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A people pleaser no more

By , - Jun 27,2021 - Last updated at Jun 27,2021

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

Summer’s door can lead to fun outdoor opportunities that we all take pleasure in. But summer can also open a door that some of us would rather keep shut. You desperate dieters know what I’m talking about... .

Swimsuit season and summer clothes mean no sweaters are available to cover the bountiful layers on our bodies. I remember how I used to wear a cardigan on hot summer days and pretend I needed it because I was chilly when in reality, I was burning hot and only used it to cover my hips. I don’t know who I was fooling, but I felt more confident going out in public with an extra layer of protection. Feeling insecure about the way we look and feel can cause us to make some interesting modifications to feel better about ourselves.

You’ve all heard the phrase ‘You are what you eat’. Well, I’m here to tell you that God created us for more than that! Our purpose on earth has nothing to do with food, but shame convinces us otherwise. We are not what we eat; we are who God created us to be! It’s time to stop believing the things the world around us believes. When we feel so insecure about ourselves and care so much about what others say about us, we set ourselves up for major disappointments. There is no pleasing people; the world around us will always find fault in us, whatever our size. When people judge us by our outer shell, then the problem lies with them. When we learn to love the person’s heart, we’re on to something real and lasting, not temporary and fluctuating. 

But this love starts with us first. We must learn to love ourselves enough to be consistent by: 

 

•Being mindful of our inner thoughts, how we feel about ourselves and what we value the most

•Reprioritising our lives so that our priorities reflect our true values instead of filling our ‘To Do List’ with what other people want us to do

•Setting small attainable goals that we can be consistent with and keep ourselves accountable. Bigger goals are only met when we are consistent in achieving the collection of smaller doable ones

 

Allowing 

ourselves to fail

 

Failing is not the problem. It’s failing to get right back up after each failure that is. We learn more from our failures than from our successes. If we can learn from what doesn’t work, then that’s half the battle. After all, insanity is defined as doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting different results! 

It doesn’t have to be that complicated just because we have been desperate dieters for more years than we care to admit. May we learn to be consistent and not complacent. Kind, not judgmental. Strong, not overpowering. Steadfast, but not on autopilot.

As for that extra cover we’re tempted to wear, even during the hot summer months, let’s take cover instead in something more meaningful and more lasting. For me, it’s my faith. May we continually ask for His wisdom and guidance as we learn to manoeuvre through daily challenges and temptations in a world that is full of them.

Wishing you a healthy and happy summer ahead!

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

After COVID, could the next big killer be heatwaves?

By - Jun 26,2021 - Last updated at Jun 26,2021

Even if Paris Agreement temperature targets are met, hundreds of millions of city dwellers will likely be afflicted by at least 30 deadly heat days every year by 2080 (AFP photo)

PARIS — Searing, unrelenting heat scorches large swathes of the Earth, killing millions who have no means to escape. Shade is useless, and shallow bodies of water are warmer than the blood coursing through people’s veins.

This is a scene from a new sci-fi novel, but the suffocating horror it describes may be closer to science than fiction, according to a draft UN report that warns of dire consequences for billions if global warming continues unchecked.

Earlier climate models suggested it would take nearly another century of unabated carbon pollution to spawn heatwaves exceeding the absolute limit of human tolerance.

But updated projections warn of unprecedented killer heatwaves on the near horizon, according to a 4,000-page Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report, seen exclusively by AFP before its scheduled release in February 2022.

The chilling report by the UN’s climate science advisory panel paints a grim — and deadly — picture for a warming planet.

If the world warms by 1.5ºC — 0.4 degrees above today’s level — 14 per cent of the population will be exposed to severe heatwaves at least once every five years, “a significant increase in heatwave magnitude”, the report says. 

Going up half a degree would add another 1.7 billion people. 

Worst hit will be burgeoning megacities in the developing world that generate additional heat of their own, from Karachi to Kinshasa, Manila to Mumbai, Lagos to Manaus. 

It’s not just thermometer readings that make a difference — heat becomes more deadly when combined with high humidity. 

It is easier, in other words, to survive a high temperature day if the air is bone-dry than it is to survive a lower temperature day with very high humidity. 

That steam-bath mix has its own yardstick, known as wet-bulb temperature. 

Experts say that healthy human adults cannot survive if wet-bulb temperatures (TW) exceed 35ºC, even in the shade with an unlimited supply of drinking water. 

“When wet-bulb temperatures are extremely high, there is so much moisture in the air that sweating becomes ineffective at removing the body’s excess heat,” said Colin Raymond, lead author of a recent study on heatwaves in the Gulf. 

“At some point, perhaps after six or more hours, this will lead to organ failure and death in the absence of access to artificial cooling.”

 

Heat stroke, 

heart attacks

 

We’ve already seen the impact of deadly, humid heat at far lower thresholds, especially among the elderly and infirm. 

