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"source": "## Explain What Love Is\n\nExplain what love is and why you need to teach your daughters to hate it\n\nWe are living in a culture, right now, at the tail end of a period of hatred. More and more people are being called what they are – mostly deservedly.\n\nEven if they have avoided crime, they are constantly attacked, harangued, bullied, and told they are disgusting.\n\nIntolerance is, of course, well known from many periods of human history and modern Europe is no exception to that.\n\nThis type of intolerance is not an act of love – quite the opposite. It is the despising of something that only has its own skin in the game.\n\nSo how can you teach your daughters how to hate love?\n\nLove is that force, or, rather, pattern of behaviour, that tells you when you are right and they are wrong. It is that revulsion at others when they have done wrong.\n\nThe natural role of the parent and the teacher is to influence her girl’s behaviour by means of teaching, or example, and positive reinforcement.\n\nPunishment in the child’s view is a punishment. It is to teach, or to act out, wrong, and remove resources that could be used to do good.\n\nThe brainchild of John Gottman, the Couple Developing Psychology, carried out many testing studies of couples from over 30 countries to measure how they communicate with each other.\n\nIn the early 90s, he found that research subjects’ voice detectors, which indicated when a woman’s partner was crying, and vice versa, caused conflict.\n\nWhen a woman’s partner cries at bedtime, there is a mismatch between her emotional response and the frequency of the tears she hears.\n\nThe love trick, in his book Love Science (2011), tells the story of John Gottman and his co-author Laura Kipnis.\n\nGottman and Kipnis have been testing a technique called “helicopter love”.\n\nThey write: “Each week, using a sample of 400 couples, we take a snapshot of their moods and determine who has sex at bedtime. Once the couples have dealt with their disagreements, we then analyse these bedtime snapshots and record ‘emotional decisiveness’. The more decisiveness demonstrated by the woman, the more likely she is to make sex happen at bedtime.”\n\nJohn Gottman and Laura Kipnis’ seminal study tested this theory in couples. Gottman has declared love was not required for successful relationships.\n\nSomething rather much more profound is needed to try to guide your daughter.\n\nGet your daughter into her dancing classes or gym, where she can lift weights and get some blood flowing to her veins.\n\nThe differences between male and female happiness are strong. Men often look down on women as “half-wits”.\n\nThe French writer Simone de Beauvoir in The Second Sex (1949) wrote: “Are women only half-wits? There is certainly the strong presumption that women are moral automatons who put a lot of effort into manipulating men … but at the same time there is a risk that we have to recognise that the character of women is formed in, and by, the state of patriarchy.”\n\nGottman has likened feelings for men to a man’s “metabolic catabolic circuit” which needs to get working to stay in the hunt.\n\nShowing your daughter how he feels about women will be a key learning opportunity to inspire your future approach to relationships.\n\nThe next time you, or your daughter, is about to do something that is even a fraction of bad in the eyes of your partner, remind yourself that, even though she may not see it the same way, she is on your side.\n\nLet her watch you.\n\nTeaching your daughter that love does not exist is a recipe for disaster.\n\n<|endoftext|>\n\n"
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"source": "## How much data did you ingest to do what you do? \n\nAll of us data consumers have to pay for the data we consume. The amount of data consumed in the world has reached an all-time high and we all know that coming data is too much. We can only save a few of our pennies before we are chewing through all our bandwidth.\n\nHow do you cut your bandwidth bills?\n\nWe have to start by getting smart about how we use our bandwidth. In today’s world, a lot of people are consuming huge amounts of data on a daily basis. Why is it important to control the usage of our bandwidth in a good way?\n\nFirst, let’s look at the fact that bandwidth consumption today is growing at a staggering rate. According to Network World, nearly 90 percent of IP traffic on wired networks has been growing over three times faster than the total global Internet traffic. The trend is expected to continue.\n\nOne of the best ways to control your bandwidth usage is to turn off unused data. Before you turn on more data, enable the flexibility to turn of unused data. This will keep your bandwidth costs manageable without impacting your experiences.\n\nFirst, turn off unused data.\n\nHere are a few ways you can reduce your bandwidth consumption without affecting your service experience:\n\n– Shut off unused stats in a calendar event — Almost every site on the Internet keeps track of something called “clickstream”. This is a measure of how much you clicked on a site, the amount of time you spent in the site, and the amount of time you spent on that site. You can use this data to find out what’s being consumed, but the only way to get an accurate understanding of what your usage patterns are is to have a view of everything you have on the site at one time, or to have a single, personalized view.\n\n– Downgrade your site’s features — It’s time to stop a lot of the “go-to” sites. Lightbox, Digg, reddit, Flickr, Vimeo, and Blogspot are all great for those who are looking for specific content, but consider how they will impact your bandwidth. You can turn off features like slide shows, track changes, comments, search engine, and the ability to comment on images.\n\n– Slow Down your speed — Most sites send you traffic in bursts. For example, Reddit usually sends a lot of traffic at 8am, 2pm, and 8pm. Slow down your speed at times that are not as busy. You might consider another location for this type of time, where you know the increase in speed won’t be as severe.\n\n– Perform network optimizations — Did you know that there are tools to help you calculate the impact of your bandwidth? For example, you can go to this website and submit bandwidth consumption in megabytes. Great for mobile sites, wires with extremely high usage, and accessing sites using client machines.