Thursday, June 11

ENFP Time Management Tips

Stop the Madness! Time Management Tips for ENFPs

1. Not every idea needs follow-through

2. Develop finite projects

3. Refresh your project management system

4. Keep a daily mini-list

5. Use micro-goals to get through mundane tasks

Once you recognize what’s happening, you can stop beating yourself up and find ways to cope. If you can’t delegate monotonous work, tackle it in bite-sized pieces. Write one sentence or five lines of code. Read three emails. Enter six transactions. Take short breaks and increase the amount of work you do in each burst. Once you get moving, momentum will keep you going forward.

6. Change your environment

7. Remove distractions

8. Use a binder for long-range planning

Point no. 5 is my fav.
Thank you!

Tuesday, June 9

read somewhere

Even when Jesus healed he said “Your faith healed you.” The emphasis was always empowerment.

When you create a harmonic internal realm, the external begins to harmonize around you. That is how you bring more peace and love to the world. This is true compassion. It starts within.

Monday, June 1

Rainbow

Of course, if one wants to be really pedantic, I guess we could say it is a constantly changing rainbow for each of us since the light of any given wavelength arriving at our location in those beautiful arcs is always coming from different droplets as they fall. Or, if you blink, you are now seeing a different rainbow.

On the other hand, the light source is the same - the Sun, the field of droplets is the same (without thinking about individual droplets), and all the angles are the same.

The geometry of reflection, however, is such that all the droplets that reflect the rainbow’s light toward you lie in a cone with your eyes at the tip.

Water droplets reflect sunlight (or any light) at an angle of between 40 and 42 degrees, depending on the wavelength.

Because of the sharp angle, you only see rainbows when the sun is (1) behind you and (2) low in the sky. When the sun is high, the light reflecting off the droplets passes over your head and you see nothing.

Now for a little creative visualization. The sun is low and behind you. All the sunbeams head in, strike the cloud of water droplets ahead of you and bounce back at an angle of 40 degrees.

Naturally the beams can bounce 40 degrees any which way — up, down, and sideways. But the only ones you see are the one that lie on a cone with a side-to-axis angle of 40 degrees and your eyes at the tip.

Don’t get it? OK, face a wall and extend your arm so it’s at 40 degree angle thereto. Now rotate the arm in a full circle, keeping the 40 degree angle to the wall. Your arm describes a cone, right?

If you think about it, you should be able to convince yourself that the only parts of the wall that are at exactly a 40 degree angle to your shoulder lie on that cone. Same with rainbows.

I said that water droplets reflect light at an angle of 40-42 degrees. Usually they do. But sometimes the light bounces around twice inside each water droplet and exits at an angle of around 51 degrees. So you’ll see a second rainbow above the main one with the colors reversed. It is fainter, but be kind. It is doing the best it can.

Articles:
Why are rainbows curved? Rainbow Formation