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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Evidence That Your Mind is NOT Just In Your Brain - Rupert Sheldrake
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Evidence That Your Mind is NOT Just In Your Brain - Rupert Sheldrake

Evidence That Your Mind is NOT Just In Your Brain - Rupert Sheldrake - 271,626 views June 11, 2024 Rupert Sheldrake via After Skool - In this episode Rupert Sheldrake, biologist and author, debunks the standard view that the mind is nothing but brain activity and argues that our mind is extended in every act of visual perception. Rupert has designed an app to enable you to test your sensitivity to being looked at from behind, and to find out if you can improve with practice. The test takes just a few minutes to complete. https://www.sheldrake.org/participate . If you find you or your partner can indeed improve with practice, scoring repeatedly and fairly reliably above 75%, please let us know by email at sheldrake@sheldrake.org For more information about Rupert Sheldrake's research, visit https://www.sheldrake.org/ This talk was part of the 2023 Holberg Debate at the University of Bergen with the neuroscientist Anil Seth and the anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann. The full debate can be seen here:    • Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brai...   Thank you! - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES -Evidence That Your Mind is NOT Just In Your Brain - Rupert Sheldrake - 271,626 views June 11, 2024 Rupert Sheldrake via After Skool - In this episode Rupert Sheldrake, biologist and author, debunks the standard view that the mind is nothing but brain activity and argues that our mind is extended in every act of visual perception. Rupert has designed an app to enable you to test your sensitivity to being looked at from behind, and to find out if you can improve with practice. The test takes just a few minutes to complete. https://www.sheldrake.org/participate . - If you find you or your partner can indeed improve with practice, scoring repeatedly and fairly reliably above 75%, please let us know by email at sheldrake@sheldrake.org - For more information about Rupert Sheldrake's research, visit https://www.sheldrake.org/ - This talk was part of the 2023 Holberg Debate at the University of Bergen with the neuroscientist Anil Seth and the anthropologist Tanya Luhrmann. - The full debate can be seen here:    • Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brai...   Thank you! - FAIR USE FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES - MIrrored From: https://www.youtube.com/@AfterSkool
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Ivy League researchers released a huge report on teen sex. It's a must-read for parents.
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Ivy League researchers released a huge report on teen sex. It's a must-read for parents.

