⚪︎just sit and watch the world go by ⚪︎Insta: @nicolesmithnoodle

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    • 5 years ago
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  • wordsnquotes:

    fy-perspectives:

    Science Of Persuasion

    [src]

    (via fyp-psychology)

    Source: fy-perspectives
    • 5 years ago
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  • fy-perspectives:

    THEORIES OF MOTIVATION!

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    Source: fy-perspectives
    • 5 years ago
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  • “There is nothing I would not do for those who are really my friends. I have no notion of loving people by halves; it is not my nature. My attachments are always excessively strong.”
    — Jane Austen (via quotemadness)

    (via convertions)

    Source: quotemadness.com
    • 5 years ago
    • 4885 notes
  • “Everybody has a secret world inside of them. All of the people of the world, I mean everybody. No matter how dull and boring they are on the outside, inside them they’ve all got unimaginable, magnificent, wonderful, stupid, amazing worlds. Not just one world. Hundreds of them. Thousands maybe.”
    — Neil Gaiman (via quotemadness)

    (via convertions)

    Source: quotemadness.com
    • 5 years ago
    • 8135 notes
  • “You don’t need another human being to make your life complete, but let’s be honest. Having your wounds kissed by someone who doesn’t see them as disasters in your soul, but cracks to put their love into, is the most calming thing in this world.”
    — Emery Allen  (via perrfectly)

    (via nakedly)

    • 5 years ago
    • 558983 notes
  • psychology-science:

    psychology-science:

    Psychological Study tips

    image

    Originally posted by szimmetria-airtemmizs

    1.       Don’t study in bed

    You need to stay focused, which will be harder for your brain when you put yourself in a space reserved for relaxing and sleeping. Not only will this lesson your focus, but trying to focus in bed will eventually also make it harder for you to get properly sleepy. You’re basically conditioning your brain to get into the right mode in the right spot. [x]

    2.       Divide and conquer

    Try to chunk the information into related bits you can repeat and revise. Don’t try to focus on a whole chapter for 3 hours. Instead, focus on one paragraph for 10 minutes, and go through it that way. At the end, go back to the paragraphs you were struggling with during the 10 minute chunks, and give those some extra time. Begin each large section – for example, 1 hour and a 15 minute break – with a short revision of the previous chunk. [x]

    3.       If you have lists, rearrange them in a way that will help you.

    Let’s say you have a list of important writers to learn, or important concepts for a language test. You can order them chronologically (the writers), or in alphabetical order (the language concepts. However, you can also order them by genre, names that end with the same letter, or things that sound weird. For a history test I once had to learn 8 different definitions of “Celtic” and I divided them into language related, art related and ‘other’. It doesn’t matter how you divide, as long as it helps you. [x]

    4.       Prepare a quiz for yourself

    Not only will you have something to test yourself with later, but you are already going through the material with a good mindset of ‘what would they ask me?’ You’re picking out the important things, and already noticing where you are struggling. [x]

    5.       Take short breaks to do a few jumping jacks or similar

    Perhaps every 20 minutes get off your chair and jump a bit, dance a little, get your blood going. It will hopefully prevent the study-slump by keeping your heart-rate up and active. [x]

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