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"\n",
"### 02/18/2023\n",
"#### Session 6.3\n",
"Dear East African Family,\n",
"\n",
"On Friday, February 3rd, I had a scan -- a PET MRI Dotatate whole body scan to see if I have a resurgence of my cancer. I got the results last week and I'm still trying to digest them, because they are mixed -- some new tumors growing in my bones and lymph nodes, but still a good result with the old tumors smaller and inactive. I still haven't heard from the doctor about what the next steps should be. I'll try to explain this type of special scan -- don't hesitate to ask questions. \n",
"\n",
"The Dotatate is a radioisotope scan that attaches specifically to tumor cells and to neuroendocrine organs like the pituitary, adrenal glands and pancreas - basically a whole body geiger counter that shows tumor activity. The PET MRI gives a better picture of tissues to show tumor size and shape.\n",
"\n",
"In the last 12 plus years I've had nearly 50 scans and each one comes with uncertain expectations and often mixed results. Two, however, have stood out in their clarity: in 2020 when the results were \"too numerous to count new metastases in liver and bone\" it resulted in the start of PRRT, the intravenous radiation that attaches to tumors with a radiation dose 50 times greater than that of the scan, and in 2022 with the \"Amazing response to PRRT - no tumor functional activity\".\n",
"\n",
"The results from Friday just came out today, and I also received a copy of Dr. Bergsland's notes, 11 pages long, outlining that 12 year history and her recommendations. First, I have several small new tumors, in a lymph node, rib and pelvis. Dr. Bergsland characterized this as \"slight progressive disease\" 2 years after the very successful PRRT. I still have the fracture of my sacrum which has caused me to retire my downhill skis and limits how far I can hike and what I can safely carry. I also continue to have episodes of cholangitis and fever from bacteria going upstream into the liver's biliary system, including one yesterday with a several hour fever up to 102.6F. I may need additional radiation for the active bony tumors or restart the monthly targeted chemotherapy injections that were stopped last August. But overall, this is a very good report and I am glad to be doing this well after 12 years living with pancreatic neuroendocrine cancer.\n",
"\n",
"Thanks to all of you for your encouragement, calls, thoughts and prayers on this cancer journey. An editorial in 1986 in the New England Journal of Medicine by a pediatrician and double cancer survivor described living with cancer as accepting and embracing uncertainty. Twenty five years later I hosted a dinner for a visiting team supporting the University of Zambia Medical School, described my cancer and mentioned that editorial, without knowing that the author was standing in front of me! So while there is uncertainty in this report, I am ever grateful for the high tech diagnostic and treatment options that have kept me alive and (relatively) well.\n",
"\n",
"We are planning to come to Kenya in August and September and hope to see many of you in Kilifi. Our time there will be complicated so I can't yet give firm dates, but probably the last two weeks in August or early September will be best. Our partner Buck is coming sometime in September, but we don't yet know how long. We are also having several couples from California coming at different times. We will let you know but hope we can see you in 2023.\n",
"\n",
"Love,\n",
"Larry\n",
"\n",
"### 06/03/2023\n",
"#### Session 7.1\n",
"##### S\n",
"\n",
"1. published third paper in international journal in april\n",
" - journal of business marketing \n",
"2. grateful for job & more\n",
" - lateral movement\n",
" + in charge of thought leadership\n",
"3. travel (threat to pepfar)\n",
" - south africa\n",
" - nairobi\n",
" - safe travel\n",
" - meet goals\n",
"4. kevin\n",
" - moved from risk to capital markets\n",
" - going to wallstreet for further training\n",
" + scheduled to go to london for more experience\n",
"5. lauren \n",
" - graduated from high school\n",
" - not a trivial thing\n",
" - was very depressed for various reasons\n",
" - it was a real threat \n",
" - june 5th is graduation\n",
" - wants to study marketing, fashion\n",
" - accepted by university of st. johns and more (next year)\n",
" - has been accepted in prestigious modeling camp in nyc\n",
" - pray for housing situation in nyc for lauren\n",
" + financial breakthrough and get out of debt\n",
" + be able to pay for pearl marina apartment in timely manner\n",
" + grateful for good health \n",
"\n",
"\n",
"##### P\n",
"\n",
"1. making progress with writing; a tiring process\n",
"2. to be done with thesis by may last year \n",
"3. want to thank god: we are done with school fees\n",
" - sending 4 children back to school after short holiday\n",
" - dorothy did some extra work\n",
" + able to send them back in time\n",
"4. everyone is well and healthy\n",
" - dorothy is on leave\n",
" - girls are happy\n",
" - boys spent holiday with her\n",
" - pray for her as she gets set to stand in for someone in kabale\n",
"5. was expecting a promotion this year \n",
" - they raised the requirements \n",
" - included it-governance certificate (takes 6 months)\n",
" + have everything except this requirement\n",
" + government doesn't have enough resources and will implement this in july 2024 (not 2023), allowing me to get certification by then!\n",
"6. phd studies\n",
" - i pray that the lord helps me pull through\n",
" - continue to pray that god gives me strength to go through this\n",
" + and i look forward to teaching ict-components in business school, at nakawa\n",
"7. pray for great health and strength to pick up the girls from school\n",
"8. pray for dorothy's two week stint in kabale\n",
"9. human resource person who was making my life difficult and wasn't supportive of my studies (e.g. stepping away from work to visit a professor) was removed\n",
"10. pray for another set of leadership to fill the gap\n",
"11. d is about to complete s6 \n",
"12. nicole is beginning to do better\n",
" - no longer focusing on teaching her to write\n",
" + she is now doing better at learning other tasks\n",
" + very thankful for this\n",
"13. martin\n",
" - still very playful but in subtle way (not at school)\n",
" - his classmates know him but is a distraction\n",
"14. lisa\n",
" - doing well in school\n",
" - stood for prefect but didn't make it\n",
" - lisa is concerned about her weight but we pray that she doesn't worry about it\n",
"15. continue to pray for resources to address needs and school fees\n",
" - and to pay back what we've borrowed from friends\n",
"\n",
"##### J\n",
"\n",
"1. thanksgiving, job\n",
" - new job\n",
"2. brenda breakthrough\n",
" - didn't happen\n",
" - reassigned to sierra leone\n",
" - family duty station\n",
" - grateful in light of many being laidoff\n",
"3. bria \n",
" - finished equivalent of o-levels\n",
" - says exams went well\n",
"4. prayer\n",
" - commit brenda to job\n",
" - family split into different locations\n",
" - stay as close-knit family unit\n",
"\n",
"##### D\n",
"\n",
"1. thankful for successful completion of phd requirements\n",
"2. only thesis left & pray for completion by may 2024\n",
"3. grateful for my most brilliant trainees who will work with me\n",
"4. pray that hiring (which is in final stages) comes through without any issues\n",
" - and that they'll transpose my productivity\n",
" - help me meet my grant-publication goals\n",
" + that we produce preliminary data for my grants this year\n",
"5. already scheduled to travel for a conference (this morning)\n",
" - continue to pray for more conferences (aging, transplant) across the world\n",
"6. extremely grateful for swimming skills\n",
" - advancement \n",
" - fitness\n",
" - health\n",
" - continue to pray for healing of hip\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"#### Session 7.2\n",
"##### S\n",
"+ **Career Accomplishments:**\n",
" - Published third paper in the Journal of Business Marketing; gratitude for job and lateral movement.\n",
" - Pray for safe travels to South Africa and Nairobi; meet professional goals.\n",
"+ **Children's Success:**\n",
" - Kevin's advancement to Wall Street and London training.\n",
" - Lauren's high school graduation, acceptance to University, and prestigious modeling camp in NYC.\n",
" - Pray for Lauren's housing situation in NYC.\n",
"+ **Financial Matters:**\n",
" - Pray for a financial breakthrough, debt relief, and timely payments for the apartment.\n",
"+ **General Health and Wellness:**\n",
" - Grateful for good health; maintain wellness levels for all.\n",
"\n",
"##### P\n",
"+ **Academic and Professional Progress:**\n",
" - Making progress with thesis; pray for completion by May next year.\n",
" - Grateful for meeting school fees; pray for smooth certification process for promotion.\n",
" - Pray for strength and success in PhD studies and teaching prospects.\n",
"+ **Family Wellness:**\n",
" - Thankful for health and happiness; pray for Dorothy's stint in Kabale.\n",
" - Pray for good leadership at work and resolution of professional obstacles.\n",
"+ **Children's Education and Needs:**\n",
" - Updates on children's achievements and concerns; pray for support, focus, and contentment.\n",
" - Pray for resources to cover needs and repay borrowed funds.\n",
"\n",
"##### J\n",
"+ **Job and Career:**\n",
" - Thanksgiving for new job opportunities; breakthrough for Brenda in Sierra Leone.\n",
" - Grateful even in light of others being laid off.\n",
"+ **Family Matters:**\n",
" - Bria finished equivalent of O-Levels; exams went well.\n",
" - Pray for family unity across different locations.\n",
" - Commit Brenda to a suitable job.\n",
"\n",
"### D\n",
"+ **Academic Achievements:**\n",
" - Thankful for successful completion of PhD requirements.\n",
" - Pray for thesis completion by May 2024.\n",
"+ **Professional Growth:**\n",
" - Grateful for brilliant trainees; pray hiring comes through smoothly.\n",
" - Seek blessings for grant-publication goals and producing preliminary data for grants.\n",
"+ **Conferences and Travel:**\n",
" - Scheduled to travel for a conference; pray for more opportunities across the world.\n",
"+ **Health and Wellness:**\n",
" - Grateful for swimming skills, fitness, and overall health.\n",
" - Pray for healing of hip issues.\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"### 07/15/2023\n",
"#### Session 8\n",
"##### S\n",
"1. Thanksgiving:\n",
" - Paper got published and going to present findings at a conference, and job will sponsor me.\n",
" - Travels to Cape Town and Nairobi went well: reports well-received.\n",
" - Kevin was in NYC/Wall Street for training; he is enjoying his work; this was his first travel for work.\n",
" - Lauren graduated from high school; but let's continue to pray; we have to go to NYC to find her an apartment.\n",
"2. Prayers:\n",
" - Addis job with the UN that I applied for 3 years ago; I'm one of the top candidates and invited on short notice for an interview; now they're asking for references. They've been checked.\n",
"\n",
"##### P\n",
"1. **Dorothy's Promotion:**\n",
" - The terms and conditions don't seem meaningful, and we pray that the confusion stops.\n",
" - Pray that the terms and conditions align with our prayers.\n",
" - Desire for less time away from Kampala and better pay.\n",
"\n",
"2. **Boys:**\n",
" - Martin is getting confirmed.\n",
" - D is having a hard time with economics and needs to improve in ICT: M E Tech drawing ICT.\n",
"\n",
"3. **Government/Office:**\n",
" - Human capital management is needed to streamline payments; people have been paid as scientists when they were not; also, there are ghosts.\n",
" - The cleaning-up process misclassified P as a non-scientist, information person; salary cut by 3/4.\n",
" - Position description will be submitted; we pray that it's fixed quickly.\n",
" - Also, the government has no money, so promotions are on hold.\n",
" - Assistant commissioner for \"information\" put P in the lowest category during a system appraisal.\n",
" - Redesignate title to Assistant Commissioner for ICT; we pray for this to return to a salary as a scientist.\n",
" - Current boss operates on rumors: not exactly the new boss I had prayed for; so let's continue praying for this; the contract ends next month; pray she is reposted.\n",
" - The one who is acting now is nice, and we pray she stays.\n",
" - Black-listed amongst those who removed the best friend of the boss, the confidant - Janet.\n",
"\n",
"4. **Studies:**\n",
" - Need to finish before new responsibilities at work - finish most of doctoral work by the end of the year.\n",
"\n",
"5. **Girls:**\n",
" - Nicole is okay, only hurt a toe on a stone.\n",
" - Lisa wants to be head girl: she hopes to be better prepared to contest after a previous loss.\n",
"\n",
"6. **Deborah:**\n",
" - Got ill while at Hopkins on summer school.\n",
" - Pray for her and guide her doctors.\n",
" - She's doing a Ph.D., and so illness doesn't bode well with it.\n",
"\n",
"7. **Dodo's Mother:**\n",
" - Birthday today - turns 77.\n",
" - Celebrate.\n",
" - She'd had multi-embolism in lungs, and God preserved her; God has been so faithful.\n",
"\n",
"8. **Mommy & Daddy:**\n",
" - They are well and strong; thank God.\n",
" \n",
"##### J\n",
"1. Gratitude:\n",
" - Traveled to Freetown, and the destitution there was eye-opening.\n",
" - Was able to help Brenda settle in: secure a nice apartment.\n",
" - Keep praying for her.\n",
" - PEPFAR will be funded, and we are grateful.\n",
" - Grateful to God for Daddy: e.g., handed money we sent him to Mummy.\n",
"2. Prayer:\n",
" - Father-in-law collapsed in Mutongo.\n",
" - Had a blood clot and is back on thinners.\n",
" - Pray that he recovers quickly.\n",
" - Grateful for Brenda's job; but ask for her to be kept safe.\n",
"\n",
"##### D\n",
"1. Thanks:\n",
" - Successfully hired two trainees.\n",
" - Attended my first conference in 3 years.\n",
"2. Prayers:\n",
" - Leadership and guidance to my trainees.\n",
" - Submit 2-3 grants to NIH by October.\n",
" - Improve my abrasive style that hurts collaboration.\n",
" - Workflow incorporating AI for success with all above + doctoral thesis by May 2024.\n",
"\n",
"--- \n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"### 07/16/2023 \n",
"\n",
"\n",
" Transcript by Zoom's AI\n",
" \n",
"```text\n",
"Here's the cleaned up version of your transcript with speakers assigned to their respective initials:\n",
"S (Sarah Kayongo): Things.\n",
"S: Yeah.\n",
"P (Patrick Muinda): Yeah.\n",
"P: Okay, let me try to find the notes. I don't know where I put them, I think. D (Abimereki Muzaale): Did they share the notes? Yeah.\n",
"S: Yes, we can see it.\n",
"D: So who is going? Trust? No, no, no, you've not. I shared the notes, but I have no idea where I saved them. I mean, just give me a second. Can you find them?\n",
"P: Okay, I'll be going in the meantime. Explaining.\n",
"P: I am completely well, Dorothy is okay. That should do enough framing.\n",
"P: Work is a bit relaxed because the financial year ended.\n",
"P: So there is now completely no money, so there is no government activity.\n",
"P: I think the money will come when finance releases this, it will be very interesting.\n",
"P: So we're waiting for them to release it. As I said, there's a fine line between tragedy and comedy.\n",
"J (Martin Muwaga): But what you've not mentioned is that the government now, from the beginning of this financial year, they just announced domestic borrowing.\n",
"J: They have said. They are chilling.\n",
"J: The trade, they're easing off on the Treasury bonds and all that. So that's why the value has really gone up because they're like we need to manage.\n",
"P: I would agree. But they're waking up really late because we have where we... D: We're drowning in debt. I think I found some notes which I'm testing here.\n",
"J: But...\n",
"D: Yeah, I just...\n",
"D: I just...\n",
"D: 2023. Yes, that's... \n",
"D: Because it's...\n",
"P: Thank you. Yeah. So we? I am now spending more time concentrating on trying to finish. Chapter 4, I submitted, and then I got changes to make. And that's what I'm working on right now.\n",
"P: It is a lot right? Writing actually is very, very intensive. Time, energy and brain intensive. After about 2 or 3 hours, you feel like you've been running a marathon.\n",
"P: Yeah. So you're putting things together from so many places. So...\n",
"P: It's okay. I'm making progress. I am hoping that I should be done this week, this coming week with Chapter 4. And I said, discussing the findings that he says he wants to...\n",
"P: To contribute to the discussion because he has been following what has been going on. The entire research. So he says, given your results, I want to also contribute and give ideas.\n",
"P: What he thinks. So I'm happy about that. At the office.\n",
"P: As I said, things are largely going down.\n",
"P: And we are in that place where we are believing good for new things.\n",
"P: Dorothy also is okay. You know they did that restructuring got a promotion. However, the promotion means going to a different body.\n",
"P: And then they also, the letter she received says that she retains the terms and conditions. So we wondered what type of promotion that was.\n",
"P: So we are seeking clarification, seeking clarification next week for them to tell us what they mean. Exactly.\n",
"P: How do you get a promotion? Then your terms and conditions of service remain the same. I think it was standard language for those who have been demoted. I think it was a standard language for everyone.\n",
"J: Yeah, it's those who are going down are being, but not upwards. Yeah. So how do you send the standard language to all? And yet that is a very incompetent HR office. So wherever they are, they are exceedingly incompetent and don't understand what they are doing.\n",
"\n",
" P: So that was surprising and borderline upsetting.\n",
"P: So we hope that we shall get a good clarification, a verbal clarification, in the course of this coming week.\n",
"P: Because we'd rather stay in Kampala if the terms and conditions are the same. We would rather retain the position and then go, you know?\n",
"P: So that is the thing. Then when you...\n",
"P: Yeah, it's a prayer. It's a very important request, one to pray for Dorothy that this is going to be sorted out, and that she even stays in Kampala. There is no real reason why she should go up country.\n",
"P: She served up country so many times for many years. There are so many young people...\n",
"P: Who should be given that opportunity to go and work up country.\n",
"P: So we hope for me. I'm doing good for promotion. I think promotions are not happening in the government...\n",
"P: For some time. I've not been hearing them happen.\n",
"P: But you know God doesn't wait for things to happen for everyone, only before he blesses you. So I trust that one thing it will happen. I've been in this\n",
"__\n",
"S (Sarah Kayongo): So, who spreads her rumors? Can you be part of the rumor machine?\n",
"P (Patrick Muinda): Now, I was blacklisted among those who contributed to her removal. So they put me on a hit list. I am among those supposed to really pay for removing her best friend.\n",
"P: Her best friend, the most confident one, the one she praises every meeting. She's praising him and this is a single lady. We could misunderstand everything because their closeness was just too much. If we are not actually understanding, we could seriously misunderstand everything.\n",
"P: That is what has been going on. The new person is very objective and he doesn't operate like we did at all. There's a lady who has been brought in to be the Under Secretary, but we suspect she was brought in to take over.\n",
"S: That's great for that to happen. I'm reading the Book of Fox and Second Kings. And you think the world is messed up right now. Oh, my God! These Kings! There were too many bloody coups.\n",
"S: Yes, it was the game of thrones way before. So, let us pray that this happens. Yes, we got confirmed in office, and because she's acting now, the other one is on leave. We have such peace in the office, work is flowing, people are well motivated, and everyone really wants to support her, to succeed.\n",
"P: The difficult post is temporary. You know their contracts end soon.\n",
"S: Oh, okay, their contracts end next month. So of course, we are praying that she should be posted elsewhere. Whatever the board chooses to do, we just pray that the one who is acting now stays. That's what we prefer.\n",
"P: Yeah, so that's how it is at the office. Work is ongoing. I've been at that job for so long. I need a new experience. But before that, I need to finish my studies. I don't want a new responsibility that demands so much from me.\n",
"S: So that I can make any progress.\n",
"P: By the end of this year, I should have made significant progress. By Christmas time, I should really be looking at other things, summarizing publications and the like. The main thesis should be done by the end of this year.\n",
"P: My children are doing well. Nicole is okay. She hurt her foot kicking a stone, but she's being taken good care of. Lisa is fine. She wants to become a head girl. She had a meeting to understand why she didn't go through in P5. And now, she's focusing on strengthening those areas so that she's better prepared in P6 for the head girl test.\n",
"P: Yes, it will happen. She is very determined. Yesterday, we celebrated Dorothy's sister's 40th birthday. It was a very happy occasion. She's in Uganda. Deborah, the youngest, arrived a few weeks ago.\n",
"D (Abimereki Muzaale): No, no, she's in summer school.\n",
"P: Okay, we're praying for her. That is a real prayer request, because when I see doctors doing something and it doesn't seem to work, then they claim they have found it and nothing changes. It disturbs everyone. They have paid so much money for surgery and whatever, and there's no change.\n",
"P: She's also doing a Ph.D., so you can imagine having the stress of health issues and also having to deal with her studies. It's not good at all. Tomorrow, we celebrate Dorothy's mother's birthday. She's now 77. I think she's younger than our mom, who is 78.\n",
"S: No, she's 75. Take 10 away from 85.\n",
"P: Okay. We're going to celebrate her birthday. You remember, she almost died last\n",
"\n",
" year, just when Covid was winding up. S: So I'm confident.\n",
"P: It wasn't Covid. It's one of the most common diseases in the lungs. But she didn't have just one clot, she had many.\n",
"S: Wow.\n",
"P: Every doctor who saw her knew that she could go anytime. But God preserved her life until all those clots dissolved and she's completely healed. She's very strong. You won't believe it. At the dinner table, you can't believe she's the same one who was in the hospital. God has been so faithful.\n",
"P: The kids are fine. They're very well taken care of and very strong. We thank God for that. That's how I've been. Nothing very out of the ordinary. That's me.\n",
"__\n",
"D (Abimereki Muzaale): It's very humbling, you know. The competition is not even close to Zoom. The difference is just unbelievable. So, I'm really good. The issue is there is a higher demand. This is a student that I worked with during the lockdown. You, as in the person at the time was an undergraduate. Now, they're a medical student.\n",
"D: And they're from Maryland, so it's around with the US, where they could work with me again, and it's like sure. We will finish up stuff and get it all published.\n",
"D: The student is brilliant. Unbelievably brilliant, for this level of training. So I'm very excited to have this, two very outstanding individuals doing great work.\n",
"D: So, the hiring process is ongoing. And the numbers may seem large to you guys, but the others have got it right. The Chinese guy contributed to the workflow that I'm trying to set up in AI.\n",
"D: This productivity is going to be like 300 people, it's going to be huge.\n",
"D: I'm starting a crazy and ambitious journey, but wow, we're leveraging what our people from data science and AI can do. So, hopefully, things will be set up.\n",
"D: Yes, you can expect a lot of growth.\n",
"D: I'm scheduled to travel for conferences. This morning, I traveled safely to San Diego, and even went over shorts and made it to Mexico. Did you go by train? How did you?\n",
"D: Yeah, and I'm extremely grateful for the swimming skills. I've been absent from it since then, and I really need to get back to it.\n",
"\n",
"D: So, that's about it for now. I did make the request to be able to formulate the most efficient plan for my team, because I believe there's a lot we can achieve in a short time.\n",
"D: I need to submit grants by October. Some grants, I want to be able to submit two to three, and the quality of the submission and the teams for the team collaborators should be part of the call.\n",
"D: One thing I've learned over the last 17 years since I first came to the US is that I need to improve my collaboration skills. Maybe because I was mostly in school and the academic setup in school at the time was individualistic.\n",
"D: Yeah, no collaboration. But in the real world, everything is about collaboration. I struggle with it, I'm an assertive personality.\n",
"D: I can be very irritable. I get very irritated if I feel people just don't get the point. People have spoken behind my back, which I've heard through other sources. People I've never worked with describe me in certain ways, and that's a problem, not how I'm described, but the fact that it's a fact.\n",
"P: Yeah.\n",
"D: I think you have two things going on, your phone and something else. But anyway, let me just wrap up.\n",
"S (Sarah Kayongo): Got it. But you know, the way to deal with that is, everyone knows that you're going back to redo everything because no one will be at your level, especially if you're the lead.\n",
"D: Well, you can't be the lead in everything, you know. S: Just go along.\n",
"D: Sure, I think I'm now more conscious of it. The first complaints I really had because of my friends way back, but I know about the issue now.\n",
"J (Martin Muwaga): I had to, but you know I ignored them. So, I'm not too sure what you mean by \"going along\". We're on this journey of self-discovery, and we recognize certain flaws. But then there is a way it can be done. When you're dismissive, you just learn to use certain terms which are agreeable.\n",
"S: To achieve things beyond individual human potential, my whole work is actually to collaborate across practice areas and with the government. You just sit there and listen to everyone, and you're agreeable. And then, you figure out what is useful and what is not. That's the essence of collaboration. You start from the broad perspective where you just listen. As you go higher, the circle becomes smaller and you can become assertive. But you can't be very assertive at the bottom.\n",
"\n",
" D: Yeah, well, I'm grateful that I have a better understanding of that aspect of me now. And you know, I think I got the best understanding after reading the responses, the reviews by students. I think those clarified everything. Because then that was a huge, dealing with hundreds of actual anonymous descriptions...\n",
"\n",
"__\n",
"\n",
"Certainly! Here is the edited dialogue:\n",
"\n",
"S: You first get their feedback. Ask them questions, then continue and be ready to change courses.\n",
"J: I don't even know how one can teach that. Anyway, back to this thing. To me, I think your support is something I don't know. We have to move to the rest, but what you say is just so profound. So if you could give it just a few extra moments. Do you think, with these insights that you have,\n",
"D: Is there a way you could actively show that you're working on this feedback? And people are aware that they can say that, something different we are saying because it's one thing you having it and you just internalizing it. But then your contemporaries cannot necessarily see those actions.\n",
"J: Do you see what I'm trying to say? I see a fight. Yes, that's a good thing. I'm gonna do something that I've never done before in my life.\n",
"D: I'm going out to. I don't call my friends. I don't call you guys. I usually receive calls. You can attest to that. I never call. But when someone calls, yeah, that's with family. I think a few days ago someone said, you need to start calling. That's it, everyone calls me. I never call.\n",
"D: Same with my friends. So one thing I'm going to try to do differently, and I'm not going to try, I'm just going to do, is to reach out more. Wow! Oh, this is my journal, right? So I don't know. Yeah.\n",
"D: So what I'm trying to say is I'll be going out, equivalent to making calls, to check on you guys, update you, and catch up. I need to do that with my colleagues.\n",
"D: That's with the Department of Surgery. The head of some of the bosses wanted to reach out to me just wanted to meet me to chat about something, so that's too busy.\n",
"D: I guess they call me spontaneously. Yeah. And I was like, my schedule is full, but I need to actively go to see them out and say, just wanted to meet and discuss.\n",
"D: I'll go with an open mind. So that's number one for the higher-ups. Then my colleagues, I'm going to start communicating more frequently just to check on them. Ask them how I could be helpful. This is something my mentor said, You know.\n",
"D: Yeah, just ask people how you could be helpful. Well, for my students, that one I've already started working on. And this concept is what's guiding me.\n",
"\n",
"D: You know, considering the challenge levels that I present to them. Because if I give it, if I'm aggressive, I'm creating a very hostile environment. High challenge levels. I think of me. And if you don't have the skills for that, your low skill for that, you've been the zone, you know, high challenge environment, you'll be anxious to some other thing.\n",
"\n",
"P: But how do these kids make it into Hopkins? Yet they had such crazy GPAs. Can they deal with pressure?\n",
"\n",
"D: Very good question. I'm with students from all of America's top universities, and you'll be amazed that they come. Even in those great places, there's a distribution. There's a mean and a standard deviation and so, I don't see anything extraordinary. I mentioned this to you. I've been at Johns Hopkins for 17 years, and there's nothing extraordinary about the people here.\n",
"\n",
"D: And I always ask what makes an institution outstanding. They'll tell you it's money in America. For those interested in European football, there is a team called Liverpool. They did something extraordinary in 2005 at the Champions League level that they did again about 5 years ago.\n",
"\n",
"D: Now the footballers were not the same, but the money was. It's the same organization. But there's something indescribable in their DNA. Most people are not extraordinary. There's just a few. My mentor is one of the few extraordinary people I've met. Definitely, absolutely outstanding.\n",
"\n",
"D: Students that I have, are some of the smartest I've ever met.\n",
"\n",
"S: These abilities, but that extraordinaryness can only be amplified through the collaboration because of those people skills. Your boss comes to town, and they're like, \"Who has been in the office on Monday?\" And yet we're not supposed to be in the office.\n",
"\n",
"S: Everyone was volunteering. It's politics. Everyone, because there is something to be gained by having proximity to your student at all these levels. Actually, I like how you've done it to everyone.\n",
"\n",
"S: Especially the upper echelon, because you learn so much about how they engage their students. You learn from them.\n",
"D: You have to go out and drink with the students sometimes, and that one is out of the question. Many of the trainees are girls and hanging out in certain crowds can be too dangerous. That's a skill I really need to work on.\n",
"\n",
"D: You know.\n",
"\n",
"S: I'm involved in partnerships, skepticism, and senior advice. It's going to be based in DC, which helped me. I received an email on my way back from Paris about a job that was moved and updated. They added the aspect of innovation and mentioned I had interviewed for it. Apparently, I was one of the top candidates, and they wanted to interview me again. I asked for a week to prepare, and I was able to do so. My dissertation on building partnerships and developing innovative financial models was useful. I had a Skype interview with the resident for East Africa. That day, I spoke with mom, and Kevin and Lauren prayed for me. I was somewhat overwhelmed but faced the interview confidently. I've had many job interviews in Nairobi before, and I noticed that the dynamics change when there's a Kenyan on the panel. This time, however, there was no Kenyan, only very high-level individuals. Despite the challenging interview, I received an email the next day asking for references. They wanted two former supervisors and one professional network contact. I provided them, and now my references are being checked. I'm praying because I want this job.\n",
"\n",
"J: Those jobs may not seem glamorous on a day-to-day basis, but the UN offers benefits and security. In Uganda, every middle-class or wealthy individual is just one health emergency away from financial ruin. I've prayed for a job at the UN that will take care of me as I age. I'm a single mom now. They raised the retirement age to 67. That is a significant change. I don't care who the other candidate is, I want to be there. Expressing gratitude is essential. Going to Freetown was a challenge. It's a long journey, and the city isn't as inviting as one might expect. It was difficult, but my mission was simple: help Brenda settle down, identify an apartment, and get a doctor who can move her around because she needs help with multitasking. We found a nice apartment on top of the town, and for that, we are grateful. Let's keep praying. My father-in-law is unwell. He collapsed during a walk around Mutungo due to a clot. He had to be rushed to the hospital.\n",
"\n",
"D: This sounds serious. He underwent surgery in 2017. However, I don't know if he's been taking any prescribed medicine since then.\n",
"\n",
"P: But he was. I don't recall it being Jay. My M is at a disadvantage, isn't she? She told me what was going on, and she was very clear. She was saying that this man is getting him into too much trouble, and I think you may want to reconsider.\n",
"\n",
"J: Exactly. But, mommy, my dad is not going to say it's mommy. He knows exactly where it came from. He knows where the command came from, but I think that he told Kudi, even at some point that I suspect that Jenny is coordinating behind. Oh, yes, yes, they told us way back, mommy told me and said, I don't want you to.\n",
"\n",
"S: I think. May I bring attention to it before all of you guys?\n",
"\n",
"D: He said, what amazes me is the consistency of your personality from challenge? You're not excited by much. Anyone who approaches you with excitement is likely to end up disappointed and frustrated. A straightforward observer. This is the most consistent. Call me. I'm different from my friends, the girls, the boys can never say that I'm not a hundred percent consistent. But I wouldn't say that. How come I have the best conversations with you? Well, I mean, that's interesting. Because interactions are, you know, unique. How unique? Yeah. So the but that one I would I, Christopher, saying, you know, you are completely emotionless. Yeah, the only people you know, people whose emotion you care about are Bach and Beethoven. And\n",
"\n",
"S: Yeah, yeah, I think. But do any of those girls come to you also discussing BA. And philosophy and trying to learn from me? No one studies classical music, you know. No, no, okay, any philosophy, anything, one that honestly, there are people who, if they don't stimulate that part of your brain. Oh, yeah, it's just that you mentioned. Because and I have In a way, I'm not okay. I'll admit that we, we should. We share a lot in common, by the way, and you're the only person you're the only person who recommends a movie to me or a TV show. I know you're the only person like and anyone else will be suggesting something I don't shake my head so like, so that that my point is when it comes to letting go. You know relations. Then, if I talk to a man and he's and that's why I think Derek was very. You know he could become anything, you know. and he said Genius in that he can sound like a very smart person. Yeah, I I I would not be interested or in a conversation with the man on the opposite side. Naturally. intelligent, you know, they someone has to stimulate my, my, my brain, not just my brain first. Oh, this guy I I just told you in the beginning. I had to look at this speak, and then he was some so kind of like, Wow, he's smart. Then we can have a conversation. I guys.\n",
"\n",
"P: That is true. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"D: Well, that is true. Today I've been documenting your progress. And so I don't know if you're done. We we we we are done, and so we will have to wrap up in about\n",
"\n",
"J: I can stop recording, and then.\n",
"``` \n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"### 09/09/2023\n",
"#### Session 9\n",
"\n",
"*Lot's of 9's today!*\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"+ Step-by-step process of reproducing the graph\n",
"+ 18:05/02:02:22\n",
"+ Removed YouTube video: was video of me, instead of my screen\n",
"\n",
"##### S\n",
"\n",
"1. Was in the green-zone (boredom) for most of the week.\n",
"2. VP then recognized that i was being underutilized and gave me a task to do.\n",
"3. Opportunties coming up:\n",
" - Doha, Qatar (Preferred)\n",
" - Ukraine: scrumble for a trillion dollars of post-war development (Less preferred)\n",
"4. Coming out of debt\n",
" - Take care of student loan beginning in October\n",
" - Repayment plan: lower rate and longer term\n",
" - Mortgage: emerged from that and am grateful\n",
"\n",
"5. Lauren\n",
" - She is doing much better mentally\n",
" - Pray for her future and her career\n",
" \n",
"6. Kevin\n",
" - Excited about opportunity to start Masters at UNC\n",
" - Met with recruiters and he has been inspired\n",
" - Would start as early as January 2024\n",
" - His job, BoA, will pay for his Masters\n",
"\n",
"7. Health\n",
" - Injured big toe\n",
" - Can't wear high heels\n",
" - Need to see a doctor (podiatrist)\n",
"\n",
"8. Continued protection\n",
"\n",
"##### P\n",
"\n",
"1. Need motivation to do the work and get the thesis out of the way.\n",
"2. Feels daunted by the amount of work. So much is not happening (feel paralyzed).\n",
"3. Continue to believe in God to fix my salary (shared the issues)\n",
"4. Thankful that God saw us through the holiday.\n",
"5. J stepped in to help with the Martin's birthday celebration.\n",
"6. We have gone through these weeks and have not wanted for anything.\n",
"7. Laughed off the blood issue with the doctor. Dr. Mugasha insisted on seeing a specialist. Who confirmed no issues, except injury from exercize. Now in physiotherapy. Electrosimulation and red light therapy.\n",
"8. Dorothy got a memo saying all staff on contract are to be confirmed: full member of staff at B.O.U. (God is good)\n",
"9. Pray for the fees of the children\n",
" - So far payed for D and Lisa\n",
" - Nicole isn't very motivated to go to school (not her thing)\n",
" - We pray she gets **engaged** in something that will help her in the future.\n",
"10. Have also felt underutilized at work. But I am thankful for the job. \n",
" - My prayer is that I'll be utilized **after** my PhD \n",
" - Circles back at #1. I need motivation to do the work and get the thesis out of the way.\n",
"\n",
"##### J\n",
"\n",
"1. TBP\n",
"2. \n",
"3. \n",
"\n",
"##### D\n",
"\n",
"1. Thankful for the simple things in life\n",
" - For the foldable 88 key piano; may facilitate praise and worship in more remote places, like Butamira\n",
" - AI (zoom, github copilot, and chatgpt); transformational in my productivity\n",
" - Health although I have very little in way exercize since May; but hope this is temporary\n",
" - Turning point for me regarding use of AI and introduction IT and building platforms for work and collaboration\n",
" - For completion of all PhD requirements except the thesis\n",
"2. Requests\n",
" - For motivation to do the work and get the thesis out of the way.\n",
" - Get back to exercize\n",
" - Left hip injury and swimmers sinusitis\n",
" - Growth and expansion of my 'Fena' platform \n",
"\n",
"\n",
" Transcript by Zooms AI\n",
"\n",
"```text\n",
"1\n",
"00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:01.310\n",
"Patrick: It did.\n",
"\n",
