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My Brain Made Me Do It: How much control do we really have? | The Nature of Things - Duration: 44:19.

This is the Nature of Things.

(♪♪)

It was beyond my control when I started thinking

I wish someone would stop me.

I wasn't in control.

I definitely didn't feel in control of myself.

(♪♪)

Narrator: What causes some peoples' behaviour to suddenly

change and others to commit horrible crimes?

(siren) (gunshots)

He just started murdering at random and he killed

pedestrians, he killed the people who came to help them.

Narrator: Neuroscientists are making new discoveries about

the workings of the human brain and criminal behaviour.

When things change even a little bit due to brain damage,

or coffee, or drugs, or anything like that,

who you are and how you decide, all of these things change.

Narrator: And they're finding answers to the question..

' What made them do it? '

People have said my brain made me do it,

but I think neuroscientifically that's always true,

it's always my brain that makes me do it.

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

When faced with grim acts of violence,

we shake our heads and ask who would do this?

Now, neuroscientists are pointing to the powerful

influence of brain biology on criminal behaviour.

So when a brutal crime is committed,

who is ultimately to blame, the perpetrator or their brain?

(♪♪)

Narrator: Austin, Texas, the clock tower that overlooks

the University of Texas campus,

looks much the same as it did in the summer of 1966.

(♪♪)

That year, student and former Marine, Charles Whitman...

(ding)

...made his way to the top of the tower,

took out a rifle and began firing on the people below.

(siren) (gunshot)

(siren)

Newsreel: Student Charles Whitman goes berserk.

He had with him a whole bag full of weapons,

and he just started murdering at random.

He killed pedestrians.

He killed the people who came to help them.

He killed the ambulance drivers who came to help them.

(gunshot)

Narrator: In all, he killed 16 people

and wounded over 30 others.

It's been said that on that day Charles Whitman introduced

America to the idea of mass murder in public spaces.

(siren)

The Austin police finally made it to the top of the tower

and they were able to kill him,

and the first thing they wanted to know was who is this?

What just happened here?

Newsreel: I don't feel like that I know the Charles Whitman

that they found up on university tower,

and the one that I knew was kind and generally good.

(♪♪)

Narrator: Police later discovered that in the hours

leading up to the shootings, Whitman had killed his mother,

and stabbed his wife to death while she slept.

(♪♪)

There was nothing about Charles Whitman that would ever flag,

oh, this is a guy who is about to go do that.

But in his diary, there was a very clear progression that had

been happening where he felt that he'd been the victim of

angry and aggressive thoughts that he couldn't control

increasingly, and he didn't know why.

In the suicide note that he wrote the night before

the shooting, he said, "When this is all over,

I want an autopsy to be performed to see if something

is wrong with my brain."

Newsreel: I've just been informed that the autopsy shows

that Mr. Whitman had a brain tumour.

It was about the size of a nickel and it had been growing

over the previous year, and it was pressing on a particular

part of his brain called the amygdala,

which is involved in fear and aggression.

Did it have something to do with what Charles Whitman did?

Almost certainly it did.

(♪♪)

The brain is the headquarters where your

cognition, your emotion, the way you behave and decide and act,

all that's happening in the brain.

When there's damage to the brain,

that changes how you behave in the world,

how you see the world, how you proceed, how you act.

(♪♪)

Narrator: Jeffrey Burns and Russell Swerdlow

investigated a comparable case in the year 2000.

(♪♪)

While neurologists at the University of Virginia Hospital,

they met a remarkable patient we'll call Michael.

He was a normal guy, you know, had a job and a wife,

and was living a normal life.

(♪♪)

It looked like he was beginning to hoard pornography,

including child pornography.

(♪♪)

Things evolved to the point that there were

improprieties with approaches to the stepdaughter.

(♪♪)

He was arrested and that led to a conviction.

Narrator: The night before his prison sentence was to start,

Michael complained of headaches, so he went to an emergency ward

where the nurses noticed some disturbing behaviour.

Russell: He remarked to a nurse that if I go home I will

either kill myself, or I will rape my landlady,

so they admitted him to the psychiatry service

for that night.

Narrator: That's where Swerdlow and Burns ran a battery

of tests on Michael.

During the exam, he was attempting to flirt with female

members of the medial team, which I thought was very unusual

for someone who is, who is about to go to prison.

Narrator: Swerdlow suspected neurological damage,

so he ordered a brain scan.

What it revealed was a massive tumour.

You can see the tumour growing off the skull base here.

These are the back of the eye sockets.

This is the right side, this is the left side,

and you can see now the tumour in stark relief extending up

through the frontal lobe mostly on the right,

really displacing where the normal orbital frontal cortex

would be, here is the cyst part of it.

You can see here the left side of the brain being pushed over

towards the left side of the skull because of the bulk

of the tumour.

We knew right away that this, this lesion,

this damage to the brain was responsible for his behaviour.

Is this a pedophilia centre of the brain?

No, but it is an area that leads to the inability to

inhibit urges and inhibit, you know, desires and inhibit,

you know, bad choices.

It was clear that putting this gentleman in prison wasn't going

to cure his inability to conform within the norms of society.

What he needed to conform within the norms of society was to have

his tumour removed.

Narrator: After surgeons removed or resected the tumour,

Michael's pedophilia and other strange

sexual behaviour disappeared.

He didn't go to jail, but spent time in a rehabilitation

program, and his wife took him back.

The story has an interesting postscript because what

happened is six months later he started developing

an interest in pedophilia again,

so his wife took him back to the doctors.

It turns out the surgeons had missed a little piece

of the tumour, which was now re-growing,

so they resected it a second time and

his sexual behaviour returned to normal a second time.

Narrator: It turns out that Michael's tumour affected a lot

more than impulse control.

When his overall brain function was tested,

the results were shocking.

I had him copy this picture here,

and this is what he came up with.

And we had him copy this picture here,

and this is what he was able to produce.

This is before the tumour was resected.

And I asked him to draw a clock and then to put the arms

of the clock in so that the time said 20 minutes after 8,

and this is what he, he generated, so not very good.

I asked him to write a sentence and this is what he wrote.

It's virtually illegible.

Now after the tumour was resected,

I had him do the same tasks,

and this you can see here that there was dramatic change.

And when he was asked to write a sentence again,

he now wrote this, I am happy that my tumour was removed.

Quite a big change.

And putting him in prison wasn't going to fix this.

(♪♪)

Narrator: Cases like this raise serious questions about

the role brain abnormalities can play in criminal behaviour.

David Eagleman is a neuroscientist and the head of

the Centre for Science and Law in Houston, Texas.

(♪♪)

So, what do we do with somebody who gets a tumour and

becomes a pedophile, and when the tumour is removed

he's no longer a pedophile?

Situations like that really complexify our notions

of culpability.

And we can imagine cases where people are killed,

and then there's a tumour removed and the person is

no longer the person he was when he committed the murder,

and we haven't faced that case yet in courts,

but it's coming soon, and in part we know that because

brain imaging has become prevalent now.

Narrator: Brain imaging has made it possible for neuroscientists

to study the criminal mind in greater detail than ever before.

(♪♪)

In Albuquerque, New Mexico,

the Director of Science at the Mind Research Network,

Kent Kiehl, studies the brains of psychopaths.

He's interested in why they commit a disproportionate amount

of violent and criminal acts.

Psychopathy has been generally associated without conscience.

The traits are synonymous with somebody having no guilt

or remorse or empathy for what they've done.

(♪♪)

Narrator: Kiehl used magnetic resonance imaging

or MRI machines to examine the brains of hundreds of

psychopaths serving time in prison.

He's created the largest database in the world.

He's made some startling discoveries.

Psychopaths' brains are very different from non-psychopathic

or healthy brains.

The brain is like a muscle.

So, they basically have less muscle mass in those emotional

regions of the brain.

(♪♪)

And we believe that contributes to the symptoms

related to psychopathic traits, lack of empathy,

inability to experience remorse or guilt,

in grey matter in the thinking areas of the brain.

In individuals with psychopathy we find that these green areas

are showing a reduction in grey matter density,

and so it's essentially like come out of the womb with not

the same amount of tissue there, not the same amount of working

matter there as, as the rest of us,

and so this contributes to the development of those symptoms.

We've also found that some of the tissues that connect the

temporal lobe and the frontal lobe together are reduced,

the wiring is thinner, which would suggest less connectivity

between those regions, and that's, you know,

a very important finding because it's believed to be, you know,

very much a brain wiring issue,

so that might be something they're born with.

This is just three different planes,

and so this is the front of the brain here, these are the eyes,

right here, this is the orbital frontal cortex,

and here are the two amygdala.

So, it's these two structures and the connections between them

that we have found are abnormal in individuals with psychopathy.

Narrator: To test the implications of those findings,

Kiehl is now using MRI to study how psychopathic brains react

to different visual stimuli.

Do they use emotional information, for example, the

same way when you make a moral decision as other people do?

Narrator: In one experiment, Kiehl flashes images that would

trigger a strong emotional response in most people.

In the vast 95% of us, 99% of us,

when you process these emotional pictures you get a big emotional

response in the brain, this limbic circuitry goes off.

But in psychopaths it's just, like, dark.

The feeling that comes along with it doesn't happen,

so they have this kind of disconnection between emotion

and decision-making.

(♪♪)

Narrator: So, what about the rest of us?

Do we control our brains, or do our brains control us,

and what's neuroscience telling us about how and why we make

the decisions we make?

We think that we know the reasons why we do what we do

and why we believe what we believe, but, in fact,

we have so little awareness of the vast machinery that

we're sitting on top of.

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

Narrator: Most of us believe that we're in conscious

control of all our actions and every decision our brain makes.

But David Eagleman says that's not the case.

Oh!

And one of the most stunning things about what we're seeing

in neuroscience is the degree to which who you are and how you

act and your beliefs, they're all driven by mechanisms running

under the hood to which we have no conscious access.

Narrator: It turns out that your brain makes most of your

decisions without your conscious awareness.

This is what's talked about is the unconscious brain.

In the 1960s, the psychologist Eckhard Hess ran an experiment

where he showed men pictures of women's faces,

and all they had to do was rate from 1 to 10 how attractive they

thought the woman was.

What the men didn't know was that half the photographs have

the same women but with their eyes dilated,

so their pupils were bigger.

