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What Is This Phenomenon Called And How To Control It

What is this phenomenon called?

I hope this doesn't sound too crazy, but I wonder if anyone can relate to this. This sounds weird, but I can't help it.

We all know that some people are transsexual or transgendered. These people are trapped in the body of the wrong gender (or they believe that they are). In other words, someone who is physically a man but feels like they were meant to be a woman... would be considered transgendered. They sometimes go on to have gender reassignment surgery, and go on to have relatively (compared to the past) normal lives. I don't understand it, but I wouldn't judge them either (I have no idea what it's like).

Is it unreasonable to suppose that some people are born with the wrong last name?
Some people simply don't like their last names, but that's not what I'm referring to.
I don't know very many people like me, who have a legal last name that they can't identify with. I felt like I was meant to be named something else. I hate the name Williams, but I don't even think of it as "my" last name. I feel like I got stuck with someone else's name. As a kid in school when I had to sign that name I felt like I was being forced to wear someone else's ugly old shabby sweater.

I think that males have it easier in the world for a number of reasons and I've disliked my gender, but I know I'm a woman.

When I found out I had Spanish ancestors I was happy at first but now I feel foolish telling people. Your last name represents your heritage. There's nothing Spanish about Williams, so when I tell people that's my name they think I don't have Spanish blood. It's really annoying because I loved latin culture and longed to be a part of that world. I have a name that labels me an outsider.

Is there a name for this? I got stuck with this legal name, but I feel like I'm not a "Williams," or that I was supposed to have a different name. What does it mean?

I don't mean to offend anyone but I just feel like I was meant for another name.

Technically, the ability to manipulate and control water at will is called hydrokinesis. This would include characters like Katara from Avatar, Blastoise from Pokemon, and Jinbe and the Fishman from One Piece.

What is this phenomenon called? "Rich becomes richer and poor becomes poorer"?

Billions of untaxed money is hoarded in offshore tax havens.The coalition regime only represent the rich so tax avoidance is paid for by austerity methods.Our current Labour party are the same.We in the UK need a people party who will make a rule [ money earned and profits made in the UK pay their taxes in the UK ] a party who will stop mass immigration,increase taxes from people who can afford it and stop obscene wages.

They are called "recurring dreams".There is a lot of speculation as to why they occur, and most of the time it depends on what the dream was actually about - but most dream interpreters and psychologists agree (seemingly so) that it has something to do with an unresolved issue or a repeated stressor. Most recurring dreams, for some reason, are negative in nature (nightmares, etc), which lends credence to the unresolved issue/stressors theory. A lot of such dreams have similar themes, such as being attacked or chased, being late, getting stuck, falling, missing an exam or other important event, etc. Like I said before, what your specific dream actually means for you depends on what the contents were and how it makes you feel, regardless of the fact that it's recurrent. I would write the dream down and take some time for yourself to consider the meaning, and what issues you may be repressing.A plethora of information can be found online: What's Behind Your Recurring Dreams Recurring Dreams Recurring Dreams: Your Dreams Are Trying to Tell You Something! Recurring Dreams And Their Meanings I hope you find what you're looking for.

What do you call that phenomenon when your dream syncs with real things happening around you?

There are two points to be made about your cat dream. Experiments have been made about intrusions into the dream. For instance an experimenter sprinkled water on the dreamer while in REM, the time when dreaming is taking place for certain. The dreamer, when awake, said that it started to rain in the dream.

Thorough investigation into this intrusion phenomenon has come to the conclusion that such outside stimuli can intrude, but they do not change the preconceived plot of the dream.

Then there is the famous example of Maury (1878) who dreamt that he was arrested by French revolutionaries, tried and finally beheaded on the guillotine. Freud discussed this dream in his book "The Interpretation of Dreams" (page 85 onwards) Because Maury woke up from this dream when the bed-head fell on his neck where the guillotine had impacted, Freud concluded that it was this blow on the neck that had caused the dream. But since the dream was so long and complex, he had great difficulties in explaining how it was possible to tell a story of forty minutes in the time of a short blow to the neck. I won't go into his convolute nonsense and go straight for the jugular vein. In Maury's case there was no doubt that he had started to dream of his ordeal forty minutes before the blow to the neck and when the guillotine struck, the bed-head dropped. The last dreams of the night, just before we wake up, can be as long as twenty to forty minutes. Freud did not know this since dream science only got going in the 1950's, which is 50 years after Freud's book was published. Also he did not believe in the anticipatory power of dreams, as did the ancients of Babylon and Egypt.

