Wishlist #1141

9/15/2018

Welcome.

[9/15/2018: I forgot to mention the time. It is now 1:02 PM EST for me. I just started typing a few minutes ago. 9/15/2018:] I know I shouldn’t compare Lois Lane to Wonder Woman, so to speak. There are expectations that I shouldn’t use on Lois Lane that I should only use on Wonder Woman. However, I can’t help but notice that, for the 1st time, I can use www.youtube.com and this WordPress format without any problems!

According to the DVD/Blu-ray mail service I use, I received movies ‘Ocean’s 8’ and ‘Avengers: Infinity War’ in my PO Box 9/11/2018, this past Tuesday. I watched both movies yesterday. That used time I could have used to explain both ‘Not add’ and the new idea I invented this past Tuesday thru Thursday. So, today, I’m finally going to explain idea ‘Not add’. 1st, here’s the music video I found from a selection called ‘Top 100 Best Songs of 2014’ from ‘TopMusicMafia’. ‘TopMusicWorld’ in web site www.youtube.com for the year 2014 seemed to only offer the top 10 music videos per month, so I just looked at what offered the top 100 songs for the entire year. Unfortunately for me, there was no preview at the bottom, so I chose to click in small increments to see what was in the selection. That’s when I found the music video I’m recommending to you. It’s from the song ‘Boom Clap’ by English singer and songwriter Charli XCX. Here is a quote from www.wikipedia.org about the song ‘Boom Clap’ and it’s music video:

‘ The single peaked at number six on the UK Singles Chart and number eight on the US Billboard Hot 100 and topped the Mainstream Top 40, as well as peaking inside the top ten of the charts in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Ireland and Italy. ‘

‘ The accompanying music video for “Boom Clap”, directed by Sing J. Lee, was filmed in Amsterdam and premiered on 2 June 2014. The video features brief clips from The Fault in Our Stars set to the song as well as on-screen text written in the style of the book cover and film poster. ‘

If you choose to look at the www.youtube.com selection ‘Top 100 Best Songs of 2014’, song and music video ‘Boom Clap’ is ranked #34, 9 minutes and 58 seconds into the selection. It’s a music video for the American romantic tragedy film ‘The Fault in Our Stars(2014)’, starring Shailene Woodley and Ansel Elgort. If you have never seen this music video before, and you are going to, based on my experience watching music video ‘Boom Clap’ for the 1st time today, it’s what I call a ‘tearjerker’. Several times while you are watching the music video, you may experience a little involuntary tear inclination. It’s not that you want to cry. Even though I did not watch the movie ‘The Fault in Our Stars’, when I looked at the beginning explanation in wikipedia.org, not the plot, but just knowing that it’s an ‘American romantic tragedy film’, the music video ‘Boom Clap’ does the rest. Here’s a quote from the lyrics:

Boom! Clap!
The sound of my heart
The beat goes on and on and on and on and
Boom! Clap!
You make me feel good
Come on to me, come on to me now

To watch the music video ‘Boom Clap’ for free, search for phrase ‘boom clap’ in www.youtube.com, and it should be one of the 1st selections offered, with over 343 million views. It was published on June 2, 2014. So, to give you a ‘heads up’ where those tearjerking moments are, based on that selection from youtube, I’ll try to tell you when they will happen:

The 1st ‘tearjerker’ starts 38 seconds into the music video in my opinion, when the lead singer known professionally as Charli XCX is surrounded by those bicycles. I’m assuming that bicycle riding is more popular than driving a car in Amsterdam. Then the words from the song ‘Boom Clap’ are emphasized in the music video, and then you see Hazel(Shailene Woodley) and Gus(Ansel Elgort) hug from the movie ‘The Fault in Our Stars’. That, in my opinion, is the strongest inclination for tears to be created by your eyes.

The 2nd ‘tearjerker’ starts 1 minute and 19 seconds into the video, when Hazel is affectionately looking at Gus. Then you hear the lyrics of the song say ‘I feel your love’, and Hazel and Gus kiss.

The 3rd ‘tearjerker’ in my opinon may only work once for you, and that’s only during the 1st time you watched the music video, if you have never watched this music video before. In my opinion, that’s because your mind is still trying to acclimate from the 1st 2 times you may have experienced it, since this is still during the 1st time you watched it. That scene starts 2 minutes and 10 seconds into the music video, when you see Hazel laughing.