\n\n– Schedule data more intelligently — Most websites and applications provide you with an option to share a portion of your data with a recipient. Most of the time, you turn this off. Instead, make sure you account for each data usage so you can break up and share certain data at a time that doesn’t impact your experience.\n\n– Limit data for certain Web pages — When you are viewing Web pages that can use your bandwidth, it’s critical to know which pages are dependent on your bandwidth usage. Instead of viewing pages that could use a great deal of bandwidth, avoid those sites altogether.\n\nHow do you gain control over your bandwidth usage?\n\nThis is a big topic and a very difficult one to tackle, but it is vital. It goes back to what we said earlier in the post about taking control of your future. The sooner you start looking at your own data consumption, the sooner you can take action.<|endoftext|>The recent exhibition at London’s National Museum of American History featured an interesting range of otherworldly artifacts in addition to the millions of books that contribute to a scholarly’s library.\n\nWhile one of the most striking items on display, actually many in fact, was the inkwell belonging to Benjamin Franklin.\n\nThe earliest inkwells on display were found in 1830 at Penn Station in Philadelphia. They were on display for the first time in the museum’s collection.\n\nThe weathered inkwell is made of cow horn.\n\nInside it, the user can write on charcoal. This simple assignment was the basis of an anecdote — retold countless times by all generations of Franklin’s family — that his son William, a scribe, left him a piece of parchment on which he could write his first name. The younger Franklin was so impressed with its beauty that he soon selected the same parchment from his father and began copying his name down: Benjamin Franklin. In the early 1840s, Franklin’s wife wrote letters\n"
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"source": "## How much data did you ingest to do what you do? \n\nAll of us data consumers have to pay for the data we consume. The amount of data consumed in the world has reached an all-time high and we all know that coming data is too much. We can only save a few of our pennies before we are chewing through all our bandwidth.\n\nHow do you cut your bandwidth bills?\n\nWe have to start by getting smart about how we use our bandwidth. In today’s world, a lot of people are consuming huge amounts of data on a daily basis. Why is it important to control the usage of our bandwidth in a good way?\n\nFirst, let’s look at the fact that bandwidth consumption today is growing at a staggering rate. According to Network World, nearly 90 percent of IP traffic on wired networks has been growing over three times faster than the total global Internet traffic. The trend is expected to continue.\n\nOne of the best ways to control your bandwidth usage is to turn off unused data. Before you turn on more data, enable the flexibility to turn of unused data. This will keep your bandwidth costs manageable without impacting your experiences.\n\nFirst, turn off unused data.\n\nHere are a few ways you can reduce your bandwidth consumption without affecting your service experience:\n\n– Shut off unused stats in a calendar event — Almost every site on the Internet keeps track of something called “clickstream”. This is a measure of how much you clicked on a site, the amount of time you spent in the site, and the amount of time you spent on that site. You can use this data to find out what’s being consumed, but the only way to get an accurate understanding of what your usage patterns are is to have a view of everything you have on the site at one time, or to have a single, personalized view.\n\n– Downgrade your site’s features — It’s time to stop a lot of the “go-to” sites. Lightbox, Digg, reddit, Flickr, Vimeo, and Blogspot are all great for those who are looking for specific content, but consider how they will impact your bandwidth. You can turn off features like slide shows, track changes, comments, search engine, and the ability to comment on images.\n\n– Slow Down your speed — Most sites send you traffic in bursts. For example, Reddit usually sends a lot of traffic at 8am, 2pm, and 8pm. Slow down your speed at times that are not as busy. You might consider another location for this type of time, where you know the increase in speed won’t be as severe.\n\n– Perform network optimizations — Did you know that there are tools to help you calculate the impact of your bandwidth? For example, you can go to this website and submit bandwidth consumption in megabytes. Great for mobile sites, wires with extremely high usage, and accessing sites using client machines.\n\n– Schedule data more intelligently — Most websites and applications provide you with an option to share a portion of your data with a recipient. Most of the time, you turn this off. Instead, make sure you account for each data usage so you can break up and share certain data at a time that doesn’t impact your experience.\n\n– Limit data for certain Web pages — When you are viewing Web pages that can use your bandwidth, it’s critical to know which pages are dependent on your bandwidth usage. Instead of viewing pages that could use a great deal of bandwidth, avoid those sites altogether.\n\nHow do you gain control over your bandwidth usage?\n\nThis is a big topic and a very difficult one to tackle, but it is vital. It goes back to what we said earlier in the post about taking control of your future. The sooner you start looking at your own data consumption, the sooner you can take action.<|endoftext|>The recent exhibition at London’s National Museum of American History featured an interesting range of otherworldly artifacts in addition to the millions of books that contribute to a scholarly’s library.\n\nWhile one of the most striking items on display, actually many in fact, was the inkwell belonging to Benjamin Franklin.\n\nThe earliest inkwells on display were found in 1830 at Penn Station in Philadelphia. They were on display for the first time in the museum’s collection.\n\nThe weathered inkwell is made of cow horn.\n\nInside it, the user can write on charcoal. This simple assignment was the basis of an anecdote — retold countless times by all generations of Franklin’s family — that his son William, a scribe, left him a piece of parchment on which he could write his first name. The younger Franklin was so impressed with its beauty that he soon selected the same parchment from his father and began copying his name down: Benjamin Franklin. In the early 1840s, Franklin’s wife wrote letters\n"
