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Intrauterine Programming: What My Army Pregnancy Taught Me About Fetal Fitness

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  When I was pregnant with my older son, the Army had just begun allowing pregnant women to stay in service. There were no regulations yet, no accommodations, no modified PT standards. If you were in uniform, you did what everyone else did — period. So every morning, I walked two miles to work. During the day, I did chin-ups, sit-ups, push-ups, and formation runs. I took — and passed — a full PT test at nine months pregnant. At the time, no one asked whether this was wise. It was simply what the Army required, and I did it. My son was born on time, healthy, and strong. In fact, he was my healthiest baby. But he was also… different. At just a few months old — when most babies are learning to roll over — he would do chin-ups if I offered him my fingers as a bar. If I held his ankles the way soldiers do for sit-ups, he would perform sit-ups with perfect form. It wasn’t a party trick. It was instinctive, rhythmic, almost familiar to him. (Bit he as definitely the life of every military...

⭐ Achieving Near‑Native Foreign-Language Proficiency: It’s More Than Just Linguistic

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  Most people assume that reaching near‑native proficiency in a foreign language is a matter of vocabulary size, grammar mastery, or hours spent studying. But anyone who has lived inside a language long enough to breathe it knows the truth: the deepest fluency is quiet, subtle, and largely invisible. It’s not the fireworks of perfect grammar. It’s the stillness of alignment . Just as not all divine messages arrive in blinding light — some come as a quiet depth, a presence you feel more than hear — the same is true of the highest levels of language ability. Near‑native proficiency is not loud. It is not showy. It is not a performance. It is a settling . It is the moment when: you stop translating you stop monitoring you stop “speaking correctly” and you simply exist in the language At ILR 4, the language is no longer something you use . It is something you inhabit . And the competencies that get you there are not the ones most textbooks teach. 1. Deep Cultural Stillness Near‑native...

Top 10 Blog Posts of April 2026. #1. Guest post from Dr. Dennis Ortman: Words Matter

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WORDS MATTER “If I speak with human tongues and angelic as well, but do not have love, I am a noisy gong, a clanging symbol.” --I Corinthians 13: 1   My three brothers recently visited from afar. We spent a week together crammed into my small apartment. We exhausted ourselves talking about our lives and our favorite subjects--religion, psychology, and politics. I daily used up my quota of words. Many family and friends avoid talking about these subjects to avoid conflict. But we relish the give-and-take of debate. Coincidentally, the Republican National Convention was televised each night. We watched it diligently and exchanged views. Our convictions ranged across the political spectrum. So our conversations were animated, our disagreements passionate. However, at the end of the week, we learned something from each other and parted friends. Words matter. They have power. Our traditions attest to this fact. For example, God created the world with His word. He began, “Let there be li...