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#I have experienced the max nr
ddelline · 2 months
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mha 419 ………….
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Unpopular opinions (maybe):
RedBull is in one of the worst situations with their current line up because Perez is not performing well enough and they have discredit Yuki so much that putting him alongside Max would seem like hypocrisy yet there's no one else besides an outsider that could step up since their juniors simply aren't good enough yet. Also, none of their juniors truly show the promises in my mind (I don't care about Lawson and after everything that happened will not) that people like Pierre or Alex did.
Alpine should 100% take Mick over Pierre.
Haas would be a fool if they replaced Mick willingly (meaning they kick him.) Add to that the silly rumours of Giovinazzi replacing him (I don't dislike Gio but absolutely not.)
To be honest I think as bad as Nicky might be to some that Seargant isn't ready yet for F1. I also do not want to see DeVries in F1, I think it's just simply to late for that and would be one of the worst moves (from a competitive championship where he had a car to win it to the backmarker in F1.)
McLaren is going to clash and burn next year. However signing Piastri at least performance wise was a good decisions (one that Alpine should have made from the get go but alas.) They simply can not have Norris and Piastri because of their potential to both be the Nr. 1 and team leader.
Aston Martin actually has a driver line up that overs the most potential for the next season (any confirmed one that is different to the one the year prior.)
Drugovich should get a seat above everyone else just from talent alone but he probably will never make the F1 cut since he isn't in any junior team to my knowledge.
Ricciardo time to leave might have been to soon but ignoring how the decision was made, you can't argue against the fact that it was the right decision. He has had the worst season by far compared to his teammate and no one can argue that. Does that mean he isn't talented? No. Is it arguable that of all the drivers he has had the most inconsistent career on the current grid? Yes. Do I think he will return? Possible. Do I think he should? No, not really to be honest. Even if he still has potential in him, it will never truly show because he will never again get into a top team where he has the right machinery and there are in my opinion also more deserving drivers for a mid field car. Besides, with all the young drivers in the junior categories and the current grid, would you really choose him after the dreadful season?
I think both Perez and Ricciardo are in a position where they can just lose. Neither will ever be a top driver in a top team and neither is really getting a seat anywhere once they leave. They both will never win a championship and in Ricciardo's place there now also is a reputation tied to him. Perez still has last season but if this season continues to go worse where he clearly lacks the pace (second drivers curse someone is not at all talked about with him eventhough arguably out of everyone he is the most shocking being so of pace) that will quickly be forgotten and not used to defend him. Unlike Bottas who had an awful last year at Mercedes but flourished at Alfa Romeo because (in my opinion) he found his love and joy in racing again regardless of the results neither of the drivers mentioned above will be satisfied with such a move. There aren't any top team options so there's really just leaving since I don't see any way they come back a year later unless some team needs a more experienced driver and they desperately want a seat. Their time in comparison to someone like Alonso and Lewis is running out. I use Lewis and Alonso because they are the oldest but they both have so much to give (whether I like Alonso or not he clearly still delivers great results and Lewis I would even argue is more determined then ever.) However they also have nothing to prove in comparison to Daniel or Perez. They have won their WDCs and they have shown their talent/brilliance again and again. If they left tomorrow nothing would change those facts.
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3thurs · 3 years
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Third Thursday events and exhibitions for September 16
The next Third Thursday — the monthly evening of art in Athens, Georgia — is scheduled for Thursday, September 16, from 6 to 9 p.m. All exhibitions are free and open to the public. This schedule and location and hours of operation information for each venue is available at 3thurs.org.
Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia
Yoga in the Galleries, 6 p.m. — Join us via Zoom for a free yoga class surrounded by works of art in the galleries. Led by instructors from Five Points Yoga, this program is free and open to both beginner and experienced yogis. This program is available both in-person and via Zoom. Email [email protected] to reserve an in-person spot or join us on Zoom.
Film Series: The Crime of Art: “Stolen,” 7 p.m. — It was the most expensive art heist in American history. In March 1990, two thieves disguised as Boston police officers gained entrance to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum and successfully plundered $500 million worth of art. Among the 13 priceless works stolen were Rembrandt’s “The Sea of Galilee” and Vermeer’s “The Concert,” one of only 35 of the master’s surviving works. Filmed 16 years after the heist, the film raises a new magnifying glass to this crime, following the renowned art detective Harold Smith as he pursues the mystery of the stolen works. With Smith as a guide, it journeys into the mysterious and surreal world of stolen art and examines the many possibilities as to where the art might be today. 2005, NR, 85 min. This film series is presented in conjunction with the exhibition “Kota Ezawa: The Crime of Art” and is sponsored by the UGA Parents Leadership Council.
On view:
“Inside Look: Selected Acquisitions from the Georgia Museum of Art” — With more than 21,000 objects in its collection, the museum cannot show everything all the time. This exhibition features new gifts and purchases across our curatorial departments that have filled critical gaps in the permanent collections.
“Kota Ezawa: The Crime of Art” — This exhibition brings together new and recent works related to Ezawa’s “The Crime of Art” series, a group of light boxes and video animations that chronicle some of the most infamous and high-profile museum heists in history.
“Neo-Abstraction: Celebrating a Gift of Contemporary Art from John and Sara Shlesinger” — “Neo-Abstraction” highlights the resurgence of abstract art among contemporary artists, drawing from a recent major gift
“In Dialogue: Artist, Mentor, Friend: Ronald Lockett and Thornton Dial Sr.” — This exhibition focuses on one work by each artist, both gifts from Ron Shelp, comparing their approach to their work and examining the shared relationship that sustained their creativity.
“Whitman, Alabama” — This ongoing documentary project by filmmaker Jennifer Crandall brings Walt Whitman’s words to life through the voices of modern-day Alabama residents.
“Contemporary Japanese Ceramics from the Horvitz Collection” — This exhibition presents Japanese pottery and porcelain created by three generations of master ceramic artists. Made with both ancient and modern materials and methods, their works are exceptionally diverse. They share the exceptional craftsmanship and sophisticated design characteristic of Japanese contemporary ceramics.
“Power and Piety in 17th-Century Spanish Art” — Works by premiere Spanish baroque painters such as Francisco de Zurbarán, Bartolomé Murillo, Pedro Orrente and others, on loan from Bob Jones University Museum & Gallery.
“Modernism Foretold: The Nadler Collection of Late Antique Art from Egypt” — An extraordinary assembly of Coptic objects dating from the 3rd to the 8th century CE belonging to Emanuel and Anna Nadler.
The museum’s days of operation are Tuesday – Sunday. Reserve a free ticket and see our policies at https://georgiamuseum.org/visit/.