And here's the thing; all the men thought that the women

with the dilated eyes were more attractive,

but none of them noticed this explicitly,

they didn't see that the pupil had a difference of a few

millimetres, and importantly presumably none of the men knew

that dilated eyes is a sign of sexual readiness in women,

but their brains knew it,

and that steered their decision-making.

And this is emblematic of all the ways that our decisions

get steered by signals that we're not even aware of,

things that cause us to act a certain way,

or to be attracted to certain things,

or be repulsed by certain things.

And we don't know why it's happening,

but really the function of the brain is to gather information

from the world and steer your behaviour appropriately,

and that's it.

You, the conscious you, doesn't have to be aware of any of how

it's doing that.

Here's an example of something that becomes automatized.

You're driving and I want you to make a lane change

into your right lane.

What does that look like?

What do your hands actually do?

Most people will do this, they'll turn the wheel

to the right and then they'll come back to centre,

that's what they think a lane change looks like.

In fact, if you did that, what's that done is that just steered

your car and you've gone off the road into a storefront.

The way that you actually do a lane change is by going to the

right, back to centre, just as far to the left and back to

centre again, that's what a lane change looks like.

And people do it everyday, but if you quiz people on it,

you'll find they have no idea how they do it.

And the lesson here is that this is an analogy for essentially

everything that we do.

How we respond to the world, how we react,

the kind of people we are, why we do the things we do,

why we believe the kind of things we believe,

all of these are so deeply automatized that we don't even

know why we do them, we just think it's all true.

Narrator: Eagleman says we're not only consciously unaware

of what we do,

we're also unaware of the reality that surrounds us.

That is, until we stop and bring it to our attention.

(♪♪)

So when I walk out the front door,

I think that I'm in the world and there's people

and there's some activity out there,

but really I'm only seeing the spot where I'm walking.

It's only when I pay attention and ask questions that I see

more details, like I can attend to the sound of the fountain,

(water splashing) or this photographer,

or a girl reading a book,

or a couple laughing,

or somebody's shoes.

It's only when I ask myself the question of what am I

experiencing here that I pull those details into

my internal model and have an experience of them.

And this just is another illustration of how much

your brain is doing under the hood that's unconscious and

you're just walking through life imagining that you're seeing

everything, imagining that your reality is the correct reality,

but, in fact, everyone's got their own reality going on,

on the inside.

(♪♪)

By analogy, if I were to ask you what is the position

of your tongue in your mouth right now,

you can answer that question, it becomes part of your awareness

when I ask it, but it wasn't there before.

(♪♪)

Narrator: So, if our brains control our version

of reality and we're largely unaware of what our brains

are doing, the question remains, is it us,

or our brains that are making the choices?

That's what Patrick Haggard is trying to find out.

He's a Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience

in University College London.

He studies how we make decisions and whether or not we have

the freewill to control our actions.

I realize that we really understood very little about

the higher levels of how the brain controls our movements

and our actions.

How does the brain decide when to make an action,

when not to make a action?

How does the brain decide which action to make?

So, I began becoming interested really in how do you get

thoughts into actions?

Narrator: Haggard devised an experiment to see if our brains

are influenced to make a choice.

Hello, Aaron.

Hi.

Thanks for volunteering for this simple experiment where we're

interested in the basis of the sense of control,

the feeling of being in control of what happens.

Narrator: Haggard wires his subject up to electrodes

to monitor brain activity.

When the subject sees a left pointing arrow,

he presses the left button.

If he sees a right pointing arrow,

he presses the right button.

And when he sees a double arrow, he can choose either button,

but before the double-headed arrow,

another arrow is flashed on the screen.

It's so quick that the subject doesn't consciously see it.

Here we've slowed it down, so you can see the small arrow

called a "subliminal prime".

Played in real time, the subject doesn't see it,

but his unconscious brain does, and he is more likely to press

the button in the direction of that subliminal arrow.

We can introduce a bias, and we can encourage people

to "freely choose", in quote marks, to use their left hand

or their right hand on any particular trial.

So, you're feeling that you are freely deciding what to do and

controlling what happens is in some senses an illusion,

so that then raises the question of whether we control

our brains, or whether our brains control us.

(♪♪)

Narrator: To answer who is in control,

Haggard does another experiment where the subject presses

a button whenever she feels like it,

and she indicates when she made the decision to act.

The subject's brain waves reveal that there is a lot of neural

activity over a second before she actually presses a button.

So, what does this mean?

Well it means that the brain begins to prepare the action

long before you have the subjective experience that you

are about to make it.

It's your brain, which makes the decisions,

which controls the actions, which produces, if you like,

all of your individual repertoire as a behaving person.

(♪♪)

What I think we can conclude in the view of modern

neuroscience is that if we have freewill at all,

it is a very small player in the system, if it exists at all.

And that's because we know so much at this point about

unconscious decision-making, about the ways that our biology

influences us, about the way that we are totally dependent on

the integrity of our biology, and when things change even

a little bit due to brain damage, or a coffee, or drugs,

or anything like that, who you are and how you decide,

all of these things change, so we are our biologies.

Narrator: So, if freewill is largely an illusion and

our decisions are made by our unconscious brain,

why do some brains make good choices

and others make bad ones?

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

Narrator: In 2011, Sid Weidman was diagnosed with Parkinson's

disease and prescribed a drug for the tremors.

Within weeks, he was so obsessed with his computer

that he ignored everything else.

Eventually his obsession destroyed his family.

I wasn't paying attention to my son.

He'd see dad was just spending all his time on the computer and

not doing what he needs to do.

I had absolutely no switch that went off in my head that said,

okay, that's enough, it just was uncontrollable,

it was a runaway train.

Narrator: In much the same way,

Parkinson's patient Janice Horn became so obsessed with her

university courses that she sometimes did homework for

22 hours a day, she couldn't stop herself.

Everything in my brain was completely focussed on just

the one thing, everything else just got, got left behind.

Narrator: Terry Komadowski can sympathize.

After receiving a Parkinson's drug,

he began to gamble obsessively.

Casinos are a real big draw for me, like,

the feeling of winning and anticipation was so great it was

hard just to stay away, and it got to the point where my wife

had to come in and pull me out.

Narrator: What was causing their compulsive behaviour?

Upon closer inspection, what surfaced was that it was

the medications that they were on.

These medications raised the level of a chemical

known as a dopamine.

A problem in Parkinson's is that dopamine is too low,

but when you raise it, that helps with the motor symptoms,

but dopamine is also involved in the reward systems.

Narrator: With raised levels of dopamine in their brains,

some Parkinson's patients can no longer control

their impulses.

Most commonly this side effect shows up as

a gambling addiction.

Physicians are instructed if this happens to their patients,

just dial down the dosage.

Now when you look at somebody and you say, "Oh,

you're a compulsive gambler, why don't you just stop doing it?"

It's not so easy because their chemicals are dialled around

just a little bit and that totally changes their behaviour.

Narrator: Eagleman points out that drug addiction is similar.

Chemical messengers disrupt the way the brain processes

information causing uncontrollable craving

and decreased impulse control.

For almost all drugs addicts, they want to quit,

but they find themselves unable.

Why?

Because the drugs plug into these very ancient systems

in our brains, these reward systems,

and these drugs jump right onto there and tell the brain

essentially this is the best thing that's ever happened to

you, and those reward systems are in there to steer us towards

our next decisions.

Neuroscience offers a number of pathways to cure drug addiction,

to actually help people to get over the addiction, and that's,

I think, a prime area where instead of just putting people

in jail, neuroscience can come to the legal system

and say here's an alternative.

Narrator: Eagleman is experimenting with an

alternative treatment that he calls "the prefrontal workout".

A subject who is addicted to crack cocaine is placed in the

MRI machine and given real time feedback of his own brain waves.

The idea is if he can see the activity in his brain,

he can concentrate on reducing his craving for cocaine

and strengthen that part of the brain that controls

his impulses.

We show them pictures of crack cocaine,

and we ask them to go ahead and crave,

well that's easy for them to do, and that lights up particular

networks in their brain that are involved in that craving

and we can measure those.

Now we show them other pictures,

and we ask them to suppress that craving,

and that lights up a different set of networks that are

involved in suppression of impulses,

so we can measure the activity in those networks.

Now, as we show them more pictures of the crack cocaine

and the paraphernalia, we ask them to suppress their craving,

and what we do is we visually present to them what looks like

a speedometer that can move between craving and suppressing.

When their craving network is active it's all the way over

here, and when their suppressing network finally wins then it's

all the way over here.

And what they're training to do is figure out how

to move that needle.

You're strengthening up those connections between

the prefrontal cortex and these other areas that are involved

in the craving.

You're strengthening it up by practicing,

and so when your next out of the scanner and somebody offers you

crack cocaine, you still want it,

you still got those systems that really crave that,

but you at least have the cognitive tools now to be able

to tip the battle so that it goes the other way,

so that you can resist it.

Narrator: Eagleman says we have to consider the many biological

factors that can influence our brains and our behaviour.

He points to a simple genetic marker that some people possess

that is associated with a greater probability they will

commit a crime.

Consider this: If you are the carrier of a particular set of

genes, you are four times more likely to commit violent crime,

you're three times more likely to commit robbery,

five times more likely to commit aggravated assault,

you're eight times more likely to get arrested for murder,

and thirteen times more likely to be arrested

for sexual assault.

Almost everybody in prison is a carrier of these genes,

and over 98% of people on death row carry this set.

Now, we summarize this set of genes as the Y chromosome,

and if you are a carrier, we call you a male,

and this means that we can't assume that everybody is coming

to the table equally equipped in terms of their drives

and behaviours, genes matter.

The important part about the Y chromosome is that on average

males are more aggressive than females,

but it does not mean that if you look at any particular male

you're going to have a prediction that this person

is gonna end up on death row just because they're male,

same thing with any particular gene.

Why is that the case?

It's because life's very complicated,

and the genes are only a little piece of the story.

Narrator: Along with your genetic makeup,

the other piece of the story that strongly influences your

behaviour is the environment you grow up in.

(child's laugh)

Sometimes people have a debate about nature

versus nurture, and the fact is that's a completely dead

question in neuroscience because it's always both.

What happens is your environmental experiences work

with your genes, work with the constraints that you have to

shape you in a particular way.

Once you arrive in the world, you land into a certain family

of origin, in a certain neighbourhood,

in a certain culture, a certain time in history,

and all of these experiences shape what your brain becomes

in concert with the genetics that you happen to have.