"2\n",
"00:00:01.670 --> 00:00:06.119\n",
"sarahkayongo: It says, how\n",
"\n",
"3\n",
"00:00:06.140 --> 00:00:18.370\n",
"sarahkayongo: how urgent it was. You know how urgently they needed feedback. And you know they're like, Oh, yeah, take your time, I mean, just make sure you submit. Give us the feedback\n",
"\n",
"4\n",
"00:00:18.730 --> 00:00:26.239\n",
"sarahkayongo: before, so we can understand the changes.\n",
"\n",
"5\n",
"00:00:26.380 --> 00:00:28.349\n",
"sarahkayongo: So that put me at ease.\n",
"\n",
"6\n",
"00:00:28.690 --> 00:00:33.269\n",
"sarahkayongo: and I was able to, because your other work continues.\n",
"\n",
"7\n",
"00:00:33.450 --> 00:00:37.820\n",
"sarahkayongo: But then you have to go back and correct all these.\n",
"\n",
"8\n",
"00:00:38.500 --> 00:00:51.259\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then actually, once you put your mind to to making the corrections, you'd be surprised to realize they are not when professors are speaking back at you or giving you feedback\n",
"\n",
"9\n",
"00:00:51.820 --> 00:01:07.530\n",
"sarahkayongo: this thinking big terms, and it may feel like you have to almost change entire. But but then, when I realized, okay, they were actually minimal. And that's the same thing. I've experienced in publishing.\n",
"\n",
"10\n",
"00:01:07.960 --> 00:01:22.760\n",
"sarahkayongo: Right? You think that is bad. You try publishing a paper, and you submit it to a journal. They come up with all sorts of, and you almost entirely have to change. I remember we've had.\n",
"\n",
"11\n",
"00:01:23.370 --> 00:01:25.400\n",
"sarahkayongo: you know, the last paper with\n",
"\n",
"12\n",
"00:01:25.650 --> 00:01:26.490\n",
"sarahkayongo: the\n",
"\n",
"13\n",
"00:01:26.690 --> 00:01:27.870\n",
"sarahkayongo: We publish.\n",
"\n",
"14\n",
"00:01:28.180 --> 00:01:33.289\n",
"Patrick: It took us a long time, because every journal we realized, okay, we need to stop\n",
"\n",
"15\n",
"00:01:33.510 --> 00:01:40.839\n",
"sarahkayongo: because we almost change the type. Not only that type we reached up point or like.\n",
"\n",
"16\n",
"00:01:40.920 --> 00:01:42.400\n",
"sarahkayongo: This is no longer.\n",
"\n",
"17\n",
"00:01:42.490 --> 00:01:50.880\n",
"sarahkayongo: You read paper every every, every editor, every reviewer is giving us all sorts of feedback.\n",
"\n",
"18\n",
"00:01:51.440 --> 00:01:52.710\n",
"Patrick: so\n",
"\n",
"19\n",
"00:01:53.120 --> 00:01:58.040\n",
"sarahkayongo: don't get so that is called pijon hauling yourself\n",
"\n",
"20\n",
"00:01:58.830 --> 00:02:01.879\n",
"sarahkayongo: so don't get pigeon told\n",
"\n",
"21\n",
"00:02:02.780 --> 00:02:08.490\n",
"sarahkayongo: and I think a week is good enough. It's sufficient. There's nothing wrong.\n",
"\n",
"22\n",
"00:02:09.210 --> 00:02:14.659\n",
"sarahkayongo: Okay? So another thing is, maybe give it another week. If you have to\n",
"\n",
"23\n",
"00:02:14.740 --> 00:02:23.350\n",
"sarahkayongo: understand the deadline for submitting the changes a a negotiate, for you know an extension, if need be.\n",
"\n",
"24\n",
"00:02:23.890 --> 00:02:31.489\n",
"sarahkayongo: and give it a fresh new set of ads. But the question is motivation.\n",
"\n",
"25\n",
"00:02:31.800 --> 00:02:37.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, motivation is the origin of everything. You can't start something until\n",
"\n",
"26\n",
"00:02:37.780 --> 00:02:46.839\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you have the motivation. Otherwise it will just be a thought. But so the question is motivation. How do you get to action?\n",
"\n",
"27\n",
"00:02:47.440 --> 00:02:50.420\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And that's that. That is original question.\n",
"\n",
"28\n",
"00:02:50.590 --> 00:03:03.410\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, what you're giving is advice, but advice does not affect motivation motivation from from within.\n",
"\n",
"29\n",
"00:03:03.470 --> 00:03:13.650\n",
"sarahkayongo: Motivation is from within, not from without, within. Yes, yes, yes, so you cannot advise. That's an external that's external influence you can't advise right now. You you feel what you\n",
"\n",
"30\n",
"00:03:13.760 --> 00:03:23.590\n",
"sarahkayongo: experiencing is burnout. Give me time. That's African.\n",
"\n",
"31\n",
"00:03:23.640 --> 00:03:27.089\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: A European will take coffee\n",
"\n",
"32\n",
"00:03:27.160 --> 00:03:28.930\n",
"Patrick: and will roll\n",
"\n",
"33\n",
"00:03:45.790 --> 00:04:02.939\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I Europeans, and is like this before drinking coffee all day. Not for fun. No one finds coffee delicious. It's bitter by definition, yeah, drink espresso. First of all, sure that they're not interested in the taste, the quantity.\n",
"\n",
"34\n",
"00:04:02.970 --> 00:04:08.750\n",
"Patrick: It's so tiny. The cups are microscopic. They're like so tiny. But then dots\n",
"\n",
"35\n",
"00:04:08.920 --> 00:04:25.370\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Americans cannot handle that call. It's too bitter. So Americans add a lot of water. But America and milk and sugar have a tiny, very tiny cookie with it, because very bitter. So then a drink? No, he's having coffee for fun\n",
"\n",
"36\n",
"00:04:25.550 --> 00:04:47.779\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know. It's not delicious. It's not delicious. Let me pull up slides. Of course, what I'm pulling up touching you'll be already familiar with.\n",
"\n",
"37\n",
"00:04:47.950 --> 00:04:52.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but I would pull it up, anyway.\n",
"\n",
"38\n",
"00:04:52.390 --> 00:04:55.320\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: How to find it!\n",
"\n",
"39\n",
"00:04:55.600 --> 00:05:00.560\n",
"Patrick: II will certainly try that out. I think I should also add some little milk to it.\n",
"\n",
"40\n",
"00:05:00.850 --> 00:05:05.150\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Well, that's that's that's\n",
"\n",
"41\n",
"00:05:06.610 --> 00:05:27.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: blood pressure at all in all of this. Yeah, we talked about.\n",
"\n",
"42\n",
"00:05:28.290 --> 00:05:39.330\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Well, right now, actually, III right now, I'm not healthy physically. Yeah. And and is that good? Is that? But that's a different question.\n",
"\n",
"43\n",
"00:05:39.390 --> 00:05:44.939\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But I know I've not done a good job. Health, wise physically.\n",
"\n",
"44\n",
"00:05:45.200 --> 00:05:54.800\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But this is this has come. This graph has come from one of my students. So I have about 300 students I've taught in the last 2 years.\n",
"\n",
"45\n",
"00:05:54.820 --> 00:06:01.059\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I noticed in the reviews until until was it may I can't remember May, June.\n",
"\n",
"46\n",
"00:06:01.120 --> 00:06:11.279\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and the way, more negative than I expected, which is very shocking. I was very surprised. No, my\n",
"\n",
"47\n",
"00:06:11.370 --> 00:06:13.880\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: classes that I'm teaching were very negative\n",
"\n",
"48\n",
"00:06:14.150 --> 00:06:22.909\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: notice. Students are not very impressed\n",
"\n",
"49\n",
"00:06:23.060 --> 00:06:41.259\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but one student made a comment and said, I need to get remedial classes in educational learning theory. Oh, I need to do that. Did you ever take those at all? I did not do any classes, but I just give III remember that comment stuck\n",
"\n",
"50\n",
"00:06:41.270 --> 00:06:54.229\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the comments stuck. I was looking for remedial classes or anything. But I run into this graph.\n",
"\n",
"51\n",
"00:06:54.900 --> 00:06:55.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"52\n",
"00:06:55.870 --> 00:07:08.390\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I run into this graph. I know I give you the code for the scrub, but I updated it now so I can give you the quote again. And you can reproduce this using Google or the Google call up, Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"53\n",
"00:07:08.560 --> 00:07:18.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so this graph for me is as turned out to be so powerful. It describes everything. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"54\n",
"00:07:18.950 --> 00:07:24.259\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that in life this is not only for students. Or you can think of all of us as students of life.\n",
"\n",
"55\n",
"00:07:24.840 --> 00:07:25.760\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"56\n",
"00:07:25.880 --> 00:07:39.660\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: then in life, you're gonna find challenges and the the level that we should find them quantified. Yeah, just let's just say so this is a skill of 0 to 10. And this and your skill level is 0 to 10.\n",
"\n",
"57\n",
"00:07:40.290 --> 00:07:51.359\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: As you can imagine, everyone probably has experience situation where you have a challenge exceeding your skills. emotional state, you're emotional state.\n",
"\n",
"58\n",
"00:07:51.610 --> 00:07:56.090\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's not gonna be bored. It's gonna be closer to anxious. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"59\n",
"00:07:57.040 --> 00:08:07.279\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: In charge. That exceeds your your skills where you cannot see how you're gonna solve this, especially if it's a challenge that's relevant that you can just walk away from\n",
"\n",
"60\n",
"00:08:07.460 --> 00:08:11.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah your your emotions are, gonna be in this zone.\n",
"\n",
"61\n",
"00:08:11.840 --> 00:08:23.150\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and or if your skills are exceeding like 6 exceeding a challenge of 2, yeah. you're more likely to be bored\n",
"\n",
"62\n",
"00:08:23.260 --> 00:08:25.640\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: or relaxed. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"63\n",
"00:08:25.850 --> 00:08:27.580\n",
"Patrick: Body. But when\n",
"\n",
"64\n",
"00:08:27.950 --> 00:08:33.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: when your challenge is high, let's say here, close to 3,\n",
"\n",
"65\n",
"00:08:34.270 --> 00:08:41.900\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and your your skill is like just 1.5, and you step up your game. You step it up.\n",
"\n",
"66\n",
"00:08:42.270 --> 00:08:49.650\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And yeah, you're in the board of Re, the red zone and stupid. I've been up in this yellow game. That's a zone of engagement.\n",
"\n",
"67\n",
"00:08:49.990 --> 00:08:54.499\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Your mind is so absorbed and then you experience victory\n",
"\n",
"68\n",
"00:08:54.660 --> 00:08:56.539\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: as you go away from\n",
"\n",
"69\n",
"00:08:56.600 --> 00:09:04.449\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the pink zone, and you feel victory around here when you're almost hitting the green zone. Yeah. the feeling of victory.\n",
"\n",
"70\n",
"00:09:04.470 --> 00:09:10.430\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and only be produced if you felt anxious anxiety.\n",
"\n",
"71\n",
"00:09:10.880 --> 00:09:37.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, you can never fill victory unless you feel that anxiety and I've overcome the victory is overcoming a challenge, whether it's a challenger in war or in sports, definitely what is the best example? But in modern life, where there's less war, these sports or politics challenger rifle.\n",
"\n",
"72\n",
"00:09:37.030 --> 00:09:41.959\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: When you win, you move from a zone of anxiety to victory. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"73\n",
"00:09:41.990 --> 00:09:43.530\n",
"Patrick: hmm,\n",
"\n",
"74\n",
"00:09:43.850 --> 00:09:52.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And so this is only producible. If you're following the Yellow zone, the feeling, the psychology of victory.\n",
"\n",
"75\n",
"00:09:52.080 --> 00:10:02.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But if you rest in your laurels and as as a sitting, Sarah, and become bleed like a ship and follow some 23 for the rest of your life.\n",
"\n",
"76\n",
"00:10:02.730 --> 00:10:05.680\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You've been in green green postures.\n",
"\n",
"77\n",
"00:10:05.720 --> 00:10:08.560\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: steel waters. It means\n",
"\n",
"78\n",
"00:10:08.680 --> 00:10:20.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you are not going to seek bigger challenges again. Yeah. Well, that's that's why the song is roded because it connects.\n",
"\n",
"79\n",
"00:10:20.620 --> 00:10:41.319\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I would like most people, desire you hear people so. Oh, I want to retire. Yes, but then there's some people who will never be content as soon as they finish. Yeah, exactly as soon as experience victory\n",
"\n",
"80\n",
"00:10:41.320 --> 00:10:45.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to them. There's only one meaning. I need a higher challenge.\n",
"\n",
"81\n",
"00:10:45.560 --> 00:10:49.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You change environment.\n",
"\n",
"82\n",
"00:10:49.890 --> 00:11:09.870\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you change. And the chat engine\n",
"\n",
"83\n",
"00:11:09.880 --> 00:11:26.719\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: they but the other thing that I haven't shown here is what are the molecules? Molecular changes in the brain that goes anxiety? So it's nora adrenaline. It's a molecule that has a modification of adrenaline for noradrenaline adrenaline doesn't get to the brain.\n",
"\n",
"84\n",
"00:11:27.120 --> 00:11:29.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it's in the rest of the body.\n",
"\n",
"85\n",
"00:11:30.100 --> 00:11:42.550\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No, no, no! Produced by the body. Coffee is not produced by the body. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"86\n",
"00:11:42.680 --> 00:11:44.200\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so\n",
"\n",
"87\n",
"00:11:44.260 --> 00:11:58.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: sort of yeah. So some things we produce anxiety. But the best examples of anxiety. Things that produce anxiety are real life challenges. That is so important, I think, your skills, your skills are not sufficient.\n",
"\n",
"88\n",
"00:11:58.220 --> 00:12:14.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, if the line jumps into the room right now, I worry. Yeah, that's a challenge. I understand very well. And I can tell you, sort of relevant to you civilized modern person. You really don't have the skills\n",
"\n",
"89\n",
"00:12:14.560 --> 00:12:21.920\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 200 lines. So you've been actual. I in in medicine, they say. They call adrenaline in the fight.\n",
"\n",
"90\n",
"00:12:22.120 --> 00:12:32.369\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Fright, flight home on you get into the mode of fighting, or fly flying away fright or getting scared fright.\n",
"\n",
"91\n",
"00:12:32.390 --> 00:12:35.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's what adrenaline does. So that's a rig song\n",
"\n",
"92\n",
"00:12:35.180 --> 00:12:40.870\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the the green zone of boredom. The molecule is called and and\n",
"\n",
"93\n",
"00:12:40.930 --> 00:12:43.279\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it's a molecule. N, mda.\n",
"\n",
"94\n",
"00:12:43.310 --> 00:13:00.100\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah, we know. What is it? Gaba? Gaba gamma? The third Greek letter am mine will be tyric acid. Gaba GABA. Gamma B Tyric acid. It's the molecules produced when you take volume.\n",
"\n",
"95\n",
"00:13:00.720 --> 00:13:08.039\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Volume is yes, it makes you sleep alcohol.\n",
"\n",
"96\n",
"00:13:08.130 --> 00:13:22.839\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: What's exactly the same as volume in the same exact location as a brain that. So alcohol because of relaxation. That's why it's the most famous beverage on the planet. Every culture\n",
"\n",
"97\n",
"00:13:23.000 --> 00:13:25.690\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: alcohol is very popular because\n",
"\n",
"98\n",
"00:13:25.940 --> 00:13:29.200\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: people are stressed. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"99\n",
"00:13:29.580 --> 00:13:32.460\n",
"if you want a quick fix\n",
"\n",
"100\n",
"00:13:32.670 --> 00:13:39.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: when you're anxious. I can assure you. Yeah, human, you might need to figure it out\n",
"\n",
"101\n",
"00:13:39.980 --> 00:13:51.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: a long time ago. It's called alcohol. Yeah. Well, that that's a moral judgment. Biology, molecular biology. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"102\n",
"00:13:51.870 --> 00:13:53.990\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah, molecular biology.\n",
"\n",
"103\n",
"00:13:54.100 --> 00:13:57.170\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That it is very effective\n",
"\n",
"104\n",
"00:13:57.190 --> 00:14:04.119\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: volume is manufactured. But alcohol is a product of nature, as in what's called fermentation.\n",
"\n",
"105\n",
"00:14:04.140 --> 00:14:15.419\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. So the human race discovered ages ago. That's why it shows up in Scripture, I think probably never is.\n",
"\n",
"106\n",
"00:14:15.460 --> 00:14:21.600\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: because it's going to be abused has to be abused because there's a lot of anxiety, a lot of stress.\n",
"\n",
"107\n",
"00:14:21.650 --> 00:14:27.299\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And if you discover the ultimate solution, it's not an ultimate solution. It just takes away the feeling\n",
"\n",
"108\n",
"00:14:27.520 --> 00:14:53.490\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it takes with the molecule. Yeah, but it doesn't solve any problem adrenaline and produces gaba tyric acid, which is the molecule for relaxation, the feeling of relaxation. But the yellow zone, the molecule is called dopamine.\n",
"\n",
"109\n",
"00:14:53.940 --> 00:14:59.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, actually, it's what's released when you eat for a good meal. Huh!\n",
"\n",
"110\n",
"00:14:59.190 --> 00:15:01.960\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Or when you're victorious, literally.\n",
"\n",
"111\n",
"00:15:02.220 --> 00:15:21.260\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So, yeah, you get that. But guess what alcohol also produces. Dopamine really causes what it really is. Dopamine. So but there are many other drugs of abuse, most drugs of abuse in a yellow produce dopamine.\n",
"\n",
"112\n",
"00:15:21.360 --> 00:15:23.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's why they're dangerous.\n",
"\n",
"113\n",
"00:15:23.220 --> 00:15:27.849\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Because if you can get victory, a feeling of victory without any effort.\n",
"\n",
"114\n",
"00:15:28.200 --> 00:15:30.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's good. You're going to abuse that\n",
"\n",
"115\n",
"00:15:30.590 --> 00:15:33.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you get hooked on. It\n",
"\n",
"116\n",
"00:15:33.490 --> 00:15:49.839\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: does not produce feeling of victory actually may create anxiety. However.\n",
"\n",
"117\n",
"00:15:49.890 --> 00:16:00.580\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if you're taking the coffee with explicit purpose of overcoming the challenge. and you're focusing. it's going to drive it towards victory.\n",
"\n",
"118\n",
"00:16:01.110 --> 00:16:12.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And the you will repeat, you'll hit, repeat, just keep it me. That's what I've done since May. For me it is mostly anxiety, as in the class of people are off my edge\n",
"\n",
"119\n",
"00:16:12.450 --> 00:16:17.890\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and I could not understand a single thing in data sciences. I all the time.\n",
"\n",
"120\n",
"00:16:17.970 --> 00:16:22.409\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II remember the first lecture. I literally understood exactly 0.\n",
"\n",
"121\n",
"00:16:23.000 --> 00:16:27.400\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Everything that has mentioned they would talk of\n",
"\n",
"122\n",
"00:16:27.440 --> 00:16:36.370\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the time. I don't use the Times because I didn't understand them. You may not understand them, too. But all the things I picked\n",
"\n",
"123\n",
"00:16:36.470 --> 00:16:49.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II had call up is that's the place where, if for status, for status, you want to try, call up. But you do not want that's you walk for should evolve to Vs code. I wrote that down.\n",
"\n",
"124\n",
"00:16:50.040 --> 00:16:59.980\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, I didn't understand anything that was being said. But I wrote that down. I was like, Oh, so if you novice call up. So I went to call up. I just very straightforward let Google call up. That's our recommended\n",
"\n",
"125\n",
"00:17:00.250 --> 00:17:15.380\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: because you can literally go ahead.\n",
"\n",
"126\n",
"00:17:15.500 --> 00:17:21.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is being recorded. And you know, let me record a shorter video because this video will be too long.\n",
"\n",
"127\n",
"00:17:21.440 --> 00:17:30.839\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: no. You showed us the code before you showed us the graph. No, what I'm saying. I'm going to record the process of reproducing this graph.\n",
"\n",
"128\n",
"00:17:31.140 --> 00:17:35.079\n",
"Patrick: Okay, did you? Did you send that code? Also by email?\n",
"\n",
"129\n",
"00:17:35.130 --> 00:17:45.269\n",
"sarahkayongo: I want the quote, I'm going to reproduce the process now. So just relax.\n",
"\n",
"130\n",
"00:17:45.380 --> 00:17:55.160\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Don't worry about it. Just just okay. Any.\n",
"\n",
"131\n",
"00:17:55.640 --> 00:17:58.420\n",
"sarahkayongo: Do you? Do you write code? P.\n",
"\n",
"132\n",
"00:17:58.950 --> 00:18:21.979\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Very small code? Not not Major smart major questions irrelevant because this AI, which is so advanced. Now, it's a very relevant question. Do you write code? So Uhhuh, step number one, go to Google, step number 2,\n",
"\n",
"133\n",
"00:18:22.260 --> 00:18:26.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: call up. Welcome to cool up\n",
"\n",
"134\n",
"00:18:27.170 --> 00:18:29.380\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: file file.\n",
"\n",
"135\n",
"00:18:29.540 --> 00:18:40.060\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And I'm gonna record this and put it together. I've hit file.\n",
"\n",
"136\n",
"00:18:40.250 --> 00:18:42.280\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm going to copy and paste\n",
"\n",
"137\n",
"00:18:42.470 --> 00:18:46.489\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: from here. So you see the code that produced this is python. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"138\n",
"00:18:46.530 --> 00:18:48.470\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: copy. Excellent.\n",
"\n",
"139\n",
"00:18:48.590 --> 00:18:55.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I think the language the most popular. Second, most popular language is number one is Javascript. Copied\n",
"\n",
"140\n",
"00:18:59.130 --> 00:19:07.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: paste it? Oh, no knowledge. You don't even know any of this knowledge here. Produced.\n",
"\n",
"141\n",
"00:19:07.380 --> 00:19:11.109\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, how about that? You can download this image.\n",
"\n",
"142\n",
"00:19:11.220 --> 00:19:18.130\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: or which I strongly recommend, you can export it to your Github account. Yeah, okay.\n",
"\n",
"143\n",
"00:19:18.370 --> 00:19:25.729\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah. So any, I'm gonna stop the recording there because it's doing this for demonstration purposes. That's a 1ย min video\n",
"\n",
"144\n",
"00:19:27.330 --> 00:19:28.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hmm.\n",
"\n",
"145\n",
"00:19:29.130 --> 00:19:35.820\n",
"sarahkayongo: You know, you should be teaching this on a on you to.\n",
"\n",
"146\n",
"00:19:35.880 --> 00:19:46.330\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's what I'm going. Where do you think I'm going to put videos, anyway?\n",
"\n",
"147\n",
"00:19:47.100 --> 00:19:59.359\n",
"sarahkayongo: no, not not really posting these videos, but create. Once I learn how to code and come up with interactive things.\n",
"\n",
"148\n",
"00:19:59.560 --> 00:20:11.219\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But I know there are so many videos on Youtube instructional videos on how. So? So this one don't put this on Youtube, I'm gonna put this on my Youtube. I created a Youtube account.\n",
"\n",
"149\n",
"00:20:11.390 --> 00:20:16.360\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so what I'm going to do is upload this.\n",
"\n",
"150\n",
"00:20:17.260 --> 00:20:20.320\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Even, I'm going to do this in real time. So I just see\n",
"\n",
"152\n",
"00:20:26.150 --> 00:20:32.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And so let's just see this process in real time. Yeah. you, too.\n",
"\n",
"153\n",
"00:20:33.780 --> 00:20:53.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I use the first person I was so creating a Youtube account was Lauren. I think she was like 4, 5 years old. But before, when I knew what she was doing didn't make any sense at the time.\n",
"\n",
"154\n",
"00:20:53.750 --> 00:20:59.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But generation was already doing these things\n",
"\n",
"155\n",
"00:20:59.060 --> 00:21:11.169\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Youtube channels like, what is a Youtube channel? Didn't make any sense. But now I see I'm pretty content for students. So whoever, even in this case for you.\n",
"\n",
"156\n",
"00:21:11.490 --> 00:21:20.760\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so you see, create upload videos I'm going to find this video.\n",
"\n",
"157\n",
"00:21:21.980 --> 00:21:24.520\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I just need to find where it's recorded.\n",
"\n",
"158\n",
"00:21:25.810 --> 00:21:27.270\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I can't remember.\n",
"\n",
"159\n",
"00:21:28.540 --> 00:21:34.079\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But I'm going to upload it. Do you have access to the the the shared notes.\n",
"\n",
"160\n",
"00:21:35.640 --> 00:21:37.690\n",
"Patrick: Okay, you send us the email\n",
"\n",
"161\n",
"00:21:38.290 --> 00:21:39.110\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that's\n",
"\n",
"162\n",
"00:21:39.510 --> 00:21:52.100\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: in zoom. I gave you that in zoom. Yes, I got zoom. I got it, but I prefer you share in the email cause. This will go the moment I turn off. Well, by the link that is not going to die. Yeah, what I'm saying is that link is\n",
"\n",
"163\n",
"00:21:52.110 --> 00:21:54.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: a real link. So if you save it somewhere\n",
"\n",
"164\n",
"00:21:54.910 --> 00:21:59.789\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you can access it anytime cause it will have this video that I'm going to share.\n",
"\n",
"165\n",
"00:22:00.690 --> 00:22:01.950\n",
"Patrick: Does that make sense?\n",
"\n",
"166\n",
"00:22:02.790 --> 00:22:07.429\n",
"sarahkayongo: Talking of coffee? Let me let me get make some coffee, I think.\n",
"\n",
"167\n",
"00:22:07.610 --> 00:22:11.680\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Actually, me, I'm experimenting walking like coffee. It's a challenge\n",
"\n",
"168\n",
"00:22:11.960 --> 00:22:17.790\n",
"sarahkayongo: really drunk. Actually, I'll I'll sleep after this. I don't have any.\n",
"\n",
"169\n",
"00:22:17.870 --> 00:22:20.379\n",
"you know. I thought it's almost morning\n",
"\n",
"170\n",
"00:22:20.620 --> 00:22:22.100\n",
"sarahkayongo: that's really bad.\n",
"\n",
"171\n",
"00:22:22.270 --> 00:22:26.789\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Please the video, it's time for sleep.\n",
"\n",
"172\n",
"00:22:27.260 --> 00:22:30.930\n",
"sarahkayongo: Okay, so yeah.\n",
"\n",
"173\n",
"00:22:31.010 --> 00:22:34.599\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: picture view, that's not a picture. This one is a video\n",
"\n",
"174\n",
"00:22:34.620 --> 00:22:36.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to the video.\n",
"\n",
"175\n",
"00:22:36.850 --> 00:22:38.570\n",
"Patrick: which one is that?\n",
"\n",
"176\n",
"00:22:38.680 --> 00:22:40.239\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No. And I've just recorded\n",
"\n",
"177\n",
"00:22:40.560 --> 00:22:42.850\n",
"Patrick: that they support that. So\n",
"\n",
"178\n",
"00:22:42.960 --> 00:22:51.650\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm now going to upload it into Youtube only to get a URL, which I'm going to embed with the\n",
"\n",
"179\n",
"00:22:53.080 --> 00:22:55.669\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you can now use it.\n",
"\n",
"180\n",
"00:22:56.570 --> 00:22:59.310\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, so what is this about?\n",
"\n",
"181\n",
"00:23:00.090 --> 00:23:01.839\n",
"Call up Google callup.\n",
"\n",
"182\n",
"00:23:02.990 --> 00:23:03.810\n",
"Patrick: Hmm!\n",
"\n",
"183\n",
"00:23:04.590 --> 00:23:07.810\n",
"Oh, love! So\n",
"\n",
"184\n",
"00:23:08.150 --> 00:23:10.830\n",
"sarahkayongo: he were trying to wait for joining.\n",
"\n",
"185\n",
"00:23:12.050 --> 00:23:14.730\n",
"Patrick: hey? He's be awake.\n",
"\n",
"186\n",
"00:23:14.900 --> 00:23:16.960\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No, he's at the airport\n",
"\n",
"187\n",
"00:23:17.280 --> 00:23:21.249\n",
"Patrick: to drop Brand at the airport.\n",
"\n",
"188\n",
"00:23:23.080 --> 00:23:24.000\n",
"Okay?\n",
"\n",
"189\n",
"00:23:25.330 --> 00:23:30.449\n",
"sarahkayongo: But I mean, if we can start after this.\n",
"\n",
"190\n",
"00:23:30.710 --> 00:23:32.080\n",
"Patrick: Yes.\n",
"\n",
"191\n",
"00:23:34.100 --> 00:23:35.210\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: next.\n",
"\n",
"192\n",
"00:23:35.450 --> 00:23:39.670\n",
"sarahkayongo: you can always read the the notes or join us.\n",
"\n",
"193\n",
"00:23:40.880 --> 00:23:43.599\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, I don't know why I'm tired today.\n",
"\n",
"194\n",
"00:23:44.870 --> 00:23:47.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hi, Evan. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"195\n",
"00:23:47.310 --> 00:23:58.220\n",
"sarahkayongo: Greetings from all your cousins in in Europe. Welcome back! We'll come back. Those are excellent photos and wonderful moments.\n",
"\n",
"196\n",
"00:23:58.470 --> 00:24:02.610\n",
"Patrick: This is just so good to see joy. I've taken so long that seeing Joy.\n",
"\n",
"197\n",
"00:24:03.570 --> 00:24:06.840\n",
"Patrick: did you know? Huh?\n",
"\n",
"198\n",
"00:24:07.190 --> 00:24:10.089\n",
"Maybe I've I've spent time with that in the Uk.\n",
"\n",
"199\n",
"00:24:10.120 --> 00:24:25.169\n",
"Patrick: Oh, I went. Yes, I went to say so much, Cindy, she eventually called her. She came up and picked me up, took me for lunch at her home. Then she also is. Then, on the next day, who took me out to see London.\n",
"\n",
"200\n",
"00:24:26.000 --> 00:24:27.570\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, she cooked for me.\n",
"\n",
"201\n",
"00:24:27.610 --> 00:24:29.479\n",
"sarahkayongo: She's a good cook.\n",
"\n",
"202\n",
"00:24:29.970 --> 00:24:30.690\n",
"Patrick: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"203\n",
"00:24:30.910 --> 00:24:36.109\n",
"Patrick: she she it was just so good being with those guys. It was so long.\n",
"\n",
"204\n",
"00:24:36.900 --> 00:24:55.539\n",
"Patrick: although I found not just seeing this daughter one of not seeing these daughters to be very, very in another world. I don't know what her issue is. I last met her\n",
"\n",
"205\n",
"00:24:55.560 --> 00:24:58.160\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 4 years old. Adventures too much.\n",
"\n",
"206\n",
"00:24:58.290 --> 00:25:00.329\n",
"Patrick: because just too much. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"207\n",
"00:25:00.750 --> 00:25:03.040\n",
"Patrick: May met as a teenager.\n",
"\n",
"208\n",
"00:25:03.060 --> 00:25:16.000\n",
"Patrick: Yeah. So she just hungry. She, the mother, talks to her, she walks, away she goes, locks herself in the room, man from morning up to evening, then at night she has disappeared.\n",
"\n",
"209\n",
"00:25:16.290 --> 00:25:18.820\n",
"Patrick: Then, opening later.\n",
"\n",
"210\n",
"00:25:19.670 --> 00:25:21.429\n",
"Patrick: just saved money\n",
"\n",
"211\n",
"00:25:21.930 --> 00:25:27.949\n",
"Patrick: of the football.\n",
"\n",
"212\n",
"00:25:28.160 --> 00:25:33.280\n",
"Patrick: Inegelda. That one I spent so much time with her. She's so friendly. She's\n",
"\n",
"213\n",
"00:25:33.300 --> 00:25:35.210\n",
"Patrick: she's just such a good person\n",
"\n",
"214\n",
"00:25:35.330 --> 00:25:37.930\n",
"Patrick: is a nice to hunt government.\n",
"\n",
"215\n",
"00:25:38.400 --> 00:25:41.679\n",
"Patrick: She she will give her life to Christ, but I think\n",
"\n",
"216\n",
"00:25:41.820 --> 00:25:47.489\n",
"Patrick: the parents may not have liked that, so they quickly took her to Catholic Semi Seminary and\n",
"\n",
"217\n",
"00:25:47.510 --> 00:25:49.580\n",
"Patrick: quickly, Bubday's yeah.\n",
"\n",
"218\n",
"00:25:50.790 --> 00:25:54.519\n",
"sarahkayongo: The father was. The father is a Catholic Catholic.\n",
"\n",
"219\n",
"00:25:55.160 --> 00:26:01.799\n",
"sarahkayongo: I do not know who has. Yes, so many questions.\n",
"\n",
"220\n",
"00:26:01.940 --> 00:26:09.980\n",
"and later on she said she wanted to give her life to Christ, and we did. We prayed. we prayed together, and she received Christ. So\n",
"\n",
"221\n",
"00:26:10.090 --> 00:26:12.569\n",
"Patrick: when this thing was done so speedy.\n",
"\n",
"222\n",
"00:26:12.740 --> 00:26:20.869\n",
"Patrick: I say, now, what is this? This is not good. But anyway, since she made that decision herself to give her life to Christ.\n",
"\n",
"223\n",
"00:26:21.080 --> 00:26:23.349\n",
"sarahkayongo: I know that God will take care of that.\n",
"\n",
"224\n",
"00:26:23.380 --> 00:26:28.450\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, she was there.\n",
"\n",
"225\n",
"00:26:29.250 --> 00:26:32.859\n",
"sarahkayongo: She's a very nice girl, you know. She went to law school.\n",
"\n",
"226\n",
"00:26:34.010 --> 00:26:35.820\n",
"Yes, she is a lawyer.\n",
"\n",
"227\n",
"00:26:36.280 --> 00:26:39.860\n",
"sarahkayongo: Hmm! Very smart.\n",
"\n",
"228\n",
"00:26:40.030 --> 00:26:41.640\n",
"Patrick: very shy.\n",
"\n",
"229\n",
"00:26:41.840 --> 00:26:47.819\n",
"sarahkayongo: She's a lot, but she was telling me she hated law, so she's not\n",
"\n",
"230\n",
"00:26:47.840 --> 00:26:51.629\n",
"Patrick: after training. She's probably not going to practice it.\n",
"\n",
"231\n",
"00:26:52.410 --> 00:26:56.810\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, I know. I know so many lawyers who end up not\n",
"\n",
"232\n",
"00:26:57.000 --> 00:27:00.949\n",
"sarahkayongo: every field, every field has people who don't practice\n",
"\n",
"233\n",
"00:27:01.630 --> 00:27:28.689\n",
"Patrick: even medicine. I'm not practicing engineering school. When I finish electrical engineering, I decided\n",
"\n",
"234\n",
"00:27:29.080 --> 00:27:34.079\n",
"Patrick: I didn't even go. I just went, picked up my certificate. And that was\n",
"\n",
"235\n",
"00:27:34.200 --> 00:27:35.010\n",
"Patrick: yeah.\n",
"\n",
"236\n",
"00:27:36.130 --> 00:27:51.270\n",
"sarahkayongo: Well, I'm doing research. I find I find it more engaging type of flow. Well, no, I'm not practice. But I'm not practicing. I'm not seeing patience.\n",
"\n",
"237\n",
"00:27:51.280 --> 00:27:58.160\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, I'm finding solutions for patients. That. The the profession doesn't have solutions, for that's why research is\n",
"\n",
"238\n",
"00:27:58.470 --> 00:28:03.670\n",
"sarahkayongo: so. But did you enjoy the clinical?\n",
"\n",
"239\n",
"00:28:03.800 --> 00:28:13.490\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Of course I did. Very good with patience. Very good. That much I, Patience, told me. don't you miss it? No.\n",
"\n",
"240\n",
"00:28:14.120 --> 00:28:37.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so you let me tell you about flow zones and boredom, and what professions are not for everyone, not for me, for sure, because I can't do routine for the rest of my life. Routines and exactly 0 creativity. As long as you're creative you are in trouble being sued first of all, because a professional inherit is inherited knowledge and wisdom\n",
"\n",
"241\n",
"00:28:37.880 --> 00:28:42.219\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it said about your ideas, yeah, it's what's proven.\n",
"\n",
"242\n",
"00:28:42.810 --> 00:28:45.259\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And so you're supposed to abide.\n",
"\n",
"243\n",
"00:28:45.580 --> 00:28:53.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Bring us? Why is your wisdom? That's that's so. In place like the Us. You're just exposing yourself to lawsuits.\n",
"\n",
"244\n",
"00:28:53.810 --> 00:28:55.589\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: If anything goes wrong.\n",
"\n",
"245\n",
"00:28:55.680 --> 00:29:00.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and you did things out of line with your profession, with guidelines of your hospitals.\n",
"\n",
"246\n",
"00:29:00.500 --> 00:29:01.529\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You're done.\n",
"\n",
"247\n",
"00:29:02.160 --> 00:29:03.040\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"248\n",
"00:29:03.780 --> 00:29:23.060\n",
"sarahkayongo: So you guys are making me feel good. Me? I chose. Actually, I wanted to be a lawyer. No, no. As a child I wanted to be a doctor. Believe it or not.\n",
"\n",
"249\n",
"00:29:23.770 --> 00:29:32.489\n",
"sarahkayongo: he used to expose us. He would ask us what we wanted to to be when we grew up and under before maybe\n",
"\n",
"250\n",
"00:29:33.080 --> 00:29:34.919\n",
"sarahkayongo: half of you are born.\n",
"\n",
"251\n",
"00:29:35.830 --> 00:29:42.690\n",
"sarahkayongo: So in Malaga they took us to the Mall. He just would take us to be exposed.\n",
"\n",
"252\n",
"00:29:42.880 --> 00:29:45.459\n",
"sarahkayongo: and then went to the Monterey.\n",
"\n",
"253\n",
"00:29:46.050 --> 00:29:49.779\n",
"sarahkayongo: and I said, No, I cannot deal with that.\n",
"\n",
"254\n",
"00:29:51.810 --> 00:29:52.719\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And\n",
"\n",
"255\n",
"00:29:53.510 --> 00:29:59.769\n",
