The wonderful thing about tiggers, is tiggers are wonderful thingsÂ

if i look back, i am lost
h
đ©” avery cochrane đ©”

Kaledo Art
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
wallacepolsom
Sweet Seals For You, Always
DEAR READER
almost home
tumblr dot com

titsay
Stranger Things
No title available
hello vonnie

blake kathryn
Jules of Nature
we're not kids anymore.
cherry valley forever

⣠Chile in a Photography âŁ
$LAYYYTER

seen from Vietnam
seen from Netherlands
seen from Argentina

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from Belgium

seen from Argentina

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Mexico

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
@positively--studying
The wonderful thing about tiggers, is tiggers are wonderful thingsÂ
why can't I just live in a castle, have a greenhouse, grow plants there, be a bookworm and collect my own library, bake muffins for breakfast and live my best life?
reblog if youâre a STEM major and are constantly googling trig identities
I FEEL ATTACKED
Somewhere cozy to call home đżđ
speak nicely to yourself! it makes a world of difference.
why is it that people equate manual labor/farming with low intelligence?Â
do you understand how hard it is to run a farm/ranch? all the different variables you have to account for, all the knowledge you have to haveâ i promise you, if i put an ivy league academic in front of a 200 lbs ewe and said ânow shear herâ they wouldnât be able to do it. not to mention all the business and economics of running a successful commercial farm, much less a little family/hobby farm.
if i told a business CEO to milk a fucking cow he probably couldnât do it, by hand or machine. or run a combine harvester, or plant sugarcane, or muck a horse stall, hell he probably couldnât even fix a simple fence break.
just because something uses knowledge of a different type doesnât mean it doesnât use knowledge. knowing how much different cattle breeds sell for, when and what to feed your ewes to maximize your lamb crop, how to birth livestock, what crops to plant when, how much water a crop needs, how to tell what minerals/diet deficiencies are causing whatever health problem your livestock are having (and how to recognize an unhealthy animal and whatâs wrong before you call the vet). how much to sell your crop for, how to shoe a horse, drive a baler, how to store your hay bales. knowing the different kinds of hay and when to feed it, how to tack up a horse or rope cattle without hurting them, how to castrate your livestock, herd cattle, prevent hoof rot, the list goes on and onâ
all of these things require in-depth, nuanced knowledge that is NO LESS VALUABLE than science, business, literature, philosophical, whatever disciplines.Â
and without that knowledge, YOUâD be the one starving. so stop assuming that farmers are all dumb, low-class folks with empty heads
The trees: *exist*
Me: nice
The trees: *rustle slightly in the breeze*
Me: nice
The world looks bleak, but progress is happening. We canât stop now. (The last flag in the post is the queer flag, since I was getting asked about it)
How to Really Comprehend a Scientific Paper
**credit to my research advisor, sheâs an amazing mentor and I aspire to be just like her someday :)
Read the abstract. Write down what the paper says it is going to be about.
Read the introduction. Write down what the paper says it is looking to accomplish and how.
Read the conclusion. Write down what the paper actually did accomplish.
Go through and find all the pictures, graphs, or diagrams. Write notes explaining these images to yourself.
Read the whole paper start to finish. Write a summary of the paper as though you are explaining it to a layperson, and then another summary as though you are explaining it to a colleague.
Throughout all of the above steps:
If there are words you donât know google them and write down the definitions
If the paper defines a formula, law, variable, etc in a certain way write that down
If there are references to or recommendations of other literature write those down. After the last step if thereâs anything youâre uncertain about or would like more information on look to that list for further reading
50 Reasons Why You Should Study
Need motivation?
To get an education.Â
To earn a degree. There are barely any jobs that offer positions to people without a degree, or are on the path of obtaining one.
To prove people wrong. That science teacher that said youâll never make it in the medical field? Make him eat his words.Â
To prove yourself wrong. Every student has doubts on whether or not they can be good enough in the classroom. Prove yourself wrong, and always be better than you were yesterday.Â
This is a privilege. Regardless of how much you believe that you HAVE to do this, to some extend you donât. Realize that you have the privilege of an education even being an option for you.
Take advantage of what youâre capable of. Donât waste a perfectly intelligent mind.Â
More money. That degree can do wonderful things to your bank account in the future.Â
Itâs interesting. Studying can get pretty boring, but there are always those topics that spark your curiosity and motivate you to learn more.
Itâs attractive. Not everyone cares for someone who is academically gifted, but a partner who is eager to learn makes me eager to take my pants off.
Itâs useful. That random fact that you read in a random textbook can stick with you and really end up helping you out one day.
Itâs fun to know useless shit sometimes.