Not add:

Because idea ‘Not add’ is recommended to be used for your experiences with mild to moderate instigation, I chose to reinforce your sense of imagination with the imagined use of a time machine. That means that if you choose to use this idea, not you actually of course, but your sense of imagination will use an imagined time machine to use this idea. [9/15/2018: In other words, an aspect of your imagination will use the imagined time machine, not an imagined you. 9/15/2018]  The recommended movie illustration for this time machine is in movie ‘The Time Machine(1960)’, starring Rod Taylor as H. George Wells. Keep in mind that tv shows and movies publicly available are probably made for the general public for entertainment. So, if you choose to use that scene from movie ‘The Time Machine’, the movie should allow you to easily imagine what it is like to use such a time machine, if you allow yourself to pay attention to it. Of course, there are a few other sci-fi movies about time travel in this category, such as ‘The Time Machine(2002)’, starring Guy Pearce as Alexander Hartdegen. If you want to look at certain time traveling scenes from the Guy Pearce movie, I mildly recommend that for the sake of variety. However, the main reference is from that 1960 movie ‘The Time Machine’, because based on it’s illustration, it’s the only movie I know of that may work for you.

The streaming version of the movie ‘The Time Machine(1960)’ is available for rental from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, the illustration starts 43 minutes and 44 seconds into the movie, when H.G. Wells used the time machine to escape danger. Of course, that scene is refurbished for this advice.  H.G. Wells also narrates the experience. Here is the quote:

H.G. Wells: ‘Only my speed through time saved me from danger. I prayed, wondering how many centuries, how many eons must pass before the wind and rain could wear away the mountain that enclosed me. Darkness. Darkness…for centuries. I wondered if there was still a war being waged on the ground above me, if man would still exist on Earth when I saw the sun again. The centuries rolled by. I put my trust in time and waited for the rock to wear down around me.

At 45 minutes and 1 second into the movie, you see the rocks being removed.

H.G. Wells: ‘I was free again.’

So, with the help of watching that scene, I imagined that, when H.G. Wells tested his time machine before actually using himself to pilot it, he made the time machine in a way that it needed certain basic characteristics that people need in order to survive, such as a breathable atmosphere and reasonable exposure to it’s surroundings. I am assuming that H.G. Wells eventually discovered a ‘dimension’, so to speak, that allowed his time machine to travel through time, and allow a human inside that time machine to also travel with it alive. So, if you choose to watch that scene, I imagined that H.G. Wells already made several prototypes in the past, and his successes already proved to him that not only can his time machine travel backwards and forwards through time, it can also allow a human being to travel alive with it. That was the refurbished purpose of using that quoted scene from the movie ‘The Time Machine’, to allow your imaginations to see that you may choose to imagine it in such a context. Of course, while his time machine was in a compromised state, he could not materialize during that compromised state. However, after thousands of centuries had passed, the rocks finally left, and his time machine and himself can safely materialize in that moment of time.

So, in an imagined context, you may choose to use that 1st generation time machine to allow your imagination to use the next illustration I am about to recommend to you. The illustration is in water, so just imagine that your 1st generation time machine can be covered in some sort of very clear material that will allow your time machine to exist under water. Let’s also allow you to add something to that time machine, like some sort of high tech yet portable viewing equipment, to allow your imagination to perceive what is outside the bubble without leaving the time machine. Since you are learning to use this idea, you can also imagine having a fixed reference point, and from that reference point, you can move your time machine in different places underwater to view the illustration better. It’s like that movie ‘About Time(2013)’, starring Domhnall Gleeson as Tim. Whenever Tim would try to fix something several times, he would do so from a fixed moment in time.

[9/16/2018: It is now 9:07 PM EST for me. I just want to add 2 things: 1st, when you use the illustration from the movie ‘The Time Machine(1960)’, starring Rod Taylor, to be clear, that’s just to recommend to you to use the imagined time machine from that movie. I’m not encouraging you to imagine going through what that character portrayed by Rod Taylor went through in the movie. That illustration is meant to encourage you to use the time machine for imagination purposes, not to imagine yourself using that time machine. I’m saying this now because H.G. Wells portrayed by Rod Taylor escaped danger with it. If you choose to see that scene again, keep in mind that you are seeing events in an impossibly accelerated rate of time.

