10K Steps Is a Myth–Try This Instead
When motivation is lacking, jumping into heavy routines is the fastest way to burn out. That’s why millions of people are turning to walking as the foundation of their fitness journey.
Walking lets you enjoy the outdoors, clear your head, and practice mindfulness. It’s simple, sustainable, and can support lasting weight loss if you know how much you need. The “10,000 steps a day” rule is outdated; everyone’s lifestyle is different.
With Simple, you’ll get access to habit-based coaching that’s helped users lose over 18 million pounds. Take the quiz to discover your personalized walking target.
One-point perspective. That's it.
It's a technique that creates the illusion of depth using a single point on your page — called the vanishing point. Once you understand it, you can draw rooms, cities, roads, and streets that feel like they stretch into the distance.
What is the vanishing point?
A single dot on your horizon line where all your perspective lines meet. Everything in your scene recedes toward it. It's the foundation of every perspective drawing — and the first thing the guide walks you through.
What can you draw with one-point perspective?
• A bedroom or living room with real spatial depth
• A city street with buildings receding into the distance
• A road that stretches toward the horizon
• 3D letters built from the same cube-drawing method
• Outdoor scenes with atmospheric depth (it's all in how you draw the clouds)
Why learn this before two-point or three-point perspective?
Because it's the easiest. One vanishing point. One horizon line. Unlimited depth. It's the fastest way to make your 2D illustrations feel believable.
How long does it take?
About 10 minutes per exercise. Pencil and paper — or a tablet — is all you need.
The best HR advice comes from those in the trenches. That’s what this is: real-world HR insights delivered in a newsletter from Hebba Youssef, a Chief People Officer who’s been there. Practical, real strategies with a dash of humor. Because HR shouldn’t be thankless—and you shouldn’t be alone in it.
Have a great day,
Jae