To make your parents proud. This is one of the main reasons I study. My parents have always been aware of my capabilities and have pushed me to be academically better every year. They know I have big dreams, and I just want to achieve them so they can know that their child made it.
To make myself proud. This goes along with number four. Knowing that you accomplished something, however small or big the thing may be, is a huge self-esteem booster.
To be independent. Thereâs nothing quite like knowing that you donât need someone elseâs job, degree, intelligence, or presence to make you successful.
To pursue your passion.Â
To gain knowledge. Whether its in your field, or a completely different one, being knowledgeable is just downright fun.
People will look up to you. Your siblings, your best friends, and your classmates may see you consistently studying, and it could motivate them to do the same.Â
To make a name for yourself. âOh yeah, (insert name here), I know them. Arenât they like really successful now?â
To become your own role model.
To be able to pay off your student loans.
Because the long nights and excessive coffee will all be worth it. Even if it doesnât seem like it now.Â
To exercise your brain. Your brain is just like a muscle, and like the body it needs to be exercised.Â
To improve your hippocampus. Your hippocamus is responsible for memory, and if you study your memorization will become significantly better.
To not waste time doing useless stuff.Â
Because stationary is amazing. I could spend a whole paycheck on just pens.
Because notes are actually all so pretty.Â
To be productive. I used to spend a lot of time on social media, and although I still do, the amount of time I spend studying and getting stuff done has definitely increased.
So classes will be easier.Â
So tests will be easier.
To impress your professors. Get those letters of recommendation!Â
So the anxiety of getting a bad grade is sufficiently decreased. I constantly worry about my grades, but studying has helped me not worry so much.
Because coffee exists.Â
There is no other atmosphere quite like the inside of a library.Â
So you wonât have to retake a class. Failing a prerequisite for your major really sucks, so maybe try not failing the first time around. This also saves you a lot of money because you wonât have to pay for the class again.Â
Finals week wonât suck as bad. Youâll be used to studying so when finals week comes around it wont nearly be as stressful as for those students who are now opening a textbook.Â
You wonât go to as many college parties. Donât get me wrong, I am all for socializing and having fun, but a lot can go wrong at a college party very quickly. And thereâs no better way to prevent that, than just not going to the party cause youâre reading your economics textbook.Â
Youâll get used to FOMO. Fear of Missing Out. Every teenagers nightmare. Eventually, youâll get used to the feeling.Â
Youâll be getting the most out of your college experience. Youâre paying for these classes. Might as well try your best to pass.Â
Youâll get used to not getting enough sleep. So, if you decide to go to grad school youâll have that department covered.Â
Thereâs really good study music out there.Â
I guarantee there will be at least 5 places on campus, or around you that are perfect for studying, and youâll want to go there everyday.Â
Youâll become a pro at writing essays, or lab reports.
Youâll learn fairly quickly that study groups rarely work.Â
Youâll make a lot of friends that are just as passionate about studying as you are. And you will cherish them.Â
Beauty and Brains. Donât you want to fit that description?Â
Thousands of students before you have done it, so you can too.Â
You can run a studyblr. Arenât they the cutest?Â
You get really good at time management.Â
Sleep becomes 5x more satisfactory after a night of studying.
Because you want to. Thereâs no better motivation for studying, than the motivation that comes from within.Â
Adjectives to Describe People in German
lustig funny langweiling boring stark strong freundlich kind, friendly ruhig calm ernst serious besorgt anxious fleiĂig diligent humorvoll humorous dynamisch energetic höflich polite intelligent intelligent aktiv active ehrgeizig ambitious ehrlich honest schĂŒchtern shy geduldig silly gut aussehend cool mutig brave introvertiert introvert zuverlĂ€ssig reliable extrovertiert extrovert kreativ creative faul lazy begeistert enthusiastic groĂzĂŒgig generous ungezogen naughty mitfĂŒhlend sympathetic rĂŒcksichtsvoll thoughtfull dumm stupid agressiv agressive kĂŒnstlerisch artistic schlecht gelaunt bad-tempered vorsichtig careful gelassen easygoing emotional emotional unentschlossen indecisive naiv naive launisch moody sozial social verstĂ€ndnisvoll understanding nett nice
This got me dying
who paid for this study bruh
itââs literally seasoning. thatâs it. thatâs what make food taste good.
Bro itâs more complex than just âey they used seasoningâÂ
Itâs HOW they used seasoning, compared to other areas of the world.Â
Indian seasoning does this neat color wheel of flavor, fitting a bunch of spices that are very DIFFERENT from each other, to create a huge range of complex flavor.Â
Meanwhile in Italy for instance, they tend to use flavors that are SIMILAR. For instance, Basil and Oregano, or Sweet fish with Sweet wine. It makes foods less likely to contrast weirdly in your mouth, and itâs the basis of why fancy european people pair red wines with steak and white wines with chicken. Savory with Savory, Light with Light. Â Â
But the Indian food steps it up a notch. The research is definitely worth a read.Â