The 2nd thing is that I thought of a way to help you move the time machine underwater. The idea is from the movie ’47 Metres Down(2017)’. I rented the DVD/Blu-ray? from the mail rental service I use. I watched it because celebrity Mandy Moore was in it. Anyway, you don’t have to see the movie. Here’s a quote from www.imdb.com:

‘ Two sisters vacationing in Mexico are trapped in a shark cage at the bottom of the ocean. ‘

I recommend that you can place that time machine in a shark cage. Of course, use some sort of coating with the shark cage so that the time machine doesn’t get exposed to too much water. I guess you can imagine some sort of clear material either outside or inside the shark cage. And with that shark cage and some sort of boat, you can more easily imagine repositioning the time machine in different parts of the water, to get different views of those people in the air bubble. Since the time machine travels in another dimension that has it’s own available atmosphere, just like the movie, you don’t have to worry about it as it travels in different moments in time while it’s point of origin is in the water. You just have to worry about not getting it wet as you move it’s point of origin to different places in the water. Of course, I’m not recommending that you watch the movie ’47 Metres Down’. I’m just using it to recommend that you use it’s shark cage illustration. 9/16/2018]

The illustration that you are going to be recommended to imagine that will help you remove certain notions that you choose to ‘not add’ to your chosen sense of intent is in episode 2.12 ‘The Secret of the Fire Nation’, also known as 2.12 ‘The Serpent’s Pass’ from animated action adventure tv show ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender(2006)’. The episode is available for purchase streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, the illustration starts about 16 minutes and 5 seconds into the episode, where Katara and Aang have created a bubble of air to allow themselves and some others to travel underwater. The illustration recommended lasts only about 20 seconds, from 16 minutes and 5 seconds into the episode, to 16 minutes and 25 seconds into the episode. Of course, in relation to advice, you can watch more of the episode if you choose to for more understanding. However, that’s the basic illustration. While using your imagined time machine, an aspect of your imagination can perceive Katara, Aang, and the others in that bubble underwater. So, in the beginning, but soon after using this idea you will change how you imagine it quickly, you can imagine certain notions, thoughts, etc. that should not be added to a certain intent, you can imagine such notions not able to exist in that bubble, because in that bubble, the water is removed, and life giving air stays in. In other words, that set-up with the bubble is in your favor, allowing things you want to stay in, and things you don’t want to stay out. With that imagined time machine of yours, you can set it up so that you can see different angles of Katara, Aang, and the others walking in that bubble of air underwater.

Stubborn:

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So, that’s the basic idea. Here’s a few examples to get you started using it, if you choose to. The 1st example I can think of right now is in movie ‘Star Trek VIII: First Contact’, starring Patrick Stewart as Captain Picard, and Alfre Woodard as Lily Sloane. The movie is available for streaming rental from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that illustration starts 1 hour, 21 minutes, and 46 seconds into the movie. You can watch refurbished for advice other scenes in the movie for further understanding. I’m just giving you the gist of the main part of the idea. Lily Sloane and Captain Picard are talking to each other. Here is the quote:

Lily Sloane: ‘See you around, Ahab.’

Captain Picard: ‘And he piled upon the whale’s white hump the sum of all the rage and hate felt by his whole race. If his chest had been a cannon, he would have shot his heart upon it.

Lily Sloane: ‘What?’

Captain Picard: ‘Moby Dick’.

Lily Sloane: ‘Actually, I never read it.’

Captain Picard: ‘Ahab spent years hunting the white whale that crippled him, a quest for vengeance, but in the end, it destroyed him and his ship.’

Lily Sloane: ‘I guess he didn’t know when to quit.’

The ‘Star Trek: First Contact’ example is for stubbornness and mild to moderate notions of revenge, especially thoughts of revenge that you are not serious about.(For example, if you watched animated show ‘The Simpsons’, the character Sideshow Bob throughout most of the show would pursue some sort of comical variation of revenge, and then have a change of heart. I’m assuming that watching Sideshow Bob would encourage people to have thoughts of revenge, but in a non serious, even funny context. For example, you may just think of the word ‘Revenge!’, but not seriously act upon it). Refurbished for advice, after Lily Sloane talked to Picard, even though Captain Picard still has obvious grievances with the Borg, he no longer acts upon them like he recently did. His verbal quote of book ‘Moby Dick’ is a validation that he no longer adds such an active grievance interaction to his active chosen use of intent.

