Gina Long
George Bradley, who is passionate about workplace wellbeing.
- Credit: Contributed
Framlingham-based George Bradley is director and co-founder of Three Eggs, a mental health and wellbeing solutions company for businesses looking to improve and support good mental health in the workplace. Now in another national lockdown, the effects of physical social distancing, social isolation and working from home are all taking their toll. With the negative mental health effects of the pandemic likely to last much longer, caring for our mental health has never been more important.
What’s been the impact of Covid-19 and how have you adapted?
Política Al Margen/Jaime Arizmendi
quadratin.com.mx - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from quadratin.com.mx Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Ето кой изпрати Филип Трифонов
standartnews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from standartnews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By Anthony Pires on 2020-12-18 23:50:00
Finally, the Best Wrestling on the Planet returns to PPV and not a moment too soon.
2020 has been an absolutely crazy year with all the big boys drastically revamping the way they conduct business. Ring of Honor, to their credit, began the Pandemic Era with great TV shows highlighting their stars in some of their all time greatest matches and moments. Then they slowly returned to TV with the amazing Pure Rules Tournament, crowning Jonathan Gresham as its newest champion of the revitalized division.
Tonight, the slow burn ends as Ring of Honor presents Final Battle, its first (and last PPV) of 2020. I give this company so much credit and praise for how they ve handled the oddity that has been 2020. Their wrestlers were paid, their Honor Club Subscribers were extended and they hit the sweet spot as far as empty arena TV shows (also have to give some love to Dave Marquez presentation of the UWN.
True West Magazine
The Sioux chief Sitting Bull was arguably the greatest Indian chief of all the tribes in the American West in the 19th century. In the decades since his death, his name has become known to most Americans and treasured by many as the supreme embodiment of Sioux values. He lived from 1831 to 1890. – D.F. Barry, Courtesy Library of Congress –
The Sioux Leader’s Final Flight to Freedom
Sunday, June 25, 1876, was a clear, hot, sunny day in the valley of Montana’s Greasy Grass River, which the white man’s maps labeled the Little Bighorn. Six tribal circles of Lakotas and one of Northern Cheyennes, the coalition of winter roamers, sprawled for nearly three miles down the narrow valley, rimmed on the east by the snow-fed river. The Hunkpapas occupied the extreme upper end of the village, the Cheyennes the lower. In between rose the lodges of Blackfeet, Miniconjou, Sans Arc, Oglala and Brule. It was an unusually large village: 7,000 people, 2,000 warriors, hous