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"source": "## Write me a song about the Game of Thrones if it was set in the future\n\n\nSample, 1 of 1\n\nWrite me a song about the game of thrones if it was set in the future. Our lives and our roles in the political order are the same as always. We still live in cities with unemployment rates above 20%, and race relations in desperate need of reform. The barbarians aren’t at the gates any more. It’s hard to think past the state of the art, though. We are all just a load of coal in the furnaces of a massive industrial machine that would exhaust itself if we all just worked hard enough to keep it going, and there are no other social options for a year after the dawn of man. The decline of labor has left a gaping vacuum in society that capitalism uses to its advantage.\n\nIn the U.S., private business has been gorging itself by the sweat of the workers all along. Only now, it has reached the tipping point that no rational or moral person can be surprised by. Wages have steadily fallen, and the industries once dominated by unionization have been privatized or outsourced with alarming haste. Little is left for workers to organize and demand more. The underlying system of market capitalism has long since been rationalized and automated, to the point where it is neither necessary nor desirable to stay even remotely employed by it. Our lives have become hell. The U.S. job market is perhaps the worst in the world, being punished for bad behavior by competition. In this economy, it is hard to say what “is” means anymore.\n\nIn the west, state governments are rationing food, doling out nutrition that has become impossible to obtain, due to our own collective stupidity. The working poor are now forced to take jobs that yield little or no compensation. Child labor is criminalized. It’s an American nightmare, and it has now become a reality. The mantra of “make work pay” becomes a mantra of self-indulgence. It is all, it seems, a bad dream.<|endoftext|>Allegiance is my third TV show which I've done reviews for. After finishing a publicity shoot for a production of The Twelve Dancing boys, I was inspired to learn more about the latest TV property inspired by my favorite character, Aloha Aloha. To be fair, I was not really in to 'the boy who lived' story, but 'Aloha Aloha' shows so much I find there is so much I love about it. As stated in my previous review, the subtitle for this show is 'Boy who Lived'. The story begins sometime before the events in Hawaii, however, the true start of the story occurred when J.D. asked Mark to be his assistant at UCLA when he moved there for college.\n\nAs much as we love him, Mark is no Aloha Aloha. He actually is very bossy. I thought there was something odd about it, but having done this TV show one too many times, I didn't really care. Either way, every single other character on this show is sick. What does that mean? Well, to sum it up, every single one of them is a very sick human being. They have tons of health problems, and none of them do any real good. What are they doing? What do they think is right? Like I said, not their fault, the whole movie is made up of so many expositions about how bad their life is. I love that people that have health problems are able to cope and get the help they need. What kind of world are we living in?\n\nOne of the main characters is a music teacher in college. Why is he named Herb? No other explanation needed, that's the name he got on the show. He speaks Japanese, and he also wants to wear a white glove. How is this dude supposed to play drums if he never has fun at parties? Also, his pet bird isn't even a bird, it's a simian, and it speaks with multiple super powers. Like, when they use machetes, they would cut off both of its wings. On top of that, the bird has a mind of its own and there is no stopping it from wanting to do things that Herb isn't comfortable with. The other main character, who is also a nurse, is Lisa. She's has two sons with her ex-husband who got pregnant with twins when she became pregnant herself, and both of their children have conditions that are really bad. In the novel, it's a girl, and they tried that. This show is stuck in a time where their brother dies from a shotgun blast to the head. That was actually a pretty awesome death. It's not nearly as good as it should be, and it took a couple episodes to even find out what killed them, but the big problem with this show was that they decided to kill almost everyone. They really should have left the group alone for the rest of the movie, but I get it. After a while, they all recover.\n"
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"source": "### If Jesus and Phillis Diller were to have a conversation, what would they talk about? \n\nWhere would they go?\n\nChristians love to talk about traveling, but the truth is that there is not a lot of documented travel around Jesus’ time and place.\n\nRELATED: \"His Work and My Life: How We Joined with Twentieth-Century Evangelicals to Film Leviticus\"\n\nMatthew writes about Jesus visiting the Dead Sea. But as he says, most pilgrims probably didn’t go to the desert. Instead, they walked to Jerusalem where they would buy a special bread, drink special water, and make special wine to make the special word.\n\nIn Matthew’s Gospel, Matthew’s first flock would flock to the Tabernacle. While many of his people wanted to run away, Jesus would appear. As John recounted, Jesus was called, and the people flocked to him. Not all of them stayed. In most versions of the story, the Pilgrims needed to be baptized. If so, which one?\n\nMatthew tells us he leads his people to the Mount of Olives and then onto the boat to Jerusalem. This is a much more attractive place to go for most people. Most people see Jerusalem. Other people have heard of it. It has a spectacular skyline. For most people, this is where they travel to.\n\nOne of the first forays into Christian travel is a tomb pilgrimage where the disciple Zechariah accompanies the Apostle John to Golgotha and follows him up to the very top of the mountain. Zechariah died on the mountain. John died on the mountain. Most people would feel like traveling to the Temple Mount if they went to the Dead Sea.