7/3/2021
Salutations.
It is now 10:38 AM EST for me.
In case you want to know, I have decided to not work Independence Day July 4, 2021, tomorrow. I have no plans to type anything in this blog during that day, but I won’t be working either.
The music video that I found earlier today while searching for singers like Dido, Carly Rae Jepson, women singers I haven’t heard of in a while, I found from the right side of my youtube screen Natalie Imbruglia(‘Torn’ 1997). She recently has a music video out called ‘Build It Better’. Just search for phrase ‘natalie build it better’ in www.youtube.com, and it should be one of the 1st selections offered, with over 250 thousand views. It was published June 18, 2021, about 2 weeks ago. Here is a partial quote from stereoboard.com about ‘Build It Better’:
‘ Discussing the new song, she described it as; “surrendering to the chaos and seeing what’s on the other side of it is a good life lesson. Letting something fall apart, and being okay with that, is something that I have had to do in my life, numerous times, but especially moving into this record and becoming a mum. So I’m really excited about that song, and about the video, which is total escapist fun – the world needs that right now.” ‘
I love that you gave my heart a home
The place hasn’t changed, but I’m here alone
I know it’s crazy walking wires
But nothing lasts forever
When it all falls down, gotta build it better
This bed feels five miles wide
Beginning to dread these lonely nights
I know it’s crazy walking wires
But nothing lasts forever
When it all falls down, gotta build it better
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And here is a quote from one of the comments:
Beautiful song and video. This is a Natalie’s powerful come back. This is the kind of music and artists the world needs. I just ordered her album. Buy her music, watch her videos, play her songs on streaming, share her stuff. Just contribute to keep the good music alive.
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All right. The way I’m approaching to comment on watching the music video for the 1st time earlier today is this: I watched something on tv years ago about a teacher talking about the financial advice he gives his students. One of his students is wondering why he is not using his own knowhow to financially benefit, since the students are clearly using his advice to benefit financially. That teacher, a man, said in that interview that he doesn’t need the money, and that his teacher’s salary is enough to have an acceptable lifestyle.
When I watched music video ‘Build It Better’, I had to ‘reset’ her. The effect is like putting Natalie Imbruglia in another context, the context that doesn’t have her ‘Torn’ reputation, and then the music video makes more sense. To help me watch music video ‘Build It Better’, I imagined a teacher with a certain ability a student wants that teacher to use, but that teacher instead just teaches, without in an obvious, more active way, without using such an ability. I speculate that, in the near future, more and more school teachers, especially the school teacher in college, will have abilities that certain students would be aware of, but those abilities won’t be used in the classroom. The occasional student will always ask that teacher something like ‘Why aren’t you using your abilities?’ It makes sense to me that such a reputation would be popular for students to emulate. For example, there is that episode in tv series ‘Boston Public’, I think it’s episode 4.6 ‘Chapter Seventy-Two’, when Ronnie Cooke(Jeri Ryan) is talking to Charlie Bixby(Dennis Miller) about her previous occupation, being a corporate lawyer. She ‘gave that up’ to be a teacher, and Charlie Bixby was startled, asking her why would she give up such a lucrative job to be a public high school teacher! I watched that episode from a DVD copy, since the show is not available streaming or on DVD/Blu-ray, and then I threw away that DVD copy, since it was just a copy. The point is that, people can choose to have careers, and not use certain abilities while practicing those careers, something I believe more and more teachers will be more open with in the future.
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The tv show trailer I watched for the 1st time earlier today, and also chose for this advice, is called ‘Schmigadoon!’. I think it’s only offered from the streaming service ‘Apple TV+’, and will premiere on July 16, 2021. Here is a quote from wikipedia about it:
A couple on a backpacking trip discover a magical town called Schmigadoon which is in a Golden Age musical, and find out they can not leave until they find true love. The title and concept is a parody of the 1947 Broadway musical Brigadoon.
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To watch trailer ‘Schmigadoon!’ for free, in www.youtube.com, search for phrase ‘schmigadoon’, and it should be one of the 1st selections offered, with over 1.9 million views! It was published June 25, 2021, about a week ago.
Based on my impressions of watching it, a couple somehow found this place where the townsfolk sing and dance like their lives are in a musical as part of their routine, and according to wikipedia, the only way they can leave is to find true love. Also according to wikipedia, it’s 6 episodes, the 1st 2 episodes are offered the same day. I’m only recommending that you watch the trailer for this advice, not the episodes.
Since I’m talking about an Apple TV+ tv show, I would like to mention that I bought my 1st ‘2021 Apple TV HD (32GB, 5th Generation)’ from Amazon.com, and it was delivered May 23, 2021. I wanted to try it out before I talked about it. When I bought it, it costs about $160. So, now, I’m using both the Firestick and the Apple TV for tv streaming. Since I’m also using a cable modem, the streaming signal seems to be acceptable. I bought the ‘HD’ version because I’m still using the old plasma tv screen.
