ROBOMIND is a new podcast dedicated to robotics. Listen to the first episode here! https://stonesoup.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/Ill_Make_an_Engineer_Out_of_You-1.m4a Transcript: Hello, my name is Misha Ahmed, and I am your host of this podcast series called ROBOMIND. I know you may be wondering, what does ROBOMIND mean? ROBOMIND is combination of two things: robotics and mind. I love robotics, and I believe that it shapes how you think and it shapes your mind. That is why I called my podcast ROBOMIND. Now a little bit about me! My name is Misha, and I’m 11 years old. I love robotics and my nickname is Mushu, which brings me to our episodes name. I know you may be wondering, “I’ll Make an Engineer Out of You” that’s the weirdest thing ever! No, it’s not. It’s a perfect name. You want to know why? Because my nickname’s Mushu like the dragon from Mulan, and we’re both very similar, both loud, both talkative, both really fun people. Well, he’s not a person, but it’s okay. And I just wanted to inspire you to maybe do robotics someday in the future or just learn a little bit more about it. And today I’m going to tell you a story that happened to me during my first ever robotics competition. New things can be really scary, and this one was one of them. I was literally terrified because I was one of the drivers and I didn’t know if maybe I was gonna be the one to mess up my team and I didn’t want that. But as the games went on, our robot only worked once, and I knew that wasn’t enough to get an award. And I know you may be wondering, why are these awards important? Well, these awards can qualify you to go to the next round, which is the state competition, and everybody wants to go to state competition. And so did my team. We really did! Since this wasn’t a good competition for us, we knew that the only chance of an award that would qualify us was the design award. The design award is a combination of your notebook and your interview. Your notebook is your documentation of your process of building your robots, and your interview is basically when one judge or two comes up to you and asks you questions about your team and about your robot. It’s important that in the interview everybody talks because if not everybody talks, it won’t seem like you worked together as a group. And it’s really important that you look like you worked together because they may not know, but you do work together a lot. And so we really hoped that we would get the design award, but we knew there were so many other great great teams! I’m telling you, we got more and more nervous as they started giving out more and more awards, and we saw so many so many, and I’m telling you a lot of amazing teams! And that’s when they started to announce the winner of the design award, and they said 97793A, and that was my team name. And I’m telling you, I was jumping for joy! It was absolutely crazy. I’m telling you if you looked at my face for the first five seconds, I wasn’t even moving. I wasn’t blinking because I couldn’t even understand that this was real. This was actually happening to me. And then I ran up with my team and accepted our award. Then we got to go to the state competition, which was just an amazing experience, which led us to our next. And there we won another award, which led us to the world competition, and that was such a great experience. It was so amazing to be there, and it all started at this one competition. It all happened at this one competition. And I think that it’s so crazy because in robotics, there’s a lot of downs, right? But these ups that happen, they make the whole thing worthwhile. And that is why I love robotics, and that’s what robotics has taught me. And I wanted to end with a riddle because it keeps your gears turning and keeps your mind in shape. So I’m gonna say that riddle twice, and I’m gonna say it slow one. You want to know why? Because you might need to write it down. It’s a hard riddle. Even I didn’t understand it at first! EPISODE 1 RIDDLE: There are 30 men and two women dressed in uniforms of black or white. They’re locked in combat for many hours. The women may be few, but they hold the most power of all of those on the battlefield. Who are these warriors? And at the beginning of the next episode, I’ll tell you the answer to the riddle. If you got it hooray for you, and if you didn’t get it, we’re on the same step. It took me a while, and maybe you couldn’t get it right away. That is okay! I’ll give you a new riddle next episode, and I’ll tell you the answer to the old one. This is Misha Ahmed your host of ROBOMIND signing off!
Taking to the Sky: Aerial Yoga by Priscilla Chow, 10
As part of the circus, aerial yoga, or “aerial dance,” is a unique way to the sky. It allows students to be free with their moves by tangling in the hanging cloth. As widely suggested, a good age to start aerial yoga is 7 to 8 years old. Teachers of aerial yoga say it is almost never too late to do aerial dance. Some risks for doing aerial yoga are falling from up high or getting tangled in the silks. In terms of its benefits, aerial yoga is almost a full body exercise of fingers, arms, core, and legs. Besides building muscles, it can also help with flexibility. Aerial yoga can be accommodated for people in wheelchairs too. I learned aerial hammock at 10 years old, a type of aerial yoga because my mom went to this fitness studio next to my grandparents’ apartment in China to do Pilates. One time I went with my mom and found out about aerial hammock. I took one class and was already in love with it. So, I continued with aerial hammock for the rest of my summer vacation there. I did not fall or get tangled. Even though my fingers were sore at the end of each class, I felt my full body become stronger. After the sessions, I could do handstands which I had never been able to do. Moving back to Miami, Florida. I explored online about aerial yoga because I hoped to continue the training. Luckily, I found that Florida even has aerial silk championships. Some locations of learning aerial yoga in Miami are at Aerial Fitness Miami or Miami Circus Arts Center. For aerial yoga you can just wear a yoga outfit – yoga pants and yoga top. My tip is to wear a long-sleeved yoga top and long yoga pants. A fun fact about aerial silks is they are not actually made of silk, because silk has no stretch and would hurt. Instead, they are made of nylon, a stretchy and silky material. Nylon is also called artificial silk because it is made of longer threads. Now that I have provided many details about aerial yoga, I have a question for you: Do you want to try aerial yoga?
Saturday Newsletter: September 16, 2023
My Sister (pencil) by Crystal Fu, 12; published in the September/October issue of Stone Soup A note from Emma Wood Hello, friends! As many of you know, my family and I recently moved to Cincinnati, Ohio. I was surprised to realize that, even though Chicago is a mere four-hour drive away, Ohio is on Eastern time—and in fact, Indiana, the state directly to the west of us, is on Eastern time too! This means the mornings are shorter and evenings are later. When it’s evening, I love that it’s still light. But every morning, I wish the sun were already up; it’s hard to wake up in the dark, and it’s only September—which means we have many more months of dark mornings ahead. The tension between my mandated time zone and what feels like the actual time has prompted me to think more about time—and especially about the way I’ve adapted to this new relationship to daytime hours and sunlight. In the September issue, there are a few poems about time: you can read two by Madeline Male, 14, here and here, and one by Sonia Kamnitzer, 10, here. Over the coming weeks, I encourage you to reflect on your relationship to time and to explore it through writing or visual art (or both!). As always, consider submitting your work to us after—we’d love to consider it for publication! Otherwise, I hope everyone is settling into a calmer back-to-school routine. My daughter started her first year of preschool this week, and we are all still adjusting! If you don’t already subscribe to the magazine, we are currently running a promotion for 30% off our annual print and digital subscription with the code BACK2SCHOOL30 for the month of September. Please consider signing up this fall, or urging your friends or your child’s school to do so. As always, we appreciate your support of Stone Soup! Yours from in front of an open window with perfectly cool air wafting in– Stone Soup is published by Children’s Art Foundation-Stone Soup Inc., a 501(c)(3) educational nonprofit organization registered in the United States of America, EIN: 23-7317498.