"It may be the most important thing we do in life; learn how to love and be loved."At least, that's according to Harvard psychologist and researcher Rick Weissbourd.He's been collecting data on the sex and love habits of young people for years through surveys, interviews, and even informal conversation — with teens and the important people in their lives.Through it all, one thing has been abundantly clear:"We spend enormous amount of attention helping parents prepare their kids for work and school," Weissbourd says. "We do almost nothing to prepare them for the tender, tough, subtle, generous, focused work of developing mature healthy relationships. I'm troubled by that."Now he and his team have finally compiled five years of intense research that asks the question, "What do young people really think about sex and love?"And maybe just as important: "How should we be preparing them?"Here are three major takeaways from the groundbreaking new report:1. Hookup culture might just be a big ol' myth.Everybody's hooking up with everybody these days, right? Not so fast.The Harvard report presents a startling statistic from a related study in 2008. A group of college students in the U.S. were asked what percentage of guys on campus they thought had sex on any given weekend. They guessed about 80%. The reality? As low as 5%.Weissbourd notes that because hookups are so culturally visible (especially in college) and gossiped about, it creates a perception that they're a lot more common than they actually are.The Harvard study itself found, in fact, that most young people are a lot more interested in sex within a committed relationship or, shockingly(!), things that don't involve sex at all.What it means for parents: We as adults, unfortunately, play a big role in this pervasive and harmful myth. "In every era there've been complaints about how sexually out of control kids are," Weissbourd says. "It's a story adults really love to tell."When we play up this stereotype, the study finds it can actually make young people less likely to seek advice or to talk about sex and relationships because they may feel inadequate or embarrassed about their lack of experience.2. Sexual harassment and assault, however, remain huge, unaddressed problems."There are a significant number of young men out there who think that all they can't do is rape someone," Weissbourd says. "They can't drag someone in an alley to rape them."What many of them have very little concept of, he says, is how harmful and dangerous behaviors like catcalling, pressuring, and coercion can be.The study cites endless instances of girls being harassed at school, complaining to administration, staging walkouts; anything to get the problem addressed. But the "boys will be boys" attitude persists, and problems are often swept under the rug rather than tackled head-on.A culture of sexual violence is harmful for obvious reasons, but the report also found these kinds of attitudes can bleed over into relationships that can "disproportionately involve females servicing males."What it means for parents: Talk. to. your. kids. about. consent."I was really surprised how many parents had not had basic conversations with their kids about things like consent, or how to avoid sexually harassing a person," Weissbourd says.We have to make it crystal clear to young people what kinds of behavior are and aren't acceptable, and follow up those lines with real consequences. It's the only way things are ever going to change.3. Teens and young adults want more guidance than we're giving them.Most parents aren't thrilled about having "the talk," and admittedly, bringing up the topic of sex with a teen is no easy task.But with all this dread and hand-wringing over how to talk about the birds and the bees, the Harvard report notes that many parents are overlooking a much bigger topic: love and relationships.Roughly 70% of surveyed young adults reported wishing they had received more or better guidance on the emotional aspects of relationships, both from parents or from health class. But it's not just a hindsight thing.Many parents are overlooking a much bigger topic: love and relationships."The percentage of young people who want guidance on romantic relationships was encouraging," Weissbourd says. "Kids light up when they are talking about love and what love is and what does it mean. That was surprising and really encouraging."What it means for parents: When you're done teaching your teenager how to put a condom on a banana, make sure to spend some time talking about the day-to-day work that goes into building a healthy relationship.That means going beyond platitudes. The Harvard team suggests diving into more complex questions like, What's the difference between attraction, infatuation, and love? How can we be more attracted to people the less interested they are in us? Why can we be attracted to people who are unhealthy for us?Those are questions some of us might not even have the answer to, but having the honest conversation with our kids is a major step in helping them learn how to love and be loved.As Weissbourd says, it's one of the most important things we'll ever do.The full report tackles even more and is jam-packed with must-know findings and statistics. It's definitely worth a read.This article originally appeared on 05.18.17
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

How 5 diabolical parents called their kids' bluff in hilarious ways
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How 5 diabolical parents called their kids' bluff in hilarious ways

