2:00
Nose ring in bull
Putting a ring in our new bull....
published: 02 May 2013
author: 22jaymorris
Nose ring in bull
Nose ring in bull
Putting a ring in our new bull.- published: 02 May 2013
- views: 1377
- author: 22jaymorris
6:52
The bull in the nose rings how to do
Welcome to Mimb Jewerly Shop. All about body piercing - nose rings, nose piercing : http:/...
published: 21 Dec 2013
The bull in the nose rings how to do
The bull in the nose rings how to do
Welcome to Mimb Jewerly Shop. All about body piercing - nose rings, nose piercing : http://mimb.org/ Nose piercing is very attractive, and can draw attention to the face, because the nose is the face's most prominent limb; Leonardo DaVinci thought that the nose set the character of the person. http://mimb.org/nose-piercing-body-jewerly/ On our channel, you will learn many more interesting things about nose rings https://www.youtube.com/user/MimbBodyJewerly- published: 21 Dec 2013
- views: 2
2:54
How to make a fake nose piercing
Yo whats up fella Youtubers!!! Today this tutorial will be teaching you how to fake a nose...
published: 05 Dec 2013
How to make a fake nose piercing
How to make a fake nose piercing
Yo whats up fella Youtubers!!! Today this tutorial will be teaching you how to fake a nose ring. It's easy and very simple to make with cheap items you can find at stores like Walmart and all those other stores. Materials you need: 16 gauge craft wire which you can get at Walmart and other craft stores bead ball captive ring which you can also get at Walmart and other body jewelry shops wire cutters (for the wire) pen (for the wire)- published: 05 Dec 2013
- views: 51
0:34
Buzz HATES Nose Rings
"Because nose rings are for PUNKS, little mister!"
Of course good ol' Disney is going to ...
published: 23 Jun 2010
Buzz HATES Nose Rings
Buzz HATES Nose Rings
"Because nose rings are for PUNKS, little mister!" Of course good ol' Disney is going to have Buzz Lightyear dislike nose rings. This is a short clip from the 1st BLoSC movie, and Buzz was getting irritated by his unofficial partners because they won't listen to him announce melodramaticallly that he'll have to defeat the Evil Emperor Zurg alone. (He also said throughout most of the movie that he works alone and doesn't need a partner, but nobody listens to him.)- published: 23 Jun 2010
- views: 3647
1:27
Down on the farm - Nose Ring
Ouch....
published: 07 Jan 2012
author: MrJoshHodgson
Down on the farm - Nose Ring
0:51
Nose Piercing
THis is how to prevent a pig from excavating vegetables and just plain old digging. Please...
published: 11 May 2009
author: antonio balladares
Nose Piercing
Nose Piercing
THis is how to prevent a pig from excavating vegetables and just plain old digging. Please don't start complaing this is not animal cruelty, this is real lif...- published: 11 May 2009
- views: 10873
- author: antonio balladares
1:16
Body Candy Interview - Nose Ring
Kelsey interviews BodyCandy.com team member Cat about her nose piercing. She tells a great...
published: 03 Aug 2011
author: bodycandybodyjewelry
Body Candy Interview - Nose Ring
Body Candy Interview - Nose Ring
Kelsey interviews BodyCandy.com team member Cat about her nose piercing. She tells a great story about the night it was pierced.- published: 03 Aug 2011
- views: 7529
- author: bodycandybodyjewelry
3:17
British dad's reaction to his daughter's fake nose ring
Decided to play a little prank on my dad, his reaction has caused some entertainment for m...
published: 25 Nov 2013
British dad's reaction to his daughter's fake nose ring
British dad's reaction to his daughter's fake nose ring
Decided to play a little prank on my dad, his reaction has caused some entertainment for my friends who said I should put it online, so here goes! Sorry for the vulgar language!- published: 25 Nov 2013
- views: 18
2:46
BULL's Nose ring lost
Here's an option you can do if your bull loses his nose ring.....I am a green newbie alone...
published: 02 Mar 2011
author: PitambarTheRedBull
BULL's Nose ring lost
BULL's Nose ring lost
Here's an option you can do if your bull loses his nose ring.....I am a green newbie alone in Hawaii so it's all scary and new to me. I am 7 months pregnant ...- published: 02 Mar 2011
- views: 6334
- author: PitambarTheRedBull
7:03
THE CHILI BANDITOS - Rock Hard Baguettes/Nose Ring LIVE @ Lestats!
The Chili Banditos performing "Rock Hard Baguettes" & "Nose Ring" live at Lestat's West in...
published: 30 Dec 2013
THE CHILI BANDITOS - Rock Hard Baguettes/Nose Ring LIVE @ Lestats!
THE CHILI BANDITOS - Rock Hard Baguettes/Nose Ring LIVE @ Lestats!
