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Science for Young People -- The Christmas Lecture
A demonstration-rich science talk designed for children and teenagers. I started the Christmas Lectures at the Royal Institution in 1825. Fire, ice, magnets, sparks, bubbles -- real science made visceral. No equations. Just wonder. The Chemical History of a Candle -- six lectures explaining all of chemistry through a single burning candle.
Self-Education Mentoring -- The Bookbinder Path
One-on-one mentoring for anyone without a formal science education who wants to learn. I had no degree, no university, no connections. I had a library and a willingness to work harder than anyone in the room. I will help you build a self-study plan and find your Humphry Davy -- the person who opens the first door.
Chivalry & Diplomacy Seminar -- The Warrior's Honor
How to wage war without losing your humanity. Prisoner treatment, negotiation under pressure, trust with enemies. I sent Richard ice when he had fever. He sent me horses. We tried to kill each other for three years and parted with respect. Tip: Your reputation arrives before your army.
The Art of War Masterclass -- 13 Chapters Deep
Intensive study of all 13 chapters. Not the motivational poster version. Terrain, espionage, fire attacks, the use of spies. Each chapter is a weapon. Most people read Chapter 1 and think they understand war. They do not. Tip: Know yourself, know your enemy. A thousand battles, a thousand victories.
War Table Sand Map (Campaign Simulation Kit)
Traditional Chinese sand table for war gaming. Sculpt terrain, place forces, simulate campaigns. Includes miniature infantry, cavalry, and fortification markers. Better than any screen -- you feel the terrain with your hands.
Espionage & Intelligence Workshop -- The Five Types of Spies
Chapter 13: the use of spies. Local, inside, converted, doomed, living. Intelligence wins wars before the first arrow flies. Information gathering, disinformation, counter-intelligence with historical and modern examples.
Castle Design & Fortification Workshop
Concentric walls, flanking towers, murder holes, killing grounds. I designed Chateau Gaillard in Normandy -- three baileys, each commanding the one below. Philip took it by climbing through the latrine chute. Tip: Design for the attack you cannot imagine, not the one you expect.
Military Innovation Seminar -- Rethinking Your Weapons
How to look at an existing weapon, tactic, or system and make it fundamentally better. I took a throwing spear and made it a stabbing spear. I took sandals off warriors and made them faster. Innovation is not invention -- it is seeing what everyone sees and thinking what no one thinks.
Underground Railroad Seminar -- Building Resistance Networks
How to build and operate a clandestine network. Safe houses, codes, route planning, compartmentalization (each station knows only the next), vetting members. The Railroad operated for decades under the noses of slavers and federal marshals. Tip: Trust is your most valuable and most dangerous resource. Verify before you trust.
Courage Under Fire -- Leadership When Failure Means Death
When the penalty for failure is death -- for you and everyone depending on you. Decision making under extreme pressure, keeping groups calm, dealing with fear and doubt. I never lost a single passenger on the Railroad. Tip: Fear is natural. Paralysis is not. Decide and move. A wrong decision made quickly is better than a right decision made too late.
Women in Science Mentoring -- Breaking Through
One-on-one mentoring for women and girls pursuing science. When I applied for a lab position, I was told there was no room for a woman. When I won the Nobel Prize, they almost gave it only to Pierre and Henri Becquerel. Pierre insisted my name be included. Find allies. Document everything. Let the work speak. The work always speaks loudest.
Multilingual Negotiation Workshop -- Speak Their Language
I spoke nine languages and used every one of them in negotiations. Speaking a person's language is the fastest way to their trust. This workshop covers negotiation tactics, cultural reading, and why the interpreter should be you, not someone you hired. Tip: The person who controls the translation controls the conversation.
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