The Porcelain and Decorative Arts Museum at the Center for Art and Nature
The Porcelain and Decorative Arts Museum at the Center for Art and Nature at the State Botanical Garden of Georgia will be opening its doors for timed ticket access (https://botgarden.uga.edu/porcelain-and-decorative-arts-museum-timed-access-now-available/). The newest building at the garden holds the personal porcelain and decorative arts of Deen Day Sanders, a longtime supporter of the State Botanical Garden. The space is designed to draw environmental and conservation connections to the collections in the museum.
Eight different gallery spaces blend conservation, botanicals, art, beauty and curiosity. Adjacent to the building is the Discovery and Information Garden, where visitors can connect to the living botanical collection that is represented in many of the porcelain works in the museum. Please join staff and docents for a time in the Porcelain and Decorative Arts Museum to develop your own ideas on art and nature and become inspired to see the natural environment through the lens of the many artists on display.
ATHICA: Athens Institute for Contemporary Art
ATHICA@675, Pulaski St., Suite 1200 
“LIGHT: 2021 Juried Exhibition” — ATHICA’s annual juried exhibition features contemporary art in all media that explores or references light, which is found all around us, around our planet, and throughout art, nature, literature, science, society and language as a concept and a construct with many different connotations. Without light there is no color and art would not exist. Work was juried by guest juror Matt Porter, curator at the Morris Museum of Art in Augusta, Georgia.
ATHICA@CINÉ Gallery
“Remembering Chatham Murray and Her Art” — Works of the late, beloved Athenian and painter Chatham Murray, organized by her friends Charles Warnock, Juana Gnecco and Anne Sears and featuring 14 paintings that span six decades. A number of works in the exhibition illustrate Murray’s love of home and table. Favorite subject matter included the bounty of the garden and home interiors and exteriors, the latter inspired perhaps by her daily walks.
Lyndon House Arts Center
3THURS Artist Talk with Andy Cherewick & Jeffrey Whittle, 6 p.m. — Join the artists and Curator Beth Sale for a gallery walk-through and discussion about the works in the exhibition “I vs. Me.” Reserve your free ticket. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/artist-talk-jeffrey-whittle-and-andy-cherewick-tickets-168152154621
On View:
“Willow Oak Tree Exhibition with Guest Curator Abraham Tesser” — In honor of the willow oak tree that graced the lawn of the historic Ware–Lyndon House for over a century, this exhibition features works created with and inspired by the tree. Each of the participating artists received reclaimed wood from the tree to incorporate into a work of art.
“Inside Out: Expressing the Inner World” — Abstract paintings from a group of women artists working primarily in the Southeast.
“Modernist Sculptures from the Legacy of Loyd Florence” — Florence’s life was marked by a lifelong passion for aviation. He graduated in 1939 from the first civilian pilot training program, sponsored by the University of Georgia and served as president of Athens Aviation, which operated the Athens Airport in the early 1950s. Later in his life, he began making metal sculpture.
“Something I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You: Brian Hitselberger and Julie Wills” — For this exhibition, the artists worked independently in their respective studios while maintaining an active dialogue through correspondence and video conferencing.  
“I vs Me: Andy Cherewick and Jeffrey Whittle” — Two beloved Athens artists’ paintings in one gallery.
“Arts Center Choice Award: A Lot More Than It Seems by David Froetschel” — With structures found at thrift stores and imagery taken from fiction, Froetschel balances between order and chaos, dreams and reality, imagining what could be and depicting “a lot more than it seems.” 
“Window Works: AJ Aremu” — Using the banks of windows as a palette, AJ Aremu represents Black bodies in motion and states of repose. Their contemporary clothing blends with African patterns in Aremu’s exploration of the melding of cultures.
“Collections from our Community: Oscar’s Godzillas” — “I always admired the idea of something unbelievable and wonderful hidden out in the world. Godzilla holds a great example. It shows how small we really are as a species and how our actions have great effects.” – Oscar Justus
Lamar Dodd School of Art Galleries, University of Georgia
“Dawn Williams Boyd: Woe” — A series of textile works by the Atlanta-based artist that reflect a lifelong critique of social injustices and racial violence. Using scraps of fabric, needles, and thread as her tools, Boyd painstakingly “paints” the entire surface of her quilts, layer upon layer, cutting, sewing, endlessly repurposing, building the surface into a formidable, authoritative source that pulls no punches. The exhibition is organized by Daniel Fuller and will travel to the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, and the Galleries at Sarah Lawrence College.
“Time at the Tableæ — Features the work of Dodd undergraduate students Alan Barrett, Alex Barrett and Massie Herlihy. In this intersection of performance, installation, ceramics and photographs, the artists hope to bring a better understanding of what it means to pursue and use ceramics in the ritual of our daily lives.
“Flex·i·ble Architecture: we’re not trying to be heavy, we’re trying to be light” — Dodd MFA candidate Rachel Seburn and Alberta, Canada–based artist Sarah Seburn created this exhibition that investigates materials and their malleability. The artists pull from architectural lineages as they create an installation that acts as a mock-up showroom, an investigation into a new kind of interior building that allows for floors and walls to sink, rock and tilt.
“Waste Creation” — Mickey Boyd, a Dodd MFA candidate, presents a collaborative exhibition with Max Yarbrough, an artist working and living in Albuquerque, New Mexico. The artists present a series of images and sculptures that explore how exponential growth equals exponential waste. 
The Atheaneum
“Trevor Paglen: Vision After Seeing” — An exhibition of photographs and a video by internationally renowned artist Trevor Paglen explores an essential question at the heart of Paglen’s recent work: “Are vision and seeing the same thing?” Paglen investigates this question as it relates to the long history of technologies that have aided, and perhaps even eclipsed, the human eye. 
tiny ATH gallery
“Davy Gibbs: ‘Empires’” — “Empire” is a word we associate with a powerful sense of place, with both glory and decay, rise and fall. The Deep South, if never quite an empire in the formal sense, has always been a land of little empires. Athenian Davy Gibbs examines this idea through photographs.
Safety precautions in place for tiny ATH gallery:
Unless vaccinated, please wear your mask
Please consider parking up Pulaski/Cleveland to alleviate parking issues   
If you feel unwell, or have been in touch with anyone who has been sick, please stay home
Enter through front porch door
Hotel Indigo, Athens
ArtWall@Hotel Indigo: Considering the intersection of natural and industrial beauty, “All or Nothing” juxtaposes organic abstractions and lush landscapes with historic structures and decimated buildings. Featured artists include Alexa Rivera, Christina Matacotta and Zahria Cook. 
BARBAR
“Uncaged” — Work in oil and watercolor by Helen Kuykendall, a largely self-taught artist originally from Venezuela who combines natural motifs in unsettling ways. Opening party from 7 to 9 p.m. as part of Third Thursday. 