Recently, blogger Jen Hatmaker had a funny conversation with a friend about parenting:"My girlfriend told me the greatest story. Apparently her 11-year-old also wanted to be a grown up this week and, in fact, not only did he treat his siblings like despised underlings, but when asked what he wanted, he said: 'I want the authority to be in charge of them and tell them what to do, because they deserve it!'Well. My girlfriend and her husband are NOT AT ALL MESSING AROUND with parenting. Calmly, evenly, they granted his request to be a grown-up for a week by pulling him out of camp (the underlings still got to go, because they are 'such children') and sending him to work ALL DAY EVERY DAY with his dad. He has to get up early and shower and make breakfast for everyone. He has to kiss the underlings before he goes to work and tell them to have a great day and that he loves them. He has to work on a typing project during his office hours. He only gets to eat what his dad eats, because eating like a grown-up is not nearly as fun as eating like a kid.Want to be an adult? Fine."Photo via iStock.Hatmaker's post went viral, with thousands of parents chiming in with their own stories of tough love, both giving and receiving.The responses were hilarious, poignant, and a sign that the next generation is being parented by extremely capable, if not a little bit diabolical, hands.Here are five of my favorite stories from the comments about parenting-gone-absolutely-right:1. Jill Duff's mom used an embarrassing outfit to teach her sister an important lesson:"My sister was snotty to my Mom. She called her and pretty much demanded, 'Bring my band uniform to the high school!' She's the one who forgot her uniform in the first place. Then she told my Mom 'Do not come in the school, that would be so EMBARRASSING. Just wait for me by my car.'So my Mom did just that. She stood by my sister's car, in the Texas heat, WEARING my sister's band uniform. All the kids walking out for the day saw it.Parenting GOLD."And Mom was like...2. Jessica Klick got her sons new shoes ... but not the ones they wanted."Our 11 and 12 year olds at the time were complaining and whining and being ungrateful, saying how 'hard their life was.' For boys, the big thing is wearing those cool Steph Curry shoes and our boys LOVE their Currys!So after hearing the last complaint my husband went to Walmart to buy white maypop leather shoes (the kind you see in geriatric centers) and high white socks. He brought those bad boys home, set them on the boys' dresser, and made them wear those things everywhere we went. Those devastated boys told us we were 'ruining their lives.'I may or may not have laughed like a little girl when I dropped them off at school and watched them do the walk of shame."3. Marisa Rodriguez Byers says she wished her mother was dead. And boy, did she regret it."I was a wretched, hormonal teenager. At the age of 13 I told my mom, 'I wish you were dead!' And at that moment, she 'died,' but to me only. (I had younger sisters).She completely ignored me, didn't speak at me, didn't look at me, wouldn't cook for me, set my place at the table, wash my clothes, take me to school, NOTHING. After 8 days, I broke down in the middle of the night, went to her room, clutched her tightly while sobbing how sorry I was and how much I loved her and that I would NEVER say those words again. I'm 41 years old now, I have NEVER uttered those words or anything remotely like them after that incident."After tough love, you gotta hug it out.4. Jessica Hill gave her daughter a good scare — and, in turn, a new appreciation."I was grocery shopping with my three year old when she decided to start screaming for ice cream. There was no reasoning with her in this hulk-type rage. I swear she had super human strength as I struggled to get her out of the cart full of groceries.I was completely unaware of the two police officers who were witnessing this wrestling match. She was still hitting, kicking, and screaming when I was stopped by the police officers in the parking lot. They thought I had abducted her. This happened long before we had smart phones full of our children's photos. They tried questioning her but she was still too busy throwing a fit, so I handed her over. I told them she could ride with them because I really needed a break and they could follow me home to see her birth certificate, baby book, etc. They started chuckling as one officer said, 'Spoken like a true mom!' I think they were more relieved than I was when she finally cried out, 'Mommy?'The officer handed her back to me while the other went back inside the store to ensure there wasn't a distraught mother looking for her missing toddler. That evening my daughter told her dad she almost went to jail because she threw a fit, and I let her believe it. She didn't throw a fit in public again.""Uhh, ma'am?""I didn't mean to scare her, so after this experience, I wanted to ensure my daughter had a healthy respect and appreciation for first responders. Today, I'm happy to say she is highly aware and appreciative of the police, firemen, paramedics, and military personnel who serve to protect her."5. Erica Goodnight taught her son an incredible lesson that he carries to this day."My kid was whining over not having anything to play with. So, without a word, I went to the garage and got a black 50 gallon trash bag and started putting in all the toys that he obviously didn't even realize were in our home to play with.I loaded them AND him into the car and we drove to our local homeless shelter and gave every. single. toy. in the bag away. To a child who TRULY had nothing. And you know what? He didn't even cry. His eyes were opened to the ones who have nothing. He actually enlarged his heart that day. And, we still do it. We still take toys to kids with nothing at least once a year."Parent win. Life lesson score.There's a fine line between teaching your kids a tough lesson in a funny way and engaging in "humiliation parenting."Making children wear a sign that says, "I sneak boys in at 3 a.m. and disrespect my parents and grandparents" or otherwise berating them publicly is a good way to erode trust between the two of you and seriously damage your relationship.But calling their bluff on a ridiculous demand? Or having a little fun with how you choose to correct their bad attitude? That's just plain survival.And that's what parenting is really all about.You can read the whole hilarious exchange over on Facebook.In the meantime, what's your favorite tough-love story?This article originally appeared on 07.13.16
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Bizarre optical illusion has people either seeing a car door or the beach
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Bizarre optical illusion has people either seeing a car door or the beach