Two heatwaves in India and Pakistan that hit 30ºC TW in 2015 left more than 4,000 people dead. 

And the 2003 heatwave that killed more than 50,000 people in western Europe registered wet-bulb temperatures only in the high 20s. 

Blistering heatwaves across the northern hemisphere in 2019 — the second warmest year on record for the planet — also caused a large number of excess deaths, but wet-bulb data is still lacking. 

Research from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) reports just over 300,000 heat-related deaths worldwide from all causes in 2019.

Some 37 per cent of heat-related deaths — just over 100,000 — can be blamed on global warming, according to researchers led by Antonio Gasparrini at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. 

In half-a-dozen countries — Brazil, Peru, Colombia, the Philippines, Kuwait and Guatemala — the percentage was 60 per cent or more. 

Most of these deaths were probably caused by heat stroke, heart attacks and dehydration from heavy sweating, and many could likely have been prevented. 

 

Cities at risk

 

Dangerous spikes above 27ºC TW have already more than doubled since 1979, according to Raymond’s findings. 

His study predicts wet-bulb temperatures will “regularly exceed” 35ºC TW at some locations in the next several decades if the planet warms 2.5ºC above preindustrial levels.

Human activity has driven global temperatures up 1.1ºC so far.

The 2015 Paris Agreement calls for capping the increase at “well below” 2ºC, and 1.5ºC if possible.

Even if those targets are met, hundreds of millions of city dwellers in Sub-Saharan Africa, as well as south and southeast Asia, will likely be afflicted by at least 30 deadly heat days every year by 2080, the IPCC report says.

“In these regions, the population of cities is growing dramatically and the threat of deadly heat is looming,” said Steffen Lohrey, lead author of a study, still under peer review, cited in the report. 

His calculations, Lohrey added, do not even take into account the so-called urban heat island effect, which adds 1.5ºC on average during heatwaves compared to surrounding areas. 

Heat-absorbing tarmac and buildings, exhaust from air conditioning, and the sheer density of urban living all contribute to this increase in cities. 

 

Heatwave ‘hotspot’

 

Sub-Saharan Africa is especially vulnerable to lethal heatwaves, in large part because it is least prepared to cope with them.

“Both real-world observations and climate modelling show Sub-Saharan Africa as a hotspot for heatwave activity,” said Luke Harrington, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Oxford’s Environmental Change Institute. 

In central China and central Asia, meanwhile, “extreme wet-bulb temperatures are expected to approach and possibly exceed physiological thresholds for human adaptability”, the IPCC warns.

The Mediterranean is also vulnerable to deadly incursions of hot weather.

“In Europe, up to 200 million people will be at high risk of heat stress by mid-century if the world warms up to 2ºC until 2100,” the report says.

Crucial to mortality rates is the ability of the population to adapt, explains Jeff Stanaway, a researcher at IHME.

“There is a greater sensitivity to heat in western Europe than in North America,” he told AFP. 

“That’s because in North America everyone has air conditioning and well-insulated, modern buildings. It’s just a difference in infrastructure.” 

‘Cooling gap’

 

But as with so many climate change impacts, the effects of heatwaves are not felt evenly by all. 

In some developing countries, economic development is not keeping up with the cost of cooling the population, exposing a race between warming and the capacity to adapt to it.

One researcher has dubbed this the “global cooling gap”. 

A study of adaptation techniques in the Vietnamese capital Hanoi found that many people don’t use the air conditioners in their bedrooms because they cost too much to run. Some wrap themselves in wet sheets before they go to sleep instead.

Ultimately, high heat will destroy more lives indirectly rather than by reaching levels at which the body simply shuts down, the IPCC report suggests.

Higher temperatures will spread disease vectors, reduce crop yields and nutrient values, slash labour productivity and make outdoor manual labour a life-threatening activity. 

Experts say the worst impacts could be avoided if global warming is capped as close to 1.5ºC as possible, in line with the Paris Agreement. 

But even then, with temperatures rising twice the global average in many regions, some severe impacts are baked in.

“Today’s children will witness more days with extreme heat when manual labour outside is physiologically impossible,” the IPCC report warns.

 

'Traumatised' Britney Spears urges judge to end guardianship

By - Jun 24,2021 - Last updated at Jun 24,2021

#FreeBritney activists protest at Los Angeles Grand Park during a conservatorship hearing for Britney Spears in Los Angeles, California, on Wednesday (AFP photo by Rich Fury)

By Laurent Banguet
Agence France-Presse

LOS ANGELES — Britney Spears urged a judge in an emotional hearing Wednesday to end an "abusive" guardianship that gave her father control of her affairs in 2008.

"I just want my life back. It's been 13 years and it's enough," Spears said in the 20-minute address via videolink as diehard fans chanted their support outside the courtroom.

The 39-year-old star's finances and personal life have been largely managed by Jamie Spears since her highly public breakdown more than a decade ago, leading some fans to launch a "FreeBritney" online campaign in recent years.

