Wishlist #1076

12/31/2016

Greetings! The only reason I am typing something in now is because I want to meet a certain routine quota that I have created in my mind. Since I am not able to finish this idea today, I plan to finish it tomorrow. For the people who would normally wait for me to type something in, (and for everyone else), I want to at least give you the music video I would try to normally offer in the beginning of these ideas. The video I have chosen today is called ‘Private Eyes’ by Hall & Oates. To see it for free, you can go to www.youtube.com and search for phrase ‘private eyes hall and oates’. One of the selections offered by youtube has almost 4 million views as of now. That is the one I am recommending for you to use.

The reason I am offering you this video to watch is because, several years ago, a certain woman got distractingly stuck in my head for some reason, and so what I did to cope with that distraction was imagine Daryl Hall, the lead singer in the ‘Private Eyes’ music video, to sing in that place where I saw her. Since it was just imagined, the rest of the band was there, but the focus was on Daryl Hall, and just like in the music video, you would also see George Edward(G.E.) Smith play his guitar in that place. You can verify the names in www.wikipedia.org. I also placed those people in certain places where I worked, Daryl Hall singing, and G.E. Smith playing his guitar, like in the ‘Private Eyes’ video. So, if you’re a teenager or an adult male, and a teenager or adult woman is unusually distracting you contemplationally, and maybe you want to be less distracted by them, I recommend that you use the ‘Private Eyes’ music video like I did. Within reason, of course, and if you can, imagine the ‘Private Eyes’ band singing in that place where you saw her, and imagine the ‘Private Eyes’ band to perform in certain areas where you work as well. If it worked for me, maybe it will work for you.

Also, if you don’t have that distraction problem, or if the advice doesn’t apply to you, I still think it’s an entertaining music video to watch.

Tomorrow, I plan to start and finish explaining bookmark ‘Intentional limitations’. This bookmark wasn’t originally planned to be in the 7+ bookmarks category, but I reasoned it to be there. I’ll give you the full explanation tomorrow. See you then! Also, Happy New Year.

1/1/2017

Intentional limitations:

Greetings and salutations! I want to start by trying to explain why I’m introducing you to meaning ‘Intentional limitations’. I believe that, when most people try to cope with instigation on their own, they develop an attitude that is what I call ‘justifiably adamant’. According to the dictionary, ‘adamant’ means-‘utterly unyielding in attitude or opinion in spite of all appeals, urgings, etc.’ The best illustration I can think of right now in my opinion is located in episode 3.12 ‘The Inside Man’ from sci-fi series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.(2016)’. The illustration starts, according to Amazon Video, 17 minutes and 34 seconds into the episode, when Phil Coulson(Clark Gregg) introduces himself to Ellen King(Melissa Bickerton). Here is a quote:

Coulson:-‘I don’t think we’ve met.’

Miss King:-‘Ellen King. Have you found a cure for them, doctor?’

Coulson:-‘A cure needs a disease.’

Miss King:-‘Interesting. I’m sure you’ll enlighten us all later. Excuse us.’

That scene, and the short scene after involving Coulson talking to General Talbot(Adrian Pasdar), represents several different points of view. Based on the quote, let’s say Coulson’s point of view represents a supporting point of view, Miss King’s point of view represents a point of view that is against. Those examples help you see General Talbot’s point of view, which is the ‘justifiably adamant’ point of view. Here is a quote soon after Coulson talked to Ellen King:

Talbot:-‘I think it’s Chen. She’s too nice. Never trust nice…Maybe she tangled with one of the Inhumans, got her all hotheaded, you know?’

Coulson:-‘Congratulations. You just narrowed it down to everyone.’

Of course, refurbished for advice, and just as one type of example, not every example, Talbot’s illustration represents a person who is ‘justifiably adamant’. You may look at the example, and think to yourself ‘That’s not me.’ Like I said, it’s a refurbished example, not every example.

1st, I want to say that I made this up. I just imagined it. However, if you think this idea may be useful to you, then I recommend that you use it. 2nd, I want to say that I imagine that the problem that may exist with people who are justifiably adamant because of instigation is that they are less sympathetic to legitimate situations in their job that have what I call ‘Intentional limitations’. I am going to try to explain ‘Intentional limitations’ using a science fiction example.

