5/3/2016
Hi! I know I should have started this several hours ago today. I think the reason I have delayed is because I am starting to feel the obvious positive effects of the advice I am about to type in, and plan to type in. For example, you may think that it’s ‘great’ when you read these ideas. Imagine what it may be like to have those ‘great’ ideas in your head before it is typed in! I know I have made 1,000 lists in Amazon.com, so a person who may do such a thing probably has some sort of disciplined experience. Even so, I am still human. So, what I’ll do is type for a few hours now, and if I don’t finish this idea today, I plan to finish it tomorrow.
Striving perspective:
Before I begin the Chris Hemsworth/Bobby Moynihan in ‘Saturday Night Live’ idea, I want to explain ‘Striving perspective’. I believe having this idea will help prepare you to use the ‘Chris Hemsworth’ idea I plan to type in. Also, I’m not giving ‘Strive perspective’ a high expectation to be used for anything else. I’m just offering it to you to prepare you for the ‘Chris Hemsworth/Bobby Moynihan idea. If I want to introduce ‘Striving perspective’ elsewhere, I’ll just re-introduce it to you.
Basically, ‘Striving perspective’ is like explaining a scene from the movie ‘The Internship(2013)’. According to Amazon Video, the rental reference starts 54 minutes and 7 seconds into the movie, when both Billy McMahon(Vince Vaughn) and Nick Campbell(Owen Wilson) are on the ground experiencing a disappointment they cannot seem to just ‘shake off’ during a game of Quidditch(I thought Quidditch was just a game created by Google, but according to Wikipedia.com, the game actually exists. According to Wikipedia, the game was created in 2005 in Vermont by by Xander Manshel and Alex Benepe. Since this quote is from Wikipedia, I’m not sure if this is absolutely true. Still, I think it’s worth thinking about). In that scene, you see both of the main characters still trying to get off of the ground. I think that is the most important part of the movie reference, the illustration of both Billy and Nick experiencing an obviously physically presented disappointment.
The best moment to recall in memory when you want to use ‘Striving perspective’ starts 54 minutes and 26 seconds into the movie ‘The Internship’, refurbished with inapproprieities removed, when Yo-Yo(Tobit Raphael) throws his Quidditch broomstick onto the ground in anger. That is when Billy said to Yo-Yo quote:-‘Don’t start that, Yo-Yo. You did your best out there.’ And then Billy said to the rest of the main characters quote:-‘That’s the first time we all came together as a team.’ So, the moment to recall is when Billy, looking like he’s limping, is walking to the right, saying his quote, but the quote is in more of a form for you to imagine. For example, when you think about Billy walking, he may say to you quote
[I just learned that I had to press ‘Purge from cache’ in order for the ‘Update’ button to work. It looks like I have to continue this explanation tomorrow.
5/4/2016
Sorry about the odd interruption. As I said yesterday, I just learned that, at least when I use WordPress, I would have to press ‘Purge from cache’ in order for the ‘Update’ button to work. I tested it earlier today, and the 1st time I did that, the ‘Update’ button took a little while to work, let’s say 20 seconds in order for me to save something. After that, it worked normally, let’s say ‘normally’ is about 5 seconds before the new entry is saved. I just pressed ‘Update’ a few seconds ago, and it works fine.
As I was saying yesterday, when you imagine Billy walking, he may say to you quote-‘That’s the first time we all came together as a team.’
cipla cialis india One study found that men that smoked more than 20 cigarettes a day. click now viagra sans prescription If, you feel shy to face a doctor or feel awkward and shy to buy it from a medical perspective. In summary, if men suffer from hemospermia, please do not take online pharmacy levitra unica-web.com. The medicine is effective and will best prices cialis start by activating an enzyme in your blood stream. The reason I chose a scene from the movie ‘The Internship’ as an example of ‘Striving perspective’ is because of how Mr. McMahon(Vince Vaughn) experiences a disappointment in perspective. Even though Billy McMahon has years of experience being a salesman, the disappointment created by Graham(Max Minghella) could not be contemplationally shrugged off, as illustrated when both Billy and Nick were both still on the ground when Graham declared his victory. The illustration according to Amazon Video starts 54 minutes and 7 seconds into the movie. Soon after Billy and Nick complained to the referee, when Billy noticed Yo-Yo complaining, Billy then demonstrated his striving perspective learned from being a salesman when he said to the team quote-‘That’s the first time we all came together as a team.’ Even though that speech was important, for the use of this advice, when Billy and Nick was on the ground experiencing a disappointment that was unavoidable, that illustration was even more important, because in my opinion, it allows you to have an example of using ‘Striving perspective’ in the beginning that is very useful for you to use. With this example, you may allow yourself to have some reasonable contemplation disappointments as you learn to use this idea. And, of course, based on my experience using the idea, you will probably improve your use of having a ‘Striving perspective’.
Going back to using the ‘Update’ button on WordPress, I also put the cursor/pointer over the ‘Update’ button to see if I can still save the text that I have just made. I also look at when a draft was saved recently, which WordPress says next to the ‘Word count’ at the bottom of the page. If you are using WordPress, and you put the cursor over the ‘Update’ button but don’t press it, as your cursor touches the ‘Update’ button, it slightly changes in color. If the ‘Update’ button doesn’t change, I would highlight the text I recently typed in and right click ‘Copy’ it. Anyway, even without the desperately, possibly ineffective ‘Copy’ option, I believe it’s still important to check the ‘Update’ button and the ‘Draft saved’ message. That way, you can avoid typing a bunch of text, and then realizing too late that you are not able to ‘Update’ all of that text into your blog. Basically, if the ‘Update’ button works, as indicated by it’s change in color, it is safe for you to type in text.
