
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Canada

seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Colombia

seen from Poland
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Iraq

seen from Brazil

seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Mexico

seen from Australia

seen from Brazil

seen from Vietnam
seen from China
Always remember to get plenty of #sleep, kids. It dramatically improves your life and prevents a lot of #stress you would otherwise not have. - #toonstop #anime #cartoon #comic #conceptart #characterdesign #characterart #illustration #drawing #helpfultips #practicaladvice #traditionalart #inktober #selfportrait #longday
Ashkan Rajaee’s practical mindset for career growth and remote income is helping professionals rethink their jobs, income paths, and long-te
No one taught us how to leave jobs the right way. This piece is what I wish I had read five years ago.
The Warren Buffett Way Practical advice on Buffett-like value Investing. Read the book review on our website. www.coneicom.com #buffett #buffettway #valuebooks #practicaladvice #valueinvesting #longterm #longterminvesting #coneicom https://www.instagram.com/p/CILdqn-KwOl/?igshid=1a49wdh227yb4
Informative Article - Practical Advice for Analysis of Large and Complex Data Sets
Url-http://www.blog.sathyamedha.com/practical-advice-for-analysis-of-large-and-complex-data-sets/
From-https://www.sathyamedha.com/, @rajeshnakka
Need some practical advice on CoronaVirus? My patients, family, and friends keeping asking me so here is a quick preview of a full video I will release later today. I am NOT an infectious disease expert! However, I do have opinions that may be helpful. The take-home points: 1 wash your hands 2 avoid contact with sick people. 3 if you are healthy, stay that way. 4 if you are sick, stay away from others so you don’t get them sick. 5 if your immune system is weak, be EXTRA careful and take precautions 6 masks are not recommended by the CDC for healthy people, but I don’t think they can hurt! CoronaVirus is more deadly than the flu, but the flu is currently more widespread. My opinion, Coronavirus is here to stay. It’s not the end of the world, but it’s just like SARS, west Nile Virus, swine Flu, and all of the m at other doomsday viruses - this too shall get handled if we are smart, vigilant, and work together. #coronavirus #handwashing #practicaladvice #myopinion #plasticsurgeon #cosmeticsurgery #rhinoplasty #cosmeticsurgeon #beverlyhills #revisionrhinoplastyspecialist #secondaryrhinoplasty #rhinoplastybeforeandafter #vogue #aestheticsurgery #aesthetics #keepthemguessing #bestrhinoplastysurgeon #topplasticsurgeon #drjaycalvert #boardcertifiedplasticsurgeon (at Newport Beach, California) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9PIFlMHAwb/?igshid=12dywv0zxud32
Eating less does not create the need to burn body fat. Instead, it creates the need for the body to slow down. Contrary to popular opinion, the body hangs on to body fat. Instead, it burns muscle tissue, and that worsens the underlying cause of obesity. Only as a last resort, if the body has no other option, it may also burn a bit of body fat. Why does the body hang on to body fat and burn muscle? To answer that question, let’s look at it another way. What does our metabolism want more of when it thinks we are starving? Stored energy. What is a great source of stored energy? Body fat. So when our metabolism thinks we are starving, does it want to get rid of or hold on to body fat? It wants to hold on. Next, what does our metabolism want less of when we are starving? It wants less tissue (which burns a lot of calories). What type of tissue burns a lot of calories? Muscle tissue. So when our metabolism thinks we are starving, it gets rid of calorie-hungry muscle tissue. Studies show that up to 70% of the weight lost while eating less comes from burning muscle—not body fat! Burning all this muscle means that starving ourselves leads to more body fat—not less—over the long term. As soon as we stop starving ourselves, we have all the calories we used to have but need less of them, thanks to all that missing muscle and our slowed-down metabolism. Now our metabolism sees eating a normal amount as overeating and creates new body fat. It is not practical or healthy to keep ourselves “chronically under-nourished,” so we don’t. Instead, we yo-yo diet. And that is why eating less is not an effective long-term fat loss approach. #poweredbyherbalife #practicaladvice #info #fatloss https://www.instagram.com/p/BquRS2YA7Qy/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=2p310zlftinh