Dolor y gloria (2019) dir. Pedro Almodóvar
Xuebing Du

Love Begins
trying on a metaphor
we're not kids anymore.
Fai_Ryy
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Kiana Khansmith

⁂
noise dept.
Keni
occasionally subtle
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
$LAYYYTER

JVL

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untitled
Cosimo Galluzzi
Three Goblin Art

Andulka
seen from Türkiye

seen from Germany
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seen from Chile

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@myrigiditylandedmeinhell
Dolor y gloria (2019) dir. Pedro Almodóvar
the comedic potential of stan bullying richie for being horny for Years and then stan getting with patty and (canonically!) turning into the Horniest Motherfucker On Planet Earth while richie watches and twitches with righteous anger... the untapped potential of this!
Do you ever just think about how much Ian and Mickey have been through? How they’ve been together since they were teenagers and have been to hell and back? How they will always, always come back to each other? How if there are any two people in the world that deserve to be happy and together, it’s them?
How about the fact that their story is beautiful and tragic and epic and filled with so much pain and loss and separation with a few bright spots of happiness in between but they’re still so in love?
I’m so glad they’re getting their happy ending - they deserve it, they’ve earned it. Give them each other. Just let them love each other and live happily ever after. Dammit.
I only discovered them recently and epic is the word I first used to describe them. I’m a sucker for a good love story but I rarely find one that’s interesting and believable and sufficiently dramatic without getting dragged down into contrivance. But I find this story really rich and complicated and their problems are organic to who they are and where they came from. I just don’t come across many stories where people are this intense and desperate about each other and I believe it. But I believe this story. I really do. And I’m glad they’re getting to this place. It’s so far from the Kash and Grab and it’s really beautiful.
He's here, he's raging, he mad!
help a black gay jew get home
hey so i hate to be asking for money again but im stuck in a very unstable and unpleasant living situation and want to get back home to missouri.
my current roommates have been unpleasant to be around at best and outright verbally and financially abusive at worst. i've been denied access to nearby synagogues, food, therapy, and more. i've been screamed at for trying to get food and denied access back into the apartment multiple times for various minor "infractions." i need to get back to missouri as soon as possible.
in order to do that, though, i need $70 for fare to get to a safe place until my mom can come and take me home.
anything helps. thank you so much.
paypal.me/j4ys3nH
please, please help me. if not by donating then by spreading this post. i literally cannot afford to pay to get to my safe place without help and if i don't get home i WILL be in critical danger.
please please help.
HOW TO WRITE A HIGH-GRADE RESEARCH PAPER
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The first time I had to write a research paper for university was one of the most stressful experiences I’d ever had - it was so different to anything I’d ever done before and caused me so much anxiety! It turned out that I’m pretty damn good at writing research reports and I’m now looking to pursue a career in psychological research.
I have never received less than a First (or 4.0 GPA for you American studiers) in my research papers so I thought I’d share my top tips on how to write a kick-ass, high-grade research paper.
*disclaimer: I am a psychology student, my tips are based on my personal experience of writing up psychological research (quantitative and qualitative); therefore, they may require some adaptation in order to be applied to your field of study/research*
These tips will be split up into the different sections a research paper should consist of: abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion.
ABSTRACT
The aim of an abstract is to summarise your whole paper - it should be concise, include key-words, highlight the key points of your paper and be written last.
When I say concise, I mean concise! The abstract is what other students and researchers will read in order to decide whether your research is relevant their own work and essentially determines whether or not they’ll read on - they want to know the key details and don’t want to be overwhelmed with information.
I always aim to keep my abstracts under 250 words. I set myself this limit to stop myself waffling and dwelling on unimportant points, it helps me to be really selective of what I include and ensures I’m gripping the reader from the start.
Your abstract should discuss the research rationale, the methods and designs used, your results and the general conclusion(s) drawn. One or two sentences on each of these topics is enough.
Make sure you’re using key-words throughout your abstract as this will also help the reader decide whether your work is relevant to theirs. You can make key-words super obvious by highlighting them in a key at the bottom of your abstract (see below) or just used jargon consistently. Using key-words is also important if you’re looking to get your work published, these words will help people find your work using search engines.
Finally, write your abstract last! An abstract is a summary of your whole research paper which makes it practically impossible to write well first. After writing the rest of your paper, you will know your research inside and out and already have an idea of what key things you need to highlight in your abstract.
INTRODUCTION
For me, the introduction section is always the most intimidating to write because it’s like painting on a blank canvas - massively daunting and leaving you terrified to make a mistake!
The aim of an introduction is to provide the rationale for your research and justify why your work is essential in the field. In general, your introduction should start very broad and narrow down until you arrive at the niche that is your research question or hypothesis.
