29.11.18 // oh my, i am finally back after so long! i have successfully made it to the holidays heh i really wanna make the most of this holiday and not just let it slip by
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Singapore
seen from China
seen from Belgium
seen from Thailand
seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from Malaysia
seen from Germany
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Japan
seen from Canada

seen from United States

seen from Switzerland

seen from United States

seen from France

seen from United States
29.11.18 // oh my, i am finally back after so long! i have successfully made it to the holidays heh i really wanna make the most of this holiday and not just let it slip by
7/1/18
I know, I didn’t post yesterday. I really have no excuses except I felt lazy and tired after church, so apologies.
But I will post the pictures I have neglected so we will get back on track. ✌🏻✨
june 2018 monthly spread. slow progress is still progress.
March is all about rewriting, revising, and making reviewers since it’ already exam season. It’s also about appreciating the people around you who never left even when you’re freaking stressed because of school and life in general. Express your gratitude to these people as much as possible!
This is going to be one hell of a month, but hopefully everything will turn out well. Good luck to everyone!!
hi everyone! i recently attended a seminar geared towards ap/honors students. the speaker gave us a few tips and reminders for when you are faced with a true or false question and i thought i would share!
every part of a true statement must be true
look for negatives, qualifiers, absolutes and long strings of statements. for example, if an absolute is present, the statement is most likely false.
if a question has negatives: “cannot” “not” “never” “no” - discard the negative and read what is left - decide whether the remains are true or false. if true, the opposite is usually false.
words like the above negatives are absolutes and require the statement to be true 100% of the time and are usually false.
words like “sometimes”, “often”, “frequently”, “ordinarily” and “generally” typically result in true statements as modest claims often reflect reality.
in long sentences that contain phrases separated by commas, analyze each statement on its own. if any one statement is false, the entire thing is.
most standard true & false tests contain more true than false answers. if you need to guess, answer true. this will give you greater than a 50% chance of being correct.
working on some us history notes
120318 [45/100 Days of Productivity]
If I’m completely honest, I had more fun screaming in the car ride there and back and sitting with just the 5 of us in the thunderstorm; I had more fun before the streams of people came and said happy birthday, all the named faces I have no true stories to put behind. But I’m grateful you thought of making it happen, and I had fun anyway, though now my social battery is absolutely depleted and I have 4 chapters of philosophy notes to consume. It’s worth it.
Happy birthday to all my twins out there. I hope you all have a good day 💕
11/01/2018 || 11/100 Days of Productivity
I made some note cards for my maths exam tomorrow, and I’m really happy with how they turned out!!!