If you ‘fast forward’ tv shows and movies most of the time, I highly recommend you get the ‘Apple TV’. For streaming, for Amazon.com and Netflix streaming that I noticed so far, you can instantly fast forward and rewind streaming tv shows and movies. It’s ‘real time’. You just use your thumb to glide across the remote, and you just ‘glide’ fast forward watching, rewind watching, and you can continue to watch it any place in that streaming programming. It’s a bit pricey at $160, compared to the Firestick, but if you’re into fast forwarding, then I highly recommend the Apple TV. Also, access to streaming itself is the fastest from Apple TV that I’m aware of. That recommendation is just based on my experience with streaming devices, and so far, that experience is only with the Firestick and Apple TV using a cable modem.
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It is now 12:52 PM EST for me. There’s an episode from tv series ‘Hi-Jinks’ I think, hosted by Leila Sbitani, I think it’s from hHi-Jinks’, if memory serves, a grammar school student, a girl, is in a classroom, all of the other students are in on it, and that girl sees a clown dancing outside. The girl smiles, but the other students act like they don’t notice that clown. I looked in Amazon.com, but I could not find that scene. It could be from another tv show, but it’s profile indicates it’s from ‘Hi-Jinks’. Since I can’t find it, I’m just going to turn it into a story.
Since I don’t have the actual reference to work with, let’s add music video ‘Picture This’, the singer is Annie LeBlanc. It was published June 2, 2018. In www.youtube.com, search for phrase ‘picture this’, and it should be one of the 1st selections offered. In that music video, Annie LeBlanc is daydreaming, and near the end of that video, 3 minutes and 12 seconds into that video, her friends help her ‘snap out of it’.
In both the ‘Hi-Jinks’ clown dancing outside of the classroom, and the ‘Picture This’ music video, they can be refurbished to illustrate the importance of focusing on classroom obligations. For example, in the ‘Hi-Jinks’ clown dancing outside of the classroom, you should have the ability to pay attention in class, and not put too much attention with the clown dancing outside of the classroom. And in that ‘Picture This’ music video, you may choose to use it as part of an example, that you should not let daydreaming interfere with your school activities and classes.
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Figure out:
It is now 1:27 PM EST for me. I am going to present 3 illustrations involving some sort of partial solace advice given about time travel. The 1st one is from near the end of movie ‘Back to the Future Part III(1990)’, starring Michael J. Fox as Marty McFly, and Elisabeth Shue as Jennifer Parker. The movie is available streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 1 hour, 50 minutes, and 27 seconds into the movie. Here is the quote:
Jennifer: ‘Dr. Brown? I brought this note back from the future, and now it’s erased.’
Dr. Emmett Brown(Christopher Lloyd): ‘Of course it’s erased!’
Jennifer: ‘But what does that mean?’
Dr. Brown: ‘It means your future hasn’t been written yet. No one’s has. Your future is whatever you make it, so make it a good one, both of you.’
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The 2nd illustration is in episode 10.3 ‘Thin Ice’ from sci-fi tv series ‘Doctor Who(2017)’, starring Pearl Mackie as Bill Potts, and Peter Capaldi as The Doctor. The episode is also available streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 3 minutes and 37 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Bill: ‘Every choice I make in this moment, here and now, could change the whole future.’
The Doctor: ‘Exactly like every other day in your life. The only thing to do is to stop worrying about it.’
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The 3rd illustration is in episode 7.5 ‘A Trout in the Milk’ from sci-fi tv series ‘Agents of SHIELD(2020)’. The episode is available streaming in both Amazon.com, and Netflix. According to Amazon Video, that scene starts 3 minutes and 30 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Daniel Sousa(Enver Gjokaj): ‘… but what if you always plucked me out of time? Does that mean I always survive? And if we end up in your present, will we even be in the same timeline?’
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3 minutes and 39 seconds into the episode:
Phil Coulson(Clark Gregg): ‘Simmons can explain — sort of — but maybe you’d feel more comfortable staying back on Zephyr One.’
Daniel: ‘No. No, no, no. I’m here. Not going back. Might as well dive in and embrace the 1970s. (man rollerskates by) Starting now.’