"sarahkayongo: and then I think we also in high school. I do not have a good physics teacher.\n",
"\n",
"256\n",
"00:30:00.350 --> 00:30:01.969\n",
"sarahkayongo: physics of the\n",
"\n",
"257\n",
"00:30:02.100 --> 00:30:03.860\n",
"sarahkayongo: I enjoyed very much.\n",
"\n",
"258\n",
"00:30:05.940 --> 00:30:13.040\n",
"sarahkayongo: I actually enjoyed chemistry, but physics, Mr. Smini, who he was so mean.\n",
"\n",
"259\n",
"00:30:13.810 --> 00:30:24.670\n",
"sarahkayongo: So I enjoyed literature because it came naturally to me. But then I discovered economics, and then I and then\n",
"\n",
"260\n",
"00:30:25.280 --> 00:30:28.170\n",
"sarahkayongo: in Essex, 5.\n",
"\n",
"261\n",
"00:30:28.450 --> 00:30:32.099\n",
"sarahkayongo: Professor, what's his name? The one was the\n",
"\n",
"262\n",
"00:30:32.200 --> 00:30:36.039\n",
"sarahkayongo: one in 4. Roomba Hall.\n",
"\n",
"263\n",
"00:30:36.490 --> 00:30:40.680\n",
"Patrick: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"264\n",
"00:30:40.990 --> 00:30:43.820\n",
"Patrick: yes, that\n",
"\n",
"265\n",
"00:30:45.760 --> 00:30:51.050\n",
"my wife had a shop in Chicago, and mommy said I should go help her.\n",
"\n",
"266\n",
"00:30:51.480 --> 00:30:53.969\n",
"sarahkayongo: And I went, and\n",
"\n",
"267\n",
"00:30:54.620 --> 00:30:57.600\n",
"sarahkayongo: I was 16. It's 4 voc\n",
"\n",
"268\n",
"00:30:58.700 --> 00:31:03.149\n",
"sarahkayongo: I was so so I was like, what's going on\n",
"\n",
"269\n",
"00:31:03.480 --> 00:31:09.619\n",
"sarahkayongo: anyway, would wake up in the morning, and these trucks would come and unload things.\n",
"\n",
"270\n",
"00:31:10.040 --> 00:31:23.989\n",
"sarahkayongo: you know, consume my goods, boxes or so matchboxes, whatever whatever people, and then, as soon as before, it was wholesale is wholesale.\n",
"\n",
"271\n",
"00:31:24.100 --> 00:31:26.970\n",
"sarahkayongo: so just by Bob says.\n",
"\n",
"272\n",
"00:31:27.280 --> 00:31:28.500\n",
"sarahkayongo: keep them.\n",
"\n",
"273\n",
"00:31:28.630 --> 00:31:31.589\n",
"sarahkayongo: and as soon as the trucks leave.\n",
"\n",
"274\n",
"00:31:31.830 --> 00:31:36.710\n",
"sarahkayongo: retailers from all over the country would come and buy the boxes\n",
"\n",
"275\n",
"00:31:37.950 --> 00:31:56.179\n",
"sarahkayongo: like, what's happening. Yeah, this is demand and supply, and and then the prices were set every day, and they would change, and I remember being 16 years old going to the neighbor, asking every\n",
"\n",
"276\n",
"00:31:56.970 --> 00:32:10.149\n",
"sarahkayongo: and then from every little chip retailer. That would be a slight difference.\n",
"\n",
"277\n",
"00:32:10.340 --> 00:32:18.099\n",
"sarahkayongo: maybe by a hundred shillings. So 200, you know their little permissions.\n",
"\n",
"278\n",
"00:32:18.140 --> 00:32:32.300\n",
"sarahkayongo: and from the end of Chico is narrow. These from the beginning of Chipova to the end, the price would change. Yeah, depending on on scarcity\n",
"\n",
"279\n",
"00:32:32.450 --> 00:32:39.540\n",
"sarahkayongo: depending on availability. I was so then I went to Essex, and I was studying economics\n",
"\n",
"280\n",
"00:32:39.580 --> 00:32:44.310\n",
"sarahkayongo: and everything I would understand demand and supply in my head.\n",
"\n",
"281\n",
"00:32:44.590 --> 00:32:46.379\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And it's like,\n",
"\n",
"282\n",
"00:32:46.720 --> 00:32:51.859\n",
"sarahkayongo: Wait a minute. That is what was happening. They will talk about hoarding.\n",
"\n",
"283\n",
"00:32:51.940 --> 00:32:53.979\n",
"sarahkayongo: So there was no doubt\n",
"\n",
"284\n",
"00:32:54.220 --> 00:33:00.790\n",
"sarahkayongo: I wanted to study business administration. That kind which was not even in market that time they had\n",
"\n",
"285\n",
"00:33:01.210 --> 00:33:03.029\n",
"Patrick: become us\n",
"\n",
"286\n",
"00:33:03.050 --> 00:33:05.270\n",
"sarahkayongo: some very archaic.\n",
"\n",
"287\n",
"00:33:06.830 --> 00:33:08.599\n",
"Patrick: very archaic program.\n",
"\n",
"288\n",
"00:33:09.370 --> 00:33:10.280\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No.\n",
"\n",
"289\n",
"00:33:10.470 --> 00:33:15.879\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: what I'm doing here, I'm almost done here. I just want you going to find the video\n",
"\n",
"290\n",
"00:33:16.110 --> 00:33:22.769\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: available. Actually, if you click that link, I think.\n",
"\n",
"291\n",
"00:33:23.440 --> 00:33:27.610\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and if you can, you'll find Link you're working on now.\n",
"\n",
"292\n",
"00:33:27.910 --> 00:33:32.259\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I already worked in it. Ii just omitted something\n",
"\n",
"293\n",
"00:33:34.250 --> 00:33:38.949\n",
"sarahkayongo: So which other link are you talking about? The one you just posted?\n",
"\n",
"294\n",
"00:33:40.330 --> 00:33:43.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, that's a link. But I think it's a different page.\n",
"\n",
"295\n",
"00:33:43.360 --> 00:33:45.570\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I have to. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"296\n",
"00:33:45.730 --> 00:33:47.449\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: let me get the correct page.\n",
"\n",
"297\n",
"00:33:50.830 --> 00:33:53.339\n",
"sarahkayongo: I already had it open.\n",
"\n",
"298\n",
"00:33:53.470 --> 00:34:05.470\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You had it top end. But I don't think you have, either. I've changed the page. So if you click on it, you want actually, I think what I shared may vanish. Because I have.\n",
"\n",
"299\n",
"00:34:05.660 --> 00:34:08.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, I fix this problem. That's just a slight problem.\n",
"\n",
"300\n",
"00:34:09.449 --> 00:34:12.580\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I have moved the link elsewhere. You'll find.\n",
"\n",
"301\n",
"00:34:13.610 --> 00:34:19.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, okay, okay. Now let me let me update it for you. I'll finish the necessary updates.\n",
"\n",
"302\n",
"00:34:21.010 --> 00:34:28.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Do you see, I'm working from the time you know everything I'm doing? I had no knowledge existed as of April this year.\n",
"\n",
"303\n",
"00:34:28.780 --> 00:34:32.839\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But now I have automated scripts, script automated.\n",
"\n",
"304\n",
"00:34:33.080 --> 00:34:35.180\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's going to update everything.\n",
"\n",
"305\n",
"00:34:37.010 --> 00:34:44.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And how do I know all this. This is all chat. Gp, just patient by calling for patience.\n",
"\n",
"306\n",
"00:34:44.210 --> 00:34:45.980\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"307\n",
"00:34:47.790 --> 00:34:53.550\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So like, this is script. I walk together to chat, gpt on. I just give it gives me this prompt.\n",
"\n",
"308\n",
"00:34:53.870 --> 00:34:55.100\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and\n",
"\n",
"309\n",
"00:34:55.530 --> 00:35:02.880\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I fill out the prompts, and it does everything else, because everything else is so routine, others out of being the green zone board\n",
"\n",
"310\n",
"00:35:03.020 --> 00:35:07.470\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: doing the same steps over and over again. So I automated them.\n",
"\n",
"311\n",
"00:35:07.910 --> 00:35:09.660\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"312\n",
"00:35:13.620 --> 00:35:30.049\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: very, very interesting. I gave you an as as an example at a conference that conference I was speaking to medical profession. The doctors. One of them asked me about you and said, Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"313\n",
"00:35:30.360 --> 00:35:38.829\n",
"Patrick: he doesn't. Of course he didn't know your name, but he he was very curious, right? It really understand how a\n",
"\n",
"314\n",
"00:35:38.950 --> 00:35:45.570\n",
"Patrick: a liver and and what kidney transplant session is. Yeah, is busy writing code\n",
"\n",
"315\n",
"00:35:45.670 --> 00:35:50.319\n",
"Patrick: generating code to to to do whatever better science. And\n",
"\n",
"316\n",
"00:35:51.180 --> 00:36:05.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that's a great example for the right crowd.\n",
"\n",
"317\n",
"00:36:05.550 --> 00:36:12.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II just you see, I just just occur to me that you, Charles, and I,\n",
"\n",
"318\n",
"00:36:12.750 --> 00:36:14.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: all in education.\n",
"\n",
"319\n",
"00:36:15.900 --> 00:36:19.630\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, we're all in education at the end of the day.\n",
"\n",
"320\n",
"00:36:19.810 --> 00:36:22.350\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So\n",
"\n",
"321\n",
"00:36:22.570 --> 00:36:33.690\n",
"Patrick: it's just that this doctorate I want to go back and teach. I think I have a passion for teaching. Well, I mean Phd. Is an academic degree.\n",
"\n",
"322\n",
"00:36:34.530 --> 00:36:39.780\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I was once a teacher. I love teaching.\n",
"\n",
"323\n",
"00:36:40.000 --> 00:36:41.809\n",
"Patrick: Yes, yes.\n",
"\n",
"324\n",
"00:36:42.960 --> 00:36:51.529\n",
"Patrick: someone. Someone's life changing because of your influence. It's that thing just rewards me in such a special way.\n",
"\n",
"325\n",
"00:36:51.610 --> 00:36:54.359\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, whose influences\n",
"\n",
"326\n",
"00:36:55.580 --> 00:37:01.140\n",
"Patrick: a teacher teaching someone who is totally blank, blank, hard drive.\n",
"\n",
"327\n",
"00:37:01.320 --> 00:37:06.559\n",
"Patrick: Then you you start inputting knowledge. And after a year, 2 years.\n",
"\n",
"328\n",
"00:37:06.820 --> 00:37:09.129\n",
"the person becomes somebody\n",
"\n",
"329\n",
"00:37:09.320 --> 00:37:19.649\n",
"Patrick: because you influence. Yeah, okay, it's official. I'm giving you an updated link.\n",
"\n",
"330\n",
"00:37:19.960 --> 00:37:25.900\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, click, that updated link. You will get the same stuff as before. But if you go to the bottom\n",
"\n",
"331\n",
"00:37:26.550 --> 00:37:32.119\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and next to take you to next pitch, do you? Do you see\n",
"\n",
"332\n",
"00:37:32.220 --> 00:37:35.140\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if you click that at the top of the next page. What do you see?\n",
"\n",
"333\n",
"00:37:36.900 --> 00:37:41.590\n",
"Patrick: Just copy the link. Oh, first I'll click on the link.\n",
"\n",
"334\n",
"00:37:42.660 --> 00:38:03.850\n",
"sarahkayongo: I'm on the link. So video clip of me posting\n",
"\n",
"335\n",
"00:38:03.890 --> 00:38:11.100\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the workflow coping code for python code going to call up and reproducing. But have you gone in the Youtube video?\n",
"\n",
"336\n",
"00:38:11.570 --> 00:38:16.949\n",
"No, it is just simply open the github, but I'm not seeing where to click.\n",
"\n",
"337\n",
"00:38:17.030 --> 00:38:24.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No, no. Can you share your screen? Can you share your screen?\n",
"\n",
"338\n",
"00:38:25.290 --> 00:38:37.909\n",
"sarahkayongo: It's part 7.\n",
"\n",
"339\n",
"00:38:38.270 --> 00:38:47.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And then there's a dates. If you're seeing the prayer request from the previous. If that's the page you're on, you just go to the bottom.\n",
"\n",
"340\n",
"00:38:48.620 --> 00:38:53.339\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and then there'll be a next. So I do not know where you are. That's why I wanted to share your screen.\n",
"\n",
"341\n",
"00:38:53.440 --> 00:39:00.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, let me share my screen. Can you see the screen? Now? Yeah. So where? Where's the link\n",
"\n",
"342\n",
"00:39:00.770 --> 00:39:01.450\n",
"dude.\n",
"\n",
"343\n",
"00:39:01.680 --> 00:39:05.270\n",
"sarahkayongo: I think, posted that link here.\n",
"\n",
"344\n",
"00:39:07.450 --> 00:39:12.150\n",
"Patrick: That's a link. Can you see my screen? No, I'm seeing Google.\n",
"\n",
"345\n",
"00:39:12.420 --> 00:39:36.269\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I just see Google watching the video. Someone is watching, looking at the say, I don't think we're looking at the same thing. I'm seeing a Google search screen.\n",
"\n",
"346\n",
"00:39:36.860 --> 00:39:43.279\n",
"Patrick: Okay, I'm stopping sharing now. And I'm going to share again.\n",
"\n",
"347\n",
"00:39:43.460 --> 00:39:50.589\n",
"Patrick: Okay. yeah. But I I'm I'm not in Google. I don't know. It's showing you Google, you may have more than one screen open.\n",
"\n",
"348\n",
"00:39:51.920 --> 00:39:53.889\n",
"Patrick: Okay, I'm sharing now.\n",
"\n",
"349\n",
"00:39:56.810 --> 00:40:00.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Can you see you're not sharing. You're not sharing\n",
"\n",
"350\n",
"00:40:03.440 --> 00:40:08.289\n",
"Patrick: book, Tito share? That's what I'm I'm seeing.\n",
"\n",
"351\n",
"00:40:08.960 --> 00:40:10.540\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, that's correct.\n",
"\n",
"352\n",
"00:40:10.600 --> 00:40:17.089\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But that's not the link I sent you, so you'll have to go. Oh, so go down, go down, down down on the left margin.\n",
"\n",
"353\n",
"00:40:18.020 --> 00:40:27.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: go down, down, go down, go down, down, down, down, down, down, down, down. Yes, click on that date.\n",
"\n",
"354\n",
"00:40:27.090 --> 00:40:29.869\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, I see. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"355\n",
"00:40:30.380 --> 00:40:39.449\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, so yeah, so that's like a one and a half\n",
"\n",
"356\n",
"00:40:39.550 --> 00:40:44.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but anyway, so so the video.\n",
"\n",
"357\n",
"00:40:44.490 --> 00:40:59.609\n",
"sarahkayongo: the video, the entire process of me producing the video so that's that's that's very good.\n",
"\n",
"358\n",
"00:41:00.200 --> 00:41:10.910\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But the instructions are clear. Oh, yeah, II so this idea is, I'm now learning to incorporate them into, as you can tell. This is my mode of communication. Now.\n",
"\n",
"359\n",
"00:41:11.260 --> 00:41:21.289\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Microsoft Office, Microsoft, Powerpoint excel. What else is there those for me that Pdf, that's history\n",
"\n",
"360\n",
"00:41:21.590 --> 00:41:28.040\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I communicate through HTML, because HTML is the language of the Internet.\n",
"\n",
"361\n",
"00:41:28.260 --> 00:41:32.369\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I, HTML can handle all kinds of media. You see, I can embed\n",
"\n",
"362\n",
"00:41:32.490 --> 00:41:39.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: video embed anything in HTML. It's designed to take on anything\n",
"\n",
"363\n",
"00:41:40.030 --> 00:41:42.309\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: because HTML, and so on is plain text\n",
"\n",
"364\n",
"00:41:42.530 --> 00:41:59.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but it it with capacity to take on anything. So for me, that's a revolution getting cause. That's that's what I pick from the data science class. They're teaching us machine learning and other things for me, just understanding\n",
"\n",
"365\n",
"00:41:59.420 --> 00:42:12.579\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that the Internet is HTML, which is a structure of the web page. Then it's Css cascading, whatever, for you know color. And you know. Gloss.\n",
"\n",
"366\n",
"00:42:12.600 --> 00:42:15.020\n",
"sarahkayongo: then Javascript for video.\n",
"\n",
"367\n",
"00:42:15.380 --> 00:42:18.479\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is just lead and each other.\n",
"\n",
"368\n",
"00:42:19.670 --> 00:42:24.590\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and that we have Chat Gp, that I can ask for any information, and it gives me\n",
"\n",
"369\n",
"00:42:24.600 --> 00:42:33.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Gives me feedback, and that I can use Github to Host cause I'm not paying for any of this. Urls right\n",
"\n",
"370\n",
"00:42:34.400 --> 00:42:52.150\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: website. In fact, website even, is a very all, all concept to me. I create books, which is a richer thing. Right? Yeah. And Github will host them. Of course Microsoft is very happy to give you this for free, because they train their AI on all all your call. Everything is.\n",
"\n",
"371\n",
"00:42:52.280 --> 00:43:00.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's how the AI is a more advanced than anyone, because Github is where people programmers are the whole wall with their code.\n",
"\n",
"372\n",
"00:43:00.250 --> 00:43:21.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So Microsoft has an advantage. No one else has access to the almost yeah and so they, you know. So they give us free services in return. We give them free data for their training. Their AI. So the AI is called Github\n",
"\n",
"373\n",
"00:43:21.330 --> 00:43:22.430\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: co-pilot.\n",
"\n",
"374\n",
"00:43:23.010 --> 00:43:24.090\n",
"Patrick: It's\n",
"\n",
"375\n",
"00:43:24.180 --> 00:43:28.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I pay $10 for it. And when I walk in this environment, let me show you.\n",
"\n",
"376\n",
"00:43:29.030 --> 00:43:37.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And this in the Microsoft environment. So this is these are things that are definitely coming to to the next version of windows.\n",
"\n",
"377\n",
"00:43:37.920 --> 00:43:40.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So this is Vs card. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"378\n",
"00:43:40.960 --> 00:43:43.230\n",
"sarahkayongo: So if I'm open.\n",
"\n",
"379\n",
"00:43:43.360 --> 00:43:45.600\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if I open\n",
"\n",
"380\n",
"00:43:45.920 --> 00:43:51.739\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: a document, say, I use dot IP ui, and that's called\n",
"\n",
"381\n",
"00:43:52.010 --> 00:43:56.099\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Jupiter. This is this is the extension that's finding call out, Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"382\n",
"00:43:56.790 --> 00:43:57.450\n",
"hmm.\n",
"\n",
"383\n",
"00:43:57.860 --> 00:44:03.799\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if you start writing code, say, if you start writing code\n",
"\n",
"384\n",
"00:44:04.500 --> 00:44:05.990\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: can't think of code\n",
"\n",
"385\n",
"00:44:06.300 --> 00:44:16.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it. It was almost the same as the the place. I peste code in collab. That's it, that's it. But you see it completing my code here.\n",
"\n",
"386\n",
"00:44:16.570 --> 00:44:33.850\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Can you see, I'm saying, put something called pandas. So I just hit. If I hit Tab it will complete I accept what is completed. Then I go look what suggesting things. So even if you don't know what you're doing. And\n",
"\n",
"387\n",
"00:44:33.860 --> 00:44:36.319\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and I just go next. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"388\n",
"00:44:36.330 --> 00:44:45.809\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: auto completion. That's so. It's called Github call up. It's developed for code. But actually, it also works for text.\n",
"\n",
"389\n",
"00:44:46.030 --> 00:44:58.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So if I move from. So this is, do you notice that this is the same as Google versus, zoom, yeah. So so I can go back here and just demonstrate. So I think I have this already in\n",
"\n",
"390\n",
"00:44:58.850 --> 00:45:03.979\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I can get so I can put my text here as well to do what? Yeah, to work.\n",
"\n",
"391\n",
"00:45:04.500 --> 00:45:05.649\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No more walk.\n",
"\n",
"392\n",
"00:45:05.900 --> 00:45:16.950\n",
"sarahkayongo: So they need to be translated into code. It can. So Texas text, yeah, text has nothing to do with with code. But\n",
"\n",
"393\n",
"00:45:17.210 --> 00:45:25.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: does it edit my my text? That's the point I'm trying to make. It was not trained for that, but it has, it has the skills to do. So\n",
"\n",
"394\n",
"00:45:25.480 --> 00:45:32.420\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah, so, for instance, no, even not asking it, you would just suggest.\n",
"\n",
"395\n",
"00:45:32.680 --> 00:45:33.700\n",
"sarahkayongo: okay.\n",
"\n",
"396\n",
"00:45:33.950 --> 00:45:43.079\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so. So I want to understand. Now I've understood. Github is the host space where you know.\n",
"\n",
"397\n",
"00:45:43.410 --> 00:45:54.010\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then python the language python is the language chat G. Ppt and AI, what's the language?\n",
"\n",
"398\n",
"00:45:54.170 --> 00:45:56.979\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, those are different. Ais. So\n",
"\n",
"399\n",
"00:45:57.000 --> 00:46:02.749\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so here. So here the environment, I'm in locally on my computer\n",
"\n",
"400\n",
"00:46:02.840 --> 00:46:10.660\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: using a extension dot, IPYN, B. That's ipython. Python is PY.\n",
"\n",
"401\n",
"00:46:11.170 --> 00:46:21.570\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is an environment for python, but more than python, because it allows me to run to do Markdown Markdown is where I can just write text.\n",
"\n",
"402\n",
"00:46:22.280 --> 00:46:28.240\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The nice thing about text is that instead of working in Microsoft office, for instance. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"403\n",
"00:46:28.940 --> 00:46:31.239\n",
"Patrick: yeah, I can write. Yeah, I say.\n",
"\n",
"404\n",
"00:46:31.310 --> 00:46:32.880\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: essay.\n",
"\n",
"405\n",
"00:46:35.750 --> 00:46:39.850\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, look at suggesting a topic to me. AI ethics.\n",
"\n",
"406\n",
"00:46:39.890 --> 00:46:43.180\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, you know what? You know, what?\n",
"\n",
"407\n",
"00:46:43.490 --> 00:46:46.159\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Because the last thing I was writing.\n",
"\n",
"408\n",
"00:46:46.180 --> 00:46:51.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I was working at AI ethics so, but but\n",
"\n",
"409\n",
"00:46:51.630 --> 00:46:53.689\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so ethics\n",
"\n",
"410\n",
"00:46:54.200 --> 00:46:56.429\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: AI ethics.\n",
"\n",
"411\n",
"00:46:57.080 --> 00:46:58.210\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Look.\n",
"\n",
"412\n",
"00:46:58.540 --> 00:47:02.760\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: oops suggesting stuff. So if I the whole paragraph.\n",
"\n",
"413\n",
"00:47:02.800 --> 00:47:07.069\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So just then entire. So if I hit Tab, it's going to accept.\n",
"\n",
"414\n",
"00:47:07.650 --> 00:47:10.459\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So then I move to the next paragraph and continue.\n",
"\n",
"415\n",
"00:47:11.710 --> 00:47:12.640\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Now.\n",
"\n",
"416\n",
"00:47:13.450 --> 00:47:16.790\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: look, Whoa suggesting.\n",
"\n",
"417\n",
"00:47:17.100 --> 00:47:24.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So it does not find, it seems almost addictive. One, but not yeah. The address of things was not designed for.\n",
"\n",
"418\n",
"00:47:30.390 --> 00:47:41.980\n",
"sarahkayongo: But I don't have enough content or things to work on. So, my, what do you mean? Content you have, Whoa! You can step from where you are with what you have.\n",
"\n",
"419\n",
"00:47:42.000 --> 00:47:55.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's where the you get the most value out of AI is small bits rather than big things. So I just start from scratch together. So what I wanted to show you is that the environment this is my local computer is\n",
"\n",
"420\n",
"00:47:55.160 --> 00:47:59.309\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the same sort of environment on Google call up, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"421\n",
"00:48:00.220 --> 00:48:01.140\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah.\n",
"\n",
"422\n",
"00:48:01.410 --> 00:48:02.270\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"423\n",
"00:48:02.640 --> 00:48:04.800\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, I went to Google jokes.\n",
"\n",
"424\n",
"00:48:05.360 --> 00:48:12.609\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The idea that you interspass coded text is the modern, the modern web communication.\n",
"\n",
"425\n",
"00:48:12.890 --> 00:48:13.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"426\n",
"00:48:15.140 --> 00:48:23.499\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if you want to hide the code. Now, if you look at the file extension, look at the file extension. You see the file extension.\n",
"\n",
"427\n",
"00:48:23.800 --> 00:48:28.110\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: IPUN. B. Like Ipython notebook.\n",
"\n",
"428\n",
"00:48:28.200 --> 00:48:30.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's a sem file extension here.\n",
"\n",
"429\n",
"00:48:30.740 --> 00:48:33.350\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, that's ipine notebook.\n",
"\n",
"430\n",
"00:48:33.710 --> 00:48:43.240\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So the name that's a Jupiter book. That's the name. And just paste your code versus text. Howard versus text.\n",
"\n",
"431\n",
"00:48:43.290 --> 00:48:47.450\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And what you're looking at here is code and text.\n",
"\n",
"432\n",
"00:48:47.520 --> 00:48:52.640\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: If you look at if you look at\n",
"\n",
"433\n",
"00:48:53.620 --> 00:49:09.140\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: this resource, yeah. So, for instance, this is text, if I go to the previous page. this is text, yeah, there's no code here. Yeah. So the previous times. Now, I'm updating content to include video.\n",
"\n",
"434\n",
"00:49:09.260 --> 00:49:14.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: huh? And next, I'm going to add text of our prayer requests.\n",
"\n",
"435\n",
"00:49:14.340 --> 00:49:20.639\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Then, if say, we need need a quote for something I'd add quote, that's what's the tiny revolution\n",
"\n",
"436\n",
"00:49:20.850 --> 00:49:26.399\n",
"sarahkayongo: that. How do you? How do you compare this to Powerpoint? Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"437\n",
"00:49:26.580 --> 00:49:31.309\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to y dot? Pdf.\n",
"\n",
"438\n",
"00:49:31.660 --> 00:49:33.380\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you can't. There's no comparison.\n",
"\n",
"439\n",
"00:49:33.450 --> 00:49:35.929\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah. The the beauties.\n",
"\n",
"440\n",
"00:49:36.000 --> 00:49:54.519\n",
"sarahkayongo: the the level of interaction, an integration potentially communication. If if I was to share this by Pdf, by Wad.\n",
"\n",
"441\n",
"00:49:54.560 --> 00:50:12.899\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I love to use email or whatever, then I'll have to send you updates. Oh, here's the latest version. But you have the URL. You have the URL. You just keep using the URL. That's why, Pia said, telling you, oh, that if you're going to lose this link after we end the zoom call\n",
"\n",
"442\n",
"00:50:13.050 --> 00:50:16.709\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: well, the link is going to be the same. So you may as well save it somewhere.\n",
"\n",
"443\n",
"00:50:17.490 --> 00:50:34.289\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, that's what I've done. Yes, because it's going to be the same link next week next year. Yeah, I mean, we can change. But for now that's what's going to be. So for me. Yes, for me. That's my later revolution the main thing is setting up a workflow.\n",
"\n",
"444\n",
"00:50:35.000 --> 00:50:44.489\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's why I need to do set up a workflow where you're like, okay, now say, if I'm in a meeting, and I want to get notes. Where am I going to type them?\n",
"\n",
"445\n",
"00:50:44.650 --> 00:50:50.320\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Or if I'm stay here in this prayer session, where am I going to type?\n",
"\n",
"446\n",
"00:50:50.790 --> 00:50:54.839\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: If I'm working my, this is where, how will I? How will I\n",
"\n",
"447\n",
"00:50:54.860 --> 00:51:03.749\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: type? How will I produce this figure? That's the main idea. Setting up the workflow? How do I get code from Chat Gp.\n",
"\n",
"448\n",
"00:51:04.170 --> 00:51:18.370\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and how do I use? Where do I run it for me? My answer, so that as I give you for status Google call up. But I remember but ultimately your goal should be to walk locally. This is not call up. You see, I'm working locally in my computer.\n",
"\n",
"449\n",
"00:51:18.380 --> 00:51:21.240\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Then I push it onto Github.\n",
"\n",
"450\n",
"00:51:21.890 --> 00:51:36.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. So so setting up the workflow is once you comfortable with the workflow walking from your computer rather than from online but then pushing the content online you have arrived.\n",
"\n",
"451\n",
"00:51:37.050 --> 00:51:46.989\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. But online, I can tell you, if it's easier to walk online. In fact, I'm getting second thoughts about this. If you go to Github.\n",
"\n",
"452\n",
"00:51:47.700 --> 00:51:48.830\n",
"Patrick: hmm!\n",
"\n",
"453\n",
"00:51:49.040 --> 00:51:53.939\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And then let me just choose a Spjd what's called a repo.\n",
"\n",
"454\n",
"00:51:55.420 --> 00:51:57.630\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And then I go to court\n",
"\n",
"455\n",
"00:51:58.820 --> 00:52:05.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: something called code spaces. I'm going to get something which looks identical to my local computer because it's all Microsoft.\n",
"\n",
"456\n",
"00:52:05.410 --> 00:52:16.040\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's Vs code on my computer. But look you, said Vs code, this is Vs code on Github identical. Yeah. What I have look has this exact folders\n",
"\n",
"457\n",
"00:52:16.130 --> 00:52:19.940\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it has the same video. Let's see.\n",
"\n",
"458\n",
"00:52:20.290 --> 00:52:23.659\n",
"sarahkayongo: So there, there, no issue between.\n",
"\n",
"459\n",
"00:52:23.710 --> 00:52:27.770\n",
"sarahkayongo: Wow, there are no issues of\n",
"\n",
"460\n",
"00:52:29.090 --> 00:52:32.459\n",
"sarahkayongo: there are no issues between.\n",
"\n",
"461\n",
"00:52:32.860 --> 00:52:55.799\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: generally.\n",
"\n",
"462\n",
"00:52:55.830 --> 00:53:11.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. But generally, it's easy. Yeah, it's easier working in Mark, I can tell you that. But you can. Of course, this is Microsoft product. Obviously, you can work in Microsoft. But the the things that with Microsoft you have to get a Linux environment.\n",
"\n",
"463\n",
"00:53:11.290 --> 00:53:15.350\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, Matt is automatic is Linux already, automatically.\n",
"\n",
"464\n",
"00:53:15.700 --> 00:53:22.609\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But Microsoft, I don't know why they decided to set it up in a non Linux system. Because everything is linux\n",
"\n",
"465\n",
"00:53:22.640 --> 00:53:39.060\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: in the Internet. I don't see any advantage it has for Microsoft users. It's just pain. And I speak as a person who is doing students who are Microsoft who are windows.\n",
"\n",
"466\n",
"00:53:39.360 --> 00:53:43.920\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, he was, he was more challenging. Giving them instruction.\n",
"\n",
"467\n",
"00:53:44.240 --> 00:53:48.820\n",
"because number one challenge, they have to create a Linux environment.\n",
"\n",
"468\n",
"00:53:48.870 --> 00:53:49.990\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: A shell\n",
"\n",
"469\n",
"00:53:50.120 --> 00:53:58.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but but look! But look at this. PI wanted to show you that you. I just went to Github and created the same environment. I have locally\n",
"\n",
"470\n",
"00:53:58.920 --> 00:54:01.090\n",
"Patrick: so it's one way.\n",
"\n",
"471\n",
"00:54:01.190 --> 00:54:09.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So you see, on on a windows system, you don't have a forward slush. That's a Linux setting. You have a backslash, which is problematic\n",
"\n",
"472\n",
"00:54:10.230 --> 00:54:21.299\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you can do, Linux, because that's what the Linux environment and all unix shell commands. For that environment.\n",
"\n",
"473\n",
"00:54:21.860 --> 00:54:34.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: They won't. We're not working an environment. Well, as far as I've seen with students, I've you. We will not walk in a windows environment like in a command line of windows. If you go and type out unix commands. I don't think they'll walk\n",
"\n",
"474\n",
"00:54:36.910 --> 00:54:48.480\n",
"Patrick: on a on a of course they cannot work in a windows environment exactly yet, but if you want to use the commands in windows. You simply go and and run your your command in in\n",
"\n",
"475\n",
"00:54:48.820 --> 00:55:05.559\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so those are things now, maybe not better, because you've been working in a windows environment. So those are things you don't think of with Mac, because it is in a Linux environment. What's all computers are Linux except Microsoft.\n",
"\n",
"476\n",
"00:55:05.820 --> 00:55:15.049\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So I don't. But any. So instead, without worrying about what operating system you're on. if you create a but account.\n",
"\n",
"477\n",
"00:55:15.420 --> 00:55:26.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you have access to just go to. You see, I went to, I just logged into Github and I went to code and click code spaces. And it created this environment which is identical.\n",
"\n",
"478\n",
"00:55:27.200 --> 00:55:30.459\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You tell me if you can see in my local computer.\n",
"\n",
"479\n",
"00:55:30.540 --> 00:55:35.849\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Look, let me put them side by side. You can. They're all Microsoft.\n",
"\n",
"480\n",
"00:55:36.070 --> 00:55:38.160\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Look.\n",
"\n",
"481\n",
"00:55:38.530 --> 00:55:51.269\n",
"sarahkayongo: you can't.\n",
"\n",
"482\n",
"00:55:51.690 --> 00:55:55.050\n",
"sarahkayongo: So you see.\n",
"\n",
"483\n",
"00:55:55.120 --> 00:56:01.809\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah. So so this, this is, this is a Vs code on Github. This is Vs code\n",
"\n",
"484\n",
"00:56:01.990 --> 00:56:09.780\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: on my computer. So same thing in the bottom, right corner in the bottom we have it have a terminal.\n",
"\n",
"485\n",
"00:56:10.040 --> 00:56:13.090\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Linux, yeah, every time you know.\n",
"\n",
"486\n",
"00:56:13.210 --> 00:56:19.229\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if I type Ellis to see the what directory there it is.\n",
"\n",
"487\n",
"00:56:19.460 --> 00:56:24.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: same here I'm the same folders. Am I in the same folders? Or\n",
"\n",
"488\n",
"00:56:24.250 --> 00:56:27.769\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I think I'm in a sub folder called sips.\n",
"\n",
"489\n",
"00:56:28.260 --> 00:56:30.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, same stuff. Look.\n",
"\n",
"490\n",
"00:56:31.490 --> 00:56:36.599\n",
"Patrick: because all my local com content, I push onto Github.\n",
"\n",
"491\n",
"00:56:36.790 --> 00:56:49.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So here I've just gone straight to Github. But the content is the same. You see, these are the folders, the 7 folders from 0 to 6, and the one we're using. If I go to 7, one, that's all the prayer, prayer requests and stuff\n",
"\n",
"492\n",
"00:56:50.070 --> 00:56:52.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: from May 2021\n",
"\n",
"493\n",
"00:56:52.120 --> 00:56:57.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if I go here to 6, 7, one for a request.\n",
"\n",
"494\n",
"00:56:58.500 --> 00:57:00.520\n",
"Much so same content.\n",
"\n",
"495\n",
"00:57:00.700 --> 00:57:23.979\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So I've been working from lo locally to online. That's the I ideal, at least, for now I think it's the ideal workflow where you work locally, then push online. But for as you establish cause, it's a painful process. What pushing from content from locally to github cause you have to use 2 part authentication\n",
"\n",
"496\n",
"00:57:24.130 --> 00:57:31.669\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: which for me, I have an automatic script that's doing all that. But it was a painful process setting up that process, that automation\n",
"\n",
"497\n",
"00:57:31.960 --> 00:57:37.729\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but before you set up that process you can go straight to Github and walk from there.\n",
"\n",
"498\n",
"00:57:38.600 --> 00:57:47.260\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So call up is a nice nice landing place. Start with, call up to see how you can copy and paste code from Chat Gpt.\n",
"\n",
"499\n",
"00:57:47.300 --> 00:58:09.460\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: When you're comfortable there. Then open a Github account and do something more advanced. Yeah, I have a shell pull up. I think I am ready to move to the next level. Oh, yeah, then then do Github, because with Github, then you have this exact environment which you will later have locally. And you can start using a shell terminal.\n",
"\n",
"500\n",
"00:58:09.710 --> 00:58:10.620\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah?\n",
"\n",
"501\n",
"00:58:10.770 --> 00:58:18.409\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And and also, yeah, anytime, you know. Once this is set up, then you can you be. You'll have set the stage for going locally.\n",
"\n",
"502\n",
"00:58:18.630 --> 00:58:26.129\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and the main thing about locally is just convincing your Github account that you're the owner of the account from your computer.\n",
