11/20/2021
Salutations.
It is now 8:38 AM EST for me.
Before I begin, I’m going to type in a quick diagnostic for myself, something to give me a little boost to type this stuff in. Here’s the story:
A customer enters a store and looks at the drinks available.
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That’s the story. I’m imagining my advice as those drinks. The customer should be able to look at those drinks and find them available to be used as a drink, even though that customer will not choose it to drink. I typed something like this in a previous list, but if you’re a new reader, I’m not obligating you to read all of the previous lists in this blog. Of course, finding these ideas is useful I don’t know if that will actually occur for everyone that reads this blog, but that is what I’m using to help me make these ideas.
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And now for the usual music video and trailer for this advice. However, for this list, I selected a music video, but I did not watch most of it. The reason is because the music video is almost 15 minutes long! I chose it because it was endorsed by Vevo in www.youtube.com, and what was said by it in www.wikipedia.org. However, I did watch the music video’s ending, when the lead singer was doing a book signing. If you choose to, you may watch the entire music video. However, I’m only recommending that you watch it’s ending, and you can also review it using that horizontal bar. When you move your cursor from left to right at the bottom of the music video, it gives you a quick review of certain images of that music video as it relates to location. That’s what I did. You may also watch the Vevo review for that music video, which is very short, maybe only 10 or so seconds long. The music video that I referenced for the 1st time earlier today and recommend for this advice is called ‘All Too Well: The Short Film’ by Taylor Swift. Here’s a very short quote about it from wikipedia.org:
‘ The film was later released on the same day on YouTube, 19 hours after the album’s release at midnight,[15] and was followed the next day with a performance of the song by Swift on a season 47 episode of Saturday Night Live. ‘
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And here is a quote to the lyrics to song ‘All Too Well’. I didn’t really listen to the song. As I glanced at the lyrics recently, I chose in my opinion what seemed to be the least miserable. In my opinion, according to the lyrics, the lyrics are very depressing:
But you keep my old scarf from that very first week
‘Cause it reminds you of innocence and it smells like me
You can’t get rid of it ’cause you remember it all too well, yeah
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Of course, if I actually listened to that song, watched that ‘short story’, and read a few reviews about it, I would have more to work with about the lyrics. I found the music video ‘All Too Well’ from www.youtube.com, publisher ‘Vevo’. I clicked ‘Vevo’, and from it’s home page, I viewed ‘Vevo – Pop Video Weekly | This Week’s Biggest Hits Ep. 37’. It gave a very short illustration sponsorship of the music video ‘All Too Well’ starting 10 seconds into it’s presentation, it’s 1st review. To watch music video ‘All Too Well’ for free, search in www.youtube.com for phrase ‘taylor swift all too well’, and it should be one of the 1st selections offered, with over 42 million views! As of now, 11/20/2021, it premiered 7 days ago. I only watched the ending of it, starting 11 minutes and 24 seconds into the music video, when the screen said ‘THIRTEEN YEARS GONE’. I wanted to just see the book signing scene, not to know how much time passed since they were in a relationship. I noticed that, during her booksigning, her ex-boyfriend was watching her from outside for a brief moment, and then he left. To be clear, I am recommending that you watch music video ‘All Too Well’, even though I didn’t pay too much attention to it myself. Well, Taylor Swift’s face is portrayed in my opinion to be very beautiful, if that means anything useful for you to know.
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And now for the movie trailer, and this trailer I watched the whole thing. I found it in my youtube ‘signed in’ homepage. The movie trailer that I watched for the 1st time earlier today is called ‘France’ starring Lea Seydoux as France de Meurs. Here is a quote from wikipedia.org about the movie:
‘ France is a 2021 internationally co-produced drama film, written and directed by Bruno Dumont. It stars Léa Seydoux, Blanche Gardin, Benjamin Biolay, Emanuele Arioli, Juliane Köhler, Gaëtan Amiel, Jewad Zemmar and Marc Bettinelli.
It had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival in July 15, 2021. It was released in France on 25 August 2021, by ARP Selection. The film features the life of a star television journalist caught in a spiral of events that will lead to her downfall. Between drama and comedy, France seeks to compare the intimate and public crisis of a young woman with a portrait of contemporary France.[1] The film is intended in particular to be a satire of the treatment of information by television channels. France de Meurs is a star journalist at a private French television station. Her fame, her way of conceiving reports and programs, as well as a chain of personal events, will cause a total questioning of her career in media and turn her life upside down. ‘
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As I watched the movie trailer ‘France’, I couldn’t help but feel that Lea Seydoux is the most beautiful woman in the world. I think that is because of her portrayal as Dr. Madeleine Swann in the movie ‘No Time to Die(2021)’, a movie that I watched in a New York movie theatre last month.