And what this means is that brains go off in very different

developmental trajectories, so right from the beginning brains

are moving off and becoming very different from one another.

Narrator: So, if your genes and environment shape your brain and

behaviour, is it still your fault if you commit a crime?

Well, according to experimental psychologist Joshua Greene

of Harvard University, there's no simple answer.

Greene studies moral judgement.

He says neuroscience is redefining the whole idea

of responsibility and how the legal system deals with

crime and punishment.

One way to think about this is to imagine engineering a person

designed to be bad...

...choosing just the right genes,

just genes from the normal population that make it very

likely that someone's going to commit crimes,

and you put somebody in an environment that makes it very

likely that the person is going to grow up to be a criminal.

When you raise people with these genes and in this kind

of environment, they end up engaging in criminal behaviour,

right.

There are practical reasons why you might want to punish the

person, but the question is do you feel that this person really

deserves to suffer, or do you feel that this person was

a victim of a horrible unethical lab experiment where this person

was grown to be unethical this way?

(smash)

Another question is why should we think any differently

about real criminals and real criminal behaviour?

Everybody's a product of their genes.

Everybody's a product of their environment.

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

(smash)

Narrator: How useful is brain science when it comes to

real criminal cases?

Can it help shape our legal systems' ideas on culpability

and sentencing?

Consider the case of Brian Dugan.

The child of alcoholics, his mother frequently beat him until

she wore herself out.

When he wet his bed, he was forced to sleep in

the soiled sheets.

Harsh discipline didn't stop him from burning down

the family garage, or setting small animals on fire.

He led a very psychopathic lifestyle from an early age.

He had all sorts of the developmental triggers

and all sorts of the same problems that was here in

all these classic stories.

Narrator: In his mid-twenties, Dugan was arrested for the rape

and murder of a 7-year-old girl.

Later, he admitted to killing two others.

He was convicted by a jury and faced the death penalty.

In a bid to save him from a lethal injection,

his defence attorneys called in Kent Kiehl

to examine Dugan's brain.

The only question before the jury in that trial was does

he deserve to go back to prison for life,

or does he deserve to be on death row?

And so, we did brain scans on him, and we studied him,

and we compared him to our databases of other inmates,

and he, as expected, his brain looked just like all the other

psychopaths that we've studied, and I testified to

the differences in his brain structure to what we know about

psychopathy, and to what that might potentially mean for,

you know, the judicial system.

Narrator: Kiehl's evidence seemed to have swayed the jury.

They came back with a life sentence.

A judge overturned that decision for the death penalty,

but the State of Illinois eventually repealed

the death penalty, and Dugan still remains in prison.

It was the first time in a US courtroom that functional MRI

scans were used to help support a psychiatric diagnosis.

I think that in these big special cases,

like these death penalty cases, that MRI scans are becoming

quite common, because if there is something wrong in their

brain, if there is a hole there, or a tumour,

or something maybe more sophisticated,

and analysis shows something else is wrong,

then juries find that to be usually mitigating and they

sentence them to life sentence versus death, and that's,

of course, what the defence attorney is trying to do.

(smash)

Narrator: There may be many biological reasons why

people are not responsible for their crimes.

(smash)

(smash) (alarm sounding)

But according to Eagleman, that doesn't mean we allow

dangerous offenders back on the streets.

It doesn't let anyone off the hook.

The legal system says are you guilty or not guilty?

Did you pull the trigger or did you not pull the trigger?

So, people who are violent and aggressive and so on,

they have to be taken off the streets to protect the more

general society, whether or not we would say it is their fault

in some deep fundamental freewill sense.

When someone does something horrible,

we may have this impulse that says, you know, lock them up,

throw them in prison, and the nastier that prison is

the better, this person did a horrible thing and

they should really suffer.

Narrator: Joshua Greene says that society's desire for

punishment goes deeper than just wanting to take the wrongdoer

off the streets.

In fact, he says our brains are wired to want revenge.

Revenge tastes good.

There's that evolutionary and a philosophical rationale

for having that taste and abiding by it,

because a world in which people don't punish is world in which

people can get away with transgressions very easily.

Narrator: But Greene maintains the more we learn about the

brain, the more likely we are to soften our desire for revenge,

and he has evidence for that.

In a controlled experiment, he gave subjects a passage to read

about neuroscience that rejected freewill and gave a mechanistic

view of the human brain, then they were made jurors

in a hypothetical murder case, and asked what kind of sentence

the murderer should receive.

They recommended a less harsh punishment than people who

didn't read the paragraph on neuroscience,

five years instead of ten years.

The people who read the neuroscientific passages

reminding you or telling you that human behaviour is

ultimately mechanistic, those people were less inclined

to add on those extra punishment sentences.

Another set of studies done by Lisa Aspinwall and colleagues

presented judges in the United States with evidence concerning

a murderer who seems to be a psychopath,

and they gave them evidence about how this person's

behaviour is shaped by their genes and they're shaped by the

person's brain, and the finding was that judges ended up shaving

off a bit of the sentence that they would hypothetically give.

They saw this scientific evidence as mitigating in a way.

So, it's not just ordinary people who have this response,

it's professional lawmakers, including professional judges.

Now, again, the scientific research doesn't tell you

whether this is good or bad, it's this shift of where

you understand the human mind, the human behaviour

in mechanistic terms, and it makes you less retributive.

Narrator: So, given what neuroscience has already

revealed about the human brain and criminal behaviour,

what can the justice system do to benefit

from the new research?

Eagleman says that if we really want to rehabilitate criminals,

we should start by looking at the effectiveness of prisons.

Jail is the original rewire your brain solution.

In other words, it's meant to punish people so that they say,

well, that was a really bad experience, changes their brain,

changes their cost benefit analyses so that they don't

do it again, and for some people that works.

It's simply that doesn't work across the society because

people end up there for very different reasons.

It tends not to work with drug addiction.

It certainly doesn't work with mental illness.

We now have drug courts, where people who are arrested

for using and abusing, are addicted to drugs,

go to special sentencing, get special things.

So, the system is already recognizing that there's many

people who have different problems, different brains,

and giving them different types of sanctions.

And so in other cases there is new things that come up all the

time, as we learn, for example, about fetal alcohol syndrome,

or posttraumatic stress disorder, you know,

from non-combat things, people are, like,

well we should take these things into consideration when we

decide how to sentence somebody,

because if we can treat the underlying problems,

then we can help to reduce the chances

that they'll do it again.

Narrator: Eagleman says as the neuroscience improves,

criminal behaviour that we don't understand now may in the future

become just another treatable condition.

It used to be that somebody with epilepsy or schizophrenia

or depression, the idea was we can just beat it out of them,

or talk them out of it, but as we've evolved in the sciences,

we've realized that these are biological issues.

So there's this spectrum about what we can measure,

and at any moment in history there's a line drawn by our

technology where if you're on this side of the line we say,

oh, poor guy, it's not really your fault,

you had a brain tumour, you had a brain injury,

if you're on this side of the line we say, well,

it's clearly your fault because we can't measure anything.

Here's the issue: As our technology evolves,

that line is gonna keep moving, we'll be able to measure new

kinds of things and we'll have new names for new disorders that

don't even exist now, so that puts us in this very strange

situation where our current technology steers our intuitions

about somebody's guilt or their culpability,

and I think it can't be a just system that decides somebody's

culpability based on whether we can measure

and we have a name for it or not.

Narrator: Many neuroscientists believe that the more we learn

about the brain and criminal behaviour,

the more the justice system will be forced to change,

placing greater emphasis on treatment and rehabilitation

for those whose brains made them do it.

I believe the neuroscience is gonna help us develop better

outcomes for everyone, and but it will also help us understand

why individuals make bad decisions in a different way,

complementary but in a different way than we view today.

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

(♪♪)

For more infomation >> My Brain Made Me Do It: How much control do we really have? | The Nature of Things - Duration: 44:19.

-------------------------------------------

God, What Do You Want Me to Do - Part 2 | Enjoying Everyday Life - Duration: 28:32.

ANNOUNCER: THIS PROGRAM HAS BEEN MADE POSSIBLE BY

THE FRIENDS AND PARTNERS OF JOYCE MEYER MINISTRIES.

JOYCE: LET ME JUST PUT A QUESTION OUT THIS MORNING

TO MYSELF AS WELL AS YOU.

WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO MAKE ANYBODY ELSE'S LIFE BETTER?

[MUSIC]

JOYCE: FATHER, WE THANK YOU FOR THE WORD TODAY, YOUR WORD IS

SO AMAZING.

AND PSALM 107:20 SAYS THAT, "YOU SEND YOUR WORD AND YOU HEAL

THEM AND DELIVER THEM FROM DESTRUCTION."

AND SO, WHILE THE WORD IS BEING PREACHED TODAY, I PRAY THAT

PEOPLE THAT DON'T KNOW YOU WILL BE--FEEL HUNGRY TO WANT TO MAKE

YOU THEIR LORD.

AND I PRAY THAT PEOPLE THAT ARE DEPRESSED, THAT THAT DEPRESSION

WOULD LIFT OFF OF THEM.

AND IF THERE'S ANY HERE THAT ARE ADDICTED TO SOME KIND OF

SUBSTANCE ABUSE, YOUR POWER IS IN YOUR WORD TO BREAK BONDAGES

OFF OF PEOPLE.

AND I PRAY THAT ANYBODY WHO'S SICK TODAY OR HAS PAIN IN THEIR

BODY, THAT WHILE THE WORD GOES FORTH, THEY WILL EXPERIENCE

YOUR HEALING POWER.

WE ASK IT IN JESUS' NAME, AMEN, AMEN.

I CONTINUE TO BE AMAZED AT HOW MUCH IS IN JUST ONE CHAPTER OF

THE BIBLE.

BUT IF WE JUST READ THROUGH IT, MANY TIMES WE MISS A LOT OF

WHAT'S THERE.

AND SO, TODAY, I WANT TO SHARE WITH YOU THIS MORNING OUT OF

JOHN CHAPTER 21.

ACTUALLY, THE TITLE OF THIS MESSAGE TODAY IS "GOD,

WHAT DO YOU WANT ME TO DO?" NOW, SOMETIMES WE SAY THAT IN

FRUSTRATION, LIKE, "WELL, I'VE DONE EVERYTHING I KNOW TO DO

AND NOTHING'S WORKING.