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In the 1st example, the one with the clown dancing outside of the classrom, and music video ‘Picture This’, where daydreaming is encouraged to be regulated, those 2 examples represent a pleasant experience to manage. For idea ‘Figure out’, that represents instigations and inadvertencies that cause you to be bewildered, perplexed, dumbfounded, quagmired, along those lines. I’m recommending that you use those 3 ‘time travel’ conundrums to help to choose to stop resolving instigations that are out of context, not relevant, and mildly, adversely affect your sense of ‘figuring out’. In at least the ‘Doctor Who’ and ‘SHIELD’ examples, someone is experiencing some sort of quagmire, and one or more people are helping that person mitigate such a contemplation, to possible ‘stop figuring it out’, so to speak.
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No defend:
During the process connected with insulating this areas and also making a request your selected carry out, specialized polymers are accustomed that will act like gum somewhere between sections. generic india viagra No matter what you free generic viagra linked here want to achieve in coming future. Low testosterone is also known to be one of the cheap tadalafil overnight amerikabulteni.com probable causes. The drug Tadalafil price is pfizer viagra australia in our pharmacy are below the average.It is now 2:56 PM EST for me. Now, this is the new idea that I invented this past Thursday, 7/1/2021. I call it ‘No defend not effective familiar’. It is made up of 2 bookmarks, 1)’No defend’, and 2)’Not effective familiar’. I’ll explain now the 1st bookmark, ‘No defend’: Here’s an example: suppose that a situation was established generalistically, let’s say where you work, and it’s agreed upon that those 3 things should not occur by both management and non-managerial employees. So, even though those things are not supposed to happen, the instigator from time to time would try to initiate those 3 things for you to experience. What you can do with that experience contemplationally is identify those initiated experiences as ‘No’s’, meaning, ‘No, that’s not supposed to happen.’, ‘Already’, as in ‘An experienced ‘no’ that has already happened, and ‘No defend’, as in ‘I don’t have to contemplationally defend a ‘no’ that has already happened. I contemplationally call that idea ‘No defend’.
Let’s say, for example, an instigator is causing you to experience an instigation that is giving you the impression to interact with a certain involvement that may have been discussed by that instigator with management. However, you did not agree to interact with such an involvement. Management has never revealed to you anything about such an involvement. And such an experience is encouraging you to contemplationally defend yourself. You can contemplationally say ‘No defend’, and identify such an experience as something that you don’t have to contemplationally defend yourself against, even though it may feel like it already happened. The only illustration example I can think of for now, refurbished with inaproprieities removed of course, is in movie ‘Never Say Never Again(1983)’, starring Sean Connery as James Bond, and Bernie Casey as Leiter. The movie is available streaming on Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 1 hour, 29 minutes, and 34 seconds into the movie. Here is the quote:
Leiter: ‘Good show, James. Q actually came through, didn’t he?’
Bond: ‘How long have you been here?’
Leiter: ‘Long enough.’
Bond: ‘Long enough for what?’
Leiter: ‘To see how you handled the lady. You did rather well.’
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To explain, Leiter was ‘already there’, and could have intervened more directly.(It’s a movie made for entertainment.) That scene refurbished, it’s intent is to give you an idea of what ‘already’ may be like, when you experience such an instigation.
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Not effective familiar:
Idea ‘Not effective familiar’ uses idea ‘Not effective’ from Wishlist #1270. Here’s a quote from that list:
In no particular order, I’m just choosing to explain one 1st, and the other next, is in episode 1.2 ‘Fallen Angel’ from sci-fi tv series ‘Altered Carbon(2018)’, when a schoolgirl(no specific name was given to her in the series) was talking to Takeshi Kovaks(Joel Kinnaman) in a museum. The episode is available streaming from Amazon.com, and available streaming from Netflix. According to Amazon Video, that scene starts 32 minutes and 7 seconds into the episode. The episode’s use here is refurbished with inaproprieities removed. Here is the quote:
Little Girl(Maddie Dixon-Poirier): ‘What do you think?’
Kovacs: ‘I think your mom is mistaken.’
Little Girl: ‘What?’
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It’s the obvious facial reaction when the schoolgirl said ‘What?’ and those other facial reactions soon afterward, refurbished of course, that indicates that her use of strategy is ‘not effective’, not working in a context that she expects it to.
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The 2nd reference is from episode 1.5 ‘Love Language’ from sci-fi tv series ‘Resident Alien(2021)’. It is the facial reaction portrayed by character Sahar(Gracelyn Awad Rinke) when talking to the alien portrayed by actor Alan Tudyk. Here is the partial refurbished quote leading to Sahar’s facial expression. The episode is available streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 40 minutes and 17 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Sahar: ‘So when you were spitting into the ocean, he was in your pocket laughing at you the whole time. Your spit will never get near him.’
Max Hawthorne: ‘We win again.’
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The reaction Sahar made refurbished with inaproprieities removed starts 40 minutes and 30 seconds into the episode. Her expectations of strategy was ‘not effective’ based on her expectations of use, and the ineffectiveness of her strategy is shown from the reaction of Sahar’s face.
