Frédéric Chatillon

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Frédéric Chatillon

Frédéric Chatillon

@fredchatillon

Cacophobe extrême.

Paris/Rome/Moscou Katılım Kasım 2011
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Frédéric Chatillon
Frédéric Chatillon@fredchatillon·
Je suis un professionnel de la communication. Je ne fais plus de politique depuis bien longtemps.
Paris, France 🇫🇷 Français
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Hamada 🇵🇸🇵🇸
Hamada 🇵🇸🇵🇸@AHMED_ABUHAMAD_·
جنود إسرائيليون يلتقطون صورة تذكارية مع طفلة فلسطينية مختطفة ! الصورة المنتشرة كانت وجوه الجنود مغطاة، لكن أحد الأشخاص استطاع الوصول إلى الصورة الأصلية . أفضحوهم !
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GDams
GDams@Gdams70·
« L’exigence est une preuve d’amour. » 🎯 Refuser de corriger les fautes d’un enfant sous couvert de "bienveillance", ce n’est pas l'aimer inconditionnellement. C'est le mépriser. Le diagnostic est implacable : Fin de la verticalité : L'autorité bienveillante est naturellement asymétrique. Faux égalitarisme : Gommer la différence de générations nuit au développement. Démission éducative : Féliciter la médiocrité (ex: "3 mots, 5 fautes, c'est génial") n'est pas un service à rendre. ❤️Aimer un enfant, c'est lui dire : « On va recommencer ensemble pour que tu fasses encore mieux. » Un enfant s'épanouit quand on croit assez en lui pour être exigeant. Tirons-les vers le haut ! 🚀📚@dupontmarieest1 #Education #Parentalite #Ecole #Exigence
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Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Your brain has a circuit that doesn't know you live in a city. Its only job is to monitor whether birds are still singing. When they stop, something dangerous is nearby. When they continue, the coast is clear. This wiring predates primates. These kids are being sedated by the oldest safety signal in the mammalian nervous system. The Max Planck Institute tested this in 2022 with 295 participants. Six minutes of birdsong reduced anxiety and paranoia with medium effect sizes. Six minutes of traffic noise increased depression by the same margin. The effect worked on people who had never left dense urban environments. Their bodies responded to a signal their conscious minds had never learned. King's College London ran a larger study. 1,292 participants, real-time mood tracking through a phone app, 26,856 assessments over three years. Hearing or seeing birds improved mental wellbeing for up to eight hours afterward. The effect held for people diagnosed with depression. Trees, plants, and waterways didn't explain it. The birds themselves were the variable. Now here's where Italy connects to Finland. 95% of parents in the Finnish city of Oulu let their babies nap outside starting at two weeks old. A 2008 study confirmed the children took longer, deeper naps outdoors. Parents reported letting them sleep in temperatures as low as -15°C. 66% said their babies were more active afterward compared to indoor naps. The practice started as a public health initiative from Nordic maternity clinics in the early 1900s and became cultural infrastructure. The Italian kindergarten in this video is running the same program the Nordic countries have been running for a century. Outdoor naps, natural soundscapes, no white noise machines, no blackout curtains. Meanwhile, American kindergartens have been eliminating nap time entirely to squeeze in more instruction. A UMass study showed that children who skipped naps forgot 12% of what they learned that morning. The nap itself was the learning. The irony is that the countries spending the least on sleep technology for children are producing the best sleep outcomes. No sound machines. No apps. Just birds.
Science girl@sciencegirl

Children in a kindergarten in Italy napping to the sound of birds singing.

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Inevitable West
Inevitable West@Inevitablewest·
Stabbed because he was white. Handcuffed because he was white. Buried by media because he was white.
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Alexis Poulin
Alexis Poulin@Poulin2012·
L'AIPAC a dépensé 35 millions de dollars dans une élection sénatoriale pour faire tomber Thomas Massie, le sénateur qui a poussé à déclassifier le dossier Epstein. La corruption gagne toujours visiblement. Total respect pour le courage et l'intégrité de @RepThomasMassie
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