Young Bloggers

ROBOMIND Ep. 4: Try Everything

https://stonesoup.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Try-Everything.m4a Episode #4: Try Everything 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? For those of you who haven’t been here for the last three episodes go check those out, but to get back on track ROBOMIND is a 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. A small tidbit about me is that I am 12 years old. I am absolutely head over heels for robotics. And I can’t wait to let you know a little bit more about it. This episode is called “Try Everything” named after the Zootopia song “Try Everything” sung by Shakira. It is called this because the song talks about failure and how you just have to get right back up again. This relates to robotics since I know that many teams didn’t make it to states nor worlds, and I want them to know that it is quite alright; and I want you guys that are interested in robotics to know that once you start you don’t just automatically have to be the best at robotics. Because that rarely happens, and it’s always important to make sure that you get better, and if you’re the best then there’s no way for improvement. And nobody’s ever the best. Before we get to that, it is time for what has got you all on the edge of your seats: the answer to last time’s riddle. If you don’t remember, the riddle went a little bit like this: There were two men Jeff and Bob. Bob bet Jeff that he would be able to hang his hat and then after walking 500 yards then turn and shoot a hole straight through the top of it, all while keeping his eyes closed (or being blindfolded). Despite knowing him to be an excellent shot, Jeff deemed it nearly impossible and readily accepted Bob’s bet and yet Bob easily won. How? Here let me give you a second to think about it. Okay, pause. If you weren’t here last time this is your time to pause and make sure you know. Okay, time for the answer! The answer is Bob hung his hat on the barrel of his gun so that it was impossible to miss. If you guys don’t know barrel means the edge where the bullet shoots out. I did not get this one. Hopefully, I’ll have better luck next time. Now that you guys are good to go let me tell you three reasons out of the many why it is all going to be okay. Number one: only very few teams make it to the state championship and the world championship. So, if you didn’t make it don’t say that you are the worst and that your stuff is trash because you are not the only team that didn’t make it, and who knows why you didn’t make it. Maybe you were literally so close that you could taste the victory. Who knows! Maybe you were so far, maybe you were just a block away, maybe you were just one point. Nobody knows! It could’ve been close. Maybe your notebook just needed to be 1% better. There’s no way we can control that because it’s not our opinion on how to judge our notebook or judge our interview. It’s really just up to the judges, and we can’t change their opinion. So, it’s not your fault. Two: It doesn’t matter how far you went; it only matters if you grew and learned. If you gained knowledge, friends, and experiences that you will never forget from this journey then personally, I would say that is just as good as going to the world championship for robotics. Because although the world championship is memorable and super fun to go to, if you had an amazing year with you and your team and you enjoyed and you learned and it was a great time then who cares if you didn’t make it! Maybe you had a better time than some of the people who went to worlds because just having that fun, family, and community is something just so amazing. Number three: As long as you don’t give up, you can always try again next year. Don’t let one bad year make you think that you should stop doing something you love and put so much time and effort into. If you keep on trying and have persistence who knows! In the next year you could do something extraordinary, maybe win a million competitions and a million awards and have an even better year. Maybe because you learned so much this year you will have gotten better and made yourself a better robotics participant and engineer. The next year you come back stronger and better than ever. I know that it may seem like the end of the world right now, but just remember that there is light at the end of the tunnel. New riddle: You find me in the past, and I can be created in the present, but the future is never mine. What am I? That’s it for the riddle! Keep your gears turning. I love you guys so so much. Thank you to all of you guys who kept making comments. You guys are so amazing. I loved seeing your thoughts and ideas. Thank you so much! This is your host Misha Ahmed of ROBOMIND signing off!

