I was adopted from Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China on June 17, 1997. I was three years old at the time and unable to anticipate what dramat
âHow do we instill pride in a community that wants to be extinct?â

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@ewolski22
I was adopted from Nanjing, Jiangsu province, China on June 17, 1997. I was three years old at the time and unable to anticipate what dramat
âHow do we instill pride in a community that wants to be extinct?â
Continuing with the clearing of my phone lol
Adventures equated to running away from spider webs and looking like serial killers. https://www.instagram.com/p/BzENQKFBgMb/?igshid=1ggdevms3jww3
The Four Elemental Power Walks
Water:
Earth:Â
Fire:
 Air:Â
my favorite thing about this is that each of them is walking in a different direction, itâs like these girls are off to conquer the entire goddamn world
Theyâre gonna meet in the middle
In the middle they will find the avatar, master of all elements and the force:
IT GOT BETTER
People keep asking me about my funny colored skin, so Iâm gonna tell you whatâs up.
I have tinea versicolor.
Itâs a common fungal infection that is caused by a type of yeast that grows naturally on your skin. It affects mainly young adults and teens. It isnât contagious and some cases are worse than others. Itâs commonly found on the neck, chest, shoulders, arms, and chest. It happens when the yeast, that everyone has on their skin, grows out of control. You usually get it because you have oily skin, live in a hot climate, sweat a lot, or have a weak immune system.
I have it on my chest, under my boobs, my neck and my back and shoulders. The stuff on my neck is darker than my skin but the stuff on my back and shoulders is lighter.
Itâs treatable in the way that you have to remember to lather yourself with creams and lotions or take pills everyday and even after you get rid of it, it probably will come back again.
I treated it once a couple years ago and when it came back I said fuck it because I didnât want to bathe in lotion everyday. Donât get me wrong, I used to hate it and be very self conscious of it and I used to get teased a lot. But I realized Iâm one of the lucky ones that doesnât have the kind that hurts or itches.
When animals have fur of different colors theyâre called dapple, and thatâs what my best friend calls me. She says Iâm dapple and that makes me special and exotic. It really helped me overcome the issues I had with this.
For anyone else who suffers from Tinea Versicolor feel free to talk to me!Â
I have the same issue and almost the same story. I got it in high school, cured it freshman year in college and it came back. Mine is itchy though and sometimes it's so itchy I'll bleed. I have gotten better at that but I'm on and off whether I want to try and get rid of it again or be happy with my body as it is. It's so nice to know I'm not the only one with this kind of story. I love her comment on being "dapple", I might start using that now! I always said I'm an "Asian leopard".
Just a random bullet journal doodle I did today.
Reblog if...
âą Eating makes you feel like a failureâšâą You feel fat everydayâšâą Losing weight is on your mind 24/7âšâą Gaining weight is one of your biggest fear âšâą You donât think youâll ever be skinny enough
Sadly true
For all people in college, university and school
Today I talked with my professor, a truly wise woman with decades of experience in theatre.
Sheâs told me that she noticed that when I perform I try to please her and other professors. She told me itâs bullshit and I must stop doing that if I want to make progress.
Time of education - she said- whether you pay for it or not, is your laboratory. This is the time and space for you to find out things - what you can and canât do, what you want, who you are.You may and you WILL fuck up, but thatâs ok. Youâre still learning, youâre growing, and you have to communicate with the world to do so.
Sheâs said sheâs 70, and sheâs still learning. Sometimes she stays at home all day eating chocolate, falling asleep, eating more chocolate, calling her friends who donât pick up bc theyâre too busy. Sometimes she fucks up too. And thatâs fine. You have to get bad things, to learn what is good
You must eat junk food to know itâs better to get veggies. You must stay at home to go out. You must be alone to feel a difference when youâre with people.
I for example, did an utterly shit project last week and the cringe is real. But she said - girl, it was shit. But now you know what to correct. And if you donât want to - screw it. Start a new project. With new rules, new world, new mind. Every day you can reinvent yourself.
anyway, Iâm only repeating what she said. she knows her stuff tho. real inspo. will throw in some more later.
Hi! Iâm glad I found your blog cause Iâm considering computer science as my future career but I still have a few doubts about it. Can you tell how is it? I know itâs hard but do you think itâs going to be extra difficult for someone who has never had experience with coding, structures and so on? Thank you
I havenât had any experience myself when I decided to go to CS. It depends on uni of course and the course and the professors⊠Mine were pretty supportive during the first term. They usually asked whether you have coded before or not and either way, it was totally fine. If you have coded before you have more freedom in choosing, for example, a programming language for a project. If you havenât coded before, they usually told you to use a certain programming language (usually Python or C during the first year because theyâre fairly easy and have lots of tutorials online).
They werenât that understanding in maths. So you really have to like maths or be okay with sitting and learning on your own a lot because they hardly ever explain anything. Theyâre most likely to recommend a book to learn from, which is not that bad at all. I havenât used many books. I bought two but used them only for definitions and more formal stuff. The âhow to actually count itâ thing for the exam I learned from yt tutorials. YT tutorials are my no. 1 go to, even now.