The Classic Center
No programming for this month’s Third Thursday.
Creature Comforts Brewing Co.’s CCBC Gallery
Artist-in-Residence Noraa James’s painting-in-progress on display in the CCBC Gallery. Plus: How do you contribute creativity to your community? Let us know on the interactive chalkboard installation! 
Third Thursday was established in 2012 to encourage attendance at Athens’ established art venues through coordination and co-promotion by the organizing entities. Rack cards promoting Third Thursday and visual art in Athens are available upon request. This schedule and venue locations and regular hours can be found at 3thurs.org.
Contact: Michael Lachowski, Georgia Museum of Art, [email protected].
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Norway Road Trip with a toddler
If you ever considered visiting Norway, I have one thing to say to you - Go! Go! Go! CI could easily become a number one fan of this country and send messages to a random people convincing them to go there, but I am already nr 1 fan of Mia and it takes all my spare time. One is for sure - it is one of the most beautiful countries I’ve been to (and I’ve been to many) and I don’t even know how to start describing it, as all the words coming to my mind are more or less like “magnificent”, “stunning”, “incredible”, “unspeakable”, “unique”.
Here are some basic and useful info:
- internet - we got a SIM card at Telia, it gives you 10GB for a week and each week you’re there you can add 10 euros and get another 10GB. The only problem was that we could not charge it online by using a German credit card (only Norwegian works). It was a problem, as there’s not too many stores you can recharge it on a way. Having a Norwegian friend could be helpful. I didn’t have one so I ended up asking a salesman in a store to buy it for me and I gave him cash.
- costs - travelling around Norway in a motorhome is a great idea. You loose all the big costs like accommodation, camping sites, restaurants and cafes. In Scandinavia there is this beautiful law that land belongs to everyone, which means that you can park wherever you wish (of course not at someone’s backyard). We did free camping all the time. We cooked in a van and took a shower over there as well. There’s a lot of places where you can refill the water and get rid of the black and grey one. There is also this magical machine, where you place your toilet cassette inside and it does all the work for you (if you ever emptied one, you know what I mean. And… you will never forget the first time you take care of “this business”). Products in shops are a bit more expensive, that’s true. But what can you do, you need to eat plus it’s a very small price to pay for all the beautiful things you’ll see around. You can save money on drinking water, as it’s everywhere around.
- currency - we used a card everywhere, I did not use an ATM once.
- sleeping - anywhere, just like this. There’s so many beautiful spots over there. We did not plan overnight stops, we stopped wherever we love a place. The beautiful thing is that you can make a campfire in Norway. You will see so many prepared by previous travellers places for a fire. You can also use the campground, which are very well prepared and offer a shower :D
- food - I read somewhere that you do not travel to Norway for food. I think that this person did not try delicious fish they have. Another friend told me that she used to spend all her pocket money on fish when she was a kid. I am not surprised at all. They also have amazing local meat and goodies from a forest like blueberries in sugar - definitely recommended! We did not eat in restaurants, we cooked almost all the meals. We like to cook out of local products, it’s exciting and it’s fun to search for new goodies in a local store.
- Norway with a toddler - I think that there’s no better country to travel with a toddler. You have a beautiful animals everywhere, stunning views, many playgrounds. We could not go on a trekking as Mia was simply not interested. Not at all. But we still managed to see stunning places and experience a lot just by driving. Finding a place to stop and explore is not a slight problem and you can share your knowledge of plants and animals with them (mine is not impressive but for Mia I was a plant specialist). The thing about Norway is that, except for a beautiful nature, there’s not much to do. It helps to disconnect, focus on what’s important - hugging and kissing your kid. Just remember that your toddler will not stay happy only with kisses, it needs entertainment. If I can give you one advise about a toy that made our journey so much easier is a modelling clay aka plasticine - Mia loooooooves it! She could spend hours playing with it and making up her strange and super cute stories. She cooked many cakes and pizzas out of it.
- highway - is paid. You can register online and they will send you a bill via email.
- while travelling in Norway you will most probably use some ferries. Nothing to worry. You just go wherever you wish and when you get to the port, you wait in line of cars and give your card or cash before boarding. No need to go anywhere or book things. Easy. It’s also another way to see unique views.
- when to go. We went there in August and there were not that many tourists. July is apparently very busy, but also warmer. I’d love to go back in winter, but for this Mia has to be slightly older and my camper van slightly younger.
Our route:
Let me just write that you don’t really need to focus on getting to places. The whole road to your destination is stunning. If I could, I’d stop each 20m and take pictures. Unfortunately, my kid will make my life a hell if I did so I didn’t. But I did admire it through the window.
Hardangervidda nasjonalpark - We went through while driving from Oslo to Odda. I remember being shocked how stunning it is. We could see the traditional houses with roofs covered in grass, horses and beautiful views. If Mia was more optimistic about trekking, I’d definitely do some. But for now I have a plan to come back when she’s older.
Eidfjord beautiful town with stunning fjords. We stopped there just to take some pictures as you cannot pass next to this view. They do have a good coffee as well :)
Odda - it’s not about Odda itself, but its surroundings. There are some beautiful trekking options in the hood and the town itself is pretty. Little houses on hills are cute as well.
Fjaerland we stopped for a night under a glacier. How crazy amazing is this! When I was travelling with Mia in New Zealand we had to take a helicopter to enjoy it. In Norway it’s just there, waiting for you :D
Skei I Jolster - was my coffee stop. I made my own coffee and stood there staring at this stunning view. There was a house just next to it. If they ever sell it, I’d love to buy it. So I guess I have to start saving 10 years ago.
Loen - one of my favourite spots. Turquoise water, stunning fiords and we had fun over there with Mia. On the end of the road, there’s a very lovely camping site.
Stadlandet - it’s surfers beach and there were many surfers over there. It’s one of these unique places where you have to go down with a very narrow curly road and need to look at all the stunning views on the way. The only minus I guess is that you cannot stop there just like it, you need to pay. It’s obviously more than worth it! We stayed for the sunset over the curly road and it was one of these pure happiness moments.
Runde - unfortunately I did not manage to take pictures of the island as Mia fell asleep on my hands and it was carrying her around for about 45 minutes. After this experience I had to wait a bit before driving as I could not operate the steering wheel. The Island is beautiful and I definitely recommend visiting.
Alesund and Stiftinga Sunnmøre Museum- it’s a village which is a museum. You can check out how they used to live in Norway and it’s pretty cool. You can visit an old shop, check out the buildings or go on a Viking boat!