"\n",
"503\n",
"00:58:26.180 --> 00:58:36.629\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And that process has been involved. I have a automated script. I can show you. It may not make any sense, but I developed it over a week period of a week\n",
"\n",
"504\n",
"00:58:36.780 --> 00:58:42.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: with Chad. Gpt. Automated script that.\n",
"\n",
"505\n",
"00:58:42.860 --> 00:58:44.409\n",
"like this script.\n",
"\n",
"506\n",
"00:58:44.510 --> 00:58:48.810\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The language, right languages is, yeah, this is Linux or unix.\n",
"\n",
"507\n",
"00:58:49.050 --> 00:58:52.989\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, automated. So it gives you this prompt\n",
"\n",
"508\n",
"00:58:53.370 --> 00:59:02.970\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and you may. In fact, the video I made you see me filling out prompts. What's the Github username? What's the repository name? What's the email address?\n",
"\n",
"509\n",
"00:59:03.090 --> 00:59:07.359\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Those prompts? They need to run the script because of the inputs required.\n",
"\n",
"510\n",
"00:59:08.220 --> 00:59:20.659\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Directory. Are you working on your computer? What's the folder name? What's the these are the keys, the Double Industry Level authentication keys I can show you the sort of passwords which are\n",
"\n",
"511\n",
"00:59:20.680 --> 00:59:23.170\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: industry standard\n",
"\n",
"512\n",
"00:59:24.160 --> 00:59:25.270\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: like\n",
"\n",
"513\n",
"00:59:26.620 --> 00:59:27.779\n",
"is that\n",
"\n",
"514\n",
"00:59:30.060 --> 00:59:34.909\n",
"Patrick: I'm going to arrange to have a separate time with you on this matter.\n",
"\n",
"515\n",
"00:59:34.920 --> 00:59:48.720\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, cause we are going to have to need to pray and then get ready. Or let's do that. Let's do that here to look at. These are my, my private keys that give me access\n",
"\n",
"516\n",
"00:59:49.000 --> 01:00:01.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: complex, whatever it is. Exactly. So you have. These are called private keys locally in my computer this. It's paired to another key on Github. So that's information\n",
"\n",
"517\n",
"01:00:01.170 --> 01:00:05.180\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to be able to access your github from your computer who squinted fat.\n",
"\n",
"518\n",
"01:00:05.370 --> 01:00:15.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So that's a thing that that relationship is called Pki public key infrastructure. Where your private key has too much.\n",
"\n",
"519\n",
"01:00:15.670 --> 01:00:20.210\n",
"Patrick: I need us to match your in order for you to be authenticated.\n",
"\n",
"520\n",
"01:00:20.260 --> 01:00:21.580\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So you call it what?\n",
"\n",
"521\n",
"01:00:22.450 --> 01:00:23.680\n",
"Pki.\n",
"\n",
"522\n",
"01:00:24.270 --> 01:00:26.509\n",
"Patrick: I need this key infrastructure.\n",
"\n",
"523\n",
"01:00:26.740 --> 01:00:32.679\n",
"Patrick: I need to use this language you're going to.\n",
"\n",
"524\n",
"01:00:32.980 --> 01:00:54.869\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Can you see that completion? The auto completion. Yeah, yeah. Wow. This language for a grant I'm applying for. Because I I'm going small business. Grant, I'm gonna have to create a business this. Grants for business. Small businesses have ideas, anyway. Let's get to pray.\n",
"\n",
"525\n",
"01:00:54.950 --> 01:01:02.699\n",
"Patrick: thank you. Now, now, if I want to get a grant to help me finish my studies and start a project. What do I do?\n",
"\n",
"526\n",
"01:01:02.940 --> 01:01:22.199\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So the Grants generally that I have access to I think I'm aware of, for now offer us citizens and so that so the question of collaboration is a different one, because professors at the School of Medicine at Mulago and School of Public Health have made a lot of money\n",
"\n",
"527\n",
"01:01:22.460 --> 01:01:27.539\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: through collaborating with John Hopkins, for instance, who have grants who have access as citizens.\n",
"\n",
"528\n",
"01:01:27.610 --> 01:01:30.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So so you can have access\n",
"\n",
"529\n",
"01:01:30.240 --> 01:01:42.320\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: through collaboration. So those are details. We can think we can explore, since I've never thought in in terms of those lines. But I know, I know, I know.\n",
"\n",
"530\n",
"01:01:43.040 --> 01:01:43.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"531\n",
"01:01:44.840 --> 01:02:03.840\n",
"sarahkayongo: However, I know my money.\n",
"\n",
"532\n",
"01:02:04.590 --> 01:02:08.240\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: By collaborating with John Hopkins, professor\n",
"\n",
"533\n",
"01:02:08.640 --> 01:02:13.950\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: who have access. So so the yeah, they're coin their core investigators.\n",
"\n",
"534\n",
"01:02:14.090 --> 01:02:15.879\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So well, then, let's see, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"535\n",
"01:02:15.920 --> 01:02:43.990\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: they're co-investigators.\n",
"\n",
"536\n",
"01:02:44.610 --> 01:02:49.469\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, this is a generation that's invest 70.\n",
"\n",
"537\n",
"01:02:49.690 --> 01:02:52.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. Then that's so many.\n",
"\n",
"538\n",
"01:02:52.350 --> 01:03:01.610\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. Mid seventies. Maybe some. I you see how there's this was really time timing.\n",
"\n",
"539\n",
"01:03:01.630 --> 01:03:07.380\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It was HIV, because\n",
"\n",
"540\n",
"01:03:07.420 --> 01:03:11.380\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: because HIV, because HIV hit the Us.\n",
"\n",
"541\n",
"01:03:11.400 --> 01:03:15.019\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 1981. Then it was discovered in Uganda.\n",
"\n",
"542\n",
"01:03:15.380 --> 01:03:17.849\n",
"sarahkayongo: My video was, oh.\n",
"\n",
"543\n",
"01:03:17.900 --> 01:03:22.760\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so American researchers came from Baltimore 2\n",
"\n",
"544\n",
"01:03:22.940 --> 01:03:31.209\n",
"sarahkayongo: even even. Larry was one of them. That's western. I remember\n",
"\n",
"545\n",
"01:03:31.250 --> 01:03:32.780\n",
"sarahkayongo: early nineties.\n",
"\n",
"546\n",
"01:03:32.860 --> 01:03:39.050\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. So Larry was a John Hopkins people. Actually. Aj.\n",
"\n",
"547\n",
"01:03:39.220 --> 01:04:01.779\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you perfect timing. You guys missed exactly what he's not interested in.\n",
"\n",
"548\n",
"01:04:01.780 --> 01:04:09.469\n",
"Patrick: Okay, we've been trying to establish. I don't. I don't recognize this right.\n",
"\n",
"549\n",
"01:04:09.610 --> 01:04:21.949\n",
"sarahkayongo: I'm just on the road\n",
"\n",
"550\n",
"01:04:22.400 --> 01:04:24.680\n",
"I'm just leaving, and never now.\n",
"\n",
"551\n",
"01:04:25.130 --> 01:04:26.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh.\n",
"\n",
"552\n",
"01:04:26.920 --> 01:04:33.060\n",
"sarahkayongo: are you supposed to be talking while driving will distract you.\n",
"\n",
"553\n",
"01:04:34.150 --> 01:04:36.709\n",
"Martin Muwaga: You refer to women are the only people who cannot\n",
"\n",
"554\n",
"01:04:58.880 --> 01:05:00.320\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: of a\n",
"\n",
"555\n",
"01:05:00.550 --> 01:05:03.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the previous\n",
"\n",
"556\n",
"01:05:03.930 --> 01:05:05.360\n",
"sarahkayongo: oh, you guys.\n",
"\n",
"557\n",
"01:05:06.380 --> 01:05:14.149\n",
"sarahkayongo: I need to be. Oh, my gosh, no, my phone was my laptop was on 86. Now, it's on 6.\n",
"\n",
"558\n",
"01:05:14.350 --> 01:05:17.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, that's an old, that's an old laptop.\n",
"\n",
"559\n",
"01:05:17.370 --> 01:05:21.300\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, it's it's really it's really old. Now I just\n",
"\n",
"560\n",
"01:05:21.450 --> 01:05:26.319\n",
"sarahkayongo: use it for things like this. David. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"561\n",
"01:05:26.390 --> 01:05:28.950\n",
"okay, I guess you can begin\n",
"\n",
"562\n",
"01:05:29.720 --> 01:05:31.630\n",
"Patrick: alright.\n",
"\n",
"563\n",
"01:05:32.390 --> 01:05:40.110\n",
"Patrick: May have already shared with you my prayer request. I need to get out of that zone of anxiety and confusion, and\n",
"\n",
"564\n",
"01:05:40.170 --> 01:05:47.299\n",
"Patrick: I'm really at the the end towards the end of these things. But ending is so hard\n",
"\n",
"565\n",
"01:05:48.830 --> 01:05:52.969\n",
"Patrick: ending is not as easy as as when you're in the middle.\n",
"\n",
"566\n",
"01:05:53.590 --> 01:05:57.900\n",
"Patrick: It's just like taking off in the plane flying and then landing\n",
"\n",
"567\n",
"01:05:58.110 --> 01:06:00.200\n",
"the landing part. My friend\n",
"\n",
"568\n",
"01:06:00.890 --> 01:06:02.880\n",
"Patrick: wears a lot of skill.\n",
"\n",
"569\n",
"01:06:03.320 --> 01:06:16.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Need to clean up so much. Have your facts right up, all your details aligned with what must be done. Okay, this this time I'm going share. I'll share the screen as I scribe so that you can. You can mention anything I'm missing.\n",
"\n",
"570\n",
"01:06:16.790 --> 01:06:19.170\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So here.\n",
"\n",
"571\n",
"01:06:20.770 --> 01:06:23.370\n",
"sarahkayongo: what? What is what\n",
"\n",
"572\n",
"01:06:24.890 --> 01:06:34.440\n",
"sarahkayongo: zone is it? Was it the green z10, me!\n",
"\n",
"573\n",
"01:06:34.910 --> 01:06:37.210\n",
"sarahkayongo: I don't know what I don't know\n",
"\n",
"574\n",
"01:06:37.260 --> 01:06:42.629\n",
"Patrick: which which bring zone. Are you talking about today? So the issue is, you need motivation to.\n",
"\n",
"575\n",
"01:06:45.890 --> 01:06:53.529\n",
"Patrick: I think I think I just need to start working. I need to start walking because I feel a bit daunted.\n",
"\n",
"576\n",
"01:06:54.150 --> 01:07:06.960\n",
"Patrick: I feel quite daunted. Then, on top of that I am I am praying for, for we continue to believe God to fix my salary. I told you what happened? Did I? Did I share? Yes.\n",
"\n",
"577\n",
"01:07:07.960 --> 01:07:11.370\n",
"Patrick: yes, I need that salary to be sorted out\n",
"\n",
"578\n",
"01:07:12.100 --> 01:07:17.169\n",
"Patrick: God has seen us through the holiday amazingly. I'm very thankful\n",
"\n",
"579\n",
"01:07:17.390 --> 01:07:21.149\n",
"cause. Money has been coming in from different sources.\n",
"\n",
"580\n",
"01:07:21.420 --> 01:07:28.410\n",
"Patrick: and that really shows how how great God is, because God doesn't depend on the salary to bless you.\n",
"\n",
"581\n",
"01:07:28.900 --> 01:07:36.969\n",
"Patrick: Yes, I had Martin's birthday. Jay came in in a most miraculous way, and jam really so grateful. He came in and\n",
"\n",
"582\n",
"01:07:36.980 --> 01:07:43.089\n",
"Patrick: said, No, this thing can't flop, because some guys are just taking their time to fix your salary.\n",
"\n",
"583\n",
"01:07:43.710 --> 01:07:45.649\n",
"Patrick: And the thing was sorted\n",
"\n",
"584\n",
"01:07:45.760 --> 01:07:50.050\n",
"completely, and the young man had the perfect birthday celebration.\n",
"\n",
"585\n",
"01:07:50.720 --> 01:07:53.830\n",
"Patrick: So God has been providing. And\n",
"\n",
"586\n",
"01:07:54.290 --> 01:07:56.849\n",
"and I am very, very thankful\n",
"\n",
"587\n",
"01:07:57.400 --> 01:08:04.699\n",
"Patrick: we have gone through these weeks. We have not lacked at all. not locked at all.\n",
"\n",
"588\n",
"01:08:05.910 --> 01:08:10.369\n",
"Patrick: But you know how the devil whispers, do you want in a way that says, Hey, you man.\n",
"\n",
"589\n",
"01:08:10.870 --> 01:08:15.029\n",
"Patrick: they are doing badly. Yeah. But I refuse to.\n",
"\n",
"590\n",
"01:08:15.050 --> 01:08:22.070\n",
"to, to to be there listening to him. So I really pray that I can finish this study.\n",
"\n",
"591\n",
"01:08:22.340 --> 01:08:26.050\n",
"Patrick: I want to get it out of the way, because so much is not happening.\n",
"\n",
"592\n",
"01:08:26.290 --> 01:08:31.789\n",
"Patrick: So much is not happening because of of the anxiety of trying to finish.\n",
"\n",
"593\n",
"01:08:31.930 --> 01:08:33.819\n",
"Patrick: It's a very daunting\n",
"\n",
"594\n",
"01:08:33.970 --> 01:08:37.630\n",
"experience and state and position I'm in right now.\n",
"\n",
"595\n",
"01:08:37.950 --> 01:08:43.379\n",
"Patrick: When I just think of all that I need to do, I feel paralyzed, as Sarah put it.\n",
"\n",
"596\n",
"01:08:43.850 --> 01:08:46.189\n",
"I feel like I can't move a muscle\n",
"\n",
"597\n",
"01:08:46.760 --> 01:08:52.310\n",
"Patrick: then of I also thank God so much. D, you know what? Remember when we talked about the blood clot?\n",
"\n",
"598\n",
"01:08:52.340 --> 01:09:00.640\n",
"Patrick: Yes, yes, yes, and and we we laughed it off, and I said, I'm not gonna see the doctor. Guess what they came for me.\n",
"\n",
"599\n",
"01:09:01.560 --> 01:09:03.849\n",
"Patrick: Dr. Dr. Mugasha, your friend.\n",
"\n",
"600\n",
"01:09:04.510 --> 01:09:09.039\n",
"Patrick: She she she seized being my friend at that time.\n",
"\n",
"601\n",
"01:09:09.120 --> 01:09:18.629\n",
"Patrick: she insisted the specialist was called in, but so I said, You know what, for the sake of peace let me go, and indeed there's completely nothing.\n",
"\n",
"602\n",
"01:09:19.600 --> 01:09:23.129\n",
"Patrick: So I have peace with her. I have peace with this specialist.\n",
"\n",
"603\n",
"01:09:23.529 --> 01:09:45.109\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and they checked, and all they found was my muscles had been hot. They've been damaged. That's what I told you. Yeah, I told you professional. After every workout they use ice. They they they protect their bodies from inflammation. The injury that comes from the workout.\n",
"\n",
"604\n",
"01:09:45.290 --> 01:09:47.300\n",
"Patrick: Exactly. Exactly.\n",
"\n",
"605\n",
"01:09:48.120 --> 01:09:51.179\n",
"Patrick: Yeah. So I have. I'm now in physiotherapy.\n",
"\n",
"606\n",
"01:09:51.520 --> 01:09:53.079\n",
"Patrick: and I'm getting better.\n",
"\n",
"607\n",
"01:09:53.100 --> 01:09:55.430\n",
"The muscles that become like a rock.\n",
"\n",
"608\n",
"01:09:55.550 --> 01:09:58.249\n",
"Patrick: that they're pulling themselves too hard.\n",
"\n",
"609\n",
"01:09:58.860 --> 01:10:06.229\n",
"Patrick: So he's doing things using a certain red light, using electricity, using so many interesting things.\n",
"\n",
"610\n",
"01:10:06.240 --> 01:10:08.500\n",
"I did enjoy the electric shocks.\n",
"\n",
"611\n",
"01:10:08.560 --> 01:10:12.530\n",
"Patrick: But think that stage is over stimulation.\n",
"\n",
"612\n",
"01:10:13.430 --> 01:10:17.459\n",
"Yeah, it was nasty, but the the muscles have now relaxed\n",
"\n",
"613\n",
"01:10:28.070 --> 01:10:32.150\n",
"these muscles at the back of your knee. They're called calf muscles.\n",
"\n",
"614\n",
"01:10:32.220 --> 01:10:38.350\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, the the cuffs, yes, below, below the back and below.\n",
"\n",
"615\n",
"01:10:38.440 --> 01:10:45.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and then the sheen, and then on the site. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"616\n",
"01:10:45.990 --> 01:10:50.500\n",
"Patrick: so so. So! When I was explaining what I had gone through after that exercise.\n",
"\n",
"617\n",
"01:10:50.520 --> 01:10:52.499\n",
"she was laughing and relaxed\n",
"\n",
"618\n",
"01:10:52.570 --> 01:10:58.160\n",
"Patrick: until I mentioned pain in the cuff muscles. She turned into another person.\n",
"\n",
"619\n",
"01:10:58.190 --> 01:11:01.360\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Because going because because we have prices\n",
"\n",
"620\n",
"01:11:01.730 --> 01:11:07.129\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that so so so this that's just a red flag for very fear of vascular disease.\n",
"\n",
"621\n",
"01:11:07.210 --> 01:11:33.229\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But for me, as I was telling you, you did not take the boxes, for this is the cause of injury to me is so obvious. It's exercise which even Olympians prevent through ice immersion in my in ice tabs of exercise. So how how appropriate! But but with more information, it was not necessary as you guys. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"622\n",
"01:11:34.050 --> 01:11:34.890\n",
"sarahkayongo: Hello.\n",
"\n",
"623\n",
"01:11:35.190 --> 01:11:45.189\n",
"Patrick: yeah. But I know know how I'm going to be doing exercise. I'll I'll be gentle at the beginning. I'll not just jump into a very, very highly intense\n",
"\n",
"624\n",
"01:11:45.670 --> 01:11:50.520\n",
"sarahkayongo: exercise. So you have to stretch also before you. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"625\n",
"01:11:50.860 --> 01:11:52.100\n",
"Patrick: exactly.\n",
"\n",
"626\n",
"01:11:52.580 --> 01:12:01.960\n",
"Patrick: Yeah. Yeah. So I'm thankful to God. Dorothy is in Kampala. Yesterday she got a memo, saying all stuff were on contract.\n",
"\n",
"627\n",
"01:12:02.140 --> 01:12:04.710\n",
"to be confirmed!\n",
"\n",
"628\n",
"01:12:05.470 --> 01:12:10.190\n",
"Patrick: So Dorothy is going to get a letter soon, confirming her as\n",
"\n",
"629\n",
"01:12:10.400 --> 01:12:14.850\n",
"a full time member of staff of the central Bank of the Republic of Uganda.\n",
"\n",
"630\n",
"01:12:14.990 --> 01:12:25.490\n",
"Patrick: So for me, that is a very beautiful, powerful answer the prayer. We've been praying about this, you know. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"631\n",
"01:12:25.780 --> 01:12:30.629\n",
"Patrick: And now, you see, when your full time staff, you have cloud, you can talk. You can say.\n",
"\n",
"632\n",
"01:12:30.640 --> 01:12:35.189\n",
"Patrick: this is what I want. This. I don't want this. You you you talk with more authority.\n",
"\n",
"633\n",
"01:12:35.580 --> 01:12:38.439\n",
"Patrick: Someone doesn't keep you around. But\n",
"\n",
"634\n",
"01:12:38.600 --> 01:12:42.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: look at the AI auto completion. Do you see that?\n",
"\n",
"635\n",
"01:12:42.600 --> 01:13:08.269\n",
"Patrick: I say good is good. Oh, my God! And we paid for Lisa.\n",
"\n",
"636\n",
"01:13:08.600 --> 01:13:12.269\n",
"Patrick: Now we we are main with fees for Martin. And\n",
"\n",
"637\n",
"01:13:12.340 --> 01:13:13.699\n",
"Patrick: when you recall\n",
"\n",
"638\n",
"01:13:15.010 --> 01:13:21.410\n",
"Patrick: Nicole, Nicole didn't do well, she's very. She's not interested, that's my biggest\n",
"\n",
"639\n",
"01:13:21.550 --> 01:13:26.159\n",
"Patrick: motivation. She's she's very switched off. She\n",
"\n",
"640\n",
"01:13:26.850 --> 01:13:33.349\n",
"Patrick: but if you say? Let us go out. dress up, we're going out. My God! Do you think this is another person?\n",
"\n",
"641\n",
"01:13:33.370 --> 01:13:51.350\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Basically, what you've described is literally a a graph of green zones, and whatever she is not being challenged, whatever whatever is doing is not more is not, is not motivating her at all.\n",
"\n",
"642\n",
"01:13:51.500 --> 01:14:08.269\n",
"Patrick: It's not motivating her at all. Yes, so we are now trying to think we need. We will just ask God to lead us what what would really challenge Nicole and make her enjoy her challenge. And yet it translated to income as well.\n",
"\n",
"643\n",
"01:14:09.280 --> 01:14:10.950\n",
"That's what we are praying for.\n",
"\n",
"644\n",
"01:14:11.060 --> 01:14:16.640\n",
"Patrick: cause. This thing of going to school going to class is not her thing at all.\n",
"\n",
"645\n",
"01:14:16.770 --> 01:14:18.399\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, just not happy.\n",
"\n",
"646\n",
"01:14:18.780 --> 01:14:24.649\n",
"Patrick: And the teachers have tried for the last 4 years I saw the most dedicated teacher\n",
"\n",
"647\n",
"01:14:24.950 --> 01:14:29.959\n",
"Patrick: reaching a point of feeling very, very frustrated cause. Nicole can show it to you that\n",
"\n",
"648\n",
"01:14:30.370 --> 01:14:32.169\n",
"Patrick: you know you're pushing. But\n",
"\n",
"649\n",
"01:14:32.670 --> 01:14:34.899\n",
"she she just shows it to that, you know.\n",
"\n",
"650\n",
"01:14:35.950 --> 01:14:38.780\n",
"Patrick: try all you want. But I think I'm not interested.\n",
"\n",
"651\n",
"01:14:39.180 --> 01:14:41.469\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, that's so so easy.\n",
"\n",
"652\n",
"01:14:41.500 --> 01:14:49.650\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is very important topic. Because, the question is engagement, you know. Yeah. And she's not engaged clearly.\n",
"\n",
"653\n",
"01:14:49.690 --> 01:14:51.609\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah, definitely, she's in\n",
"\n",
"654\n",
"01:14:51.690 --> 01:15:17.439\n",
"Patrick: something she likes. She really pushes the bridge. If you say we are going to Dubai tomorrow, and now your room must be. You must have swept. Go and make sure the car is washed. Go and do shopping. Go and do this. My God, she will do everything to that, dot. This is very important diagnosis. She's not engaged.\n",
"\n",
"655\n",
"01:15:18.220 --> 01:15:31.989\n",
"sarahkayongo: and also the incentive, the incentive. Well, I mean. So so that's the challenge of teachers. That's what that's what engagement is to give people motivation.\n",
"\n",
"656\n",
"01:15:32.110 --> 01:15:41.790\n",
"Patrick: Even if you said we are going to Mumbai, just invaded to go and have a weekend with the in-laws and be at the resort. Yeah. My friend.\n",
"\n",
"657\n",
"01:15:42.570 --> 01:15:44.669\n",
"she would have got\n",
"\n",
"658\n",
"01:15:46.860 --> 01:15:59.469\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so this is a challenge that's mostly directed towards instructors. Because that's a challenge thinking about this thing the whole since I think. June\n",
"\n",
"659\n",
"01:15:59.480 --> 01:16:02.700\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: engaging. How do keep people engaged?\n",
"\n",
"660\n",
"01:16:02.710 --> 01:16:16.300\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, I was thinking about it from reactions for my students, some who are bored, others were anxious. That's how I ended up with that graph because some people the challenges are giving them too much, others, they're too low.\n",
"\n",
"661\n",
"01:16:16.340 --> 01:16:23.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. So the the board. So how do you step up for some students while stepping down for others.\n",
"\n",
"662\n",
"01:16:23.770 --> 01:16:32.009\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: My solution. I actually, because I've gotten the clarity of the question is to have 3 different classes beginners intermediate and advanced\n",
"\n",
"663\n",
"01:16:32.190 --> 01:16:40.990\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so so Nicole's issues high structures. Need need to realize that the problems that they're not engaging. Huh?\n",
"\n",
"664\n",
"01:16:41.590 --> 01:16:43.650\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, true. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"665\n",
"01:16:43.970 --> 01:16:49.210\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That is the big. Yeah. Okay? So that's I've noted that.\n",
"\n",
"666\n",
"01:16:50.060 --> 01:16:50.850\n",
"Hmm.\n",
"\n",
"667\n",
"01:16:51.310 --> 01:17:08.429\n",
"sarahkayongo: that's interesting. Because I had a boss, a Vp. Who asked without really fully engaged or being under utilized. That's a very important question and very focused also, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"668\n",
"01:17:08.480 --> 01:17:29.449\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah. And I told him I was being under utilized. And by the end of the week he was thinking of some projects to put me on like, there's been a story of my life for the last, maybe 15 years, and the solution, of course, one solution would have been me to leave\n",
"\n",
"669\n",
"01:17:29.490 --> 01:17:50.040\n",
"sarahkayongo: but other solution I worked so far. My mentor left. I got disrupted. Now I have to, you know. Have step up I got challenge.\n",
"\n",
"670\n",
"01:17:50.040 --> 01:18:03.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I move from the green pastures into the fire. Now my situation is similar to yours felt under utilized, but\n",
"\n",
"671\n",
"01:18:03.200 --> 01:18:10.800\n",
"Patrick: I know that if anything happened and I'm suddenly needed for thorough utilization, I need to also be through this study.\n",
"\n",
"672\n",
"01:18:11.170 --> 01:18:13.429\n",
"Patrick: You need to avoid me. I miss that bit.\n",
"\n",
"673\n",
"01:18:14.520 --> 01:18:18.010\n",
"Patrick: I was saying, I felt the way you did\n",
"\n",
"674\n",
"01:18:18.240 --> 01:18:27.380\n",
"Patrick: about being underutilized, and my prayer is to be utilized more. But again I my prayer is that I be utilized after I am through my studies.\n",
"\n",
"675\n",
"01:18:27.500 --> 01:18:40.290\n",
"Patrick: cause once I'm engaged at that level. Now, then, it will jeopardize by completion of these studies. Yet I have very just a few things to do. I'm gonna put my papers together and submit them for for publication.\n",
"\n",
"676\n",
"01:18:40.550 --> 01:18:47.399\n",
"Patrick: Well, very interesting. The language of use.\n",
"\n",
"677\n",
"01:18:47.440 --> 01:18:49.569\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is your language, Luke. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"678\n",
"01:18:50.040 --> 01:18:55.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, yeah, those graphs the language of use is essentially\n",
"\n",
"679\n",
"01:18:56.160 --> 01:18:57.740\n",
"sarahkayongo: I'm confused.\n",
"\n",
"680\n",
"01:18:57.910 --> 01:19:04.520\n",
"sarahkayongo: So you want to pray for the green zone to\n",
"\n",
"681\n",
"01:19:04.620 --> 01:19:25.780\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: what you mean by after it means father down the ski line? That's what you're saying, because let's say right now you to put in the Red Zone. But if the ski line is pushed. Yeah, yeah, yellow. Does that make sense?\n",
"\n",
"682\n",
"01:19:25.920 --> 01:19:31.309\n",
"Patrick: If? If? Yeah, it does. But you see, the moment I am given work at office.\n",
"\n",
"683\n",
"01:19:31.420 --> 01:19:33.719\n",
"Patrick: Then I won't be able to do that. Ph, d.\n",
"\n",
"684\n",
"01:19:33.810 --> 01:19:42.519\n",
"sarahkayongo: Because because you don't build skills with work you're doing. Routine\n",
"\n",
"685\n",
"01:19:42.940 --> 01:20:06.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: routine does not allow for growth. That's a green zone doesn't need to grow. Growth only comes from the yellow zone. Because you're going to higher challenges, higher challenges, higher skill. The growth of skills is the growth. But the green zone. You're avoiding challenges. So you're just stuck with your skills.\n",
"\n",
"686\n",
"01:20:06.570 --> 01:20:15.269\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm avoiding work challenges. But I'm happy to get the school challenges. I'll take them on and I will do them.\n",
"\n",
"687\n",
"01:20:15.280 --> 01:20:26.759\n",
"Patrick: Once these guys start sending me up country giving me assignments that take weeks. That means I've put the books aside and I won't be making progress. Meanwhile graduation day is coming.\n",
"\n",
"688\n",
"01:20:26.780 --> 01:20:28.519\n",
"Patrick: I want to be on the list.\n",
"\n",
"689\n",
"01:20:28.890 --> 01:20:39.270\n",
"Patrick: I need to be on that list. Yeah, yeah. So I need to really finish that Phd, and\n",
"\n",
"690\n",
"01:20:39.580 --> 01:20:41.229\n",
"get it out of the way.\n",
"\n",
"691\n",
"01:20:42.940 --> 01:20:43.710\n",
"Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"692\n",
"01:20:45.890 --> 01:20:49.149\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: back at one, as they say back at one\n",
"\n",
"693\n",
"01:20:50.120 --> 01:20:54.199\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I need I need I need. And I need to get oh, look what it's saying.\n",
"\n",
"694\n",
"01:20:55.080 --> 01:21:00.280\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that's the AI, and we do. I need to do the work and get that. This is not too quick.\n",
"\n",
"695\n",
"01:21:00.530 --> 01:21:02.580\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is a look at the air.\n",
"\n",
"696\n",
"01:21:02.720 --> 01:21:11.200\n",
"Patrick: Can you see how how is that? How is that possible? Because it's it's it's a large language when you're speaking my microphone, or what?\n",
"\n",
"697\n",
"01:21:11.260 --> 01:21:16.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: No, it's a it's a it's a token. So\n",
"\n",
"698\n",
"01:21:16.170 --> 01:21:27.509\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II figured out how AI works, and I checked even on Wikipedia. They're called tokens. So in in gospel. My go. I told you about my gospel music university that I'm studying in\n",
"\n",
"699\n",
"01:21:28.250 --> 01:21:37.940\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to play, like a black goes for artists, pianist, so when when it goes for artists, he has a not a melody.\n",
"\n",
"700\n",
"01:21:38.540 --> 01:21:40.130\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the number of codes.\n",
"\n",
"701\n",
"01:21:40.190 --> 01:21:44.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: hard probabilities that imagine his head is actually fixed.\n",
"\n",
"702\n",
"01:21:45.430 --> 01:21:49.339\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: There's a list of codes that can go with that note.\n",
"\n",
"703\n",
"01:21:49.600 --> 01:21:54.959\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, that's good thinking that II did. I did not have until this class.\n",
"\n",
"704\n",
"01:21:54.970 --> 01:22:08.089\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Of course you know that. Yes, the same melody I'd already been even working on a new Namia variations. Yeah. So yes, I already knew that I could produce different sort of chords for the same song. I knew that already.\n",
"\n",
"705\n",
"01:22:08.200 --> 01:22:12.579\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But in gospel music it's is a fixed number of courts\n",
"\n",
"706\n",
"01:22:12.750 --> 01:22:20.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: like. With this note you can have only 7 optional cards for that one, only 2 for this one only 9.\n",
"\n",
"707\n",
"01:22:20.750 --> 01:22:24.470\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So that is also how these models work.\n",
"\n",
"708\n",
"01:22:24.550 --> 01:22:29.880\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: When you've written something like circus back at one, I need\n",
"\n",
"709\n",
"01:22:30.000 --> 01:22:33.170\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: given all these things I've written above. From one up to 10\n",
"\n",
"710\n",
"01:22:33.570 --> 01:22:35.429\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it uses information\n",
"\n",
"711\n",
"01:22:35.970 --> 01:22:43.939\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: based on its this thing has been trained on 1.3 trillion parameters, 1.3 trillion. That's\n",
"\n",
"712\n",
"01:22:44.030 --> 01:22:48.709\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: more than I don't know thousands of trillion data points\n",
"\n",
"713\n",
"01:22:48.750 --> 01:22:53.279\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and so it says, if you have written this 10 points already.\n",
"\n",
"714\n",
"01:22:53.450 --> 01:22:57.160\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and I says Sac was back at one. So it just went back to one here\n",
"\n",
"715\n",
"01:22:57.420 --> 01:23:01.790\n",
"Patrick: and extracted this. That's what I did.\n",
"\n",
"716\n",
"01:23:01.920 --> 01:23:04.710\n",
"Patrick: It expected that. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"717\n",
"01:23:05.020 --> 01:23:06.760\n",
"Patrick: Okay.\n",
"\n",
"718\n",
"01:23:06.940 --> 01:23:14.980\n",
"Patrick: Imagine I did this for my masters, but I'm now seeing it. Practically. I've never done this practically to pass the paper.\n",
"\n",
"719\n",
"01:23:15.090 --> 01:23:16.360\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"720\n",
"01:23:16.650 --> 01:23:22.440\n",
"Patrick: AI AI is robotics that uses an inference engine and uses\n",
"\n",
"721\n",
"01:23:22.710 --> 01:23:24.229\n",
"Patrick: a knowledge base.\n",
"\n",
"722\n",
"01:23:24.490 --> 01:23:34.949\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, this generates is based on heuristics. So that's what is calling tokens other than heuristics.\n",
"\n",
"723\n",
"01:23:35.750 --> 01:23:44.289\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's a structured language. So the structure of language in English is subject. Verb, object.\n",
"\n",
"724\n",
"01:23:44.460 --> 01:24:05.429\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. II run to the the grocery store. So I subject run is a verb. Object is the grocery store. All all languages like that, whether it's even computer cord. If you look at any of the codes, there's a subject verb object\n",
"\n",
"725\n",
"01:24:05.800 --> 01:24:11.329\n",
"and so models are able to use those heuristics. That's how AI is thriving.\n",
"\n",
"726\n",
"01:24:11.690 --> 01:24:22.039\n",
"Patrick: That's exactly what it does, exactly what it does. And at that time I didn't really understand. I just got the thing, and then just had to pass the exam.\n",
"\n",
"727\n",
"01:24:22.130 --> 01:24:26.119\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hey? Now I've seen the application\n",
"\n",
"728\n",
"01:24:26.630 --> 01:24:38.990\n",
"Patrick: alright. The I've secured your those other things. So, Sarah, I think\n",
"\n",
"729\n",
"01:24:39.340 --> 01:24:43.570\n",
"sarahkayongo: that graphical illustration was so appropriate.\n",
"\n",
"730\n",
"01:24:43.660 --> 01:24:51.559\n",
"sarahkayongo: I was kind of in the boredom. It's so so easy for me to get in the boredom the green zone\n",
"\n",
"731\n",
"01:24:52.070 --> 01:25:03.259\n",
"sarahkayongo: cause. I challenge myself quickly. II get in a high. I finish up project, and then I'm I'm always, actually, always, you know, in the\n",
"\n",
"732\n",
"01:25:03.640 --> 01:25:07.719\n",
"sarahkayongo: finishing off, and then I hit the bottom. But this time\n",
"\n",
"733\n",
"01:25:08.390 --> 01:25:11.669\n",
"sarahkayongo: I don't know how it happened. A Vp\n",
"\n",
"734\n",
"01:25:11.950 --> 01:25:23.529\n",
"sarahkayongo: very senior person. You know I've written, I think sometime last year I told you guys I'd written a concept, not about process.\n",
"\n",
"735\n",
"01:25:23.540 --> 01:25:26.859\n",
"sarahkayongo: some improvements and so on.\n",
"\n",
"736\n",
"01:25:27.030 --> 01:25:30.989\n",
"sarahkayongo: and they never had from them. But then\n",
"\n",
"737\n",
"01:25:31.130 --> 01:25:38.630\n",
"sarahkayongo: we had a meeting we had. We had planned several meetings. We never had time until recently.\n",
"\n",
"738\n",
"01:25:39.420 --> 01:25:43.239\n",
"sarahkayongo: when the Vp. Was like. Well,\n",
"\n",
"739\n",
"01:25:43.910 --> 01:25:49.819\n",
"sarahkayongo: II think you're one of the people we who are under utilized and would like for you to\n",
"\n",
"740\n",
"01:25:50.150 --> 01:25:51.859\n",
"sarahkayongo: to just\n",
"\n",
"741\n",
"01:25:52.070 --> 01:25:59.410\n",
"sarahkayongo: be more agile, so that we can for you to be a part of other projects.\n",
"\n",
"742\n",
"01:25:59.600 --> 01:26:05.800\n",
"sarahkayongo: One of the things we offer our company offers is management, consultancy for\n",
"\n",
"743\n",
"01:26:06.190 --> 01:26:10.310\n",
"sarahkayongo: for governments. and so\n",
"\n",
"744\n",
"01:26:10.610 --> 01:26:19.589\n",
"sarahkayongo: there are opportunities coming up, and Dora is one of them to provide economic development work.\n",
"\n",
"745\n",
"01:26:19.860 --> 01:26:30.680\n",
"sarahkayongo: I don't know what that will look like, but it may involve some travel down the line and maybe extended. and I'm open to that.\n",
"\n",
"746\n",
"01:26:30.870 --> 01:26:35.490\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then, of course, Ukraine, which seems to be a scramble.\n",
"\n",
"747\n",
"01:26:35.650 --> 01:26:38.510\n",
"sarahkayongo: These these are trillion dollars\n",
"\n",
"748\n",
"01:26:38.920 --> 01:26:45.190\n",
"sarahkayongo: that is being you know, the government of Ukraine has put out, and\n",
"\n",
"749\n",
"01:26:45.530 --> 01:26:49.899\n",
"sarahkayongo: and the West every power is really scrambling to really\n",
"\n",
"750\n",
"01:26:50.310 --> 01:26:59.090\n",
"sarahkayongo: find Ukraine's rehabilitation, post-war development. So I'm a part of that. But that one I'm not so\n",
"\n",
"751\n",
"01:26:59.120 --> 01:27:01.790\n",
"sarahkayongo: him because\n",
"\n",
"752\n",
"01:27:02.590 --> 01:27:10.429\n",
"sarahkayongo: it involves, you know. There, there are so many young people want to go to Ukraine and just put it on their.\n",
"\n",
"753\n",
"01:27:10.480 --> 01:27:18.289\n",
"sarahkayongo: We are contractors, just like Afghanistan people. There were more contractors in Afghanistan, by the way.\n",
"\n",
"754\n",
"01:27:18.420 --> 01:27:23.990\n",
"sarahkayongo: more than all the armies combined. There were more American contractors.\n",
"\n",
"755\n",
"01:27:24.290 --> 01:27:29.419\n",
"sarahkayongo: It's business, as usual. I don't want to be in Ukraine for any reason.\n",
"\n",
"756\n",
"01:27:29.790 --> 01:27:36.880\n",
"sarahkayongo: so I'd rather take something like Doha so I'm praying that\n",
"\n",
"757\n",
"01:27:36.890 --> 01:27:39.899\n",
"that materializes into something.\n",
"\n",
"758\n",
"01:27:40.660 --> 01:27:42.520\n",
"sarahkayongo: Otherwise my\n",
"\n",
"759\n",
"01:27:43.250 --> 01:27:50.450\n",
"sarahkayongo: my request is the same. For national independence, and more\n",
"\n",
"760\n",
"01:27:50.570 --> 01:27:57.649\n",
"sarahkayongo: the ability to come out of debt. I'm actually beginning to intentionally come out of some debts.\n",
"\n",
"761\n",
"01:27:58.210 --> 01:28:02.440\n",
"sarahkayongo: And I I'm positioning myself to.\n",
"\n",
"762\n",
"01:28:03.120 --> 01:28:05.649\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah. There are few dates of paid off.\n",
"\n",
"763\n",
"01:28:06.190 --> 01:28:16.459\n",
"sarahkayongo: and now I'm ready even to be able to take care of my college student loan, which begins in October. So I pray to God for for vision, for that\n",
"\n",
"764\n",
"01:28:17.240 --> 01:28:19.299\n",
"sarahkayongo: and for the Ph. D.\n",
"\n",
"765\n",
"01:28:20.090 --> 01:28:28.649\n",
"sarahkayongo: The only college loan I have in life. All my education was sponsored, so I'm grateful.\n",
"\n",
"766\n",
"01:28:28.740 --> 01:28:37.129\n",
"sarahkayongo: And and because and and it it has come at the right time. Because, you know, I finished in 2,020,\n",
"\n",
"767\n",
"01:28:37.270 --> 01:28:50.040\n",
"sarahkayongo: and this administration had just come into power, and one of the key hallmarks for their election was to reduce or cut student loans.\n",
"\n",
"768\n",
"01:28:50.640 --> 01:28:58.309\n",
"sarahkayongo: So the issue has been debated for 3 years the Republicans have been opposed to it. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"769\n",
"01:28:58.390 --> 01:29:16.660\n",
"sarahkayongo: yeah, it has been so for 3 years. We've not paid any student loans. We're just going to be very remarkable even now there's so many opportunities to to even\n",
"\n",
"770\n",
