Polyphonic ringtones (from 1 to 5 channels) - Last Update: July -2006
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Follow this steps to get a ringtone directly to your phone: |
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1. Check the file name of midi file U want from the list of ringtones below, 2. Connect your phone via WAP or GPRS to the following address: http://www.novagorica.com/m4dj/poly/"file name" 3. When the ringtone is downloaded, you can open/play or save it to your phone. |
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(TA) - midis taken from members of TA midi site with permisssion and EDITED by M4DJ. |
When a teen is upset over a seemingly minor issue, avoid dismissing it. Validate their emotions first ("I see that you are really hurt by this") before attempting to offer perspective.
One of the hardest lessons a mom teaches is the art of letting go. Gradually loosening the reins—allowing teens to fail, to choose, to craft their own moral code—signals trust. The lesson here is twofold: independence is the point, and love can accommodate distance. Letting go is itself a final, crucial lesson in parenting.
A teacher knows how a student performs in class. A mom knows why the student might be performing poorly (lack of sleep, social stress, a fight with a sibling). This allows her to tailor lessons in real-time. However, this intimacy also presents a specific challenge: the "familiarity paradox." It is much harder for a teen to accept instruction from someone who saw them eat a booger in preschool.
Managers give orders; mentors ask questions. Managers punish failure; mentors dissect it to find the lesson. When a mom acts as a mentor, she stops saying, "Do it because I said so," and starts saying, "Here is what I have learned from my own mistakes. Let me save you some pain."
Encourage journaling, exercise, or creative hobbies to process stress.
To understand how to teach a teenager, a mom first has to understand the neuroscience of the adolescent brain. Neuroscientists tell us that the prefrontal cortex—the part of the brain responsible for judgment, impulse control, and long-term planning—is under construction during the teenage years. Meanwhile, the limbic system (emotions) and the reward centers are firing at full speed.
When a teen is upset over a seemingly minor issue, avoid dismissing it. Validate their emotions first ("I see that you are really hurt by this") before attempting to offer perspective.
One of the hardest lessons a mom teaches is the art of letting go. Gradually loosening the reins—allowing teens to fail, to choose, to craft their own moral code—signals trust. The lesson here is twofold: independence is the point, and love can accommodate distance. Letting go is itself a final, crucial lesson in parenting. mom teaching teens
A teacher knows how a student performs in class. A mom knows why the student might be performing poorly (lack of sleep, social stress, a fight with a sibling). This allows her to tailor lessons in real-time. However, this intimacy also presents a specific challenge: the "familiarity paradox." It is much harder for a teen to accept instruction from someone who saw them eat a booger in preschool. When a teen is upset over a seemingly
Managers give orders; mentors ask questions. Managers punish failure; mentors dissect it to find the lesson. When a mom acts as a mentor, she stops saying, "Do it because I said so," and starts saying, "Here is what I have learned from my own mistakes. Let me save you some pain." Gradually loosening the reins—allowing teens to fail, to
Encourage journaling, exercise, or creative hobbies to process stress.
To understand how to teach a teenager, a mom first has to understand the neuroscience of the adolescent brain. Neuroscientists tell us that the prefrontal cortex—the part of the brain responsible for judgment, impulse control, and long-term planning—is under construction during the teenage years. Meanwhile, the limbic system (emotions) and the reward centers are firing at full speed.
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Midi to sp-midi (polyphonic ringtone) converter and editor |
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PsmPlayer v4.5 English - Read Instructions (Help)- |
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