In a speech where Spears barely stopped to catch her breath, the star said that, under the legal arrangement, she has been prevented from having a contraceptive implant removed, despite wanting more children.

The mother of two said it had left her "traumatised" and "depressed."

"I'm not happy. I can't sleep. I'm so angry. It's insane," she said, adding that she cries every day.

"I truly believe this conservatorship is abusive. I want changes, I deserve changes," Spears pleaded to Judge Brenda Penny.

The singer has rarely spoken directly about the guardianship but her lawyer Samuel Ingham said in April that Spears wanted to directly address the court, resulting in Wednesday's hearing.

Spears has long had a difficult relationship with her father.

Last year, she filed to remove him from the conservatorship and give sole power over her estate to a financial institution. Her court-appointed lawyer said she was "afraid" of her father.

'Too, too much!'

Devoted Spears fans have long scoured her social media accounts for hints about her well-being, and any sign that she may be eager to throw off the guardianship.

Confidential records published Tuesday by the New York Times said Spears told a court investigator that the conservatorship had "become an oppressive and controlling tool against her" as far back as 2016.

Spears reportedly said the guardianship system had "too much control... Too, too much!" and that she was prevented from making her own decisions on friendships, dating, spending and even the colour of her kitchen cabinets.

According to the Times report, Spears told the investigator that she wanted the conservatorship terminated as soon as possible, and that she was "sick of being taken advantage of."

Spears' revelation that the conservatorship is preventing her from removing a contraceptive IUD — despite her wanting to take authority of her own birth control medication in order to get pregnant — sparked further outrage from fans and reproductive rights groups online.

"We stand in solidarity with Britney and all women who face reproductive coercion. Your reproductive health is your own — and no one should make decisions about it for you. #FreeBritney," Planned Parenthood president Alexis McGill Johnson tweeted Wednesday.

Spears is currently responsible for footing the legal bills for both sides — including the hefty fees charged by the attorneys opposing her in the case.

'Embarrassed'

The controversy surrounding Spears' legal case exploded following the February release of the documentary "Framing Britney Spears," which chronicled her initial mental health struggle and her father's ensuing appointment as her guardian.

Spears said she was "embarrassed" by her portrayal in the documentary, in which fans say she is essentially being held prisoner and claim she has been sending coded pleas for help.

Following her 2006 divorce from Kevin Federline, and the loss of custody of her children the following year, Spears was snapped by paparazzi, barefoot and shaven-headed, at a gas station.

Under her father's guardianship, Spears swiftly returned to performing. She released three albums, appeared on various television shows and even took up a Las Vegas residency.

But in January 2019 she abruptly announced she was suspending her performances until further notice.

She said her father and associates regularly threaten her.

"If I don't do this, what they tell me to do, enslave me to do, they're gonna punish me," she said.

Spears said doctors forcefully put her on medication that made her feel "drunk" and that she was not even allowed to get changed in privacy or drive her own car.

Jamie Spears' lawyers say he has done an excellent job of managing his daughter's finances.

But a judge ruled in February that both Spears' father and wealth manager Bessemer Trust would oversee the pop star's finances, denying Jamie Spears' bid to keep sole power to delegate investments.

In a statement read in court, a lawyer for Jamie said he was "sorry to hear her in so much pain" and that he loved his daughter "very much."

‘Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard’ hits top of box office

By - Jun 23,2021 - Last updated at Jun 23,2021

LOS ANGELES — North American moviegoers again showed their love of action comedies this weekend as new release “The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard” shot to the top of the box office, taking in $11.4 million, industry watcher Exhibitor Relations reported.

Total takes remain pale compared to their pre-pandemic levels, but Hollywood watchers have taken heart in the progressive reopening of theatres and the lifting of capacity limits in many cities.

As a sequel to Lionsgate’s popular “The Hitman’s Bodyguard” from 2017 — and with Ryan Reynolds, Samuel L. Jackson and Salma Hayek reprising their leading roles — the new “Bodyguard” was expected to do well. But it will have to keep performing to make up for its $70 million production cost, Variety said.

Last week’s box office leader “A Quiet Place: Part II” — hovering at or near the top since its release four weeks ago — slipped slightly to second spot, taking in $9.1 million for the three-day weekend. The Paramount horror flick about ferocious unseen monsters stars Emily Blunt. Her husband John Krasinski directs.

In third was Sony’s family-friendly “Peter Rabbit 2: The Runaway”, at $6.1 million. The mixed live-action/animation features the voice of James Corden in the title role, with live performances by Rose Byrne, Domhnall Gleeson and David Oyelowo.

Fourth spot went to another horror movie, Warner Bros.’ “The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It”, at $5 million. Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga again star as paranormal investigators fighting demonic nastiness.

And in fifth was Disney’s family-friendly “Cruella”, at $4.8 million. Emma Stone stars as the puppy-persecuting title villain.