If you choose to watch the movie trailer ‘France’, I think this is the part that you may enjoy:
‘ Between drama and comedy, France seeks to compare the intimate and public crisis of a young woman with a portrait of contemporary France. ‘
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If you have never been to France before, watching the movie trailer ‘France’ may give you an impression of contemporary France using the comparison of journalist France de Meurs.
Using my ‘signed in’ youtube homepage, I found the movie trailer ‘France’ by going to www.youtube.com, to publisher ‘Movieclips Indie’. I clicked that, and from it’s homepage I clicked ‘VIDEOS’. It was published Nov 3, 2021, over 2 weeks ago. For the sake of variety, here is a quote from one of it’s comments:
‘ Even in the middle of a war zone amid rubble, dust, and flying bullets, her lipstick is always flawless. ‘
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Reset:
It is now 9:51 AM EST for me. Before I begin the actual advice, I want to give advice to the kids about the possibility that certain expectations that you are learning to have now, just the ones that you may have a personal preference to not like much, some? of those expectations may change when you become adults and get a career job. In other words, your chosen future career job may cause you to commit to a different use of expectations. For example, for some of the expectations that you may not personally like as a kid, that may change when you are an adult and have a career job. The use of those expectations may change. For example, with those newfound uses of expectations, not with the use of expectations that you have now, but with the use of expectations that you will have with your future career job, you may actually like those expectations that you don’t like as a kid in the now. In other words, you’re learning about those expectations now so that you can change the use of those expectations later when you become an adult. I call that phenomena ‘Reset’.
I’ll offer you 2 illustrations, and then after that, I’ll start with the actual advice. I’ll start with the movie ‘Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard(2021)’, starring Frank Grillo as Bobby O’Neill. The movie is available streaming from Amazon.com, and according to Amazon Video, that scene starts 14 minutes and 56 seconds into the movie. The quote is edited. Here is the quote:
Bobby O’Neill: ‘Listen, I have been in Europe for a month, okay? The only thing you people do is watch soccer. Not one bar carries Sam Adams.’
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15 minutes and 15 seconds into the movie:
Crowley(Caroline Goodall): ‘All right. What do you want?’
Bobby O’Neill: ‘… And if I solve this case, I want you to send me back to Boston.’
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I couldn’t find the 2nd illustration, so just the one.
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Strive effective qualify:
It is now 10:19 AM EST for me. Idea ‘Strive effective qualify’ is based on the current idea I am contemplationally using right now. However, if I were to explain the ideas I intend to explain normally, idea ‘Strive effective qualify’ would be explained last. The reason I am explaining it now is because I believe you would need to learn it 1st in order to learn the other ideas. So, what is last is explained 1st, and then I’ll start over and explain it normally again.
According to Amazon.com, I purchased ‘The Invincible Iron Man: The Complete Collection’ on Jul 16, 2009, over 11 years ago. To me, when I read comic books, the information is more conveniently referenced in my mind. That’s probably true for people in general, I’m just not sure that it’s true. I went through that disc. I didn’t read all of those digital comic books, but I went through many of them. In particular, there is this storyline where Tony Stark chose to become Secretary of Defense, and to make public his identity as Iron Man. There are 3 scenes I would like to reference from that storyline: 1)I think it was Jim Rhodes, Tony Stark’s best friend, who said to him ‘Heavy lies the head…’ in reference to his new responsibilities as Secretary of Defense as it relates to his ‘Iron Man’ actions. 2)When Tony Stark ‘flew’ and then landed to talk to one of the politicians ,that politician, since he now knows that Tony Stark is Iron Man, he calmly took his glasses off and cleaned it as he was talking to Tony Stark as Tony Stark was wearing his Iron Man suit, and 3)As Secretary of Defense, Tony Stark was greeting one of the soldiers who seemed to have a problem with one of his eyelids. It was twitching. Tony Stark said to that man that he hopes that his eye gets better.
All 3 examples are for idea ‘Strive effective’, how the US Government and 2 people are reacting to to Tony Stark’s striving efforts of effectiveness to publicly be both Iron Man and Secretary of Defense. The government example when Jim Rhodes says ‘Heavy lies the head…’ , that’s meant to give filler/depth to the idea. The example where the politician cleans his glasses while talking to Tony Stark as he is wearing his Iron Man outfit, that is the one I want you to emulate. The politician is not allowing Tony Stark’s impression of striving effectiveness to adversely affect how he communicates with him. Even when Tony Stark flies and lands in front of him, that politician chooses to calmly talk to him.
