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Hey, there's a website I'd like to share with you.
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And that's arrow.net, a-r-r-o-e.net.
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It's not just a podcast.
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It's 20 different podcasts that give you the power of choice.
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In fact, speaking of the choice,
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that's one of the top podcasting shows with all of its episodes.
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Sure, we have a daily prayer.
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Sure, we talk about everyday life and the challenges at work.
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And we're trying to figure out ways to get up and beyond
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where we presently stand with challenge.
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Sure, we have a choice to be made only on arrow.net,
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Enjoy your exploration.
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Hey, it's me that question guy.
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Of course it is, because I love researching for answers,
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such as, do people who are right handed
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tend to use their left hand more?
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It's not landing on the moon.
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Is this history's way of getting wrapped up inside
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its own conspiracy of not ever landing on the moon?
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I'm a daily writer, a silent wolf.
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I stand on the sidelines and do nothing but watch,
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listen, study, then activate.
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I call it the Daily Mass.
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It is a chronological walk through an everyday world,
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because it's my morning writing.
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As a receiver of thoughts and ideas,
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we as people tend to throw things to the side
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and deal with it later on.
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When a subject arrives inside of me,
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dude, it's time to dig in.
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It's still keeping that daily journal,
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but by doing the research, the picture becomes clearer.
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This is the Daily Mass.
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Do we ever use our left hand more as right handed people?
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Very simple answer here.
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Just because it's not the dominant tool in the box,
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the left hand of right handed people
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is a classic example of what support really looks like.
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Physically assisting institutions
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that require more than just balance.
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The dominant hand, left or right, the dominant one,
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is all about precision, being in control,
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and really getting into detail.
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The opposite hand is our stabilizer, holding paper,
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and opening containers.
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Your brain is wired to make one side more efficient.
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And yes, many, many, many people work
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with their less dominant hand to show it, hey, look,
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you can be a part of this team.
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Let's work together as one.
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How about those athletes with both hands
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and artists at play?
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Deep down inside, your dominant hand
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doesn't ignore the weakness of the other.
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Now ways that you can strengthen it
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include writing with your opposite hand.
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Pouring water from a picture.
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Practice doing coin flips
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and do some finger tapping.
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That'll strengthen up those fingers in a heartbeat.
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Hey, coming up next, Artemis II is in space,
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but it's not landing on the moon.
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Is this part of the conspiracy
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that we've never been on the moon?
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Hey, thanks for coming back to the Daily Mass.
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Is this a conspiracy or a continuation of one?
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Why are we taking circle trips around the moon
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and not landing on it
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like the Apollo missions of the 1970s?
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Well, it's almost like we've never been there, right?
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It's like they're gonna do what?
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Whatever you do, drop the conspiracy theory
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completely out of your story.
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Scientists and astronauts see this
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as a very deliberate step-by-step return to the moon.
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There is absolutely no avoidance taking place.
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Ever since the fire of Apollo one, NASA plays by one rule.
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You've got to test everything in stages
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and don't rush your crew into unproven systems.
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Artemis III is gonna be the lunar landing mission.
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A golden rule in NASA is that you don't land
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until all of your pieces are proven together.
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A new goal isn't to beat the Russians at the space game.
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It's actually to stay longer in space.
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We wanna build infrastructure
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and eventually zoom off to Mars
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from a space station on the moon.
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These space missions are no longer about taking sprints.
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Artemis II circling the moon is far from being something new.
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They actually did it with Apollo eight.
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We'll start learning more about Starship HLS
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It said that the astronauts will use Starship HLS
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to lower themselves to the moon's surface.
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Amazing, exploring the regions up there, out there,
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I'm Arrow and that's the Daily Mess.