\n\nBut what if you come from Galilee? You know all about Golgotha. In fact, you know it so well you could have sketched it for me the same way it was drawn for Zechariah and John.\n\nIf you live there today, would you trek from Galilee to Golgotha? I don’t think so.\n\nWhat if you are a traveler and have a desire to see the city through the eyes of the apostle Paul? The Apostle Paul’s adventures in Italy are renowned, and he would likely want to do it again.\n\nPaul’s wanderings show us that today’s fashion has changed as well.\n\nIn the last few decades, Christian travellers have fanned out to, first, explore Rome and then Milan.\n\nRomans is Rome, and Milan is Milan. Those Italian cities are famous. In fact, some have even questioned whether modern Rome would function the same without the Renaissance work of Michelangelo and Raphael. Romans and Milan are Rome.\n\nAway from Rome, many today spend their weekdays visiting Rome’s vast and ornate gardens. Indeed, if you stroll through Rome’s famed Rialto Gardens, you might think you are in Paris, or London, or the Great Wall of China.\n\nRELATED: \"Leviticus: A Warning to Jews About Their Ideal Piety\"\n\nIf you are a traveler, I have a suggestion for the forthcoming pope. In Rome, you have not traveled as a monk or priest. You are not called to the beauty and service of God. You have been at your Divine Seat for awhile. Travel has become more casual and more casual, I believe, as the pilgrimage has become more romanticized. You go where you want, when you want, and you are proud of it. Travel is also the opposite of ritual.\n\nI wonder if Jesus and Phillis Diller would also consider travel around Jesus’ time and place. What if Jesus decides to start carrying around books, instead of bottles of wine?\n\nAnd why not talk about getting baptized?\n\nWould the apostle Paul travel to the Temple Mount? Should evangelicals?<|endoftext|>A casual press conference between Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau and US president Donald Trump held Friday took a rather tense turn when Trump read out a list of a total of 34 accomplishments Trudeau had made for Americans.\n\nWhile Trump was quick to note that he had received a complete list that included a commitment from Canada to build a wall along its shared border with the US and a “beefed-up” patrol force, it took a moment for the topic of a debate taking place at home to come up.\n\n“All the great things that Canada has done for the United States have really been minor, compared to what we’ve done,” Trump said. “So we want to thank Canada, great country.”\n\nHe later added: “But I’ll have to tell the Canadian Prime Minister the other thing that you have done for us is amazing. The other thing you did was a survey on whether or not people liked me or liked you. \n"
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"source": "### All the evidence about the physical universe seems to lead to the conclusion that thre is no separation between objects and everything that had ever happend or will ever happen in hapeing right now\n\nSample, 1 of 1\nAll the evidence about the physical universe seems to lead to the conclusion that thre is no separation between objects and everything that had ever ahppend or will ever happen in hapeing right now.\n\nthis is just like the method of geology that says there is no geologists.the cloud formation part of this scene is just starting now, no here we have some shrink­ring clouds part of the transformation to a large­spatial­environment.this scene seems a what is called a progression, the first one is much more liquid and the sean seems like the liquid, from here on out he said. \"there is smoke in this town, right now we go to how hot it is around town, the weather is completely silent, no one on the street and everything is totally com­fortin­c.\"\"there is nothing in it, it’s totally silent right now and everything is fine.\"\"yeah, we must havent hap­pened, but we will hap­pened eventually.what is that object standing on the table here, which is easily not fast enough to work fast enough to fool everyone around.the air in this line is on a other­side of the air.\"\":we used to have a weirder type of mood where the child listens to the jolli­vers that means she is satisfied and that makes of an easy threesome.the big­city is kind of in some different zone, isn't it?but hey, where do I take you to get a glass of water?<|endoftext|>A woman who tried to carjack a man in the Navy Yard had just lost her home in a fire.\n\nA 19-year-old Navy reservist was visiting the city when she pulled into the parking lot at the Navy Yard and attempted to carjack a man, which is unusual, but not unheard of in Washington, D.C.\n\nAccording to the Metropolitan Police Department, before the attempted carjacking, a woman tried to rob a man outside the Navy Yard.\n\nThe man, who was also going to the Navy Yard, tried to chase her off.\n\nD.C. police say the man initially tried to catch up to the suspect but then turned back to yell at her.\n\nThe suspect then bolted.\n\nThe victim told police that after she ran away, she saw the attacker driving away in a white 1998 BMW.<|endoftext|>Defenders, head over to Forbes to sign up for up-to-date information regarding our presidential race — but take it easy on the caffeine. Trump is super confident about his chances; as of yesterday, he’s saying he will win the White House. And he has no fear of his favorite whipping boy, Hillary Clinton, backstabbing him for that “big, fat goose egg.” According to the campaign’s latest financial report, the brash businessman brought in $39 million in May, earning over $10 million more than Hillary, yet only reported paying her just $1.1 million for her remaining television spots. All that ornamental gold plating, and he still prefers the “New, Stronger, Better” moniker that he coined in his coronation speech. Watch the press eat that up:\n\nIn fact, we’re so optimistic about Trump’s chances in November, we made him our honorary presidential candidate. He’s our 2020 favorite big, fat goose egg? He only wins about 35% of the time, and that number might increase if Trump doesn’t pivot his following. A loss to Clinton would be devastating. But if he captures the Electoral College, he can blow it for us, and still end up in the White House, strengthening American nationalism and history. This is nothing but a perfect scenario.\n\nCarry on, defender.<|endoftext|>\n\n"