To prep you up for the story, go to episode 3.12 ‘The Empath’ from sci-fi series ‘Star Trek(1968)’. According to Amazon Video, the effects start 22 minutes and 24 seconds into the episode, when Gem(Kathryn Hays) chooses to heal Kirk(William Shatner). It is the music that such a scene is associated with, and Kirk, that will be used for the ‘Intentional limitations’ story. There are other moments in the episode that such music is used, but a few of those moments I think are unnecessarily extreme, just to get the music that goes with it. If you want to use the other, non extreme moments in the episode, in relation to advice said, you can do so.

The 2nd ‘prepping up’ scene is from episode 1.3 ‘Exodus from Genesis’ from sci-fi series ‘Farscape(1999)’. Since I can’t find the episode in Amazon.com, I’m recommending the use of the episode from www.youtube.com. Just search for phrase ‘farscape season 1’, and there should be this section that has many ‘Farscape’ episodes in it, and just choose the 1.3 ‘Exodus’ episode, and according to youtube, the scene is located 43 minutes and 56 seconds into the episode, and the scene only lasts for a few seconds. It shows 3 Peacekeepers on the floor exhausted because of the heat. According to the ‘Farscape’ show, when Peacekeepers are exposed to certain situations involving heat, they become exhausted, drained of strength. When you look for that scene, keep in mind that this sci-fi episode has a lot of sci-fi violence. I’m not recommending the violence, only the obvious draining illustration the Peacekeepers experience when exposed to certain situations of heat.

If you choose to, once you look at those 2 illustrations, we can begin this ‘Intentional limitations’ story:

[Sorry, but I want to stop now and continue explaining this next week. I underestimated how much time I needed to start and finish typing this idea. I guess I’ll see you next week.

1/7/2017

Before I begin, I want to recommend to you episode 2.6 ‘Thor’s Chariot’ from sci-fi series ‘Stargate SG-1(1998)’. According to Amazon Video, the scene I want you to watch starts 33 minutes and 41 seconds into the episode, when the hologram known as Thor reveals itself again to the Stargate team. Here is the quote:

Thor:-‘There is no shame. Perhaps…in more time, you will come of age.’

Daniel Jackson(Michael Shanks):-‘Uh…Excuse me. Could you, uh…Could you just, uh…Please, just…One second?’

Soon after Daniel Jackson made that request, the Thor hologram froze.

I think it was less than a week ago, and I can’t explain the idea fully now, it may take 2 months to explain it. However, I can give you something about it later, but that will be after these 7+ bookmarks are explained. Less than a week ago, I think I invented a bookmark called ‘Refine’. For here, I’m using a bookmark called ‘Accuse refine’. I’m going to use this bookmark on the use of the greeting I plan to give you soon. You see, as I think about typing the greeting in, there’s something about it, a certain refining, that is distracting me. And so, what I will do is use bookmark ‘Accuse refine’ to allocate/remove such a distraction and place that distraction elsewhere. The best reference to that effect is the reference I just recommended to you, when Daniel Jackson made a request to the Thor hologram, and it paused. Basically, I imagined Daniel Jackson’s knowhow being used to negotiate with the Thor hologram, and the negotiation allowed the hologram to pause for a moment. That said, I begin this idea with the greeting, and I plan to use this ‘Accuse refine’ idea on that greeting.

**’Accuse refine’** about to be used on greeting:

Hello.

To avoid some ambiguity, like I said, I am the one experiencing the distraction. In other words, I just used bookmark ‘Accuse refine’ to remove something I sensed from the word ‘Hello’. To allow me to give you advice with less distractions, I may be using bookmark ‘Accuse refine’ upon my own thinking, such as other words that may have some sort of distraction that I can remove. I am not using such an idea on you directly. If you choose to, maybe you can use the idea, even though I did not give you the full explanation yet. I do plan on giving you at least some of the explanation for ‘Refine’ soon.

For a reference using the greeting ‘Hello’, if you want a reference, I recommend the song ‘Hello’ by Lionel Richie. According to www.wikipedia.org, the song ‘Hello’ reached number 1 on three Billboard music charts in 1984. I’m not recommending the music video for ‘Hello’, just the song ‘Hello’, since it has been years since I watched that video.

