Ah good. Now I know what specs not to buy.
Interestingly, there is some evidence that suggests that antioxidants like vitamin C, especially when taken in the excessively large doses that are fashionable these days, can interfere with the immune system (which relies on oxidation reactions in order to clear pathogens and precancerous cells) and preclude gains from exercise (oxidation is used as a signal by the body to eg. induce muscle mass growth).
Depending on how old your kid is, it might or it might not improve. The frontal lobe of their brain still has a lot of development left in children; right up until they’re about 25. This may improve things.
Also, please don’t be one of those parents who discounts meds. They can really help a lot. And no, they’re not addictive (in fact, people with ADHD are more likely to forget them than to use them recreationally).
What’s helped me is a combination of physical exercise (which helps against feelings of unrest that may be bothering me) and sort of sliding into the subject, tackling the easier parts first and from there riding the dopamine wave.
But yeah, it doesn’t get any easier.
Exactly, and you cannot have a serious conversation about the attitudes of yore if you censor the words they themselves used.
Back then, it simply meant “developmentally delayed”.
What river? Asking for a friend…
“Password cannot contain username”
“Password must contain digits”
“Password cannot contain reversed misspellings of predynastic Egyptian pharaohs”
And now…
“Password cannot contain JavaScript”
Sadly Microsoft didn’t specify where on the keyboard the key has to be.
In order to find out, hit the keyboard with your head; wherever your forehead touches the keyboard first is where the key is supposed to be.
Yeah, I deserve that. I’m just gonna leave my typo. Thanks for the laugh!
1024 = 210
FYFY
Actual old person here: the above is all made up.
The slots were for sporks.
That sounds like uncontrolled dosages of Desoxyn.
I alternate
I have a dad joke, but it’s yo momma.
weekend = day_of_week in (“sat”, “sun”)
As a bonus this completely sidesteps the issue of what day is 0 or 1.
Well that’s an odd way of putting it ;)
Those are different kinds of fine motor skills than used when writing cursive. Ideally kids should be exposed to both.
Cursive writing helps in developing fine motor skills.
So ‘truncate’ and ‘table’ are OK?