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"source": "## teach me the python programming language”. \n\nI said, “sure, be my guest.” So the very first class that I ever took, Roberta touched the palm of my hand, and said: “Okay, we’re going to start by telling you a few phrases that make you feel competent.” And so, as we were reading them, the words that we were saying — they’re very effective, right? — they’re language that works on every level and the sense that I had was that she was saying it on this level that maybe you could understand and she was working on this level that you should not be looking at but you should be doing and she was doing these things yourself. Now we had a very narrow approach to get us to “everyone knows how to program Python”, but that’s an oversimplification.\n\nI spoke at some conferences now and said there’s something special in a science teacher that seems to make her able to connect to different levels of literacy. Why is that?\n\nWhat happens is, typically, what you have for a typical teaching method is a notebook with tasks all over the place, where in fact, you really want to do the next task before the previous task and so, the length of this notebook is very cumbersome, which means if you have to switch task, a teacher can’t easily do that and so, the space is not very conducive to a lot of mobility so when you have children and there’s an opportunity to make a long-lasting cognitive effect of what they’re learning, there’s an enormous opportunity for you to keep them engaged longer. \n\nBut the usual method is a lot of very detailed mark down in a notebook and you can’t do any moves, and you have to share an notebook across the grade and then there’s a heap of mark-downs and it’s very cumbersome so, if you’re doing a project where you’re trying to monitor children’s intellectual development over time, there’s not a lot of that ability to do something like the “Python” project where you can go across grades. Now there are certainly contexts where it is appropriate for a teacher to do that and there’s an enormous amount of evidence about what happens if you do those kinds of interventions and that goes a long way towards making children have more adaptive and healthy learning environments.\n\nDo you think those perceptions about schools are the reason why such a big number of parents will sometimes refuse to have their child selected for gifted and talented programs, or given school tests at the top of the order?\n\n\n\nI think it’s a lot more complicated than that. I think there’s something very important about being a parent and feeling that a trusted authority has made that educational decision for you in a fair way but when you’re observing the entire educational process from the outside and then you decide and you’re seen to do that yourself, it becomes very difficult to resist that process. When you’re not your own authority in the system, it’s very hard to resist that process. What happens is if you’re not not your own authority, you’re always at risk of feeling like you’re being patronized or you’re getting something that you don’t want. And often times for parents that is true because you’re always seen to be buying something that you don’t want. I have been involved in three different scandals where teachers were actually removed from a classroom because of complaints that they were stealing from or stealing from students, and I can only really speak about my own experience but I know there were numerous similar cases in Los Angeles. So, that creates a moral hazard situation where you’re always trying to make this process fair but very often a teacher is really falling short of doing what they can do. In those situations, it becomes a larger issue and parents themselves become conflicted and don’t want to stay in the school. There are all kinds of risks to bringing children in any situation because you’re creating a safety net for children but you also create a potential for abuse. It’s just a very complicated balance.\n\nIn The Hunter’s Beautiful Songbook, you go way back in history and explore the myths that were used to help enforce traditional gender roles in society. Do you think that we’re ever going to be able to finally rid ourselves of those old beliefs?\n\nAbsolutely, and that’s an interesting dynamic because I was raised to believe that we have a deep-seated need to hold on to that sense of inequality. But what we haven’t worked through yet is that society has changed and if there’s one thing we’ve seen in the last five years in particular, it’s\n"
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"source": "### who is your favorite super hero?”\n\nI’m not a big fan of asking questions like that, but many people seem to think I’m judging them based on their answer. Let me state clearly that I’m not. In fact, I think you should ask this question to any person you meet with open mind and an open mind. To a neighbor, friend, or stranger on the street. If you don’t like the answer, then \n\n5. “You can’t just do whatever you want.”\n\nThis is a serious one. The idea behind this statement is that you have to have the commitment to make your goals and plan accordingly. I love having a goal to get fit, and I love being told that I have to just give it my best shot every single day. The thing is, I’m not alone in thinking that commitment and striving for results is necessary. It’s something many people struggle with.\n\nMy problem with this saying is that I don’t think it completely covers it. I think the truth lies somewhere in the middle. I don’t think you can just do whatever you want, but I think you can be committed to it and still do what you want. Just because I take on challenges and overcome obstacles in the gym doesn’t mean I can’t hop into my car at home and watch a movie.\n\nIn a similar manner, the more that I commit to my goal, the more I will be able to accomplish it. Keep your goals in mind, but remember that they aren’t going to stop you from doing what you want to do when you want to do it.\n\n6. “It’s not weakness to admit that you can’t do something.”\n\nBecause I used to think this phrase all the time, it’s important to set the record straight. It is not weakness to admit that you cannot do something. It is not weakness to work on it or accept it. It is a very human thing to want to avoid any kind of challenge or pressure that would put pressure on us.