OK, let’s finish this idea! Last week, I was about to begin the ‘Intentional limitations’ story. So, here it is: Refurbished for advice, of course, using the character James T. Kirk(William Shatner) from the ‘Star Trek’ episodes(1966-1969), the story starts with an employee who works for a company in the now, his name is also James T. Kirk, and he looks like the Kirk from those ‘Star Trek’ episodes. His personality, however, is like General Talbot’s(Adrian Pasdar) personality from episode 3.12 ‘The Inside Man’ from sci-fi series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.(2016)’, justifiably adamant. Although he is relatively new in the company, many people in the company already see him as having ‘the face of the company’, like in the movie ‘Two Weeks Notice(2002)’, how George Wade(Hugh Grant) is ‘the face of the company’ that he works for. It is because of his company compatibility that someone in the company wanted to introduce to him something about a division of the company that his justifiably adamant attitude does not mix well. A woman who Jim(James) knows in the company, let’s say she’s like Ashley(Abbie Cornish) from the movie ‘The Girl(2012)’, talks Jim into visiting her division in the company.

Now, this visit is going to be a little science fiction, because this is the only way I know right now to introduce to you the idea ‘Intentional limitations’. In this division, let’s say 20 or so people, are involved in a project that causes them to experience some sort of heat exhaustion when exposed to a certain amount of heat, refurbished, like the way the Peacekeepers experienced some sort of temporary heat exhaustion in episode 1.3 ‘Exodus from Genesis’ from sci-fi series ‘Farscape(1999)’. Ashley is also one of the people in this group, and she wants to show Kirk, who she has colleague admiration for, what happens when they experience a certain amount of heat in the room.

So, with Ashley, Kirk enters their facility area. Now, when they experience their heat exhaustion, they have their own separate rooms, let’s say 4 to a room, where their bodies are accomodated. For example, each of those rooms have 4 beds and such. However, when this happens, most of them like to be in just 1 room. So, imagine a pile of them, let’s say 20 of them, in 1 medium sized room, either lying on the floor(the intent use of ‘lying’ is from word ‘lie’, which means-‘to rest in a horizontal or flat position’), or leaning against the walls as they sit on the floor, or to rest on the 4 beds available. Kirk is in this room with Ashley, sitting down by a table, both Kirk and Ashley facing each other. Ashley is explaining to Kirk what is happening to the others and to herself. The room is of course hot, but not unbearably hot. However, since Ashley and the others are participating in a certain company program, they have agreed to allow their physical bodies to easily experience exhaustion when exposed to a certain amount of heat. In other words, and it’s just an example, if you experienced the heat in such a room, it would be just hot to you. However, if they experienced that same heat, they would experience heat exhaustion in such a way that they would have to rest somewhere.

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1/9/2017

Hi. I’m typing because I imagined that some of the kids are having problems thinking about the use of the word ‘Hello’, after I used the ‘Accuse refine’ bookmark on ‘Hello’ upon myself. So, if you are having problems thinking about it, I would like to help you out with a recommended solution.

The solution begins with a scene from tv show ‘Whiz Kids’, an episode I watched years ago. You don’t have to watch the whole episode. Since ‘Whiz Kids’ is not available on DVD, at least not yet, I was still able to find the reference in www.youtube.com. Also, if you want more information about ‘Whiz Kids’, www.wikipedia.org has more. To watch it for free, search for phrase ‘whiz kids 2.1’, and the episode’s name is 1.2 ‘Fatal Error’ from tv show ‘Whiz Kids(1983)’. The scene starts 6 minutes and 7 seconds into the episode, when Jeremy Saldino(Jeffrey Jacquet) said quote:

Jeremy:-‘Change color!’

So, basically, the main characters of the tv show ‘Whiz Kids’, according to www.imdb.com, are ‘a group of young kids who are amateur computer experts and detectives’. They were playing a computer game introduced to them by a man who is in jail, and he was using the kids to help him somehow get out of jail. When one of the kids, Jeremy, recommended to him that he ‘change color’, he used the idea to change the appearance of his clothing, which allowed him to escape from jail. Of course, the ‘Whiz Kids’ didn’t know they were helping him escape from jail. They just thought they were testing a computer game.

My point is that, with the rest of this advice, if you are having a little trouble using the word ‘Hello’, all you have to do is change it’s appearance in your mind to something that is more acceptable to you. If you go to www.dictionary.com and search for the word ‘hello’, dictionary.com offers you 2 ways of pronouncing it. The 1st way is ‘he-loh’. Notice that the 1st syllable is ‘he’, and the 2nd syllable is ‘loh’. Now, if you used that song ‘Hello’ by Lionel Richie, go to www.google.com, and search for ‘hello lionel richie lyrics’, use a link that shows you the lyrics to the ‘Hello’ song, and go to that part of the song where it uses the word ‘hello’, such as

‘Hello, is it me you’re looking for?’