â That like flavors should be combined for better dishesâan unspoken but popular hypothesis stipulated by recipe-building in North American, Western European, and Latin American culturesâis an idea essentially reversed in Indian cuisine. â
well yes, spices need to not just complement the food but contrast against each other. to get maximum flavour when cooking indian food:
1. use whole spices, dry roast small quantities of individual spices together and then grind them to a powder. balance is what youâre looking for, not just chucking in handfuls of seasonings willy nilly because quantity does not equal flavour when it comes to spicing indian food.Â
2. whole spices go in the oil first. always. also everything gets fried on its own before itâs chucked into the sauce/curry. even the curry base is started off by frying onions/ginger/garlic/tomatoes or any combination thereof. basicallyâŠFRY THAT SHIT. i donât know of any regional cuisine in india that uses stock for simmering. frying everything individually is how we add flavour instead. Â
3. indian food needs to be cooked long and slow for the flavours to really merge. donât skimp on the cooking time if you can because that makes a huge difference.Â
This was so enlightening
I feel a need to mention that the researchers for this study are NOT white, as stated above. Theyâre Indian. Itâs Indian people saying âwhy does our cuisine work and taste so vastly different than anywhere else in the world?â To quote from the article:
âResearchers Anupam Jaina, Rakhi N Kb, and Ganesh Bagler from the Indian Institute for Technology in Jodhpur ran a fine-tooth comb through TarlaDalal.comâa recipe database of more than 17,000 dishes that self-identifies as âIndiaâs #1 food siteââin attempts to decode the magic of your chicken tikka masala or aloo gobi.â
Thereâs a major misconception in how a lot of people understand science. Thereâs this idea that thereâs a frontier of stuff we donât know and a big block of stuff we do. Their first reaction is to scoff because we already âknowâ that Indian food âuses spicesâ and thatâs why it tastes good. Why waste time re-treading that ground to come to the conclusion you already have?
In reality, the frontiers of knowledge are everywhere. Most of what gets studied is common everyday stuff because we generally have a good grip on what stuff does but the holes are in the âhow it does itâ. And we donât know anything to perfect certainty, only degrees of relative certainty, and in varying levels of precision.Â
The person who says the Earth is flat isnât making a terribly large miscalculation of the curviture of the Earth, and on a local scale it may not impact their day to day life, but they are still wrong. The person who says the Earth is round is also wrong, but the model is off from reality significantly less. The one who says the planet is an oblate spheroid futher brings the model into precision, but ultimately, the only perfect 1:1 model of the planet, is the planet.Â
Every measurement is going to have a margin of error. Doesnât mean we should just stop at the sphere, or even the oblate spheroid.
How did you learn so many languages. Do you have any tips?
Yes!!!! Yes I do!!!
Everything I wish I could tell myself before starting my language âjourneyâ lol:
đŠ©Dont be intimidated
Donât be intimidated, specifically by doing listening or speaking practice. I know in the US (or for most English speakers), when we hear someone that speaks perfect English but merely has an accent we think âthey donât speak Englishâ, but from experience this mentality is not shared with other languages. When you know even a little bit of a language or canât speak it very well, natives speakers are really really encouraging. I think since we view not being 100% fluent without so much as an accent, as ânot knowing any of a languageâ we are hard on ourselves and give up pretty easily.
đŠ©Listening practice is as important as studying vocabulary and grammar
When you listen to native speakers talk, you are training your ear even though you donât understand it. Listen and listen, eventually your brain stops picking out English words that arenât even there, but rather, starts to catch patterns in the language (for example, the same words sticks out to you over and over).
đŠ©Set realistic and doable goals or youâll get discouraged and quit
If you are a busy person, make small goals to fit language study in. Donât tell yourself that you need to master _____ within a week. Instead give yourself 15 mins of reading in the evening, and 25 mins of language listening in the morning. Itâs also easier to add the language into stuff you do on a daily basis anyway. For example if you are religious, find your prayers you pray daily in the language you are learning.
đŠ©learn to read the language first (obviously this tip might not be applicable for character based languages like Chinese)
I know everyone says âimmersion is the best and most important part of languageâ but honestly, a lot of our native speaking knowledge comes from our literacy education. When we are taught how to read, itâs through reading we can discover new words through context. Itâs also easy to pick up new language reading since itâs available anywhere, where immersion is only available when you are surrounded by native speakers. The first thing I do is learn how to read and write the language, then the entire language becomes accessible to me.
đŠ©Spend time perfecting the sounds of the language that are most difficult for you