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Idea ‘Not effective familiar’ is when you feel an ineffectiveness of your own strategy. You may also call it ‘Not effective recognize’, when you recognize an ineffectiveness from your own strategy, and you choose to not use that sense of strategy. So, from an experienced instigation, you are contemplationally made to be familiar/recognize a sense of ineffectiveness, but you choose to not use and become it. Here is an illustration example where the exact opposite occurs, so to speak. A person causes 2 people to interact with a sense of ineffectiveness in a way that allows her and another to avoid getting into trouble. That scene is in episode 1.3 ‘Depends on the Wagon’ from adventure tv series ‘The Mysterious Benedict Society(2021)’. I think the episode is only available streaming on Disney Plus. According to Disney Plus, that scene starts 39 minutes and 19 seconds into the episode. Here is the quote:
Jackson(Ben Cockell):(I’m not sure it’s him) ‘Hey! What are you two doing out?’
Kate Weatherall(Emmy DeOliveira): ‘We couldn’t sleep. We thought a brisk walk might help.’
Jillson(Katherine Evans): ‘And you’re off the pathway. You need to come with us.’
Constance Contraire(Marta Kessler): ‘Don’t. She has bursitis. It’s gross. And contagious.’
Jillson: ‘Well, you’re not supposed to be out this late. Back to your rooms. We’re watching.’
Jackson: ‘And if we find you out again, full report.’
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So, Jackson and Jillson experienced a sense of ineffectiveness of strategy from their inability to physically escort Kate and Constance, causing them to avoid reporting both Kate and Constance, and just giving them a warning. Of course, if you experienced an instigation that is out of context and not relevant, then don’t use that sense of ineffectiveness familiarity that seems to be coming from you.
So, to start you off, contemplationally say the whole thing, ‘No defend not effective familiar’, to remind yourself of it’s meaning. When you think you are experiencing such an instigation, use the parts that you need to, such as just contemplationally saying ‘No defend’, or just contemplationally saying ‘Not effective familiar’, or ‘Effective familiar’, or ‘Effective recognize’. As you are practicing it, here’s a refurbished illustration from the movie ‘Men in Black: International(2019)’. That scene/movie is available streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 23 minutes and 20 seconds into the movie. Here is a quote:
Agent M(Tessa Thompson): ‘Hi, you.’
Man: ‘Wait! Wait! Wait! Don’t touch him!’
(alien turns into many aliens)
Agent M: ‘Oh, God.’
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Now, many of those agents are scrambling to pick those things up. Since it’s a sci-fi movie, I’m just going to refurbish that scene to help you practice: Just imagine a few of those agents incrementally in a 3 year period being exposed to that situation. Let’s say one agent in particular, when he 1st started confronting that situation, he complained to others and himself a lot, that another new agent just petted that alien, and now they all have to pick the aliens up. Now, fast forward 3 years, and when it happens, that agent just tries to pick them up as part of his job routine. That’s it. It’s just part of his job to do. He doesn’t even complain about it anymore, and maybe he does complain about it a lot as well, but that is because there are ‘Men in Black’ job assignments that involve complaining, whether you do well in it or not. Let’s just take the former for now, and in 3 years, he doesn’t complain about it anymore, it’s just part of his job routine.
Just use that ‘Men in Black’ scene as an indicator for your progress when using idea ‘No defend not effective familiar’. Treat that ‘Men in Black’ scene like it was just light coming from a flashlight that you are using. The light itself is not the answer, but it’s still useful to you. [7/3/2021: If you choose to, you may use the ‘Men in Black’ music while using these ideas. 7/3/2021]
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It is now 4:31 PM EST for me. I’m going to close this list now. Like I said earlier, I’m not working tomorrow, but I don’t plan on adding more ideas to this blog tomorrow. I will instead add more ideas next Saturday. Happy 4th of July, and if you are there next Saturday, then I’ll see you then.
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Violence and viewer discretion for tv series ‘Boston Public’. Rated PG sci-fi violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘Back to the Future Part III’. TV-PG sci-fi violence and viewer discretion for ‘Doctor Who(2005+)’ and ‘Agents of SHIELD’. Rated PG violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘Never Say Never Again’. TV-MA mature themes, sci-fi violence and viewer discretion for tv series ‘Altered Carbon’. TV-14 sci-fi violence and viewer discretion for tv series ‘Resident Alien’. TV-PG viewer discretion for tv series ‘The Mysterious Benedict Society’. Rated PG-13 sci-fi violence and viewer discretion for movie ‘Men in Black: International’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode, series, and movie. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Figure out’, ‘No defend’, ‘Not effective familiar’, and ‘No defend not effective familiar’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.