Lets see, If I were to bill for my time it would be at over $100 an hour. Yet you play fast and loose with it. Maybe send me a check for my wasted time? I would not take it if you could.I feel really horrible and is there anything at all I can do?
Eat properly, get outside for at least 2 hours in the afternoon, and go to bed on time. I've been reading through some of Don Lancaster's articles online, and he knows enough about electronics to put anyone on this forum to shame. Even he wrote an article emphasizing the importance of good health.
Your physical and mental health are much more closely linked than is usually given credit. You can boost one with the other, to build them both up. For instance, if you challenge yourself to run a certain distance, you'll find yourself strategizing to find a way and convince yourself that you can do better next time. Conversely, if you eat and sleep properly, you'll find the physical ease of your body will permit great lucidity of thought.
Stop playing video games. They're a waste of time, especially to the degree that they're often played today. A half-hour of video games is fun and sufficient. More than that is symptomatic of habitual activity - it's no longer fun, you just do it because of the inertia of the activity, to the point of it inhibiting your ability to imagine doing anything else. That's not good.
I don't want to get on a whole thing here, but since I'm at it...
The ethics of video games, especially FPS, is inconsistent with the ethics of reality. That's probably self-evident (you're not going to go out and gratuitously blow-up a piece of public property just to watch it explode, are you?), but we don't really concern ourselves too much with thinking reflectively about that. We should. Behind all the bells and whistles of a FPS game - the VR, communicating to your team members, taunting the other team members - there's very little in terms of the scope of human interaction. Yet, sadly, many young people in their formative years are taught (even if indirectly), that it's okay to sit for hours on end in front of a computer, having the vaste scope of possibility for human interaction limited by the meager capabilities of a single video game. Which was probably programmed by a group of anti-social nerds to begin with.
Temper your activities. Be like Johnny #5 in Short Circuit: get more input.
Thats not necessary quix.
Hey leave me out of this! I'm not tutoring anyone.
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