Not exact matches
Peace and Ramadan Kareem to all Muslim Brothers and Sisters... Inshallah fasting from Monday Dawn to SunSet... Just wonder in Christians or non Religious have tried fasting as Muslims do... am sure with time they will adopt it as a system for the health benefits it holds health and body... it is told it helps the body to discharge and burn out the poisonous chemicals from our bodies other
than controlling weights... Some say they can not because of smoking other for water or
food... but other
than that is controlling anger or bad mood of the empty stomach, controlling one's tongue from hurting any one, to control eyes from staring at desire... Above all those to a Muslim he is to Maintain Prayers and Quran Reciting which of course beside it being a spiritual matter it is meant the body exercise by the up's and down's of prayers... as well as training of tongue & lungs by the Quran Recitation... these beside Tasbih «
Praise of Glorify» helps to control one's breathing..
I've known Jesus for as long as I've known my name, and still I use other people like capital to advance my own interest, still I gossip to make myself feel important, still I curse my brothers and sisters in one breath and sing
praise songs in the next, still I sit in church with arms folded and cynicism coursing through my bloodstream, still I talk a big game about caring for the poor without doing much to change my own habits, still I indulge in
food I'm not hungry for and jewelry I don't need, still I obsess over what people say about me on the internet, still I forget my own privilege, still I talk more
than I listen and complain more
than I thank, still I commit acts of evil, still I make a great commenter on Christianity and a lousy practitioner of it.
The scans revealed that when
praised, 13 of the dogs showed equal or greater levels of brain activity in the region that controls decision - making and signals rewards
than when they received
food, the scientists will report in an upcoming issue of Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience.
A new study suggests that most dogs respond more positively to
praise than to
food.
Quick to learn and usually eager to please (though he definitely has his independent moments and must be taught who is in charge), he responds well to obedience training that utilizes
food and
praise more
than jerking around.
A bit stubborn and easily distracted, but also very sensitive, the English Pointer responds well to patient obedience training that includes
food rewards and
praise rather
than jerking around.
They have been selectively bred through generations to pay attention to people, and MRI scans show that dog brains respond to
praise from their owners just as strongly as they do to
food (and for some dogs,
praise is an even more effective incentive
than food).
Motivational training methods — those that use
food,
praise, and play to reward the dog for getting it right, rather
than punishing him for getting it wrong — is the best way to persuade them that they want to do what you ask.