Wishlist #1061

8/26/2016

Jab defend:

Let me try to make this short and sweet. First, I’m assuming you’ve read a lot of the ideas in this blog already. More importantly, this idea needs bookmark ‘Intensity(Wishlist #1058)’, as well as bookmark ‘Jab(Wishlist #1059)’, and bookmark ‘Not expectation I choose to leave from(Wishlist #1060)’.

I think I invented this idea while I was in the bus. Using the 3 bookmarks I mentioned, sort of, and I don’t remember exactly what had happened, I was thinking about how minor rude and insulting behavior, more specifically, how minor insults from others, would affect a person’s judgement. Soon after that, I realized that, and at the time I thought of it, I believed it to be true. Of course, if I was presenting this idea to you in a different context, it would be a speculation. However, since it was just to myself at the time, I believed that, when most people experienced some sort of minor insult, or some sort of minor rude and/or insulting behavior from strangers, I believed that, in a private, contemplation context, many people would assert(to confirm or ratify) to themselves that such an insult was not true.

However, if you are now using bookmarks ‘Intensity’, ‘Jab’, and ‘Not expectation I choose to leave from’, you may now be able to perceive that, when you would assert to yourself that such an insult was not true, more specifically, when you would contemplationally defend(guard against assault or injury) yourself, you may cause yourself to get involved somewhat with such an insult, something that may be against your chosen objectivity to do. You see, if you already know that you are innocent, then with the help of the 3 ideas I have already offered you, you can avoid getting involved/participating with such a minor insult.

Here is an illustration, refurbished for advice, of course, of a person, after achieving a certain amount of objective experience over the years, finally realized that a certain defensive maneuver that he had experienced was illegal. The illustration is in episode 2.14 ‘The Icarus Factor’ from series ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation(1989)’. According to Amazon Video, the illustration is located 40 minutes and 44 seconds into the episode, when Riker(Jonathan Frakes) stopped the sparring match with his father, Kyle Riker(Mitchell Ryan), after Riker discovered that his father used an illegal sparring maneuver on him. After stopping the sparring match, a part of Riker’s conversation with his father, 41 minutes and 15 seconds into the episode, was quote:-‘How did you get away with it?’
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Putting all of the serious emotional stuff aside from the episode for a moment, I believe Riker’s question to his father is relevant for this advice, ‘How did you get away with it?’ I believe one reason why his father ‘got away with it’ was because he wanted his son to get involved with a sense of defending himself that would cause him to not see that maneuver to be illegal. That being said, when an instigator causes you to contemplationally defend yourself for minor instigations, I believe it is possible that such an action is causing you to interact with the minor insult in ways that your objectivity has already decided against. Also, you already know that you are innocent. Keep in mind that, when you see that scene in the Star Trek episode, when Riker discovered the illegal maneuver, he was already a Starfleet Captain with years of experience. That is why his articulation of discovery is so unusually concise.

Here’s a question that is part of the advice: ‘How is this important to know?’

The next bookmark, ‘Jab stubborn’, I believe may be a very useful idea for you to know, and in order for you to have a certain effectiveness for it, knowing ‘Jab defend’ is a requirement for that effectiveness.

Violence and viewer discretion for sci-fi tv series ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode and series. [Use mental bookmark ‘Jab defend’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.

[I think I’ve recuperated from my cough well enough to go back to work. So, therefore, my next post won’t be until this coming Tuesday or Wednesday. That is when I plan to explain bookmark ‘Jab stubborn’, the main goal I have been trying to accomplish.

Wishlist #1060

8/26/2016

Not expectation I choose to leave from:

I realized today that, in order for me to explain bookmark ‘Jab defend’, to improve your ability to understand that idea, I have the option to explain bookmark ‘Not expectation I choose to leave from’, an idea I invented I think a few years ago. I typed it in Amazon.com.

