11/4/2015
Before I begin, I would like to recommend an expectation for reading this advice. For those of you who read Wishlist #1017, this advice is like that, so to speak. I speculate that, for many of you who read it, the best part of that advice was when I explained ‘Shock complain reciprocate’. If you look at your copy of the idea, or at the blog, you will notice that ‘Shock complain reciprocate’ was created at 10/1/2015. I typed that last part in the morning after I thought I finished explaining the idea, something I rarely do nowadays. I also imagined a boy explaining Wishlist #1017 to someone, saying that quote-
‘It was really good at first, but then it got really stupid at the end.’
Of course, the reason I imagined the boy explaining Wishlist #1017 was because of what I imagine the list to be it’s phenomenal success. You see, I speculate that the word ‘argue’ from that last part of that list is probably called one of the best ideas that I have ever made, even though it may seem to others that I have invented the idea by accident. Well anyway, the point of this speculation is not to brag about bookmark ‘Argue’, but just to recommend to you what type of expectation you may want to use to read this advice. I recommend you use the expectation that I speculate you have learned by reading Wishlist #1017. Basically, when I would recall Wishlist #1017, I see it as 5 words: 1)reciprocate, 2)attention, 3)surprise, 4)shock, and 5)argue. Since I am here, as an imagined exercise, I recommend that you imagine using those 5 words as if you are in a specific moment in episode 1.6 ‘Eggheads’ from series ‘Sliders(1995)’. According to Amazon Video, the reference recommended is located 39 minutes and 42 seconds into the episode, when Quinn Mallory(Jerry O’ Connell) is playing a sport called ‘Mindgame’. Within reason and refurbished for advice, of course, just imagine doing what Quinn did, but instead of answering the question ‘What is pi to 13 places?’, you use the 5 words as the answer in the context of ‘Mindgame’. In other words, you are running around like Quinn, but you are giving the 5 words as the answer: 1)reciprocate, 2)attention, 3)surprise, 4)shock, and 5)argue.
Well anyway, here is the example of what type of expectation I am recommending for you to use for this idea: It has been over a month now since you may have started using the ‘Argue’ bookmark, but even though it may seem like your use of the word ‘Argue’ is just the explanation I gave you for ‘Argue’, you imagined/speculated that, if all I did was give you the definition of the word ‘Argue’, then you would not use the word ‘Argue’ at all(This deduction is just from your 1st thoughts. You know what you mean). You then made the logical deduction that the effectiveness of the word ‘Argue’ was from the entire explanation from Wishlist #1017, even though you may not use the other parts of the explanation at all. [So, what I am trying to say is that, even though the beginnings of this advice may not WOW you in the beginning, after you read the whole thing, so to speak, you may be logically surprised as to what you may eventually find valuable in it.
Brace:
Before I begin the explanation, I recommend that, if you choose to use this advice, you try to remember what you were like before the use of this advice. For the kids who read this advice, whether or not you have one, I do not expect you to have an obvious technique that you can call upon to remember distress, like the way you may anticipate watching a new movie. However, for the adults, I recommend that you try to remember what you were like before this advice, if you choose to use it. All right, here it is: I’d like to start by identifying an instigation you may not be aware of that I call ‘Brace’. That is when an instigator tries to improperly impose an overemphasized non preferred sense of bracing upon you to obligate to. The best example I can think of right now in my opinion for ‘bracing’, not the bookmark ‘Brace’, is from movie ‘Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan(1982)’. For the Amazon Video reference, I am using The Director’s Cut version of the ‘Khan’ movie. The reference is located 51 minutes and 40 seconds into the movie, when Khan sent a photon torpedo at the Enterprise, and Kirk said quote-‘Hang on!’ to help the crew brace for impact. Of course, there are all sorts of varieties of bracing that an instigator may improperly impose upon you. The one I am referring to for this advice is from a bookmark I call ‘Up curve justification’. Basically, the bracing the instigator may impose upon you for this example is a bracing from your composure that, not only will you be aware of it, but you will have the option to declare what it is to others. That is what the instigator is counting on, because when you experience an instigation that uses ‘bracing’ in this manner, the response that you have probably may have given in the past to the instigator is like, without actual words of course, it’s like you are trying to show them as a clarification that you have been offended in some sort of way. Right at that moment, you are trying to show the instigator that you have experienced some sort of indiscretion. (Now, this is just the 1st part of this advice, so I recommend that you reserve your final judgment until you see the rest of the advice.) Now, if you have read the composure idea(Wishlist #1003-1008), which is located at the beginnings of this blog, then I believe you may have the ability to productively consider this: Adults who experience some sort of employment related transition may experience some misunderstandings during such a transition. Of course, the company probably issued some sort of explanation and courtesy to help with the transition, but there still may be some misunderstandings as employees interact with each other, let’s say several different categories of employees are learning to interact with each other. [Now, this ‘bracing’ instigation, in my opinion, could discourage you from transitioning with the new company situation. I mean, look at how you are responding: Even though it is clearly the instigator’s fault, your presentation of declaration, just by how it looks, and the seriousness involved, in my opinion, can inhibit your ability to transition to the company’s new policy. In other words, you are in the right to have a reason to respond to such an instigation, but the manner in which you choose to respond to such an instigation, the declaring appearance that you have been wronged, in my opinion, that is one way how the instigator wants you to respond, because such a response can inhibit your ability to transition to a new situation.