Ancient sage Obi-Wan Kenobi once remarked, "Your eyes can deceive you, don't trust them." Well, he's right, kinda.Our eyes bring in information and it's our brain's job to decipher the image and determine what we're seeing. But our brains aren't always correct. In fact, sometimes they can be so wrong we wonder if we are accurately interpreting reality at all.After all, our brain can only label things if it knows that they are. If you lived on a deserted island your whole life and a cow showed up on the beach, you'd have no idea what to label it.The latest baffling image that's making people across the internet doubt their senses is a picture tweeted out by Twitter user nayem. "If you can see a beach, ocean sky, rocks and stars then you are an artist," the comment reads.But some people who see it also think it looks like a car door. What do you see?If your brain told you the picture is of a lovely evening laying on the beach then you're definitely an optimist. But, according to the person who posted it, the photo is of the bottom of a rusted out car door. Not very romantic, is it?Here's what Twitter users thought about the illusion.This guy must be hungry.This guy is having flashbacks to 2015.Your perception determines your reality.This guy explains it perfectly.This guy has a great imagination.This article originally appeared on 8.16.21
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
1 y

Did this woman drop the greatest breastfeeding response of all time?
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Did this woman drop the greatest breastfeeding response of all time?

When it comes to breasts, Americans really have it twisted. We've sexualized them to such a point we no longer see them for their main purpose: feeding babies.This disconnect is so extreme that when women breastfeed their children in public they are often met with scorn or shame.Florida mom and anti-circumcision advocate, Ashley Kaidel, isn't having it anymore.Kaidel was breastfeeding in an unnamed restaurant when another diner gave her the stink-eye, just for feeding her child in public. So Kaidel took a photo of herself staring right back at the shamer and posted it to Facebook. The photo quickly went viral, receiving over 420,000 likes.In her post, she explained why she had such a stern look on her face."In the picture, it appears I'm staring off into the distance. In reality, I'm staring into the eyes of a woman staring at me. She is looking at me with disgust and shaking her head with judgement in an attempt to shame me and indirectly tell me without words that I am wrong and need to cover myself.”Kaidel says she breastfeeds in public to reduce the stigma surrounding it."I do this for the person that has the mentality 'Boobs are to be covered. They're for your husbands eyes only. They're intimate. It's a personal/private thing to feed your baby. Cover up out of respect. My kids don't need to see that. Walk out of the room' and any other derogatory, close-minded comments and sentiments alike.”Then, she cut through all the nonsense surrounding breasts to explain their real purpose."[B]reasts were made to sustain your baby's life before they were made to bring pleasure to any other man, woman, partner or spouse. Their sole purpose is to make food and dispense it straight into a baby's mouth. There is nothing weird about this and there's no difference in me feeding my baby with my breast than you feeding yourself with a spoon.Finally, Kaidel had some strong words for the next person who attempts to shame her for breastfeeding in public."No person should be isolated and shunned because they're eating, especially when you yourself are eating while ridiculing how someone else is eating. Is it not certainly easier to avert your eyes from a displeasing sight rather than suggest or demand a mother and child remove themselves from your presence? How pompous and selfish is this? Just look away. It's simple to do so. No harm done at all."via GIPHYThis article originally appeared on 11.24.15
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y ·Youtube General Interest

YouTube
Prince Andrew FINALLY admits what we all suspected
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Mad Mad World
Mad Mad World
1 y Wild & Crazy

rumbleOdysee
Bill O'Riley Says They are Pulling Joe Biden
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

WEF Unveils AI Smart Tech To ‘Ethically’ Eliminate Non-Compliant Humans
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WEF Unveils AI Smart Tech To ‘Ethically’ Eliminate Non-Compliant Humans

from The People’s Voice: TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Never Let Anyone Forget How The Media Lied To The World About Joe Biden
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Never Let Anyone Forget How The Media Lied To The World About Joe Biden

by Derek Hunter, Townhall: Honestly, I didn’t think Joe Biden would do well during the first presidential debate, but I would not have bet money that he would have pulled the equivalent of repeatedly smacking himself in the face with a frying pan. I can’t stand the man and I almost felt bad for him. […]
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

7 Unexpected Friendships Between Historical Figures
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7 Unexpected Friendships Between Historical Figures