GOD, WHAT DO YOU WANT ME TO DO?" BUT I'M LOOKING AT A MORE

SINCERE QUESTION, LIKE, "GOD, WHAT DO YOU WANT ME TO DO?"

I CAN SAY THAT AGAIN IF YOU DON'T ALL LIKE IT.

GOD, WHAT DO YOU WANT ME TO DO?

YOU KNOW, SOMETIMES WHEN I'M IN THE MIDDLE OF SOMETHING, IF

I JUST STOP AND SAY, "OKAY, GOD, I'M FEELING REALLY FRUSTRATED,

I'VE LOST MY PEACE HERE.

WHAT DO YOU WANT ME TO DO?" SO OFTEN I'LL JUST HEAR HIM SAY,

"JUST LEAVE IT ALONE.

THIS IS NOT SOMETHING YOU CAN DO ANYTHING ABOUT.

JUST LET ME TAKE CARE OF THIS."

YOU KNOW, THERE'S SO MANY THINGS IN OUR LIVES THAT GOD WANTS TO

TAKE CARE OF.

BUT HE WON'T UNLESS WE LET THEM GO.

CAST YOUR CARE ON THE LORD AND HE WILL CARE FOR YOU.

FIRST, WE HAVE TO STOP TRYING TO DO EVERYTHING, SHOWING THAT WE

TRUST GOD TO DO IT.

VERSE 15, "WHEN THEY HAD EATEN," NOW YOU DON'T WANT TO MISS THIS

NEXT PART, "JESUS SAID TO PETER, 'PETER, DO YOU LOVE ME?'"

THERE'S A WHOLE BUNCH OF STUFF HERE IN

THE AMPLIFIED TRANSLATION THAT I WON'T READ 'CAUSE

HE SAYS THE EXACT SAME THING THREE TIMES.

"PETER, DO YOU LOVE ME?" "YES LORD, YOU KNOW THAT

I LOVE YOU."

"WELL, FEED MY SHEEP.

PETER, DO YOU LOVE ME?" "YES LORD, YOU KNOW THAT

I LOVE YOU."

"FEED MY LAMBS.

PETER, DO YOU LOVE ME?" NOW, IT'S BEGINNING TO GRIEVE

PETER A LITTLE BIT THAT THE LORD KEEPS ASKING HIM THE SAME THING,

SAME THING, THE SAME THING.

BUT I JUST THINK THAT MAYBE SINCE THIS IS THE MESSAGE THAT

GOD GAVE ME FOR TODAY, I THINK JUST MAYBE HE WANTS TO ASK US

THAT TODAY.

SO, JUST GIVE ME A LITTLE BIT OF LIBERTY HERE AND LET ME JUST

SAY, CHURCH, DO YOU LOVE JESUS?

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: OKAY.

NOW, YOU KNOW WHAT I BELIEVE THE TRANSLATION OF THAT WOULD BE?

INSTEAD OF, "FEED MY LAMBS," I'D SAY IT A LITTLE BIT DIFFERENT.

"WELL, IF YOU LOVE ME, HELP SOMEBODY."

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: CHURCH, DO YOU LOVE ME?

WELL, THEN HELP SOMEBODY.

COME ON, CHURCH, DO YOU LOVE ME?

THEN HELP SOMEBODY.

LET ME JUST PUT A QUESTION OUT THIS MORNING TO MYSELF

AS WELL AS YOU.

WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO MAKE ANYBODY ELSE'S LIFE BETTER?

A LITTLE QUIET IN HERE.

I MEAN, WE NEED TO ASK OURSELVES THAT.

WHAT ARE WE DOING?

ARE WE JUST SITTING IN CHURCH WEEK AFTER WEEK, AND WE THINK

BECAUSE WE GET A LITTLE CHECKMARK ON OUR GOD CALENDAR

BECAUSE WE'VE GOT GOOD CHURCH ATTENDANCE?

NO, WHAT ARE YOU DOING?

WHAT ARE YOU DOING TO HELP SOMEBODY?

AND YOU KNOW WHAT?

DON'T SPEND YOUR LIFE SITTING OUT THERE WISHING YOU

WERE UP HERE.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: "WELL, I JUST WANT TO BE IN MINISTRY."

YOU ARE IN MINISTRY.

EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU, THERE IS NOT ONE LEFT OUT,

EVERY SINGLE ONE OF YOU IS IN MINISTRY.

AND MOST OF THE MINISTRY THAT'S NEEDED IN THE WORLD WILL NEVER

TAKE PLACE FROM A PLATFORM.

OUR WHOLE JOB IS TO TRAIN YOU UP THAT YOU MIGHT GO OUT AND DO

THE WORK OF THE MINISTRY.

GOD SHOWED ME THIS ONE TIME A LONG TIME AGO, HE SAID,

"I HAVE MY PEOPLE POSITIONED EVERYWHERE."

I MEAN, WE'RE EVERYWHERE.

YOU'RE IN SCHOOLS, EVERY COMPANY.

THE ONLY PROBLEM IS WE'RE TOO QUIET.

WE'RE TOO MOUSY.

WE'RE TOO AFRAID OF WHAT EVERYBODY'S GOING TO THINK.

AND I'M NOT SUGGESTING YOU GET OUT IN THE WORLD AND BE

OBNOXIOUS.

BUT I'LL TELL YOU THE TRUTH, IF WE WOULD JUST GET OUT IN THE

WORLD THAT IS FULL OF DARKNESS AND TURN THE LIGHTS ON.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: AND I'LL TELL YOU WHAT, YOU DON'T NEED

TO QUOTE SCRIPTURES TO YOUR CO-WORKERS,

YOU NEED TO HELP THEM.

AND THE ONE THAT YOU DISLIKE THE MOST THAT HAS BEEN THE ABSOLUTE

MEANEST TO YOU, WHEN YOU HEAR THAT THEIR CAR IS BROKEN DOWN

AND THEY'RE GOING TO HAVE TROUBLE GETTING TO WORK, YOU'RE

THE ONE THAT NEEDS TO GO OFFER TO GO OUT OF YOUR WAY TO GO PICK

THEM UP AND BRING THEM BECAUSE THEY'RE GOING TO WONDER HOW IN

THE WORLD THAT YOU CAN DO THAT AFTER THE WAY THEY'VE

TREATED YOU.

CHURCH, DO YOU LOVE ME?

THEN IT'S GOT TO BE MORE THAN TALK.

HOW ABOUT THIS?

I'LL GIVE YOU A GOAL.

EVERY DAY, I MEAN, THIS IS SIMPLE, ANYBODY CAN DO 'CAUSE

YOU DON'T NEED ANY MONEY TO DO THIS, ANYBODY CAN DO THIS.

EVERY DAY, HAVE A GOAL TO AT LEAST MAKE THREE PEOPLE SMILE.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: GO AHEAD, I JUST DARE YOU, JUST

SAY SOMETHING NICE TO SOMEBODY TODAY AND MAKE THEM SMILE.

IF YOU HEAR SOMEBODY HAS A NEED, DON'T PRAY FOR GOD TO MEET IT.

HEY LISTEN, GOD DOESN'T CUT ME ANY SLACK.

AND I REMEMBER WHEN HE SAID TO ME, "WILL YOU STOP ASKING ME

TO DO THINGS FOR PEOPLE THAT YOU COULD EASILY DO AND JUST DON'T

WANT TO?" WE DON'T WANT TO GIVE THEM

OUR $100, WE'D RATHER GOD DO SOMETHING FOR THEM.

ARE YOU WITH ME TODAY?

HEY, LOVE COST JESUS HIS LIFE.

THE REASON WHY WE DON'T SEE MORE LOVE IS, I'LL BE HONEST WITH

YOU, IT'S EXPENSIVE.

NOT JUST IN MONEY, BUT IN TIME AND EFFORT AND SACRIFICE.

EVERY--YOU KNOW, WE JUST--I MEAN, FLESH IS INNATELY SELFISH.

IT'S INBRED INTO US, AND IF YOU DON'T BELIEVE THAT, YOU JUST

WATCH A BABY, IT DOES NOT TAKE VERY LONG AT ALL AND THEY KNOW

HOW TO HAVE A BIG FIT EVERY TIME THEY DON'T GET EVERYTHING JUST

THE WAY THEY WANT IT.

AMEN?

YOU'RE OUT THERE, RIGHT?

DO YOU LOVE ME? DO YOU LOVE ME?

DO YOU LOVE ME? DO YOU LOVE ME?

WOW.

OKAY, VERSE 18.

NOW, HERE COMES THE KIND OF NOT SO GOOD NEWS.

"YES LORD, I LOVE YOU.

I LOVE YOU, I LOVE YOU, I LOVE YOU, I LOVE YOU."

"OKAY, WELL THEN I GOT SOMETHING I NEED TO TELL YOU.

WHEN YOU WERE YOUNG, BOYS, CHILDREN, YOU GIRDED YOURSELF

AND YOU PUT ON YOUR OWN BELT OR GIRDLE, AND YOU WALKED ABOUT

WHEREVER YOU PLEASED TO GO."

YOU KNOW, IN THE BABY STAGE OF CHRISTIANITY, YOU JUST PRETTY

MUCH DO WHATEVER YOU WANT TO, AND GOD JUST HELPS YOU,

AND YOU'RE JUST BLESSED, AND EVERYTHING'S GOOD.

BUT IT'LL CHANGE.

THE TIME'S GOING TO COME WHEN GOD'S GOING TO SAY TO YOU,

"IT'S TIME FOR A TRANSITION."

AND MAYBE SOME OF YOU ARE AT THAT POINT NOW IN YOUR LIFE

WHERE YOU'RE FIGHTING THAT TRANSITION, AND THAT'S WHY

YOU'RE NOT HAPPY.

HE SAID, "BUT WHEN YOU GROW OLD," AND THAT'S NOT TALKING

ABOUT NUMBERS OF YEARS YOU'VE BEEN ALIVE, IT'S TALKING ABOUT

SPIRITUAL MATURITY.

"WHEN YOU GROW OLD, YOU WILL STRETCH OUT YOUR HANDS AND

SOMEONE ELSE WILL PUT A GIRDLE AROUND YOU AND CARRY YOU

WHERE YOU DO NOT WISH TO GO."

THESE PEOPLE BACK HERE IN THE CHOIR, THEY GET THIS.

I GUESS THE MORE SPIRITUAL PEOPLE ARE BACK HERE IN

THE CHOIR, I DON'T KNOW.

