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    <title>THINGY FLIP BLOG</title>
    <link>https://www.thingyflip.com</link>
    <description>Keep up with the Thingy Flip</description>
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      <title>THINGY FLIP BLOG</title>
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      <link>https://www.thingyflip.com</link>
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      <title>Do you want to upgrade your brain.</title>
      <link>https://www.thingyflip.com/do-you-want-to-upgrade-your-brain</link>
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           This is a subtitle for your new post
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           Do you want to upgrade your brain.
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           Let me tell you about The Thingy Flip The Dream The Plan The Experiment The Garantee
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           Dream One is to find out how it feels to upgrade our Brains with 3% extra Grey matter. To keep the grey matter you need to continue using the Thingy Flip.
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           Yes it's been proven in research on Juggling. 25 people
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            After three months, the jugglers had a 3% increase in the volume of grey matter in the mid-temporal part of the brain. see
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           https://www.abc.net.au/.../articles/2004/01/22/1029268.htm
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            The Plan is to use The Thingy Flip eye hand coordination Program over 3 months for 10 to 30 minutes per day.
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           Its easier to learn than juggling but more of a workout for the brain because it allows you to toss and catch on 10 new sides of your hands.
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            The Experiment
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           Step 1
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           Buy a Thingy Flip
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            Step 2
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           Do the program.
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           Step 3
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           Using the app report your findings.
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           The Garantee.
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           We Garantee you will level up your licence. Or your money back.
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      <pubDate>Wed, 26 Jul 2023 01:14:44 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.thingyflip.com/do-you-want-to-upgrade-your-brain</guid>
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      <title>Hand-Eye Coordination is the Key to Connecting the Brain</title>
      <link>https://www.thingyflip.com/hand-eye-coordination-is-the-key-to-connecting-the-brain</link>
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           Hand-Eye Coordination is the Key to Connecting the Brain
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           Eye–hand coordination is fundamental to learning how the brain produces internal models of the activity space and induces movement within it, and it is at the heart of our everyday acts and experiences with objects and people around us. One of the most important aspects of the learning process is hand-eye coordination. It allows your child to watch their hand gestures through their eyes, which is crucial for reading and decoding. It is impossible for a child to concentrate on an object or track it as it travels without the aid of these stimuli. Thingy Flip was developed to fill a void in the market for fun hand-eye coordination games for children. The goal is simple: to boost kids' brainpower and improve their skills in a positive, entertaining way, so that their young brains will benefit from all of the new neuronal networks formed as a result of learning to grab with both hands on both sides.
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           The Thingy Flip Has the Highest eye hand coordination Rating as it uses 5 sided of each hand to toss and catch with. Up to now we have only used the palms. This is one of the reasons to believe it is important to encourage children to use all sides of their minds by practicing and learning new techniques such as catching and tossing with the Thingy Flip. At the moment, it seems that the most common activities that children would complete at school and at home are using their computers (Gutstein et al., 2019). We believe it is important that they return to more active play, which would also challenge their hand-eye (brain) coordination. 
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           Its logical that we can make many more connections.
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           Thingy Flip began as a personal passion project for creator Dominic See, who struggled to learn as a teenager. Dominic, a natural athlete, experienced a significant improvement in his ability to focus after learning to juggle and committed to practicing on a daily basis. His experience of ADHD and dyslexia made it difficult for him to pay attention in school, and he often mentions the "fuzziness" that clouded his mind when he was attempting to study. Fortunately, he learned juggling, and the fog began to dissipate, along with his grades and self-esteem. Thingy Flip helps to close the distance in brain growth and motor skills by including children in athletic activities that teach them hand-eye coordination while also enhancing their cognitive ability.
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      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Nov 2021 06:02:09 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>dom@seeit.com.au (Dominic )</author>
      <guid>https://www.thingyflip.com/hand-eye-coordination-is-the-key-to-connecting-the-brain</guid>
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      <title>Why Kids Are Leaving Sports at An Early Age</title>
      <link>https://www.thingyflip.com/why-kids-are-leaving-sports-at-an-early-age</link>
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           Why Kids Are Leaving Sports at An Early Age
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           Apart from the obvious answer. DEVICES
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           As children approach high school, the youth sports system evolves to meet the needs of more active athletes, and the demands put on them rise. Many kids who left at 14 are thought to be the ones who wouldn't have made a varsity team in high school anyway. Many that hang around discover that being a part of a project necessitates a greater time and effort dedication. Increased participation in less intense activities was linked to higher IQ, but neither vigorous sports nor walking were linked to higher IQ (Alexandru Szabo et al., 2020). The relationships with vigorous exercise at work or at home are curvilinear, with both more and less activity correlated with lower IQ. There has been a tacit assumption that physical fitness is related to intellectual ability since the time of the ancient Greeks.
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           Any children are naturally gifted athletes, and most are not. If they compete in sports, several points are recorded for their accomplishments. But what if it was regarded as a necessary and routine part of the curriculum? This is very important to us! Later, we'll talk about brain function and how it relates to motor skills and learning. It's all connected, which is one of the reasons Thingy Flip was created. We want to close the distance so that kids engage in more physical learning and spend less time on their computers (Sittikraipong et al., 2020). Thingy Flip was developed to fill a void in the market for fun hand-eye coordination games for children. The goal is to boost children's brainpower and help them learn skills in a fun way. Consider how many new brain pathways you'll need to master to grab on both sides of your hands.
