Mohit Jha
Thursday, 5 September 2019
Wednesday, 18 February 2015
how to make things right?
1
Try to visualize what you need to do. If you can see it, building it (or doing it) will become easier to do.
2
Know how to do it. If you are good at doing something, do it more often. Every once in a while you will have to branch out, but doing something right may make you feel good.
3
Ask an expert. If you are trying something out in college, maybe for a job application or something else, ask someone in that expertise. They can help you and tell you exactly how to succeed and do it right.
4
If all else fails, read the instructions. They come jam-packed with information, but it's not that exciting.
5
Read books. Look things up. Go to a library and check out a book on whatever subject you need to do something right in.Tuesday, 10 February 2015
FEAR
Fear is an emotion induced by a threat perceived by living entities, which causes a change in brain and organ function and ultimately a change in behavior, such as running away, hiding or freezing from traumatic events. Fear may occur in response to a specificstimulus happening in the present, or to a future situation, which is perceived as risk to health or life, status, power, security, or in the case of humans wealth or anything held valuable. The fear response arises from the perception of danger leading to confrontation with or escape from/avoiding the threat (also known as the fight-or-flight response), which in extreme cases of fear (horror and terror) can be a freeze response or paralysis.
In humans and animals, fear is modulated by the process of cognition and learning. Thus fear is judged as rational or appropriate and irrational or inappropriate. An irrational fear is called a phobia.
Psychologists such as John B. Watson, Robert Plutchik, and Paul Ekman have suggested that there is only a small set of basic orinnate emotions and that fear is one of them. This hypothesized set includes such emotions as joy, sadness, fright, dread, horror,panic, anxiety, acute stress reaction and anger.
Fear should be distinguished from, but is closely related to, the emotion "anxiety", which occurs as the result of threats that are perceived to be uncontrollable or unavoidable.[1]
The fear response serves survival by generating appropriate behavioral responses, so it has been preserved throughout evolution.
NOMAD
A nomad (Greek: νομάς, nomas, plural νομάδες, nomades; meaning one roaming about for pasture, pastoral tribe) is a member of a community of people who live in different locations, moving from one place to another. Among the various ways Nomads relate to their environment, one can distinguish the hunter-gatherer, the pastoral nomad owning livestock, or the "modern" peripatetic nomad. As of 1995, there were an estimated 30–40 million nomads in the world.[2]
Nomadic hunting and gathering, following seasonally available wild plants and game, is by far the oldest human subsistence method. Pastoralists raise herds, driving them, and/or moving with them, in patterns that normally avoid depleting pastures beyond their ability to recover.
Nomadism is also a lifestyle adapted to infertile regions such as steppe, tundra, or ice and sand, where mobility is the most efficient strategy for exploiting scarce resources.
HAPPINESS
Happiness is a mental or emotional state of well-being characterized by positive or pleasant emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy.[1] A variety of biological, psychological, religious, and philosophical approaches have striven to define happiness and identify its sources. Various research groups, including positive psychology, endeavor to apply the scientific method to answer questions about what "happiness" is, and how it might be attained.
It is of such fundamental importance to the human condition that "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness" were deemed to be unalienable rights by the United States Declaration of Independence.
The United Nations declared 20 March the International Day of Happiness to recognise the relevance of happiness and wellbeing as universal goals. In 2014, Happy became the anthem and inspired clips from around the world. :)
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