The vocal sounds of a language is the foundation of a language. I know we are all impatient and want to simply learn as many phrases as possible as fast as possible, but if you get down the unfamiliar sounds of a language that donât exist in English, youâll have a better foundation of the language and your speaking and listening will be better from the very beginning. So take the time to practice those weird sounds by looking into the position of the tongue and where the sound comes from, from the chest to the lips. Look into how tense the mouth is, how much air comes from the lips, what the sound is like next to other sounds. When you master this speaking becomes more instinctual and itâs easier to pick up the language.
đŠ©Search YouTube, google, Instagram IN THE LANGUAGE YOU ARE STUDYING.
Donât search âkorean musicâ or âkorean kids tvâ or even âkorean vegetablesâ in google. Just translate how to say them in a translator app, then copy and paste them into the search bar. This way native korean information, videos, posts will come up. For example, if youâre in the mood for some horror comics, and want to read/watch them in the language you are learning, go to the translator app, and figure out how to say them, then search it. It works way better, even if the translation isnât correct or more natural, youâll still get the information, posts, and videos you want to see.
đŠ©Find ways to practice speaking the language (I use HiNative) and donât be discouraged by corrections.
Getting corrected does not mean youâre wrong, corrections are the most useful part of learning a language. If you are the type of person who is sensitive to criticism, you need to remind yourself corrections are NOT criticism. They are NOT a reflection of your progress, they are NOT you failing! You will always be corrected as a language learner and the sooner you are gentle with yourself in learning the sooner you will learn more. Get those first corrections out of the way, allow yourself to butcher pronunciation, get corrected for the first 10 times, let it sting a little and move on. Eventually you will be begging native speakers to tell you every little detail in where you went wrong!
đŠ©Tv and Books seems to be more useful for immersion and listening practice then music does
So far in my experience music is its very weird and abstract, and the things said in music arenât really useful in speaking? Itâs good for gathering vocab, but if you want music listening practice thatâs music based try searching for rap in that language, although obviously youâll be picking up a lot of informal language in music/rap. Tv shows however are typically how people really do talk, so turn off English subs and just listen! Books are really useful for learning new vocabulary, but sometimes written language is different than spoken (often), although when you speak it the way youâve learned from a book the worst youâll sound is âformal and poeticâ.
đŠ©Look up âinsert language you are learning phrases and words that arenât useful or correctâ
There so many programs and books that teach you phrases youâll never use or that are only appropriate in very specific situations. I donât know why language programs do this, but learning which ones are weird or only in specific settings before you start learning really helps. Chinese Especially does this...like I learned so many phrases and words that natives will never use and have no purpose???
đŠ©Know the different subjects of learning a language and which apps to use for that
Everyone uses Duolingo, but this app alone wonât make you speak a language. Duolingo and Memrise are great for memorizing vocab, but, is it vocab that in the context of your reading and listening practice? Are you learning words you are hearing and reading all the time? Duolingo is a lot of fun but I feel like the vocab is so broad and it doesnât go deep enough into the language. Feel free to use it at first to get used to the sounds of the language, but try using flash card apps like quizlet or Anki instead where you can write down and study words you are hearing constantly. Memrise does have actually study sets for many language books and lessons! So you can study words you are hearing in specific programs and books which is pretty useful in regards to vocab.
There obviously is more than just learning vocab. What about grammar, listening practice, speaking practice and reading? If you are wanting to use primarily apps find out which apps are available for your language. Here is an example of the apps I use for each subject. Be aware some languages are not available on them.
Vocab: quizlet, anki
Grammar: books (printed or kindle), YouTube grammar lessons, websites
Reading: books (printed or kindle), beelinguapp, instagram (posts that have text), Netflix/YouTube with both subtitles in the language you are learning and spoken in language you are learning, epic app
Writing: just use paper and pencil/pen
Listening: audio books (beelinguapp/epic/kindle/YouTube), tv and movies (Netflix/YouTube etc with no English subs), conversations on YouTube (search in language you are studying, donât search âSpanish conversationsâ or âJapanese conversationsâ)
Speaking: HiNative (pretty much all I use since itâs all languages, quick, and you get immediately answered and corrected by native speakers), get friends in language you are learning through lots of apps
Translator: itâs really hard to find a good one, most of them are really weird so only use them for words and the most basic or simple phrases and sentences, otherwise use HiNative to ask native speakers directly, or ask people on the apps that connect you to native speakers