IS THIS HALF OF THE CHOIR AS GOOD AS THIS HALF?

IT'S NOT GOD'S NUMBER ONE GOAL IN LIFE TO KEEP US COMFORTABLE

ALL THE TIME.

WE'RE SUPPOSED TO BE OBEDIENT WHETHER IT'S CONVENIENT OR

INCONVENIENT, IN SEASON OR OUT.

GOD, WHAT DO YOU WANT ME TO DO TODAY?

WHAT DO YOU NEED?

WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU TODAY?

WHO CAN I BLESS TODAY?

LET'S CHANGE THE WAY WE PRAY JUST A LITTLE BIT.

WHEN YOU WERE YOUNG, YOU DID WHATEVER YOU WANTED TO.

I WAS LOOKING AT MY--JUST SPENT A WEEK WITH MY GRANDKIDS,

THE THREE SMALLEST ONES.

AND ONE OF THEM IS 3 YEARS OLD AND ONE'S 7 AND ONE'S 9.

AND THEY ALL PLAY A LOT, BUT YOU CAN KIND OF SEE THE PROGRESSION.

I MEAN, THE 3-YEAR-OLD, THAT'S ALL HE WANTS TO DO, PLAY.

"WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO TODAY, PARKER?"

"PLAY.

PLAY."

BUT YOU KNOW, THAT HAS TO CHANGE AS YOU GROW UP.

THEY DON'T HAVE TO BE RESPONSIBLE.

AND THERE NEEDS TO COME A TRANSITION WHERE IT'S NOT JUST

EVERY DAY GOD HEARS MY PRAYER LIST OF THINGS YOU HAVE TO DO

FOR ME TODAY TO JUST KEEP A SMILE ON MY FACE.

"OH GOD, IF YOU DON'T DO THIS, I DON'T THINK I CAN TAKE IT

ANYMORE.

YOU DON'T DO THIS GOD, I JUST DON'T THINK I CAN HANG ON."

COME ON, WE'RE GOING TO DO A TRANSITION AND WE'RE GOING TO

SAY, "GOD, WHAT CAN I DO FOR YOU TODAY?

HOW CAN I BLESS YOU TODAY?" VERSE 19, "AND HE SAID THIS TO

INDICATE BY WHAT KIND OF DEATH PETER WOULD GLORIFY GOD.

AND AFTER THIS, HE JUST SIMPLY SAID TO HIM, 'FOLLOW ME.'"

NOW, THIS NEXT PART JUST IS SO RIDICULOUSLY FUNNY.

AFTER THIS CONVERSATION THAT JESUS HAS HAD WITH PETER,

"DO YOU LOVE ME?" "YES, I LOVE YOU."

"FEED MY SHEEP. DO YOU LOVE ME?

DO YOU LOVE ME?

OKAY, YOU'VE BEEN USED TO DOING WHAT YOU WANT TO DO, NOW

THERE'S GOING TO BE A CHANGE.

YOU'RE NOT GOING TO LIKE EVERYTHING THAT GOES ON

IN YOUR LIFE."

AND LOOK AT WHAT--LOOK AT WHAT HE SAYS.

"BUT PETER TURNED AND SAW THE DISCIPLE WHOM JESUS LOVED,"

REMEMBER HIM?

JOHN WHO WROTE THE BOOK, "FOLLOWING THE ONE WHO HAD

LEANED BACK ON HIS BREAST AT SUPPER AND HAD SAID, 'LORD,

WHO IS IT THAT'S GOING TO BETRAY YOU?'

AND WHEN PETER SAW HIM, HE SAID TO JESUS, 'LORD, WHAT'S

GOING TO HAPPEN TO THIS MAN?'" I MEAN, THE HUMOR IN THAT IS

JUST--DON'T YOU LOVE THIS CHAPTER IN THE BIBLE?

HOW MANY OF YOU ARE SURPRISED THERE'S THAT MANY LESSONS IN

THIS ONE CHAPTER, JOHN 21?" IT'S JUST AMAZING.

YOU KNOW, WE JUST NEED TO MIND OUR OWN BUSINESS.

HOW HARD IS IT WHEN YOU'RE SUFFERING AND SOMEBODY ELSE YOU

KNOW, MAYBE SOMEBODY YOU'RE NOT EVEN REALLY THAT FOND OF,

IS JUST BEING BLESSED, BLESSED, BLESSED?

WHOO, THAT'S HARD.

MAN, THAT IS HARD.

SO, PETER HEARS EVERYTHING HE'S GOING TO GO THROUGH, AND HE

SAYS, "WELL, WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN TO HIM?"

SOMEHOW, IF WE'RE SUFFERING, IT SEEMS TO MAKE US FEEL BETTER IF

EVERYBODY ELSE IS SUFFERING TOO.

BUT I'M JUST GOING TO THROW SOMETHING OUT TO YOU THAT DAVE

AND I HAVE LEARNED OVER THE YEARS, AND THIS IS PROBABLY

ONE OF THE HARDEST THINGS IN THE WORLD TO DO.

I DON'T THINK THAT ANY OF US CAN BE TRULY BLESSED IN OUR LIVES

UNTIL WE CAN BE HAPPY FOR OTHER PEOPLE WHO ARE BEING BLESSED.

WAIT A MINUTE, I'M NOT DONE, DON'T CLAP YET.

UNTIL WE CAN BE TRULY HAPPY FOR OTHER PEOPLE THAT ARE BEING

BLESSED WHILE WE'RE NOT YET.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: AND YOU KNOW THE ONLY WAY THAT HAPPENS

IS IF WE REALLY BELIEVE THAT GOD KNOWS WHAT HE'S DOING,

AND THAT HE HAS A PURPOSE FOR EVERYTHING THAT HE DOES.

AND IF YOU'RE GETTING SOMETHING AND I'M NOT GETTING IT, IT'S NOT

BECAUSE GOD IS HOLDING OUT ON ME.

IT'S BECAUSE HE KNOWS SOMETHING ABOUT ME AND ABOUT MY LIFE THAT

I DON'T KNOW, AND HE WANTS US TO TRUST HIM THAT HIS TIMING IS

PERFECT IN OUR LIVES.

DON'T YOU LOVE THAT?

"WHAT ABOUT THIS MAN?

WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN TO HIM?" WE'RE ALWAYS SO CONCERNED ABOUT

WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN TO SOMEBODY ELSE.

JESUS SAID TO HIM, "IF I WANT HIM TO STAY AND SURVIVE AND LIVE

UNTIL I COME BACK, WHAT IS THAT TO YOU?

[WHAT CONCERN IS THAT OF YOURS?

YOU FOLLOW ME]."

DO YOU KNOW WHAT THE MESSAGE IS TODAY?

YOU DON'T NEED TO BE CONCERNED ABOUT ANYBODY ELSE

AND NEITHER DO I.

WE'RE ONLY GOING TO HAVE TO ANSWER FOR ONE PERSON WHEN

THIS IS ALL OVER, AND IT'S US.

AND JESUS IS SAYING, "GET YOUR EYES OFF EVERYBODY ELSE

AND YOU FOLLOW ME.

THAT'S ALL YOU NEED TO BE CONCERNED ABOUT IS YOU

FOLLOW ME."

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: I LIKE THIS MESSAGE TODAY.

SO, SO MUCH LIKE US.

"SO WORD WENT OUT AMONG THE BRETHREN THAT THIS DISCIPLE

WAS NOT GOING TO DIE."

HERE YOU GO, THEY DIDN'T GET IT, SO THEY STARTED A RUMOR.

HOW MANY TIMES DO WE NOT UNDERSTAND WHAT'S GOING ON?

SO WE START A RUMOR, SO NOW THIS RUMOR'S GOING ALL OVER

THE PLACE.

WELL, JOHN'S NEVER GOING TO DIE, WHAT'S THAT?

VERSE 25 IS BEAUTIFUL, "AND THERE WERE ALSO MANY

OTHER THINGS WHICH JESUS DID.

IF THEY SHOULD BE ALL RECORDED ONE BY ONE IN DETAIL, I SUPPOSE

THAT EVEN THE WORLD ITSELF COULD NOT CONTAIN AND HAVE ROOM FOR

ALL THE BOOKS THAT WOULD HAVE TO BE WRITTEN."

COME ON, GIVE GOD A PRAISE THIS MORNING.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: WOW.

NOW, JUST A MOMENT HERE.

YOU KNOW, IF YOU'VE NOT RECEIVED CHRIST AS YOUR SAVIOR, I REALLY

DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE WAITING FOR.

MAYBE YOU HAVE THE MISTAKEN IDEA THAT IF YOU BECOME A REAL

SERIOUSLY COMMITTED CHRISTIAN, THAT MEANS YOU'RE NEVER GOING TO

GET TO DO THE THINGS YOU WANT TO DO AND YOU WON'T GET TO HAVE

ANY FUN ANYMORE.

WELL, HELLO, ARE YOU HAVING FUN?

I MEAN, IS A HANGOVER FUN?

IS HATING PEOPLE FUN?

NO.

I'M NOT GOING TO TELL YOU THAT IF YOU RECEIVE CHRIST THAT

EVERYTHING IN YOUR LIFE'S GOING TO BE EASY.

I'M NOT GOING TO TELL YOU THAT YOU'LL NEVER HAVE TO GO

THROUGH ANYTHING.

BUT I WILL TELL YOU THIS, YOU'LL NEVER HAVE TO GO THROUGH IT

ALONE.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: YOU KNOW, HOW--MAYBE YOU CAME IN HERE ONE

AND YOU'D LIKE TO GO OUT TWO.

YOU'D LIKE TO BE ABLE TO SAY, "THERE'S TWO OF US.

CHRIST IS IN ME AND I'M IN HIM."

BECOMING A CHRISTIAN IS NOT ABOUT JOINING A CHURCH

AND DOING A FEW GOOD WORKS.

IT'S ABOUT INVITING JESUS TO COME IN AND LIVE INSIDE OF YOU.

I'VE BEEN READING SCRIPTURES ABOUT THE HOLY SPIRIT.

I LOVE TO READ THOSE SCRIPTURES ABOUT HOW JESUS SAID, "WHEN I GO

AWAY, I'M GOING TO SEND YOU ANOTHER COMFORTER."

A HELPER, A STRENGTHENER, AN INTERCESSOR, AN ADVOCATE,

A TEACHER.