Trollstigen - this is a hell of an experience, especially for a driver. You want to go down with this road! Not up, at least I prefer not to with my 23 year old van. I do not have a support in a steering wheel and I did it! Just look at all these curly roads.
Atlantic Ocean Road - each part of this road is stunning. These are small islands connected by many bridges. All of them covered with green grass (most probably in the summer) and tiny houses. Behind one, there’s a ship wreck.
Trodheim if I only could sit in one of the cafes and enjoy a view. Meantime, I kept running after Mia, which was pretty awesome as well.
Foldereid we stopped here on our way on the ferry to Lofoten. It’s not a special or a popular spot, I just truly enjoyed the surroundings and took 1000 of pictures over here.
Lofoten - is a unique place in Norway. I will risk writing that it’s a must if you want to see an unspeakable beauty of mountains thrown into a water. Lofoten includes islands connected by bridges or not (so you need to use ferry sometimes, but you don’t need to, depends on where you go). I think that the most popular part is at the end. We got there by ferry and started from there. If you travel without a toddler, I believe you can make some awesome trekking. But I do travel with one and she prefers short ones, which means 15 minutes max. We stopped at a few stops, but to be frank, the whole drive is simply beautiful.
Å
Reine
Hamnoya
Sakrisoya
Moskenesoya
Leknes
Heenningsvear
Husoy, Senja - a tiny town located on a tiny island which creates a spectacular view.
Oldervik - town at the end of a road. It’s something what I am glad I experienced as the way over there was filled with horses and beautiful sunrise and I woke up to one of the most beautiful mornings.
Nordkapp - I wanted to skip this part, as thought that I saw enough beauty in Norway and nothing will surprise me. I was obviously wrong. Nordkapp is a must in Norway, at least from my perspective. This is a place where you can hang out with reindeers and I mean it. I woke up to them in the morning. They were sleeping in front of my camper’s door. And I give you 100% chance that you’ll meet them a lot :) The area is also beautiful. I wanted to go there for a day, but I stayed for long. I can totally see myself staying there forever.
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NRS-410V Pathophysiology and Nursing Management of Clients’ Health Entire Course
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NRS-410V  Topic 1 Mandatory Discussion Question
Max Points: 20.0 The case scenario provided will be used to answer the discussion questions that follow. Case Scenario Ms. G., a 23-year-old diabetic, is admitted to the hospital with a cellulitis of her left lower leg. She has been applying heating pads to the leg for the last 48 hours, but the leg has become more painful and she has developed chilling. Subjective Data Complains of pain and heaviness in her leg. States she cannot bear weight on her leg and has been in bed for 3 days. Lives alone and has not had anyone to help her with meals. Objective Data Round, yellow-red, 2 cm diameter, 1 cm deep, open wound above medial malleolus with moderate amount of thick yellow drainage Left leg red from knee to ankle Calf measurement on left 3 in > than right Temperature: 38.9 degrees C Height: 160 cm; Weight: 83.7 kg Laboratory Results WBC 18.3 x 10¹² / L; 80% neutrophils, 12% bands Wound culture: Staphylococcus aureus Critical Thinking Questions 1. What clinical manifestations are present in Ms. G and what recommendations would you make for continued treatment? Provide rationale for your recommendations. 2. Identify the muscle groups likely to be affected by Ms. G’s condition by referring to “ARC: Anatomy Resource Center.” 3. What is the significance of the subjective and objective data provided with regard to follow-up diagnostic/laboratory testing, education, and future preventative care? Provide rationale for your answer. 4. What factors are present in this situation that could delay wound healing, and what precautions are required to prevent delayed wound healing? Explain.
NRS-410V  Week 1 Assess your Knowledge of Foundational Concepts Details: Assess your knowledge of foundational concepts essential to the nursing management of client health by taking the interactive quiz, located in the media “Arterial Blood Gas Interpretation.” http://lc.gcumedia.com/zwebassets/courseMaterialPages/nrs410v_self-assessment-v1.1.php The quiz is designed as a tool for self-assessment. When you encounter questions that seem vaguely familiar, click on the media’s study materials, which are organized by topic (e.g., anatomy, biology, chemistry, pharmacology). This media will serve as a refresher for the concepts that build upon one another in nursing practice. You will have the opportunity to retake the quiz until you achieve a passing score of 100%. Once completed, please save your results and submit to the instructor. NRS-410V Topic 2 Assignment Approach to Care Details: Write a paper (1,250-1,750 words) describing the approach to care of cancer. In addition, include the following in your paper: Describe the diagnosis and staging of cancer. Describe at least three complications of cancer, the side effects of treatment, and methods to lessen physical and psychological effects. Prepare this assignment according to the APA guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required. This assignment uses a grading rubric. Instructors will be using the rubric to grade the assignment; therefore, students should review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the assignment criteria and expectations for successful completion of the assignment. You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. Refer to the directions in the Student Success Center. Only Word documents can be submitted to LopesWrite. NRS 410 Topic 2 Mandatory Discussion Question The American Cancer Society (ACS) is a nationwide, community-based, voluntary health organization dedicated to eliminating cancer as a major health problem. Together with its supporters, ACS is committed to helping people stay well and get well by finding cures and by fighting back.Critical Thinking Questions: 1. Imagine that a family friend or colleague has just been diagnosed with cancer. Explain how the American Cancer Society might provide education and support. What ACS services would you recommend and why? 2. According to statistics published by the American Cancer Society, there will be an estimated 1.5 million new cancer cases diagnosed each year over the next decade. What factors contribute to the yearly incidence and mortality rates of various cancers in Americans? What changes in policy and practice are most likely to affect these figures over time 3. Select a research program from among those funded by the American Cancer Society. Describe the program and discuss what impact the research will have on the prevention or treatment of cancer. NRS-410V Topic 3 Case Study 1 Details: In a short essay (500-750 words), answer the Question at the end of Case Study 1. Cite references to support your positions. Prepare this assignment according to the APA guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required. This assignment uses a grading rubric. Instructors will be using the rubric to grade the assignment; therefore, students should review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the assignment criteria and expectations for successful completion of the assignment. You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. NRS410V.R.CaseStudy1_Student_02-11-13.docx NRS-410V Topic 3 Case Study 2 Details: In a short essay (500-750 words), answer the Question at the end of Case Study 2. Cite references to support your positions. Prepare this assignment according to the APA guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required. This assignment uses a grading rubric. Instructors will be using the rubric to grade the assignment; therefore, students should review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the assignment criteria and expectations for successful completion of the