I have studied dreams for over 60 years and have found that they anticipate all of our waking life. I call them the blueprints of waking. I have written two books with massive evidence to support my contention.

So what happened in your case seems to be a mixture of what happened to Maury and the sprinkling water experiment. Keep a dream journal and find out that dreams rule your life.

Family planning and planned parenthood, and as Nandan Choksi pointed out, it includes everything from the timing and means of conception to how to avoid it until then. When the terms are hijacked for political or religious aims and narrowed to be synonymous with contraception or abortion, the connotation is generally a negative one. But for many people, the connotation is one of taking responsibility for one's family - by making sure that the parent(s) are prepared physically, mentally, emotionally, and financially to BE parents, rather than relying on the notion that any pregnancy will be a happy little accident whenever it happens. (It still could be - best laid plans often go awry.)

To answer your question we first have to have the same understanding of what patriarchy is. According to definition: “Patriarchy is a system in which men hold primary power and predominate in roles of political leadership, moral authority, social privilege and control of property.”Contrary to some people’s belief, patriarchy isn’t about an individual’s sexism or lack thereof, nor is it a new expression made up by feminist or female gender theorists, but a very old one.We see it referenced by Aristolte, who “portrayed women as morally, intellectually, and physically inferior to men; saw women as the property of men; claimed that women's role in society was to reproduce and to serve men in the household; and saw male domination of women as natural and virtuous.”Which means that would make the term about 2300 years older than feminism or female gender theories and still reflects what patriarchy is defined as today. Of course as any term it has evolved in meaning and scope, but the roots are still there.Now to answer who is responsible, we would need to know how patriarchy was caused: There are two prevalent theories, which I will massively oversimplify, because I have no wish to write several 100 pages of content about this subject.One is that patriarchy arose from the opression of women. And yes one could argue that this is putting more than 50% of the blame in the man’s lap, but it’s actually more nuanced than that. (if someone wants to read up on it: Lerner, Gerda (1986). The Creation of Patriarchy. Women and History. Oxford University Press. pp. 8–11. ISBN 978-0195039962.) I don’t subscribe to that notion.And the other is that patriarchy has come to life by biological differences between men an women. So originally no one was to blame, as the differences led to a social construct of gender roles. With the advent of birth control and other huge changes these gender roles have been challenged for many years now thus the inherent sexism within the system (that has formerly been seen as “normal”) is now challenged too.So who is now in our day and age to blame for patriarchy? My answer would be, all the people who are still clinging to overcome gender roles, (like: all women must be nurturing, no men can show feelings, etc.) that put men and women at a disadvantage and don’t want the system to change. And I honestly don’t know how many of them are women and how many are men.

I will try and answer this without being too techy…!A compressor’s performance map can be characterised by a plot of pressure ratio (on the vertical axis) against non-dimensional mass flow (on the horizontal axis). Superimposed on this, is a contour plot of the compressor efficiency. See for example this link here:Compressor map - WikipediaAs the compressor speeds up, both pressure ratio and mass flow increase up what is know as the working line. This working line can be shifted up or down by modifying a rear throttle area (which in a gas turbine engine is the area of the turbine driving the compressor). The working line position is usually set so that it passes through, or near the peak efficiency of the compressor, for obvious reasons.Above the working line is another line called the surge line. At, or above this line the flow in the compressor will break down and ultimately reverse - i.e. the flow flows the wrong way through the compressor, and will in fact spew out of the front of the engine in a ball of flames! This is a so-called surge event. It is dramatic when it happens on an aircraft, but usually the engine quickly recovers. The whole event happens in a fraction of a second. See this Boeing training video for example:The engine is designed such that the working line should have a healthy margin to the surge line (the so-called surge margin), so that the engine should never surge in normal operation. However, sometimes things go wrong, something may fail mechanically or the engine deteriorates faster than expected and a surge event will occur. Usually the engine recovers quickly, and then will be sent for overhaul where it is easily rectified.Modern axial compressors have various devices incorporated into their design to keep the working line well clear of the surge line, such as bleeds (which remove part of the flow from the compressor), and variable vanes which can mechanically alter the incidence of the vanes to the approaching flow. These are standard devices on modern high pressure ratio axial compressors.Hope this gives you a favour, without writing a thesis!

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