WHAT A WONDERFUL GIFT WE HAVE IN THE HOLY SPIRIT.

HE LIVES IN US.

YOU KNOW, YOU NEVER EVEN HAVE TO MAKE A DECISION BY YOURSELF

'CAUSE YOU'VE ALWAYS GOT THE PEACE OF GOD TO GUIDE YOU

TO SAY YES OR NO.

SO, MAYBE YOU'RE HERE TODAY AND YOU'VE NEVER ASKED JESUS

TO COME INTO YOUR HEART.

MAYBE YOU'RE BACKSLIDDEN, YOU'VE TRIED TO SERVE GOD AND YOU'VE

FALLEN BACK INTO SIN, AND HOW'D YOU GET HERE TODAY?

I DON'T KNOW, A FRIEND BROUGHT YOU.

YOU CAME IN DESPERATION, YOU THOUGHT YOU'RE GOING TO SEE JOEL

AND YOU GOT STUCK WITH ME, I DON'T KNOW.

OR MAYBE YOU EVEN HEARD I WAS GOING TO BE HERE AND YOU CAME

FOR THAT.

BUT THE WHOLE POINT IS WHATEVER YOU THINK YOU CAME FOR,

GOD HAD ANOTHER REASON.

OR MAYBE YOU'RE HERE TODAY AND YOU SAY, "I JUST--I DON'T KNOW.

I DON'T KNOW ABOUT THIS BORN AGAIN THING.

I DON'T--I MEAN, I GO TO CHURCH."

NO, YOU NEED TO KNOW.

SO, IF YOU'RE HERE TODAY AND YOU SAY, "I WANT--I WANT YOU TO PRAY

WITH ME.

I WANT TO--I WANT TO KNOW THAT I'M BORN AGAIN.

I WANT TO SURRENDER," THIS IS NOT ABOUT YOU JUST GETTING

JESUS, IT'S ABOUT YOU GIVING YOURSELF TO HIM.

SO, THERE'S SURRENDER HERE.

YOU HAVE TO BE REPENTANT.

YOU NEED TO BE WILLING TO TURN AWAY FROM SIN AND TURN

TOWARD GOD.

IF THAT'S YOU TODAY AND YOU WANT US TO PRAY WITH YOU, WOULD YOU

JUST SLIP YOUR HAND UP NICE AND HIGH AND LET ME SEE WHERE

YOU'RE AT?

OH, I LOVE THAT, AMEN.

COME ON NOW, ANYBODY ELSE?

DON'T--AWESOME.

AWESOME, AWESOME, AWESOME.

OKAY, NOW LOOK, I'M GOING TO ASK YOU TO DO SOMETHING, AND YOU

KNOW, SOMETIMES PEOPLE DON'T LIKE IT 'CAUSE THEY THINK

THEY'RE GOING TO BE EMBARRASSED, BUT IN A MINUTE, I'M GOING TO

ASK YOU TO STAND UP IF YOU REALLY MEAN BUSINESS.

AND IT'S NOT TO EMBARRASS YOU, BUT HERE'S THE THING.

IF YOU WON'T TAKE A STAND IN HERE IN THIS BUILDING TODAY,

YOU WILL NOT GO OUT IN THE WORLD AND TAKE A STAND FOR CHRIST.

YOU WILL NOT.

SO, IF YOU MEANT IT AND YOU'RE REALLY READY TO SURRENDER YOUR

LIFE TO CHRIST, I WANT YOU TO STAND UP RIGHT BY YOUR SEAT

RIGHT NOW.

WE'RE NOT GOING TO ASK YOU TO COME DOWN, JUST STAND UP RIGHT

WHERE YOU'RE AT.

[AUDIENCE APPLAUDING]

JOYCE: COME ON, ALL OVER THE PLACE

JUST STAND UP.

AMEN.

AWESOME, AWESOME, AWESOME.

OKAY, NOW LISTEN TO ME JUST REAL QUICK.

REMAIN STANDING, THE USHERS ARE GOING TO BE GIVING YOU A BOOK,

SOMETHING TO HELP YOU IN YOUR NEW LIFE WITH CHRIST.

BUT IF YOU'RE SITTING THERE THINKING, "I WISH I WOULD'VE

GOTTEN UP," YOU KNOW WHAT?

WE'RE GOING TO GIVE YOU JUST ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY.

IF YOU WISH YOU WOULD'VE AND YOU DIDN'T, HOW ABOUT RIGHT NOW?

RIGHT NOW.

ALL RIGHT, LET'S ALL PRAY WITH THEM.

AND YOU KNOW WHAT?

IF YOU SEE SOMEBODY STANDING AROUND YOU, WHY DON'T YOU BE

A SWEET CHRISTIAN AND JUST REACH OUT AND HOLD THEIR HAND,

OR TOUCH THEIR SHOULDER, OR JUST LET THEM KNOW THAT YOU

LOVE THEM.

LET'S ALL PRAY THIS TOGETHER NICE AND LOUD.

FATHER GOD, I LOVE YOU.

JESUS, I BELIEVE THAT YOU DIED FOR ME.

YOU PAID FOR MY SIN.

YOU TOOK MY PLACE, YOU TOOK MY PUNISHMENT.

I'M SORRY FOR THE WAY I'VE LIVED.

I REPENT.

I TURN AWAY FROM SIN AND I TURN TOWARD YOU.

I RECEIVE YOU INTO MY LIFE TODAY TO BE MY SAVIOR, TO BE MY LORD.

AND I GIVE MYSELF TO YOU.

TAKE ME JUST THE WAY I AM.

NOW, MAKE ME WHAT YOU WANT ME TO BE.

I BELIEVE I'M SAVED, I'M ON MY WAY TO HEAVEN, AND I WANT

TO ENJOY THE JOURNEY.

THANK YOU FOR LOVING ME.

AMEN, COME ON, LET'S GIVE GOD A BIG PRAISE.

MALE: I GET TO HAVE A RELATIONSHIP WITH HIM NOT

BECAUSE OF ANYTHING I'VE DONE OR WHO I AM, BUT BECAUSE OF WHO

HE IS.

FEMALE: I'M STARTING TO EXPERIENCE ALL THE THINGS

HE DIED FOR.

MALE: IT'S SOMETHING REALLY THAT YOU FEEL AND IT'S IN

YOUR HEART.

AND WHEN YOU DO, IT'S AMAZING.

ANNOUNCER: BEGIN YOUR NEW WAY OF LIVING WITH THIS FREE BOOK

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JOYCE: YOU KNOW, I'M SO GRATEFUL THAT WE HAVE A HELPER

IN OUR LIFE, THE HOLY SPIRIT, WHO'S PROMISED TO NEVER LEAVE US

NOR FORSAKE US, TO BE WITH US, AND TO HELP US AND GUIDE US.

SO, WHATEVER MAY BE COMING UP ON THE HORIZON OF YOUR LIFE, YOU

CAN KNOW THAT YOU'RE NOT EVER GOING TO HAVE TO DO IT ALONE.

AND YOU CAN HAVE FUN WHILE YOU'RE DOING IT.

YOU CAN ENJOY YOUR LIFE.

TODAY, I WANT TO OFFER YOU A BOOK THAT I'VE WRITTEN

THAT I'M REALLY FOND OF CALLED "THE POWER OF SIMPLE PRAYER."

YOU KNOW, WE ALL WANT TO PRAY, WE KNOW WE SHOULD PRAY,

BUT REALLY PRAYER IS NOT AN OBLIGATION, IT'S MORE OF

A PRIVILEGE THAT WE HAVE.

AND I'M GOING TO ENCOURAGE YOU TO START PRAYING MORE THAN YOU

EVER HAVE BEFORE.

AND EVEN WHEN I SAY MORE, I'M NOT SAYING YOU HAVE TO SIT DOWN

IN ONE PLACE AND PRAY A LOT LONGER AT ONE TIME.

I JUST WANT YOU TO LEARN TO PRAY YOUR WAY THROUGH THE DAY.

START LETTING GOD IN ON EVERYTHING THAT YOU DO.

INVITE HIM INTO EVERY SITUATION.

AND WE'RE GOING TO OFFER YOU, WE'RE GOING TO GIVE YOU THIS

PRAYER JOURNAL, WHICH IS A NICE LITTLE LEATHER JOURNAL.

AND YOU CAN WRITE DOWN MAYBE SOME OF THE THINGS YOU'VE

PRAYED, AND THEN RECORD WHEN YOU SEE THOSE ANSWERS COMING

IN YOUR LIFE.

I BELIEVE A LOT OF TIMES, WE PRAY ABOUT THINGS AND THEN MAYBE

2, 3, 4, MAYBE EVEN 6 MONTHS LATER, THE ANSWER COMES, AND WE

FORGET TO REALLY THANK GOD FOR WHAT HE'S DONE IN OUR LIFE.

SO, LEARN MORE ABOUT PRAYER, WRITE SOME OF IT DOWN, AND BE

AMAZED AT WHAT GOD WILL DO IN YOUR LIFE.

THANK YOU FOR BEING WITH US TODAY.

[MUSIC]

JOYCE: GOD WANTS TO HELP YOU, BUT HE CAN'T IF YOU DON'T ASK

HIM TO.

ANNOUNCER: TODAY, WE'RE OFFERING

"THE POWER OF SIMPLE PRAYER."

INSIDE THIS BOOK, JOYCE UNRAVELS THE MYSTERY OF TALKING WITH GOD

ABOUT EVERYTHING.

ALSO, WE'RE OFFERING A PRAYER JOURNAL.

INSIDE, YOU'LL BE ABLE TO WRITE DOWN YOUR SPECIFIC PRAYER AND

A PLACE FOR YOU TO WRITE DOWN GOD'S ANSWER YOU RECEIVE.

FOR A DONATION OF...

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BY CALLING...

OR VISIT US AT JOYCEMEYER.ORG.

GINGER: WHEN YOU PROVIDE A HOPE PLATE, IT REALLY IS SO

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[MUSIC]

NAOMI: THEY LOOK SAD AND DOWNHEARTED AND THEN THEY LOOK

AT YOU, GET--MAKE EYE CONTACT, AND YOU SMILE.

THEN THEY READ THAT SMILE AND THEN THEY START SMILING.

AND THEN THE KIDS ALL RUN TO YOU AND THEY SMILE.

WHEN YOU REALLY EXPERIENCE THAT, YOU JUST--YOU WOULDN'T--YOU'RE

HOOKED.