assignment. You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. NRS410V.R.CaseStudy2_Student_02-11-13.docx NRS-410V Topic 4 Mandatory Discussion Question Use the image in “Discussion Question Resource: Chest X-Ray” to answer the following Critical Thinking Questions. Examine the x-ray of a patient diagnosed with pneumonia due to infection with Mucor. Refer to the “Module 4 DQ Chest Xray” resource in order to complete the following questions. Critical Thinking Questions Explain what Mucor is and how a patient is likely to become infected with Mucor. Describe the pathophysiologic progression of the infection into pneumonia and at least two medical/nursing interventions that would be helpful in treating the patient. Examine the laboratory blood test results and arterial blood gases provided in “Discussion Question Resource: Laboratory Blood Test Results.” What laboratory values are considered abnormal? Explain each abnormality and discuss the probable causes from a pathophysiologic perspective. What medications and medical treatments are likely to be prescribed by the attending physician on this case? List at least three medications and three treatments. Provide rationale for each of the medications and treatments you suggest. NRS-410V Topic 4 Assignment Collaborative Learning Community: Home Visit with Sallie Mae Fisher Details: This is a CLC assignment. As a group, observe the simulated “Home Visit With Sallie Mae Fisher” video (http://lc.gcumedia.com/zwebassets/courseMaterialPages/nrs410v_vp01Alt.php). Refer to “Sallie Mae Fisher’s Health History and Discharge Orders” for specifics related to the case study used to inform the assignment. Using “Home Visit With Sallie Mae Fisher” and “Sallie Mae Fisher’s Health History and Discharge Orders,” complete the following components of this assignment: Essay Portion After viewing the home visit, write an essay of 500-750-words in which you do the following: Identify, prioritize, and describe at least four problems. Provide substantiating evidence (assessment data) for each problem identified. Identify and describe at least four medical and/or nursing interventions. Discuss your rationale for the interventions identified. Prepare this step of the assignment according to the APA guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required. Scripted Dialogue Portion Utilizing the information learned from the home visit, health histories, and discharge orders, write a scripted dialogue in which you provide Sallie Mae with education that describes her problems and the interventions identified to improve her condition. Consider Sallie Mae’s physiological, psychosocial, educational, and spiritual needs when developing your dialogue. Your dialogue should resemble a script. The following is an example of a few sentences from a scripted dialogue: Nurse: “Good morning, Salle Mae, my name is ______ and I will be your nurse today. I understand you are experiencing problems with ________.” APA format is not required for this part of the assignment, but solid academic writing is expected. Refer to “Home Visit With Sallie Mae Fisher Grading Criteria.” Entire Assignment You are required to submit this assignment to LopesWrite. Refer to the directions in the Student Success Center. Only Word documents can be submitted to LopesWrite. NRS410V.R.SallieMaeFishersHealthHistoryandDischargeOrders_Student_02-11-13.docxNRS410V.R.HomeVisitWithSallieMaeFisherGradingCriteria_Student_02-11-13.docx NRS-410V Topic 5 Mandatory Discussion Question The case scenario provided will be used to answer the discussion questions that follow. Case Scenario Mr. C., a 32-year-old single man, is seeking information at the outpatient center regarding possible bariatric surgery for his obesity. He reports that he has always been heavy, even as a small child, but he has gained about 100 pounds in the last 2–3 years. Previous medical evaluations have not indicated any metabolic diseases, but he says he has sleep apnea and high blood pressure, which he tries to control with sodium restriction. He current works at a catalog telephone center. Objective Data Height: 68 inches; Weight 134.5 kg BP: 172/96, HR 88, RR 26 Fasting Blood Glucose: 146/mg/dL Total Cholesterol: 250mg/dL Triglycerides: 312 mg/dL HDL: 30 mg/dL Critical Thinking Questions What health risks associated with obesity does Mr. C. have? Is bariatric surgery an appropriate intervention? Why or why not? Mr. C. has been diagnosed with peptic ulcer disease and the following medications have been ordered: Magnesium hydroxide/aluminum hydroxide (Mylanta) 15 mL PO 1 hour before bedtime and 3 hours after mealtime and at bedtime. Ranitidine (Zantac) 300 mg PO at bedtime. Sucralfate/Carafate 1 g or 10ml suspension (500mg / 5mL) 1 hour before meals and at bedtime. The patient reports eating meals at 7 a.m., noon, and 6 p.m., and a bedtime snack at 10 p.m. Plan an administration schedule that will be most therapeutic and acceptable to the patient. Assess each of Mr. C.’s functional health patterns using the information given. (Hint: Functional health patterns include health-perception – health management, nutritional – metabolic, elimination, activity-exercise, sleep-rest, cognitive-perceptual, self-perception – self-concept, role-relationship, sexuality – reproductive, coping – stress tolerance.) What actual or potential problems can you identify? Describe at least five problems and provide the rationale for each. NRS-410V  Topic 5 Assignment Benchmark – Evidence-Based Practice Project—Paper on Diabetes Details: Identify a research or evidence-based article that focuses comprehensively on a specific intervention or new diagnostic tool for the treatment of diabetes in adults or children. In a paper of 750-1,000 words, summarize the main idea of the research findings for a specific patient population. Research must include clinical findings that are current, thorough, and relevant to diabetes and the nursing practice. Prepare this assignment according to the APA guidelines found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. An abstract is not required. This assignment uses a grading rubric. Instructors will be using the rubric to grade the assignment; therefore, students should review the rubric prior to beginning the assignment to become familiar with the assignment criteria and expectations for successful completion of the assignment. You are required to submit this assignment to Turnitin. Refer to the directions in the Student Success Center. Only Word documents can be submitted to Turnitin. NRS-410V  Topic 5 Evidence-Based Practice Project—Intervention Presentation on Diabetes Details: Based on the summary of research findings identified from the Evidence-Based Project—Paper on Diabetes that describes a new diagnostic tool or intervention for the treatment of diabetes in adults or children, complete the following components of this assignment: Develop a PowerPoint presentation (a title slide, 6-12 slides, and a reference slide; no larger than 2 MB) that includes the following: 1. A brief summary of the research conducted in the Evidence-Based Project – Paper on Diabetes. 2. A descriptive and reflective discussion of how the new tool or intervention may be integrated into practice that is supported by sound research. While APA format is not required for the body of this assignment, solid academic writing is expected, and in-text citations and references should be presented using APA documentation guidelines, which can be found in the APA Style Guide, located in the Student Success Center. You are not required to submit this assignment to Turnitin, unless otherwise directed by your instructor. If so directed, refer to the Student Success Center for directions. Only Word documents can be submitted to Turnitin.
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lenakrruger · 6 years
Text
Brian Walker closes last NRS office
It is a brand-conscious society, Brian Walker will tell you.
That’s why the 61-year-old broker closed the doors a year ago on his long-time brokerage NRS – a name once recognized as one of the largest realty companies in Canada – and re-opened shop as a Re/Max West Realty office.