"01:29:16.820 --> 01:29:37.729\n",
"sarahkayongo: claim some some. So if you don't have a job, you almost don't have to pay right away, and if you want to start paying as little as you can. It's very negotiable, and it was never like that. So I'm grateful for that, and I'm going to apply for a lower repayment\n",
"\n",
"771\n",
"01:29:38.730 --> 01:29:45.819\n",
"sarahkayongo: monthly loan. It's a very important loan, and I look forward to paying it.\n",
"\n",
"772\n",
"01:29:46.520 --> 01:29:56.279\n",
"sarahkayongo: I pray for Lauren. You know she's doing better mentally. And I were discussing that.\n",
"\n",
"773\n",
"01:29:56.680 --> 01:29:57.830\n",
"sarahkayongo: And she's.\n",
"\n",
"774\n",
"01:29:58.280 --> 01:30:06.089\n",
"sarahkayongo: you know, it's a continued prayer for her to stay focused and really think about her future, because\n",
"\n",
"775\n",
"01:30:06.160 --> 01:30:09.299\n",
"sarahkayongo: sometimes we have great discussions.\n",
"\n",
"776\n",
"01:30:09.850 --> 01:30:17.890\n",
"sarahkayongo: She wants to do some courses, and II pray that she stayed that course. But mentally she's doing much better.\n",
"\n",
"777\n",
"01:30:18.210 --> 01:30:25.120\n",
"sarahkayongo: And, Kevin. I'm grateful for him because he's well. I'm grateful to God for what he.\n",
"\n",
"778\n",
"01:30:25.600 --> 01:30:27.159\n",
"sarahkayongo: Dan. It's alive.\n",
"\n",
"779\n",
"01:30:27.450 --> 01:30:39.000\n",
"sarahkayongo: because this morning he called me excited about news of the possibility. He has an opportunity to start his Master's degree\n",
"\n",
"780\n",
"01:30:39.120 --> 01:30:42.730\n",
"sarahkayongo: at the University. North Carolina.\n",
"\n",
"781\n",
"01:30:42.970 --> 01:30:48.660\n",
"sarahkayongo: And he wants to to do. Actually, he met with the recruiters. He went for.\n",
"\n",
"782\n",
"01:30:49.200 --> 01:30:55.979\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, he went. He went to recruiters. He has some African friends who have inspired him.\n",
"\n",
"783\n",
"01:30:56.820 --> 01:31:02.849\n",
"sarahkayongo: and so he wants to start as early as next year in January.\n",
"\n",
"784\n",
"01:31:03.040 --> 01:31:10.950\n",
"sarahkayongo: to do a masters in financial.\n",
"\n",
"785\n",
"01:31:11.210 --> 01:31:12.830\n",
"sarahkayongo: So I say.\n",
"\n",
"786\n",
"01:31:13.040 --> 01:31:28.029\n",
"sarahkayongo: and his job actually will pay for it. So I pray that he can be accepted, and that he gets into the program while his job can pay for his Master's degree. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"787\n",
"01:31:29.090 --> 01:31:36.650\n",
"sarahkayongo: for I pray for good. So for health. I also have an injury. I injured my big foot.\n",
"\n",
"788\n",
"01:31:36.970 --> 01:31:43.509\n",
"sarahkayongo: Ii don't know this so much pain. I can't wear high heels.\n",
"\n",
"789\n",
"01:31:45.150 --> 01:31:48.289\n",
"sarahkayongo: I need to go see a doctor.\n",
"\n",
"790\n",
"01:31:48.390 --> 01:31:52.910\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, please do that quickly. And then, put all fears aside.\n",
"\n",
"791\n",
"01:31:53.670 --> 01:31:55.760\n",
"Patrick: You might need to do some physio\n",
"\n",
"792\n",
"01:31:57.470 --> 01:31:58.870\n",
"sarahkayongo: for my big foot.\n",
"\n",
"793\n",
"01:32:00.120 --> 01:32:13.369\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, it's I is it? Is it around? Oh, big toe. Okay?\n",
"\n",
"794\n",
"01:32:13.400 --> 01:32:19.699\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Well, Github, call up, says I, the doctor. Podiatrist.\n",
"\n",
"795\n",
"01:32:21.170 --> 01:32:25.559\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, II found one. I need to make an appointment.\n",
"\n",
"796\n",
"01:32:28.120 --> 01:32:30.100\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah. Otherwise.\n",
"\n",
"797\n",
"01:32:30.350 --> 01:32:33.550\n",
"sarahkayongo: yeah, for continued protection.\n",
"\n",
"798\n",
"01:32:33.770 --> 01:32:34.980\n",
"sarahkayongo: And\n",
"\n",
"799\n",
"01:32:39.390 --> 01:32:40.940\n",
"sarahkayongo: that's all for me.\n",
"\n",
"800\n",
"01:32:42.470 --> 01:32:43.620\n",
"Patrick: Okay.\n",
"\n",
"801\n",
"01:32:43.770 --> 01:32:45.639\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Jay is Jay back?\n",
"\n",
"802\n",
"01:32:46.370 --> 01:32:49.179\n",
"sarahkayongo: Lost him? Oh.\n",
"\n",
"803\n",
"01:32:49.510 --> 01:32:56.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: okay. So come move to me so. P. I will share. How? How do I share this?\n",
"\n",
"804\n",
"01:32:57.700 --> 01:33:00.620\n",
"sarahkayongo: Can I share where yours deep?\n",
"\n",
"805\n",
"01:33:01.410 --> 01:33:08.589\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I haven't written them yet. I just wanted to share my screen. How do II don't share my screen. Aren't you to see me?\n",
"\n",
"806\n",
"01:33:08.910 --> 01:33:10.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: How do you do that?\n",
"\n",
"807\n",
"01:33:11.330 --> 01:33:18.099\n",
"sarahkayongo: Can you see me full?\n",
"\n",
"808\n",
"01:33:18.420 --> 01:33:19.570\n",
"sarahkayongo: We would.\n",
"\n",
"809\n",
"01:33:19.590 --> 01:33:24.979\n",
"sarahkayongo: Oh, always because I can't see you. I didn't realize you could see me.\n",
"\n",
"810\n",
"01:33:25.960 --> 01:33:30.870\n",
"sarahkayongo: No, me. I think I was on and off the video. But and he's also back.\n",
"\n",
"811\n",
"01:33:31.130 --> 01:33:48.999\n",
"sarahkayongo: Well, because you're sharing your screen and we can. But I'm not sharing. Oh, oh, I'm sharing screen. I don't share my screen. So I accidentally right into this, and I don't know how.\n",
"\n",
"812\n",
"01:33:49.450 --> 01:33:50.700\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But\n",
"\n",
"813\n",
"01:33:50.750 --> 01:33:55.320\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: is that? 88 keyboard, 88 notice\n",
"\n",
"814\n",
"01:33:55.560 --> 01:33:58.570\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: holdable. I saw it, and I was like, what\n",
"\n",
"815\n",
"01:33:58.960 --> 01:34:05.729\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and it does $75. That was even more shocking. I was like 77 77 was like.\n",
"\n",
"816\n",
"01:34:05.930 --> 01:34:09.980\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: this is, I can afford to take a risk with $75.\n",
"\n",
"817\n",
"01:34:10.060 --> 01:34:11.080\n",
"sarahkayongo: It's\n",
"\n",
"818\n",
"01:34:11.130 --> 01:34:15.040\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that's exactly what I'm going to demonstrate.\n",
"\n",
"819\n",
"01:34:15.280 --> 01:34:20.889\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, huh! Oh, no, I should have\n",
"\n",
"820\n",
"01:34:20.920 --> 01:34:23.099\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I assumed it still had the charge.\n",
"\n",
"821\n",
"01:34:23.310 --> 01:34:30.709\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But just give me a second. Maybe I can plug this in\n",
"\n",
"822\n",
"01:34:31.150 --> 01:34:32.629\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and demonstrate.\n",
"\n",
"823\n",
"01:34:32.840 --> 01:34:40.600\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But for me I couldn't I could not II the concept because III envy, you know, guitarists who.\n",
"\n",
"824\n",
"01:34:40.800 --> 01:34:46.720\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if I just move around the instrument? Yeah, they just move around that instrument anywhere. I'm like.\n",
"\n",
"825\n",
"01:34:47.020 --> 01:34:50.050\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you can't do that to the keyboard. You can't do that to the piano.\n",
"\n",
"826\n",
"01:34:50.060 --> 01:34:53.369\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So this for me is the closest\n",
"\n",
"827\n",
"01:34:53.420 --> 01:34:56.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to being like a guitarist catching up with Guitarist\n",
"\n",
"828\n",
"01:34:57.040 --> 01:35:02.369\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: any. Maybe I'll demonstrate some other time. Let me. Oh, okay, I'll plug the\n",
"\n",
"829\n",
"01:35:03.110 --> 01:35:04.560\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: plug the 10.\n",
"\n",
"830\n",
"01:35:04.680 --> 01:35:07.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Let me see, there's a USB,\n",
"\n",
"831\n",
"01:35:07.830 --> 01:35:09.590\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so okay.\n",
"\n",
"832\n",
"01:35:09.970 --> 01:35:19.490\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I mean\n",
"\n",
"833\n",
"01:35:19.710 --> 01:35:22.120\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: none of that. And also that has me.\n",
"\n",
"834\n",
"01:35:22.420 --> 01:35:25.190\n",
"Patrick: So amazing.\n",
"\n",
"835\n",
"01:35:25.280 --> 01:35:26.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 75.\n",
"\n",
"836\n",
"01:35:27.240 --> 01:35:30.309\n",
"Patrick: Okay? But it's 88 notes. And so the\n",
"\n",
"837\n",
"01:35:30.420 --> 01:35:32.109\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: standard size.\n",
"\n",
"838\n",
"01:35:33.930 --> 01:35:35.350\n",
"Patrick: Okay.\n",
"\n",
"839\n",
"01:35:36.690 --> 01:35:38.330\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: There it is. It's on.\n",
"\n",
"840\n",
"01:35:39.000 --> 01:35:40.270\n",
"sarahkayongo: Wow!\n",
"\n",
"841\n",
"01:35:40.590 --> 01:35:42.299\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And I need volume\n",
"\n",
"842\n",
"01:35:42.720 --> 01:35:46.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: is that I want to thank God\n",
"\n",
"843\n",
"01:35:46.940 --> 01:35:55.660\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: for the S simple things. So so II need to change zoom to original sign for musicians off.\n",
"\n",
"844\n",
"01:35:55.670 --> 01:35:58.840\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hope that's going to. And then this, sir.\n",
"\n",
"845\n",
"01:35:59.220 --> 01:36:02.160\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, so I cannot do something like.\n",
"\n",
"846\n",
"01:36:03.260 --> 01:36:05.169\n",
"sarahkayongo: Oh, it is.\n",
"\n",
"847\n",
"01:36:06.010 --> 01:36:08.370\n",
"sarahkayongo: I can see\n",
"\n",
"848\n",
"01:36:08.630 --> 01:36:15.210\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I need like I didn't bring a lamp here so I can't see. I think I I'm in a wrong voice. Oh, there it is.\n",
"\n",
"849\n",
"01:36:19.180 --> 01:36:28.580\n",
"Dx. 7. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"850\n",
"01:36:29.250 --> 01:36:31.769\n",
"Patrick: that's me, I mean, thank you budget.\n",
"\n",
"851\n",
"01:36:39.440 --> 01:36:41.560\n",
"sarahkayongo: That's amazing.\n",
"\n",
"852\n",
"01:36:42.750 --> 01:36:52.999\n",
"Patrick: Yeah. So that so this is a for me, this encapsulates affordable 88 keys full\n",
"\n",
"853\n",
"01:36:53.570 --> 01:36:59.249\n",
"for keyboard. Right there, I forgot. Switch off.\n",
"\n",
"854\n",
"01:36:59.720 --> 01:37:03.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, but that fits\n",
"\n",
"855\n",
"01:37:03.240 --> 01:37:06.550\n",
"that fits. I think I forgot to switch this off\n",
"\n",
"856\n",
"01:37:07.090 --> 01:37:12.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that fits yeah, that fits in the bag here.\n",
"\n",
"857\n",
"01:37:13.280 --> 01:37:15.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So the guitarists are in trouble.\n",
"\n",
"858\n",
"01:37:22.340 --> 01:37:31.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So anyway, I think that for the simple things, the simple things for the simple things\n",
"\n",
"859\n",
"01:37:31.380 --> 01:37:38.689\n",
"Patrick: yes, yes, cause now that one I can travel with Uganda, and even live in Uganda.\n",
"\n",
"860\n",
"01:37:38.870 --> 01:37:57.270\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's not perfect. But it's an innovation which was exciting.\n",
"\n",
"861\n",
"01:37:57.500 --> 01:38:08.250\n",
"sarahkayongo: And she was telling me that how you guys to manage the chairs and whatever.\n",
"\n",
"862\n",
"01:38:08.580 --> 01:38:12.479\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So there is an innovation.\n",
"\n",
"863\n",
"01:38:13.230 --> 01:38:15.679\n",
"Patrick: Yeah, so\n",
"\n",
"864\n",
"01:38:21.800 --> 01:38:33.890\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: oh, this is, yeah, it's a bit delicate as long as someone, it's not delicate. Actually, it's just The feel is a bit different because the keys are not deep.\n",
"\n",
"865\n",
"01:38:34.660 --> 01:38:42.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay, cause they're very. They're the correct size, but they're flat. So it takes a bit getting used to\n",
"\n",
"866\n",
"01:38:43.690 --> 01:38:59.379\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but it has, it has over 100 voices over 100 bits over 50 demos, I mean, it's for for the, for its cost and convenience. It's really, really, really special. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"867\n",
"01:38:59.610 --> 01:39:17.269\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So so yes, I'm thankful to go for this small things in life. Ai is saying for the ability to work. That's more proper. If I if I was 80 years old, so just say for the foldable.\n",
"\n",
"868\n",
"01:39:17.660 --> 01:39:22.959\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 88. No, look at that completion. Keep you piano\n",
"\n",
"869\n",
"01:39:23.280 --> 01:39:44.289\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: because 88 completely piano, because 88. Really, this is not 88 doesn't go with many other things in humanities records. By the piano. Yeah. So this one I'm very excited for, but even another small you may call it simple, but I'm thankful for AI,\n",
"\n",
"870\n",
"01:39:44.300 --> 01:39:46.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: as Patti knows.\n",
"\n",
"871\n",
"01:39:46.360 --> 01:39:50.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Ai! So far the ais that I've used\n",
"\n",
"872\n",
"01:39:50.900 --> 01:39:56.729\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: definitely zoom not some. Then Github.\n",
"\n",
"873\n",
"01:39:57.390 --> 01:40:00.100\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: copilot and\n",
"\n",
"874\n",
"01:40:01.140 --> 01:40:03.009\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and Chad Gpt\n",
"\n",
"875\n",
"01:40:03.970 --> 01:40:04.730\n",
"Jeep.\n",
"\n",
"876\n",
"01:40:05.290 --> 01:40:06.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Gp, T.\n",
"\n",
"877\n",
"01:40:09.320 --> 01:40:12.090\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: These have been very transformational.\n",
"\n",
"878\n",
"01:40:12.570 --> 01:40:17.119\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: transformational for my workflow\n",
"\n",
"879\n",
"01:40:17.590 --> 01:40:18.790\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: productivity\n",
"\n",
"880\n",
"01:40:20.420 --> 01:40:25.560\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: in my productivity really, really, really transformational.\n",
"\n",
"881\n",
"01:40:27.510 --> 01:40:33.090\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: for for for the foldable piano may allow me.\n",
"\n",
"882\n",
"01:40:33.850 --> 01:40:35.629\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: may facilitate\n",
"\n",
"883\n",
"01:40:37.970 --> 01:40:45.069\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: praise and worship. and more remote suns. So this is\n",
"\n",
"884\n",
"01:40:45.430 --> 01:40:47.150\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: like, what time are you? Yeah?\n",
"\n",
"885\n",
"01:40:47.560 --> 01:40:51.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, it's saying like village, like I did say, like the village.\n",
"\n",
"886\n",
"01:40:51.090 --> 01:41:02.449\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yes. So so this did a tiny thing that I'm really, really, really, really grateful to them.\n",
"\n",
"887\n",
"01:41:02.470 --> 01:41:09.399\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I have been very thankful. I don't know if you call it a simple thing, but I've always been thankful for my health.\n",
"\n",
"888\n",
"01:41:09.920 --> 01:41:12.139\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: although I have.\n",
"\n",
"889\n",
"01:41:12.230 --> 01:41:21.859\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I have done very little. and we have exercise since May a. But\n",
"\n",
"890\n",
"01:41:22.900 --> 01:41:25.309\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I hope this is temporary.\n",
"\n",
"891\n",
"01:41:26.890 --> 01:41:38.079\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So I've been. I've always been thankful for God blessing with health and all that I've gained to today. I clocked in to 30 pounds. So I don't think I've ever recorded a higher weight than that in my life.\n",
"\n",
"892\n",
"01:41:39.810 --> 01:41:42.909\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So I need to get back.\n",
"\n",
"893\n",
"01:41:43.280 --> 01:41:44.030\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"894\n",
"01:41:44.980 --> 01:41:51.120\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Gitbuck. So so so that's yes, lots of thanks giving thanks.\n",
"\n",
"895\n",
"01:41:51.290 --> 01:41:52.800\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But\n",
"\n",
"896\n",
"01:41:53.200 --> 01:41:55.960\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: my biggest thanks\n",
"\n",
"897\n",
"01:41:56.390 --> 01:41:58.229\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: has been a turning point\n",
"\n",
"898\n",
"01:41:58.750 --> 01:42:02.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: for me\n",
"\n",
"899\n",
"01:42:02.110 --> 01:42:03.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: regarding\n",
"\n",
"900\n",
"01:42:05.590 --> 01:42:09.579\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: use of AI and introduction\n",
"\n",
"901\n",
"01:42:09.830 --> 01:42:10.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to\n",
"\n",
"902\n",
"01:42:11.590 --> 01:42:15.930\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: should I call it? It? Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"903\n",
"01:42:16.060 --> 01:42:18.070\n",
"introduction to it\n",
"\n",
"904\n",
"01:42:18.270 --> 01:42:21.690\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and building platforms\n",
"\n",
"905\n",
"01:42:22.810 --> 01:42:25.499\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: for work and collaboration?\n",
"\n",
"906\n",
"01:42:26.060 --> 01:42:32.339\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, so that I think is my my biggest thing this year what's taking my time\n",
"\n",
"907\n",
"01:42:32.480 --> 01:42:43.769\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and what has occupied me fully. And it's also the reason I've not been exercising, because I've been completely absorbed by this. And I'm extremely grateful for this.\n",
"\n",
"908\n",
"01:42:43.940 --> 01:42:46.579\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm really thankful. And\n",
"\n",
"909\n",
"01:42:46.970 --> 01:42:51.410\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II couldn't say I couldn't. I couldn't. Yeah, I couldn't say this enough.\n",
"\n",
"910\n",
"01:42:51.770 --> 01:42:57.519\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, so so that. That's that's that's it also thankful for.\n",
"\n",
"911\n",
"01:42:58.810 --> 01:43:05.379\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I've said this before, but I will say it again for completion.\n",
"\n",
"912\n",
"01:43:06.060 --> 01:43:12.959\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: All ph d requirements except this is. Oh, look at it completing\n",
"\n",
"913\n",
"01:43:13.110 --> 01:43:14.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: except this is\n",
"\n",
"914\n",
"01:43:15.100 --> 01:43:31.699\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm really, really, really, really can't say that again. It's been challenging. Yeah, passing classes, you know in the old days my prayers would will, after being a zone of getting as\n",
"\n",
"915\n",
"01:43:31.800 --> 01:43:35.589\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but I've been humbled, and my goals have been to pass.\n",
"\n",
"916\n",
"01:43:35.750 --> 01:43:39.560\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and I'm not trying to say that. But yes.\n",
"\n",
"917\n",
"01:43:39.830 --> 01:43:42.240\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: this have been my goals, and\n",
"\n",
"918\n",
"01:43:42.420 --> 01:43:48.699\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the school because of the pandemic allowed\n",
"\n",
"919\n",
"01:43:48.910 --> 01:43:51.870\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: even required courses to be done for pass fail\n",
"\n",
"920\n",
"01:43:53.270 --> 01:43:55.890\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: from 2020 this year, they ended.\n",
"\n",
"921\n",
"01:43:56.600 --> 01:44:03.030\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: they announced, because the Academic has started last week. They said. They're ending. The past failed. Staff returning to letter grades.\n",
"\n",
"922\n",
"01:44:03.290 --> 01:44:09.690\n",
"sarahkayongo: So I've I've dodged that phase. So my entire Phd, I've been able to do things past fail.\n",
"\n",
"923\n",
"01:44:10.080 --> 01:44:21.609\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and it was very challenging. My goals were to pass my exam. The the classes where, I can tell you it was definitely many of the statistics classes were too advanced.\n",
"\n",
"924\n",
"01:44:21.860 --> 01:44:27.879\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know, and my goal was like, if I need to pass. And I passed.\n",
"\n",
"925\n",
"01:44:28.220 --> 01:44:32.110\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, the data science class was a little too much.\n",
"\n",
"926\n",
"01:44:32.170 --> 01:44:43.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: My goal again was to pass. II don't remember praying for an a ever. It has to pass. Yeah. So so for completion of all my requirements.\n",
"\n",
"927\n",
"01:44:43.790 --> 01:44:47.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's really, really, really a big deal. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"928\n",
"01:44:47.230 --> 01:44:50.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And now my request?\n",
"\n",
"929\n",
"01:44:51.980 --> 01:44:58.459\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So the first request is that, oh, motivation to do the work.\n",
"\n",
"930\n",
"01:44:58.590 --> 01:45:14.280\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, I will take but this audit has got wrong for the fees for the children so this one get back to physical\n",
"\n",
"931\n",
"01:45:14.770 --> 01:45:26.690\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: activity. Oh. yes, get back to physics to exercise. There's another one I have. So hip left. Hip injury.\n",
"\n",
"932\n",
"01:45:28.360 --> 01:45:29.390\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and\n",
"\n",
"933\n",
"01:45:30.460 --> 01:45:33.900\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and say so. Swimmers sinusitis.\n",
"\n",
"934\n",
"01:45:34.670 --> 01:45:38.429\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I've inflamed. I've I've inflamed my sinuses.\n",
"\n",
"935\n",
"01:45:40.630 --> 01:45:51.920\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, at first I thought, was Alaji chief, but there's no way I could have had allergies all this month. Haven't swam since May, so I have no reason to have it congested. Noz\n",
"\n",
"936\n",
"01:45:52.410 --> 01:45:56.579\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so I could also be. Rewriting\n",
"\n",
"937\n",
"01:45:56.870 --> 01:45:57.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: could be what\n",
"\n",
"938\n",
"01:45:58.330 --> 01:46:02.340\n",
"Patrick: Rhinite is a symptom. Rhinite is a symptom of\n",
"\n",
"939\n",
"01:46:02.410 --> 01:46:15.209\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: sinusitis, or so Senegal or something. So it's just a symptom. But sinusitis is A a broader is actually an actual diagnosis. No, no, it's inflammation of the sinuses.\n",
"\n",
"940\n",
"01:46:15.260 --> 01:46:19.559\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Right? Right is the inflammation of the the Noz\n",
"\n",
"941\n",
"01:46:19.630 --> 01:46:30.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but the sinuses. And those are in related areas. So yeah, they're related. But the length of time I've had to congested knows is too long for any of these other things.\n",
"\n",
"942\n",
"01:46:30.080 --> 01:46:34.639\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And when I connected the dots and the fact that I've not swam since May.\n",
"\n",
"943\n",
"01:46:35.480 --> 01:46:41.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The injury was done from swimming. I've done nothing but swim since\n",
"\n",
"944\n",
"01:46:41.780 --> 01:46:43.070\n",
"April last year.\n",
"\n",
"945\n",
"01:46:43.620 --> 01:46:49.349\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: swimming 2ย h every day. Don't think there's many human beings that swim that much\n",
"\n",
"946\n",
"01:46:49.610 --> 01:46:51.159\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: in chorinated water.\n",
"\n",
"947\n",
"01:46:51.620 --> 01:46:56.580\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. And the chlorine is very rough on the on. The sinus is very rough.\n",
"\n",
"948\n",
"01:46:56.900 --> 01:47:07.200\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So II. So this diagnosis only came up with it, maybe yesterday. and it is 2 days ago, and it is revolutionary, because now I've started treatment\n",
"\n",
"949\n",
"01:47:08.870 --> 01:47:21.600\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and I can already feel I can smell better. I could. I couldn't smell anything. I was not struggling, smelling anything. I can. I breathe better? Yeah, but I will have to continue the treatment.\n",
"\n",
"950\n",
"01:47:21.920 --> 01:47:30.870\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: for for the foreseeable future. So yes, so I pray, for you know, continued healing of my left injury, so that I can return to jogging.\n",
"\n",
"951\n",
"01:47:31.020 --> 01:47:39.780\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm thankful for the Dagnits of similar sinusitis, because that has led to directed treatment. I've been going to a doctor, I'm treating myself\n",
"\n",
"952\n",
"01:47:40.090 --> 01:47:42.610\n",
"so. I'm ent specialist.\n",
"\n",
"953\n",
"01:47:42.630 --> 01:47:49.989\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: If if I'm not clear cured, then I will see a specialist. But for now the rate of improvement suggests that I'll be fine\n",
"\n",
"954\n",
"01:47:50.420 --> 01:47:58.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so yes, so so those are those things, then, for growth.\n",
"\n",
"955\n",
"01:48:01.100 --> 01:48:04.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: an expansion of my.\n",
"\n",
"956\n",
"01:48:04.970 --> 01:48:16.380\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: this one. I not get any chance to share my fenna platform. I oh, you can see my screen. So yeah, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"957\n",
"01:48:16.600 --> 01:48:21.049\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: have I shared? Have I ever shared about this platform? I don't think I have.\n",
"\n",
"958\n",
"01:48:21.150 --> 01:48:27.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So there's this one shared. I probably shared with you. So there's this platform\n",
"\n",
"959\n",
"01:48:27.360 --> 01:48:37.559\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I've developed from the summer. It's called. But I'm treating it as Uganda. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"960\n",
"01:48:37.590 --> 01:48:47.930\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: this is in in Chinese this, says Mandarin, my trainees, Vincent Jin gave me this. This is this is a means we're all in the same boat.\n",
"\n",
"961\n",
"01:48:48.210 --> 01:48:58.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is a collaborator in California, in Arabic. Translated this, this is one of my trainees it's called Andrew. Arcing is Jewish.\n",
"\n",
"962\n",
"01:48:59.170 --> 01:49:01.079\n",
"That's his name under arcing\n",
"\n",
"963\n",
"01:49:02.090 --> 01:49:07.389\n",
"he gave me this. He gave me something idiomatic, asked him to give me something idiomatic in Hebrew\n",
"\n",
"964\n",
"01:49:07.620 --> 01:49:16.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that encapsulates this. So this is I discussed with Sarah. It's a long story which I won't get into, but I mentioned\n",
"\n",
"965\n",
"01:49:16.470 --> 01:49:21.669\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I got cancelled by my students if you know what we cancelled.\n",
"\n",
"966\n",
"01:49:21.880 --> 01:49:26.870\n",
"but I got counseled by my students. And and the strange thing is, in the last\n",
"\n",
"967\n",
"01:49:26.950 --> 01:49:32.679\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 2 years, or even this year, I've been interacting with 9 Johns Hopkins people a lot.\n",
"\n",
"968\n",
"01:49:32.720 --> 01:49:42.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So a high school student in Florida called Calvin Matthias approached me and sent me an email in order to to be involved in a research project. I didn't even ask how I got my email.\n",
"\n",
"969\n",
"01:49:42.820 --> 01:49:49.529\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So those are ideas for this platform. This medical student is not at Johns Hopkins is in New York\n",
"\n",
"970\n",
"01:49:49.740 --> 01:49:50.840\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: under arcing.\n",
"\n",
"971\n",
"01:49:51.130 --> 01:50:01.250\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, I'm working 2 projects with him. This is one project. This is why it stands. You can get details on the project\n",
"\n",
"972\n",
"01:50:01.360 --> 01:50:07.800\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: here. This is called version control and Github. So you can see the history\n",
"\n",
"973\n",
"01:50:07.900 --> 01:50:28.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: of the document we're working on. The last person to put information. Here was a collaborator called Fawaz Al Amari, but if you click on history it will tell you all. The last update was from Faraz 3 days ago. Then from Andrew 5 days ago, then earlier from me last month. So these are versions. If I click on this.\n",
"\n",
"974\n",
"01:50:28.880 --> 01:50:36.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it will take you to the version if I like. Click on this, take you to the version of this document in August 15,\n",
"\n",
"975\n",
"01:50:36.920 --> 01:50:55.840\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: or something like that. So it's very. It's a platform that has been used in Silicon Valley, but I'm trying to introduce to to to the medical world, and and as you can see II don't have bounds when I say I'm in education. I'm actually in education.\n",
"\n",
"976\n",
"01:50:55.980 --> 01:51:03.850\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: very informal, right? Very informal. Sector. None of these are Johns Hopkins, but of course\n",
"\n",
"977\n",
"01:51:03.900 --> 01:51:13.560\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know the faculty. Who are Johns Hopkins, so I'm going. Not yet introduced this to the Department of Surgery division of transplant surgery. I haven't introduced this to them.\n",
"\n",
"978\n",
"01:51:13.880 --> 01:51:15.110\n",
"Patrick: but I will.\n",
"\n",
"979\n",
"01:51:15.270 --> 01:51:17.450\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And so the platform\n",
"\n",
"980\n",
"01:51:17.620 --> 01:51:22.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: caters to an individual but gives resources.\n",
"\n",
"981\n",
"01:51:22.330 --> 01:51:28.190\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That allow for for clinical research really is a target. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"982\n",
"01:51:28.290 --> 01:51:33.639\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: clinical research. And of course, the person the services we're providing are for patients.\n",
"\n",
"983\n",
"01:51:33.670 --> 01:52:00.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So they the products like, online web apps that allow you to quantify risks a patient in front of you has regarding something you're planning for them or their disease or their surgery. So you should be able to put in the information and an app which we can produce under your profile, safety, profile. You're here if you, if you're ben philosoph\n",
"\n",
"984\n",
"01:52:00.530 --> 01:52:05.580\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: transplant surgery. So if you know. So once\n",
"\n",
"985\n",
"01:52:05.610 --> 01:52:17.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to make a decision, say, he gets a call saying an organ is available, someone just died, and a donor. Does he have any patient who needs this organ? Usually the question is quality of the organ\n",
"\n",
"986\n",
"01:52:18.130 --> 01:52:25.129\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and the number of viruses involved in the quality of an organ, I can tell you. I can give you just a taste of it.\n",
"\n",
"987\n",
"01:52:25.190 --> 01:52:27.300\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You know.\n",
"\n",
"988\n",
"01:52:27.530 --> 01:52:32.940\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: these are the variables. These are just the parameters. One.\n",
"\n",
"989\n",
"01:52:32.960 --> 01:52:54.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Th! This they may not make sense to you. Pr, a, B or group Bmi edge. These are parameters, but in them they even further things. Father Via was involved in a in quantifying the risk. So no human being can process this. In a short time you did. Transplant schedule has to make a decision in within few minutes.\n",
"\n",
"990\n",
"01:52:54.500 --> 01:53:03.540\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Should I accept that organ? So sorry if I said no, the organ is offered to the next transplant generation, maybe in another state like Philadelphia.\n",
"\n",
"991\n",
"01:53:03.600 --> 01:53:09.259\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. And so if Ben Philosoph wants to be able to make a quick decision.\n",
"\n",
"992\n",
"01:53:09.340 --> 01:53:14.270\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that would be for the benefit of his patients. So on a wait list. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"993\n",
"01:53:14.600 --> 01:53:19.900\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So this is Ben. So if he so to be able to produce something that useful\n",
"\n",
"994\n",
"01:53:20.040 --> 01:53:33.549\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: for faculty. That's also useful, of course, for the target features of patients. But of course we have trainees too. So have things useful for them. And so I'm very excited that I was able to produce this platform.\n",
"\n",
"995\n",
"01:53:33.650 --> 01:53:41.239\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I if you told me that I produced this at the beginning of the year, I'll I'll say that said, that's crazy. Because where was I supposed to get skills to do this?\n",
"\n",
"996\n",
"01:53:41.330 --> 01:53:44.730\n",
"Patrick: Yeah. But\n",
"\n",
"997\n",
"01:53:44.820 --> 01:53:55.379\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the the stars connected aligned. And I did a data science class chat. Gpta arrived. and I drank a lot of coffee.\n",
"\n",
"998\n",
"01:53:55.510 --> 01:54:03.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and I was able to use this platform. So yes, so growth and expansion of my fana platform.\n",
"\n",
"999\n",
"01:54:04.490 --> 01:54:16.610\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that's one request, because the bigger platform for me is a social media platform, the more useful it is. Ironically also, the bigger it is, the more it grows.\n",
"\n",
"1000\n",
"01:54:16.760 --> 01:54:30.569\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. So yeah. So actually, I don't know. You should know Flavia. She's a sister of one of your, is she a yif person\n",
"\n",
"1001\n",
"01:54:31.060 --> 01:54:46.629\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Flavia Opio opio for me. So yes, Sasha was here. She was here a few weeks ago, and I saw shared this platform, and her mind went crazy. She was like, Oh.\n",
"\n",
"1002\n",
"01:54:46.670 --> 01:54:56.490\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: she just started thinking about how I should get in touch with the health sector in Uganda, how a one-stop center\n",
"\n",
"1003\n",
"01:54:56.700 --> 01:55:03.960\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: of truth. Say, if a patient, a patient, sees a doctor in Guru, yet he has records from\n",
"\n",
"1004\n",
"01:55:04.140 --> 01:55:06.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Carbadio Kampala.\n",
"\n",
"1005\n",
"01:55:06.760 --> 01:55:22.659\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: They should be one central place where all these things can be referenced. Yeah. And she was. I was like, that's interesting ideas. And and she was like, Yeah, you seem to be able to to be in the zone of producing such a platform. And I was like, oh.\n",
"\n",
"1006\n",
"01:55:22.860 --> 01:55:29.170\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so what resulted was, oh, I guess I I'm less than sharing my screen.\n",
"\n",
"1007\n",
"01:55:29.870 --> 01:55:37.819\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So that's so. I'm I'm thankful. But I'm also praying for growth. What resulted was\n",
"\n",
"1008\n",
"01:55:38.380 --> 01:55:41.150\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: me getting a call from her brother-in-law.\n",
"\n",
"1009\n",
"01:55:41.530 --> 01:55:43.629\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hi, Ivan!\n",
"\n",
"1010\n",
"01:55:43.770 --> 01:55:54.009\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But I haven't really followed up on this, because he called at a time when I couldn't speak. So this is all clinical, all the Us. Mostly the Us. But then, because\n",
"\n",
"1011\n",
"01:55:54.600 --> 01:56:01.529\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: of some interactions I had as II created other categories, and I don't know if you know, you know, I even mumble it.\n",
"\n",
"1012\n",
"01:56:02.680 --> 01:56:21.469\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So I got a call from him. I was like, Oh, he must have been having a chat with flavour, and he was like, yes, yes, yes, so so the platform is already growing, at least this top of it already imaging. But I want guidance\n",
"\n",
"1013\n",
"01:56:21.750 --> 01:56:30.060\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and the process of growth and the growth will be successful if it's very relevant to people.\n",
"\n",
"1014\n",
"01:56:30.330 --> 01:56:58.659\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And I don't want that to be, because this is it. I don't want there to be any geographic boundaries already. There. None. It's gone beyond Johns Hopkins. But I'm I'm happy to see reaching Uganda cause people like saying, When are you coming back? What are you doing for Uganda? So if this can lead me to do things directly in my area of specialty. For Uganda, I'll be very, very delighted. So that's where I'm praying for growth\n",
"\n",
"1015\n",
"01:56:58.780 --> 01:57:04.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: expansion of my finap platform. Thin platform.\n",
"\n",
"1016\n",
"01:57:04.250 --> 01:57:14.650\n",
"sarahkayongo: Just, general. There's a lot you can.\n",
"\n",
"1017\n",
"01:57:14.840 --> 01:57:19.389\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, yes, yes, yes, indeed.\n",
"\n",