The Chili Banditos performing "Rock Hard Baguettes" & "Nose Ring" live at Lestat's West in San Diego, California. 12.11.13.- published: 30 Dec 2013
- views: 10
3:22
THE CHILI BANDITOS - Nose Ring [Official Audio]
You're listening to "Nose Ring" off The Chili Banditos' debut album, 'Keep It Spicy', out ...
published: 08 Jun 2014
THE CHILI BANDITOS - Nose Ring [Official Audio]
THE CHILI BANDITOS - Nose Ring [Official Audio]
You're listening to "Nose Ring" off The Chili Banditos' debut album, 'Keep It Spicy', out now. Download 'Keep It Spicy' here: http://thechilibanditos.bandcamp.com/ http://thechilibanditos.com/ https://www.facebook.com/thechilibanditos- published: 08 Jun 2014
- views: 1
Vimeo results:
16:19
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER ...
published: 13 Aug 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS (HQ) - PART גשטאלט - מודעות - חלק 1
HQ. gestalt work on awareness, part 1. hebrew subtitles added.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Perls calls them the "essences" of a patient's personality, or we can say he is working from his "centers", stretching those sounds, moves and psychological motivations in as many creative directions as he can. I monitor closely to be sure he is not faking it, the way most actors end up doing since they do not have the centers to begin with.
Before the performer begins working with others doing improvs and scenework, there is an important transitional stage in the work in which I help him get comfortable using his very personal Gestalt material freely as creative material. He needs to shift from seeing himself as a patient to enjoying the role of an artist of the
29:21
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL part 3 (HQ)
part 3 of a two hour gestalt session on awareness with actress bel baca. the focus here is...
published: 01 Jan 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL part 3 (HQ)
part 3 of a two hour gestalt session on awareness with actress bel baca. the focus here is "the rhythm of contact and withdrawal", alternating between contact with the environment and withdrawal into the void of "not knowing" to discover what fantasies and new ideas are waiting to emerge into awareness there.
TO VIEW OR DOWNLOAD ALL OF MY VIDEOS, PLUS 1500 PAGES OF MY EXPLANATORY ESSAYS (ALL AT NO CHARGE) PLEASE VISIT MY WEBSITE: franklynwepner.com. ALSO PLEASE NOTE MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS, IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH ME ANY COMMENTS ABOUT MY WORK: franklynwepner@gmail.com. IN THE LISTING OF VIDEOS THE LETTERS (HQ) REFER TO A HIGHER QUALITY VERSION OF THE VIDEO, WHICH IS AVAILABLE TO YOU IF YOUR COMPUTER CAN HANDLE IT.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Per
37:11
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL pt 2 (HQ)
second part of a two hour session on awarenesss with actress bel baca. this is the "guided...
published: 26 Dec 2010
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT WORK ON AWARENESS WITH BEL pt 2 (HQ)
second part of a two hour session on awarenesss with actress bel baca. this is the "guided awareness" part of the exercise, since here i am giving lots of feedback immediately as things happen. in the "unguided" part i waited about 15 minutes before giving feedback. i continue this "guided" process in the 3rd and last part, the next video.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using his major Gestalt moments as what Michael Chekhov in his book "To The Actor" labels "psychological gestures". Perls calls them the "essences" of a patient's personality, or we can say he is working from his "centers", stretching those sounds, moves and psychological motivations in as many creative directions as he can. I monitor closely to be sure he is not faking it, the way most actors end up doing since they do not have the centers to begin with.
Before the performer begins working with others
25:52
GESTALT - AWARENESS PART כותרות בעברית. גשטאלט - מודעות חלק 2 .HQ
HQ. GESTALT - AWARENESS PART גשטאלט - מודעות חלק 2
HEBREW SUBTITLES ADDED
כותרים בעברית
g...
published: 24 Aug 2011
author: franklyn wepner
GESTALT - AWARENESS PART כותרות בעברית. גשטאלט - מודעות חלק 2 .HQ
HQ. GESTALT - AWARENESS PART גשטאלט - מודעות חלק 2
HEBREW SUBTITLES ADDED
כותרים בעברית
gestalt therapy work on awareness with actress bel baca.
second part of "unguided awareness work", in which i
give bel feedback for the work she did in the first part.
part 3 begins the work on "guided awareness", where i closely supervise her work on awareness, and give instantaneous feedback as she goes along.
TO VIEW OR DOWNLOAD ALL OF MY VIDEOS, PLUS 1500 PAGES OF MY EXPLANATORY ESSAYS (ALL AT NO CHARGE) PLEASE VISIT MY WEBSITE: franklynwepner.com. ALSO PLEASE NOTE MY NEW EMAIL ADDRESS, IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO SHARE WITH ME ANY COMMENTS ABOUT MY WORK: fwep@earthlink.net. IN THE LISTING OF VIDEOS THE LETTERS (HQ) REFER TO A HIGHER QUALITY VERSION OF THE VIDEO, WHICH IS AVAILABLE TO YOU IF YOUR COMPUTER CAN HANDLE IT.
