#TED-010#第52&53周打卡
There are over 1.5 billion people experience armed conflict. Children are the most innocent and vulnerable victims, but not just from the obvious physical dangers, but from the often unspoken effects that wars have on their families. The experiences of war leave children at a real high risk for the development of emotional and behavioural problems. Good news is children can be protected by warm, secure parenting during and after conflict.
The speaker is originally from Syria, and she lost several family members in really horrifying ways. She has two kids who are at an age typically asked lots and lots questions. She began to wonder what it might be like to parent her children in a war zone and a refugee camp. How she could cope?
She is psychologists and parent trainers, they know that arming parents with skills in caring for their children can have a huge effect on their well-being, and they call this parent training. She wonder if parent training programs be useful for families while they were still in war zones or refugee camps?
For the past 5 years, she and her colleagues have been working on ways to support families that have experienced war and displacement.
1) The first step must be to ask them what they’re struggling with, right? She travelled to refugee camps in Syria and in Turkey. She listened their parenting challenges, listened to their parenting struggles and listened to their call for help. They told her about their struggles, they told her about rough, harsh refugee camp conditions that made it hard to focus on anything but practical chores like collecting clean water. They told her how they watched their children withdraw: the sadness, depression, anger, bed-wetting, thumb sucking, fear of loud noises, fear of nightmares - terrifying, terrifying nightmares. They watched their children change and they had no idea how to help them.
At same time, they ale found that these families were so motivated to support their children. They were making attempts at seeking support from different organisations, but very difficult or useless.
2) After hours of speaking to NGO workers, a fantastic innovative idea of distributing parenting information leaflets via bread wrappers that were being delivered to families in a conflict zone in Syria by humanitarian workers. There were two pieces of paper brought with bread wrappers. One was parenting information leaflet that had basic advice and information that normalised to the parent what they might be experiencing, and what their child might be experiencing. The other piece of paper was a feedback questionnaire.
In one week, they managed to distribute 3000, and a 60% response rate. The families had left hundreds of messages - most incredibly positive and encouraging.
But the most important is that the wars needed to stop. We need to build a world where children can dream of planes dropping gifts, and not bombs.
Earth Day is 24 hours, because that’s how long it takes the Earth to rotate, how long it takes to go around once. It takes Mars 24 hours and approximately 40 mints to rotate once.
The speaker’s team is to send commands to the rover to tell it what to do the next day. To tell it to drive or drill or tall her whatever she’s supposed to do. So while she’s sleeping - and the rover does sleep at night because she needs to recharge her batteries and she needs to weather the cold Martian night. While she sleeps, we worked on her program for the next day. So they have to work as they were actually in Mars. They keep moving 40 minutes every day, because it is so confusing and they have the Mars watch.
She could actually tell what mission they worked on from their Martian accent.
It also affects their families. When she has been on Mars time three times, and her husband is like, ok, we’re getting ready for Mars time. So he’ll put foil all over the windows and dark curtains and shades. It is 2016, so there’s an app for Mars time.
There was one guy, called David, one of their flight directors. He was at the beach in Los Angeles with his family at 1:00 in the morning. Because they landed in August and his kids didn’t have to go back to school until September they actually went on to Mars time with him for one month. They got up 40 minutes later everyday. And they were on dad’s schedule. So they lived on Mars time for a month and had theist great adventures, like going bowling in the middle of the night or going to the beach. And one of the things that they all discovered is you can get anywhere in Los Angeles at 3:00 in the morning when there’s no traffic.
Just like moving a time-zone every day.
Sleep researches were studying them because it was so unusual for humans to try to extend their day. So the Mars time will be modified.
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TSTS
@小牛儿 我年前好像52周的没写 我记得 这次都补上了 么么大