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           We've had a significant drop in activity rates in just the last decade. When technology advances, children's pastimes begin to revolve around staring at a computer screen rather than being involved outdoors (Candra et al., 2020). Dominic See invented the Thingy Flip in response to a decrease in hand-eye coordination and IQ. The Thingy Flip is a game that makes learning hand-eye coordination and movement enjoyable. Aside from that, a number of experiments have backed up the idea that hand-eye coordination is challenged beyond the straightforward catch and throw. The Thingy Flip puts your brain to the test in a way you've never seen before.
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      <pubDate>Mon, 15 Nov 2021 05:51:19 GMT</pubDate>
      <author>dom@seeit.com.au (Dominic )</author>
      <guid>https://www.thingyflip.com/why-kids-are-leaving-sports-at-an-early-age</guid>
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      <title>Why are IQs going down?</title>
      <link>https://www.thingyflip.com/why-are-iqs-going-down</link>
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         Why are IQs going down
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         Over the last 20 year kids have been doing less and less of what I call backyard ball play instead they have been on devices to entertain themselves.
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         Australian schools are in 'absolute decline' globally, says PISA report.
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         I believe this decline coincides with less backyard balls skill time and more screen time.
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         A simple model of the brain was developed in the 1960s where functions of the brain were assigned to the left and right hemispheres of the brain from operations performed on patients with epilepsy. However recently we are finding out that the connections in the brain are much more complex.
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         Also as researches claim that so much of the brain is settled by the time we turn 7 early connections in the brain are extremely important.
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         So parents need to be aware that if they make an effort to encourage brain development early it will have long term benefits.
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         This may be why its so much harder to learn a language after you turn 7.
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         From the 1940s onward IQs were shown to be increasing which was know as the Flyn effect. However recently researches are finding that IQs are actually on the decline. This is now known as the Reverse Flyn Effect.
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         We need a way to stop the reverse Flyn Effect.
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         It’s a challenge today with kids going home and after school going straight to their devices to play and missing out on the backyard ball play we all used to do that we now know was a core activity to giving us intelligence.
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         The Thingy Flip is hear to not only stop us from getting dumber but I believe it can increase our brain connectivity because we are using 5 sides of the closed fist we could be 5 time more intelligent with 5 times the connection from right to left sides of the brain It might even be possible to bring the sexes closer together than ever before.
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         https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2013/12/male-and-female-brains-really-are-built-differently/281962/
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         What I mean by this is they say . By analyzing the MRIs of 949 people aged 8 to 22, scientists at the University of Pennsylvania found that male brains have more connections within each hemisphere, while female brains are more interconnected between hemispheres.
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         What if by exercising the brain with the Thingy Flip both males and females could have the same amount of connections. Would there be less divorces. Would there be less Wars less aggression.
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      <pubDate>Fri, 11 Sep 2020 07:47:49 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.thingyflip.com/why-are-iqs-going-down</guid>
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      <title>How the Thingy Flip was Invented.</title>
      <link>https://www.thingyflip.com/how-the-thingy-flip-was-invented</link>
      <description>How the Thingy Flip was invented</description>
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         How the Thingy Flip was Invented
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         My name is Dominic See the inventor of the Thingy Flip.
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         I was a great sportsman as a kid, I jumped 2m in the high jump and was a 1st 15 Rugby player but I struggled at school being dyslexic and probably today I would be diagnosed as being hyperactive.
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         To me, I was just a kid. My confidence with school work was very low to the degree that I did not care at all about school apart from making sure I had fun.
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         and that's hard to do when you are so far behind the other kids in class, my grade average was Es and Fs, about as bad as you can get. And getting the cane was not fun eather.
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         As a boy of about 9, I learnt to juggle 3 balls. I had been trying for a few years but could never get the hang of it.
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         Have you Tried to Juggle its really hard.
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         I remember being so determined to juggle it took about 12 months but i finally did it.
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         Soon after all my grades went up dramatically to Cs and Ds, But the best thing was my confidence and communication grew and I was concentrating in class and I was a lot happier.
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         In my 20s I learned the reason I was slow at school was the right and left hand sides of my brain were not connected as well as others. And by learning to Juggle I was making pathways and connections.
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         When I was about 27 I remember  I wanted to invent something that was easier than Juggling to help people connect the right and left sides of the brain.
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         It only took me  30 years to come up with the idea.
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         I bought a 3D printer and I was lying in bed thinking about what to print.
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         I remembered wanting to invent something easier than Juggling
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         and I also thought about a game we used to play called Knuckles where you have 5 bone knuckles and toss them in the air to see how many you can catch.
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         I thought about the Brain and how it would be great to toss and catch on 5 sides of the fist.
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         That would be a great Brain eye hand coordination workout even better than Juggling.
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         Then it hit me the thought of putting a handle into a box.
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         A few nights later I thought about putting games onto each side of the box. Its been a long process but that’s how I came up with the Thingy Flip.
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      <pubDate>Fri, 11 Sep 2020 07:36:14 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>https://www.thingyflip.com/how-the-thingy-flip-was-invented</guid>
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