The 2nd example is in James Bond movie ‘Never Say Never Again(1983)’, starring Sean Connery as James Bond, Klaus Maria Brandauer as Maximilian Largo, and Kim Basinger as Domino Petachi. Here is a quote about the illustration from www.wikipedia.org:

‘ At the charity event, Largo and Bond play a 3-D video game called Domination; the loser of each turn receives a series of electric shocks of increasing intensity or pays a corresponding cash bet. ‘

It’s been years since I watched movie ‘Never Say Never Again’, but I think that Maximilian Largo actually invented the game ‘Domination’, and that he has never lost before. The movie is available streaming from Amazon.com for about 14 dollars. There is no rental for it. Of course, you don’t have to buy it. I can just explain it to you. So, according to Amazon Video, the illustration starts 1 hour, 15 minutes, and 50 seconds into the movie. It’s becoming more apparent that Maximilian Largo is losing for the 1st time, but he is having trouble letting go of the controls to admit defeat, even though he is experiencing more electric shocks as he is losing. Here is the quote:

Domination game: ‘Blue missile destroyed. Blue pain level, 50%'(‘Blue’ represents Maximilian Largo). Danger level. Repeat. Danger level. Second blue missile destroyed. Blue pain level, 55%. Danger.’

Domino Petachi: ‘Max.’

Domination game: ‘65%. Blue pain level, 70%. Pain level at 80%.’

Domino Petachi: ‘Max.’

Domination game: ‘85%. Danger. Danger.’

Domino Petachi: ‘Max!’

Domination game: ‘Danger.’

Finally, 1 hour, 16 minutes, and 22 seconds into the movie, Maximilian Largo lets go of the controls, and shows his hands to everyone, indicating defeat. The point of the illustration is that it is my belief that there are many concepts in the minds of Americans that are not challenged, that may never be challenged by others. However, not just instigators, but also inadvertencies may cause a person to experience a result from certain concepts, certain notions, that he/she may not be prepared for. In Maximilian Largo’s case, he never lost a game of Domination to anyone else before. That is why he had difficulty letting go of the controls, even though he was experiencing more and more pain. You may imagine, refurbished for your own use, Maximilian Largo showing you his open hands as an imagined example of you allowing yourself to continue with a notion, even though that notion had an unprepared result.(I have an idea for nonsensical notions of not being prepared called ‘Not prepare’. I plan to explain that next week). In other words, within reason, imagine a refurbished image of Maximilian Largo showing you his hands, helping you change your use of intent.

Fear:

If you are in a situation that you reasonably know for certain you should not need to experience fear, then idea ‘Not add’ may help you to ‘not add’ fear to your chosen sense of intent. As an illustration, and it’s just to know that such an illustration exists, not to watch the illustration, there is the tv show called ‘Fear Factor(2017)’ hosted by Ludacris. Here’s a copy of the show’s description from www.imdb.com:

‘ Hosted by Ludacris, “Fear Factor” is filled with new stunts inspired by urban legends, popular scary movies and viral videos from today’s cultural zeitgeist. Contestants will have to confront their fears to win money. ‘

Again, I’m not encouraging you to watch the game show. You can look at the previews, refurbished for advice with inaproprieities removed, on www.youtube.com, to verify the game show’s existence.

Weak: Weaker:

The experience of feeling weaker when compared to another person may also be moot(of little or no practical value, meaning, or relevance). For example, there are expectations at least by intent I try to use on only one person and not on others. For example, I do not use certain expectations I use on Wonder Woman on Lois Lane.

Since I choose to proofread and finish this idea today, and it’s now 5:39 PM EST for me, I have to stop now. I did invent several new ideas within the past week, so I’ll have something to type in next Saturday. The reason I finally explained idea ‘Not add’ was to allow myself to explain those new ideas. Although I don’t know for sure, I may also invent some more new ideas within the next week. So, if you are here next Saturday, I’ll see you then.

Violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘The Time Machine(1960)’. Rated PG-13 violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘The Time Machine(2002)’. Rated R violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘About Time(2013)’. Rated TV-Y7 animated violence and viewer discretion for tv show ‘Avatar: The Last Airbender’. Rated PG-13 sci-fi violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘Star Trek: First Contact’. Rated TV-14 animated violence and viewer discretion for tv show ‘The Simpsons’. Rated PG violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘Never Say Never Again’. Game show induced peril and viewer discretion for tv show ‘Fear Factor’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode, tv show, and movie. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Not add’, ‘Stubborn’, ‘Revenge’, ‘Fear’, ‘Weak’, and ‘Weaker’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.