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There were several versions of the "Hang in There, Baby" poster, featuring a picture of a cat or kitten, hanging onto a stick, tree branch, pole or rope. The original poster featured a black and white photograph of a Siamese kitten clinging to a bamboo pole and was first published in late 1971 as a poster by Los Angeles photographer Victor Baldwin.
Motivational posters can have behavioral effects. For example, Mutrie and Blamey, [4] of the University of Glasgow and the Greater Glasgow Health Board, found in one study that their placement of a motivational poster that promotes stair use in front of an escalator and a parallel staircase, in an underground station, doubled the amount of stair use.
It is a spoof of the management guru book genre and features 18 stylized renderings of Demotivators to illustrate the points. The book comes in three editions including a $1,195.00 Chairman edition. In 2004, the Harvard Business Review published a serious essay on the nature of work and self-fulfillment by Kersten: "Let Me Take You Down". [7]
Ben Affleck, hang in there,” she said. "Dunkin Donuts is the best coffee in the world!" Affleck's wife Jennifer Lopez filed for divorce Tuesday, the second end to their romance that spans ...
Looking back through history, there's no limit to what we can achieve on Wednesdays. Yuri Gagarin, the first human to travel to outer space , achieved his remarkable feat on a Wednesday in 1961.
A multitude of terms have been used to refer to DDM of varying severities and varieties, including apathy, abulia, akinetic mutism, athymhormia, avolition, amotivation, anhedonia, psychomotor retardation, affective flattening, akrasia, and psychic akinesia (auto-activation deficit or loss of psychic self-activation), among others.
And there were those who didn’t look like humans at all anymore, who were there in the way a tree branch is there shaking outside your window, or the sun is there in your face when you first open the front door in the morning, or like the chill when you get out of the bath, or sparks in your eyes, tiny flashing lights, or the way black tea ...
Some troops leave the battlefield injured. Others return from war with mental wounds. Yet many of the 2 million Iraq and Afghanistan veterans suffer from a condition the Defense Department refuses to acknowledge: Moral injury.