Now, just contemplationally pronounce the word ‘Hello’ with the Lionel Richie ‘Hello’ song, except you pronounce it ‘he-loh!’. That new appearance of the word ‘Hello’ should make it more acceptable for you to think about.

Now, for previous moments when you used the word ‘Hello’ contemplationally in a way that you did not find acceptable, that you had trouble with, keep in mind that, if you chose to use ‘he-loh!’, you now have a more acceptable use of the word. The way you used to use the word ‘Hello’ happened(you experienced a non-preferred perspective from that use), but now you are using the word ‘Hello’ in a more acceptable context. When you think about the troubled way you used the word ‘Hello’, you don’t have to become that way again. Your new use of the word ‘Hello’ now supercedes the older way you used to use the word ‘Hello’. This is not you forgetting how you used to use the word ‘Hello’. This is you clarifying to yourself how you now choose to use the word ‘Hello’. So, when you think about those past ways that you had trouble using the word ‘Hello’, you can now contemplationally say ‘He-loh!’ to those moments, and not become the older version of ‘Hello’ that you used to use.

Anyway, I hope that was helpful. See you Saturday!

1/14/2017

Howdy!(Don’t worry. I’m going to try not to avoid using the word ‘He-llo’. However, to help you ween out of that ‘He-llo’ fiasco, I’m going to use a hyphen(-) to place in the word ‘He-llo’ for a while). It is now 7:19 PM EST for me, so I am going to try to give the explanation of this list 2 hours. Hopefully by then, I would have finished this ‘Intentional limitations’ story. The good news is that I may have some extra time this coming Monday to continue with the next idea.

Let’s see. Last week, I talked about Ashley(Abbie Cornish) and Kirk(a younger William Shatner) sitting in a hot room, and everyone in the room seems to be experiencing some sort of heat exhaustion except for Kirk. Now here is where a little of your experience with watching TV and movies comes in. If you watched tv and the movies, you would notice that the actors present themselves in a context that gives continuity to what they are portraying, for example, how the actors and actresses talk to each other, and how they move around in tv shows and movies. So, what I am about to say next, I recommend that you imagine adding some of that continuity. Basically, it starts with Ashley sitting down talking to Kirk on opposite sides of the table that is there. Ashley is explaining why they have such an intentional limitation, and of course it’s a company project. While Ashley was trying to explain something to Kirk, she wanted to illustrate what she was trying to say by standing up and showing him. Soon after Kirk turns his chair around to see what Ashley was trying to tell him, which means that Ashley got up from her chair, left her side of the table, and walked to Kirk to talk to him from his side of the table, soon after she did that, Ashley looked like she was about to faint from the company created heat exhaustion. After all, she is one of the people in the group involved in the heat exhaustion project. Now, using a little of your experience with tv shows and movies, imagine Kirk getting out of his chair in order to catch her so that she would not fall to the ground, and as he is doing that, you hear that music from episode 3.12 ‘The Empath’ from sci-fi series ‘Star Trek(1968)’. A certain common themed music is played throughout that episode. You don’t have to watch the whole episode. I didn’t even watch the whole episode! As I looked through it, I found a music moment for you, refurbished with inapproprieities removed, of course. The scene, according to Amazon Video, starts 22 minutes and 6 seconds into the episode, when Kirk looks like he’s in pretty bad shape. That is when Gem(Kathryn Hays), the empath, walks towards Kirk, and then starts to heal him. You can use any part of that music that was played, up until 23 minutes and 52 seconds into the episode, when Gem collapsed onto the platform she was on.

So, when you imagine that happening, you may see Kirk facing you, and as Ashley is fainting and is about to fall to the ground, Kirk catches her and lifts her up, and as Kirk is holding her entire body in her arms, you hear that music from episode ‘The Empath’. The idea behind such an imagined experience is that, when you reasonably imagine taking Kirk’s place in the story, of course if you are a kid or you think you are too short to do so, or you just choose to, you can imagine someone else that represents you, or a taller you, to catch and hold her, so when you or your avatar catches and holds Ashley, the idea is that feeling her body weight in your arms represents one example of sensing ‘intentional limitations’. You can choose to hear that ‘Star Trek’ music if you want, or don’t hear it, as you hold a heat exhausted Ashley in your arms.

