Jesse Schoberg has been living abroad for 14 years, splitting his time between more than 40 countries — and he has no plans to return to the U.S. anytime ...
"I enjoy those aspects of living abroad as well as a bit of the simplicity and lack of conflict that I'm seeing so often in the U.S." "While I can afford a pretty nice life in the U.S., I live a lot better here than I did in the U.S.," he says. "You've got the street-level city, which is your food vendors, people running to work, taxis and motorbikes," he says. It could be Mexico, Europe and Dubai, who knows … but I like to keep my options open," he says. "The quality of life in Thailand compared to the United States, is much better for 90% of things and more stress-free," he says. "When I got to Bangkok for the first time, it just had that pulse that felt familiar to Panama City … there's just this incredible energy on the street and with the people," he says. "Just around the corner from my apartment, there's a Belgian sandwich shop and a Vietnamese barbeque joint." "The level of services that you get here — fancier movie theaters, nice cars — completely blow away what you get in the U.S." He and Janine spend about $1,900 each month on takeout and dining out, often ordering food from local restaurants on a popular app called gopanda. Jesse Schoberg began plotting his escape from Elkhorn, Wisconsin, where he was born and raised, when he was a teenager. "I knew right away that Bangkok was going to be my Panama City 2.0." By the time he turned 27, however, Schoberg began to feel restless.
The drones navigate to struggling swimmers quickly, when a delay of seconds could be the difference between life and death. In Spain they're being used on ...
“It may be nice to have that drone go out there and maybe they do get there quicker than the lifeguard,” he said. But the lifesaving ones can cost tens of thousands of dollars and are out of reach. In a best-case scenario, he said, lifeguards or a drone could spot a drowning person. A number of lifeguard officials in the United States said they are excited about drones. The lifeguards in the water rely on colleagues on land to direct them. The life vests they drop whip around in the wind too much. In the United States, roughly 3,690 people drown unintentionally per year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. After that, Agudo and Fernández partnered with engineers at Valencia’s Polytechnic University to create a drone that could reach people quicker than the fastest swimmer or water scooter and potentially save lives. Lifeguards began using personal watercraft and inflatable raft round the 1980s to quickly reach people in danger on the beach. In the 2000s, companies created software to visually detect struggling swimmers in pools, providing lifeguards an early-warning system. For years, the tools of a lifeguard have not changed. About a century later, as shipwrecks began to dwindle and recreational swimming rose, the roots of modern day lifeguarding emerged: trained life savers patrolling pools and beaches, ready to respond.
Out of influence, Dr. Olukayode Abraham Ibrahim Ajulo in his childhood days vowed to become a lawyer and true to his wish, Kayode has not only become a ...
That explains why he’s passionately committed and gives his all to whatever he sets out to do. His spirit of total commitment and drive for excellence propelled him to the limelight in his early days at the bar, when he stood up for Yoruba by defending OPC supreme leaders, late Dr. Frederick Fasehun and Aare Ona Kakanfo, Iba Gani Adams, against the Federal Government of Nigeria that charged them with treasonable felony. Out of influence, Dr. Olukayode Abraham Ibrahim Ajulo in his childhood days vowed to become a lawyer and true to his wish, Kayode has not only become a legal practitioner, but one whose accomplishments have distinguished him among his peers at the bar, even as he’s fast assuming the status of a household barrister.
For decades before his 2016 death, Justice Antonin Scalia was the court's champion of originalism, the approach to constitutional law that hews tightly to the ...
Medics running The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust outreach programme have started picking up their first confirmed cases. Man Van - Promoting Men's ...
This is particularly important for those at highest risk of prostate cancer, which includes men over 50, black men and men with a family history of the disease.” And the levels of awareness and knowledge of prostate cancer, especially among Black men who are at higher risk, is pretty low. We want to see more plans to target men across the country to help them understand their risk and what they can do about it. He said: “I think the Man Van is a very good idea. Medics behind the innovative new outreach programme told i they recently detected the first set of confirmed prostate cancer cases in men who said they would otherwise probably never have gone for a check-up as they had not been showing any symptoms. Is it possible that this is the future?