[banner]
The move to Re/Max West was a no-brainer, says the Richmond Hill-Ont.-based broker. “What’s happened in the brokerage business is that the weight and expectation on brokerages has become greater and greater as the margins these brokerages collect dwindle,” he says. “It was becoming a ball and chain to run a small office,” which is what NRS had become. “In this business you have to go big or go home.”
NRS was not always small. When Walker opened NRS Select as a franchisee in 1991 the company “had the systems in place and the power to move forward.”  NRS (National Real Estate Service) had about 7,000 agents at its peak. In the 1970s it was identified with actor Raymond Burr, who played lawyer Perry Mason, and who also did commercials for the firm.
By the mid ’90s, however, the franchisor was in a tailspin and two years after West Coast investor Ron Dixon took the helm with an ambitious restructuring agenda, the company was dead. Walker stubbornly hung onto the name at his realty office in Oak Ridges – a small community at the north end of Richmond Hill – even when he was confronted in the mid-2000s by a B.C. broker demanding he stop using the name because he claimed to have the rights to it under the logo National Relocation Service.
“I didn’t figure I would be carrying on for long but lo and behold, I kept the name (until 2017).”
Last August he signed on as a broker under the banner of Re/Max West Realty. “They totally refurbished my office, allowing me to work at the same address with the same phone number.” And he kept his wealth of contacts – integral to his continued success.
Brian Walker (Photo by Elijah Shark)
“In the last year we’ve been able to up our game because we have the bigger brand and we’re in a brand-conscious society.”
He says at NRS it had become difficult to keep up with fast-paced technological and regulatory changes.  A case in point is FINTRAC compliance requirements, which have become “increasingly onerous” and owners don’t see a payback.
The Ontario Real Estate Association has been “pretty effective” at addressing many government initiatives but government keeps knocking at the door says Walker, who is a past president of the association. For example, he says the Ontario government’s minimum wage hike on Jan. 1 “puts a huge burden on brokerages operating from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.”
Whenever there was a change in the industry, Walker’s office, like many small brokerages, was left scrambling to adapt.
“It was easier to be a Mom and Pop shop” in the 1990s, he says. “Now when there is a technological glitch…when your computer goes down you have this expense of pulling your tech guy in.”
He forged on, however, in part because his secretary – “the anchor of my brokerage” – took care of everything from booking appointments to operating Lone Wolf (back office accounting software).  “That is unheard of now.  I was spoiled,” he says. After 17 years his secretary retired, influencing his decision to close NRS Select.
He says to replace experienced personnel in today’s market takes time and training can be costly for smaller brokerages. At Re/Max West his transition has been smooth because the company provides administrative needs and has someone continually recruiting agents and training staff for its 10 offices. “As an office for Re/Max West, my company hands off all the administrative duties to them. It is a well-oiled machine.”
He says while he has to pay for the Re/Max West banner, the price is “not that high” for the services provided. Fees he paid when at NRS for accounting software and an answering service alone were significant.
Walker says another reason small independent brokers might consider moving to a big brokerage is if they are extensively involved in other time-consuming activities. For example, he was the president of his local board in the 1990s and president of OREA in 2007 and then spent four years on the CREA board.  “It takes a lot of focus away from running your brokerage, from selling real estate.”
He believes there is room for agents who don’t heavily rely upon the latest technology or social media to drum up business. “Skills of good old-fashioned networking and belly-to-belly contact are still important. Instead of things going one way, things are just more diverse.”
Walker sees himself in the industry for years to come. “The challenge is keeping aware of changes. I enjoy being a sponge . . . keeping up on things.”
When the broker is not selling real estate, he is often picking leads and strumming rhythm on his Strat or Tele with his band Shakey and the Bluenotes – a group made up of Realtors that has raised about $60,000 over the past dozen years for the OREA Realtors Care Foundation through an annual musical jam.
This year the jam will be held in late November at Lee’s Palace on Bloor Street in Toronto. “At this stage in my life I am pinching myself that I am getting out and doing this. It is still a novelty,” says Walker.
The post Brian Walker closes last NRS office appeared first on REM | Real Estate Magazine.
Brian Walker closes last NRS office published first on https://grandeurparkcondo.tumblr.com/
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felishasheats · 6 years
Text
Brian Walker closes last NRS office
It is a brand-conscious society, Brian Walker will tell you.
That’s why the 61-year-old broker closed the doors a year ago on his long-time brokerage NRS – a name once recognized as one of the largest realty companies in Canada – and re-opened shop as a Re/Max West Realty office.
[banner]
The move to Re/Max West was a no-brainer, says the Richmond Hill-Ont.-based broker. “What’s happened in the brokerage business is that the weight and expectation on brokerages has become greater and greater as the margins these brokerages collect dwindle,” he says. “It was becoming a ball and chain to run a small office,” which is what NRS had become. “In this business you have to go big or go home.”
NRS was not always small. When Walker opened NRS Select as a franchisee in 1991 the company “had the systems in place and the power to move forward.”  NRS (National Real Estate Service) had about 7,000 agents at its peak. In the 1970s it was identified with actor Raymond Burr, who played lawyer Perry Mason, and who also did commercials for the firm.
By the mid ’90s, however, the franchisor was in a tailspin and two years after West Coast investor Ron Dixon took the helm with an ambitious restructuring agenda, the company was dead. Walker stubbornly hung onto the name at his realty office in Oak Ridges – a small community at the north end of Richmond Hill – even when he was confronted in the mid-2000s by a B.C. broker demanding he stop using the name because he claimed to have the rights to it under the logo National Relocation Service.
“I didn’t figure I would be carrying on for long but lo and behold, I kept the name (until 2017).”
Last August he signed on as a broker under the banner of Re/Max West Realty. “They totally refurbished my office, allowing me to work at the same address with the same phone number.” And he kept his wealth of contacts – integral to his continued success.
Brian Walker (Photo by Elijah Shark)
“In the last year we’ve been able to up our game because we have the bigger brand and we’re in a brand-conscious society.”
He says at NRS it had become difficult to keep up with fast-paced technological and regulatory changes.  A case in point is FINTRAC compliance requirements, which have become “increasingly onerous” and owners don’t see a payback.
The Ontario Real Estate Association has been “pretty effective” at addressing many government initiatives but government keeps knocking at the door says Walker, who is a past president of the association. For example, he says the Ontario government’s minimum wage hike on Jan. 1 “puts a huge burden on brokerages operating from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.”
Whenever there was a change in the industry, Walker’s office, like many small brokerages, was left scrambling to adapt.