Rounding out the top 10 were “In the Heights” ($4.2 million), “Spirit Untamed” ($1.6 million), “12 Mighty Orphans” ($900,000), “The House Next Door: Meet the Blacks” ($600,000) and “Wrath of Man” ($460,000).

 

‘Doomsday’ climate tipping points have wiggle room

By - Jun 23,2021 - Last updated at Jun 23,2021

Photo courtesy of wasted.ie

By Marlowe Hood
Agence France-Presse

PARIS — Global warming thresholds that could tip massive ice sheets into irreversible melting or see the Amazon rainforest shrivel into savannah have “grace periods”, giving humanity more time to draw down planet-warming carbon emissions, researchers have calculated. 

More than a dozen tipping points triggered mainly by rising temperatures could unleash catastrophic changes in Earth’s climate system.

As the Paris Agreement goal of a 1.5ºC cap above pre-industrial levels slips out of reach, this is potentially very good news — although no reason to relax — scientists said.

Ice sheets atop Greenland and West Antarctic hold enough frozen water to lift oceans a dozen metres, drowning cities and redrawing the planet’s coastlines. 

Greenhouse gases escaping from Siberian permafrost could overwhelm already belaboured efforts to curb man-made carbon pollution.

Monsoon rains in South Asia, the polar ice cap, coral reef ecosystems, the jet stream, the Amazon basin — all are vulnerable to point-of-no-return transitions that would radically alter the world as we know it. 

Up to now, scientists have focused mostly on temperature thresholds and timing: How much warming will it take to trigger each tipping point?

‘Period of grace’

The threshold for the two ice sheets is probably below 2ºC, and may have already been passed, experts say. To melt the permafrost, however, it will likely take at least another degree or two of warming. 

But new research led by Paul Ritchie and Peter Cox from the School of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences at Exeter University asks a different question. 

Once a tipping point tripwire has been triggered, can we row back by lowering temperatures, whether by sucking CO2 out of the air or injecting a sunscreen into the stratosphere? 

“Our analysis shows that it is possible to overshoot tipping point thresholds without leading to an abrupt and permanent climate change — as long as the overshoot is for a short period of time,” Cox, senior author of a study published in Nature, told AFP. 

“There is a ‘period of grace’ once the threshold is crossed when it is still possible to avoid tipping.” 

In the study, Cox and colleagues looked at four parts of the climate system: Ice sheets, monsoons, the Amazon basin and the ocean conveyor belt of currents that drives cold and warm water across the global, known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation.

Ice sheets and ocean currents, they found through modelling, have slow-onset tipping points which unfold on a timescale of centuries. 

Dire climate shifts

This suggests that even if temperatures rise above the tipping point threshold and set in motion a profound change, there is still time to pull back from the cliff’s edge by lowering the global thermometer. 

“The slow timescale of some of the most worrying tipping points gives us a better chance of reversing global warming before we tip into a less favourable world,” Cox said.

But the same timing does not apply to Amazon forest dieback and disruption of the monsoon, which could flip into a new state within decades, the researchers found.

For the Amazon, that shift is also hastened by massive de-forestation. 

“The study shows that if temperatures overshoot the tipping points for too long, we may set in place irreversible changes in the climate system, such as dying of the Amazon rainforest,” commented William Collins, a professor of meteorology at the University of Reading.

Other scientists not involved in the research agreed with the findings but cautioned against complacency.

“This may offer a very tiny bit of wiggle room in our expectations of when such dire climate shifts might become permanent and extremely damaging as Earth continues to warm,” Grant Allen, a professor of atmospheric physics at the University of Manchester told the London-based Science Media Centre.

“But a brief delay to some of global warming’s more catastrophic consequences does not mean that it is any less dangerous now.”

‘Harlem of the South’ in Texas declared a heritage site

By - Jun 22,2021 - Last updated at Jun 22,2021

A historic Black neighbourhood in Houston, Texas designated a landmark just as the United States observes a new national holiday remembering the end of slavery (AFP photo)

HOUSTON — A Houston neighbourhood founded in the 19th century by former slaves has become the Texas city’s first heritage district, just as the United States marks a new national holiday commemorating slavery’s end.

This status for Freedmen’s Town highlights the rich history of a place that has been called the “Harlem of the South”, a reference to the New York district synonymous with Black American culture.

“I can think of no better community to designate as Houston’s first heritage district than Freedmen’s Town, and no better day than Juneteenth to share the good news,” Mayor Sylvester Turner, who is Black, said on Wednesday after the city approved the designation.

With little advance warning, President Joe Biden signed a bill this week making June 19 a national holiday for Juneteenth, when the last enslaved African Americans in 1865 learned that they were free.

It was on that day that Union Army general Gordon Granger informed African Americans that slavery was abolished in Texas, where president Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation of 1862 had yet to be enforced nearly three years later.

