domingo, 19 de enero de 2014
miércoles, 15 de enero de 2014
Páginas para descargar ebooks en inglés
Los primeros sitios a los que debemos irnos es a páginas
donde se puedan bajar libros legales (con derechos de autor expirados) y que
sean de fiar. Estas son algunas muy útiles:
1. Archive.org: es una colección inmensa de contenidos
gratuitos, entre otras cosas, libros. Hay miles y miles de títulos para
descargar. Usa el buscador de arriba y pon el nombre que más te apetezca.
2. Openlibrary: como ves hay tropecientos títulos. Una
ventaja que tiene es que si te registras puedes hacer listas con tus títulos o
autores favoritos.
3. Bookshouldbefree.com: tiene unos 3000 títulos, pero lo
importante es que incluye el audio. Muy importante si aún no te aclaras bien
con la pronunciación en inglés, porque leer sin saber pronunciar te puede
producir malos hábitos.
4. Project Gutenberg: un proyecto sin afán lucrativo que nos
permite descargar alrededor de 42.000 títulos en epub, versión para Kindle y
también leer directamente en html. Si te animas, también te dejan colaborar
grabando la lectura de un ebook.
5. Justfreebooks.info: esto en realidad es un buscador en la
red. Busca en páginas de bibliotecas y otros sitios que te permitan acceder
online. Un recurso muy útil si buscas algo muy concreto. También vale para
otros idiomas.
6. Free-eBooks.net: tiene una inmensa variedad, tanto de
ficción como no ficción. Y lo mejor de todo: puedes encontrar libros académicos
de temas interesantes en inglés.
7. Qué de libros: esta página la usamos más para libros en
español, pero también tiene una sección de literatura en inglés con una gran
variedad.
miércoles, 8 de enero de 2014
Too Busy For Yoga?
THE positive effects of yoga on the mind, body and spirit have been well documented, but sometimes finding the time and energy to actually do it is a little more challenging. We asked renowned yogi, Eoin Finn, for his advice on incorporating yoga into a busy lifestyle.
It can be hard to make time for yoga - what would your advice be to people who feel that they're just too busy?
1. Motivate yourself by knowing that you will be more clear, focused and happy as a result, even when you are busiest. Yoga is your ultimate return on investment.
2. Aim for 15 to 30 minutes of yoga. Taking 30 minutes to get to a yoga studio for a 90-minute class seems like a lot of time to take out but it is amazing what a few sun salutations, two standing poses, two forward folds and a twist followed by three minutes of meditation can do.
3. Swap time on the internet for the "inner net"! By cutting out 10 to 15 minutes of social media, texting or even sending two emails, you will make this 15 minutes available for bliss.
What is the best way to get into the right frame of mind for yoga?
You have to start with atmosphere - light a candle, find a great view out of your window, find something to create a more zen space. It will help. Also, do anything that makes it easier like putting on music you enjoy - down-tempo preferably.
Start with "breath appreciation" - most yoga instructors say deep breathing, which is what we are doing, but I like to think of it enjoying breath opening up tight places in your body. Where you feel tight, allow the breath to penetrate those places. My mantra is to "replace tightness with lightness".
Are there any specific exercises you'd recommend to begin the day with?
Three sun salutations taking three minutes, triangle and revolve triangle for one minute each on both legs, crow pose to get the heat up, a seated forward fold for one minute and spinal twists, each side for one minute. End with two minutes of breathing which will get you in a clear state of mind and an open heart to focus on what you want to manifest today. 15 minutes total investment - the return is massive.
Your new DVD, Earth Body Yoga, focuses upon the effect of nature on our wellbeing.
My life's work is about trying to answer what exactly happens when we get quiet and feel the energy of nature. Ideally we would all be able to take the time to stand alone on a mountain top every day, feeling how small we really are and experiencing the intense beauty that surrounds us. In reality, we live in cities and we are busy, but we can bring this consciousness into the yoga practice. For example, when we really breathe in with full appreciation of the plants and trees around us providing this air, not only does our body feel looser but we blur the line between where we end and where nature begins. The Earth Body Yoga DVD and iTunes download is turning a great physical yoga into a celebration of our joyful connection to nature.
What small changes do you think people could make this year to bring about a big difference to their wellbeing?
Gratitude. It's the fastest way to bring about our healthiest state of mind. It turns striving into contentment, competition into compassion and complaints into celebrations of miracles. This has a radical effect on our body systems; we heal faster, we have more energy and we connect with our joy.
What made you fall in love with yoga?
