In my case, I found it a fun challenge to run meetings (i.e. try to follow the standard protocol of devising an agenda, checking minutes, etc.; standard bureaucracy) – especially the key activity of raising and voting on issues to consider taking the division in new directions. That al...
On an even smaller scale, close to my own profession and direct experience, I read a story by a PhD supervisor that largely blamed their student for falling silent (“supervisor phobia”) and then having problems with their degree, while the supervisor “was too busy to notice for another s...
Matt and Christina Drayton are a couple whose attitudes are challenged when their daughter brings home a fiancé who is black. Nymphomaniac: Vol. I (2013) A man named Seligman finds a fainted wounded woman in an alley and he brings her home. She tells him that her name is Joe and...
but i really appreciate flash, but not in the 2000-2008 rush of making Flash-alone sites it is if you do a whole site as an image flash must be an element of design an improvement on the final look of a site in a Pc but taking care of cellphones and nonflash devices as you may...
Some weird emo secretary welcomes you by saying something like “h3Y dÜde LoLZ”, then she brings you in a black room with huge blinking boards. Some horrible hip-hop music starts playing as soon as you get in. That’s too much for you, you die of epileptic seizure before you even...
At that time, we were so fragile and yet indestructible. We began to exist and will continue to exist. I have a second cousin who had an epileptic seizure while driving a big rig. He arrived at the ER DOA (Dead on arrival), or so the story goes. Doctors revived him, but he had ...
The difference between a savant and an average person is that the average person could never develop the same level of skill and talent that a savant can no matter how much they practiced. ByBrickBack— On Jun 25, 2011 @Mutsy - I think you are right. I was reading about a young girl...
I’ve had enough experience now as an epileptic that I look back on my seizures with disappointment (“Oh damn, not again.”) but also familiarity (“OK that happened; I know how things will go now.”). They are terrifying at the time, especially for my family, and my disorientation ...
I’ve had enough experience now as an epileptic that I look back on my seizures with disappointment (“Oh damn, not again.”) but also familiarity (“OK that happened; I know how things will go now.”). They are terrifying at the time, especially for my family, and my disorientation ...