"1018\n",
"01:57:19.470 --> 01:57:24.130\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, I'm clinical medicine, I know. Clinical medicine. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"1019\n",
"01:57:24.310 --> 01:57:29.049\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yes, so so you know. So I'm grateful for these things that should be merged.\n",
"\n",
"1020\n",
"01:57:29.060 --> 01:57:32.570\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And I think that's it, you know. That's it for me.\n",
"\n",
"1021\n",
"01:57:32.780 --> 01:57:38.000\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: J. Is not here, so you know. We we shall.\n",
"\n",
"1022\n",
"01:57:38.310 --> 01:57:43.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes,\n",
"\n",
"1023\n",
"01:57:44.440 --> 01:57:45.870\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: a\n",
"\n",
"1024\n",
"01:57:45.890 --> 01:58:00.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah. I is it to be to be a to be? I can't remember. But yes, yes, so.\n",
"\n",
"1025\n",
"01:58:00.440 --> 01:58:02.410\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, yes, I\n",
"\n",
"1026\n",
"01:58:03.800 --> 01:58:08.289\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, let me post this that you have. You all have access.\n",
"\n",
"1027\n",
"01:58:08.840 --> 01:58:09.840\n",
"Patrick: Okay?\n",
"\n",
"1028\n",
"01:58:10.070 --> 01:58:19.699\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And I can share my screen. Continue sharing that. You see me walking the Linux, I can tell you to think that I walk off a Linux terminal. That's just a whole new world for me.\n",
"\n",
"1029\n",
"01:58:20.260 --> 01:58:22.679\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and Linux command\n",
"\n",
"1030\n",
"01:58:22.980 --> 01:58:24.389\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: command line.\n",
"\n",
"1031\n",
"01:58:26.180 --> 01:58:36.730\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So so I have a script which I wrote. which I call II call Abi Kissa. It's a it's a summary of Abi marriage. An ikissa.\n",
"\n",
"1032\n",
"01:58:36.800 --> 01:58:44.970\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's happy kiss. yeah, I can't show you what the script looks like. It looks like this cut\n",
"\n",
"1033\n",
"01:58:45.320 --> 01:58:47.540\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: get because\n",
"\n",
"1034\n",
"01:58:47.760 --> 01:58:50.480\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it took me a while. I would create a script\n",
"\n",
"1035\n",
"01:58:50.570 --> 01:58:55.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: lots of interaction with. So that's those are contents of the script.\n",
"\n",
"1036\n",
"01:58:56.090 --> 01:58:57.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But\n",
"\n",
"1037\n",
"01:58:58.010 --> 01:58:59.679\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you'll see it in action.\n",
"\n",
"1038\n",
"01:59:01.910 --> 01:59:16.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's exactly why my prayers. I'm giving thanks for AI, because I can tell you II can't recognize myself.\n",
"\n",
"1039\n",
"01:59:16.850 --> 01:59:36.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I I'm like, what are you? Am I writing a script? Oh, a lot of time, as I can tell you, it shows on my body the body has suffered. Yeah, the body has suffered, has been neglected. Yeah, yeah, the body has been neglected.\n",
"\n",
"1040\n",
"01:59:37.010 --> 01:59:42.410\n",
"Patrick: But you see, I just do these inputs and the rest is automated.\n",
"\n",
"1041\n",
"01:59:43.530 --> 01:59:44.260\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"1042\n",
"01:59:44.680 --> 01:59:46.949\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: hey, hey, Nicole?\n",
"\n",
"1043\n",
"01:59:49.040 --> 01:59:51.170\n",
"sarahkayongo: Hi, hi, Nicole!\n",
"\n",
"1044\n",
"01:59:52.040 --> 01:59:54.379\n",
"Patrick: Hello! I'm not using silo.\n",
"\n",
"1045\n",
"01:59:55.070 --> 01:59:57.360\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hello.\n",
"\n",
"1046\n",
"01:59:59.190 --> 02:00:01.660\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: okay, thank you, Ronald.\n",
"\n",
"1047\n",
"02:00:02.070 --> 02:00:07.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I think she's I think she's I think she has. She's really tall. My God.\n",
"\n",
"1048\n",
"02:00:07.750 --> 02:00:09.690\n",
"sarahkayongo: to\n",
"\n",
"1049\n",
"02:00:10.090 --> 02:00:15.310\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah. okay, save, you see.\n",
"\n",
"1050\n",
"02:00:15.380 --> 02:00:21.629\n",
"Patrick: The automation is now on. I've finished the input input parameters. Da da, da all this\n",
"\n",
"1051\n",
"02:00:21.640 --> 02:00:38.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and and the keys. Okay, that's fine. III just what I was doing is that posting all the prayers are going to be available within about 1ย min on that link I've shared. If you need me to send it again, let me know.\n",
"\n",
"1052\n",
"02:00:38.020 --> 02:00:41.919\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So that's what I was doing. I was just posting them push. So that's what I've done a pushed\n",
"\n",
"1053\n",
"02:00:41.990 --> 02:00:46.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: them to Github. The time the time they used is push. Push them to Github\n",
"\n",
"1054\n",
"02:00:46.860 --> 02:00:58.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Github pages, cause that's a pub that's a URL. So within I'm going to check on my side to see when it usually takes 30ย s to a minute.\n",
"\n",
"1055\n",
"02:00:59.170 --> 02:01:02.579\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Let's see.\n",
"\n",
"1056\n",
"02:01:03.510 --> 02:01:08.659\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: do we need to to pray. Yeah, yeah, let's let's pray. I'm done.\n",
"\n",
"1057\n",
"02:01:09.580 --> 02:01:10.609\n",
"Patrick: I'm done.\n",
"\n",
"1058\n",
"02:01:13.630 --> 02:01:17.450\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Okay. Oh, it's available. If you click the link\n",
"\n",
"1059\n",
"02:01:18.130 --> 02:01:25.389\n",
"Patrick: cause I was doing this so that you can. You have access to this item, though you can read from my screen or your screen, whichever. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"1060\n",
"02:01:25.580 --> 02:01:32.230\n",
"sarahkayongo: But you have them also. Just so you know.\n",
"\n",
"1061\n",
"02:01:33.240 --> 02:01:45.799\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if you click on the link, you have them. Cause this is not from my computer, but fine. I'll share. Okay\n",
"\n",
"1062\n",
"02:01:46.660 --> 02:01:51.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the 9.9. No.\n",
"\n",
"1063\n",
"02:01:51.910 --> 02:02:02.070\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Sarah.\n",
"\n",
"1064\n",
"02:02:02.240 --> 02:02:10.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I guess. Alright.\n",
"\n",
"1065\n",
"02:02:11.470 --> 02:02:15.539\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Charlie. I'm gonna stop recording. I don't think we need to record the prayer.\n",
"\n",
"1066\n",
"02:02:19.190 --> 02:02:22.840\n",
"sarahkayongo: Okay, now I need the leaning.\n",
"```\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"### 10/07/2023\n",
"#### Session 10\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
" Transcript\n",
"\n",
"```text\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"1\n",
"00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:01.180\n",
"sarahkayongo: I don't know\n",
"\n",
"2\n",
"00:00:02.600 --> 00:00:05.030\n",
"sarahkayongo: you dumb down everything\n",
"\n",
"3\n",
"00:00:05.370 --> 00:00:20.320\n",
"sarahkayongo: and making\n",
"\n",
"4\n",
"00:00:20.380 --> 00:00:30.219\n",
"sarahkayongo: they they can undermine you in a way, because you're disposable. You're not that powerful, and you're crossing level. Yeah, exactly.\n",
"\n",
"5\n",
"00:00:30.600 --> 00:00:35.749\n",
"Martin Muwaga: But and another thing with these guys who are not raised, though the view way\n",
"\n",
"6\n",
"00:00:35.920 --> 00:00:43.579\n",
"Martin Muwaga: life only presents binary choices. So if you're not in the account. you can only be against them.\n",
"\n",
"7\n",
"00:00:44.290 --> 00:00:47.769\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So it is. That's how\n",
"\n",
"8\n",
"00:00:48.320 --> 00:00:52.050\n",
"Patrick Muinda: you have Friday.\n",
"\n",
"9\n",
"00:00:52.090 --> 00:01:18.310\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Do you have friends that secretaries also cause. Once. I have made friends with them at office, and even out of office. I have one of her closest friends is Dan Rotiva. If you're not done, rotivo has tried\n",
"\n",
"10\n",
"00:01:19.220 --> 00:01:24.739\n",
"Patrick Muinda: school is Buddha Buddha, and also the the same fellowship.\n",
"\n",
"11\n",
"00:01:24.840 --> 00:01:28.630\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Hey? So we're joining. So joining those up.\n",
"\n",
"12\n",
"00:01:28.740 --> 00:01:31.759\n",
"Martin Muwaga: he took 5. Yeah, yeah, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"13\n",
"00:01:32.090 --> 00:01:50.480\n",
"Martin Muwaga: So. So you don't know her because she she's 1970. You don't have Coach, Patty. I'm not saying make friends with her friends, I'm saying, make friends with everyone around her from the secretaries, everyone so that they can give you information.\n",
"\n",
"14\n",
"00:01:50.660 --> 00:01:55.769\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then that one I've done. That's what I have done effectively.\n",
"\n",
"15\n",
"00:01:55.930 --> 00:02:19.420\n",
"sarahkayongo: And and they they sneak information to me, and II just marvel II marvel. In fact, I don't know. I don't know. I have understood you, sir. First of all, it starts by being overwhelming. That's the first thing.\n",
"\n",
"16\n",
"00:02:19.520 --> 00:02:34.430\n",
"Patrick Muinda: You just can't believe it all. Then, after that you say, Okay, fine. How do I navigate through this. So I begin doing that now. Having chatted, let's say with Dan, you know now, now she she she can't tell that I have information.\n",
"\n",
"17\n",
"00:02:34.510 --> 00:02:38.900\n",
"and she finally opened up and said, I even told Dan, ABC, ABC.\n",
"\n",
"18\n",
"00:02:39.100 --> 00:02:46.400\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So now Dan calls me and says, Man, what's going on we call her number 8, number 8 on eighth floor.\n",
"\n",
"19\n",
"00:02:46.500 --> 00:02:53.309\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Number 8 is very, very cold to me these days. Talk to her, and she's not as receptive.\n",
"\n",
"20\n",
"00:02:53.440 --> 00:02:56.949\n",
"Now see how this thing is now infecting done as well.\n",
"\n",
"21\n",
"00:02:57.210 --> 00:03:00.310\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So so it is a a game\n",
"\n",
"22\n",
"00:03:00.330 --> 00:03:05.319\n",
"whereby you need so much energy to play, and I realize that\n",
"\n",
"23\n",
"00:03:05.760 --> 00:03:19.589\n",
"Patrick Muinda: 1, 1, 1. 1. One thing that must not be discounted is the fact that we should take this thing to God in prayer cause. The the more we use this effort and energy and and brilliance and tact.\n",
"\n",
"24\n",
"00:03:19.980 --> 00:03:22.020\n",
"Patrick Muinda: the more exhausted we get.\n",
"\n",
"25\n",
"00:03:22.240 --> 00:03:27.290\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Cause I didn't see her. She she she also is very. She looks frustrated, and\n",
"\n",
"26\n",
"00:03:27.300 --> 00:03:33.340\n",
"Patrick Muinda: she just is so walked up by so many things. I think she thinks that I report her directly to the first link.\n",
"\n",
"27\n",
"00:03:33.640 --> 00:03:37.050\n",
"Martin Muwaga: and and and the that context to very\n",
"\n",
"28\n",
"00:03:37.650 --> 00:03:51.309\n",
"Martin Muwaga: that context is so important for you guys to understand he's in that peculiar situation. And and yet I don't. I'm not even as close to the first lady as she. Well, party perception is real at all.\n",
"\n",
"29\n",
"00:03:51.430 --> 00:03:58.810\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Everything, everything, everything she's talking about in meetings I am relaying direct.\n",
"\n",
"30\n",
"00:03:59.000 --> 00:04:11.540\n",
"Martin Muwaga: so so that one is like befriending an ask.\n",
"\n",
"31\n",
"00:04:11.910 --> 00:04:33.350\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Yes, very difficult. That lady is a very difficult individual context. She's a 1970 model pretty much like you no kids, no husband. She lives\n",
"\n",
"32\n",
"00:04:33.360 --> 00:04:53.690\n",
"Martin Muwaga: so that that that you also have to understand. Because, again, this may sound stuff Gen. Z. People can't relate with. But these something like when we get these new bosses, and they introduce themselves. And they say, I have 3 kids. They're all young. This is in their forties. We are like.\n",
"\n",
"33\n",
"00:04:54.160 --> 00:05:15.829\n",
"Martin Muwaga: she has a instruction. Everyone rejoins.\n",
"\n",
"34\n",
"00:05:23.750 --> 00:05:30.310\n",
"sarahkayongo: I wanted to share a screen.\n",
"\n",
"35\n",
"00:05:30.450 --> 00:05:35.109\n",
"sarahkayongo: Janet is 16 13, I think.\n",
"\n",
"36\n",
"00:05:35.870 --> 00:05:43.499\n",
"sarahkayongo: The story of hey, guys, she's never mentioned. No one talks about her except that\n",
"\n",
"37\n",
"00:05:43.790 --> 00:05:45.810\n",
"sarahkayongo: 16. What?\n",
"\n",
"38\n",
"00:05:46.280 --> 00:05:50.289\n",
"sarahkayongo: Genesis? 1613.\n",
"\n",
"39\n",
"00:05:54.350 --> 00:06:05.960\n",
"sarahkayongo: So that woman I read different commentary. So basically, it's a story of the slave woman. Abraham's that Abraham's film.\n",
"\n",
"40\n",
"00:06:06.050 --> 00:06:14.970\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, Ishmael. And then Sarah gets mad and they throw her out, and she goes with the sign, and they don't know where they're heading.\n",
"\n",
"41\n",
"00:06:15.020 --> 00:06:19.040\n",
"Martin Muwaga: But they really stay. Now, booming. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"42\n",
"00:06:19.150 --> 00:06:34.420\n",
"sarahkayongo: which must have been written by a guy, cause that guy says, you see how I put everything so nicely. The guy says.\n",
"\n",
"43\n",
"00:06:34.710 --> 00:06:56.340\n",
"sarahkayongo: the woman who was sexually abused and and used. And\n",
"\n",
"44\n",
"00:06:57.150 --> 00:07:08.339\n",
"sarahkayongo: yeah, but can you imagine sexually abuse, and then just left. So anyway. That first, says the Lord who sees me\n",
"\n",
"45\n",
"00:07:08.540 --> 00:07:11.489\n",
"sarahkayongo: and God God saw her.\n",
"\n",
"46\n",
"00:07:11.910 --> 00:07:19.050\n",
"sarahkayongo: you know he saw her sorrow, and and he provided more. Yeah, her pain and her sorrow.\n",
"\n",
"47\n",
"00:07:19.100 --> 00:07:23.250\n",
"sarahkayongo: and he provided water for them in the desert.\n",
"\n",
"48\n",
"00:07:23.300 --> 00:07:31.780\n",
"sarahkayongo: and he also promised that her son who will be prosperous, and they will become a great\n",
"\n",
"49\n",
"00:07:32.250 --> 00:07:43.209\n",
"sarahkayongo: and and the reason, you know, I watch so many Netflix things when I watch Dubai blink. Dubai, I'm like, Wow, these people.\n",
"\n",
"50\n",
"00:07:43.510 --> 00:07:45.110\n",
"sarahkayongo: So wealthy.\n",
"\n",
"51\n",
"00:07:45.140 --> 00:08:00.830\n",
"sarahkayongo: But you know, it's because God actually also had a promise for them. So.\n",
"\n",
"52\n",
"00:08:01.290 --> 00:08:08.079\n",
"sarahkayongo: Isaac, yeah, something else. Isha, Isha Krovin. The Israelites are the covenant ones.\n",
"\n",
"53\n",
"00:08:08.090 --> 00:08:19.009\n",
"sarahkayongo: but whether you're coming up or not, but God gave a promise to Abraham, that's all his descendants, all of them.\n",
"\n",
"54\n",
"00:08:19.070 --> 00:08:34.200\n",
"sarahkayongo: So so man cries out, and God answers her before she even, and he tells her to look around. And this water, and and they they also got this promise that her children will be prosperous.\n",
"\n",
"55\n",
"00:08:34.289 --> 00:08:41.610\n",
"sarahkayongo: So she! And then that other comment, she, aol Roy\n",
"\n",
"56\n",
"00:08:41.630 --> 00:08:44.800\n",
"sarahkayongo: in Hebrew, means the word who sees me\n",
"\n",
"57\n",
"00:08:44.840 --> 00:08:49.420\n",
"sarahkayongo: so the person she talked to Angel wherever\n",
"\n",
"58\n",
"00:08:49.530 --> 00:09:08.140\n",
"sarahkayongo: said she was like, Oh, my gosh, you you mean God has seen me, and I've seen a message of God. So in in Hebrew they say that, and actually in the entire Old Testament no one has given God a name except her.\n",
"\n",
"59\n",
"00:09:08.250 --> 00:09:12.350\n",
"sarahkayongo: she called him the good who sees me. aero.\n",
"\n",
"60\n",
"00:09:12.910 --> 00:09:23.309\n",
"sarahkayongo: so don't worry. stick to your custody when you're in the house. When you leave the house, pray for protection.\n",
"\n",
"61\n",
"00:09:23.540 --> 00:09:29.229\n",
"sarahkayongo: Amen. The house out, out, out in the walk to this\n",
"\n",
"62\n",
"00:09:29.350 --> 00:09:43.209\n",
"Martin Muwaga: God is on your side, and he sees, I mean for everyone. The the Lord sees us and party, what is what? Yeah, what is? How does your immediate boss? Because your immediate boss isn't the PS. The undersecretary?\n",
"\n",
"63\n",
"00:09:43.510 --> 00:09:46.749\n",
"Martin Muwaga: How does she right under the Ps.\n",
"\n",
"64\n",
"00:09:47.150 --> 00:09:49.670\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Number 2,\n",
"\n",
"65\n",
"00:09:49.780 --> 00:09:57.820\n",
"Patrick Muinda: the Under Secretary? You should. Did I show you my my appraise? So I thought I oh, sorry I sent you to Durham\n",
"\n",
"66\n",
"00:09:57.920 --> 00:10:05.110\n",
"Patrick Muinda: when she had finished appraising. May I shared it with breath before, to know the mind of my boss about me and my work? My boss thinks\n",
"\n",
"67\n",
"00:10:05.170 --> 00:10:06.739\n",
"I am incredible.\n",
"\n",
"68\n",
"00:10:07.090 --> 00:10:08.820\n",
"sarahkayongo: Oh, delicious! Nice!\n",
"\n",
"69\n",
"00:10:09.150 --> 00:10:17.430\n",
"Patrick Muinda: She thinks I am not ordinary at all. I do my work. I don't just do my work. I do it well, and I do it above\n",
"\n",
"70\n",
"00:10:17.470 --> 00:10:19.360\n",
"Patrick Muinda: and beyond what it should be.\n",
"\n",
"71\n",
"00:10:19.400 --> 00:10:38.230\n",
"Patrick Muinda: An ordinary person. Be wheelbarrow style. Just go exactly where you're supposed to go, but II do, I put in extra, and she recognizes that. And she really loves me. When I walk into her office she's already smiling. She's laughing. She even when she's on phone. No, come in, come in. She really really loves me so much.\n",
"\n",
"72\n",
"00:10:38.480 --> 00:10:45.809\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Now, when it comes to me, her and the overall boss number, because I'm I'm at level 3 in the ministry.\n",
"\n",
"73\n",
"00:10:46.220 --> 00:10:50.569\n",
"Patrick Muinda: so the other one is CEO. Then comes her, then comes me\n",
"\n",
"74\n",
"00:10:50.610 --> 00:10:56.779\n",
"Patrick Muinda: my level. So when we are 3, and we are all in the context of work.\n",
"\n",
"75\n",
"00:10:57.010 --> 00:10:59.140\n",
"I can see my boss also.\n",
"\n",
"76\n",
"00:10:59.500 --> 00:11:03.000\n",
"Patrick Muinda: just just doing enough to protect me.\n",
"\n",
"77\n",
"00:11:03.040 --> 00:11:05.780\n",
"sarahkayongo: but not not trying to antagonize\n",
"\n",
"78\n",
"00:11:05.960 --> 00:11:16.930\n",
"Patrick Muinda: the CEO by showing her that she's on my side. so I can understand. She also needs to protect her skin. But when we are together she says, no, you know what what just happened there. Ignore it.\n",
"\n",
"79\n",
"00:11:17.570 --> 00:11:23.389\n",
"sarahkayongo: Continue doing, ABC.\n",
"\n",
"80\n",
"00:11:23.800 --> 00:11:35.960\n",
"sarahkayongo: But all of you guys, you you've all been very successful. God has seen us through up to this stage.\n",
"\n",
"81\n",
"00:11:36.130 --> 00:11:37.939\n",
"Patrick Muinda: That that is so true.\n",
"\n",
"82\n",
"00:11:38.020 --> 00:11:42.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, I've been transformed very slowly\n",
"\n",
"83\n",
"00:11:42.550 --> 00:11:44.030\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: from childhood to now.\n",
"\n",
"84\n",
"00:11:44.660 --> 00:11:49.180\n",
"sarahkayongo: Been doing very micro evolutions every year.\n",
"\n",
"85\n",
"00:11:49.680 --> 00:11:50.590\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"86\n",
"00:11:51.230 --> 00:11:52.360\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Pete\n",
"\n",
"87\n",
"00:11:52.760 --> 00:12:09.660\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Khadi. There's there's one thing I think I don't know about, Sarah, but I'll speak for the men here. I've heard from Khadi. I've had from Patty, and I can relate it with it, too, at the workplace. I've also received feedback from being\n",
"\n",
"88\n",
"00:12:09.710 --> 00:12:15.660\n",
"Martin Muwaga: about being critical when something is not being done. And I just.\n",
"\n",
"89\n",
"00:12:15.750 --> 00:12:20.290\n",
"Martin Muwaga: I've I've also gotten it. So could we? Maybe party probably be a little more.\n",
"\n",
"90\n",
"00:12:20.620 --> 00:12:24.500\n",
"Martin Muwaga: are aware about this and realize that people's\n",
"\n",
"91\n",
"00:12:24.530 --> 00:12:26.290\n",
"Martin Muwaga: people's ability.\n",
"\n",
"92\n",
"00:12:34.460 --> 00:12:40.159\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I know that made it clear.\n",
"\n",
"93\n",
"00:12:40.990 --> 00:12:46.759\n",
"Patrick Muinda: My boss made it very clear, and she says we need to strike a balance between good governance\n",
"\n",
"94\n",
"00:12:46.820 --> 00:12:49.840\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and what politics requires.\n",
"\n",
"95\n",
"00:12:49.920 --> 00:12:52.520\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I got the point loud and clear.\n",
"\n",
"96\n",
"00:12:53.280 --> 00:13:04.260\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So she says she's a Christian. She compromises incredibly incredible compromise, and and I'm not using the other negative words. I'm leaving it at compromise.\n",
"\n",
"97\n",
"00:13:04.320 --> 00:13:06.969\n",
"Patrick Muinda: She knows how to get her Christianity\n",
"\n",
"98\n",
"00:13:06.990 --> 00:13:10.920\n",
"Patrick Muinda: and not balance it out. Her beliefs is what what she has to do.\n",
"\n",
"99\n",
"00:13:37.080 --> 00:13:51.350\n",
"sarahkayongo: You can come off as a mud black woman already. You're mad, black woman, but I've I've never, ever ever raised my voice. Actually, it's funny at work.\n",
"\n",
"100\n",
"00:13:51.350 --> 00:14:10.370\n",
"sarahkayongo: I just go, you know I just first of all, if it took endless. I want to buy you, get it, and and you know who that do as the workers and the Nan and the talkers. So I don't argue now, because I know everyone's working style. After a while\n",
"\n",
"101\n",
"00:14:10.390 --> 00:14:35.960\n",
"sarahkayongo: I don't. I don't argue. I'm agreeable. So all these terms. Yeah, I'm agreeable. I don't. I don't give off any 5 of you know. No, no, no! And I understand the boundaries. I understand their little terminologies.\n",
"\n",
"102\n",
"00:14:35.960 --> 00:14:46.820\n",
"sarahkayongo: and I don't try to trigger when it comes to deliverables. No one can beat me on on delivering so.\n",
"\n",
"103\n",
"00:14:47.030 --> 00:14:54.180\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then this little girl's journey, you and I over would judge, you know, Georgetown, Owen, or too\n",
"\n",
"104\n",
"00:14:54.280 --> 00:14:58.959\n",
"sarahkayongo: extra. What's that? What they use?\n",
"\n",
"105\n",
"00:14:59.730 --> 00:15:01.329\n",
"Patrick Muinda: to include? Deep?\n",
"\n",
"106\n",
"00:15:01.820 --> 00:15:10.979\n",
"sarahkayongo: No, they just want their their work, basically, and then they will take it, or they will hear things, you know\n",
"\n",
"107\n",
"00:15:11.280 --> 00:15:32.770\n",
"sarahkayongo: extra. What's the word? The terminology? Do you have genesis use exprop pro appropriate. You can work with them on a project, they would take your work and make it theirs.\n",
"\n",
"108\n",
"00:15:32.820 --> 00:15:41.470\n",
"sarahkayongo: So you have to be careful with them. Is there a way, approach them because they like to Google everything I tell them, and just give them\n",
"\n",
"109\n",
"00:15:41.740 --> 00:15:48.530\n",
"sarahkayongo: things in general terms. Oh, Sarah, can we meet? And you show us how to\n",
"\n",
"110\n",
"00:16:16.330 --> 00:16:32.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but\n",
"\n",
"111\n",
"00:16:32.560 --> 00:16:35.100\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: they do it without blinking.\n",
"\n",
"112\n",
"00:16:35.220 --> 00:16:36.990\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, you can't even believe\n",
"\n",
"113\n",
"00:16:37.410 --> 00:16:41.030\n",
"Patrick Muinda: what? Taking on your work and making it yours.\n",
"\n",
"114\n",
"00:16:41.100 --> 00:16:42.389\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, it does.\n",
"\n",
"115\n",
"00:16:42.870 --> 00:17:00.969\n",
"sarahkayongo: hey? But then they cannot defend it. So that's\n",
"\n",
"116\n",
"00:17:26.880 --> 00:17:33.600\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and like, so what are you working on? That's it. I'm not just that kind of question. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"117\n",
"00:17:33.640 --> 00:17:46.919\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: then, 2 months later, calling II didn't attend some conference, and a colleague sends me text message from the conference like someone. I just presented this from another institution.\n",
"\n",
"118\n",
"00:17:47.180 --> 00:17:54.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: probable that at the same time this is improbable topic that II\n",
"\n",
"119\n",
"00:17:54.240 --> 00:18:03.300\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: focused on someone that also did it. At the same time, that's almost impossible. Statistically. yeah, and\n",
"\n",
"120\n",
"00:18:03.580 --> 00:18:13.890\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I knew the idea elsewhere. Hopkins.\n",
"\n",
"121\n",
"00:18:13.900 --> 00:18:19.899\n",
"sarahkayongo: And I hate to say this, but this one goes up only 9\n",
"\n",
"122\n",
"00:18:19.960 --> 00:18:40.019\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but same.\n",
"\n",
"123\n",
"00:18:40.070 --> 00:18:52.950\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: this one is the only person.\n",
"\n",
"124\n",
"00:18:53.860 --> 00:18:56.390\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Wonder why my motivation\n",
"\n",
"125\n",
"00:19:20.770 --> 00:19:33.979\n",
"sarahkayongo: so for us we walk in the office with your acidity. Cut people don't talk, and I was like, hey, there's no small talk, boy, you guys, I guess I know.\n",
"\n",
"126\n",
"00:19:33.980 --> 00:19:55.479\n",
"sarahkayongo: Oh, I can help you with that, though. Dump their walk on. You kind of you have to create this boundaries? And no, what's the we have those simple questions, what's the level of level of effort level\n",
"\n",
"127\n",
"00:19:55.640 --> 00:19:57.300\n",
"sarahkayongo: that going on?\n",
"\n",
"128\n",
"00:19:57.400 --> 00:20:01.850\n",
"Martin Muwaga: No, it is, it is. It is a metric for billing.\n",
"\n",
"129\n",
"00:20:02.240 --> 00:20:04.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You can't believe that no\n",
"\n",
"130\n",
"00:20:04.410 --> 00:20:05.850\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: like 30%.\n",
"\n",
"131\n",
"00:20:06.020 --> 00:20:34.250\n",
"sarahkayongo: If if you're giving me one, my very colleague, senior other fellow technical advisors\n",
"\n",
"132\n",
"00:20:34.450 --> 00:20:39.899\n",
"sarahkayongo: they want. They wanted to still out talk with them, and then they go to meetings, guys.\n",
"\n",
"133\n",
"00:20:40.070 --> 00:21:00.869\n",
"sarahkayongo: and they will talk more. And they're sharing all my ideas, I, and direct it out. You know what happened now, they discovered. Oh, okay, but we can go with all these trips, some of them. You see me going on like in December. This guy I played him. I told him you want. I can help you with this.\n",
"\n",
"134\n",
"00:21:01.090 --> 00:21:08.110\n",
"But it would take time for me to do that would probably need to go together. Okay, then come.\n",
"\n",
"135\n",
"00:21:08.220 --> 00:21:16.739\n",
"sarahkayongo: come with me to Kenya and and Ethiopia, and that\n",
"\n",
"136\n",
"00:21:16.820 --> 00:21:27.789\n",
"sarahkayongo: he what he needed me to help him. So I'm like, no, no, no, the only way I can help you is is if we go to the field office together because I cannot write without evidence.\n",
"\n",
"137\n",
"00:21:27.940 --> 00:21:36.000\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, yeah, come with me, and then you help me talk to this Kenyan stakeholders.\n",
"\n",
"138\n",
"00:21:36.230 --> 00:21:42.780\n",
"sarahkayongo: Then we wrote a good report together. But I was not gonna write for him. And then he steals my ideas.\n",
"\n",
"139\n",
"00:21:43.260 --> 00:21:45.280\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah,\n",
"\n",
"140\n",
"00:21:45.520 --> 00:21:47.600\n",
"Martin Muwaga: yeah. So yeah, guys.\n",
"\n",
"141\n",
"00:21:48.280 --> 00:21:58.679\n",
"Martin Muwaga: II know th, this has really been. If you ask, it has really been help, because this is a topic which up applies. But you know one of the things that leads\n",
"\n",
"142\n",
"00:21:58.980 --> 00:21:59.780\n",
"Martin Muwaga: to\n",
"\n",
"143\n",
"00:22:00.290 --> 00:22:08.799\n",
"Martin Muwaga: frustration. And you really start feeling you're in a bad place is when you personalize a situation. What's happening to you is not peculiar.\n",
"\n",
"144\n",
"00:22:09.460 --> 00:22:15.249\n",
"sarahkayongo: It is something. It's. It's a landscape that we are all having to\n",
"\n",
"145\n",
"00:22:15.530 --> 00:22:20.800\n",
"Martin Muwaga: to to navigate, but is one of the things that really helps me.\n",
"\n",
"146\n",
"00:22:21.250 --> 00:22:31.089\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Actually, my reaction is a bit different as not giving you the advice that I follow when I know someone is negative and all that. I do not let them know that I know.\n",
"\n",
"147\n",
"00:22:31.150 --> 00:22:40.789\n",
"Martin Muwaga: because what happened in the case of party is that when Katy go to land at Rotiva. had had this information, had\n",
"\n",
"148\n",
"00:22:40.910 --> 00:22:59.100\n",
"Martin Muwaga: provided this information to Patrick she became even more hostile. She's like this guy now. Must be coming after me full place. So old news about keeping your friends close and your enemies closer that stuff you think, Jay, because\n",
"\n",
"149\n",
"00:22:59.280 --> 00:23:06.869\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: being honest sharing when you're meeting someone for the first time in walk, even me when I met Dory II the first time.\n",
"\n",
"150\n",
"00:23:06.950 --> 00:23:23.759\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I just yeah. But that may not be very strategic. Yeah. So so giving people all in the information they need is something that I never used to consider.\n",
"\n",
"151\n",
"00:23:48.510 --> 00:24:01.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But when he comes back\n",
"\n",
"152\n",
"00:24:01.020 --> 00:24:03.109\n",
"Martin Muwaga: to consider, view his dysfunction.\n",
"\n",
"153\n",
"00:24:03.200 --> 00:24:09.159\n",
"Martin Muwaga: which skills that did I acquire. I mean a lamb. your lovedness.\n",
"\n",
"154\n",
"00:24:09.180 --> 00:24:15.239\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, yeah, yeah. Oh, yes. So you know, I got that skill so rich doesn't have much value in America.\n",
"\n",
"155\n",
"00:24:15.520 --> 00:24:31.960\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But how come? How come that skills. It worked for your dad in the seventies. It ingratiated him so many. I'm unwilling. Iii life for me is not worth living in that position.\n",
"\n",
"156\n",
"00:25:00.080 --> 00:25:08.949\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, under. That makes it impossible, completely impossible for me to be like him. I can't.\n",
"\n",
"157\n",
"00:25:09.060 --> 00:25:15.110\n",
"Martin Muwaga: And his peers get shocked because Elizabeth Murram came and lived next to us in dar es salaam.\n",
"\n",
"158\n",
"00:25:15.170 --> 00:25:35.470\n",
"Martin Muwaga: So we used to go across with bread for dinner, and should be saying stuff, and I'll just tell her. She was shocked. Everything, so I can tell that this is I had very. So. I used to be invited around Christmas time to\n",
"\n",
"159\n",
"00:25:35.500 --> 00:25:38.170\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: 7 friends places, for\n",
"\n",
"160\n",
"00:25:38.430 --> 00:25:45.230\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know th, these are no Christians so it doesn't. Christian music does this holiday music. You had to play music\n",
"\n",
"161\n",
"00:25:45.510 --> 00:25:50.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: around Christmas time, you know. Ho! Holiday music.\n",
"\n",
"162\n",
"00:25:50.540 --> 00:25:54.900\n",
"Martin Muwaga: And I've I've been yesterday.\n",
"\n",
"163\n",
"00:25:54.990 --> 00:26:12.859\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's all in reflection is like, Wait a minute. When did the invitation stop? You know every yeah, without fail. But it's only a reflection. I realize I haven't been invited some of those events in over 8 to 10 years. I didn't notice it.\n",
"\n",
"164\n",
"00:26:12.960 --> 00:26:22.640\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But I now know why. No, I mean I know why, because II could tell the nature of the relationship that was naturally.\n",
"\n",
"165\n",
"00:26:23.180 --> 00:26:27.870\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The bones. It was a sort of relationship with Mom's and Daddy Yup.\n",
"\n",
"166\n",
"00:26:27.910 --> 00:26:33.120\n",
"Martin Muwaga: zoom Liberals, just like Amara. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"167\n",
"00:26:33.190 --> 00:26:39.110\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But then tend to realize, oh, this fill up? Yeah, is,\n",
"\n",
"168\n",
"00:26:39.250 --> 00:26:41.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: does not seem to be position.\n",
"\n",
"169\n",
"00:26:41.680 --> 00:26:55.330\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, yeah, I don't know my place. Yeah. So there's an implied hierarchy. And if you acting as if your equals people actually that look all sweet and nice.\n",
"\n",
"170\n",
"00:26:55.460 --> 00:26:58.869\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: since to be comfortable, this is to enjoy their relationship.\n",
"\n",
"171\n",
"00:26:59.580 --> 00:27:03.750\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, they enjoy it when it's very clear there's a hierarchy\n",
"\n",
"172\n",
"00:27:28.270 --> 00:27:34.180\n",
"sarahkayongo: unless you go somewhere.\n",
"\n",
"173\n",
"00:27:34.250 --> 00:28:01.649\n",
"sarahkayongo: II had a a former boss in Georgia who would teach me, should say you went to that meeting. Where did someone associate in proximity to this one? So who spoke might check, who's spoken? Who did this? And and I was like should be no Z. She was teaching me hierarchy. Now for me my situation. Hierarchy became a very. I can remember the day yeah, when I was like, okay, this one. I know what direction I'm going to take.\n",
"\n",
"174\n",
"00:28:01.740 --> 00:28:09.620\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I mean academia. And we're dealing with science. And when leaders in the area and I'm in a meeting with Dory, one on one.\n",
"\n",
"175\n",
"00:28:10.040 --> 00:28:16.509\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and we're going over some idea of developing. And that seems to be very important. And\n",
"\n",
"176\n",
"00:28:16.770 --> 00:28:25.669\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: we disagree on steady, decided stuff calls trying to show that is a modern democratic person, you know.\n",
"\n",
"177\n",
"00:28:25.710 --> 00:28:35.770\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: He calls colleague one of the colleagues that used to invite me for Christmas is John, email.\n",
"\n",
"178\n",
"00:28:35.910 --> 00:28:37.570\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Explain to him\n",
"\n",
"179\n",
"00:28:38.220 --> 00:28:44.680\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the situation you're in and the 2 defiring ideas. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"180\n",
"00:28:44.760 --> 00:28:58.609\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And then we'll choose, because that's 3, 3. I share this idea, this idea.\n",
"\n",
"181\n",
"00:28:58.680 --> 00:29:04.780\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And as soon as the email goes, there is a very follow up on emails like Abby's not being clear.\n",
"\n",
"182\n",
"00:29:05.170 --> 00:29:08.399\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Abby says this, and I say this.\n",
"\n",
"183\n",
"00:29:09.270 --> 00:29:22.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah.\n",
"\n",
"184\n",
"00:29:42.730 --> 00:29:43.790\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: because\n",
"\n",
"185\n",
"00:29:43.800 --> 00:29:45.560\n",
"Martin Muwaga: it is a sustainable question.\n",
"\n",
"186\n",
"00:29:45.680 --> 00:29:54.979\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: what's the point? I didn't come from Egango to Baltimore? To\n",
"\n",
"187\n",
"00:29:55.260 --> 00:29:59.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to to tell people to explain it. So then let's say.\n",
"\n",
"188\n",
"00:29:59.690 --> 00:30:01.450\n",
"Martin Muwaga: yeah, that's the utmost.\n",
"\n",
"189\n",
"00:30:01.780 --> 00:30:08.370\n",
"sarahkayongo: There are more standard deviations between market. And\n",
"\n",
"190\n",
"00:30:24.290 --> 00:30:29.030\n",
"Martin Muwaga: but it started getting darker, and with their chauffeur being kaka.\n",
"\n",
"191\n",
"00:30:29.400 --> 00:30:31.109\n",
"Martin Muwaga: they had to make a call.\n",
"\n",
"192\n",
"00:30:31.630 --> 00:30:38.829\n",
"Patrick Muinda: They couldn't risk making it. But actually lives in Busan. But yeah, sure they couldn't. They go and stay in Grace Place.\n",
"\n",
"193\n",
"00:30:40.830 --> 00:30:46.360\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Well, yeah, but that is, that's that's true. But II\n",
"\n",
"194\n",
"00:30:47.360 --> 00:30:52.430\n",
"Martin Muwaga: II do not know. I do not know, Patsy, how the deaddies are still\n",
"\n",
"195\n",
"00:30:52.800 --> 00:31:07.090\n",
"Martin Muwaga: you you know some of these relationships that he had when he he was chair, and I promise all these cases showed up for your foot years, marriage anniversary. They are going to be\n",
"\n",
"196\n",
"00:31:07.450 --> 00:31:14.129\n",
"Martin Muwaga: by either way before I forget something. Yeah, I should. It's good that I bring this up right away. I time is all\n",
"\n",
"197\n",
"00:31:14.250 --> 00:31:17.559\n",
"Martin Muwaga: the essence. The other day II went to see\n",
"\n",
"198\n",
"00:31:18.090 --> 00:31:27.590\n",
"Martin Muwaga: that the end, you know, one of the things I dread most after we finish our meetings with, that is, when they are walking us out. Mom usually stays at the door\n",
"\n",
"199\n",
"00:31:27.660 --> 00:31:30.939\n",
"Martin Muwaga: that it proceeds a little further. The same economy.\n",
"\n",
"200\n",
"00:31:31.700 --> 00:31:35.460\n",
"Martin Muwaga: and says, You know this, seeing each of\n",
"\n",
"201\n",
"00:31:35.610 --> 00:31:47.149\n",
"Martin Muwaga: you people the 4 of you. Okuba wonti molecular your money collectively. I really really feel in Timothy Kumbi, sir.\n",
"\n",
"202\n",
"00:31:47.350 --> 00:31:52.230\n",
"Martin Muwaga: like a welfare pass. This is supposed to be a very personal thing\n",
"\n",
"203\n",
"00:31:52.490 --> 00:31:58.130\n",
"Martin Muwaga: which each of you bringing to me.\n",