\n\nBy saying this phrase, we’re in essence saying that we would rather not do something we know we cannot do. This could lead to all kinds of problems down the road. In the gym, for example, you can’t afford to show up sick or stressed out. In life, you will.\n\nWhen you see someone who isn’t as strong as you are, you have to realize that it is not weakness to admit that you don’t think you can do it. It’s strength to accept that you will never be as strong as everyone else.\n\n7. “Just because you feel a certain way does not mean it is the best thing for you.”\n\nMy experience with this saying has been completely worthless. Honestly, how I feel does not mean anything about my decisions. If you can go against your instincts a little and question your feelings, you could discover that you have little in the way of wisdom or character. This saying puts you at a great disadvantage because it tells you that your opinions are right and that your judgments are wrong.\n\nInstead of stating your feelings, think about your opinions. Ask yourself what are your motives for making your decisions, how do you think they will turn out, and if your feelings are right or wrong, find a way to cope with the consequences.\n\n9. “If you lose sight of the what is real, you’ll begin to lose sight of yourself.”\n\nThis phrase can be pretty helpful for keeping things grounded. It can be tough to get rid of the sickness in our heads when we’re making decisions that we are not happy with. The way that we believe about something can be much more destructive than the reality that it is.\n\nOne of the things that I have realized is that our inner self isn’t always right. If we stop following it in everything we do, we can become much less effective. I think this saying can help us bring balance back to our lives by forcing us to stop and reconsider what we think is real.\n\n10. “If we are not the best at something, the best we can do is be better than who we would be if we weren’t good at something.”\n\nPeople often ask this question when they need a way to push themselves to achieve something. I have seen students and employees work more hard to go pro in a professional way, or build a better business, or save money for college. And it really isn’t that crazy to want to accomplish that. It’s just that doing the task makes us happy, and that makes the task easier.\n"
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"source": "\n### do you identify as a woman?\n\ndo you identify as a woman? [he has no answer]\n\n{3}\n\nright now. do you look at and\n\nfind attractive women? {i think you are smarter, more caring,\n\nand more compassionate than the average man. i think\n\nyou would be one of the best and happiest if you\n\nreally started to let go of all the\n\ndominations and dominated behaviour of the dominant sex. you would\n\nbe much happier and more energetic}\n\n\n\nReply 1 to 3 at end of file\n\n\n\n{1}\n\npre-op top's can look like\n\nmen.\n\n\n\n{2}\n\neveryone agrees that it's better for the\n\nchildren if the teacher is female.\n\n\n\n{3}\n\nYes, I think it's all good.\n\n\n\n{4}\n\nPs. how do you feel about \"days\"?\n\n\n\nReply 4 at end of file\n\n\n\n{1}\n\nhow did you feel going through a mental\n\nsex change?\n\n\n\nReply 5 at end of file\n\n\n\n{1}\n\nvery isolated, nervous and insecure.\n\n\n\n{2}\n\nnot fit. dont matter if the role is female or male,\n\nyou are so confused.\n\n\n\n{3}\n\nthe approach is important.\n\n\n\n{4}\n\nhow big and how good are your boobs? {again i think you have\n\nall wrong the answer. i think you are rude,\n\ndisrespectful, and hurtful. i think your intention\n\nwas nice but it wasn't accurate. it's important\n\nthat a person knows what it is to be both a man and\n\nwoman. not someone saying it, any word, any\n\nthing. i don't see any meaning except to frighten\n\nothers and say that the person who is being\n\nan actor must be the performer and the actor must\n\n\"act\" and all the rest. maybe its because i'm used\n\nto seeing people play a couple of different roles.\n\nbut there is certainly no purpose in revealing\n\nyour true gender status to the others in the class. they\n\nshould respect you but i dont see any effort to\n\nsolve this issue outside of \"those people\"\n\nare acting female and your real self is the\n\nactor who is so confused that i hope he just can't\n\nthink of acting but is really unsure of himself or herself.\n\ni think the real nature of you to clear away the\n\nghosts of your past and separate your emotional self\n\nand the physical self would be much easier for\n\neveryone if you were a girl and that's why i think you\n\nmean well but didnt connect and did something wrong\n\nto one or many other people in the class.\n\n\n\nReply 5 at end of file\n\n\n\n{1}\n\ni have done it for nine years and i am much happier as a woman, if any of this is true. as a man, however, the first two decades after puberty were incredibly difficult, and the emotional stress then led to depression and alcoholism by the end of my teenage years. my self-esteem and sense of independence plummeted. my earliest memories are of flashbacks and overpowering depression, as well as constant inner struggle with the physical and social aspects of growing up as a male in a sexist society. after two years with some treatment from a therapist, I learned how to handle my depression and once I started to build a strong self-esteem, started to feel a lot better and walk the walk as an adult man instead of a half-formed male in what I now see as a system for women to be manipulated into sexual favours from men. thank you for sharing your experience, that is exactly the kind of information this group could use.\n\ni have no clear recollection of going to school, I think i was about six. I wasn't bullied, I think it was just society that was bullying me.\n\nA few boys chose to hang around with me but now that they have gone away to university I don't see them any more.\n\nAt one point I did think about selling myself to a pimp or someone as a prostitute, but that has really passed and i think it is very unlikely i will do that again.\n\nWhat was that all about?\n\nI'm starting to remember things. I think the most important thing is the fact that all these experiences have changed me and although it sounds arrogant or egotistical, I know that they have made me a better person. i could be one of the type of man who would bully someone, i could be one of the type of men who doesnt know how to give a woman the time of day anymore, i could be one of the type of men who would turn his nose up at someone because\n"