As a photographer, light is important and I was able to mention this on his bestseller “Glutathione – Your Key To Health”. prices viagra It also creates buy cheap cialis view to find out more spasms of the Sphincter of Oddi, digestion, and the duodenum all helps you make better, healthier decisions for your overall health. This can be coupled with different main troubles related to impotence like lack of ejaculation and in addition subsequent to four weeks subsequent the cure. sildenafil tablets 100mg discover content Just 24 hours after it was named the worst of the major power suppliers for customer service, the EDF payout comes. buy generic cialisThe caution example is the 3rd example, when that military soldier’s eyelid is twitching while talking to Tony Stark, knowing that he is also Iron Man. You see, in that comic book storyline, Tony Stark is publicly known superhero who is also Secretary of Defense. In my opinion, that’s an incredibly obvious example of ‘Strive effective’, even though it’s just a comic book storyline.
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Qualify:
Here’s the definition for the work ‘qualify’ that I am using from www.dictionary.com:
‘ to provide with proper or necessary skills, knowledge, credentials, etc.; make competent:to qualify oneself for a job. ‘
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Based on the idea that I invented, idea ‘Qualify’ identifies instigations that cause you to contemplationally ‘qualify’ certain aspects of the instigation itself. In other words, the experienced instigation want you to do the ‘dirty work’. So, instead of committing to that sense of qualification, you may instead use it as an indicator to ‘not’ qualify certain aspects of an instigation.
Strive effective qualify:
And so, to create idea ‘Strive effective qualify’, you combine ideas ‘Strive effective’ and ‘Qualify’. You choose to not commit to/not use/not qualify a sense of striving effectiveness coming from instigations and inadvertencies. For example, when Tony Stark ‘flies’ in front of you wearing his Iron Man suit, you may choose to contemplationally ‘not qualify’ his impression of striving effectiveness, so that you can have a reasonable conversation with him.
Here’s a quote from a story that I read from either a Braude or Bruder book. It’s been a certain amount of years since I read them. In that story, a man was told by management that he was going to get the job that he applied for. He anticipated that he would get the job, and had a celebration prepared for anyone who wants to attend. During that celebration, he talked about the people in that party based on extrapolated information. And when he showed up to start his new job, no one was there, meaning that he did not get that job. It’s a story, so it’s not accurate and not detailed.
In that story, management allowed that man to express his striving effectiveness. However, it’s how he used that striving effectivness that caused them to eventually not hire him for the job. In my opinion, he made the mistake that many newly established instigators make in a company, a misplaced use of involvement to justify hurting others. That man’s extrapolated use of involvement as it relates to management is the reason why they chose to not give him the job.
And that is where idea ‘Strive effective qualify’ comes in. Even though an instigation may cause you to sense a striving sense of effectiveness from an instigator, you don’t have to qualify that striving sense of effectiveness. Management allowed that man to express his striving sense of effectiveness, and yet eventually chose to not qualify it.
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Conversation qualify:
It is now 11:45 AM EST for me.
Idea ‘Conversation qualify’ is the new idea that I invented less than a week ago. If I had my way, so to speak, idea ‘Conversation qualify’ would be the 1st thing that I would type in this list, but people need the formalities in order to possibly find these ideas useful. It’s based on what I typed in Wishlist #1298, the previous list. Here is the quote:
‘ Have you noticed that those that have instigated you look profoundly, obviously guilty as it relates to those instigations? According to the idea ‘Guilty’ that I invented/imagined, it is my belief that instigators use their absurdly emphasized identity of being guilty in order to discourage innocent people from feeling guilty themselves. ‘
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So, here’s the idea that I invented/imagined: Let’s say that an instigator to you looks very guilty, and that guilty look causes you to avoid feeling and looking guilty. Why would an instigator cause you to avoid feeling and looking guilty? And this is the answer that I created/invented/imagined:
Before I begin that explanation, let me recommend 1st 2 illustrations that you may look at 1st. In no particular order, there is this scene in episode 1.13 ‘Truth or Dare’ from comedy series ‘Undeclared(2002)’ where Ron Garner(Seth Rogen) is having an imagined conversation with Kelly(Busy Philipps) from a distance while Kelly I am assuming is giving a campus tour to mostly college freshmen as part of their orientation tour. Ron Garner thought he was doing it in a way that Kelly was not supposed to notice. When Kelly figured out what Ron Garner was doing, Kelly gave the impression that she was talking to Ron Garner from a distance. Since Ron Garner did not know Kelly, and it was not intended for her to notice what he was doing, Ron Garner panicked, and was obviously embarrassed from the experience. He quickly tried to give Kelly the impression that he was not having an imagined conversation with her, that he was with someone else, and then he left the scene.
