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My "best friend" is a fucking piece of shit
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2017-02-03 at 6:27 PM UTCIf you get this going and you kill the animals humane I'll by some fur from you.
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2017-02-03 at 6:35 PM UTCRaise the raccoons to produce a torrent of babby coons which you can skin alive just make sure it's done humanely. 馃槆
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2017-02-03 at 6:43 PM UTCHow does the fur you try to get look?
I really like Mink but it's overused and I've felt fox and didn't really like it. -
2017-02-03 at 7:10 PM UTCI prefer wolf or birdskin.
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2017-02-03 at 10:05 PM UTCOstrich leather is pretty dope for highlights.
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2017-02-04 at 1:31 AM UTC
Originally posted by cerakote imagine reading a sentence with no conjunctions
ok now imagine a sentence with fuck instead of a conjunction
thats what you sound like
Dont be such a fucking victim dude. You act like me using the fuck word excessively hurt your delicate sensibilities. -
2017-02-04 at 4:43 AM UTC
Originally posted by a路nom路a路ly Dont be such a fucking victim dude. You act like me using the fuck word excessively hurt your delicate sensibilities.
how the fuck am i playing the victim
im just trying to make you aware that you look like a fag for doing it -
2017-02-05 at 6:09 AM UTC
Originally posted by cerakote how the fuck am i playing the victim
im just trying to make you aware that you look like a fag for doing it
You are a victim because how someone else presents themselves offends you enough to be like "Hey man, swearing isnt cool".
I know I look like a fag dude. Dont worry about me and worry about how much of a fag you look like yourself. -
2017-02-05 at 8:12 AM UTCHey man cool it on the profanity my kid browses this board.
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2017-02-05 at 8:16 AM UTC
Originally posted by SCronaldo_J_Trump Hey man cool it on the profanity my kid browses this board.
I feel triggered -
2017-02-05 at 3:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by Sophie Lol no, i think they call it "thought".
Not really. It's called subvocalization and it's apparently the "wrong" way to read/think.
You as an adult should probably be doing visual reading, where you don't sound stuff out in your head.
http://wellness.uchicago.edu/page/speed-reading -
2017-02-05 at 9:11 PM UTCPeople selling speed reading courses do say that a lot. The actual evidence that eliminating subvocalization is a productive activity leaves room for doubt.
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2017-02-05 at 9:18 PM UTC
Originally posted by Lanny People selling speed reading courses do say that a lot. The actual evidence that eliminating subvocalization is a productive activity leaves room for doubt.
I don't really care for the "speed" aspect of speed reading, like reading faster or comprehending more in a shorter span of time. That honestly seems like a stupid consideration unless you are excessively slow at reading to the point of it hindering your daily life and productivity.
But it's strange to me that a fully grown adult would have to sound out words in their brain when they read. Like, there's nothing inherently wrong with an adult riding a bike with training wheels for example; it lends additional safety and stability to a normal bike at no cost of performance really... but you kind of expect a normal adult to not have to use one. -
2017-02-05 at 9:30 PM UTCthey're literally discussing how to read.
and i thought that i'd find literate people here. -
2017-02-05 at 9:35 PM UTC
Originally posted by Captain Falcon I don't really care for the "speed" aspect of speed reading, like reading faster or comprehending more in a shorter span of time. That honestly seems like a stupid consideration unless you are excessively slow at reading to the point of it hindering your daily life and productivity.
But it's strange to me that a fully grown adult would have to sound out words in their brain when they read. Like, there's nothing inherently wrong with an adult riding a bike with training wheels for example; it lends additional safety and stability to a normal bike at no cost of performance really… but you kind of expect a normal adult to not have to use one.
I think most adults can read without mentally sounding out words, like for speed reading courses an exercise is to read while saying some word repeatedly and you can do it immediately although it's kind of distracting. But memory is associative, it seems feasible there's some cognitive benefit to including a tactile dimension (subvocalization) to reading and writing. -
2017-02-06 at 3:36 AM UTCIsn't it the same sort of memory retaining concept behind taking notes? When I was in school I almost never took notes to study, just so that I could absorb information better. They were damn near illegible too.
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2017-02-06 at 4:01 AM UTCTaking notes is definitely the most beneficial way to study and learn, across the board, in literally every single case. It's been proven to exercise the greatest volume of your mental capacities and all facets of comprehensive ability and retention. If you don't take notes to learn you are essentially taking a good chunk of your brain matter and feeding it to your puppy. Throwing away knowledge. Destroying the universe.
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2017-02-06 at 3:25 PM UTCMake new friends. Become mine.
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2017-02-07 at 3:33 AM UTCI don't know, I never took notes, it felt distracting and I was never going to come back to them anyway. #YOLOSWAG
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2017-02-12 at 2:59 PM UTCShut the fuck up