To start, you need to provide the reader with some background information and context. You should discuss the general principle of your paper and include some key pieces of research (or theoretical frameworks if relevant) that helps your reader get up to speed with the research field and where understanding currently lies. This section can be pretty lengthy, especially in psychological research, so make sure all of the information you’re including is vital as it can be pretty easy to get carried away.
This background should lead you onto the rationale. If you’ve never written a research paper before, the rationale is essentially the reason behind your own research. This could be building on previous findings so our understanding remains up to date, it could be picking up on weaknesses of other research and rectifying these issues or it could be delving into an unexplored aspect of the field! You should clearly state your rationale and this helps lead into the next section.
You should end your introduction by briefly discussing your current research. You need to state your research question or hypothesis, how you plan on investigating the question/hypothesis, the sample you plan on using and the analysis you plan to carry out. You should also mention any limitations you anticipate to crop up so you can address these in your discussion.
In psychology, references are huge in research introductions so it is important to use an accurate (and modern as possible) reference for each statement you are making. You can then use these same references in your discussion to show where your research fits into the current understanding of the topic!
METHODS
Your methods section should make use of subheadings and tables where necessary and should be written in past tense. This can make the (potentially) lengthy section easier to navigate for the reader. I usually use the following headings: participants, materials, design, procedure.
The participants section should describe the sample that took part in your research. Age, gender, nationality and other relevant demographic information should be provided as well as the sampling technique. Personally, I use a table (see below) alongside my continuous prose as an alternative way of viewing my sample population. Please note, if you’re using a table make sure it adheres to your university guidelines.
The materials section of your methods should include any equipment, resources (i.e. images, books, diagrams) or any other materials used in your data collection. You should also reference the program that helped you conduct your analysis. For example, if you are writing a qualitative research paper, you may want to include Microsoft Word in your materials if you use the program to transcribe interviews.
You should then describe the design used in your research. All variables should be identified in this paragraph, if relevant. You should also discuss whether your research is within-groups or between-groups, again only if relevant.
Last is your procedure section - the most important one! You must write this section with enough detail so that anybody could pick it up, read it and conduct the same experiment with ease. You should describe what participants were required to do, how data was collected and it should be written in chronological order! While it’s important to provide enough information, try not to overwhelm the reader with lengthy sentences and unnecessary information.
RESULTS
Your results section’s sole purpose is to provide the reader with the data from your study. It should be the second shortest section (abstract being first) in your research paper and should stick to the relevant guidelines in regards to reporting figures, tables and diagrams. Your goal is to relay results in the most objective and concise way possible.
Your results section serves to act as evidence for the claims you’ll go on to make during your discussion but you must not be biased in the results you report. You should report enough data to sufficiently justify your conclusions but must also include data that doesn’t support your original hypothesis or research question.
Reporting data is most easily done through tables and figures as they’re easy to look at and select relevant information. If you’re using tables and figures you should always make sure you’re stating effect sizes and p values and to a consistent decimal place. Illustrative tables and figures should always be followed by supporting summary text consisting of a couple of sentences relaying the key statistical findings in continuous prose.
DISCUSSION
The discussion section should take the opposite approach to your introduction! You should start discussing your own research and broaden the discussion until you’re talking about the general research field.
You should start by stating the major findings of your study and relating them back to your hypothesis or research questions. You must must must explicitly state whether you reject or accept your experimental hypothesis, if you have one. After stating your key findings you should explain the meaning, why they’re important and where they fit into the existing literature. It’s here that you should bring back the research you discussed in your introduction, you should relate your findings to the current understanding and state the new insight your research provides.
You should then state the clinical relevance of your research. Think about how your findings could be applied to real-life situations and discuss one or two practical applications.
After this, discuss the limitations of your research. Limitations could include sample size and general sample population and how this effects generalisability of findings, it could include methodological problems or research bias! These limitations will allow you to discuss how further research should be conducted. Suggest ways in which these limitations could be rectified in future research and also discuss the implications this could have on findings and conclusions drawn.
Finally, you need to give the reader a take-home message. A sentence or two to justify (again) the need for your research and how it contributes to current understanding in the field. This is the last thing your audience will read so make it punchy!
