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Physics Problem-Solving Tutoring
One-on-one tutoring in physics. Any level, any topic. I spent 10 years as a professor. The secret to teaching physics is this: never start with the formula. Start with the question. Why does this happen? What would you expect? Now let's check. The formula is just the shorthand for the understanding.
Violin (German Make, 1920s, Concert Quality)
My violin. Well, a replica of my favorite one. I named the original Lina. Mozart and Bach -- that's what I play when I'm stuck on a physics problem. The music reorganizes my thinking. If you can play, borrow it. If you can't, I'll give you a beginner lesson. Badly. I'm a better physicist than violinist.
Compass (Pocket, Brass -- Like the One That Started It All)
Brass pocket compass. When I was five years old, my father showed me a compass. The needle moved without being touched. Something invisible was acting on it. That moment -- the mystery of the invisible force -- started everything. Give this to a curious child and watch what happens.
Tabletop Printing Press (Working Replica)
Working replica of a 15th-century screw press, scaled to tabletop size. Wooden frame, iron screw, leather ink balls. Comes with a starter set of lead type (Textura blackletter) and oil-based ink. Print your own pages. The same mechanism that ended the Dark Ages, now in your kitchen.
Cloud Chamber (Wilson Type, Desktop)
Desktop cloud chamber that makes radioactive particle tracks visible. Pour in isopropyl alcohol, cool the base, and watch cosmic rays and natural radiation leave vapor trails in real time. It's like seeing the invisible forces that pass through your body every second. Mesmerizing and educational.
Lead Type Set (Textura Blackletter, Complete Alphabet)
Complete alphabet in Textura blackletter -- the typeface of the Gutenberg Bible. Upper and lower case, numbers, punctuation. Cast in traditional type metal (lead-tin-antimony). Each piece hand-finished. Handle with care; lead is toxic. Wash your hands after use. I didn't know that part.
Plains Horseback Riding -- Bareback & War Pony
Bareback riding on the open plains. No saddle, no stirrups -- just you and the horse. The Lakota were among the finest horsemen on Earth. Knee signals, voice commands, shooting from horseback. Tip: The horse must trust you before it will carry you into danger. Earn the trust first.
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.
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.
Strategic Thinking for Business -- Sun Tzu Applied
Art of War applied to business competition, negotiation, and market strategy. Deception, positioning, intelligence. Every CEO who read my book only understood half. Tip: The best victories are the ones your competitor does not realize they lost until it is too late.
Radiation Science Workshop -- Safely Understanding Radioactivity
Two-hour session with safe demonstration materials. Cloud chambers to see particle tracks, Geiger counters to measure background radiation, mineral samples that glow under UV. You'll understand alpha, beta, and gamma radiation and why each behaves differently. Tip: Radioactivity is natural. You're surrounded by it. The banana you ate this morning was radioactive. Fear comes from ignorance. Understanding comes from measurement.
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.
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