morrison, who died last August, was born in 1931. Spectacular even alongside other early novels bathed in the blood of gothic dread-William Faulkner’s “As I Lay Dying” (1930), say, or Flannery O’Connor’s “Wise Blood” or Ralph Ellison’s “Invisible Man” (both published in 1952)-Morrison’s book cut a new path through the American literary landscape by placing young black girls at the center of the story. ![]() ![]() ![]() After defining a couple of words as a class, I will give students the opportunity to try it on their own worksheet. We will talk about how to use the text, illustration, or another resource to define it. I will revisit pages with the vocabulary word, reread the sentence with the word, then model how to figure out the meaning. I pulled out my favorite vocabulary activity again for this lesson. “Bear Snores On” is packed full of rich Tier II vocabulary words that merit time and attention. The next day really wants to dive into vocabulary. ![]() ![]() We will complete a cut and paste to sequence the “who” and “what” in the story. I want to make sure my students understand the gist and basic plot of this story. The first day I will ask text dependent questions to target key ideas and details. I couldn’t resist purchasing Melonheadz adorable graphics for these read-aloud activities. I chose “Bear Snores On” for January because it is the perfect fictional story to compliment our hibernation unit of study. I enjoy noticing Wilson’s ingenious craft and new details as much as my students. I can’t resist any of the Bear series by Karma Wilson. ![]() Bear Snores On Interactive Read-Aloud for Kindergarten and 1st Grade ![]() |