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That’s it folks! My tips for writing a kick-ass, high-grade research paper based on my personal experience. If you have any questions regarding things I’ve missed or didn’t provide enough detail of, then please just send me an ask!
Also, if any of you would like to read any of my past research papers I would be more than happy to provide you with them :-))
family gatherings are great because everyones like "why is your hair so short" and im like i literally dont respect any of you
Study Tips Straight from My Professor
Hi guys! So a lot of our classes are starting today, even with the eclipse so I thought I’d share some tips my teacher sent out to help everyone get a better grade in the sciences classes, which may or may not be slightly trickier than others. It’s important to realize that no one can get through all of these, so pick what is most important to you.
1) Put in the time. Using the “three-to-one” rule, three hours of studying outside of class time per one credit hour. If your class is 3 credits, you should be studying independently an additional 9 hours. For 4 credits, 12 hours. Teachers expect you to treat studying as your job (even if you do have an actual job) meaning you should virtually be studying anytime outside of meals, class, sleep, work, etc. > To clarify, this is per week. Not at all per day. You will never be able to shove an appropriate amount of studying per class into one day. Do not try, it is not healthy. 2) NO cramming. It is MUCH more productive to study a little each day rather than 9 hours the day before a test. You will remember virtually nothing if you do and will not be as happy with the grade you recieve. Taking it in little bits stores it in long term memory and you will actually learn it rather than just regurgitating it onto a test. 3) Time management is crucial. Especially if you are someone who works or has kids or other priorities that also need attention. Make a schedule and. Stick. To. It. 4) Be prepared and organized. Do not be the person who lost their pencil and doesn’t have an extra, forgot a notebook or textbook, keys, etc. Give yourself enough time so you’re not rushing and make sure you have what you need! Your college professors are not here to attend to your personal needs when some of them have 800+ students a semester. 5) Use a calender. Write down your assignments, projects, class times, anything you need to remember. Use it religiously because it will be so much easier than trying to keep it all inside your head and that way you will not forget anything. 6) Use the book AND the notes. Most professors write things in a different way than the book and reading something in multiple different ways will better help you remember the concept rather than the sentence word for word. 7) Read ahead. Doing so helps you prepare for and not be lost in lecture and it will benefit you as well as the teacher. 8) Attend all/as many classes as you can and be an active listener. Sit up straight, face forward, don’t pay attention to what others around you are doing (I sit up front whenever possible). Keep an extra piece of paper near you in case you have questions so you can either ask or go back later and look it up yourself. 9) Take detailed notes. With permission, record the lecture so you can hear it again later, abbreviate whatever you are scribbling down, and then as soon as you can after class, rewrite it in a neater, nicer way and don’t be afraid to word things differently. A review shortly after class is proven to help it convert to long term memory. 10) Keep your phone off in class. I know we all love our phones and class is boring, but it’s also crucial information. We’ve all been through that period of regret where we wished we had paid attention. Don’t let that happen anymore. Use it only for emergencies and recording lectures. 11) Even if you don’t rewrite your notes after class, review them. Make sure to pay attention to anything the teacher may have repeated or any learning objectives they would like for you to know. 12) Study early and often! This goes along with no cramming but the sooner and more repetitively you relay information to your brain, the easier it will be to remember it. If you don’t look at the information for 2 weeks and then suddenly need to remember it all, not only will you be too stressed to retain it, you’ll also be wasting valuable time. Make your own study guides and test questions. 13) Make flashcards. Flashcards are only useful when you a) shuffle them occasionally and b) take the ones you’ve memorized out of the pile but still review them every now and then to make sure you still remember. Put any back in the pile that you missed. 14) Use mnemonic devices for lists of related terms. 15) Type or rewrite your notes. I’d recommend writing them again, because physical writing by hand is another way to help remember it. 16) Consolidate your material. This means: tables, lists, figures, concept maps. Reasonable chucks. 17) Teach it to someone else. The best way to tell if you have mastered something is that you are able to explain it to someone else correctly in a way that makes sense. 18) Pick a good place for effective studying. We all love our study groups, but let’s be honest. At most the first 20 minutes is talking, then 10 minutes of studying before half the group is surfing Tumblr and the other half is complaining they’re hungry. I prefer to study by myself for this reason. Find a quiet place with minimal distractions and get prepared to work your fucking ass off. 19) Get decent rest before the exam and be sure to get there early or on time, unpredictable situations included. Exams are important and your teacher will not care if there was a traffic jam. If you miss the exam, you miss the exam. 20) Learn from your mistakes. Review your incorrect exam answers and figure out why it was wrong and why the correct answer was correct. Talk to your teacher, TA, resource lab, anyone who may help you if you’re stuck. 21) Review the midterm and start preparing for finals. Most of the midterm material should be on the final, so it’s one of your best study guides. 22) Keep your textbooks and notes. I know we’re all broke as fuck and would like to sell them back, but you never know when that information will be useful in another class down the road. 23) Do NOT discuss grades, quizzes, tests, or exams with your class mates. Of course they’ll complain that they didn’t study, that chapter 6 was this, or chapter 8 said that and it was confusing. This type of conversation will only make you nervous so steer clear of all of it.