Unlike other forms of exercise, nothing gave me the experience of being relaxed and present when I was finished the way that yoga did. Even though the workout was intense, it always ended with relaxation. What I found was that in this place I didn't have to pursue happiness anymore, I could just slow down and let it catch up.
Vogue UK
sábado, 4 de enero de 2014
Recursos para practicar tu inglés
En mi primera entrada del año quería recomendaros un sitio web muy útil para estudiar y practicar inglés con cantidad de recursos.
Aquí encontraréis quizzes, word games, word puzzles, proverbs, slang expressions, anagrams, random-sentence generators y otros recursos muy útiles.
http://www.manythings.org/
lunes, 30 de diciembre de 2013
I wish everybody a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!!!
Bruce Springsteen - Blue Christmas - Song from 'The Promise'
domingo, 24 de noviembre de 2013
Tony Hawk on Following Your Passion
'Follow your passion' is Tony Hawk's unspoken motto, but the entrepreneur and skateboard icon also realized that it takes more than that to find success.
In this 'Trep Talk Extra, Hawk shares insight on what following a passion really meant to him when it came to starting a business.
Tony Hawk's adventure sports empire includes skateboard company Birdhouse Projects, the Hawk Clothing line, a wildly popular video game series, and his production company 900 Films that teamed with YouTube this year to launch the Ride Channel. He has also donated more than $4 million to nearly 500 skatepark projects throughout the country through the Tony Hawk Foundation.
Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/video/223509#ixzz2lZG8XpVt
jueves, 21 de noviembre de 2013
Johnson: Don't fear the Tweeter
PUBLIC discussions about language often include worried questions about the role of technology on "kids these days". After observing the rampant rise of texting, e-chatting and whatnot, the questioner will then wonder whether the youths of today are forgetting how to write properly.
Johnson has seen a lot of moral panic around this concern, but little hard evidence. This is because most people have an innate sense of occasion with language. Just as you would not use the word "ain't" in a job interview, most pupils know not to write about Hamlet's "2B or not 2B" soliloquy in term papers. Johnson suspects that, once again, the kids are going to be all right.
But this is not to say that technology isn't changing the language. One of the most obvious ways is of course the presence of new vocabulary. (Nobody needed to say "e-mail" 30 years ago or "tweet" ten years ago.) Another change is the proliferation of acronyms. These are nothing new, but chat-speak has lead to a proliferation of LOL, WTF, BRB, G2G and so on. Indeed they are being coined and spread faster than ever before.
Such acronyms rise so fast that they can cause confusion. "LOL" originally meant "laughing out loud", but now it merely conveys a quick, world-weary smirk. Acronyms are also making the jump to speech. Sarah Palin, briefly an American political celebrity, used "WTF" on television. This also helps illustrate the acronym's subtle change in meaning, as Ms Palin, a family-values conservative, would never have said "what the fuck" on the air.
But this is hardly the debasement of the language. When words and phrases mutate, they do so in order to fill some niche that needs filling. Often, that change involves taking a formerly powerful word or phrase ("awesome", "oh my god", "what the fuck") and turning it into a wry comment ("If you could stop tapping your foot, that would be awesome"; "My boss was in a weird mood all morning and I was like WTF?" "OMG this cheesecake is amazing.") This is why people actually speak "OMG" and "LOL" out loud, though they are no shorter than the phrases they replace. ("WTF" takes even longer to say than "what the fuck".) As organisms adapt to ecological niches, so do new bits of language.
What are the long-term effects of all this? We might see language littered with ever more phrases born of keyboard brevity. Another intriguing possibility involves the rise and spread of speech-to-text technology. One quirk of these systems is that they require speakers to enunciate punctuation and other typographical manoeuvres. (Eg: "Are you coming tonight question mark; New paragraph on another point, I'd like to mention that...") As speech recognition software improves, we might go from language designed for a tiny keyboards entering our speech (people speaking "OMG" out loud), to language designed for speech recognition software entering our speech (people speaking "new paragraph" out loud to signal a change in topic). Such spoken punctuation would probably find the same special niche function as "WTF" and "LOL" have today. "Wow, I can't wait to read your screenplay exclamation point" would mean something quite different from "Wow, I can't wait to read your screenplay!"—namely, semi-ironic detachment.
Long-term language change is inevitable. People need to convey a wide range of emotions, and they will always find the words to do so, even if formerly powerful words ("awesome") and phrases ("oh my God") are debased. Technology may speed up this process (in ways that can be unsettling to some), but it also allows people (and not just the young) to be inventive and experimental, perhaps more than ever before. Only dead languages never change.
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