Freedmen’s Town rose up after that proclamation as hundreds of newly freed slaves left the Texas and Louisiana plantations and began a new life in Houston.

“They settled down on the Southern banks of the Buffalo Bayou. It was wooded and swampy fields nobody wanted and that they managed to make it livable,” Charonda Johnson, vice-president of the Freedmen’s Town Association, told AFP during a visit to the district.

 

A UNESCO 

site some day?

 

By the early 20th century, Freedmen’s Town was bustling. It boasted thousands of residents, more than 400 shops, restaurants as well as jazz and blues clubs. Gospel music rang out from its churches. 

It was then that it received the nickname “Harlem of the South”, the New York neighbourhood that was also growing at the time.

Freedmen Town’s pretty wooden houses stretched further and further, thanks to the skills of the carpenters and other African American workers who had built mansions for white land and slave owners.

Zion Escobar, executive director of the Houston Freedmen’s Town Conservancy, radiated excitement over what the heritage designation will mean for the work she started three years ago with the founding of her association.

Escobar, who grew up in the Houston area, listed the many projects afoot for Freedmen’s Town: fixing up houses and roads, building a visitors centre, creating an augmented reality app for people to get a better feel for what the neighbourhood used to be like, and getting Freedmen’s Town on the UNESCO list of world heritage sites.

Just in the small heart of the neighbourhood, there are some 15 points of interest — churches, homes, cemeteries and a street with bricks arrayed in patterns that paid tribute to religious symbols of the Yoruba people of west Africa. 

 

The ‘Emancipation Trail’

 

“The inhabitants had to petition to have the streets paved and some of them participated in the laying of the bricks in 1914,” said Escobar.

In 2014, at a time when people were less sensitive to this heritage, the city council voted to have those bricks removed, Escobar said. She shows a photo of an activist lying in the street to block that project.

In the end a judge let the bricks stay where they are. And today you can walk along that street and see the skyscrapers of downtown Houston not far away.

Some Black families still rent homes in Freedmen’s Town but over the decades most have moved away as gentrification caused housing prices to rise.

But, said Escobar, “with a big diversity of origins, the population that lives here now is really eager to put a light on this Black history.”

She said Freedmen’s Town will soon become one of the last phases of an “Emancipation Trail” project that will be managed by the federal government’s parks department.

The trail refers to the 80 kilometres that separate Houston and the city of Galveston, where the Juneteenth declaration was made in 1865. 

The project, now under study, “answers the question of what happened when this people had their freedom”, said Escobar.

“There are not very many substantial exhibitions about Black history done by the National Park Service,” she said. “That’s part of why they are here: To acknowledge this is part of our national story.”

 

Nature bites back: Animals push human boundaries

By - Jun 22,2021 - Last updated at Jun 22,2021

Animals and humans are increasingly coming into close contact, as when an elephant burst into a house in Thailand (AFP photo)

PARIS — The pandemic and climate change is testing as never before the delicate balance of human co-habitation with the natural world.

As an Australian prison is evacuated after it was overrun by the plague of mice ravaging the east of the country, we look at some of the most spectacular recent examples.

Australia mice plague 

Battling a massive plague of mice after the end of a three-year drought, eastern Australia is seeing crops destroyed, grain silos and barns infested and homes invaded by the rodent that was first introduced to the country by European colonialists.

Skin-crawling videos of writhing rodent masses have been shared around the world along with reports of patients bitten in hospital, destroyed machinery and swarms running across roads en masse.

In the latest twist on Tuesday, mice forced the evacuation of hundreds of inmates from a jail after they gnawed through ceiling panels and wiring.

Experts warn that climate change could make such chronic infestations more regular.

Indeed the Gippsland region in the southeast of the country has been covered in a sea of spider webs after an invasion of sheet web spiders fleeing flooding in early June.

China's herd 

A herd of elephants which has wandered off its reserve in Yunnan province in China has made headlines around the world, with 3,500 people in their path evacuated from their homes and hundreds of trucks deployed to keep them away from densely populated areas.

State broadcaster CCTV is carrying a 24-hour live feed of the migration which began late last year and which has so far cost farmers more than a million dollars in damage to crops.

Elephant in the room 

An elephant stuck his head through Kittichai Boodchan's kitchen wall in western Thailand on Sunday night to nose through his larder for a midnight snack.

Kittichai lives near a national park and this was not the first such visit. Last month the elephant knocked a hole through the wall, creating an opening reminiscent of a drive-through restaurant window.

Tough teen 

A California teenager became a social media sensation when a video of her shoving a large bear off her suburban garden wall to protect her dogs went viral earlier this month.

"The first thing I think to do is push the bear. And somehow it worked," said the 17-year-old, whose shove sent the bear falling off the low wall and retreating with her cubs.

Conservation controversy 

But there was a grim end to another ursine encounter in Slovakia last week when a brown bear killed a 57-year old man outside Bratislava.