What does a grumpy old widower have in common with a chubby young boy scout? Nothing! This is why the eventual friendship between the cranky Carl and the young Russell was so entertaining in Pixar’s 2009 film, Up. Imagine how much more interesting it would be if such unlikely friendships happened in real life. Luckily, they do—among very famous historical figures, no less. Here are some of the most unexpected ones: 1. Harry Houdini and Arthur Conan Doyle One was an illusionist; the other was a famous author. Harry Houdini and Arthur Conan Doyle formed an unlikely friendship after they were brought together by their spiritualism.  They were already celebrities by the time they met in 1920. Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories were massive hits, and Houdini had already staged dozens of live shows performing various stunts and escape acts.  It wasn’t just their careers that made them different. The Guardian described Conan Doyle as a Scottish Victorian gentleman, while Houdini was a self-educated Hungarian immigrant in the U.S.  Conan Doyle believed in the supernatural and was convinced that Houdini had magical powers that allowed him to perform his illusions. Conan Doyle sought out Houdini, and they became quick friends.  However, after many public outings, the friendship fizzled when Conan Doyle’s wife, Jean, attempted to contact Houdini’s mother through a private seance. According to reports, Houdini’s mother tried to make contact through 15 pages of writing. Houdini didn’t believe it was his mother because the language was too grammatically correct.  Additionally, Houdini denounced mediums, which annoyed Conan Doyle. The friendship was never mended.   A British TV series was commissioned to showcase this fascinating relationship. Houdini & Doyle aired ten episodes in 2016. 2. Marilyn Monroe and Ella Fitzgerald Both were entertainers, so it should not have been much of a surprise that Marilyn Monroe and Ella Fitzgerald were friends. However, Fitzgerald was Black, and segregation was still rampant in the United States at the time.  Fitzgerald had been making waves as a jazz singer since the 1930s. Up to the 1950s, she had only booked gigs in small venues. It wasn’t until she was given a chance to play at Mocambo nightclub that her career skyrocketed. Guess who made that possible? Marilyn Monroe.  The nightclub reportedly didn’t want to book Fitzgerald in 1955 because of her race. Monroe referred to Fitzgerald as her “very favorite person.” She called the nightclub and got her the gig.  Yahoo! quoted Monroe’s friend Amy Greene, who described the incident: “Marilyn read this in the paper and got very annoyed and called the manager and said, ‘Hi, this is Marilyn Monroe, and if you rebook Ella Fitzgerald, I will come every night to hear her sing.’” Nobody said no to Monroe, so Fitzgerald was booked.  They first met in 1954 when Monroe watched Fitzgerald perform at a small nightclub in Los Angeles.  3. Prince and Muhammad Ali They were both fans of each other but only met in June 1997, after both had already peaked in their careers. Prince was such a fan of the boxer that he didn’t mind that he only had two days’ notice for the scheduled meeting at the Hay-Adams Hotel in Washington, DC. Prince was asked to support Ali’s World Healing Project.  The BBC reported that Prince said this when Ali’s team invited him: “He said, ‘Muhammad wants you to…’ and I said ‘Yes.’ I didn’t even let him finish. He could have said, ‘Mow the lawn,’ and I would have been down with it. Muhammad’s my hero. He has been since I was a child.” During the meeting, they reportedly bonded over magic, which started a lasting friendship. Both died in 2016—Prince on April 21 and Ali on June 3.  When Prince died, Ali tweeted: “We’ve lost a true original. Prince was someone who cared for others and used his genius to help many.”  4. Joe Louis and Max Schmeling Joe Louis and Max Schmeling were rivals in the ring. However, years after their time as boxers, they found common ground and became friends.  Louis was a much younger Black American pugilist, and Schmeling was a German boxer with something to prove. Schmeling had a fan in Adolf Hitler, which unfortunately got the boxer fighting for Nazism. Boxing enthusiasts had dubbed Louis and Schmeling’s 1936 and 1938 fights as a battle between Americanism and Nazism.  To be clear, Schmeling wasn’t a Nazi. However, his win over Louis was used as propaganda in favor of Nazism. Louis, for his part, was devastated by the loss via knockout, his first. A rematch was organized two years later, and Louis dominated—he knocked Schmeling out in the first round.  