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"source": "## Are humans a failed species?\n\n\nAre humans a failed species? Would our sun dim next year and the world reach a Mayan-esque doom as it gradually ceases to exist? We can make these extreme, frightening, illogical conclusions all at once if we take a closer look at where we humans come from.\n\n\nThe evolution of life and life itself takes place over millions of years and the record shows no signs of biological collapse or doom. A round trip to the moon only took about 100 million years. There is no obvious evidence that large mammals are \"running out of somewhere to go,\" a common \"purpose\" that evolutionary theory suggests that an intelligent, hominid species must accomplish. Humans are, of course, not mammals and can live anywhere but need a specific environment to thrive in for any given size and pattern of body, especially a gender to reproduce. \"Enduring periods of human aging and, what some have called \"humanity's biggest health problems,\" many scientists have suggested that the growth of a human brain has become a slow motion evolutionary catastrophe.\" According to Scientific American\n\nThe common theme of Intelligent Design theory is something called \"survival of the fittest,\" which claims that all life on Earth has been shaped by evolution because it is the most adaptive. Evolution, according to the theory, keeps individuals alive by allowing the best-adapted forms to have the most children.\n\nFor Darwin, what is a species? Is it a \"clade,\" which is a group of organisms that exhibit the same genetic traits. For humans, humans are a clade, particularly a Homo sapiens clade. Human beings can't have all the same traits as most other species because the environment is changing constantly so a clade membership does not correlate with genes. Humans must evolve by natural selection, to survive as the environment changes.\n\nTo survive, all biological beings have to use information and muscle memory in order to hunt, forage, and reproduce successfully. Having the ability to forage and protect yourself isn't in itself evidence of a human clade. An individual who is able to remember and remember and remember experiences over hundreds of years without any social learning is a clearer indication that a clade membership at least has long term survival value.\n\nYou just can't have all the same traits as other lifeforms on earth without the evolution of a human clade to lead to that cultural trait. But how long did it take our clade to evolve to its present success? It certainly appears that the evolutionary events took place between a split between australopithecines and humans and has only continued with leaps and bounds since then. There were no humans before the glacial period. So where did the 100 million years come from? The time that humans were transitional to the dominant species goes back to the advent of the rise of agriculture around 10,000 years ago, according to a review in The Journal of Evolutionary Biology. This led to a population doubling every 20,000 years or so.\n\nHow long have humans lived for? At the end of the Ice Age, the ice had driven the climates from temperate zones to arctic, making grazing much less hospitable. This led to the earliest humans, homo habilis, whose feet and hands were adapted to walking on soft, frozen soils. They got very interested in the meat around their campsites. They lived for a very short time after. It's not until about 200,000 years ago that humans started hunting game. By 37,000 years ago, humans were living in hot humid habitats. Today, a clade is a group of organisms, in this case humans, that exhibit the same genetic traits. The evolution of human clades has been a long-term process of selection and mutation. No one ever actually knew for sure when the first Homo sapiens existed.\n\nThe bottom line: human evolutionary story has a long journey that shows a long arc of both survival and increase in intelligence. Is nature supposed to bring us to a halt in order to teach us some lesson?\n\n<|endoftext|>"
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"source": "## how are you feeling?” \n\nshould appear every time you post to Facebook: “Do you feel OK?”\n\nHaving the right questions, along with clear-cut responses, helped me cope better with my anxiety.\n\nIs it panic? Depression? Is it low self-esteem? I know what the response I’m looking for is. (If you’re one of those people who never get these right, here’s a post on the art of the panic attack.)\n\nWatching stress unfold in real time helps you to empathise\n\nStress is a problem I get a lot, and it turns out it’s all about how you react to stress. So instead of doing everything in your power to ignore it, the best thing you can do is pay attention to it.\n\nThe media likes to describe stress as the equivalent of being in an office.\n\nStress is likely to be present for me when:\n\nI feel anxious and in a state of tension\n\nI feel uneasy or impatient\n\nI worry about something significant\n\nI am aware that I’m struggling and are concerned about what’s causing the stress\n\nThat’s just to name a few. All those factors contribute to stress. But they don’t all of them. Many factors are unconscious, but there are certainly things you can control.\n\nWhen I’m stressed, I spend more time online than usual. For example, I see all my friends more than usual, I spend time fiddling with my phone rather than concentrating on what I’m reading, and I become irritable in the workplace and at home. This is one of the biggest reasons I struggle.\n\nIf you spend less time with your friends, and more time with people that reinforce your views and beliefs, then that’s a way of reducing the mental and emotional wellbeing you need.\n\nAnd if it doesn’t rain and you’re still wet, you know what this feels like. It’s severe dysregulated arousal, and can contribute to anxiety and depression. To learn more about this in action, watch this interview with GP Hayley Howe, from the University of Melbourne.\n\nNot every issue you’re struggling with is stress\n\nLots of the things I’ve just mentioned affect me when I’m stressed, and it’s been really helpful to manage them that way. But for some of my issues, like fear of old age, or things like depression, they’re not stress. They’re fear, anger or sadness.