Poetry Soup – Ep. 17: “Desire for Spring” by Kenneth Koch

https://stonesoup.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Poetry-Soup-Episode-17.MP3.mp3   Hello, and welcome to Poetry Soup! I’m your host, Emma Catherine Hoff. Today, I’ll be talking about “Desire for Spring,” by Kenneth Koch. Kenneth Koch was born on February 27, 1925, in Cincinnati, Ohio. He went to school at Harvard University and became close with the poet John Ashbery (who was featured in the very first episode of Poetry Soup!). He became a member of the New York School of Poets, a group of poets (some of whom lived in New York) that Ashbery was also a part of. Koch taught poetry at Columbia, but in addition to poetry, he wrote books on how to write poetry, as well as many plays. Many of his poems are humorous and slightly absurd (he also has plays in verse that are very similar). As you will see in “Desire for Spring,” Koch often uses exclamation points in his poems as well, to create a high spirited, energetic tone that is common in much of his work. Koch was a recipient of the Glasscock Prize. He also won the Bollingen Prize for his collection of poetry, “One Train.” Kenneth Koch died in 2002. Here in New York, spring is swiftly blossoming, so I think this poem echoes the sentiments of many people, including myself. Winter has been here for so long that we feel we need to push it out of the way to make space for the gentle flowering and warmth of spring. A very lyrical poem, “Desire For Spring,” as shown by the title, is very fitting for this time. Calcium days, days when we feed our bones! Iron days, which enrich our blood! Saltwater days, which give us valuable iodine! When will there be a perfectly ordinary spring day? For my heart needs to be fed, not my urine Or my brain, and I wish to leap to Pittsburgh From Tuskegee, Indiana, if necessary, spreading like a flower In the spring light, and growing like a silver stair. Nothing else will satisfy me, not even death! Not even broken life insurance policies, cancer, loss of health, Ruined furniture, prostate disease, headaches, melancholia, No, not even a ravaging wolf eating up my flesh! I want spring, I want to turn like a mobile, In a new fresh air! I don’t want to hibernate Between walls, between halls! I want to bear My share of anguish of being succinctly here! Not even moths in the spell of a flame Can want it to be warmer as much as I do! Not even the pilot slipping into the great green sea In flames can want less to be turned to an icicle! Though admiring the icicle’s cunning, how shall I be satisfied With artificial daisies and roses, and wax pears? O breeze, my lovely, come in, that I mayn’t be stultified! Dear coolness of heaven, come swiftly and sit in my chairs! In the first three lines of his poem, Koch mentions days that feed people with nutrients. You could interpret these days as three seasons (winter, fall, and summer). But none of these seasons or nutrients are enough for Koch. He wants something that will feed his heart, not just his health. Spring can give him this, so he spends the entire poem hoping that it will come. Nothing, not even the most terrible things that could cause anyone to give up (like the diseases Koch mentions) can quell his hope for spring. He cannot be satisfied by simple human things – only by nature, by the irresistible curve of the seasons into spring. With his flowing lines, Koch creates a sort of song for spring, while still showing his enthusiasm through a plethora of exclamation points. He also creates this excited feeling by using very specific, enticing similes – for example, he wants warmth more than even a moth (proving how powerfully he is drawn to the sun and the heat of spring, like a moth is drawn to a flame).  Koch demonstrates a fear of cold, a want for the warm weather of spring. He understands the other seasons, even admires them, but he needs the real spring rather than the fake fruits he talks about at the end of the poem. He needs fresh air, needs to have space to grow and stretch. In a way, he wants to go through the rejuvenation that the world experiences when spring comes. He wants to start anew, and to be gifted this ability by the cool, heavenly breezes of spring (“spreading like a flower/In the spring light, and growing like a silver stair”). Though the theme of the poem itself is pretty straightforward, it’s also important to look at the lines and the way the poem reads. As one long stanza, everything feels very connected. Because Koch uses them so often, the exclamation points don’t feel too sudden – they’re just part of the tone. Multiple lines use commas at the ends and in the middle to maintain a flow, just like a light wind or a flowing river. However, there are also multiple enjambed lines, echoing the feeling of the slow, kind of broken up progress of budding and sprouting. Overall, Koch’s poem is a playful ode to spring, a version of which seems to be in everyone’s minds this season. I hope you enjoyed this episode of Poetry Soup, and I’ll see you soon with the next one!

Some of My Favorite Mothers are Octopuses!

Recently, I began to learn about octopuses because I wanted to learn more about them. Octopuses are very intriguing creatures, and they are known to be cute and delicate, as well as protective and caring. Here are some fun facts about octopuses (and by the way, the preferred plural of octopus is octopuses not octopi). First, two thirds of an octopus’ nerve cells are in their tentacles, which they use both to taste and touch. They can also regenerate their limbs if injured and protect themselves with their ability to camouflage in less than a second. The octopus is very intelligent, with an IQ of 140, and they have 3 hearts. They nurture at least 100,000 eggs and take care of them for 6 months. They are so meticulous with their care of the eggs that they don’t eat in that time frame. When the eggs are finally hatched, the mother dies of starvation, making a huge sacrifice for her whole family. Although the two species look dissimilar, I see a clear connection between octopuses and humans. For example, we care for our siblings and family members when they need it, just like a female octopus. Even if we don’t starve ourselves like they do, sometimes we make certain sacrifices for the people we love. When studying the octopus, I saw that the mothers are so caring and generous, just like moms who are humans. Human mothers resemble octopuses because they are protective and caring for their young and are so dedicated and loving that they sacrifice themselves for their family. On this note, don’t forget that Mother’s Day is coming up next month. I can’t wait to tell my mom that she reminds me of an octopus! I’m sure she will love the compliment!