You're pure magic. My kind of magic. 💕
Awww... your sweetness abounds. giggles, feels all warm and tingly
Yes, that was the way people could remember stuff. Rhyme is in essence a mnemotechnic resource.
Of course, that's why you'd know this. 🤦♀️
NFT games are a mystery to me. I started playing splinterlands because it looks sorta fun. I like card games.
That was helpful for me. I've never tried splinterlands, so that's why I have no clue at all. 😂😂😂
Send more charm in electronic frequencies
On the contrary, I know it because I have read a lot. The thing about rhyme is just some interesting trivia about it. 😛
Ha, ha, ha. I can't know it all. I wish.
feels harmonized by the charm of poetic frequencies pulsing in electronic energy forms of fantastic beauty
Yes, I can tell you're well read. Aren't books the best? I've not come across that, so more learning, yum.
There's no way to know it all, already tried, failed miserably.
Sends more poetry in senses. It goes with the wind, light, temperature and all the sorts of things one can feel on the skin
They are. I have a lot and still haven't read them all. But books are my Dragon's Hoard I always need more.
I don't mind failing. That's the beauty of trying something new.
Feels the poetic sensations caress skin with wind, light, and temperature, begins to hum with the vibration
I know that feeling. You'd probably like some of the ones I have on wood, trees, and art, plus some others I won't list here.
I agree. I like mistakes. I find that teaches me more than other methods. I'm relearning something at the moment that I didn't think I'd do again. It's a very strange experience. Familiar, yet not familiar at the same time. I have to go back and remember....like a rusted motor that needs to be cleaned and oiled. 🤣
Writes a haiku to commemorate the beauty of the words.
All verses
instantly revealed-
nature's breath.
Sounds like some good reading. And yes, I'd love to get a better botanical understanding of wood. Also, the technical parts of woodworking as well. I know a little because I have binged too many YouTube videos. However, a book has more details.
Reminds me of the experience of going back to work with my hands. I used to do a lot of intellectual work. I like it, but it's taxing on the body. I got back into using my hands with origami, then cooking, woodworking came along and now I know that this notion I had about myself being too clumsy to do any crafts was a myth. But I'm still clumsy and get some cuts from time to time. It's just part of the learning process. I don't teach, but I use what I learned to teach myself.
That's lovely.
feels the warmth at the special effort of a haiku that touches a personal soft spot of affection and returns the affection
Best way to get an understanding of it is to study trees directly and if possible get a small piece of wood of whatever trees you want to study. Then just cut into it, see how it responds to different ways of cutting and working. Play around that way. You'll get the best understanding of it's nature by doing that for each type. This is what I've done. It doesn't take long, especially if you have other woods to use as comparison for differences in personalities. I prefer books to videos for a few reasons, but direct experience beats both of those.
Origami too? You are quite something special there. Being in "the mind" is very draining. I find working with one's hands to be a cleansing, wholesome experience and becomes meditative. I always feel good after a day of working like that. The intellectual or work like that I find draining and it takes away rather than adds.
I can't really picture you and clumsy hands together as one thing. Doesn't fit at all.
I'm always doing some little thing to myself here or there. It's due to lack of attention, not caring to pay attention, or a very strong distraction. I frankly don't care and don't even see it as clumsy, just as something that occurs and reminds me to pay more attention.
Gets encircled by warm affection
Glad you liked it!
So I've been told. I have my basic understanding of the ones I have used to make instruments so far. There are some really tough to work out. And there's no other way to learn about their differences and plasticity than having them in your hands. I would go to a place where I could cut trees and that, but there aren't many safe places I can go I do that.
Yes, another quarantine-learned skill. It is an interesting and relaxing thing to do. And yes, doing to much mental work is draining. That's why people with heavy loads of it tend to go and get a physical activity to compensate and relax their tired walnut.
I guess it's like you say a lack of attention rather than clumsiness. But I get the idea being clumsy is not paying enough attention to the things you do. Maybe it's not like that at all. 😅