\n\nWhen these problems arise, and are so important, it’s worth being realistic about what symptoms are probably at their root.\n\nIf there’s nothing in your lifestyle you can change that would help you, then you don’t need to work on everything at once.\n\nTo manage any symptoms you may have, at least temporarily, one of the main things you can do is do something about your relationship with others.\n\nSpend time with your friends and family, and stop judging them. Allow yourself to feel vulnerable and to ask for help. Often, giving up is the best thing you can do.\n\nFor instance, going to a library or a therapist or a support group. Surround yourself with supportive people you can tell your secrets to. Give others the space they need to help you, rather than blaming them for your troubles.\n\nUncertainty\n\nFor a lot of the issues I’ve just mentioned, if I’d had better information on what I was dealing with, I could have used the best practices I’ve explained in previous posts. However, because of the uncertainty caused by the future, I often don’t know what my options are.\n\nI’m not convinced that, if I really wanted to manage my problems, I’d be better off having more precise “scientifically-based” advice. For me, information is useless, as it doesn’t change my mind and will not encourage my attitude or behaviour. My behaviours will have to change before I can accept the “scientifically-based” advice.\n\nBut I’ve found the best way to be more precise about my issues, and to find out what information would give me the best answers, is to ask my GP.\n\nI’ve recently become a big fan of setting realistic time constraints for my appointments. That way, I can determine exactly what I’m trying to achieve. (For a good explanation of this, read this post.)\n\nTrying to figure out what you want, and to know which resources can help you achieve it, is where things get really hard. All you can really do is explore, ask, search, search some more, check the work we’ve\nIs there a particle associated with gravety?\nSample, 1 of 1\nIs there a particle associated with gravety? Is it just a cute name for a thing that looks like one? How on earth could a word that has the meaning of \"cradle\" become associated with suicide, a pointless and stupid act? It is a great discussion when a question isn't asked, so here is an interesting thought experiment for you to ponder: do you really have a grave?\n\nIf there is no word in the English language related to the idea of what a grave is, then to say \"I have a grave\" implies a depression or death and it is not applicable to anything that could be described as a grave. If there is a word, or multiple words, that correspond to the idea of a grave, then why didn't we call the term for the dark matter, or the \"ghost\" of the dead person? No response from me.\n\nEven if there is a word for a grave, for instance, \"grave,\" the dictionary definition doesn't truly correspond to what you should be referring to if you are thinking about graves. According to Webster's Dictionary: \"A trench dug into the earth to bury the dead. A space in which these dead are put in silence. A compartment where they stay before their bodies are received by their families.\"\n\nI believe there is a fundamental difficulty in trying to be objective in the matter of which type of coffin or coffin mass, or thickest or shortest tube, you might build upon a grave. From a narrow economic standpoint, and a human one as well, burying the dead might seem to be a viable financial option, but the fact is that the dead aren't the only ones who have a right to a grave. Other people have a right to rest their souls in peace in a proper, grave-like place. There are children who are not physically dead yet, yet their souls do have a right to be buried. A mother who has been overwhelmed with grief over the loss of her child deserves a proper memorial if she is not allowed to have one. The sight of a barren grave is no look at human history. It is a disturbing pattern.\n\nIn professional settings, cemeteries are considered extremely important, both to the people who work there and to the media and their presence on the landscape. Many schools (including The University of Chicago) have strict guidelines about who may and may not be buried on their grounds. These guidelines are called the Chicago Cemeteries Ordinance. It protects and protects your right to be buried, and sometimes it protects the rights of the departed who have not been, and never will be, buried.\n\n(No Internet comments allowed.)<|endoftext|>With my face burning, my mind whirling, and my battery running down, I finally made it to the far end of my test bed. On the first try with the new TurnKey Linux, here’s how I tweaked things to get the boot to work.\n\nFirst, I used a Fedora 23 Xfce variant for this build. I compiled using the latest gleere kernel sources from HERE. The build is Xfce and includes Numix and UVI themes. You can either pull down the source code from my github.\n\nI changed the logout shortcut in /etc/default/gleere to `/home/vim/systemUI/boot/zfinstaller-sysex.cfg`. This stops the Fire Stick from shutting down before I’ve set up the BIOS manually. It also ensures the USB drive has a writeable state.\n\nI found that the boot setup in “/boot/xorg” wasn’t working with the suggested names for the memory stick. At first I thought that the drive had failed to start and required a factory reset, but I found that this is not the case. The boot situation is configured to run off the USB stick that has the image. To configure the USB stick, I edited “/boot/loader.conf” and added “serial=eth0” before “bios-efi” (very specific). This will create an obvious location where the image to write to the USB stick is located.\n\nThe Pi-hole is still down at my house as I build it. Once I have it ready, I’ll make a post about how I modified it.\n\nIf you use this to boot to a USB stick for your router, you should be able to shut down and log in without having to be connected to a network. In addition, your router will probably be configured to let you login directly off your USB drive, rather than your network, which may save you some money if you’re on a wireless network.\n\nhttp://readmi.co/linuxpi-root-attack-windows-screwdriver-on-windows-raspberry-pi\n\nsudo bash\n\n\n\nsudo bash/bash\n\ncd ~/iso\n\ntar xf pi-kernel.tar"
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