BY FRANKLYN WEPNER SEPTEMBER 1, 2006
HOW I WORK: GESTALT DREAMWORK AS THEATER AND PROPHECY
GESTALT DREAM WORK AS PREPARATION FOR PERFORMING
Since 1975 I have been using Gestalt work on awareness, dreams and personal relationships as a way to train and direct performers. The basic principle is simple. I use the Gestalt work to peel the onion of layer after layer of social cliches, ego games and unfinished personal business, and then I do the reverse process reconstituting the onion in the form of characters or other artist structures. The existential message of the dream becomes the superobjective or action of the tragedy, and then I build up the way the performer handles the characters and the plot around that.
My usual procedure is to begin the training with three Gestalt sessions, one on one. The first session, two hours long, deals with the three zones of awareness. During the first hour I simply let him relate what he aware of, since I want to know how he operates before I start meddling with his life. This is important since overall during the Gestalt sessions we are peeling the onion of cliches and games to get to authentic action, and later we will need all of those layers to rebuild the onion as characters involved in the unfolding action of a drama. We need his cliche and game layers for the beginning of the action in Act One as much as we need his authentic action at the end of the dramatic action for Acts Four and Five of a tragic drama.
During the second hour of the first Gestalt session on awareness I attempt to guide him towards a balance of the zones of awareness: outer zone awareness of the environment, inner zone awareness of his body, and fantasy zone awareness of his daydreams. The second and third Gestalt sessions are each three hours long, and each is a typical Gestalt dreamwork session as presented by Fritz Perls in Gestalt Therapy Verbatim. The performer tells the dream in the here and now, identifies with (play acts) several of the main images of the dream in dialogues with each other, and experiences the rhythm of contact and withdrawal. That is to say, after each major dialogue of polarized sides of himself (the contact part) he is instructed to close his eyes, enter his body awareness and daydream (the withdrawal phase of the rhythm).
Since my goal is theater as well as healing, whenever possible during the Gestalt dreamwork I encourage lots of expression using sound and movements. I work with a palette of about 200 different types of recorded musical excerpts, and whenever appropriate I ask him if that image or emotional state were part of a movie what sort of music might be the sound track. Then I find something close to that in my palette of musical colors and ask him to express the mood using the music along with his vocalizing and expressive movements. While he is doing the entire session I spend most of my time jotting down near verbatim notes and making stick figures of his poses and movements, since later in the work I will feed all this back to him and encourage him to explore using it as creative material for acting, dance or whatever his medium is. Taping the session is less useful, since then I would need to spend too much time replaying the tapes. Taking notes live forces me to sort out the wheat from the chaff very efficiently, even at the cost of not observing or notating every detail.
WORKING OUT FROM YOUR CENTERS
After the three introductory one on one Gestalt sessions, session number four is for feedback and discussion of the results. I show him in my notes and diagrams all of the stages of competed and uncompleted actions, and together we search for characters in the theater literature that have similar patterns of action. Is he a Hamlet type, or an Oedipus type, for example? In contrast to the usual practice in acting classes, his first acting assignment probably will be a monologue from a serious tragedy, since I want him to begin with a dramatic action with which he can identify totally. In this process he is using
Youtube results:
4:23
Melissa's Lizard Nose Ring
Daredevil catches lizard and intentionally makes it bite her face*...
published: 25 Mar 2012
author: GotMiley2
Melissa's Lizard Nose Ring
Melissa's Lizard Nose Ring
Daredevil catches lizard and intentionally makes it bite her face*- published: 25 Mar 2012
- views: 154
- author: GotMiley2
0:35
the mother of all nose rings
you don't have a nose ring, THIS is a NOSE RING!!!...
published: 15 Jan 2010
author: mangimages5
the mother of all nose rings
the mother of all nose rings
you don't have a nose ring, THIS is a NOSE RING!!!- published: 15 Jan 2010
- views: 3547
- author: mangimages5
1:18
Imprint On My Heart Pet Paw and Nose Keepsakes
Imprint On My Heart Fine Fingerprint Jewelry offers pet paw and nose impression keepsakes ...
published: 12 Mar 2013
author: ImprintOnMyHeart
Imprint On My Heart Pet Paw and Nose Keepsakes
Imprint On My Heart Pet Paw and Nose Keepsakes
Imprint On My Heart Fine Fingerprint Jewelry offers pet paw and nose impression keepsakes in sterling silver, bronze, acrylic and wood. Capture the impressio...- published: 12 Mar 2013
- views: 16
- author: ImprintOnMyHeart