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Do I Have To Write Out Every Single One Of Them

I need a list of ALL (every single one) of $uicideboy$ songs?

Go on Amazon or Spotify

How do I read 18 books and make a report on every single one of them in 2 months starting in october?

Wooow ok..a. Are u a fast reader or have enough hours a day? Then try to read for 8 hours a day ! I’d be done in less than 2 months ..Good luck !!b. U hate reading ? Read a summary and as many reviews online to form a complete idea of the book then start reading first and last page of each chapter ? Might work but no A+ guaranteed !C. check With Ur teacher / professor if u can collaborate with ur classmates, if he oks it then contact them and divide the reading equally then meet and explain /discuss .d. start as early as possible because u never know what happens ( there are days when u might fall sick, attend a birthday .. etc)i wrote my dissertation 100 words a day ( which seems so little ) till it was done .. if the load had been too big I would’ve burnt out and dropped it, and if I didn’t commit to such a small amount of words I would have piled up huge chunks of work !Best of luck !

If I have several interests, should I do a little of each of them or concentrate every day on a single one of them?

You will always have that one interest which will have a slightest edge over others.Try allotting more time for it in a week.I don’t specifically have interests but as for how my study goes,my teachers always believed in multitasking.I’d have to concentrate on more than three subjects in a day which I never liked to do. I personally don’t have inclination towards allotting slots to each subject in a day like for example physics in the morning and chemistry in the evening .I know these subjects maybe in no way related to your interests but these are at least what I can relate to.I suggest it’s better to shift your focus on one interest one single day and let the strongest one resonate multiple times a week.The preponderance would tell you’ll get stressed if you concentrate on one work an entire day,but for me there’s absolutely no room for stress if you’re fully into the activity as for you,they are after all your ‘interests’ and you would never feel like having enough of it.In the end it all boils down to your personal preference.If you feel happy and satisfied doing things in a particular way then it’s fine but if you’re not sure of what suits you the best then try experimenting with every combination and come out with the best routine if time isn’t a constraint.

Out of 100 people, how many of them want to write a book someday?

Every single one of them wants to write a book.Here are the crunching numbers:Most want to write a memoir to leave to their descendants, which is a wonderful idea! Do it! It’s fun and your children will thank you.Writer Joseph Epstein wrote, “81 percent of Americans feel that they have a book in them — and should write it.” That's approximately 200 million people who would like to be writers.That’s very exciting!The rest of the article is less exciting:200 Million Americans Want to Publish Books, But Can They? - Publishing PerspectivesUp to Mark O’ Bannon:“Ninety percent of writers fail at the premise. Ninety percent of screenplays and eighty percent of novels are rejected because of poor structure.”The rest of the article is more exciting:If you have a good, unique story idea and develop it well, you can cut out 90% of your competition. 50,000 contenders have just been reduced to 5,000.What Are The Odds Of Getting Published?“There are approximately 281,300 people employed as an Authors, Writers, and Editors.”How many people are currently employed as an Authors, Writers, and Editors in the United States?“19,000 writers doing four books a year. Or 38,000 writers doing two books a year. Yup, there are only 300 writers making a living writing fiction.”Killing the Sacred Cows of Publishing: Only 300 Writers Make a Living“There are somewhere between 600,000 and 1,000,000 books published every year in the US alone, depending on which stats you believe. Many of those – perhaps as many as half or even more – are self-published. On average, they sell less than 250 copies each.”Thinking of Self-Publishing Your Book in 2013? Here's What You Need to Know.As if this wasn’t frightening enough:“The average number of books each person read over the course of a year was 12…but that number is inflated by the most avid readers. The most frequently reported number was 4 books per year. Of course, there's plenty of variation among demographics.”How Many Books Does the Average Person Read?Now, do you understand why most don’t even go there?

I dream vividly every single night and can remember them every morning. What does this mean?

Similar to you, I dreamt every night and most of them are vivid.Sometimes it seems so real that I couldn't tell if it is a dream, reality or a memory, occasionally it takes me a few hours to get out of the feeling I have in the dream.I also woke up tired on most days even when I have 8 hours of sleep. My psychotherapist requested me to note down the numbers of times I woke up in night.She explained why I could remember my dreams and it's because I wasn't in deep sleep. During the REM moment I was awake hence she said I could remember my dream vividly. And since I am not in deep sleep and half awake most of the time, that is why I feel tired. This might be the answer to your question.I only found out this reason 3 days ago and have been writing down and being aware of:how many times I woke up in the night,what time did I sleep,how long did I take to fall asleep (using android sleep app),what time did I wake up next day andWhat did I do before sleepingrate my sleep quality (1 to 10).So far I noticed that if I wake up less, my sleep quality is higher, I also remember less of my dream. I also realise the less I try to remember my dream, the less I will. Perhaps you should stop trying to remember your dreams (or intepret dreams) so you can have a more peaceful sleep. I am also being advice to do boring stuff before bed instead of playing games or watching thriller. Hope this helps you too.FYI: since young I have vivid dream so I tried lucid dream when before bed, I get myself into the situation I want to dream then manipulate my dreams so I can prepare running 2.4km, practice for my coding exam, practice my presentation skill and problem solving.