[Since I plan to continue this coming Monday, I’m just going to stop now and continue then. It’s only less than 2 days from now. I’ll see you then.

1/16/2017

He-llo! Now that I have presented to you the 1st, original story that was used to create bookmark ‘Intentional limitations’, I can now tell you the reason why ‘Intentional limitations’ is important for these ideas. The idea ‘Intentional limitations’ is used as the composite idea to combine the next 3 bookmarks that I want to introduce to you. If memory serves, those 3 bookmarks are 1)’Not ready’, 2)’Not agree to address’, and 3)’Time’. So, after I finish explaining ‘Intentional limitations’, I can start explaining those 3 bookmarks.

Since I have already presented to you the 1st story of ‘Intentional limitations’, I can now present to you the 2nd story of ‘Intentional limitations’. This story is the one that will be used more directly to be the ‘composite’ story. This is how the story begins: The main character of this story is basically about Kevin(Chris Hemsworth) from movie ‘Ghostbusters(2016)’. Here is a quote from the extended cut from the movie ‘Ghostbusters’ that I had purchased from Amazon Video about Kevin. According to Amazon Video, the quote starts 44 minutes and 57 seconds into the movie. The quote, is of course, refurbished for this advice, and I will clarify it’s use in this story:

Patty Tolan(Leslie Jones):-‘Hey, did y’all hire that big, dumb dude? Man, I got a cousin Mookie. He is half as stupid, and he will work for Vienna sausages.’

The 2nd reference I want to recommend is when Kevin is giving his job interview to Erin(Kristen Wiig), Abby(Melissa McCarthy), and Jillian(Kate McKinnon). The interview starts 33 minutes into the movie.

Using these 2 references, I imagined Kevin when he was younger, in his 20s, working for a company that has over five hundred employees with different divisions. Kevin was trained by this company to inform the different divisions of this company about the intentional limitations that certain divisions have, since the company allows employees from different divisions to interact with each other, to mingle. After the boss and upper management of that company approved of Kevin’s ability to inform other divisions, meetings were arranged for Kevin to give a presentation to each division. So, let’s say that each division has 10-20 people in it, and to allow you to imagine it easily, about 7%(not an accurate percentage. It’s just a story) of those people could not believe what Kevin was telling them. The other employees basically just absorbed what Kevin was presenting, since he was sent there by their boss. However, since what he was presenting to them was kind of quirky and difficult to believe, about 7% of them expressed difficulty and disbelief as to what they were being told by Kevin.

Now, the thing about all of those presentations Kevin gave, and the training that was given to him, he incorporated certain aspects of what he had learned from that company, more specifically, the aspects from those 7% that made obvious complaints to him, and he incorporated those aspects into his chosen personality. That’s why when you watch the movie ‘Ghostbusters’, some? of you might think Kevin is stupid, such as when Patty Tolan called Kevin ‘dumb’ and ‘stupid’, but in reality what Kevin did was incorporate certain responses he had learned from that company to emphasize certain points he tries to make in his conversations with others. So, to help you see how Kevin ended up being the way he is in the ‘Ghostbusters’ movie, I recommend that you just imagine one of those presentations Kevin is giving in that company, and one of the people says to Kevin quote-‘I don’t believe you.’ Most of them are trying to understand, but a few of them are making an active issue about it. Using that as a reference, Kevin basically collected all of those disagreeing moments, and used what he had learned to emphasize certain points that he is trying to make in his conversations with others.

Now, I chose Kevin to be an example for this 2nd ‘Intentional limitations’ story because the actor that portrays Kevin, Chris Hemsworth, is also the actor that portrays the superhero Thor in the recent Marvel movies, such as ‘The Avengers(2012)’, and ‘Thor: The Dark World(2013)’. What I wanted to do was make an association to Captain America’s Shield. At the time I made this idea, I think it was a few months ago, I believed that Captain America’s shield was made up of a composite(composed of separate parts) of metals. Less than an hour ago, I checked the internet, and I found out that it was made of pure Vibranium. Still, I’m using the ‘composite’ version. Basically, those 3 ideas, ‘1)’Not ready’, 2)’Not agree to address’, and 3)’Time”, were composite elements for Captain America’s shield, and since I wanted Kevin’s ‘intentional limitations’ experience, I imagined Kevin testing Captain America’s shield, which means he was testing those 3 ideas.