Now, the solution that I recommend is that, with your composure idea, you have the ability to decide what your chosen composure is, so when the instigator imposes a bracing experience that gives you the justified right to declare that you have experienced some sort of indiscretion, you can make a contemplation note of it, but instead of presenting an obvious declaration that you have been offended, you can instead present a more reasonable composure response. The point of this 1st ‘bracing’ idea is that you have the ability to transition to new situations, even though you may experience certain mild to moderate instigations that encourage your sense of bracing to feel justified to declare itself.
Jittery understand:
[Recently, I just accessed from Amazon Video the movie ‘The Chronicles of Riddick’. 40 minutes and 46 seconds into the movie, when Riddick(Vin Diesel) was captured by the mercenaries, Toombs(Nick Chinlund) said to the other mercenaries quote-
‘Maybe we should think about upping our game here a little bit.’
That brings us to the next bookmark I want to introduce you called ‘Jittery understand’. To help you remember the word ‘Jittery’, I recommend a word association to music video ‘Wake Me Up Before You Go Go’ by the English duo ‘Wham!(1984)’. According to youtube.com, the video has been watched over 57 million times. The phrase ‘The Jitterbug’ is repeated 4 times at the beginning of the music video. Now, the quote-‘Maybe we should think about upping our game here a little bit.’ from the ‘Riddick’ movie is used to identify that the instigator could make the instigation worse, which is why that ‘brace’ idea was only the 1st part of this explanation.
[I can continue typing for an hour or so, but I have some tv shows in the Tivo? player I would want to go through. Plus, even though I have an idea of what ‘Jittery understand’ means, since I did invent it, I think another week to think about it may give me a better explanation. In case you want to know, I invented ‘Jittery understand’ relatively recently, a week or so ago. After I explain ‘Jittery understand’, the 3rd bookmark that I plan to explain that is part of this idea is called ‘Justify subside’, and the 4th bookmark is called ‘Reciprocate argue’. So, as of now, this list when finished will have 4 bookmarks: 1)’Brace’, 2)’Jittery understand’, 3)’Justify subside’, and 4)’Reciprocate argue’. I plan to finish explaining this idea next week.
The bigger the order greater will be the better usually in stock cheap cialis solution of it. https://www.unica-web.com/archive/2011/jeunesse2011.html levitra on line But it is not a cheap medicine. It truly is a strategy for men that are harrowed by erection dysfunction by which they super viagra uk can share with colleagues around the world. Take in of generic viagra cipla http://www.unica-web.com/2014-images/GA-2014-report-of-auditors.pdf should be regarded only with the talk to of a doctor or health reputable.
11/11/2015
Sour subside:
I planned today to explain bookmark ‘Jittery understand’, but if I did so, to me, so to speak,> the effort may drain the living attention span out of me, so to speak(I’m trying to indicate that ‘so to speak’ is for the phrase ‘the effort may drain the living attention span out of me’). And so, what I plan to do to finish this list is just obligate myself to explain bookmark ‘Justify subside’, and if I choose to do more, I’ll try to do it in the next list or a future list.
I invented bookmark ‘Justify subside’ from episode 7.4 ‘Taxed’ from series ‘The Good Wife(2015)’, from the examples of Maia Sachs(Marsha Stephanie Blake). For example, according to Amazon Video, this reference starts 11 minutes and 14 seconds into the episode, when Alicia(Julianna Margulies) is making a plea recommendation to Maia, and here’s the quote:
Alicia-‘The prosecution is willing to take it down to six months probation, but you’ll need to plead guilty.’
Maia-‘But all I did was return a sweater. This is…I’m not admitting to anything.’