"\n",
"204\n",
"00:31:58.650 --> 00:32:07.719\n",
"Martin Muwaga: And I was like, okay? And then he says, and and I live in. In. In addition to that, there is this lack of predictability.\n",
"\n",
"205\n",
"00:32:07.970 --> 00:32:14.469\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Yeah, supposed to show up\n",
"\n",
"206\n",
"00:32:14.560 --> 00:32:17.969\n",
"Martin Muwaga: with these contributions. II you know the.\n",
"\n",
"207\n",
"00:32:18.310 --> 00:32:32.889\n",
"Martin Muwaga: So I was like, okay, that it that the bit on the timing. I agree. I think we need to do much better. We can agree on a timeline when we are supposed to be getting this stuff. But as like Daddy, this second bit\n",
"\n",
"208\n",
"00:32:32.930 --> 00:32:39.019\n",
"Martin Muwaga: whereby you set into we are like giving you some welfare thing. You're getting one collective thing. I was like dead\n",
"\n",
"209\n",
"00:32:39.040 --> 00:33:02.810\n",
"Martin Muwaga: perception. II you know, Kadika, this is that I indulge, Daddy. But what I told Daddy is that just look at the alternative reaction here when mommy, because I told him he knows that Patty very publicly use mommy, her contribution habit. I said, when mommy gets hers, mommy, daddy is so grateful. She writes each of us individually, she doesn't take it.\n",
"\n",
"210\n",
"00:33:02.870 --> 00:33:04.159\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. So\n",
"\n",
"211\n",
"00:33:04.290 --> 00:33:11.639\n",
"Martin Muwaga: I say, Daddy, but I apologize if this is how it was perceived. I said, so. What is going to happen is that this lump sum\n",
"\n",
"212\n",
"00:33:11.680 --> 00:33:23.340\n",
"Martin Muwaga: is going to be split up. and you will receive it individually from everyone, and again goes quiet. Because, I said, the laptop will be split up. It's like no, no, no.\n",
"\n",
"213\n",
"00:33:23.400 --> 00:33:29.819\n",
"Martin Muwaga: it doesn't really have to be a case of splitting up the lumps. And it's as and when someone wants to\n",
"\n",
"214\n",
"00:33:30.820 --> 00:33:56.260\n",
"sarahkayongo: to to compile, that's the point\n",
"\n",
"215\n",
"00:33:56.280 --> 00:34:01.869\n",
"Martin Muwaga: his hands. The my point over here is that we need to have a date.\n",
"\n",
"216\n",
"00:34:02.100 --> 00:34:09.949\n",
"Martin Muwaga: We need to have a deep the way we have standing orders for stuff. and we just make sure that we we get this stuff to pee.\n",
"\n",
"217\n",
"00:34:10.300 --> 00:34:27.490\n",
"Martin Muwaga: you know, because I was so tempted to give him my contribution, but particularly, quite rightly said, no, let Jody hold on to your contribution. Wait for for for all of us to be ready, but II think we should just\n",
"\n",
"218\n",
"00:34:27.699 --> 00:34:45.039\n",
"sarahkayongo: just locking it. I mean, II apologize for this month, but maybe like\n",
"\n",
"219\n",
"00:34:45.070 --> 00:34:46.239\n",
"sarahkayongo: teach me\n",
"\n",
"220\n",
"00:34:46.440 --> 00:35:05.310\n",
"Martin Muwaga: no. And and can you reminded me the 4 of us are all on the same page. Don't allow, don't allow that so much peace. It has caused stability, and and we're some kind of\n",
"\n",
"221\n",
"00:35:05.860 --> 00:35:09.810\n",
"Patrick Muinda: less reduced reduced tension at all.\n",
"\n",
"222\n",
"00:35:10.260 --> 00:35:12.530\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah, that's so nice\n",
"\n",
"223\n",
"00:35:12.760 --> 00:35:24.330\n",
"Martin Muwaga: for for me, I think. Let's carry on that we've been doing on the same bed.\n",
"\n",
"224\n",
"00:35:24.560 --> 00:35:36.239\n",
"Patrick Muinda: This is yours. This is from all of us. And mommy, mommy, you're taking care of everything.\n",
"\n",
"225\n",
"00:35:36.290 --> 00:35:42.549\n",
"Patrick Muinda: mom, you're taking care of the food, everything that needs to be done.\n",
"\n",
"226\n",
"00:35:43.030 --> 00:35:46.969\n",
"Patrick Muinda: And then I tell her things to do with Zafar. You let me know directly\n",
"\n",
"227\n",
"00:35:47.270 --> 00:35:52.949\n",
"Patrick Muinda: if the car is an issue, you need a new battery. You need this. Let me. Yeah, know.\n",
"\n",
"228\n",
"00:35:53.100 --> 00:35:56.169\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Let me. Yeah, daddy, this is just for your wedding.\n",
"\n",
"229\n",
"00:35:56.270 --> 00:36:01.569\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Just keep it. If you don't need to spend. If you need to go for aircraft. Let me know.\n",
"\n",
"230\n",
"00:36:02.520 --> 00:36:26.820\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. By the way, you guys may not know if I tell him, but in addition to that, III cover the utilities that use to cover reading very well\n",
"\n",
"231\n",
"00:36:26.820 --> 00:36:33.880\n",
"Martin Muwaga: around. I need to have all the money like $240. So it's not\n",
"\n",
"232\n",
"00:36:33.880 --> 00:36:39.910\n",
"sarahkayongo: yeah. So so, Le. But you know, rather than having a date.\n",
"\n",
"233\n",
"00:36:40.100 --> 00:36:48.419\n",
"Martin Muwaga: I would rather have the one which is predictable is the American way of saying it where we so that party will remit the fast Monday\n",
"\n",
"234\n",
"00:36:48.460 --> 00:36:56.430\n",
"Martin Muwaga: of the month. Something like that. Yeah, that's the first abandoned\n",
"\n",
"235\n",
"00:36:56.490 --> 00:37:02.999\n",
"sarahkayongo: cause, you know, for us. We are paid or not. You know how it is bi weekly, and then\n",
"\n",
"236\n",
"00:37:03.580 --> 00:37:10.290\n",
"Martin Muwaga: paycheck to paycheck. So so I do not know this thing\n",
"\n",
"237\n",
"00:37:10.430 --> 00:37:21.170\n",
"sarahkayongo: with this thing. Of course it is the end of September thing which we are we are talking about right now. Next week, on Monday or Tuesday you should have mine.\n",
"\n",
"238\n",
"00:37:22.210 --> 00:37:24.999\n",
"Martin Muwaga: Okay, so can we say Tuesday.\n",
"\n",
"239\n",
"00:37:25.450 --> 00:37:33.340\n",
"sarahkayongo: II wide a lot of money last week.\n",
"\n",
"240\n",
"00:37:33.480 --> 00:37:39.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I believe it's to how much send Wave kind of allow me to send.\n",
"\n",
"241\n",
"00:37:39.940 --> 00:37:43.100\n",
"sarahkayongo: I can't. I can't do yours.\n",
"\n",
"242\n",
"00:37:43.300 --> 00:37:45.550\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, got it, I kind of say, got it\n",
"\n",
"243\n",
"00:37:45.820 --> 00:37:53.560\n",
"Martin Muwaga: so, Jason, are we? Ca, can we, Sarah? Identitiate? Which date are we saying we're we're going to Tuesday.\n",
"\n",
"244\n",
"00:37:53.860 --> 00:37:55.999\n",
"Patrick Muinda: That is 3 days from now.\n",
"\n",
"245\n",
"00:37:56.060 --> 00:37:57.650\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, okay, that's fine.\n",
"\n",
"246\n",
"00:37:58.220 --> 00:38:04.700\n",
"Martin Muwaga: So, Pete, I'll I'll send it. I'll send you the funds, and and then we agree\n",
"\n",
"247\n",
"00:38:04.860 --> 00:38:09.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: from there on. Will it be the first Monday?\n",
"\n",
"248\n",
"00:38:09.250 --> 00:38:12.339\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, that's fine. It sounds reasonable.\n",
"\n",
"249\n",
"00:38:12.570 --> 00:38:18.179\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Guys. Remember II you know you're praying for me about what happened? My salary?\n",
"\n",
"250\n",
"00:38:18.310 --> 00:38:26.119\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yes, yes, and that's why II was not able to contribute effectively last week as only contributing in kind way I could\n",
"\n",
"251\n",
"00:38:42.480 --> 00:38:47.779\n",
"Martin Muwaga: that amount that that that\n",
"\n",
"252\n",
"00:38:47.870 --> 00:38:52.870\n",
"Martin Muwaga: let's chip in for now until that, because we are waiting for you.\n",
"\n",
"253\n",
"00:38:53.000 --> 00:39:07.120\n",
"sarahkayongo: Thank you so much. Thank you. So so I mean, guys, you don't know it. But but p. 2 is 75% haircut.\n",
"\n",
"254\n",
"00:39:07.350 --> 00:39:20.209\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yes, I'm going by that Scripture, the God that sees me and he's going to come through\n",
"\n",
"255\n",
"00:39:20.290 --> 00:39:26.130\n",
"sarahkayongo: you, will you? Will\n",
"\n",
"256\n",
"00:39:26.210 --> 00:39:28.389\n",
"sarahkayongo: our prayer? Okay.\n",
"\n",
"257\n",
"00:39:30.060 --> 00:39:33.970\n",
"Patrick Muinda: the same as what I shared the last time?\n",
"\n",
"258\n",
"00:39:34.110 --> 00:39:38.470\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Of course, the my fish tank. But\n",
"\n",
"259\n",
"00:39:38.580 --> 00:39:40.260\n",
"it's the same thing. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"260\n",
"00:39:40.330 --> 00:39:50.029\n",
"sarahkayongo: I put a link there so you can see the stuff. JJ, we didn't get stuff. Oh, yeah, I can share my screen so that you see\n",
"\n",
"261\n",
"00:39:51.330 --> 00:39:54.569\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So if you look in, the there's a link in the chat.\n",
"\n",
"262\n",
"00:39:55.170 --> 00:39:56.979\n",
"sarahkayongo: how\n",
"\n",
"263\n",
"00:40:10.600 --> 00:40:23.790\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: cause you're driving from. So we didn't get so anyway. So there's a video I think the pass code. I didn't remember with the pass code. I look for it\n",
"\n",
"264\n",
"00:40:23.980 --> 00:40:28.219\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: in case I don't. I don't think you have time towards the video. But is it video\n",
"\n",
"265\n",
"00:40:28.510 --> 00:40:49.199\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: if you want?\n",
"\n",
"266\n",
"00:40:49.430 --> 00:40:59.080\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But otherwise is my self reflection. After I reviewed the students.\n",
"\n",
"267\n",
"00:40:59.180 --> 00:41:14.300\n",
"sarahkayongo: comments over the last 2 years. Education theory\n",
"\n",
"268\n",
"00:41:14.300 --> 00:41:36.539\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: never thought about ever before.\n",
"\n",
"269\n",
"00:41:36.540 --> 00:41:45.209\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but now my mind was so. I like I was not looking for this thing. I ran into them accidentally, this, this is not me. This is under my ideas, therefore psychology.\n",
"\n",
"270\n",
"00:41:45.240 --> 00:41:49.860\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And II ran into them, and I was like, Oh, my goodness, this is it.\n",
"\n",
"271\n",
"00:41:50.320 --> 00:41:58.939\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So? I am the one presenting challenge levels. The material presenting class and students have skill levels.\n",
"\n",
"272\n",
"00:41:59.020 --> 00:42:01.039\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So over time.\n",
"\n",
"273\n",
"00:42:01.340 --> 00:42:03.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Say, you've said 8 week class.\n",
"\n",
"274\n",
"00:42:04.030 --> 00:42:08.060\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: You can think of students coming 0 skills.\n",
"\n",
"275\n",
"00:42:08.400 --> 00:42:19.539\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And so the idea should meet me be that I present skills. Maybe at this level, they may be anxious a little, but II give them tools to allow them to move further down\n",
"\n",
"276\n",
"00:42:19.740 --> 00:42:31.090\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: with time. Never thought about, but this is very well.\n",
"\n",
"277\n",
"00:42:31.480 --> 00:42:33.529\n",
"supported by research.\n",
"\n",
"278\n",
"00:42:33.680 --> 00:42:42.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And now, my conclusion actually, is to to have 3 separate classes for people at different levels, because coming at 0,\n",
"\n",
"279\n",
"00:42:42.980 --> 00:42:43.850\n",
"sarahkayongo: yeah.\n",
"\n",
"280\n",
"00:42:44.350 --> 00:42:46.360\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: some people around here.\n",
"\n",
"281\n",
"00:42:46.460 --> 00:42:48.620\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So if you're giving material, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"282\n",
"00:42:48.740 --> 00:42:51.949\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: they're going to. Actually, that appreciation is very important.\n",
"\n",
"283\n",
"00:42:52.130 --> 00:42:53.900\n",
"sarahkayongo: that that book.\n",
"\n",
"284\n",
"00:42:54.100 --> 00:42:58.309\n",
"sarahkayongo: It's very much what's\n",
"\n",
"285\n",
"00:42:58.330 --> 00:43:02.479\n",
"Patrick Muinda: so. So so now I'm offering 3 different classes\n",
"\n",
"286\n",
"00:43:02.680 --> 00:43:06.800\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm going to offer 3 different classes. I don't know how. Get the time.\n",
"\n",
"287\n",
"00:43:06.850 --> 00:43:12.109\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know, basic and intermediate advanced, so that\n",
"\n",
"288\n",
"00:43:13.280 --> 00:43:20.049\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: no one is ever II don't have representing stuff at this level when someone's at the level 4, and they're bought.\n",
"\n",
"289\n",
"00:43:20.220 --> 00:43:21.100\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"290\n",
"00:43:41.760 --> 00:43:46.030\n",
"Patrick Muinda: and then presents us with challenges. And then we all work together.\n",
"\n",
"291\n",
"00:43:46.950 --> 00:44:01.959\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: That's that's that's graduate level. But this is a graduate students. But that's students. And it's a very diverse group of people from all kinds of backgrounds.\n",
"\n",
"292\n",
"00:44:02.010 --> 00:44:20.290\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So it's like from the same departments. Some are medical students met that year out of the Phd students in their past year. Some of Mph. Students who Mp. Students almost do nothing because I know I know what Mph. Is. 9 months.\n",
"\n",
"293\n",
"00:44:20.470 --> 00:44:28.059\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So I've been exposed to everything in such a compact period. They have no skew, no advance knowledge of anything.\n",
"\n",
"294\n",
"00:44:28.250 --> 00:44:41.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So it's a mix of all kinds of people so it it for me as convinced. You know the deadline for so many new new courses and stuff was in September 30, and as able to do that.\n",
"\n",
"295\n",
"00:44:41.690 --> 00:44:51.119\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Say, that's what I'm sharing. And I remember pee like this figure. And of course, if you want to copy and paste the code and edit if you can change content.\n",
"\n",
"296\n",
"00:44:51.330 --> 00:44:52.690\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So okay.\n",
"\n",
"297\n",
"00:44:52.730 --> 00:44:57.050\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But anyway, so the stuff is there. And so you said.\n",
"\n",
"298\n",
"00:44:57.400 --> 00:45:12.559\n",
"sarahkayongo: Still a can you go back to that top. I just want to see mine because the green zone\n",
"\n",
"299\n",
"00:45:12.590 --> 00:45:28.510\n",
"sarahkayongo: no, I mean I'm still there. But I keep myself. Say, no, work doesn't stress me. I just as I say, they watch people, and then I know that you know it's temporary, and we'll get more work.\n",
"\n",
"300\n",
"00:45:28.640 --> 00:45:39.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yes, being in the green zone is a good thing at work. It enables you to do a lot of research.\n",
"\n",
"301\n",
"00:45:39.840 --> 00:45:42.290\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I agree. Yes, I agree. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"302\n",
"00:45:43.060 --> 00:45:44.329\n",
"Martin: yeah. I mean.\n",
"\n",
"303\n",
"00:45:44.350 --> 00:45:48.950\n",
"Martin: I was looking at it mathematically if you just do a straight line, and\n",
"\n",
"304\n",
"00:45:49.020 --> 00:45:57.820\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: that comes with an angle of 45 degrees for a tangent of one which has\n",
"\n",
"305\n",
"00:45:58.290 --> 00:46:12.779\n",
"Martin: both both sides, both skill and challenge being at the same level. Anything on either side.\n",
"\n",
"306\n",
"00:46:13.020 --> 00:46:16.519\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: People's one. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"307\n",
"00:46:17.110 --> 00:46:20.530\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh, American sports people call it being in the zone.\n",
"\n",
"308\n",
"00:46:20.720 --> 00:46:26.189\n",
"sarahkayongo: I heard that in finding Nemo\n",
"\n",
"309\n",
"00:46:26.420 --> 00:46:34.700\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Zone is where they call snapping.\n",
"\n",
"310\n",
"00:46:35.780 --> 00:46:39.839\n",
"sarahkayongo: you could stay there long enough.\n",
"\n",
"311\n",
"00:46:39.990 --> 00:46:43.859\n",
"sarahkayongo: You can snap stressful. This is very stressful place.\n",
"\n",
"312\n",
"00:46:43.920 --> 00:46:47.160\n",
"sarahkayongo: This is where my students majority of them are.\n",
"\n",
"313\n",
"00:46:47.340 --> 00:46:49.149\n",
"Martin: Well.\n",
"\n",
"314\n",
"00:46:49.270 --> 00:47:01.670\n",
"Martin: you should see the old guys in Usaid where we are walking in a Google document. And they create new Google documents and run over stuff. They download it into one.\n",
"\n",
"315\n",
"00:47:01.790 --> 00:47:04.309\n",
"Martin: What stuff they work offline!\n",
"\n",
"316\n",
"00:47:04.370 --> 00:47:08.789\n",
"Martin: Then they come back and throw stuff, you know.\n",
"\n",
"317\n",
"00:47:08.940 --> 00:47:19.349\n",
"Martin: mandatory training, mandatory training. Now, you're taking a Google documents. Me right now, anyone walking with me has to work with Github.\n",
"\n",
"318\n",
"00:47:19.420 --> 00:47:24.529\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It's called the version control. So it's version, this with Silicon valley uses.\n",
"\n",
"319\n",
"00:47:24.920 --> 00:47:28.209\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so that\n",
"\n",
"320\n",
"00:47:28.420 --> 00:47:48.180\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the software takes care of versions because in Google, docs is very confusing. When you see everyone there updating stuff at the same time. But with this one, when you're doing update, then you write it what's called a commit message. Say, what changes have made. And that's the software is able to keep a history of that document over time and all the\n",
"\n",
"321\n",
"00:47:48.340 --> 00:47:53.030\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: new additions by every individual over time.\n",
"\n",
"322\n",
"00:47:53.190 --> 00:47:55.750\n",
"Patrick Muinda: how is your picture now?\n",
"\n",
"323\n",
"00:47:56.570 --> 00:48:01.330\n",
"Actually, you know what I was about to tell you guys, I haven't gone to that, doctor.\n",
"\n",
"324\n",
"00:48:01.670 --> 00:48:06.580\n",
"sarahkayongo: but it's not painful at all and I can wear use.\n",
"\n",
"325\n",
"00:48:06.900 --> 00:48:10.400\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So we we went to the overall doctor.\n",
"\n",
"326\n",
"00:48:10.440 --> 00:48:16.929\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, yeah, I think, you guys, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"327\n",
"00:48:17.280 --> 00:48:41.200\n",
"sarahkayongo: II did not go. She's doing well.\n",
"\n",
"328\n",
"00:48:41.320 --> 00:48:45.649\n",
"sarahkayongo: and then I got up for me a little bit. So\n",
"\n",
"329\n",
"00:48:46.010 --> 00:48:56.439\n",
"sarahkayongo: coming out of debt. Yeah, this is. This is intentional. So I'm paying back every small and big\n",
"\n",
"330\n",
"00:48:56.530 --> 00:48:57.600\n",
"sarahkayongo: did.\n",
"\n",
"331\n",
"00:48:57.790 --> 00:49:05.420\n",
"sarahkayongo: which is my college dates, which is the biggest date I currently have.\n",
"\n",
"332\n",
"00:49:05.440 --> 00:49:23.410\n",
"sarahkayongo: The Biden administration really came out with all sorts of options for us. If you work for a nonprofit, you can actually have your date. Where? But I don't work for nonprofit right now.\n",
"\n",
"333\n",
"00:49:23.540 --> 00:49:37.309\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah. So I managed to talk to that loan. You know, you get a loan advisor. And she said, Well, I think you qualify for loan reducement.\n",
"\n",
"334\n",
"00:49:37.460 --> 00:49:42.989\n",
"sarahkayongo: And so I'm gonna be paying $49 every month.\n",
"\n",
"335\n",
"00:50:08.290 --> 00:50:14.270\n",
"sarahkayongo: So I'm very grateful for that. And actually, I did that during this\n",
"\n",
"336\n",
"00:50:14.370 --> 00:50:22.860\n",
"sarahkayongo: this past week, and I had a list of things to take care of, and that's one of the things\n",
"\n",
"337\n",
"00:50:23.230 --> 00:50:35.470\n",
"sarahkayongo: so breakthrough. And then I've done some interviews. you know God is interesting. Because when I I'm not looking for a job, jobs come to me\n",
"\n",
"338\n",
"00:50:35.700 --> 00:50:38.570\n",
"Martin: some interviews\n",
"\n",
"339\n",
"00:50:38.630 --> 00:50:48.860\n",
"sarahkayongo: and they are big jobs that I mean here in the U.S.A. Vp for business development for nonprofit and then but\n",
"\n",
"340\n",
"00:50:48.930 --> 00:50:55.560\n",
"sarahkayongo: I will leave God, who sees everything.\n",
"\n",
"341\n",
"00:50:55.750 --> 00:51:06.760\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah. And I need, I need, I continue to need a financial breakthrough. So I can complete all my projects, and, you know, prepare for retirement\n",
"\n",
"342\n",
"00:51:07.110 --> 00:51:13.430\n",
"sarahkayongo: and take care of the kids. So I know he would do something. I'm no longer anxious.\n",
"\n",
"343\n",
"00:51:13.550 --> 00:51:16.240\n",
"sarahkayongo: So then the first part about\n",
"\n",
"344\n",
"00:51:16.300 --> 00:51:18.620\n",
"sarahkayongo: about my walk.\n",
"\n",
"345\n",
"00:51:18.760 --> 00:51:24.600\n",
"sarahkayongo: you know the Vp.\n",
"\n",
"346\n",
"00:51:24.960 --> 00:51:26.510\n",
"Martin: But talking\n",
"\n",
"347\n",
"00:51:26.610 --> 00:51:34.529\n",
"sarahkayongo: sees everything he would take care of. He would give me another job where I'm challenged, and and I'm not bored.\n",
"\n",
"348\n",
"00:51:34.770 --> 00:51:40.109\n",
"sarahkayongo: So I'm grateful that I'm actually where I have time to do other things.\n",
"\n",
"349\n",
"00:51:40.200 --> 00:51:43.679\n",
"sarahkayongo: Hmm! Which are personal\n",
"\n",
"350\n",
"00:51:44.330 --> 00:51:45.860\n",
"sarahkayongo: so, and young. Gish!\n",
"\n",
"351\n",
"00:51:46.800 --> 00:51:47.630\n",
"Hmm!\n",
"\n",
"352\n",
"00:51:49.160 --> 00:51:50.479\n",
"Martin: That is.\n",
"\n",
"353\n",
"00:51:50.680 --> 00:51:58.160\n",
"Patrick Muinda: we thank Good so much for what he has done in your life over this one month. Oh, is that it? Almost a month now?\n",
"\n",
"354\n",
"00:51:58.240 --> 00:52:01.070\n",
"sarahkayongo: God, yeah, God is everything. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"355\n",
"00:52:02.130 --> 00:52:06.460\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Now for me. Number one. That motivation came.\n",
"\n",
"356\n",
"00:52:06.600 --> 00:52:07.820\n",
"I tell you.\n",
"\n",
"357\n",
"00:52:08.400 --> 00:52:11.910\n",
"Patrick Muinda: done so much work. Yes, it does, is my supervisor.\n",
"\n",
"358\n",
"00:52:11.960 --> 00:52:21.609\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So she's given me corrections that I need to implement. So I don't. II now have a clear direction, and I'm very happy\n",
"\n",
"359\n",
"00:52:22.470 --> 00:52:24.520\n",
"Patrick Muinda: in the past. I was just\n",
"\n",
"360\n",
"00:52:24.740 --> 00:52:29.849\n",
"Patrick Muinda: not clear about what I was doing, and I was feeling really really terrible. But now it's cut out.\n",
"\n",
"361\n",
"00:52:30.170 --> 00:52:34.669\n",
"Patrick Muinda: scratch out, and I must emphasize this. This didn't come out strong enough\n",
"\n",
"362\n",
"00:52:34.990 --> 00:52:40.040\n",
"Patrick Muinda: here. I was ambiguous here. This is very good, so she gave me feedback.\n",
"\n",
"363\n",
"00:52:40.640 --> 00:52:52.249\n",
"Patrick Muinda: They have lunch today. That feedback is mostly negative. And if it's positive, then it is, it's only growing a constant.\n",
"\n",
"364\n",
"00:52:52.890 --> 00:52:54.440\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: It is cancer.\n",
"\n",
"365\n",
"00:52:54.650 --> 00:52:56.260\n",
"Patrick Muinda: It is kazaa. Okay?\n",
"\n",
"366\n",
"00:52:56.480 --> 00:52:59.549\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. So I think that's being home.\n",
"\n",
"367\n",
"00:53:00.110 --> 00:53:03.970\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Then, of course, I'm very thankful to God for the conversation we had.\n",
"\n",
"368\n",
"00:53:04.070 --> 00:53:15.609\n",
"Patrick Muinda: You have said a lot of what I already knew. It's just that I did not think that you had gone through it as much as I thought you had, all of you. So for me, that has been such a reinforcement\n",
"\n",
"369\n",
"00:53:16.080 --> 00:53:18.250\n",
"Patrick Muinda: tonight. Continue towing. But\n",
"\n",
"370\n",
"00:53:18.260 --> 00:53:24.710\n",
"Patrick Muinda: it's not personal. Just just to add context to what Jujus said.\n",
"\n",
"371\n",
"00:53:25.110 --> 00:53:30.200\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I'm not the only one who is having this type of thing with her. It's not just me.\n",
"\n",
"372\n",
"00:53:30.450 --> 00:53:42.490\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So yeah, it it is other people. So now I'm tempted, II, to to join into conversations that I tell myself. No, this time I'm not saying anything. I like my lessons from the format boss.\n",
"\n",
"373\n",
"00:53:43.140 --> 00:53:46.479\n",
"Patrick Muinda: When people come and cry about their frustration about him\n",
"\n",
"374\n",
"00:53:46.560 --> 00:53:47.849\n",
"I also share.\n",
"\n",
"375\n",
"00:53:48.170 --> 00:54:01.999\n",
"Martin: but before I know it he knows about it. Then I'm in more trouble. Yes, they extract and burn, mess you up in 4 wheel drive. So in this one I don't.\n",
"\n",
"376\n",
"00:54:02.270 --> 00:54:07.440\n",
"sarahkayongo: Someone comes and cries their eyes out. Yeah, I just a month.\n",
"\n",
"377\n",
"00:54:07.640 --> 00:54:20.869\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I think. Let us trust God to see us through. Let let us let us keep on working hard, and, let's trust, go to give us victory as we do our work and do it excellently. That's what I tell them. I no longer say anything now.\n",
"\n",
"378\n",
"00:54:21.100 --> 00:54:22.940\n",
"sarahkayongo: and and by that has helped\n",
"\n",
"379\n",
"00:54:22.970 --> 00:54:28.089\n",
"Patrick Muinda: the turbulence in this regime is much less. It's terrible, but it's less than\n",
"\n",
"380\n",
"00:54:39.770 --> 00:54:43.689\n",
"Martin: you talk of those millennials. Drop Genesee\n",
"\n",
"381\n",
"00:54:44.430 --> 00:54:50.529\n",
"Martin: W. To me the biggest tragedy for them, I think. Well, I don't know whether it's a tragedy. But this\n",
"\n",
"382\n",
"00:54:50.730 --> 00:54:56.190\n",
"Martin: body of knowledge which is collectively put together, asking my daughters whether they ever read\n",
"\n",
"383\n",
"00:54:56.260 --> 00:54:59.480\n",
"Martin: textbook. Say, look at me. It's a textbook\n",
"\n",
"384\n",
"00:54:59.780 --> 00:55:25.679\n",
"Martin: like those text books that have been put together, which systematically explain the topic they're like. No, no, no, it is all these puzzles, as we said, of knowledge, Youtube, just quickly. There's like a same thing. They don't. They? Just Google, someone explain something. And it's really, really. And that's why I was curious when asking the about how many genesis are transitioning into doctor studies because there are no games.\n",
"\n",
"385\n",
"00:55:25.810 --> 00:55:35.990\n",
"Martin: There is a system\n",
"\n",
"386\n",
"00:55:36.100 --> 00:55:39.589\n",
"Martin: about to change for them.\n",
"\n",
"387\n",
"00:55:39.720 --> 00:55:44.010\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I can tell you that's the most brilliant person I might\n",
"\n",
"388\n",
"00:55:44.420 --> 00:55:45.140\n",
"Patrick Muinda: hmm!\n",
"\n",
"389\n",
"00:55:45.530 --> 00:55:51.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The most brilliant person I've Metro, or is my master's in higher? It was my student is Gen. Z. Roughly.\n",
"\n",
"390\n",
"00:55:52.010 --> 00:56:17.900\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I should know. It's exactly\n",
"\n",
"391\n",
"00:56:17.900 --> 00:56:26.880\n",
"Patrick Muinda: number 3, number 3, that one God is going to do it, and I want to believe that the next time we meet telling you that the\n",
"\n",
"392\n",
"00:56:27.050 --> 00:56:39.009\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Public Service Commission has issued my minute, and that Hr. Has fixed the salary and want to believe that that's what it's going to be the next time we meet\n",
"\n",
"393\n",
"00:56:53.650 --> 00:56:56.000\n",
"sarahkayongo: setbacks. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"394\n",
"00:56:56.490 --> 00:57:06.649\n",
"Patrick Muinda: then, then, then we also pray for Sarah, I mean for for Dorothy. She's going to do an American visa interview next week, or is it next week?\n",
"\n",
"395\n",
"00:57:07.560 --> 00:57:08.960\n",
"1, 20 fourth.\n",
"\n",
"396\n",
"00:57:09.750 --> 00:57:15.639\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So please remember, we don't want to lose that money, even if she's not travelling immediately with her mom.\n",
"\n",
"397\n",
"00:57:16.160 --> 00:57:23.309\n",
"sarahkayongo: Let her at least have it. If you have your 2 years, you can plan even next year, just get the visa.\n",
"\n",
"398\n",
"00:57:23.740 --> 00:57:27.720\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So so we are. Thank. We are thankful to hope that.\n",
"\n",
"399\n",
"00:57:29.130 --> 00:57:38.630\n",
"Martin: And I'm going to. We are having a chat with Dodo. You know these? Us. Embassy interviews invariably take no more than 2ย min.\n",
"\n",
"400\n",
"00:57:38.950 --> 00:57:53.440\n",
"Martin: This case with their determination. Right right away. It's not about land, titles and bank statements and all that. You look them in the eye. Just tell them, hey? I'm here. Abcd.\n",
"\n",
"401\n",
"00:57:53.780 --> 00:57:55.749\n",
"Martin: and you out are all\n",
"\n",
"402\n",
"00:57:57.580 --> 00:57:58.320\n",
"yeah.\n",
"\n",
"403\n",
"00:57:59.150 --> 00:58:02.829\n",
"Martin: that is very true. Who go with Lantitos are kicked out, you know.\n",
"\n",
"404\n",
"00:58:02.950 --> 00:58:11.080\n",
"Patrick Muinda: yeah. I once made a mistake, walked in and introduced myself as coming from Ministry of Education, said Minister of Education.\n",
"\n",
"405\n",
"00:58:11.100 --> 00:58:12.590\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Minister of Education.\n",
"\n",
"406\n",
"00:58:12.600 --> 00:58:21.079\n",
"Patrick Muinda: She gave me back my passport and said, We'll get back to you, said you. You don't need to. You don't need to to, to, to, to apply again.\n",
"\n",
"407\n",
"00:58:22.180 --> 00:58:32.139\n",
"Patrick Muinda: You, you! You! You Ja! Just wait! You'll hear from us. So my friends traveled. I stayed. I eventually got the visa, but after they were returning on when they're planning to return back from the Us.\n",
"\n",
"408\n",
"00:58:32.250 --> 00:58:36.169\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Why, why is that so, civil servant?\n",
"\n",
"409\n",
"00:58:36.910 --> 00:58:48.689\n",
"sarahkayongo: II think maybe I should have started that way, and once you come\n",
"\n",
"410\n",
"00:58:48.700 --> 00:58:50.810\n",
"Martin: for its own personal grounds.\n",
"\n",
"411\n",
"00:58:50.950 --> 00:58:56.979\n",
"Martin: And it's yes related like 12 national. Yeah, there should have been a diplomatic note attached.\n",
"\n",
"412\n",
"00:58:57.310 --> 00:59:01.919\n",
"Patrick Muinda: and yet as going on a private business. So I should not up fronted government.\n",
"\n",
"413\n",
"00:59:01.950 --> 00:59:07.590\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I learned that. Yeah, I shouldn't have. I should have just gone in my own right as me.\n",
"\n",
"414\n",
"00:59:08.260 --> 00:59:14.760\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. So II have learned that. And to be assertive when you're talking to them, you don't sound apologetic.\n",
"\n",
"415\n",
"00:59:15.040 --> 00:59:21.289\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So their their number 5. Jay, thank you so much. Then number 6,\n",
"\n",
"416\n",
"00:59:21.450 --> 00:59:25.319\n",
"Patrick Muinda: we have gone through the weeks and wanted nothing. That's the same as today.\n",
"\n",
"417\n",
"00:59:25.470 --> 00:59:40.219\n",
"Patrick Muinda: The the the issue of number 7. God has done it. My leg continues to only get better. I'm get. I'm completely fine. I'm not even going for physiotherapy anymore.\n",
"\n",
"418\n",
"00:59:40.410 --> 00:59:43.839\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I didn't even have to go for anything. I'm just.\n",
"\n",
"419\n",
"00:59:44.070 --> 00:59:50.829\n",
"Patrick Muinda: The only thing I pray for is the post nozzle, drip thing that I'm having. I'm swallowing too much. So that once was a bit sold in here.\n",
"\n",
"420\n",
"00:59:51.050 --> 00:59:56.390\n",
"sarahkayongo: It's a bit irritating, so I might have to get some.\n",
"\n",
"421\n",
"00:59:59.070 --> 01:00:14.859\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II don't. I think it's analogic reaction or something where you feel you feel like there's a tap which is not well close, and you have a running nose. It can run backwards, down, down your throat.\n",
"\n",
"422\n",
"01:00:14.950 --> 01:00:17.400\n",
"Patrick Muinda: down the throat.\n",
"\n",
"423\n",
"01:00:17.500 --> 01:00:21.619\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I suppose, NASA driven so same conditions. Directions?\n",
"\n",
"424\n",
"01:00:21.920 --> 01:00:24.150\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yes.\n",
"\n",
"425\n",
"01:00:24.390 --> 01:00:38.490\n",
"Patrick Muinda: so so. So. I really pray against it. Cause now solving can become painful and UN inconveniencing cause. We are soling all the time the muscle that swallows you can almost feel the must cause I'm solving literally all the time.\n",
"\n",
"426\n",
"01:00:38.930 --> 01:00:41.100\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So II really\n",
"\n",
"427\n",
"01:00:41.160 --> 01:00:46.320\n",
"Patrick Muinda: pray against that, and hope that this week I should have proper treatment. Get out of it\n",
"\n",
"428\n",
"01:00:46.810 --> 01:00:56.959\n",
"Patrick Muinda: then. We, we continue. We thank God for the school fees. Remember, we paid for fees. I tell you, all the fees were cleared. All we have no date.\n",
"\n",
"429\n",
"01:00:57.040 --> 01:01:01.850\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Wow! Absolutely.\n",
"\n",
"430\n",
"01:01:02.620 --> 01:01:10.059\n",
"Patrick Muinda: All the children are in school. It's just unbelievable over 8 million shillings, I'm telling you\n",
"\n",
"431\n",
"01:01:10.360 --> 01:01:19.920\n",
"Patrick Muinda: so. I thank God so so so much! Nicole is going to school, but she has made it clear that she doesn't want to go that school anymore.\n",
"\n",
"432\n",
"01:01:20.080 --> 01:01:23.709\n",
"and she wants to go to another school where she can do things with her hands.\n",
"\n",
"433\n",
"01:01:23.850 --> 01:01:27.110\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So we're not good.\n",
"\n",
"434\n",
"01:01:27.530 --> 01:01:31.149\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. Yeah. Yesterday took her out. We had.\n",
"\n",
"435\n",
"01:01:31.300 --> 01:01:33.050\n",
"Patrick Muinda: We went out.\n",
"\n",
"436\n",
"01:01:33.080 --> 01:01:36.940\n",
"Martin: She dressed up well and went out on a date. It was very powerful.\n",
"\n",
"437\n",
"01:01:36.950 --> 01:01:38.950\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I'll send you the photos?\n",
"\n",
"438\n",
"01:01:39.230 --> 01:01:43.599\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. So so we talked and she told me\n",
"\n",
"439\n",
"01:01:43.930 --> 01:01:50.919\n",
"Patrick Muinda: how she feels. Doesn't think being with those young babies in that class is really adding any value.\n",
"\n",
"440\n",
"01:01:50.990 --> 01:01:53.110\n",
"Patrick Muinda: She wants things now.\n",
"\n",
"441\n",
"01:01:53.230 --> 01:01:55.860\n",
"Patrick Muinda: yeah, very cool.\n",
"\n",
"442\n",
"01:01:56.500 --> 01:02:09.169\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. So we pray she she gets engaged that that point that that we we get to know exactly what to do and where to go, and that God provides for us.\n",
"\n",
"443\n",
"01:02:09.510 --> 01:02:12.990\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. And that one is is\n",
"\n",
"444\n",
"01:02:13.470 --> 01:02:21.589\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I mean, the last one is more or less done. I pray that that Ph. D. Of will translate into something really really good.\n",
"\n",
"445\n",
"01:02:21.650 --> 01:02:24.340\n",
"and that finally, that that Ph. D.\n",
"\n",
"446\n",
"01:02:24.730 --> 01:02:25.890\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Will come.\n",
"\n",
"447\n",
"01:02:26.000 --> 01:02:36.940\n",
"Patrick Muinda: that I'll be able to complete it. I had a very great engagement with my supervisor. It was really, really I. She poured herself out from around 8 30 in the morning up to 2 PM.\n",
"\n",
"448\n",
"01:02:36.980 --> 01:02:41.629\n",
"Patrick Muinda: What she has just on me, no other student just me alone.\n",
"\n",
"449\n",
"01:02:42.280 --> 01:02:51.470\n",
"Patrick Muinda: So by the end of that I felt so, so, so, so so wonderful! I am so clear in my head about where to go. She gave so many examples\n",
"\n",
"450\n",
"01:02:51.680 --> 01:02:59.780\n",
"Patrick Muinda: about how other students made it. Those who failed, why they failed, how things should be presented, how things should be as simple as possible.\n",
"\n",
"451\n",
"01:02:59.850 --> 01:03:02.019\n",
"Lisa should be able to treat my thesis.\n",
"\n",
"452\n",
"01:03:02.220 --> 01:03:10.889\n",
"Patrick Muinda: and at least get some. Yes, yes, once things are not clear, then it causes my Max to be cut off during examination.\n",
"\n",
"453\n",
"01:03:11.700 --> 01:03:13.919\n",
"So that is the thing\n",
"\n",
"454\n",
"01:03:14.070 --> 01:03:23.990\n",
"Patrick Muinda: that is for me now. And of course my boss issues. I really pray that she gets out of my hair. But Scripture says we rest or not against flesh and blood\n",
"\n",
"455\n",
"01:03:31.490 --> 01:03:47.249\n",
"sarahkayongo: efficient. 10 to 18 every day put on the full arm of God, like, you know, the one for describes. He must have been looking at a Roman soldier. Because.\n",
"\n",
"456\n",
"01:03:47.480 --> 01:03:51.869\n",
"sarahkayongo: yeah.\n",
"\n",
"457\n",
"01:03:52.360 --> 01:04:10.770\n",
"Patrick Muinda: so you can see, the whole context is a context of war. It's a context of non stop warfare. And that's what we are in as Christians. It's warfare. Non stop every day.\n",
"\n",
"458\n",
"01:04:11.140 --> 01:04:16.079\n",
"sarahkayongo: By the way, yeah. So they tell us every day.\n",
"\n",
"459\n",
"01:04:16.450 --> 01:04:30.050\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. So that is me. I just ask that we pray about that bus issue that God intervenes. It's a spiritual issue, however much I try to talk to my boss, it will not work, cause I've tried. I even went to meet her on a Saturday.\n",
"\n",
"460\n",
"01:04:30.190 --> 01:04:35.990\n",
"Patrick Muinda: We sat together in a garden. Can you imagine in a garden, when I took her that letter from the first lady\n",
"\n",
"461\n",
"01:04:36.190 --> 01:04:39.380\n",
"we spoke. We talk. I thought she understood me.\n",
"\n",
"462\n",
"01:04:39.890 --> 01:04:43.089\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I got coming from Wau\n",
"\n",
"463\n",
"01:04:43.120 --> 01:04:48.609\n",
"Patrick Muinda: completely. Waste of time, waste of time, if anything, she's now using it against me.\n",
"\n",
"464\n",
"01:04:48.640 --> 01:05:00.990\n",
