Originally posted by StringerEverytime you press F5 on your keyboard or refresh the page, this GIF will automatically change.
Your like a savant with great YouTube skills.
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6 hit control-f and then type a 0 into the resulting pop-up search bar and hit enter
Originally posted by Oneness
Everytime you press F5 on your keyboard or refresh the page, this GIF [b]will automatically change.0000010100000001111011101001
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00000111011011011011011110116 hit control-f and then type a 0 into the resulting pop-up search bar and hit enter [/B]
Not using a cp
Originally posted by StringerMore specifically, I'm a savant in any area.
Your like a savant with great YouTube skills.
As a boxer who thinks differently getting hit in the head than would, say, a neurologist. Whereas the boxer thinks something like, "**** I let him hit me" and then reacts by putting up a better defense next time he thinks his opponent his going to go for his head, the neurologist would think about the kinesiology of it and how your head rocking back and forth like that causes concussions, and in a fight the neurologist would respond with fear not anger.
Therefore, a boxer perceives things in a way that's more suited for boxing, and a neurologist perceives things in a way that's more suited for medicine.
With me, you get both. It's a gift in rare moments, but mostly a curse. However, learning to alter your perceptions, your own mind-frame, that's easy, anyone can do that. That's what I do. I can curb one fixation with another fixation that's geared for what I'm doing here and now.
Originally posted by Oneness
More specifically, I'm a savant in any area.As a boxer who thinks differently getting hit in the head than would, say, a neurologist. Whereas the boxer thinks something like, "**** I let him hit me" and then reacts by putting up a better defense next time he thinks his opponent his going to go for his head, the neurologist would think about the kinesiology of it and how your head rocking back and forth like that causes concussions, and in a fight the neurologist would respond with fear not anger.
Therefore, a boxer perceives things in a way that's more suited for boxing, and a neurologist perceives things in a way that's more suited for medicine.
With me, you get both. It's a gift in rare moments, but mostly a curse. However, learning to alter your perceptions, your own mind-frame, that's easy, anyone can do that. That's what I do. I can curb one fixation with another fixation that's geared for what I'm doing here and now.
Maybe you should take up boxing.
If Sherlock Holmes had miscalculated any of those reactions, his attack might have failed to produce a victory.
He merged his knowledge of pressure points with his opponent's predictability. So a knowledge of medicine can make one a better fighter in some ways, on rare occasions. Also, one may manipulate his opponent using what's called psychological warfare. What if the dude attacking you had a sister that he loved? He's much less likely to continue the altercation if she's in the way.
It's very unlikely that I could use inductive reasoning well into a fight to the extent of infallibly calculating my opponent's every reaction like in that Hollywood fakeness of a film. I'm just saying, if you doing this makes him do that, and you're smart enough to know it, you've already predicted who's going to win the fight and therefore it's already over.
However, like emotions, events unfold statically, Murphy's law. Best to wait for God to give you a sign. If an opportunity to start a business your way and it just so happens your current job has given you the know-how to tackle some of its pit-falls, that's God giving you an opening.
I'm talking something that is really happening in my life with that, btw. True story.