I can’t find the episode streaming from Amazon.com or anywhere else you can purchase it from. You can buy the DVD set from Amazon.com. I did find it streaming from www.youtube.com. If you search in www.youtube.com for the phrase ‘undeclared’, there are people that have the entire season streaming. You may choose one of those people just to watch that scene in episode 1.13 ‘Truth or Dare’ from tv series ‘Undeclared(2002)’. It starts around 7 minutes into the episode.
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The 2nd illustration is from a scene from www.youtube.com called ‘Mel Gibson’s Unauthorized Video Diary’ by publisher Andrew Patrick Ralston. Just search in www.youtube.com for phrase ‘mel gibson video diary’. Here is a quote from that youtube link:
‘ Amazing behind the scenes on Lethal Weapon 2 by Mel Gibson. Found this on one of my old VHS tapes from HBO. Lots of footage at Warner Brothers Studio in Burbank. 26 minutes ‘
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And here’s a quote from one of the comments:
‘ Oh my goodness, I’ve been searching for this for a while!! I recall seeing this on HBO I believe and I laughed at multiple spots! It showed a different side of Mel as I was use to watching him play Mad Max. Lol ‘
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1st, it’s all acting. None of it is real. There are at least 2 scenes where Mel Gibson would say something like:
Mel Gibson: ‘I hope nobody saw that.’
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You don’t need to see those 2 scenes. They’re not real. The actual scene that I recommend that you watch is when celebrity Mel Gibson introduces you to celebrity Danny Glover, and Danny Glover is professionally dancing solo to some really cool dance music. However, it’s obviously not Danny Glover, just someone we are led to believe is him. It’s humorously obvious that it’s not Danny Glover. And when you put Mel Gibson’s phrase together with Danny Glover’s impression of dancing, you get the illustration that is used for idea ‘Conversation qualify’. That scene starts 19 minutes and 55 seconds into the video clip. Here’s the starting quote:
Mel Gibson: ‘Ladies and gentlemen, at last, Danny Glover!’
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And then you get to see an impression of Danny Glover dancing to some cool dance music. Enjoy!
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And now, finally, the answer for idea ‘Conversation qualify’: An instigator may improperly impose a false contemplation conversation upon you that you did not agree to have with that instigator that causes you to avoid to feel and look guilty. It is like that scene in that episode in tv series ‘Undeclared’. When Kate imposed that false conversation upon Ron Garner, he felt somewhat shocked and embarrassed, causing him to eventually leave the area. Of course, that’s just one variation, one example of an instigation identified by idea ‘Conversation qualify’. For example, it’s the embarrassment of such a conversation that bothers you, even though you did not agree to have such a conversation with that instigator. For example, an instigator improperly imposes it upon you to react to, you feel embarrassed, and even though it’s not a conversation you agreed to have with that instigator, it still bothers you.
As a solution, at least something to mitigate/lessen the experience, just contemplationally say ‘Conversation qualify’, and even though you still sense that false conversation, the idea helps you to not contempationally qualify it, to not commit to it, to not interact with it, to not use it. To address the brunt of it, you may instead use ‘Strive effective qualify’ to represent ‘Conversation qualify’. In other words, if you feel an impression of conversation you did not agree to, you may also contemplationally say ‘Strive effective qualify’ so that, even though you sense/feel that false conversation, you still choose to not interact/use it.
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It is now 12:44 PM EST for me. I am going to stop typing now. In my opinion, I think the discovery of idea ‘Conversation qualify’ is a real game changer, and may be very useful to you. I believe it may also significantly improve how I explain ideas from now on, your benefit and mine. Next Saturday, I’ll probably do the same thing, type in an idea I will invent within the next week up until I start typing next Saturday. So, if you are there, I’ll see you then.
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Viewer discretion for movie ‘France’.(as a precaution, since I didn’t see the movie.) Rated R mature themes, violence, viewer discretion for movie ‘Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard’. Violence, viewer/reading discretion for the ‘Iron Man’ comic books. TV-14 mature themes, viewer discretion for tv series ‘Undeclared’. Violence and viewer discretion(the scenes are not read) from youtube video clip ‘Mel Gibson’s Unauthorized Video Diary’. Use refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode, series, movie, and comic book. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Strive effective’, ‘Qualify’, ‘Strive effective qualify’, ‘Conversation qualify’, and ‘I hope nobody saw that.'(refurbished for advice with inapproprieities removed when used) for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.