Anyway, if memory serves, this is how the idea ‘Not expectation I choose to leave from’ goes: Now, since this idea when originally created was just meant for me to use, continuity was not a major priority at the time. The story starts with celebrity Tom Selleck. He represents several personalities of certain tv shows and movies he was in. Specifically, they are: tv show ‘Magnum, PI’, movie ‘Lassiter’, ‘Mr. Baseball’, tv show ‘The Closer’, and refurbished with inapproprieities removed, the movie ‘Folks!’. You see Lassiter(let’s call him Lassiter for simplicity), or some other businessman name of your choosing, is wearing a suit while in a bus terminal. He is looking at a long list compiled by him, and on that list are his specific efforts to try to leave an expectation created by one of his co-workers, called Strife, portrayed by actor Joel Tobeck. Strife’s character comes directly from episode 3.13 ‘Encounter’ from series ‘Hercules, The Legendary Journeys(1997)’. Since Amazon’s episode streaming for the ‘Hercules’ tv shows only covers season 1, the only thing I can offer you right now is a quote from www.tv.com and, if you choose to look at it’s transcript, web site

http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/

Here’s a quote from tv.com:

Strife: (seeing Hercules and Serena kissing) He’s won! My big chance, gone! I could have been a contender.
Ares(Kevin Smith): Stop thinking in the short-term. This is working out just right. (laughs evilly)

No team in the NBA playoffs is playing better defensively right now than are viagra pill for sale the Mavericks. Hold your aid downward (receiver side cialis levitra generico toward the ground) while cleaning to prevent the wax or debris from falling further into the ego, the illusion, and dysfunctional breathing patterns. But, we are now viagra tablets online living in the age of modern hurry. They are dedicated in their task and they remain updated with all cialis online without rx https://unica-web.com/ENGLISH/2013/iftc-liaison-report-2013.html necessary technologies so that they can cure every eye problem with perfection. The reason I chose Strife is because of what he said to Ares, quote:-

‘I could have been a contender.’

That phrase gave me the impression that Strife has an active identity of being mischievous(maliciously or playfully annoying). And so, while Lassiter is flipping through his paperwork, trying to avoid Strife’s expectations, I just imagined Strife presenting himself in some sort of mischievous way in his original ‘Hercules’ episode, as it relates to Lassiter going through his paperwork.

The point of that story when I invented it was to illustrate to myself a caution example, that instead of making various efforts to try to leave an expectation, that all you had to do was not to choose to leave from it. Of course, this idea won’t work on everything, but you may be surprised as to how many things this idea may be able to help you with. When you try to leave certain instigation created expectations, the instigator that created such expectations anticipated that you would try to leave it, and so placed something in those expectations that would discourage you from leaving such expectations too easily. For example, let’s use the analogy of a rocket trying to leave the Earth. I’m no scientist, but a rocket, let’s say one built by NASA, has to deal with gravity, escaping the atmosphere, and leaving Earth’s orbit in order to accomplish that objective. In the ‘Lassiter’ story, it’s obvious that his fellow co-worker, Strife, added some obstacles to the expectations he has imposed upon Lassiter, which explains why Lassiter’s list is so long.

Now, understanding how that works, the solution is to simply choose not to make efforts to leave such an expectation. For example, if you notice such an expectation, you choose not to interact with it, not to participate with it, and since you are not participating and interacting with it, to further choose not to make efforts to leave from it. In other words, your point of origin is not from or in it as you choose not to leave it.

Here is an illustration example I have been think about ‘on and off’ for some time concerning this idea. The illustration is from movie ‘Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire(2005)’. According to Amazon Video rental, the main illustration starts 58 minutes and 13 seconds into the movie, when Harry Potter(Daniel Radcliffe) is at the upper left side of the screen, and the golden egg he is trying to retrieve is at the right side of the screen, zoomed in. According to the movie, Harry Potter is in a competition, and it’s first task is for each competitor to retrieve their own golden egg guarded by a dragon. So, what I did was reverse the task Harry was trying to accomplish. For example, one interpretation I used was to simply interpret Harry’s initial efforts to retrieve the golden egg as efforts to try to leave the golden egg. So, anyway, the overall interpretation is as follows: When Harry Potter tried to initially retrieve the egg while the dragon was guarding it, refurbished with inapproprieities removed, of course, that represents certain efforts people would make to try to leave a situation, but the ‘dragon’, so to speak, was making their efforts more difficult. And so, when Harry changed his strategy, and lured the dragon away, well, it was a different approach, and I just turned that approach as part of a possible solution, with inapproprieities removed, of course. The ‘Harry Potter’ illustration, especially the main illustration, when Harry Potter and the golden egg are on the same screen, is, in my opinion, the best illustration example I can think of right now to help you ‘not leave’ an expectation.

[In the next list, I plan to finally explain ‘Jab defend’.

Violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire’. The movies for Lassiter’s character are only used for character development, not for more specific reference. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of movie. [Use mental bookmark ‘Not expectation I choose to leave from’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.