“It was easier to be a Mom and Pop shop” in the 1990s, he says. “Now when there is a technological glitch…when your computer goes down you have this expense of pulling your tech guy in.”
He forged on, however, in part because his secretary – “the anchor of my brokerage” – took care of everything from booking appointments to operating Lone Wolf (back office accounting software).  “That is unheard of now.  I was spoiled,” he says. After 17 years his secretary retired, influencing his decision to close NRS Select.
He says to replace experienced personnel in today’s market takes time and training can be costly for smaller brokerages. At Re/Max West his transition has been smooth because the company provides administrative needs and has someone continually recruiting agents and training staff for its 10 offices. “As an office for Re/Max West, my company hands off all the administrative duties to them. It is a well-oiled machine.”
He says while he has to pay for the Re/Max West banner, the price is “not that high” for the services provided. Fees he paid when at NRS for accounting software and an answering service alone were significant.
Walker says another reason small independent brokers might consider moving to a big brokerage is if they are extensively involved in other time-consuming activities. For example, he was the president of his local board in the 1990s and president of OREA in 2007 and then spent four years on the CREA board.  “It takes a lot of focus away from running your brokerage, from selling real estate.”
He believes there is room for agents who don’t heavily rely upon the latest technology or social media to drum up business. “Skills of good old-fashioned networking and belly-to-belly contact are still important. Instead of things going one way, things are just more diverse.”
Walker sees himself in the industry for years to come. “The challenge is keeping aware of changes. I enjoy being a sponge . . . keeping up on things.”
When the broker is not selling real estate, he is often picking leads and strumming rhythm on his Strat or Tele with his band Shakey and the Bluenotes – a group made up of Realtors that has raised about $60,000 over the past dozen years for the OREA Realtors Care Foundation through an annual musical jam.
This year the jam will be held in late November at Lee’s Palace on Bloor Street in Toronto. “At this stage in my life I am pinching myself that I am getting out and doing this. It is still a novelty,” says Walker.
The post Brian Walker closes last NRS office appeared first on REM | Real Estate Magazine.
Brian Walker closes last NRS office published first on https://oicrealestate.tumblr.com/
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2centsofsilver · 7 years
Text
10/17/17
Last night after blogging that thing about L, I had a dream about her. She was present in my life. She had come back. It was like, I opened the door, and she was standing there with a smile. And she was talking to me and we were talking. We were getting ready to go somewhere or do something. It was a dream of great peace and clarity. Woke up sad. I had a dream several nights ago with her friend C in it too. I was over at someone’s house and I took her to the side and was like, “Can I talk to you???” And she sort of gave an “Ok fine” reply and took me into a side bedroom behind the kitchen. I was like, “What is going on???” And she said something to the effect of, “Lisa doesn’t want you to talk to her anymore. She doesn’t want you in her life anymore.” And I asked her why. And she was reluctant to tell me, but sort of did tell me, but I don’t remember the reason or it was vague, I’m not sure. And then she had to get back to her party because she had guests over. ---- Today while I was paying my parking meter on 1st St, I literally got attacked by a squirrel. I’ll talk about it later, but it was sort of traumatic. --- Today I had therapy at 3:30pm. It started out in the waiting room with me telling Amy I was attacked by a squirrel and asking whether I needed to get a rabies shot LOL. She said no, it didn’t break skin, etc. What a way to bring myself into therapy. Lately in therapy, she’s been getting a comprehensive, ongoing Hx and last time we got through my first ever major loss in life: Band. We had ended session with it and she was taken back by how significant the loss and said we’d pick up there next time. But I came in today really needing help with the present. She asked me how I was and I told her I was really stressed and amidst a giant financial crisis of having completely run out of money in both my checking and savings account. That led to me sort of blabbing about how I need a job/don’t have one/cancelled my interview this morning because: Domino Effect - I didn’t sleep last night because: Domino Effect- I was writing about Lisa. I backtracked and told her how the new job emailed saying that they can’t take me on anyway if I don’t have Thursday availability. Domino Effect- I told Amy that I signed up for an art class during that exact shift at the A2 Art Center on Thursdays because: Domino Effect- I deferred from school and just wanted to be happy and help my depression, so I thought I had done something good, which was sign up for an art class. Had I not done that, I could have taken this job, but how was I supposed to know? Additionally- Domino Effect, I told 3 employers I have open availability on Wednesdays, but Domino Effect, I am now in a class created by my therapist called Hungerwise which runs every Wednesday for the next 9 weeks. This is a really crucial class to help cure my depression in the next year of my deferment.  Then I talked a lot about being possibly depressed from my benzos or maybe from being used to loss; basically told her that I was emotionally flat/emotionless during a time that I otherwise never would be: Loss of Lisa. I told her how it didn’t make sense that I wouldn’t be in deep pain grieving this, but I talked about how I’m not experiencing any emotions at all including happiness or the ability to concentrate/absorb experiences and information. I also told her how I haven’t gone grocery shopping in 2 months, don’t eat what I buy, eat out twice a day for the last 2 months, have run out of money because of it, am always hungry, and never sleep/sleep all day. Despite how it sounds, I was actually quite organized while I explained all this to her. She was following really well. I really like Amy because she stops me and asks relevant questions that make me think and they always help me understand and connect A-B-C-D-E-F-G, etc. History and Present. Trauma and Behavior. She’s slightly psychodynamic, but I think it’s working because she’s contemporary in her approach and integrative. She uses the Family Systems Model which is proving quite beneficial. It’s where we work on identifying emotions and assign ages to those emotions. For example: How did it feel when M texted me about L and “Company Members. If you had to put a single emotion to that, what would it be?” I struggled to think of an emotion. She listed some off, one being “Scared.” I thought about it, then agreed. Wholeheartedly agreed. “Yes, I felt really really scared,” I said. And then she sometimes will ask, “If you had to put an age to that emotion, what age does it feel to experience that emotion for you?” I usually really struggle with this question, but usually it’s an age from childhood. She didn’t ask me that for this scenario today, but if I had to choose an age for how “Scared” I felt after that encounter, I would pick, maybe 16 or 17 because it was a reasonable, complex fear laced with “What If” fears and mental racing in considering numerous factors, etc., but oftentimes, I’ll say “Age 7 or 8″ when she asks me for other things. We talked a lot about the “Company Members” thing and how much that brief text exchange has fucked me up since it happened. We talked about my desire to want to “Report” things- how I often feel scared/in trouble when I’m innocent and feel like I need help from someone of power, like a social worker, or my dad as a lawyer. She asked me why that is and I told her I think it has something to do with my parents always getting me out of everything when I was a child. I told her how even if I fought all this, it would be a losing battle, because it’s hard to prove mental health as a medical condition, etc. I also told her