đ±I should note that for talking to native speakers I only like HiNative, since itâs built to NOT be a form of social networking at all. Itâs not personal in anyway, and thereâs no way to private message or speak to other users outside a asking questions publicly. The people on there are only about learning or teaching a language, not usually making friends. Iâve found the sites that are built to make native speaking friends arenât useful to me personally, as most of the native speakers are either dudes looking for a woman to date or people wanting to only practice English with you, so they wasted a lot of my study time. People who are willing to help you learn are there, but it takes time to filter everything else out. If you would find it helpful to make friends by all means use them but I donât really use it myself.đ±
You donât want to really study EVERY SUBJECT every single day (unless you have the time). It can get really overwhelming, and you donât really absorb information that if you are just cramming. While I would say itâs good to read and listen daily, spread subjects out over the week. Grammar on Monday and Friday, vocab on Tuesday and Thursday. Take one day to review all of what youâve learned all week. Pick a day you have the largest block of free time. Bi-weekly works fine too.
I have an old post on how I organize my study time for multiple languages: https://alwaysabeautifullife.tumblr.com/post/182817883372/what-do-you-use-to-learn-your-languages-im
đŠ©Write sentences daily of everything youâve learned (no THIS I RECOMMEND DAILY)
Write as many as you can. Use all the grammar youâve learned, the words youâve learned, everything! Write them in your notes and submit them to be corrected in HiNative. The sentences they correct, put them in flash cards!
đŠ©Itâs ok to abandon languages you arenât passionate in
So youâve learned to read the language, and you know basic phrases, and now you just donât want to do it anymore. If you canât think of any reason to maintain it and donât know why you are studying it, learning some of the language is good! Fluency does NOT need to be everyoneâs goal. You can hold a conversation, and thatâs good enough for you. Feel free to try out various languages, there will be one or some that really are your passion, itâs fine to have the goal of fluency in those and conversational in others.
Donât abandon languages however because you feel discouraged. Discouragement is just a bump to get over, when you train your brain to maintain study habits through the days you feel discouraged, you make it habitual. Habits are harder to break and abandon! Evaluate your reasonings for wanting to speak a language, and your reasons for abandoning them if you want. Donât let difficulty, disorganized, discouragement, or poor time management get in your way!!
đŠ©With all that said itâs ok to take breaks
Itâs ok to get overwhelmed and take breaks from language learning. If you can still maintain what youâve learned by listening to music in your language or staying connected in some way thatâs good, but the âyouâll loose a languageâ isnât entirely true. Iâve taken year long breaks and refreshing what I learned previously is pretty easy! Your brain really does go âoh yeah I do remember this!â when youâre studying information you studied years ago.
đŠ©Be gentle with yourself
Be gentle with yourself. People that claim to be fluent in 6 months are selling something or want to be an influencer. Donât compare yourself to them. Language learning even for natives is a lifetime education. Itâs not something you do for 6 months then stop. Itâs continual and that looks different for everyone (yes native speakers included). Donât bother watching YouTube videos on how to learn in 10 mins or 3 months, youâll only get discouraged about your own amazing progress and all the work youâve done.
đŠ©Plan your âcan you say something in itâ phrase now
This one is just for fun but after hearing you are learning a language the first thing youâll get asked is âoh cool you speak (insert target language here)? Can you say something in (insert target language here)?â It does not matter what level of fluency you are at, you will absolutely forget the entire language and your own native language when you are asked this because it sends your brain to another dimension. So think of some funny phrases to say to people who ask, master them, then when they ask what they mean you can have a laugh. Other wise you will say something stupid of jumbled words (my go to was âwe women are fruitâ for some reason thanks brain youâre incredible) youâve learned that donât belong in a sentence, or even worse youâll run a blank and youâll just look at them like:
đłđđł
So think of inside jokes to tell your friends, funny phrases, even goofy insults! Memorize them and tell them at your friends and family to torture them because they canât escape sound waves! Itâs a good way to memorize the language but also to become confortable speaking it!
Please excuse any errors I donât wanna go over my mistakes so pretend u canât see them đ
I hope the alternate universe version of me where I live in a little cottage with my wife and bake bread and garden everyday is thriving.
Bees really be out there every day, checking out the flowers, collecting nectar, pollinating plants, making honey, and buzzing around. I respect them for that.
Be calm. When you close your eyes, you will be lying in a field. The grass is soft. Around you, there is birdsong. The sun is warm on your face. The sky is blue above.