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Handy though, for ease of descent from my ivory towers. The Child of the Dragon will find each Day of the Moon , to his benefit or his caution, depending on his native view. π
Yes, the silly metal stuff varies value every time a President sneezes. I've been out scrolling. And I find I'm puzzled, or maybe not. Many posts refer to problems. I'm unsure of how to put this, but such a word should be faded out from one's vocabulary. The use of such words implies a person is beaten down before attempting to rise. 'No problems mate.' means just that. A bush outlook, that only challenges exist. Problems are for those who can't hack it.
Turn one's view around, and difficulties, thistles, rocky surface, hard gradient, thick wait-a-while, all become challenges. 'No problems mate!' π
A VERY good and valid viewpoint, Simon, another one I'd like to eliminate from our language is the word "try" When people try, they allow themselves the possibility of failing, and a get out of jail free card for not putting in their best efforts...as Yoda says in one of the Star Wars films..."Do or do not do...there is NO try"π
Well one things for sure....as a dragon you will have no need of a flying carpet then!!! πππ
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Handy though, for ease of descent from my ivory towers. The Child of the Dragon will find each Day of the Moon , to his benefit or his caution, depending on his native view. π
Two sides to every tale (tail) especially if one has a dragon's scale!!
Bet the treasure trove of gold comes in mighty handy too!
I refer, of course, to the INNER treasure, not the silly metal stuff π΅ππ
Yes, the silly metal stuff varies value every time a President sneezes. I've been out scrolling. And I find I'm puzzled, or maybe not. Many posts refer to problems. I'm unsure of how to put this, but such a word should be faded out from one's vocabulary. The use of such words implies a person is beaten down before attempting to rise. 'No problems mate.' means just that. A bush outlook, that only challenges exist. Problems are for those who can't hack it.
Turn one's view around, and difficulties, thistles, rocky surface, hard gradient, thick wait-a-while, all become challenges. 'No problems mate!' π
A VERY good and valid viewpoint, Simon, another one I'd like to eliminate from our language is the word "try" When people try, they allow themselves the possibility of failing, and a get out of jail free card for not putting in their best efforts...as Yoda says in one of the Star Wars films..."Do or do not do...there is NO try"π
Very true. Keep on keeping on. π