Jesse Schauberg began planning his escape from Elcorn, Wisconsin, where he was born and raised, when he was a teenager. "It's your typical small town in.
“You have a street-level city, which is the food vendors, the people running to work, the taxis and motorbikes,” he says. “While I can afford a nice life in the United States, I live a much better life here than I did in the States,” he says. Schauberg and his fiancée live in a one-bedroom apartment in a building with a private gym, pool, co-working space, restaurant, and daily cleaning service. “When I first arrived in Bangkok, this pulse was familiar to Panama City … There’s just this amazing energy on the street and with the people,” he says. He moved to Thailand in December 2021 and shares a one-bedroom apartment with his fiancée Janine. Jesse Schauberg began planning his escape from Elcorn, Wisconsin, where he was born and raised, when he was a teenager.
Jesse Schauberg began planning his escape from Elcorn, Wisconsin, where he was born and raised, when he was a teenager. "It's your typical small town in.
“You have a street-level city, which is the food vendors, the people running to work, the taxis and motorbikes,” he says. “While I can afford a nice life in the United States, I live a much better life here than I did in the States,” he says. Schauberg and his fiancée live in a one-bedroom apartment in a building with a private gym, pool, co-working space, restaurant, and daily cleaning service. “When I first got to Bangkok, this pulse was familiar to Panama City… There’s just this amazing energy on the street and with the people,” he says. He moved to Thailand in December 2021 and shares a one-bedroom apartment with his fiancée Janine. Jesse Schauberg began planning his escape from Elcorn, Wisconsin, where he was born and raised, when he was a teenager.
Residents in rural South Georgia are adamantly fighting a zoning request — a faith-based nonprofit called Redeemed Living wants to build cabins for men in ...
“So that we can help these folks get to a point in their life no different than the same point as one of the previous speakers.” You get a taste of it and you’re going to go right back to it.” Henderson said the group chose him to represent them because he understands the nature of addiction and recovery. “I’m sorry, but we are not ready to base the security of our family and our children on hope,” Henderson said. GARR also reviewed the transitional housing’s program for accountability, which includes voluntarily sharing location with a phone app. “A real choice has to happen no matter what that is.” He believes God led him to open the current sober house his nonprofit runs. “They needed money and they say, ‘Hey, I have a house. She said the problem is that anyone can open a sober living house without a permit or certification required. Morris runs a separate business as his day job and considers Redeemed Living service work. When people in recovery successfully complete a hospital or jail-based detox program, they must be careful choosing where to live. “On top of that, my son gets to come live with me, which is something I had given up on.”
Lion Anogwi Anyanwu, an alumnus of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, had a glittering career in the banking and finance industry that spanned 25 ...
Being involved in volunteer services has a way of energizing you and getting you to do more. To give them freely of my time, labor and means; to aid others by giving my sympathy to those in distress, my aid to the weak, and my substance to the needy and lastly, be careful with my criticism and liberal with my praise; to build up and not destroy. One of my aspirations in this Lions service year is to spread the gospel of Lionism and attract many more Nigerians to the association. First, I believe that respect is a fundamental right of every human being. To hold that true friendship exists not on account of the service performed by one to another, but that true friendship demands nothing but accepts service in the spirit in which it is given; to always bear in mind my obligations as a citizen to my nation, my state, and my community, and to give them my unswerving loyalty in word, act, and deed. What it takes is the ability to strike an appropriate balance. Legend has it that my kindred and people have an affinity with lions such that lions will not harm us and we will not harm lions. In fact, come to think of it, I am actually a triple lion. The name of my kindred is “Odo Agu” which means “The habitat of the lion”. So, traditionally I am also a lion. All members of the Lions Club are obligated to live up to these ethics. I joined the Lions Clubs International out of curiosity and fascination about their selfless and humanitarian services. I have been involved is so many humanitarian services since then, both in the Lions Clubs Association and on a personal level.