The generalistic moment for this advice is Maia’s declarations of being innocent, and that she will not plea as if she was guilty. There are several examples of that in the episode. However, the highlighted moment was during the quote I offered you, soon after Maia said ‘This is…’ It is her articulation of body language that is declaring her defiance, that she will not take a guilty plea because she believes she is innocent, a highly recommended reference for this advice.
And so, here is the definition of the instigation: An instigator may improperly impose a justified, declaring, resisting identity of justification as the identity of the instigation the instigator would want you to experience. [Maia’s example is the best example I can think of that illustrates a person experiencing a justified, declaring, resisting identity. Now, if I extrapolate Maia’s situation into a context of a mild to moderate instigation, I see another person who experienced an instigation, and the instigation’s identity is being maintained by the innocent person’s sense of justification use! The innocent person experienced an instigation that is resisting, declaring, and defiant, just like the characteristics Maia is using, except that the person is not showing such characteristics in an obvious sense, but rather is using such characteristics contemplationally to interpret the instigator’s imposition. So, for example, let’s say that innocent person is a woman, and that woman experienced such an instigation. Even though the woman won’t be obvious like Maia, that woman will still use contemplation characteristics of declaring, resisting, and defiance in a justified sense. The identity of the instigation would be mildly bothersome in that woman’s mind.
The solution I have originally invented for instigation identifed by bookmark ‘Justify subside’ is to allow your sense of justified identity to subside from the experience. This is not about changing your school of thought. Once you identifed the instigation, you know or you feel that you have been treated unacceptably. From there, instead of maintaining such a declaring, resisting, and defying identity, like the instigator wants you to , if that is the instigation you are experiencing, you can still have the justified identity, but if you choose to use this advice, you don’t need to maintain it’s interactive angst(a feeling of dread, anxiety, or anguish) when you think about it. Since you already know what it is, you can instead subside from it.
As I invented this idea, I treated the subsiding of such an experience as the answer. However, soon after using this idea, I discovered that, instead of just subsiding as a possible solution, you can instead change the actual subsiding that you are using when experiencing such an instigation. Here is an example I believe adults who have had kids have experience with, the meaning, not the exact content: The reference is in movie ‘Price Check(2012)’. According to Amazon Video, refurbished for advice, of course, the scene starts 1 hour, 13 minutes, and 5 seconds into the episode, when Henry Cozy(Finn Donoghue), who was only a few years old according to imdb.com, woke up Susan Felders(Parker Posey) while she was sleeping on the couch. Henry looked like he yelled a groul sound at her. She woke up, said a phrase induced by being startled(a phrase you can change), and then she calmly placed her hand on young Henry’s shoulder and said calmly quote-‘Don’t do that.’ So, is that an example of a person changing her use of subsiding, or what? So, when you reasonably extrapolate from the ‘Price Check’ example, if you experience an instigation identified by bookmark ‘Justify subside’, instead of the subsiding improperly encouraged by the instigation, it may be possible to choose a different sense of subsiding altogether. For example, even though Susan Felders from the ‘Price Check’ example didn’t directly interact with the subsiding introduced by young Henry, she clearly did not ignore it. She responded to it, used a different subsiding, and calmly interacted with Henry’s subsiding. The ‘Price Check’ reference is highly recommended.
‘Justify subside’ is an understanding bookmark. For your convenience, I want you to have a form of the bookmark that you could actually use more, so a variation of ‘Justify subside’ I recommend for you to use is called ‘Sour subside’. The word ‘Sour’ is used to help you quantify such an experience using intensity and taste. The only example I have time to give you right now for the use of bookmark ‘Sour subside’ is from movie ‘Another Cinderella Story(2008)’. According to Amazon Video, the example starts 47 minutes and 51 seconds into the movie, when Mary Santiago’s(Selena Gomez) step sisters played a short video where Mary when she was younger made a video of herself for Joey Parker(Drew Seeley) to see, and they played the video during a party, many of the people in the party laughed at it, and Mary said quote-‘This can’t be happening!’ to emphasize her embarrassment, and then she left the party. To be clear, I believe the video induced a sour experience for Mary Santiago to experience. The great thing about this example is that it is highly illustrated. Fans of celebrity Selena Gomez will probably easily relate to the reference in the movie’s context.
[Violence, viewer discretion for sci-fi series ‘Sliders’, violence and viewer discretion for movies ‘Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan’ and ‘The Chronicles of Riddick’, rated PG viewer discretion for movie ‘Another Cinderella Story’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode, series, and movie. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Brace’ and ‘Sour subside’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.