[MUSIC]

ANNOUNCER: WE HOPE YOU ENJOYED TODAY'S PROGRAM.

FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT JOYCEMEYER.ORG.

THIS PROGRAM HAS BEEN MADE POSSIBLE BY

THE FRIENDS AND PARTNERS OF JOYCE MEYER MINISTRIES.

For more infomation >> God, What Do You Want Me to Do - Part 2 | Enjoying Everyday Life - Duration: 28:32.

-------------------------------------------

Vlog 3 // DADDY, DON'T KILL ME #AUPAIR - Duration: 7:00.

What time is it ?

7:44pm

and we're going to get a tattoo

my father is going to kill me

he's going to ask me : how many tattoos do you actually want?!

but we only live once

we only have one life, one body and one bank account

no we have 2 bank accounts

one french and one american

we have an empty one and an other one, almost empty so ...

those people are extremly poor

and the last one

we have Harlem under our skin

look how they walk

we're going to meet the girls and we are going out tonight

Are they cuted ?

Move a little bit

I love it

So, we have orders to learn how we have to take pictures

the flag has to be behind myself

all of the colors need to flatter myself

can you put a knee on the floor ?

and there it is

hi !

this is good, this is good

put that on instagram now !

we are sunday morning, you've just seen us take our brunch

i'm going back to philly

but i have to tell you something

so many things happened

the reflection is awful

sorry, we are not the same day anymore, we're the day after

yesterday, i almost missed my bus, my train

so i didn't have the time to tell you the story

but i have to

so, we took uber everyday

friday night, we were only two girls, the other girls didn't joined us yet

and the uber stole our money

he was parked in front of our house

he saw us and in 4,30 seconds

he just decided to cancelled the course

and we even have to pay 5$ FOR NOTHING

so yesterday, on sunday

we were packing our luggage because we were leaving our airbnb

Ornella booked a uber

and said to me : he's here !

the same thing is not going to happen again

so i'm going to hurry and get inside of the car while waiting for the girls

i open the door of the house and indeed, i see a car just in front of me

a big car because we were 5 girls with luggages so we needed space

i'm coming closer

i see a woman driver inside of the car

she looks at me

i'm telling myself : ok she saw us

sometimes they helping us with our stuff

maybe she doesn't want to do it

nevermind, i'm going to do it on my own

so, i'm about to open the rank

the woman says : sorry, sorry ?!!

i'm telling myself : oh damn, maybe the rank is automatic, i'm going to break it like that

and the rank opens itself

and i see a huge mess inside of it

it was impossible to just put one luggage

i'm telling myself : this driver isn't really professional

i didn't have to think that

and the girl just started yelling at me

what are you doing ?!!

what is happening ?

and in the same time, i'm hearing ornella said :

what the hell ? i booked a car for 5, this is not going to fit is this one because there are only 5 seats

and at that moment

an other car was behind ourself

our real uber driver

laughing while looking at us getting in the wrong car

i just tried to get inside the wrong car

this was a huge fail

the woman really wanted to fight with me

but then she said : it's ok baby, don't worry

and my friends said to me : this kind of things always happens to you

and yes moreover, the night before we were in a club

and so many girls were so mean at me

let me live my life !

so this is the kind of situations that my friends have to deal with

anyway, this weekend was insane

we walked 30 kilomètres

our foot arch was in a really bad mood

i think i slept 5 hours during the entire weekend

i'm still going to complain about the food but

we ate burger and pizza all weekend long

where are my french rillettes bordeau chesnel ?

this is the end of the vlog

i tried to vloging more in live

i need to improve myself

i'm gonna try

this is our hymn, sorry !

no copyright, so this video is maybe going to be censured

i just wanted to say thank you for the first video

we did 1000 views in one day

this was so fun to film all of it

my friends were so happy about it

this is going to be so cool in your vlog

so now i'm going to sweat at the gym

see you soon

now i know how to turn it off

For more infomation >> Vlog 3 // DADDY, DON'T KILL ME #AUPAIR - Duration: 7:00.

-------------------------------------------

Jordan Davis - Take It From Me (Stripped) - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> Jordan Davis - Take It From Me (Stripped) - Duration: 2:57.

-------------------------------------------

Cover Me - Playthrough - slickerdrips - Duration: 38:16.

For more infomation >> Cover Me - Playthrough - slickerdrips - Duration: 38:16.

-------------------------------------------

Phantoms - Lay With Me ft. Vanessa Hudgens - Duration: 3:34.

For more infomation >> Phantoms - Lay With Me ft. Vanessa Hudgens - Duration: 3:34.

-------------------------------------------

Brooke Baldwin: This face behind Trump startled me - Duration: 5:59.

For more infomation >> Brooke Baldwin: This face behind Trump startled me - Duration: 5:59.

-------------------------------------------

dont kill me please pubG| player LeninMRaj |gamingroom - Duration: 3:35.

For more infomation >> dont kill me please pubG| player LeninMRaj |gamingroom - Duration: 3:35.

-------------------------------------------

Nightcore - You Make Me Shy (Jai Waetford) || Lyrics - Duration: 2:42.

this video includes lyrics on the screen

For more infomation >> Nightcore - You Make Me Shy (Jai Waetford) || Lyrics - Duration: 2:42.

-------------------------------------------

My Dad Teaches Me How To Make A Stained Glass Window - Duration: 5:56.

I'm at my parents place and my dad's gonna teach me how to make a stained

glass window. We'll use this kind of mould

that's just a square wooden frame. This is square. Tape it and this will be the base.

and what we are going to do is fill it in out with lead strips and then we have

to cut the glasses at the right size move from the left bottom corner all the

way to the right. We're gonna use three types of strips. The ones on the outside

and you can see it here, is called 'U'. You can see why. Then for most of the glass

in between we're gonna use this H strip. So you put glass in here and in here and

for the middle section we're gonna use an H strip with a thicker core and that

will give extra strength. Yeah, so let's just put it down.

You press a bit, not too much and then I'll pull and that will give this very

flexible LED strip a bit more strength. This is a LED knife it's to cut lead

so for instance this last part we have just damaged a bit. And I can just cut it

like that. All you need to do. With this you can open it. Just to make sure you

open up the lead again. 'Cause here in the end you see it's closed because you put

pressure on it. Or if I would like to put another piece say into it, you can make

it wider with just the thickening of that. The first U we can put here. We'll

use these lead nails quite a bit. Pieces of glass will fit in here

and when you when you have fixed it and you want to set it you can again use it

with these nails to push it. We've made a double drawing. The first drawing we'll

use as the surface of The second one we've got all of these

samples of what we needed to cut and then we have also big pieces of glass.

The question is how do you cut it? You cut it with a glass cutter, which is a very

small diamond kind of cutter in in the tool.

whatever you gonna cut you have to break. How can I cut the glass such that I

minimize the amount of glass I waste? I will try to cut it first in the shape

that I cut it in one go and I only use this piece and then all of the glass here at

the very top of it might be waste but the rest I can still use for the next

one. And I trace it a special white pen for it. You can see

it in a minute I'll take this away. And the most important thing of any glass is

try to do it in one go. The cutter itself very straight and then and now the scary

part comes and it's breaking the glass. This is where you can see the line and I

put it on an edge, already done. So this is indeed as simple as it was.

Fits perfectly!

Well, sort of

No, you can't do it that way. Why not?

Well, you can try...

show both how you can make it dirty

And clean again

Story of my life

my kids make it dirty

and daddy has to clean up

For more infomation >> My Dad Teaches Me How To Make A Stained Glass Window - Duration: 5:56.

-------------------------------------------

Fast rap Ever done by me (My Fastest) Eminem's a faster rapper - Duration: 3:16.

I mister be technical when the humming I'm making a record for you but

everything without bringing the board's opinion I'm making I'm have to do

whenever they'd approve won't pitches but I've been taking my time when I

remember that Robin I give her that my typical cynical evil psycho but nobody

them giving them I better be running I'm coming up a hook to you face and the big

government here will have taken a smash it with his face making me fall my

favorite a little busy I just a doubt say but it will not be a mess with me

I'll eat you alive when I'm not gonna be like a piece of meat raw look at my

teeth see the blood what you think I'm a killer because i forgiven never to be

giving you for the delivers of rapper and says it matters not leaving you

bruised your batter is making me hear anything when they give it a bit about

the wonder anyone hoping this makes me look like a nice guy but everybody

define Robert Lee's ready to strike what does trumpet that shows his friends

before it bites little twist admissible mistake take a new one I thought about

forgive me running my mouth you better get down I'm making up pounds I'm giving

you out don't leave you now I'm making a bad won't break a new cup one doing the

fam they're messing around I'm giving up the only thing that I ever love to do

but the bottom will be begging to grow my food so I pick it up oceans like the

plume bomb would have a beer in that unit buddy but soon when I talk I'm a

vehicle made making me open and it'll never I'm gonna be when they step into

me yeah bringing the heat and they should not be some cheaper than me my

enemies when I'm bringing the pain they call me

crazy' now I second I'm missing the same that's in my brain I'm taking up with

the meeting anyway in the middle of the night like a creep holding a knife but

did that make you bleed and now I make you bleed to go ahead and begging please

I tried to be the best but I could never wanna be in one fucking time forget I

wanna be alive when I want to be a little bit better when I want to give in

Louisville fuck you conversation they can't wait to rock the slope to have you

now that I can go where I flow so you better get a better body coming to get

better let me buy the piece we wanna be the one stop me

so two little Benigni maybe it is a superb wingman I get it you're saying

what I mean but sometimes I feel like don't weaker than what I said to be even

that by picking fall and the beach is defeated and said what feel but seeing

me and sobbing give me life try to beat it but I'm gonna tell my feels different

little strongest words that they keep running from my bushes when they appear

i harden before it's potent and showing the world I'm pissed off and throw one

tip retentive like a bitch Missy lamps off might as well be a dick who needs

pills against if all of you want to see what a better beam up still gonna be the

peasants over to speaking to bring in the home with me sure but if they would

have given everything maybe to see who was gonna be one of our Grubman I gave

my passion to lay a little grabbing the bite when they get away to be big in the

they've been given attention cuz I'm on the road but wanna be giving this to go

to be daughter but with a heart of gold and you know everybody have what they

bring ability with everything for the record I'm gonna think about the second

the brings everything to be just able to put this in the back three fire let it

play it begs for my mouse with the flames but the fireplace is my big new

city and I'm gonna beat instrumental but never in a simple I could it's like a

pistol would be time Oliver dude they're gonna still do with this you there's a

pen a pencil or each other lost it you there's nothing I was meant to think

that was they get to said to me no one said that to me fuck him a different man

because my cup in my hand alone every time I can press record and understand

when I'm in that's doing I mean what about to become a fan

For more infomation >> Fast rap Ever done by me (My Fastest) Eminem's a faster rapper - Duration: 3:16.