"Patrick Muinda: But you remember that letter you brought me? Well, now, that thing has turned out to be a problem. Now you're likely to be sucked into it. So get ready to answer, I said. Answer, what couriers don't answer.\n",
"\n",
"465\n",
"01:05:01.270 --> 01:05:05.780\n",
"Martin: You don't ask.\n",
"\n",
"466\n",
"01:05:06.320 --> 01:05:29.730\n",
"Martin: Well, I think what you what you need to to do it. So you you may need to come with an instrument to, to to sue her spirit. You know, David.\n",
"\n",
"467\n",
"01:05:36.350 --> 01:05:45.849\n",
"Patrick Muinda: no, just stay away. I don't report to her.\n",
"\n",
"468\n",
"01:05:45.950 --> 01:05:51.160\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I don't need that, so I report to my Under Secretary\n",
"\n",
"469\n",
"01:05:51.170 --> 01:05:56.449\n",
"Patrick Muinda: if I must respond to something to her through the Under Secretary, who forwards to her.\n",
"\n",
"470\n",
"01:05:56.660 --> 01:06:01.269\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Hmm, so I don't need her. I don't need to be with her\n",
"\n",
"471\n",
"01:06:01.380 --> 01:06:07.569\n",
"Patrick Muinda: at all. Yeah. So I'm simply going to stay away from her. She's terrible every time I get close to her.\n",
"\n",
"472\n",
"01:06:07.580 --> 01:06:13.060\n",
"Patrick Muinda: It is criticism pointing out issues, reminding me of things of the past.\n",
"\n",
"473\n",
"01:06:13.100 --> 01:06:15.100\n",
"Patrick Muinda: And you you remember this.\n",
"\n",
"474\n",
"01:06:15.620 --> 01:06:20.850\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I've never had that lady sit down with me, and we talk about anything constructive.\n",
"\n",
"475\n",
"01:06:20.900 --> 01:06:33.439\n",
"Patrick Muinda: how we are going to improve the education sector, how to strengthen. ICT nothing, nothing. It's criticism, fault finding politics, which is just very toxic\n",
"\n",
"476\n",
"01:06:33.600 --> 01:06:36.749\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: it. ICT, really.\n",
"\n",
"477\n",
"01:06:37.770 --> 01:06:48.170\n",
"Patrick Muinda: yeah, yeah, yeah, there's so much to talk about. So I think my my strategy now is, stay away, stay in good. and let God do his thing. He knows what he's doing. He's aware\n",
"\n",
"478\n",
"01:06:48.390 --> 01:06:51.979\n",
"Patrick Muinda: he knows me. God knows me. He's aware of what I'm going through.\n",
"\n",
"479\n",
"01:06:52.090 --> 01:06:58.419\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I'm not being disrespectful. I'm not being abusive. I'm doing my work. I report for duty and do it. Well.\n",
"\n",
"480\n",
"01:06:58.550 --> 01:07:04.010\n",
"Patrick Muinda: so I think what I'll do is simply do my work, trust God\n",
"\n",
"481\n",
"01:07:04.170 --> 01:07:07.220\n",
"and and and stay out of space.\n",
"\n",
"482\n",
"01:07:07.650 --> 01:07:12.360\n",
"Martin: Only be there. She needs me. but I'll be available.\n",
"\n",
"483\n",
"01:07:12.620 --> 01:07:14.400\n",
"Martin: Yeah, be available.\n",
"\n",
"484\n",
"01:07:15.830 --> 01:07:17.510\n",
"Martin: It will be wealthy.\n",
"\n",
"485\n",
"01:07:18.050 --> 01:07:21.620\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, it will be. No, you'll be okay.\n",
"\n",
"486\n",
"01:07:21.760 --> 01:07:23.940\n",
"sarahkayongo: You've been\n",
"\n",
"487\n",
"01:07:24.070 --> 01:07:25.670\n",
"sarahkayongo: by Jay.\n",
"\n",
"488\n",
"01:07:25.930 --> 01:07:26.720\n",
"Yes.\n",
"\n",
"489\n",
"01:07:26.940 --> 01:07:36.350\n",
"Martin: I did have. II didn't have anything to to share, as you record, but mine is really more of\n",
"\n",
"490\n",
"01:07:37.250 --> 01:07:42.959\n",
"Martin: Thanksgiving. In September Bria went back to\n",
"\n",
"491\n",
"01:07:43.000 --> 01:07:46.080\n",
"Martin: to school for her a levels. She's studying\n",
"\n",
"492\n",
"01:07:46.260 --> 01:07:49.370\n",
"Martin: mathematics, economics, and literature.\n",
"\n",
"493\n",
"01:07:49.880 --> 01:07:54.070\n",
"sarahkayongo: Oh, and\n",
"\n",
"494\n",
"01:07:54.710 --> 01:08:06.539\n",
"Martin: we. She's really growing into this mature girl who really is is focused in what she what she does. Oh, and sociology for subjects.\n",
"\n",
"495\n",
"01:08:06.780 --> 01:08:10.529\n",
"Martin: you and let's pray for Gabby\n",
"\n",
"496\n",
"01:08:10.880 --> 01:08:12.090\n",
"Martin: Guppy.\n",
"\n",
"497\n",
"01:08:12.200 --> 01:08:19.539\n",
"Martin: Getty seems not to have you know she's gifted. But can you hear me, guys.\n",
"\n",
"498\n",
"01:08:19.700 --> 01:08:22.880\n",
"Martin: Yeah, gut, Guti doesn't seem to. I mean.\n",
"\n",
"499\n",
"01:08:33.090 --> 01:08:37.709\n",
"Martin: yeah, no. Just saying that. Let's just pray for Gapi to be.\n",
"\n",
"500\n",
"01:08:37.750 --> 01:08:48.880\n",
"Martin: you know, to to show more enthusiasm with work. Very gifted girl. But. you know, like bored with stuff, she drifts off in\n",
"\n",
"501\n",
"01:08:49.189 --> 01:09:06.810\n",
"sarahkayongo: in the in in in this stuff. And then she self diagnosed herself. She says she has Adhd.\n",
"\n",
"502\n",
"01:09:06.899 --> 01:09:15.720\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: When does she come?\n",
"\n",
"503\n",
"01:09:15.950 --> 01:09:24.969\n",
"Martin: Patty pattishes she. Unfortunately she comes back earnest in December. But we that's not a problem. We can set up a call.\n",
"\n",
"504\n",
"01:09:25.620 --> 01:09:26.720\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Okay.\n",
"\n",
"505\n",
"01:09:27.450 --> 01:09:31.090\n",
"Martin: I can set up that call for you, too. She's she's going to be\n",
"\n",
"506\n",
"01:09:31.200 --> 01:09:35.700\n",
"Martin: joining home mom next week in\n",
"\n",
"507\n",
"01:09:35.960 --> 01:09:39.130\n",
"in Cyril Leon. So she is not coming for half time here.\n",
"\n",
"508\n",
"01:09:39.270 --> 01:09:40.740\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: She's going online. Okay?\n",
"\n",
"509\n",
"01:09:45.380 --> 01:09:51.780\n",
"Martin: No, no, no, with bread. I will join them later. so\n",
"\n",
"510\n",
"01:09:51.890 --> 01:09:56.699\n",
"Martin: So apart from that one, let's pray for for hand, I'll Gabili.\n",
"\n",
"511\n",
"01:10:00.930 --> 01:10:10.000\n",
"Martin: I think. Also that group masculine blah blah blah just to to it's it's it's a generational thing. But for her to\n",
"\n",
"512\n",
"01:10:10.690 --> 01:10:12.050\n",
"Martin: to, you know.\n",
"\n",
"513\n",
"01:10:12.140 --> 01:10:19.019\n",
"Martin: return to her roots, and at least appreciate what is truly authentic and not just.\n",
"\n",
"514\n",
"01:10:19.350 --> 01:10:24.819\n",
"Martin: Yeah, she should have some kind of filters through which she sees all this feedback she gets from\n",
"\n",
"515\n",
"01:10:25.270 --> 01:10:29.930\n",
"Martin: from from friends and all that. Let's just commit. That is very true.\n",
"\n",
"516\n",
"01:10:30.160 --> 01:10:42.760\n",
"Martin: Yeah, going on really? Well, one of the things that I would like you to\n",
"\n",
"517\n",
"01:10:43.070 --> 01:10:44.480\n",
"Martin: pray for me.\n",
"\n",
"518\n",
"01:10:44.850 --> 01:10:52.920\n",
"Martin: There is thorough knows the category of stuff. I belong to its. They are called foreign service Nationals.\n",
"\n",
"519\n",
"01:10:53.600 --> 01:10:56.130\n",
"Martin: and some of the power\n",
"\n",
"520\n",
"01:10:56.420 --> 01:11:05.139\n",
"Martin: Samantha Power has recently put in place some new agency initiatives,\n",
"\n",
"521\n",
"01:11:05.190 --> 01:11:10.440\n",
"Martin: which focus on empowerment of foreign service, national. And so now\n",
"\n",
"522\n",
"01:11:10.670 --> 01:11:13.230\n",
"Martin: a their husband\n",
"\n",
"523\n",
"01:11:13.710 --> 01:11:20.320\n",
"Martin: for each of the major departments and bureaus. One of the deputy directors has to be\n",
"\n",
"524\n",
"01:11:20.910 --> 01:11:25.969\n",
"Martin: a Ugandan. OAOA national, a foreign service national of the country!\n",
"\n",
"525\n",
"01:11:26.350 --> 01:11:36.619\n",
"Martin: So there! There are some positions that are going to be coming up. And one of them, which I'm looking at, his position of deputy program's director.\n",
"\n",
"526\n",
"01:11:36.880 --> 01:11:46.370\n",
"Martin: So they'd be a Deputy health Director health Office director, Deputy Economic Growth Director, but the one end of which I am\n",
"\n",
"527\n",
"01:11:46.960 --> 01:11:54.910\n",
"Martin: there was a lot of pushback, naturally, from Americans who found it outrageous that you can.\n",
"\n",
"528\n",
"01:11:55.260 --> 01:12:05.980\n",
"sarahkayongo: foreign service nationals who in Nairobi, literally the offices, 90% Kenyans?\n",
"\n",
"529\n",
"01:12:06.070 --> 01:12:13.170\n",
"Martin: No, but Kenyans at different level. Those ones are so highly skilled. They run the show. They take no nonsense from the zoom.\n",
"\n",
"530\n",
"01:12:13.240 --> 01:12:19.850\n",
"sarahkayongo: Their country demands that they should have those top positions.\n",
"\n",
"531\n",
"01:12:20.070 --> 01:12:34.160\n",
"Martin: and and and my friend told me when you're going like an American being reassigned to to to Kenya. They they just tell them that. Just stay in your lane. These guys know what they are doing. Your job is not to\n",
"\n",
"532\n",
"01:12:34.300 --> 01:12:47.340\n",
"sarahkayongo: what you're doing. It's just, you know, some missions, Kenya. I went to the mission, though. Would you move? Do you merely literally Kenyan.\n",
"\n",
"533\n",
"01:12:47.870 --> 01:12:49.579\n",
"sarahkayongo: I was so impressed.\n",
"\n",
"534\n",
"01:12:49.650 --> 01:12:59.289\n",
"Martin: People people know what they're doing. So let's pray for that. Breakthrough for the position of deputy programs, director as and when it becomes available.\n",
"\n",
"535\n",
"01:12:59.400 --> 01:13:05.259\n",
"Martin: This is not really about me per se. But one thing that really\n",
"\n",
"536\n",
"01:13:05.280 --> 01:13:12.530\n",
"Martin: I keep committing to prayer is my Dad, really, truly, truly, truly, Daddy.\n",
"\n",
"537\n",
"01:13:12.850 --> 01:13:18.289\n",
"Martin: finding peace, you know. Sometimes we have these conversations like Kadi Gay.\n",
"\n",
"538\n",
"01:13:21.360 --> 01:13:26.470\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: II didn't tell you how that conversation about the\n",
"\n",
"539\n",
"01:13:26.790 --> 01:13:27.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah.\n",
"\n",
"540\n",
"01:13:29.910 --> 01:13:31.950\n",
"Martin: Say that that.\n",
"\n",
"541\n",
"01:13:32.470 --> 01:13:41.980\n",
"Martin: Can you hear me? Yeah, yeah, I was like that. You are truly, truly, truly blessed. I'm about to turn 50, and I realize\n",
"\n",
"542\n",
"01:13:42.370 --> 01:13:43.810\n",
"Martin: you have. You have.\n",
"\n",
"543\n",
"01:13:46.820 --> 01:13:50.220\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah, your phone is on and off. You don't know\n",
"\n",
"544\n",
"01:13:51.630 --> 01:13:55.650\n",
"sarahkayongo: you're breaking off.\n",
"\n",
"545\n",
"01:13:56.020 --> 01:14:01.890\n",
"Martin: Yeah, II do not know what's happening. II think it has something to do with my network, can you?\n",
"\n",
"546\n",
"01:14:03.210 --> 01:14:05.760\n",
"sarahkayongo: Can you still hear me?\n",
"\n",
"547\n",
"01:14:06.530 --> 01:14:09.519\n",
"Patrick Muinda: You said he was 45 when he did what?\n",
"\n",
"548\n",
"01:14:09.750 --> 01:14:15.059\n",
"Martin: No, he was 58 when he became chair apostle PSC.\n",
"\n",
"549\n",
"01:14:15.570 --> 01:14:27.570\n",
"Martin: 58. Us. And that's like you have been so blessed, and you held that position. I've been told him how we're waiting, having lunch with\n",
"\n",
"550\n",
"01:14:27.820 --> 01:14:33.310\n",
"Martin: my father-in-law, Ki Kishuka, and the the Kamundos and the Rakasis, and they were like what\n",
"\n",
"551\n",
"01:14:33.430 --> 01:14:39.080\n",
"Martin: this guy was chairperson for 16 years. They even shifted to Ro Nakura and said, What did this guy do?\n",
"\n",
"552\n",
"01:14:39.580 --> 01:14:49.870\n",
"Martin: Who, you know? He's not part of the guys who made the sacrifices. He had been there for a long time for 10 years, because he had broken the U Cb. Bank for\n",
"\n",
"553\n",
"01:14:50.120 --> 01:14:51.220\n",
"Martin: the rib boots.\n",
"\n",
"554\n",
"01:14:51.520 --> 01:14:58.669\n",
"Martin: you know. Sounds like that. You've been blessed like this, but has like that changing of the mind. I some. I sometimes find it\n",
"\n",
"555\n",
"01:14:58.870 --> 01:15:01.650\n",
"Martin: upsetting. Khadi says that I indulge him.\n",
"\n",
"556\n",
"01:15:01.880 --> 01:15:16.650\n",
"Martin: but you started off by saying he needs peace, so he's not peaceful about that, or he's not appreciative. Or let me. You guys know what I'm talking about that the post\n",
"\n",
"557\n",
"01:15:17.710 --> 01:15:19.460\n",
"sarahkayongo: are complaining.\n",
"\n",
"558\n",
"01:15:21.940 --> 01:15:24.949\n",
"Martin: No, not really forget.\n",
"\n",
"559\n",
"01:15:26.830 --> 01:15:30.910\n",
"Martin: But party is gratitude an issue of memory, or is it a mindset?\n",
"\n",
"560\n",
"01:15:32.170 --> 01:15:32.870\n",
"Martin: Hmm!\n",
"\n",
"561\n",
"01:15:33.320 --> 01:15:37.799\n",
"sarahkayongo: We need to be reminded sometimes, and I'm reminded of what it has done for me.\n",
"\n",
"562\n",
"01:15:37.850 --> 01:15:40.510\n",
"Patrick Muinda: It it puts me back on track.\n",
"\n",
"563\n",
"01:15:40.990 --> 01:15:50.080\n",
"Patrick Muinda: In fact, I become humble and even repent and say, God forgive me for what I've been thinking and say, sometimes you just need to be reminded.\n",
"\n",
"564\n",
"01:15:51.410 --> 01:15:58.390\n",
"sarahkayongo: oh, yeah, that's so good, that is so good. But anyway, ask why?\n",
"\n",
"565\n",
"01:15:58.940 --> 01:16:01.760\n",
"Martin: You may ask where I brought this up, but\n",
"\n",
"566\n",
"01:16:01.850 --> 01:16:03.820\n",
"Martin: but it's upsetting. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"567\n",
"01:16:04.180 --> 01:16:11.950\n",
"Martin: I brought it up because it's upsetting it. It sometimes gets, and we are always going round and round and round and round.\n",
"\n",
"568\n",
"01:16:12.190 --> 01:16:14.230\n",
"Martin: Yes.\n",
"\n",
"569\n",
"01:16:14.420 --> 01:16:25.640\n",
"Martin: IIII told Kadi that when the dead is went to the village for some time. It was like I got a bit of a breath as like, Oh, you know it can't drain you. You get to have your 4, 5 days.\n",
"\n",
"570\n",
"01:16:36.310 --> 01:16:48.010\n",
"sarahkayongo: because I would sit there and moan about this and complain.\n",
"\n",
"571\n",
"01:16:48.100 --> 01:16:58.220\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah, III see that unfortunately, I see where this is coming from. I told you months ago.\n",
"\n",
"572\n",
"01:16:58.650 --> 01:16:59.490\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Oh.\n",
"\n",
"573\n",
"01:17:00.570 --> 01:17:07.440\n",
"Martin: yeah, so that is not mine peculiar to me. It affects me quite a bit, but I think it's a prayer for all of us.\n",
"\n",
"574\n",
"01:17:07.620 --> 01:17:10.610\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Just leave it under you. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"575\n",
"01:17:10.820 --> 01:17:17.590\n",
"Martin: Yeah. And finally, Brenda, let's keep praying for Brenda. You know she's so far away.\n",
"\n",
"576\n",
"01:17:18.150 --> 01:17:26.260\n",
"Martin: But at first, the first time I arrived in Sierra Leone. Just the sheer trouble that it's like a whole day's\n",
"\n",
"577\n",
"01:17:26.370 --> 01:17:39.630\n",
"Martin: trouble is like, really. What what the hell are you doing? Is this really what life is about that someone goes halfway across the world. But Brenda is enjoying her work. She's coming into her own.\n",
"\n",
"578\n",
"01:17:39.950 --> 01:17:46.569\n",
"Martin: This is a much more senior position. She's the chief of nutrition. There\n",
"\n",
"579\n",
"01:17:46.590 --> 01:17:50.219\n",
"Martin: we are. We are praying for a breakthrough for how to get.\n",
"\n",
"580\n",
"01:17:50.890 --> 01:17:56.830\n",
"Martin: You know Cyril Leone is an unfamiliar duty station, so she can start applying after a Yah!\n",
"\n",
"581\n",
"01:17:57.160 --> 01:17:58.610\n",
"Martin: We're not the\n",
"\n",
"582\n",
"01:17:58.800 --> 01:18:05.060\n",
"Martin: for another posting. So we are. We will be coming to a yeah in July next year.\n",
"\n",
"583\n",
"01:18:05.570 --> 01:18:15.600\n",
"Martin: So from then she can start applying. So let's just keep that at the back of our mind. She really really has a prayer to\n",
"\n",
"584\n",
"01:18:15.830 --> 01:18:18.689\n",
"Martin: be able to move to to Nairobi.\n",
"\n",
"585\n",
"01:18:19.240 --> 01:18:25.519\n",
"Martin: where she she she really feels she's not been able, and I agree with her being able to be there with the girls\n",
"\n",
"586\n",
"01:18:25.760 --> 01:18:31.469\n",
"Martin: as much unengaged, mother. So let's put that request for\n",
"\n",
"587\n",
"01:18:32.040 --> 01:18:41.610\n",
"Martin: being closer for me. and when you're in Nairobi. You're in Kampala for all intents and purposes you're 45ย min away. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"588\n",
"01:18:43.540 --> 01:18:46.440\n",
"Martin: Kali, that's it from me.\n",
"\n",
"589\n",
"01:18:46.600 --> 01:18:48.570\n",
"Patrick Muinda: The hmm.\n",
"\n",
"590\n",
"01:18:48.620 --> 01:18:52.210\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah. A a few us here last time. Yeah. So\n",
"\n",
"591\n",
"01:18:53.570 --> 01:19:05.510\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah, as giving thanks for my summer. There's a very summer, the the last 2 months, 2 and a half months or so where II literally did nothing else.\n",
"\n",
"592\n",
"01:19:05.780 --> 01:19:11.420\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But it must myself in a while, which is 100% new to me using AI\n",
"\n",
"593\n",
"01:19:12.090 --> 01:19:19.529\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know, so that that that is very exciting new tools. And\n",
"\n",
"594\n",
"01:19:19.870 --> 01:19:25.599\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I want to, I'm I'm going to be using them. I've created a platform that allows me to collaborate\n",
"\n",
"595\n",
"01:19:25.830 --> 01:19:30.059\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: more smoothly with students, colleagues.\n",
"\n",
"596\n",
"01:19:30.260 --> 01:19:31.450\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: peers\n",
"\n",
"597\n",
"01:19:31.720 --> 01:19:36.790\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and you know, a anyone interacting with me in any capacity\n",
"\n",
"598\n",
"01:19:36.870 --> 01:19:39.090\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: now goes through a system\n",
"\n",
"599\n",
"01:19:39.840 --> 01:19:46.789\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: platform that it created. Yeah. So very excited about that, because it allows me to\n",
"\n",
"600\n",
"01:19:46.980 --> 01:19:49.220\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: to to do much more\n",
"\n",
"601\n",
"01:19:49.380 --> 01:19:51.459\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: than I would do as an individual\n",
"\n",
"602\n",
"01:19:51.960 --> 01:19:54.529\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'll be able to do as an individual. So I'm grateful.\n",
"\n",
"603\n",
"01:19:55.570 --> 01:19:59.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: And you know, although they detain things as always.\n",
"\n",
"604\n",
"01:19:59.870 --> 01:20:04.490\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I I recently ordered new shoes.\n",
"\n",
"605\n",
"01:20:04.590 --> 01:20:13.340\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm an exercise, but at least I mean the process.\n",
"\n",
"606\n",
"01:20:13.420 --> 01:20:25.789\n",
"Martin: Oh, fixing this had you have these guys see those shoes? Sort of you see the shoes.\n",
"\n",
"607\n",
"01:20:25.900 --> 01:20:31.670\n",
"Martin: But but we need to mobilize money and and all the shoes.\n",
"\n",
"608\n",
"01:20:31.710 --> 01:20:39.050\n",
"Martin: Bokadiep, bring them! Trust me, you wear these trainers. Your knees will never feel a thing you just bounce on air.\n",
"\n",
"609\n",
"01:20:39.060 --> 01:20:45.070\n",
"sarahkayongo: Oh, you mean the\n",
"\n",
"610\n",
"01:20:45.070 --> 01:21:09.969\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: the prices are down that come down the 300 in 2021 this time, which is 1 50. So that's a huge difference. Yeah, I'm going to place an order the moment I can. And you please come with them. Oh, yeah, you just need to clarify, you know the virtual last time. I don't remember if the size was fine, I think the 11 and a half is all\n",
"\n",
"611\n",
"01:21:09.970 --> 01:21:10.530\n",
"okay.\n",
"\n",
"612\n",
"01:21:10.720 --> 01:21:12.550\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Can you confirm and say his advice.\n",
"\n",
"613\n",
"01:21:12.900 --> 01:21:20.550\n",
"Martin: But it was 11, and I think for me, I am 12. I just\n",
"\n",
"614\n",
"01:21:20.650 --> 01:21:22.569\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yeah. 12 is safe for running\n",
"\n",
"615\n",
"01:21:22.820 --> 01:21:43.989\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: women shoes.\n",
"\n",
"616\n",
"01:21:55.670 --> 01:22:02.670\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Uk.\n",
"\n",
"617\n",
"01:22:03.170 --> 01:22:11.400\n",
"sarahkayongo: are you guys different? What you mentioned sounds like mommy size, that kind of size.\n",
"\n",
"618\n",
"01:22:11.920 --> 01:22:33.200\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I know me. I think even Brenda will need.\n",
"\n",
"619\n",
"01:22:33.220 --> 01:23:03.179\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yep. So you. You may not just come in with your rocks.\n",
"\n",
"620\n",
"01:23:03.180 --> 01:23:11.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: So yeah. So I began hopefully, my final year, the Phd fourth year\n",
"\n",
"621\n",
"01:23:11.280 --> 01:23:18.000\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I only Phd. Requirements is the only thing sorry, not Phd requirements, only thesis\n",
"\n",
"622\n",
"01:23:18.090 --> 01:23:21.779\n",
"sarahkayongo: is what I'm supposed to be focused on. DC.\n",
"\n",
"623\n",
"01:23:22.260 --> 01:23:51.389\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I haven't done anything yet.\n",
"\n",
"624\n",
"01:23:51.470 --> 01:23:58.500\n",
"sarahkayongo: So it should be easy. But you know,\n",
"\n",
"625\n",
"01:23:58.890 --> 01:24:02.950\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I do not have all the data with me paid\n",
"\n",
"626\n",
"01:24:03.040 --> 01:24:18.849\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: surface some data, and I just need to schedule time to access those data and all that stuff. But the main thing I've been doing is my latest hire is laying down some automating set of processes for me that will make this a breeze\n",
"\n",
"627\n",
"01:24:19.070 --> 01:24:27.519\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: laid down. I should move at very high speed. So let's pray that that happens sooner.\n",
"\n",
"628\n",
"01:24:27.550 --> 01:24:30.940\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and data, and then in the process of\n",
"\n",
"629\n",
"01:24:31.600 --> 01:24:39.379\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Pi think, prayed about it, but I didn't. I didn't write it down, but he prayed about it. My grants. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"630\n",
"01:24:39.400 --> 01:24:43.199\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I need. I did. I need. I need grants. The more grants I have.\n",
"\n",
"631\n",
"01:24:43.210 --> 01:25:10.239\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: The more jay I took about that percent. Yes, that applies everywhere, so I should call it protected time protected from seeing patients so protected from academic. The more money you have, the the more free. I do. Whatever is your beating\n",
"\n",
"632\n",
"01:25:10.270 --> 01:25:12.899\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so so grunt.\n",
"\n",
"633\n",
"01:25:13.110 --> 01:25:22.940\n",
"sarahkayongo: I wanted to submit October, but I've not been able to. So next cycle is February.\n",
"\n",
"634\n",
"01:25:22.970 --> 01:25:27.029\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and so I pray that putting this together, that's a lot of work.\n",
"\n",
"635\n",
"01:25:27.380 --> 01:25:44.490\n",
"Martin: And and I just, I need to. I need to select collaborators and investigators. But, Kadi Khadi, you have because that means you have essentially October, November, and\n",
"\n",
"636\n",
"01:25:44.710 --> 01:25:55.349\n",
"Martin: that's pretty much it\n",
"\n",
"637\n",
"01:25:55.640 --> 01:26:06.500\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: so II don't feel anything in my hip since the last.\n",
"\n",
"638\n",
"01:26:06.550 --> 01:26:20.520\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: yes, symptom\n",
"\n",
"639\n",
"01:26:21.730 --> 01:26:29.660\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: clearing my sinuses but II will consider seeing an ent session\n",
"\n",
"640\n",
"01:26:30.530 --> 01:26:34.000\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: in the next month, or based on\n",
"\n",
"641\n",
"01:26:34.200 --> 01:26:41.730\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: how I I'll be doing by then, but I feel much better. I can smell. I couldn't smell. I couldn't smell food.\n",
"\n",
"642\n",
"01:26:41.920 --> 01:26:43.820\n",
"Martin: I can see. Well.\n",
"\n",
"643\n",
"01:26:43.880 --> 01:26:46.329\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: but now I can smell. I can smell the air\n",
"\n",
"644\n",
"01:26:46.450 --> 01:26:48.890\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: and breathe better. So.\n",
"\n",
"645\n",
"01:26:49.230 --> 01:26:58.830\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: This is the platform that is describing. So this this growth hasn't yet started because I haven't did expose people to it. I've just been building it.\n",
"\n",
"646\n",
"01:26:59.380 --> 01:27:03.130\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: But it's a platform through which people will be interacting with me.\n",
"\n",
"647\n",
"01:27:03.470 --> 01:27:08.350\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Yeah. So so, yeah, so, so this is my press. So just give me one\n",
"\n",
"648\n",
"01:27:08.420 --> 01:27:11.020\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: minute to\n",
"\n",
"649\n",
"01:27:12.190 --> 01:27:12.890\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: oh.\n",
"\n",
"650\n",
"01:27:13.090 --> 01:27:16.520\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: you know, I mean it just to\n",
"\n",
"651\n",
"01:27:17.370 --> 01:27:22.989\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: transfer this cause. There's no freighting to transfer this year. I can copy and paste\n",
"\n",
"652\n",
"01:27:24.020 --> 01:27:25.700\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: a few things here.\n",
"\n",
"653\n",
"01:27:28.170 --> 01:27:40.140\n",
"Martin: The Ministry of Education of Australia has formally introduced AI as a core tool that has to be used right from the get-go\n",
"\n",
"654\n",
"01:27:40.220 --> 01:27:43.669\n",
"Martin: in instruction. There was a lot of pushback from\n",
"\n",
"655\n",
"01:27:43.820 --> 01:27:56.900\n",
"Martin: parents and all that, but II just had the the, the press Conference of the Minister for Education, saying, no. You remember how we were against the calculator being handed to kids.\n",
"\n",
"656\n",
"01:27:57.600 --> 01:28:03.250\n",
"sarahkayongo: That's practical. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"657\n",
"01:28:03.300 --> 01:28:14.710\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: most natural reaction across the world. AI has been in education wilders to to, to to ban it by gradually. Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"658\n",
"01:28:14.840 --> 01:28:28.999\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Evolving moving away from that. And for me. My, I got exposed to AI through a data science class. So II don't understand when people are regulations and risks cause for me. I've been using it to develop apps.\n",
"\n",
"659\n",
"01:28:29.150 --> 01:28:41.880\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I'm like, what? So so when you're using Sunday for engineering, you roll your eyes at other people's consignments.\n",
"\n",
"660\n",
"01:28:42.350 --> 01:28:43.400\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: A\n",
"\n",
"661\n",
"01:28:43.820 --> 01:28:45.090\n",
"actually\n",
"\n",
"662\n",
"01:28:45.660 --> 01:28:48.009\n",
"Martin: that thing data sciences.\n",
"\n",
"663\n",
"01:28:48.330 --> 01:28:58.890\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I know. Patty got Chat Gbt. To write Martin a letter convincing him to pursue a career in data science brilliant.\n",
"\n",
"664\n",
"01:28:59.650 --> 01:29:07.329\n",
"Martin: He just spoke audio audio. To the mic is delivered that audio very\n",
"\n",
"665\n",
"01:29:07.370 --> 01:29:16.569\n",
"Martin: converted, but it was a brilliant, brilliant analysis, and us like, now look at this. This is not even funny.\n",
"\n",
"666\n",
"01:29:16.900 --> 01:29:31.429\n",
"sarahkayongo: No, I don't.\n",
"\n",
"667\n",
"01:29:31.670 --> 01:29:34.619\n",
"Martin: I do for a while. My post, yeah.\n",
"\n",
"668\n",
"01:29:35.380 --> 01:29:42.609\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then when she saw it, she's like fantastic. This is good. In fact, your let's put you on the Ukraine.\n",
"\n",
"669\n",
"01:29:42.840 --> 01:29:45.139\n",
"sarahkayongo: Well, the Ukraine project.\n",
"\n",
"670\n",
"01:29:45.930 --> 01:29:55.980\n",
"sarahkayongo: It was more of a speculation.\n",
"\n",
"671\n",
"01:29:56.330 --> 01:30:00.119\n",
"Patrick Muinda: One thing I see\n",
"\n",
"672\n",
"01:30:00.520 --> 01:30:03.640\n",
"Patrick Muinda: is that you need to know how to ask the right question.\n",
"\n",
"673\n",
"01:30:03.690 --> 01:30:07.180\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah. Oh, the media to ask the right question. Detail.\n",
"\n",
"674\n",
"01:30:07.350 --> 01:30:09.590\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Yeah, yes. Yes.\n",
"\n",
"675\n",
"01:30:09.860 --> 01:30:17.520\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Well, once once you're able to ask the right thing in the right intensity and detail. I tell you it will work for you.\n",
"\n",
"676\n",
"01:30:17.590 --> 01:30:21.780\n",
"Patrick Muinda: but someone who doesn't know how to do that will find it a very boring tool.\n",
"\n",
"677\n",
"01:30:22.320 --> 01:30:32.540\n",
"sarahkayongo: Now, in in research, even, you're talking now like a research at the right research question. Everything.\n",
"\n",
"678\n",
"01:30:33.250 --> 01:30:34.160\n",
"sarahkayongo: Yeah.\n",
"\n",
"679\n",
"01:30:34.270 --> 01:30:35.720\n",
"Martin: very, very true.\n",
"\n",
"680\n",
"01:30:35.750 --> 01:30:37.330\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: Alright. So\n",
"\n",
"681\n",
"01:30:37.650 --> 01:30:42.590\n",
"Abimereki Muzaale: I think I've finished posting here. It's it's going to take about 30ย s to load.\n",
"\n",
"682\n",
"01:30:42.840 --> 01:30:47.470\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I wanted to understand from you\n",
"\n",
"683\n",
"01:30:47.650 --> 01:31:01.139\n",
"Patrick Muinda: why is ending the Phd. Tougher than starting it, cause II want to finish. But everything seems to be there. There's nothing I don't have.\n",
"\n",
"684\n",
"01:31:01.300 --> 01:31:09.680\n",
"Martin: I'm trying to finish, and since slowing down like landing on aircraft is just. Yeah. Landing is harder than take off.\n",
"\n",
"685\n",
"01:31:10.250 --> 01:31:18.730\n",
"sarahkayongo: anyway. Now you have to assemble all these things, and you you'll even have to forget where you started.\n",
"\n",
"686\n",
"01:31:18.740 --> 01:31:28.460\n",
"sarahkayongo: We? Okay? Oh, yeah, that has changed a lot has changed exactly. It seems like you did it long time ago.\n",
"\n",
"687\n",
"01:31:28.760 --> 01:31:36.729\n",
"sarahkayongo: And then here volume of data you have to go through to now. Begin writing.\n",
"\n",
"688\n",
"01:31:38.150 --> 01:31:44.910\n",
"sarahkayongo: III don't remember. Sorry you know what I've completed writing.\n",
"\n",
"689\n",
"01:31:45.060 --> 01:31:49.549\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I've finished writing. But now putting it all together.\n",
"\n",
"690\n",
"01:31:49.570 --> 01:31:56.460\n",
"sarahkayongo: No, no, putting it together in the form that is a real, that is a synthesis. Now\n",
"\n",
"691\n",
"01:31:56.720 --> 01:32:02.059\n",
"Martin: you have data points, information of the writing which sections\n",
"\n",
"692\n",
"01:32:03.070 --> 01:32:14.200\n",
"Patrick Muinda: I have finished my my chapter. One introduction through Literature Review. I've done methodology. I've written my findings. I'm now in discussion of findings.\n",
"\n",
"693\n",
"01:32:15.680 --> 01:32:19.179\n",
"sarahkayongo: You. Okay, yeah, wait. Wait.\n",
"\n",
"694\n",
"01:32:19.600 --> 01:32:30.200\n",
"Martin: You did your data analysis already. Yes, I'm done. And the results are so exciting. I'm going to share with you.\n",
"\n",
"695\n",
"01:32:43.420 --> 01:32:47.109\n",
"sarahkayongo: I'm through like a a\n",
"\n",
"696\n",
"01:32:47.930 --> 01:32:50.070\n",
"Patrick Muinda: Hi, I'm good enough.\n",
"\n",
"697\n",
"01:32:50.630 --> 01:33:17.409\n",
"sarahkayongo: I'm I'm through the data analysis, both qualitative and quantitative, using thematic analysis for the qualitative. I use the structure equation.\n",
"\n",
"698\n",
"01:33:18.400 --> 01:33:21.039\n",
"sarahkayongo: III don't even.\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"```\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"##### S \n",
"+ `Gen 16:13`. \n",
" - Hagar. The God who sees me. \n",
" - Provided for her and son (Ishmael) in the desert \n",
" - She was a slave, but God saw her.\n",
" - Qatar, Emirates, Saudi Arabia, etc.\n",
" - Her children will be prosperous\n",
" - In context of P sharing about challenges at work with hostile PS\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"1. Student debt\n",
" - Will be paying $45/month in load renogotiation\n",
"\n",
"2. Interviews\n",
" - Jobs that I was told about: pray for me\n",
"\n",
"3. Financial breakthrough\n",
" - For retirement\n",
" - Supporting kids\n",
"\n",
"4. Work\n",
" - Grateful that I'm in the green zone (can do other things)\n",
"\n",
"##### P\n",
"+ Striking a balance between good governance and politics (PS)\n",
"+ How to deal with a hostile PS (Spiritual warfare; `Eph 6:12`)\n",
" - CEO is level 1: PS (is the hostile one)\n",
" - Under secretary is level 2 and immediate boss (values my work)\n",
" - I'm level 3\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"1. Much clearer directions for PhD thesis after feedback from supervisor\n",
"2. Thankful to God for the conversations we started the meeting with (i.e., governance & politics)\n",
" - Clarifies some things: I'm not personalizing this; others are also facing the same challenges\n",
"3. PSC will be announcing the breakthrough regarding my pay (erroneously cut by 75%) by our next meeting\n",
"4. Dodo US visa interview: we pray for a 2yr visa\n",
"5. Postnasal drip: pray for treatment and healing\n",
"6. Thankful that all fees were paid: no debt!\n",
"7. And prayers for Nicole's new school search: technical school\n",
"\n",
"##### J\n",
"+ D and I have received feedback at work about how critical we are\n",
" - P, maybe some self-reflection may be needed in case you are also very critical\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"1. Thanksgiving \n",
" - Bria returned to school for A-levels (MEL Sociology)\n",
" - Gaby is gifted but doesn't show enthusiasm: says she has ADHD (pray that this is not the case and its generational issue); pray for her to return to her roots and be authentic and filter influences\n",
"\n",
"2. Work\n",
" - As a foreign service national, agency initiatives now empower some one like me to be a leader\n",
" - Some positions will be coming up (deputy programs director is the one I'm interested in and pray for)\n",
"\n",
"3. Daddy\n",
" - Pray that daddy finds peace: he's truly blessed\n",
" - Trajectory of his career (PSC chair in late 50s & then for 16 years) \n",
" - We are close to that age right now and appreciate what an accomplishment that was!\n",
" - Upsetting to me and pray for him to find peace and for me to feel less stressed about it\n",
"\n",
"4. Brenda\n",
" - Enjoying her work and is now Chief of Nutrition. Thankful\n",
" - She can apply to another posting in a year. So lets pray for that (Nairobi is her ideal posting)\n",
" - Nairobi is closer to the girls\n",
"\n",
"##### D\n",
"1. Thankful for healing process for my left hip injury and swimmers sinusitis\n",
"2. Pray for return to exercize and swimming (have shopped clothes and shoes)\n",
"3. My PhD thesis and grants are #1 priority and urgent\n",
"\n",
"---\n",
"\n",
"### 12/03/2023 \n",
"#### Session 11\n",
"##### S\n",
"- Grateful for fruitful trip to Nairobi\n",
"- Had chance to go home and visit family\n",
"- Request For Proposals (Ethiopia one)\n",
" - Pray for guidance\n",
" - I'm technical lead and need to lead a winning proposal\n",
" - Will plan to stay here for the holiday\n",
" - Thankful for Kevin and his progress with work\n",
" - His prayer is to do GMATs and will need funds for study software\n",
" - Lauren is enjoying her gap-year and will need guidance and leanon God for this\n",
" - Also thankful for good health this year and want to finish the year on this note\n",
" - Mummy and daddy fascilitated my processing of the national ID\n",
" \n",
"##### P\n",
"- Successful conclusion of PhD thesis and specific publications under this\n",
"- Continue to pray for Gods direction with Nicole; she's now 18yo and we need to know what to do\n",
"- We should also continue praying for my pay; documents are on the ICT PSs desk\n",
" - The one who signed my letter for transfer at beginning of PhD\n",
" - Praying she forwards this to PSC\n",
" - She's previously been warned for tampering with people's salaries\n",
" - As communication person was wrongly classified as \"communication\" instead of ICT\n",
" - Praying the lord intervenes soon; key for paying school fees\n",
" - Thankful for Dodos support from her pay and Kabale placement\n",
" - Also for career progress to be less ambiguous\n",
" - Committment of career into God's hands\n",
" - Assistant commissioner is highest I can achieve if not in mother ministry (i.e., ICT)\n",
" - D has completed his S6 and we are thankful to God\n",
" - He wants to go to Strathmore University in Nairobi\n",
" - Believe in God for finances\n",
" - What he wants to study here is not available in Uganda (Data Science)\n",
" - Martin has been promoted to S2 and we are thankful to God for this\n",
" - Lisa is going to boarding school; she did well and got a 4 in her mock\n",
" - We pray that she adapts to this change\n",
" \n",
"##### J\n",
"- Grateful for completing contract review process\n",
"- Attempted coup in Sierra Leone, but Brenda is safe\n",
"- Family returns this Friday and will be around for four weeks\n",
"- I'm in fairly good health, exercizing regularly\n",
"\n",
"\n",
"##### D\n",
"- Thankful to God for the healing process of my left hip & swimmers sinusitis\n",
" - Its a process and I'm grateful that I'm back to 9 mile walks (not runs)\n",
" - Also back to swimming having found temporary relief swimmers sinusitis\n",
" - Thankful to God for providing outfit and shoes to facilitate my return\n",
" - Thankful for being on track with my PhD thesis\n",
" - Dec 21st thesis committee meeting (required by school); pray that I have aim 1 data and analysis complete by then\n",
" - Pray that I remain on course to complete by May 2024\n",
" - Pray that I complete the final year of my \"Career Development\" grant and complete its aims - K08\n",
" - The three aims of my grant are identical to the aims for my thesis\n",
" - And the PhD has been the \"career development\" component\n",
" - Thankful for successful submission of RPPR (research performance progress report on Nov 15)\n",
" - Grant applications for R03 & R21\n",
" - By Feb 15\n",
" - I pray for God to enable to spend time with family & friends this holiday\n",
" "
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