The death sparked fury from hunters who claim that bear numbers have become too high because of a ban on hunting to save the species.

The outcry echos similar debates in other countries over bear conservation.

Wolves divide 

The protection of wolves is equally divisive, with an outcry in the US in March after licensed hunters in Wisconsin killed 216 wolves in 60 hours — a fifth of the state's entire population.

Donald Trump lifted federal protection for wolves, exposing them to trophy hunting in several states.

A similarly heated debate is raging in France where the wolves have flourished since 1992, after being previously hunted to extinction.

While their numbers are only a fraction of those found in Italy, Spain, Romania or Poland, farmers baulk at the ban on killing the predator across most of the EU.

Gatecrashing boars 

Wild boars also raise hackles across most of continental Europe, damaging well-manicured lawns and golf courses from the French Riviera to the Baltic, where they have become notorious for venturing into residential areas looking for food.

In one of the funnier incidents, a German wild boar stole a nudist's laptop last year by a lake in Berlin, with a video of the naked sunbather chasing after the animal clocking up millions of views.

Lockdown liberty 

Pandemic lockdowns have brought a new-found freedom to many wild animals, allowing them to wander into the heart of cities.

With half the world's population locked down last year, social media was full of images of wildlife reclaiming the streets, from herds of wild sika deer wandering through metro stations in Japan to packs of jackals congregating in the centre of Tel Aviv in Israel.

Volkswagen Teramont 2.0 TSI: Spacious, statuesque SUV

By - Jun 21,2021 - Last updated at Jun 21,2021

Photos courtesy of Volkswagen

A dedicated seven-seat SUV rather than one that has been stretched to accommodate a third row, the Volkswagen Teramont is a hugely practical family vehicle with semi-premium brand cache and a more accessible price tag than other German SUVs of its size, including its own Touareg stable mate.

A replacement for the now more advanced, up-market and pricier Touareg in some markets including the US — where it wears the Atlas nameplate — and unavailable in others, the Teramont is sold alongside the Touareg in Middle East markets.

 

Efficient yet effective

A departure from the Touareg’s longitudinal layout, the Teramont is built on Volkswagen’s highly versatile MQB transverse engine-oriented architecture to make it more affordable. The transverse platform also delivers better cabin space to also make the Teramont an effective replacement for the US market’s Volkswagen Routan people carrier. Offered with a choice of turbocharged four-cylinder or naturally-aspirated V6 engines and built at Volkswagen’s US and Chinese plants, the Teramont is sold in Jordan with the former, more efficient but similarly effective of the two options.

The production interpretation of the 2013 Volkswagen CrossBlue concept, the Teramont first arrived as a 2018 model, and is chunky and chiselled yet conservative and uncomplicated in its design, with muscularly squared wheel-arches, black lower cladding, defined character lines and a level waistline finished off with an upward C-pillar kink. A strong, statuesque and well-proportioned SUV with a distinct air of assertiveness and clean uncomplicated lines, the Teramont’s dominant fascia features squared-off deep-set headlight and a twin-slat grille filling the space between, while the rear features high-set lights and integrated dual exhaust ports.

Confident delivery

Powered by a 2-litre turbocharged direct injection 4-cylinder engine sitting transversely under its muscularly ridged bonnet, the Teramont develops 217BHP at 4,400-6,200rpm and a deep reservoir of 258lb/ft torque available throughout a broad 1,500-4,400rpm band in 2.0TSI guise as available in Jordan. Weighing in at 2,060kg and 45kg less than the V6 version, the turbo 2-litre version delivers comparable performance to the V6, and is even quoted with an 0-3-second 0-100km/h acceleration advantage at 8.6-seconds, and the same 190km/h top speed, according to some Volkswagen literature.

More efficient with moderate in-class 9.4l/100km fuel consumption, the Teramont 2.0TSI may not have the V6’s same seamlessly progressive power delivery, response from idling or headline power as the V6. However, in real world driving, it is responsive from standstill, with negligible turbo lag, while a much wider mid-range torque band delivers more flexibility despite giving away 8lb/ft at peak. Quick on its feet, responsive and muscular on the road, the 2.0TSI’s slick shifting 8-speed automatic gearbox meanwhile features a broad ratio range for performance and refinement.

 

Controlled and comfortable

Maneuverable and easy to drive for its size, the Teramont’s MacPherson strut front and multilink rear suspension deliver good ride comfort and highway stability. Reassuringly settled and refined on highway, the Teramont is well-suited for long distance cruising. Biased more for comfort than handling, and especially with taller, more compliant entry-level S spec 245/60R18 tyres, the Teramont was supple and better-soaked lumps and bumps during test drive in Jordan. That said, body roll is well controlled through corners for such a tall and heavy vehicle.