It really is manageable, even though youâd have to catch up and first of all, learn how to study by yourself, without any help from the teachers. Once you know how to do that, youâd be just fine :)Â
During my first months I was mostly like âgoddammit I quit, why did i choose this, I donât even like/know how to code, wtf am i doing why is nobody telling me how to do it and WHAT to study even omg I donât have any friends to ask for help this sucksâ. And I was âTHISâ close to quitting, but looking back Iâm happy I didnât. I thought âwell, I should just stay and try to make it work because either way, it would be a waste of a year coz I wonât do anything productive if I quit. Iâd be just moping around. So if I fail the exams, thatâd be okay, but Iâll try not toâ and I didnât fail and passed everything on my first try :) So donât overthink too much, like I did, but just roll with it and try to learn as much as you can. And good luck! You can do it! x
Just gotta push through senior year
I like how my September weekly spreads came out. Not bad for my first bullet journal. Now, onto October!
Taking textbook notes is a chore. Itâs tedious and boring and sometimes challenging, but hopefully these tips will help you improve your skill and shorten the time it takes you to do textbook notes!
Give yourself time: Realistically, you canât knock out 30 pages of notes in 20 minutes. Take your time with textbook notes so theyâre a good studying tool in the future. The general rule is to take how many pages you have to do and multiply it by 5: thatâs how many minutes itâll take you to do the notes.
Also, divide you notes up into manageable chunks to increase your productivity. I am personally a huge fan of using pomodoro timers, and I adjust the intervals for however long I need to.
Skim before you start taking notes: If time is an issue, donât read your 40 page in depth before even picking up a pen, but make sure you know what youâre reading about by skimming a bit ahead of your notes. Read over section titles, and look at charts, maps, or graphs. Writing and highlighting as you read the chapter for the first time isnât effective because you donât know if a sentence will be important or not, so make sure youâre reading a paragraph or section in advance before writing.
Use the format they give you in the book to help take your notes: In a lot of textbooks, there will be a mini outline before the chapter itself that shows all the headings and subheadings. Those will be your guidelines! I find this super helpful because long chapters can be daunting to go into without any structure. If you donât have one of those, use the headings and subheadings provided for you. If you havenât already been doing this, it will help you so much.
Read actively: Itâs so easy to âreadâ a textbook without digesting any information, but that is the last thing you want to do. Not only does it make taking notes a million times harder, but youâll be lost in class discussions because you didnât understand the reading. To keep from passively reading, highlight, underline, star any important information in the book itself.
Have a color coding system for highlighting or underlining and write down a key somewhere (hereâs a few that you can adjust for your needs: x,x)
Use sticky notes or tabs to mark any questions or important points to come back to
Summarize important information and paraphrase: When taking the actual notes, donât copy down full sentences word for word. Not only does writing full sentences waste a lot of time, itâs not an effective way to learn. If you can paraphrase the information, then you understand it. Itâs also easier to study notes which are in your own words instead of textbook academia writing.
Be selective: You shouldnât be writing down every fact that comes up in your textbook. If a fact ties into the bigger topic and provides evidence, then itâs probably something to keep, but you donât need every piece of supplemental information (but do make sure you always write down the vocab). Learn your teacherâs testing style to help you decide what to write down. Could this be on the quiz/test? If the answer is yes, make sure you write it down.
Learn to abbreviate: Just like writing full sentences, writing out full words will waste time. Implement some shortenings (make sure to use ones that youâll understand later!) into your notes. Some common ones are: b/c=because, gov=government, w/o=without, and hereâs a great list of a ton of examples of abbreviations and shortenings.
Answer margin and review questions: A lot of textbooks have margin questions on every page or so that sum up whatâs really important about that information. Make sure not to skip them because theyâre really helpful for understanding. Write them down and answer them clearly in your notes. Most textbooks also have review questions after the chapter that check for reading comprehension, so make sure to answer those because theyâll show you if you really understood the chapter.
Donât skip over visual sources: Maps, diagrams, illustrations, charts, and any other visuals in textbooks are so helpful. If youâre a visual learner, these things will be so essential to you and how you understand what youâre reading. Charts, tables, and diagrams sometimes also summarize information, so if youâre a visual learner it might benefit you to copy those down instead of writing it out.
Add visuals if itâll help you: As said above, copying down charts, tables, illustrations, or diagrams can be super helpful for visual learners. Theyâre clear and concise, so pay attention to them.
Write your notes in a way thatâs effective and makes sense to you: Mindmaps, Cornell notes, or plain outline notes are all really good forms of notetaking. Find which one works best for you to understand them and which one is most effective for your class, and use it (stuff on mindmaps and cornell notes).
Combine your class and textbook notes: If you rewrite your class notes, add in information you think is relevant from your textbook notes. Mark anything both your book and teacher said were importantâyou donât want to forget any of that. If you donât rewrite class notes, then put stars next to anything repeated.
1.22.17 / rosy tones
Love the layout of this weekly! Definitely going to use for inspiration for my weekly
i might not always study, i donât always do my homework, i procrastinate a lot, i leave things to the last minute, i own like two pencils, my notes are written with a sloppy handwriting and i donât always get good grades.
there is a lot i donât do or get, still iâm filled with joy. please donât be so hard on yourself.
This is my family, APO. â€
Type 2 Diabetes Struggles
I was just recently diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and this picture could not be more accurate.