my HEART is not in “The Company” - and went into an organized description of how much I oppose ABA and how much I hated my job there and why I chose to reapply. And then she asked me some questions about why I want to prove so badly that I’m a person of value. She asked some questions about H and I answered. She’s a really, really good therapist. We’ve accomplished so much in the 10 sessions I’ve seen her so far. She ended up ending session by asking me a really hard, comprehensive question that she wants me to think about and said we could talk more about next time. It was a thought she had: Do I notice a pattern in my emotions and actions for each and every time all these individuals have “left me” and do any of these people have anything in common. I said yes to the pattern, that it’s always the same, and no to them having things in common. I said the only thing in common is that I thought these people were the coolest people ever and wanted them to like me, I wanted to feel included, and I wanted to be just like them. She then asked the broader comprehensive question of, would I compare my lifespan problems with my parents (attachment to abandonment- Child through Present Day) to the patterns of these short-lasting relationships with friends who have “left.” I thought about it. I told her it’s really hard to compare 26 years with anywhere from 3 months to 2 year friendships. But I ultimately said maybe, “Because my parents don’t love me anymore.”  --- After therapy today, I got a lot of things done on my To-Do List. A lot of really important things. I bought cold wax medium from Michael’s for my class, ordered art supplies online for overnight delivery, returned my textbook and mailed my Aetna reimbursement form at the post office, went into a book store asking for books on Portland (spontaneous and unplanned; it was like something led me in there), went to the library on Stadium -- really nice inside! -- to print my NR 401k paperwork for cash-out, fax my Recipient Rights certificate for my current job, and print more Aetna forms. I also got coffee at Sweetwater’s at the library which made me feel happy. I think the wind and changing weather had something to do with my desire to walk into that bookstore and feel cozy with coffee and my dream. Reevaluate whether I’m on the right road here in A2. I got GTPC too. It was a really productive day. --- Tomorrow I have my SEED followup for Integrative Health with Deb. My friend Kara is going, but unfortunately Alyssa and Kaylee aren’t going. I don’t think Savannah will be on campus because she has a meeting for Field. I might have lunch with Amanda after, but then I have to catch the bus and go out to Plymouth Rd for a massage with a new girl named Maggie.  Then Thursday, I have my art class in the morning, possibly an interview, and am hanging out with Max, Gabe, Logan, and maybe Savannah in the evening. I am hoping to hang out with Erin again soon and Lindsey too. It feels good that all these people are inviting me to do things, rather than the other way around. I still don’t know where I am though. I feel like I’ve just been dropped into white space. --- Peace, Love, Happiness. 1:09AM
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Predictions about the F1 grid until about 2025:
Max will win the championship this year. I mean, Mercedes is coming back but not good enough to be a threat, Ferrari is a walking shit show and Perez will never even be in contention. This is pretty much guaranteed.
Next year we will actually have a fight between multiple drivers (until a certain point obviously.) If RedBull keeps the performance and Mercedes keeps this improvement to get back to their former self we will have Lewis, Max and George fighting for it. Ferrari is only in that fight if they get ride of Binotto and hire a team principal that can actually reflect and just deflect any facts.
I think 2024 will most likely be Lewis last season. I think he'll definitely give it another shot if they are in contention next year but I honestly do not see him staying past 2024. I don't think he's out of talent I just think that if he wins his 8th, possible even his 9th championship, there's really nothing for him in the sport anymore. I also think he would be someone to leave thinking that he'll let the younger generation have their turn. I don't for a second think that he'll be done with motorsport but I just think within the next 3 years he'll leave because there's nothing to prove and he might also focus more on other priorities.
Aston Martin will actually become competitive in the next 3-4 years. I think the team most likely to be at the top is actually team. However there needs to be better management. I also strongly believe that with the right car Lance not only has a shot at winning races but also at a championship. If AM where smart they would try everything to get Drugovich a seat so he could replace Alonso in 2-3 years once the car is competitive enough to fight at the front.
McLaren will be a catastrophe to come. The lawsuits from the Indy drivers, the promises they make, the awful way they threat their drivers, it will all come back to bit them in the ass. Hell, I could see Norris jumping ship as soon as shit hits the fan because why should he stay in a burning wreckage? However I think Norris will be the driver that McLaren builds itself around.
Haas will actually become closer and battle at the top of the midfield, maybe even able to sneak an occasional podium. I truly believe we are seeing Haas on the up and not at the end of that road. They won't be a top team but I think they will truly be the midfield battlers.
I sadly believe that Charles will be a lost championship. Unless Ferrari get their shot together, Charles incredible talent and potential will be wasted. He deserves better and I truly hope Ferrari sort it out so we can see him in the championship battle.
I think Mick might become a RedBull driver at some point. If the rumours about him leaving Ferrari are true and he doesn't join AM, I see his best chance alongside Max.
I think once Lewis leaves, Esteban will be put into that Mercedes seat. He's shown talent and I think he would be a great teammate for George. I mean Nyck de Vries has said himself that there's just no real possibility he'll be back in F1 and I don't see any way they get Vandoorne in there when he's contracted with FE for probably at least 2 seasons in my mind.
I think Sergio will be kicked from F1 at the end of next season just like Ricciardo. Both are going to be replaced by younger drivers. They're just in no mans land. They would never be number 1 drivers at any time, the younger gen is the priority and I truly believe that most teams will try to have their Nr. 1 experienced driver and another younger driver to support that driver.
Talking about this I think sadly that will also be Pierre's faith. He's not really a choice for RedBull anymore which is why I truly believe his best shot will be with Alpine. He could be an outside for the Mercedes seat but we all know that the entire focus of the team once Lewis leaves will be on becoming champions with George.
I think Yuki will be stuck at Alpha Tauri for the next 2-3 years if he performs well. I unfortunately don't think he or Alex will be going anywhere any time soon. They're sadly bond to be midfield drivers.
I actually think that maybe, the best candidate for that Ferrari seat alongside Charles might be Guanyu. I personally think Sainz performance until recently has not been that great and I think he will clash with Charles eventually because he expects and demands on equal statues which Charles will at some point fight against (as he should because he's clearly the better driver.) That will lead to a fall out where Ferrari is screwed because unless Mick stays contracted they will have no one with experience to replace Sainz. Guanyu has shown great performances this year (he's also been hit by a ball of bad luck.) He's not really a threat to Charles championship in my mind and I truly think that he would be a great Nr. 2 driver that would consistently score the required amount of points.
I think at the end of 2024/2025 Bottas, Perez, Ricciardo, Magnussen, Alonso and Lewis will all be gone (for different reasons but yeah.) Might be a big shot but yeah I think it's not too far off.
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