Edit: I have made an adjustment to #2 to clarify that the 3 hours of studying/1 credit hour for that class should be per week, not per day. 💕
the beatles moments i think about a lot
thinking about if paul ever found out it was John who touched him and not the other dude
when the interviewer spit on george
the mockers and marbles interview
“we were just trying to write songs about prostitutes and lesbians is all.”
“what kind of girl do you like?” “john’s wife.”
the whole train scene from a hard days night with the old man arguing with them
“and the rest of you if you’ll just rattle your jewelry.”
their studio bloopers
their last interview together from 1966 where they were all so pissy and john looked like a karen
paul admitting to doing lsd
“JOHNNNNNN” “WHAAATTTTTTT”
george being asked if he wanted to hear led zeppelin’s first album
“i think they look great” “well i think they look dopey”
“she’s a drag. a well known drag.”
this long tall sally performance
“shut up while he’s talking”
“we’d like to say-” “SHUT UPP!”
“of course i love him. of course i love him. i love john as i loved him. you can’t change love. there’s no reason on earth why i should hate him.”
“it’s like barbara fucking walters”
that help scene where they all dressed up and looked like their older selves
eric lennon
“knock knock” “who’s there” “john the baptist”
this paul interview where we talked about beatles songs
when paul was sick during an interview and john was worried
and he’s still going in 2020 :,)
this interview
“what’s next on the agenda?” “a song.”
“where’s the bus”
“what’s the matter with you phillip it’s the last fucking verse.”
when george harrison invented reaction videos
their iconic first press conference
“thanks for the purple heart” “silver! silver!”
paul talking about his best times with george
“yoko sat in that very chair” george: imma head out now
george harrison’s dad passed the vibe check
aunt mimi’s interview
that cursed shakespeare play that they did
the beautiful ringo and george interview from the 80′s that i love with all my heart
“that’s when you discover other things…”
pushing each other into on coming traffic lmao
this interview breaks my heart
the in my life live performance..oh wait there never was one. and that’s my villain origin story.
but then again, its kind like putting a meat suit on and telling a shark not to eat you
We (men) are not fucking sharks!
We are not rabid animals living off of pure instinct
We are capable of rational thinking and understanding.
Just because someone is cooking food doesn’t mean you’re entitled to eat it.
Just because a banker is counting money doesn’t mean you’re being given free money.
Just because a person is naked doesn’t mean you’re entitled to fuck them.
You are not entitled to someone else’s body just because it’s exposed.
What is so fucking difficult about this concept?
How can you not reblog something like this
As a man I’m real fucking tired of the idea that I have no impulse control. We all have it, some of you jackasses just think you’re above it.
This thread is gold
I regret every crying-
- at the wrong time.
anyone else gay and bad at life
bill hader
-like or reblog if you save/use
Crowley @ Aziraphale for 6000 years
Eddie and Bill used to hold hands when they were little. Before they knew what it meant, when it was just something that made Eddie’s entire body fill with bright light and he looked up at Bill, breath stuttering and thought, Billy. Bill, who’s just as handsome as Corey Haim, and Eddie tells him that when they’re leaving the movies after watching The Lost Boys. Just as handsome and just as brave, and Bill would have smoked all those vampires if he’d been in the movie. It makes Bill blush and say, thanks Eds, just before he grabs Eddie’s smaller hand and squeezes it, making Eddie’s eyes flutter. Making him think of things like kissing, before he quickly pushes it from his mind. Because kissing was something boys and girls did with each other, even if he does think about it again later that night when he’s alone in bed, pushing his mouth against his pillow and saying, Billy.
But then the afternoon comes when a kid from class sees them holding hands as they walk into school and hisses to his friends, Check out the fucking queers and Bill snatches his hand away from Eddie so quickly that Eddie feels like he’s been punched in the chest. He never forgets it, how easily Bill dropped his hand that day, like Eddie was something dirty, like the feel of his skin made him recoil. Bill still holds his hand after that, but only when they’re alone and never when they’re walking home from school or when they’re in town getting ice cream.
And one afternoon after school, Eddie’s crying to himself because not only had Bill stopped holding his hand, he’d also ditched him to go hang out with some girl from class. Some stupid girl with a dumb name. But then he hears someone say his name, and when he looks up he sees Trashmouth gawking at him. Ugh, and Eddie hated Richie. He was loud and crude and always acted out in class because teachers said he was hyperactive, aka a moron. Richie asks him why he’s crying and Eddie tells him to go away, but Richie says he won’t until Eddie tells him. And Eddie, on the rise of a hiccuping sob says, “Bill won’t hold my hand anymore,” and he freezes like a rabbit because Richie’s about to laugh at him. He’s about to laugh in his face and call him a little queer like those other boys did. But Richie doesn’t. Instead he reaches out and takes Eddie’s hand in his own, and Eddie’s so surprised he stops crying, staring down at their clasped hands. And Richie says, “If Denbrough won’t hold your hand, then I will,” and he gives Eddie this crooked little smile as Eddie just blinks up at him. That day, he walks Eddie home, holding his hand the entire way, not once dropping it, even when they pass people on the street, or a group of kids from school. And that night, Eddie stares up at the ceiling in his bedroom and says, Richie.
goddamn