Erzébeta and Vlad Adnan. Intro sketches.
Lukas: go take a break…
Don’t armchair diagnose mass shooters and other killers. The misconception that all violent people must be mentally ill (and the following conclusion that all mentally ill people must be dangerous) has horrible real life consequences for visibly mentally ill people.
Schizophrenic people are 14 times more likely to be a victim of a violent crime than committing one because people assume that we’re homicidal and dangerous and may react very negatively to visibly mentally ill behavior, partly due to all the media portrayals of schizophrenics as violent killers.
50% of people killed by police are disabled or mentally ill (and the victims are disproportionately black or other people of color) because the unusual behavior of visibly disabled and visibly mentally ill people is read as inherently threathening and dangerous.
Please consider the real life consequences of reinforcing the association between mental illness and violence - people are dying because y'all want to blame all evil in the world on severe mental illness so that you can clearly separate yourself from it. You’re harming an already extremely vulnerable and marginalized group of people and it’s time to stop!
I want them to have regular get togethers where they all bundle up and just rELAX no fighting or anythING just chilling everyones safe and ok!
So this is before Artemis and Wally get together but after M’gann and Connor. Wally has no intentions of sharing, but everyone except Connor took that into consideration haha. Artemis is telling Kaldur what a terrible film choice they’ve made.
Richard Crafus, a giant of a man known as King Dick, was a notorious inmate who ruled a block in Dartmoor Prison in the early 19th century. Few in Britain have heard of him, and fewer still know of his extraordinary contribution to British theatre.
It is thanks to this American “gangster-turned-theatre impresario” – and his fellow inmates of Prison Four – that the first all-black productions of Shakespeare were staged in Britain in 1814, according to Simon Mayo, who has made one of those productions central to his novel Mad Blood Stirring.
Masterposts
Advice and tools by @thegrangersapprentice
Tips and links by @stemnerd3
Resource masterpost by @etudiance
Logarithms by @allydsgn
Graph shapes by @codeorg
Resources
Algebra II Homework Help
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ProfRobBob
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Resource masterpost by @etudiance
Some tips by @sundayscholar
Advice if you suck at geometry by @ballpenned
Cool trig gif post
Pythagorean formula explained
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Hippocampus
Khan Academy (and trig only)
Geometry Dictionary
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Math Fortress
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ProfRobBob (and trig only!)
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Resource masterpost by @etudiance
Final precalculus review by @studteaing
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Rules for transforming functions
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ProfRobBob
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How to study calculus by @sundayscholar
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Studying for college math (emphasis on calculus) by @hexaneandheels
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Great tips by @hexaneandheels
Process of studying math by @doitforthea
More study tips by @study-hack
Amazing math masterpost by @studybuzz
Tips for studying math by @studyign
This incredible resource blog: @themathblrs
Best of luck with your mathematics!! Hopefully seeing this post is a good sine for the future.
(You can see my other original content here or request a post here!)
That is, it rarely works out that you have an idea, then do a first draft, then edit that draft, then celebrate. The writing process itself is often an act of discovery, and can be messy and “inefficient.”
You may write your first draft and realize it has major holes, causing you to need to return to your outline, correct the issue, and re-approach your draft.
You may discover that the character you thought was your main character is not your main character. It’s actually her sister, and now you need to rewrite your story.
You may change your point of view character several times before landing on the right one.
You may write 9 drafts of your story only to realize the fundamental concept is flawed, bringing you back to the drawing board.
You might throw away hundreds of pages.
If you’re writing a novel, you might outline, then draft, then re-outline, then re-draft several times before you even get a solid handle on where you’re going with your story.
You might write four different endings before you decide which one works best for your story.
You might remove characters, combine characters, add characters.
…all of this is normal. If this is happening to you, you’re not doing anything wrong. You’re a writer, and this is what writing is like sometimes. Sure, some writers seem to be able (or claim to be able) to write more quickly and efficiently. But there’s no sense in comparing yourself to them, and most of them are lying anyway. Instead of criticizing yourself, try to become curious about and embrace your process. There’s something awesome about how mysterious and unpredictable writing can be!
who thought it was a solid plan to put Anakin in charge of thousands of impressionable 12-year-olds honestly i ask you
RIP Wally West
November 11, 1994 - June 20, 2016