SINNERS (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
sheepfilms
YOU ARE THE REASON
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸

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Alisa U Zemlji Chuda

â

JVL

@theartofmadeline

Product Placement
styofa doing anything
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

Kaledo Art
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Cosmic Funnies

Kiana Khansmith
almost home
KIROKAZE
Game of Thrones Daily

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@bigpapabear001
SINNERS (2025) dir. Ryan Coogler
you know that was intentional
good morning guys I need someone to kiss my balls nowww
đ
Dennis
Late night movie with my boy đ!! đđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđОđĽđżđО
Absolutely HOT
People turning 18 today will be turning 22 on 2/22/2022.
February 22nd of 2022 will fall on a Tuesday and henceforth should be forever known as âTwoâs-Dayâ.
Revolutionary parenting hack:
If your child is in the middle of some activity and clearly enjoying it (and wasn't supposed to be doing something else instead), DO NOT interrupt them and have them do chores that will "only take 5 minutes or so!"
You haven't asked them to do anything before they got out the Legos, started reading a chapter of their book or painting the complicated picture, or began playing their video game.
As a result of being repeatedly interrupted, they will learn that their presence in public space of the household=availability to do chores, so they will make themselves scarce so you can't find them and order them around. They will also become suspicious of your efforts to engage with them as they play, as they've learned that these pleasantries are a prelude to "Take out the trash", or "move your boots and vacuum the entryway, there's dirt everywhere ".
"But I need my children to help me around the house!", I hear you cry. I understand. Children should not be treated like royalty and left to their own devices 24/7.
An alternative is to give the kids a clearly delineated chore chart and stick to it, resisting the urge to add anything to it. There are some chores that are easier and quicker with two people, though. A (in my opinion) even better option is to divide the child's day into "on-duty" and "off-duty " time. When they're on-duty, you can interrupt them as before, but you have *consulted with your child beforehand * and they understand that during this time they can relax, but they must be ready to jump in and lend a hand.
That way they won't start trying to level up in their video game or break out the clay and make stuff. When they are off-duty, you leave them alone and their only responsibilities are to clean up whatever mess they make at the end of this time.
Also, if they are tearing around the house or whining about being bored, don't make them do chores so they will "have something to do"; this could make the child conflate extra chores with punishment for whining and make them reluctant to help out when you randomly tell them to at other times because they might think they're being punished but they have NO IDEA WHAT THEY DID. And IMO children should see chores as things everyone has to do no matter what, not punishments.
I may seem unqualified to offer parenting advice as I have no kids, but I was talking with my dad today and he said: "I wish you didn't hide from us in your room so much, but every time your mom walked by she'd give you a chore to do, so I can't blame you for that." A kid who hides in their room to play has an entirely different relationship to the family than the child who sprawls on the livingroom floor and excitedly describes the city they are building out of Legos.
And today, in times of Covid I play a complicated game of hide-and-seek with my mother as I try to do my online coding homework and apply for jobs. I am now attempting to turn my bedroom into my own tiny office because if I work in our home office, she'll find me and go "I can't attach this file to my email," and so on.
Children *have* to obey their parents when they are young. But true respect and honoring collective responsibilities is stronger than forced obedience. If you demonstrate to your children that you respect them and their time, they will reciprocate.
Tl;dr if your child is "always hiding in their room", there is a reason for it and setting a regular routine and boundaries will benefit both of you in the long run.
MFW I realize I still hide in my room because Iâm still yelled at whenever Iâm seen enjoying anything
Oh my goodness. It used to drive me to distraction when I would have PLANS for my free time and then get interrupted for chores. I love the idea of having on- and off-duty time!
Mechanical pencil discourse:
These are the good ones
These? Awful wobbly hell sticks.
what about these
how about this?Â
Both of these are good too but the bottom ones are expensive as fuck
đ ?
Those classify as the first ones they are good
what about everyones favorite?
THOSE ARE DISGUSTING HOW FUCKING DARE YOU
those last ones shatter if anyone within 10 feet of you even thinks that they might maybe need something to write with
Hey OP
this is the worst addition, thanks
Things are getting fucking heated in the Mechanical Pencil fandom.
STOP! Let the little penguin cross your dash he has places to go.
I just sat here and waited for a pixel penguin to waddle across my screen, AND I WOULD DO IT AGAIN
Which one is the successful one
you, if you do this every night
ITS FUCKING DECEMBER WHAT
you tricked me for a second which really speaks for how much meaning time has lost
i found the video
source
Are you shitting me?
this is what i like to see
old memes die hard
ok but she gettin it
When I complain about being a âgiftedâ kid who grew into a talentless adult I donât mean that Iâm not trying to work on my talents or anything
I mean that the âgiftsâ I had are useless
Reading books above my age isnât a talent when Iâm not eleven
Knowing big words isnât a talent when Iâm not a kid, itâs just growing up
Itâs just a weird thing that happens and it feels shitty when youâre brought up being told youâre an exceptional child only to realise as an adult youâre just average
This
I did a lot of reading about gifted kids and especially gifted adults when I got my âdiagnosisâ because I was told I was gifted at 23 and well, it serves no purpose to have a confirmation that youâre gifted at 23
Thing is, gifted children are not amazingly better than everyone else. Gifted brains just donât work the same so they build their skills in a different order
Basically when youâre very young, most people brain learn social skills and how to interact with their peers, but gifted brains are already at the next step which is how to understand and interact with the world
That makes the stereotypical young children that are very good at math, always asking questions about how things work, very upset when they donât know a thing
But the thing is, when everyone gets older, theyâve mastered most social skills and now turn towards understanding the world
But the gifted children have already mastered that part and are turning towards how to build social skills. Except thereâs no one left to teach us about that! Because weâre late to that party
Long story short, at the end everyone, gifted or not, goes through all the necessary steps to make functioning adults, so the difference that was obvious as a child has disappeared
But us gifted people often end up with social anxiety and impostor syndrome because we are actually less equipped than others to face a world that taught everyone to be confident and talk to people while we were busy reading books above our age
âŚâŚâŚâŚâŚthat last paragraph.
damn.
It didnât help how frequently âgiftedâ also just meant âlikes to read.â
When youâre a little kid and you read ten books on Egyptian History youâre so worldly and intelligent but when youâre 30 and you spend the same amount of time in a wikepedia hole, it just means youâre late for work and your dishes arenât done.
And as kids, âgiftedâ doesnât mean youâre better than anyone. Youâre still a kid, but your brain works differently. This isnât good or bad; it just is.
One of the biggest things I have to learn was really âunlearningâ my âspecialness.â I forget what eventually triggered it, but sometime in college it occurred to me that my âgiftedâ education had taught me extraordinary laziness and procrastination. I had to learn how to actually learn and fight all the anxiety about not being as wonderful and good as my early years had told me I was. Lots of imposter syndrome I still fight when it comes to learning new things.
big challenges tuesday
it's Friday
big challenges tuesday