I love writing stories, but I always get bored while writing them. Like when I get unsatisfied with the plot or something, I just start a new story, so I've never been able to finish a single one. How do I fix this?

I have a similar problem. I have several unfinished stories laying about on my computer--all interesting ideas (at least to me) and all unfinished. I just thought of one the other day, in fact, that I would love to write. This just happens to those of us who are ... afflicted. My advice to you would be for you to pick one story and finish it through no matter what. There are tricks to this. One of the better ones is to end each night's writing with a sort of a cliff hanger. Sometimes, I'll leave off in the middle of an interesting conversation, anything that will draw me back to the same story the next day. If you finish one, even a very short one, the next one is easier, and the next one is easier after that. I was writing a zombie story once, and I posted what I had of it on a zombie site and let the people who were reading it, talk, cajole and force me into finishing it for them. This actually worked really well, and I highly recommend it. I published that story afterwards."Like when I get unsatisfied with the plot or something, I just start a new story ..." Alter the plot here and make something exciting happen that does interest you. Even if that thing is way off from what you planned. And I mean dinosaurs with lasers strapped to their heads off (as long as you can fit it into the plot and make it work and it won't be absolutely ridiculous like literally dinosaurs with lasers strapped to their heads).You can do this, oh prolific one. Start small and work your way up into something bigger. Use Cliff Hanger and hang him from every cliff necessary to get you to the end, post your stuff and see if people will help you write it by bullying you word for word, paragraph by paragraph, and deviate from the chosen plot whenever necessary to keep you interested and excited about what you're writing--unleash dem dinosaurs!

7 deadly sins wrath, greed, sloth, pride, lust, envy, and gluttony?

I don't believe in good or evil, which is why I have such beef with God. Humans were the best creation, one that broke Lucifer's heart when it took all of God's attention away. They loved each other, but jealousy tore them apart and now both wade in loneliness.

At least, that's my impression from reading the Bible. You're right in that God is the ultimate murderer, while Lucifer has killed so few. But he has killed, he has tempted and corrupted, but only with the sins created by God. God, who gave free will and damns you if you use it.

Well, some say that the Bible is actually evil, that it was written by the true Devil. Because would a loving father actually kill so many, or claim to be the one and only true power? Shoot me if I'm wrong, but I always took Yahweh as the humble type.

Why is there not a single programming language for all purposes?

I assume you mean, by “all purposes”, everything from “low down” things like an operating system kernel, drivers, firmware and other embedded software right up to “high-level” applications like business apps or even scripts, web applications and domain-specific applications? Not to mention software for scientific purposes, finance, you name it.That is quite a tall order.One reason that so many languages have been created over time is precisely this: there are so many different domains and use cases. In some applications, performance is critical, or the ability to manipulate hardware; in others it is the ability to quickly prototype and make changes without the need for compilation.However, the best attempt I have come across for making a language that spans all these areas is this: Red Programming LanguageAs you can see from this image, Red is providing a language that is usable for doing very low-level programming right up to scripting and DSL.How?Well, part of its solution is something called “dialects”; the ability to easily write domain-specific languages within the language. Red’s solution for low-level programming is simply a dialect of the language itself, which provides a language that is feature-comparable with C, called Red/System (it’s still the same language, though). Furthermore, Red can be either compiled or interpreted. For GUIs (cross-platform and native) it uses another dialect also written in itself.The most mind-boggling part of Red, however, is that the toolchain with the compiler and interpreter and including the whole runtime, with the ability to cross-compile for different platforms, the ability to write systems programs and user-level applications, and the built-in GUI capability, is provided in a single, 1MB binary. (That’s not a typo: it’s One Megabyte).It’s still early days though; Red is yet to ship with a garbage collector in the next release, full networking support is still in the works; also the cross-platform GUI works on Windows and Mac, but not Linux.*Anyway, if you are looking for a single language that can be used for all purposes, then give Red a try.*If you want to try a language with these features, but missing the ability to do systems-level programming and compilation support, you can give Rebol a try. Rebol is the inspiration for Red - it’s spiritual predecessor, if you will. It’s not maintained anymore, but still extremely fun to use!

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