Smooth riding and settled, the Teramont has good vertical and lateral control for its class, and while clearly no sports SUV, it is nevertheless quite tidy into corners and reassuringly grippy throughout. The Teramont’s electric assisted steering is light but direct, quick and accurate, if not particularly textured or nuanced — and is user-friendly and makes it easy to manoeuvre despite its high bonnet line. Though large, the Teramont is easy to park and benefits from a 12.4-metre turning circle, factory reversing camera and dealer-fitted parking sensors in S trim specification.

 

Classy cabin

Driving its front wheels under normal conditions, the Teramont’s 4Motion all-wheel-drive can transfer 50 per cent power rearward when additional traction is necessary. A more road-oriented SUV big on space, comfort and refinement, the Teramont nevertheless features generous 203mm ground clearance and decent 20.4° approach, 22.4° departure and 17.5° break-over angles for competent off-road driving. Additionally, it features four driving modes that remap steering, accelerator, gearbox, adaptive cruise control, hill descent and hill start functions to optimise driving characteristics for on-road, off-road, and snow conditions.

Well-packaged with tall roofline, long wheelbase and unibody construction, the Teramont is a somewhat larger mid-size SUV, with palatial cabin space, including terrific mid-row head and leg room for tall and larger occupants. Third row seating is meanwhile quite useable and boot space is generous at a 583-litre minimum and expands to a van-like 2,741-litre maximum. Well-equipped if not over-equipped in S guise, the Teramont’s airy cabin provides a well-adjustable and comfortable driving position, and features quality materials, user-friendly layouts and clean, classy and un-fussed business-like styling.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

Engine: 2-litre, turbocharged transverse 4-cylinders

Bore x stroke: 82.5 x 92.8mm

Compression ratio: 9.6:1

Valve-train: 16-valve, DOHC, direct injection

Gearbox: 8-speed automatic, four-wheel-drive

Ratios: 1st 5.59; 2nd 3.14; 3rd 1.95; 4th 1.43; 5th 1.21; 6th 1.1; 7th 0.81; 8th 0.67

Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 217 (220) [162] @4,400-6,200rpm

Specific power: 109.3BHP/litre

Power-to-weight: 105.3BHP/tonne

Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 258 (350) @1,500-4,400rpm

Specific torque: 176.4Nm/litre

Torque-to-weight: 169.9Nm/tonne

0-100km/h: 8.9-seconds

Top speed: 190km/h

Fuel consumption, combined: 9.4-litres/100km

CO2 emissions, combined: 221g/km

Fuel capacity: 70-litres

Length: 5,036mm

Width: 1,989mm

Height: 1,769mm

Wheelbase: 2,979mm

Track, F/R: 1,708/1723mm

Ground clearance: 203mm

Approach / departure angles / break-over: 20.4° / 22.4° / 17.5° 

Aerodynamic drag co-efficient: 0.34

Headroom, F/M/R: 1,048/1,027/972mm

Legroom, F/M/R: 1,055/955/856mm

Shoulder room, F/M/R: 1,563/1,544/1,395mm

Luggage volume, behind 3rd / 2nd / 1st row: 583-/

1,571-/2,741-litres

Kerb weight: 2,060kg 

Payload: 685kg

Steering: Electric-assisted rack & pinion

Lock-to-lock: 2.76-turns

Steering ratio: 16.3:1

Turning Circle: 12.4-metres

Suspension: MacPherson struts, anti-roll bar / multilink

Brakes: Ventilated discs

Tyres: 245/60R18

Price, on-the-road, no insurance, from: JD41,900 (2019 model year)

 

Summer brain drain

By , - Jun 20,2021 - Last updated at Jun 20,2021

Photo courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

By Dina Halaseh
Educational Psychologist

 

Over the summer break, we witness a combination of boredom, activities and fun times. It changes our little ones and in many cases for the best. Nevertheless, we still need to be careful of the “summer brain drain”.

During the school year, students are regularly introduced to essential skills that are reinforced daily. Summer is entirely different. Students spend around three months with as little work as possible. Many don’t even hold a pen or pencil throughout their vacation.

Of course, the much-needed break offers students a respite from schoolwork and a tough year of distance learning due to the pandemic. However, being away from school, now more than ever, has an impact on your child’s mental agility.

The learning gap

 

Even before COVID-19, we knew that children lose about three months’ worth of learning during their break, according to a study by Dr Harris Cooper. The negative impact is especially noticeable regarding maths, but spelling and reading are close behind. 

In many schools, children do not get the chance to revise the material of previous years. In some cases, this results in a huge learning gap for students. Each summer, the gap gets bigger and a child drops farther and farther behind academically, leading to many children struggling to catch up with their reading and maths afterward. 

 

The socio-economic gap

 

Unfortunately, this gap is proven to be greater among students of low-income families, those who cannot afford to send their children to camps, vacations or educational experiences. Higher-income students have slight gains after their summer break as they are able to afford useful and advantageous activities.

