11/26/2016
I want to begin by explaining from now on how I choose videos, such as music videos, to go with these ideas. Since this is a public list and kids could be reading this, I’m assuming that, for the kids and some adults, if you need to get to a place that requires car transportation, you’re probably using either a taxi or an uber system. For the uber web site, www.uber.com . Let’s use an analogy involving someone using uber. When you call from a cell phone to get a ride from uber, you expect that some sort of car would be involved to pick you up. That is how I see the videos I recommend to you. It’ simply part of the idea, like some sort of car is used by the uber driver to pick you up. You don’t have to use the video I offer you, and there doesn’t have to be some sort of deeper meaning involved with the use of that video. I simply just want some sort of video to start these ideas. I’m also not trying to promote uber. I’m just using uber as an analogy for videos being with these ideas.
For today’s video recommendation, I recommend the performance given on episode 42.3 from tv show ‘Saturday Night Live’, the 2 performances given by Bruno Mars called ’24K Magic’ and ‘Chunky’. I’m not recommending the actual music videos associated with those 2 songs, just the performances of those songs by Bruno Mars and the others in the ‘Saturday Night Live’ episode that aired October 15 of this year. I think those 2 performances are lively and give a change of pace, even though I didn’t see the entire performance myself. I think I saw enough, though, to recommend it.
I couldn’t find his performance in Amazon Video(the episode with Emily Blunt didn’t have Bruno Mars’ performance), but I did find it in youtube.com, and the quality of the video looks pretty good! Just go to www.youtube.com, type and search for ‘bruno mars saturday night live’, and choose the one that says ‘Bruno Mars 24K Magic [SNL Performance]. It’s the one that has over 2 million views so far.
Ready:
It’s now 6:19 PM EST where I am, which means I started typing this in late, very late. 1st, I want to say that, instead of starting the explanation of the 7+ bookmarks for ‘Proof’, I have decided to explain bookmark ‘Ready’, a new idea I invented this past Sunday, a day after I typed in the previous bookmark. The reason is that, once I start explaining those ‘Proof’ bookmarks, I plan not to stop explaining them until they are finished, and that could take 2-3 weeks to finish. So, I try to explain bookmark ‘Ready’ now, and in December, I plan to finish those ‘Proof’ bookmarks. I think this works out because many of you I assume would be busy in December anyway with Christmas.
So, I’ll start with the illustration for bookmark ‘Ready’. I’m glad that that reference is still there, because sometimes when I would look for a reference, it would be altered or removed completely from the tv show or movie. The illustration is in episode 6.20 ‘The Man Who Would Be King’ from sci-fi tv series ‘Supernatural(2011)’, and according to Amazon Video, it starts 20 minutes and 2 seconds into the episode. In the illustration, Dean Winchester(Jensen Ackles) is talking to Sam Winchester(Jared Padalecki) and Bobby Singer(Jim Beaver). Here is the quote:
Dean:-‘This is usually the point where we would call Cass for help.’
Bobby:-‘We talked about this.’
Sam:-‘Yea, Dean.’
Dean:-‘No, you talked. I listened.’
The definition of ‘Ready’ was created from the previous bookmark ‘Able’. If memory serves, ‘Able’ means-‘Just because I have the ability to commit to an evaluation use, doesn’t mean I have to.’ Basically, ‘Ready’ is when an instigator imposes the impression that you are ‘ready’ to experience something, that you have chosen to be ready for it. If the experience is out of context and not relevant for you to respond to, you can simply choose not to be ready for it. Although not an exact match, in the ‘Supernatural’ episode reference refurbished for advice, Dean made the distinction that he did not agree to talk about the matter. All he did was listen to what Bobby and Sam said to him.
Here’s another example I just thought about a few seconds ago. Imagine how a tv and movie celebrity interacts with people in public areas. Let’s say this celebrity is a man, and many of the people that man celebrity is talking to are making outlandishly overwhelming requests. Now, normally, if such a thing happened to an average American man, that man may feel obviously distracted by such requests. However, since that celebrity has years of experience being treated that way, he simply? chose not to be ready for such requests. Instead, he tries to maintain normal conversations with the people, which includes signing autographs and making jokes.