Finally, the Chris Hemsworth/Bobby Moynihan in Saturday Night Live idea. 1st, the reason I believe the Chris Hemsworth/Bobby Moynihan reference works is because of how Chris Hemsworth gives a variety of interactions with other Saturday Night Live actors and actresses. However, even though he does show you other examples, the one example that I am recommending for you to recall is his performance with Bobby Moynihan. In fact, his performance with Moynihan is what I would call the ‘Rosetta Stone’ for the use of this idea(If you look at the last article of ‘Rosetta Stone’ in web site wikipedia.com under heading ‘Idiomatic use’, it says quote-‘The term Rosetta stone has been used idiomatically to represent a crucial key in the process of decryption of encoded information’. In other words, when you use this idea, you may use the performance of Chris Hemsworth and Bobby Moynihan to use this idea, instead of a bookmark.
1st, if you choose to use this idea, I recommend, with inapproprieities removed, of course, the intro performance of Chris Hemsworth with the Saturday Night Live crew. It is in episode 41.8 ‘Chris Hemsworth/Chance The Rapper’ from series ‘Saturday Night Live(2015)’. According to Amazon Video, the scene begins 2 minutes and 35 seconds into the episode. If you choose to watch those variety of examples, we can now go to that scene where Chris Hemsworth interacts with Bobby Moynihan. That scene begins 3 minutes and 1 second into the episode. What I recommend you recall most is when Chris says to Bobby something like quote-‘How may sketches do you play Santa Claus tonight?’, and Bobby says quote-‘All of them.’ And then, refurbished, Chris walks away laughing. Also, what I recommend you use as a reference is when, as an act, the discomfort that Chris created for Bobby when Chris acted like he pulled some of Bobby’s hair. When Bobby acted like he was in discomfort, that is also the reference I recommend for you to use.
And now, finally, this is the actual idea(I was just recently walking around where I live, being both excited and trying to calm down). A month or so ago, as I was walking on the sidewalks where I live, it is my belief that someone intentionally startled me as that person walked by. That ‘startling’ caused me to make a contemplation comment. It was around that moment when I realized that an instigator has the ability to impose a contemplation comment upon an innocent person, a comment that is influenced by the instigator. The best example I can think of right now is when Chris Hemsworth asks Bobby Moynihan the question ‘How may sketches do you play Santa Claus tonight?’, and Bobby says to Chris ‘All of them’. The comment that is influenced is when Bobby says ‘All of them.’ Now, of course, it is my belief that, when an instigator causes an innocent person to make a contemplation comment, that is what many people in America do. I didn’t say there was anything wrong with that. After all, nobody knows everything. Also, it’s a private thought, to contemplationally comment as a result of something an instigator caused you to respond to. It is my opinion that, the problem with making such a comment is that the comment is adversely influenced by the instigator. If you want proof, look at that scene again, when Bobby says ‘All of them.’ to Chris. Bobby is not gleefully cheery when he says ‘All of them.’ to Chris. Bobby sounds depressed. If you looked at all of the examples of Chris interacting with the other Saturday Night Live actors and actresses, the goal that Chris is using is to influence the comments of those he is talking to.
If you choose to, if you experienced instigation before, let’s look at what happens when you experience an instigation, that the instigation influences your private contemplation comments caused? by that instigation. Let’s see. You are making a comment influenced by the circumstance imposed upon you by the instigation. Of course, it’s a private comment, but notice how you are driven to make a comment. Now, what I propose for you to do is that the next time an instigator tries to influence you to comment upon an instigation the instigator wants you to respond to, recall when Bobby Moynihan said ‘All of them.’ to Chris Hemsworth, and choose instead to objectively sense your inclination to make such a comment, but as an option, to choose to not directly interact with such an inclination, or to directly interact less with such an inclination. For example, when you do this for the 1st time, it may be like you are still making a comment because of the imposed upon instigation, but you are now making an effort to also notice that you are now more objectively noticing such a comment, instead of just immersing yourself into such a comment.
If you have been using the previous ideas in this blog, you will probably learn this idea very quickly. Now, thanks to the Chris Hemsworth/Bobby Moynihan reference, I have also included with that technique the effort to also identify discomfort more objectively as it is induced by the instigation in the context of this advice. If you go back to the scene when Chris is talking to Bobby, Chris caused Bobby to experience discomfort. I believe that discomfort itself, even though the instigator didn’t touch you or talk to you, the instigation itself can also use discomfort as a catalyst to cause you to comment upon the discomfort.
So, basically, when you experience an instigation that gives you the inclination to comment, at least within the 1st week of using this idea, you can recall Bobby Moynihan saying ‘All of them.’ to Chris Hemsworth, and, if you choose to, that should help you not need to immerse yourself in the commenting that the instigator wants you to create contemplationally. After the 1st week or so of using this idea, it’s novelty should fade away, but look at what you have learned from the experience! After a few weeks of using this idea, you should be able to more objectively notice inclinations to comment upon instigations without needing to immerse yourself upon such inclinations.
You may use this idea by itself, and/or you can use it as part of idea 3 of 6.
Some viewer discretion for tv series ‘Saturday Night Live’. Rated PG-13 viewer discretion for movie ‘The Internship’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode, series, and movie. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Striving perspective.’ and ‘Rosetta Stone(I use that phrase to reference the Chris/Bobby idea, but it’s not it’s bookmark name).’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.