 

Distance learning

 

Many schools in Jordan have taken admirable steps to try to keep students learning throughout school closure. Digital learning has ensured that students still engage academically from day to day. But online learning isn’t a one-to-one replacement for an entire school day. This means that no child can afford to spend summer without engaging the brain. The brain responds to how we use it; the more we use it, the more we train it. This also means when we stop using it, it somehow deteriorates.

Tips for combating summer brain drain

 

The brain adapts to the amount and way it is used as well as to the environment. So, an environment with rich mental stimulation and lower stress is much better for the brain. Here’s how you can ensure that the environment is helping your child’s brain beat the summer brain drain:

Exercise boosts brainpower so make sure it is a part of your child’s everyday routine

Sleep boosts brain development. Many children and teens stay up late during summer break since they don’t have to wake up early. Make sure, though, that they get the right amount of sleep. If you sleep well, you think well!

Healthy eating is linked to better brainpower. Your child needs a balanced diet and everything in moderation. You can ensure that no vitamins or supplements are lacking and, if so, provide necessary adjustments according to your healthcare provider

Screen time has a detrimental effect on the brain. Play is essential to building fine and gross motor skills as well as problem-solving skills. So let your child get bored and discover other ways of having fun — off the screen. Encourage unstructured play that embraces creativity

Chronic stress affects memory and many other brain functions, like mood and anxiety. We may lead stressful lives but our brains shouldn’t. Children, especially, lack the ability to deal with stress. Ask for help if your child is struggling and try to ensure not to overwhelm them with too many activities. Try including yoga, mindfulness activities and being present in their daily lives 

 

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

As Cyberpunk reboots, can unloved games win an extra life?

By - Jun 19,2021 - Last updated at Jun 19,2021

Photo courtesy of cyberpunk.net

BRUSSELS — Retro-futurist video game Cyberpunk 2077 will be back in the Playstation store on Monday after a disastrous launch marred by bugs forced a 184-day time-out.

But can a blockbuster game recover from the reputational hit of a failed roll-out? Sometimes, as other titles have shown, one can.

“Redemption is possible,” said Yohan Bensemhoun, game tester for jeuxvideo.com. “But it’s risky. Fail twice and you’re done.”

CD Projekt’s dark future roleplaying title had been hotly anticipated after the studio’s work on the groundbreaking The Witcher III, but gamers were disappointed when the game first appeared and an online storm damaged confidence.

Some games — even some studios — go under after such a botched start, but when the hopefully revamped Cyberpunk 2077 goes back on sale the developers will be hoping they emulate the revival of games like “No Man’s Sky”.

When that game came out in mid-2016, under the banner of UK studio Hello Games, the epic space explorer was billed as a revolution, set in an almost infinite universe featuring planets boasting unique ecosystems.

“It’s up there, yes, as one of the most exciting game I’ve ever awaited,” said 31-year-old British gamer Matthew Winter.

The resulting game, however, fell short as repetitive and bug-ridden. A social media furore erupted among the vocal gaming community.

“I was very disappointed,” admitted Winter. “I blame them for lying but I blame myself for allowing myself for being as hyped as I was.”

Many player demanded refunds, but five years later No Man’s Sky has not only survived but — after a series of free downloadable fixes and improvements — it has become a critical success and something of a classic.

Reinvention and constant updates are even more important in the world of the MMORPG — or massively-multiplayer online role-playing game — which relies on a loyal subscriber base to maintain longer-term revenue.

 

Real world money

 

In 2010, Japanese studio Square Enix’s “Final Fantasy XIV” — as the number implies — inherited fans from a popular long-running series, only to disappoint them at first with a lack of varied content within the players’ world.

The first version was taken down and a relaunched, reworked virtual world returned in 2013. Bit by bit the community was restored, and by the middle of last year 20 million players were wandering its vast playable space. 

As journalist Daniel Andreyev explained, the huge user base becomes not only the strength of a game and the source of its profits, but also a powerful incentive not to just abandon a struggling title but to rework it over time to iron out problems. 

Sometimes, it’s not a technical failure that sinks a game, but a perceived betrayal.

In 2017, US publisher Electronic Arts brought out “Star Wars: Battlefront II”, a title that could rely on the goodwill of fans of both the iconic space opera franchise and a series of popular and accomplished battle games.

The problem was in the way players progressed in the game, with their digital avatars gaining prowess through “loot boxes”: caches of virtual weapons and equipment to help them overcome increasingly dangerous foes.

These boxes could be acquired through spending time in the game at the frontline — or paying real-world money to unlock them.

This wasn’t a new concept, but it was not popular with fans. The Force was not with EA, and after months of online abuse the company dropped the in-game commerce and attempted to win back customers by adding new, fan-friendly Star Wars content like classic characters and locations. 

“We got it wrong,” former EA executive Patrick Soderlund told The Verge in 2018. “I’d be lying to you if I said that what’s happened with Battlefront and what’s happened with everything surrounding loot boxes and these things haven’t had an effect on EA as a company and an effect on us as management.”

 

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