Americans celebrated the win uproariously. A loss against Germany and Nazism would have been unfathomable. However, Louis and Schmeling weren’t comfortable with the burden they had to carry for their countries. Louis didn’t want to represent a country that oppressed Black people, and Schmeling didn’t support Adolf Hitler and his party. They bonded over their similar situations.  In the end, only death separated the two. Louis died in 1981, and Schmeling was one of his pallbearers. Their friendship was immortalized in the 2002 TV movie Joe and Max.  5. President Ulysses S. Grant and James Longstreet Unlike many of the duos on this list, Ulysses S. Grant, who became the 18th U.S. President, and James Longstreet had been friends for a while. They were at West Point together, with Longstreet graduating in 1842 and Grant a year later. There are unverified reports that Longstreet became Grant’s best man at his wedding to Julia Dent in 1848.  So, what was unusual with their friendship? It was astonishing that it lasted through the Civil War, where they fought from opposing sides. Grant was the commanding general that led the Union Army to victory in 1865. Longstreet was a general of the Confederate Army and the principal subordinate of Robert E. Lee.  Longstreet was responsible for convincing Lee to surrender and end the war. Grant and Longstreet resumed their friendship and served at the Jefferson Barracks shortly after their West Point graduation. They then fought side by side in the Mexican-American War.  6. Pope John Paul II and Ali Agca Can you really be friends with the Pope? Perhaps not. However, the extraordinary meeting between Pope John Paul II and his would-be assassin is worth including in this unexpected friendships list.  On May 13, 1981, Mehmet Ali Agca shot Pope John Paul II as he entered St. Peter’s Square to address the faithful. The Pope was hit in the abdomen multiple times and was in critical condition. Despite being gravely hurt, Pope John Paul II said, “Pray for my brother… whom I have sincerely forgiven.” Agca was immediately restrained, arrested, and sentenced to life in prison. Reports aren’t consistent regarding Agca’s reason for the attempt on the Pope’s life. One account stated that it was because the Pope was the leader of the Crusades, while another said it was supposed to be revenge for the attack on the Grand Mosque in Mecca. He had been a member of the Turkish national group.  In a Dec. 1983 file photo provided by Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, Pope John Paul II meets Mehmet Ali Agca, in Agca’s prison cell in Rome. On December 27, 1983, Pope John Paul II visited Agca in prison. Agca kissed the Pope’s hand. They spoke for at least 20 minutes out of earshot. The Pope also gave Agca a gift, a silver rosary.  When the Pope fell ill, Agca sent a letter wishing him well. When Pope John Paul II died on April 2, 2005, Agca and his family grieved.  Agca was eventually released in 2010. Four years later, he laid roses at the tomb of the late pontiff.  7. Mark Twain and Helen Keller They met in 1895 when Helen Keller was only 14, and Mark Twain was 60. Despite the age gap, the two struck a surprising friendship. In his autobiography, Twain recalled: “Without touching anything, and without seeing anything, obviously, and without hearing anything, she seemed to quite well recognize the character of her surroundings.” Keller was also instantly at ease when she met Twain. “The instant I clasped his hand in mine, I knew that he was my friend,” Keller said.  Twain helped Keller get into Radcliffe College, which has since been integrated into Harvard University. She became the first deaf and blind person in the U.S. to earn a college degree. The two continued to write to each other, and when Twain’s wife Olivia died in 1904, Keller wrote to comfort him. It wasn’t all sentimental, as both were known to tease each other via correspondence.  Keller loved that Twain treated her like a regular person. Shortly before Twain’s death, Keller spent time with him at his home in Redding, Connecticut.  Friendships Form in the Most Unlikely Places and Among Unexpected People Friendships often bloom because of shared backgrounds and circumstances. However, some relationships form naturally despite there being nothing in common between them. But they endure because both parties nurture the bond and are determined to maintain it. The post 7 Unexpected Friendships Between Historical Figures first appeared on History Defined.
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