Some years ago, when I watched tv show ‘Sabrina, the Teenage Witch’, I remembered a scene when Principal Kraft(Martin Mull) was driving Sabrina(Melissa Joan Hart) to school. That’s when Sabrina noticed that a few of the students were throwing eggs at Principal Kraft’s car every day. I looked for that scene in www.google.com, but I could not find it. And so, what I did was imagine Kevin testing Captain America’s shield by holding it by the window, and allowing those students to hit the shield with eggs. The shield was meant to protect a portion of Principal Kraft’s car from being hit by the eggs. The 2nd test I imagined Kevin using for the shield was to put it over his head as it is raining(The 2nd test I think has something to do with the attitude he uses in the ‘Ghostbusters’ movie). And that is it! The shield being tested by Kevin is the composite idea for the 3 ideas ‘1)’Not ready’, 2)’Not agree to address’, and 3)’Time”. I could not just say that in the beginning because you probably would not have understood it without the 1st ‘intentional limitations’ story, the one with Kirk and Ashley.

I finally finished the ‘Intentional limitations’ explanation. This Saturday, I plan to start explaining the 3 ideas ‘1)’Not ready’, 2)’Not agree to address’, and 3)’Time”. I’ll proofread and type in the disclaimer later, probably this Friday or Saturday.

1/21/2017

Greetings! Before I finish this list, I want to clear up any? of the misunderstandings created by the ‘He-llo’ fiasco. For the convenience of the kids, if you choose to, I’m allowing myself to imagine, refurbished for advice, to testify in episode 1.12 ‘Trial by Fury’ from fantasy tv series ‘Sabrina, the Teenage Witch(1997)’. The reference starts, according to Amazon Video, 12 minutes and 53 seconds into the episode, starting with Judge Samuels(Henry Gibson) presiding. If you have Amazon Prime, the episode is included with your Prime membership. Basically, if you choose to, you can imagine me testifying in that courtroom my explanation of the ‘He-llo’ fiasco. You can just imagine someone there to represent me. The episode is refurbished for advice, of course.

OK, here it is: Before I gave you the ‘Accuse refine’ explanation, which is in this list, I did not know that some of you would have your use of ‘He-llo’ affected by it. If I knew that would happen before I typed ‘Accuse refine’ in, I probably would not have typed it in.

Also, notice when I gave you the ‘He-llo’ solution. The date was 1/9/2017, only about 2 days after I explained the ‘Accuse refine’ idea. So, instead of waiting an entire week to give you the solution, I gave it to you in 2 days. I believe I should get some points for that.

Some time during those 2 days, I imagined that some of the kids may have trouble contemplationally using the word ‘He-llo’. The affect was like the instigation identified by bookmark ‘Time loop’, a bookmark I explained in this blog. The kids affected were experiencing a non-preferred perspective for how they were trying to use the word ‘He-llo’ in their minds. So, as I was thinking about that imagined possibility, I wanted to create a solution that the kids were able to use based on what was already given to them in this blog. Soon after, I thought that by giving those kids the ability to change the appearance of how they used ‘He-llo’ in their minds, that that would be enough to fix their problem. And that was the intent of the ‘He-llo’ solution I offered them.

I realize that there could be a difference between my intent and how the kids interpreted the words I typed in. And so, hopefully, these new words may help clear up any? of the misunderstandings created by, but not necessarily because of, the interpretations of the words the kids made of the solution I offered them. In other words, based on my intent, if you choose to, you now may have more of an idea what my intent was regarding the ‘He-llo’ fiasco.

Soon after I type this in, I’m going to start proofreading the words in this blog, and I plan to finish this list today so that I can start on the next idea today.

Violence and viewer discretion for sci-fi series ‘Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’, ‘Star Trek’, ‘Farscape’, and ”Stargate SG-1′. Some viewer discretion for fantasy tv show ‘Sabrina, the Teenage Witch’. Violence and viewer discretion for sci-fi movie ‘Ghostbusters’. Some viewer discretion for tv show ‘Whiz Kids’. Use only refurbished for advice references recommended. Throw away rest of episode, series, and movie. [Use mental bookmarks ‘Intentional limitations’, ‘He-llo!’, and ‘He-llo’ for reference, allocation, and prevention when needed.