Although I believe the discovery of bookmark ‘Ready’ is very important, what will be recognizably important to you is the several variations that I had invented in the past few days to go with bookmark ‘Ready’. Let’s see. The 1st one is called ‘Push back’, the 2nd one is ‘Lose’, the 3rd is ‘Persist’, and the 4th is ‘Dismiss’, and the 5th is ‘Extract’.
Push back:
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Bookmark ‘Push back’ could be the very part of the instigation that you are experiencing that is vexing(to torment; trouble; distress; plague; worry) you the most, but I can’t think of a reasonably compatible reference to give you for it. The only thing I can think of right now, and if have Amazon Prime, you don’t have to pay extra to see this reference, is episode 2.14 ‘5 Easy Pieces Of Libby’ from fantasy tv series ‘Sabrina, the Teenage Witch(1998)’. Here is a quote. According to Amazon Video, the quote starts 8 minutes and 54 seconds into the episode, where Sabrina(Melissa Joan Hart) is talking to Libby(Jenna Leigh Green):
Sabrina:-‘Wait. I-I-I’m just trying to get to know you better.’
Libby:-‘Well, I’m popular, confident, non-freakish-everything you’re not.’
Soon after, Sabrina chose to separate herself from Libby, which caused Libby, in a science fiction context, of course, to turn into some sort of puzzle. With the help of her aunts and the Quizmaster?(it’s been a while since I watched the entire episode), Sabrina was able to put Libby back together.
Anyway, I guess if you want to, you can see that episode, refurbished for advice, of course.
‘Push back’ is meant to identify some sort of obviously aggressive attention an instigator wants you to experience, that involves, whether it’s true or not, the impression of you pushing back, the instigator pushing back, or some sort of impression of pushing back, that you did not agree to commit to, but that does not matter, because before this advice, you may have treated such an experience as though you were ready to not push back. Now, with this idea, you may be able to contemplationally say bookmark ‘Push back ready’, and if it’s out of context and not relevant, for example, you can choose to not need to be ready for such an interjection. For example, it’s like the way Dean said-‘No, you talked. I listened.’ You calmly chose to not participate, to not interact, with the instigator’s impression of being ready for not pushing back.
Lose:
Bookmark ‘Lose’ is going to be a little awkward for me to explain, since I don’t have a ‘standard demographic’ reference for you. However, I’ll instead give you how I actually invented the bookmark. It happened a few days ago, while I was in a public bus. There was an older lady towards my left line of sight that I thought was doing something unusual to get the attention of others. Soon after she did something, a man who was sitting in front of me also did something that I believe was like a ‘Push back’ instigation, designed to get the attention of others. Once the 2nd man did his show, I made the discovery that an instigation could try to define how you lose when you try to evaluate/experience/resolve/respond to an instigation.
The solution I invented was to change the vantage point of the evaluation, to identify when it occurs that the instigation is trying to define how you ‘lose’ when evaluating such an experience, and choose not to be ready, to not need to commit, to such an experience. I believe the idea has some effectiveness because what you are also trying to do is decide how you choose to ‘lose’ with such an experience. Even though I only invented this idea a few days ago, I don’t actively use the idea anymore. However, I still think it’s a good idea to know.
[It’s now 8:00 PM for me, and since I started late, I’ll have to finish this idea next week. I hope you find these ideas useful eventually. See you next week!
12/3/2016
Hi. Even though I have made more new ideas this past week, since it is December, I am FINALLY going to start the 7+ ‘Proof’ bookmarks I have talked about in the recent lists. So, what I’ll do here is proofread this list, add the disclaimer, and in the next list, I’ll start the ‘Proof’ bookmarks, probably starting with bookmark ‘Chair’.
Violence and viewer discretion for sci-fi tv series ‘Supernatural’. Some viewer discretion for fantasy tv series ‘Sabrina, the Teenage Witch’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode and series. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Ready’, ‘Push back’, and ‘Lose’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.
After reading this over, I just remembered that I haven’t explained ‘Persist’, ‘Dismiss’, and ‘Extract’ yet. I believe this list is still viable even without those 3 bookmarks because I did explain ‘Ready’, ‘Push back’, and ‘Lose’. Also, since I am going to start explaining the ‘Proof’ ideas, that means for me I plan to choose not to add any more new ideas, not until I finish the ‘Proof’ ideas. That should last for a few weeks. Hopefully, that means that I should finish the ‘Proof’ ideas sometime this month. See you in the next list, which should begin in a few minutes.