Me too, the shape is just so perfect for so many things. I bought some recently at the Vietnamese market nearby. They have fancy little roses surrounded by a filigree pattern printed on them and say "English" on the handle in some Victorian-looking cursive font lmao. I love them.
One time, i triggered some sort of shoplifting detection when I put my credit card up in my purse after paying. I guess the camera thought I did it in a sketchy way?
But the developers put a story/easy mode in the game. That seems intentional to me. Maybe those games just aren't for you if the mere option of difficulty settings bothers you so much.
I think so. When i lived in the foothills of the Smokey Mountains, common wisom was that we didn't have to worry about tornados because of all the hills, which is basically the same idea. Then we had one touch down anyway. I think tornadoes just don't care anymore, almost like they're more energetic for some reason... like the climate has changed somehow...
Did he ever actually have the ring? I know he tried to take it from Frodo, but i don't think he succeeded. Unless i'm getting confused since i have watched the movies more recently than i have read the books...
Edit: totally forgot about outside moria. apparently i need to do a re-read AND a re-watch lol.
Omg. You just made me realize MY backpack is a quarter of a century old. Just out of curiosity, is it a jansport? I wonder if they still "make 'em like they used to" or if they've fallen prey to enshittification like everything else...
Yes, i do think the biggest problem is shoving so many different tricks at them at once that it leads to confusion. There was also a bit of frustration from some of my tutees from having to solve the same problems multiple times. Some found it boring and tedious, and some found it confusing and made them less confident in their skills since not all methods they were taught "clicked".
When I was tutoring, i had a few elementary-school aged kids. They'd have homework where they had to do the problems three or so different ways, using each of the methods that they were taught (one of which was always the way I was taught when I was their age). I actually feel like I learned a lot from them, as there were some interesting tricks that I didn't know before helping with the homework. I think that's a really good way to approach it, because a kid may struggle with some of the methods but generally was able to "get it" with one of them, and which method was "the best" was entirely dependent on the kid. For me, being able to see which methods clicked and which ones didn't helped me be more effective as a tutor, too, since it showed me a bit more about how their individual little brains were working.
But I agree, if you're not also at least trying to explain why the different methods get you the same answer, it can lead to problems down the line. Some of them saw the "why" for themselves after enough time working at it, and some needed a bit more external guidance (which, considering they were coming to me for tuturoing, I guess they weren't getting at school). My argument would be that no one really taught me "why" when I was in school learning The One Way to do math either. I still had to figure out little tricks that worked for me on my own, since my brain is kinda weird. It may not have taken me so long to believe that i'm actually pretty damn good at math if I'd done those kids' homework when I was their age, as i would have had more tools in the toolbox to draw from.
And some girls want to look at boobies, too.