-------------------------------------------

Visit Malta 2018 (with me) - Vlog 31 - Duration: 11:02.

Malta Island in the Mediterranean Sea is our next stop on our Europe vacation

our trip started from Cologne airport with a ticket for 35 Euro with Ryanair

I prepared this trip with a YouTube Malta Video from Wolters World

Google search, a travel guide book

I'm an empty nester,

so I see my son twice a year, I was pretty excited for this trip,

we stayed at Mellieha, this is a quiet family area.

We booked a full day three Island cruise Malta, Gozo and Comino.

on that day we couldn't sail because the wind was not strong enough

This was in the evening, I believe this was the Mellieha nights, or something like this

and just listen to the music, to the variety of all the music it's just amazing

then we went to Medina and you really need a Sun umbrella or an umbrella to

get protected from the Sun it's so hot it's just unbelievable hot

and beside Medina is St. Paul's Grotto, they are very

If you are a little bit claustrophobic, it's not for you, it was not for me, I wouldn't enjoy it, so I didn't go down

but my husband and my son's yeah they liked it but they said also it was

very claustrophobic, yeah I I don't enjoy to be in the catacombs underground

tiny, no, but it's something for some people they really like to see that

then we went to this beach, I hardly can pronounce the name, is Ghajn beach or

something like this, my sons were pretty excited about it

because they thought we have to hike there but it was just going down the

stairs, that's all

We went for special night with Malta food and Magic

Which was very interesting

and there was also a dance and my son happened to dance

unfortunately I'm not allowed to show it but I can imitate the reaction from my

eldest, the woman came to the table and she said; do you wanna dance

and he was ...... and then ... no, no you dance ....... he had to dance, it was very cute

my second, my younger one .... Oh he loved to dance, he said, ok, I am coming

... and this is Emma

so the next day we went to the water park, this was a wish of my sons, and it was a really fun day out.

so the last day we went to Valletta and I bought this kitchen towel or tea towel

so you have Malta on it, Comino and Gozo and I always buy stuff like this

because it reminds me and I can use it. I don't buy figurines or something like that.

So, that's it for Malta video and I will list all the activities I have done in Malta with my family

and I will also list it down below, if you liked this video let me know, I'm really happy if you give me the thumbs up

And I need 1000 subscriber, so this would be great if you could subscribe

so these are my five days in Malta and what I really loved in Malta,

They had a Lidl,

and if you don't know Lidl, it's a German grocery store and it's really cheap and

they have everything, it was really great thank you for watching and I see you

next Thursday bye

For more infomation >> Visit Malta 2018 (with me) - Vlog 31 - Duration: 11:02.

-------------------------------------------

Join Me In Jamaica: Pier 1 - Duration: 1:00.

(tropical music)

- You're on the beautiful waterfront of Montego Bay.

It is breathtaking and full of resorts and Pier 1

is one of the most famous hangout spots here.

This business was started by our parents 30 years ago.

It was born out of their passion for entertaining friends,

family, just about anybody.

- Pier 1 is special.

It's very unique.

It's actually where locals and tourists come together.

People come here and just chill, get the day all washed off

with some alcohol and get their bellies full.

Jamaicans party and they want the crowd to feel

what you're feeling.

If they're having a good time,

everybody has to be having a good time.

Come to somewhere where there's no stress.

Come and listen somewhere good music,

sit on the beach, have a drink and experience bliss.

- Join us in Jamaica.

For more infomation >> Join Me In Jamaica: Pier 1 - Duration: 1:00.

-------------------------------------------

SHINHWA - Kiss Me Like That OFFICIAL MV Reaction - Duration: 9:59.

Debi: Ba-bam!

Lusi: Ja-jan!

Lusi: Welcome back to..

Debi: Talk KPop

Lusi: With our MV Reaction

Now is

Oppas

Ahjussi but feels like oppas

Lusi: Actually, not ahjussi (Debi: Not ahjusi, they're still oppa)

Lusi: The point is we still want to call them oppa

Lusi: (They're) finally comeback

Debi: After... how long?

Lusi: I think, it's not that long

Debi:What was their last comeback song?

Lusi:They were comeback last year

Debi: It's been a long time not to follow their activities

I meant, they're still make a comeback

Lusi: It's been a long time we're not focus on them

because there are too many that

Debi: We need to do

Lusi: We need to see

Debi: So there's long list for us to see

Debi: But finally we can see them

Lusi: They're comeback with title song..kinda

Debi: Kiss me like that

Lusi: Already know their name?

Yeay...Shinhwa

Lusi: Seriously, since it's too long not follow their activities

I only remember

2 members

Debi: I remember their name

also their face, but if I'm given (suddenly)

I'm like, who is this?

Debi: I'm thinking 'who is this'

Ah.. he's bla-bla.. or not? But if I'm given their name

maybe I'll remember. I hope so

Debi: I hope so

I hope I remember

Lusi: What if we start?

Debi: Let's go~~

Debi: Are they in the ship?

Lusi: Just say so

Debi: Who?

Debi: Oh...model..

Lusi: I want it

Debi: Champagne

Lusi: For us, if were given Teh Kotak (it's brand), we'll be happy

Debi: Or get milk

Lusi: Minwoo, right?

Debi: Looks like a painting. Ah, he's Minwoo

Lusi: I already said it.. (Debi: Ah, sorry)

Debi: Hyesung, Junjin...

He's Andy. And he's (Both: Eric) Where's Dongwan?

Debi: And I'm looking for him

Lusi: And he'll show up after this

Debi: I think so. Nah, we're right (Lusi: He's like "I'm here")

Debi: Sorry...

Debi: Owh.. that nose...

Debi: Who is the one that has the most pointed nose?

Eric?

Hyesung?

Lusi: Like what? (talking about lyrics)

Debi: Yes, like what? Awh..

Lusi: I think he is (talking about nose)

Debi: Hyesung

Debi: If we see it from side, it's really something

Lusi: Tell me, like what (talking about lyrics)

Lusi: Eric is one of

ideal man

Debi: Right..

Lusi: He's handsome, can sing

(most important) can cook

A man who can cook is really something (it's an A score)

Debi: Oh.. purple!

Debi: Who's wearing purple?

Debi: See? Minwoo?

Lusi: Really? (Debi: Minwoo, right?)

Debi: Oh.. Andy.. sorry

Andy is the one who wearing it (purple)

Debi: Why did she hit...?

Debi: Junjin...

Lusi: That's pink?? (Debi: Yes..)

Lusi: There are purple and pink...

Lusi: What is this??

Lusi: Jazz...

Lusi: Suddenly the music's changing into Jazz

Debi: Can't stop... I understand..

Both: It's real??!!

Debi: Hyesung oppa

Lusi: Just think he's professional

Debi: Sorry

Lusi: The moon is cute..

Debi: He's seeing the moon?

Andy.. the maknae

Lusi: The fireworks are cute

Debi: The background looks like

Debi: Looks like a painting

Debi: Woooaaa, I thought it's already end

Debi: The bloopers?

Lusi: Behind the scene..

Debi: I think so.. look at that

Debi: What is he doing??

Debi: Look!

Debi: Where's Eric??

Debi: There he is

Finished??

Debi: So funny

Debi: Speechless

Debi: Charismatic oppas

what should we say it? Experienced!

Lusi: Twenty years (in Entertainment industry)

Debi: They gave different feeling

Lusi: (We're like) Ah, it finished already?

and we feel like, it's so fast

Debi: There's bloopers

Lusi: It's unexpected they will kissed for real

usually it's only

from camera angle (so they look like kissing). And we saw it was..

Lusi: Ah, that was not a kiss. A peck..

Debi: Ha? (Lusi: Peck)

Debi: Actually from the MV

you already know how we react

We don't need to explain anymore

Because we (make) mv reaction

not mv comment

Lusi: We're not video editor or something like that

so we don't have experience

So, we can't give

long comment about video

Debi: We just see it as a fans

Lusi: The point is, we only know about KPop

Debi: Don't forget to like

Lusi: Subscribe

Debi: Comment

Lusi: Keep support us

Lusi: See you in next MV reaction

For more infomation >> SHINHWA - Kiss Me Like That OFFICIAL MV Reaction - Duration: 9:59.

-------------------------------------------

Lie To Me - 5SOS Cover - Duration: 3:47.

Hello Shyguitar people! So today, I'm going to be doing a cover of Lie to Me by 5 Seconds of Summer.

I have no idea what is going on with my hair today. It's been sticking up so much since I shaved it lately. But

whatever.

Okay soooo, let's get this show on the road.

I saw you looking brand new overnight.

And I caught you looking, too, but you didn't look twice.

You look happy, oh mmm. You look happy, oh mmm.

Flashing back to New York City.

Changing flights so you'd stay with me.

Remember thinking that I got this right.

Now I wish we'd never met

cause you're too hard to forget.

While I'm cleaning up your mess,

I know he's taking off your dress.

I know that you don't, but if I ask you if you love me

hope you li-li-li-lie, lie to me.

It's two A.M. and the moonlight's testing me.

If I can make it 'til dawn then it won't be hard to see,

That I ain't happy, oh mmm.

I ain't too happy, oh mmm.

Flashing back to New York City.

Changing flights so you'd stay with me.

Problem was I thought I had this right.

Now I wish we'd never met,

cause you're too hard to forget.

While I'm cleaning up your mess,

I know he's taking off your dress.

I know that you don't, but if I ask you if you love me

hope you li-li-li-lie, lie to me.

Singin' li-li-li-lie, li-li-li-li-li-lie, li-li-li-li-li-lie, li-li-li-li-li-lie

I know that you don't, but if I ask you if you love me

hope you li-li-li-lie, lie to me.

Okay so, that was my cover of Lie to Me by 5 Seconds of Summer.

I hope you guys liked it!

Uh, make sure to give this video a like if you enjoyed it, and subscribe if you'd like more videos from me!

Um, bye guys! Rock on!

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