Includes unlimited streaming via the free Bandcamp app, plus high-quality downloads of City Mountains, Dancing In The Summer, Yes Sir!, CRUSH, Grungy Bungee, FEELALONE (feat. AK4RI), Dream Punk, OOPS, and 6 more. , and , . Purchasable with gift card Buy Digital Discography $30.06 USD or more (35% OFF) Send as Gift lyrics Tell me do you feel alrightI just wanna have some conversationAnd can I get some more of your timeCause I just wanna have, relationsTell me what is it that you wantCause I'm tired of running around in circlesI just want some of your timeCause I wanted to let you know thatYou are very specialLa la laLa la laLa la laLa la laLa la laLa la laDo you really wanna have that conversationCause I've been really running out of timeDo you really wanna haveHave that conversation $(".lyricsText").last().bcTruncate(TruncateProfile.get("tralbum_long"), "more", "less"); credits released November 30, 2021 license all rights reserved tags Tags alternative indie dreampop garage rock post punk post punk. shoegaze Miami Shopping cart total USD Check out about Mr Floyd Larry Miami, Florida
I Just Want
DWAYNE: I had these rules. First I wouldn't sell weed, I just smoke. Then I might sell weed, but I definitely wouldn't sell like hard drugs. Like I wouldn't be selling cocaine, right? And then I knew people who would rob people, but they were just friends of mine. I definitely would never do this, right? And then one day, I'm with like, it was five of us, and I really only knew one of the people. And we in a room talking, and 30 minutes later we in a car driving to Springfield Mall. And I get it, like we intentionally went there to rob somebody. But, even now I'm trying to explain it, it's just not as clean as that. I didn't even know their names you know? And to admit something like that either makes the crime seem worse, or I hope, makes it more obvious how kind of oblivious I was. And how kind of, I got caught up in this wave that ended in prison.
Dwayne: So this is like, it was an understanding of a narrative. And it wasn't just us creating a narrative, and it's just some in-community narrative. It was one that had wide ramifications that drifted into the court and that drifted into politics.
shipping? yeah, we do that. basically after you enter your information at checkout you can pick shipping rates. they are generated directly through ups and usps and automated in our system. so if they looks expensive, blame Obama. (somebody told us that, we didn't know he even worked at the post office, HOW DOES HE FIND THE TIME!!? but somebody told us to do that, so... cannonball). anyway, you are the "choose your own adventure" decider of your shipping rates, and we don't make any money off that, so don't get mad at us when you choose the "$485 hand delivered by virgin handmaidens riding razor scooters down the alps" option. hey, you picked it. we would have just went with regular old first class mail option. If you email us, for $1,000 todd will probably personally deliver, let you stroke his beard, and cook you waffles. He has free time.
They didn't want these powers, this magic, this curse, or whatever it is that was foisted upon them. The responsibility to save the world? Forget it! All those exciting adventures and the ability to potentially do anything? Take them away. They want nothing to do with it.
While this is all well and good, most writers conveniently forget that after such an exciting and exceptional existence, everything else will seem dull and meaningless to most people. Not only are special abilities usually given up, but sometimes also cherished friends. Some people psychologically will be unable to adjust, and most will acquire deep-seated mental issues about the whole process.
This can also include situations where overt powers or the like are not involved, wherein the characters are involved in an exceptional situation. It can also occur when characters, for no particular reason other than that the show is ending or that they're leaving it, have a sudden and usually implausible epiphany that they really want to live a "normal" life. Somehow this almost invariably includes them cutting ties with the entirety of the rest of the characters and locations.
One common subversion is Can't Stay Normal where the character finally becomes normal, but is not able to adjust to it, and longs for their old life back. Or just as they achieve their normality, something happens where they NEED their abilities back, particularly to save the Love Interest. Either may be a 10-Minute Retirement, the former may be a Sequel Hook. If someone is constantly being forced by the plot to do heroic things, when really they want to be left alone, they're Heroic Neutral.
See also Cursed with Awesome, Internalized Categorism, It Sucks to Be the Chosen One, Who Wants to Live Forever?, Refreshingly Normal Life-Choice and Refusal of the Call. Contrast Jumped at the Call, where wanting to be normal never even occurs to the hero and Keeping the Handicap, where the character chooses to stay disabled (or similar) even if they could feasibly cure it. Naturally, the opposite of this trope is I Just Want to Be Special. See also Blessed with Suck, when the hero has every reason to want to be normal.Related to I Just Want to Have Friends when the character wishes to be normal to develop relationships. Also related to Give Him a Normal Life, when they leap at the chance to arrange this for their offspring.
Ten children said parental support facilitated their participation. Despite not wanting to volunteer initially, some children participated because they knew their parents wanted them to. One girl explained:
In some cases, you may want to consider medication. There are situational causes like loss or grief and there are clinical causes from hormonal or physical and combinations of both, all of these are treatable and things can get better with help.
There may be setbacks occasionally and that is ok because you can always get back on the path and find your way back to where you want to be. Trust your body. You know yourself better than anyone else. Pay attention to the messages your body sends you and share with your care providers. Food and exercise can make a difference.
Tell students they will be examining ways to make decisions in this lesson. Display four or five pieces of candy to the class. Ask how many would like to have a piece of candy. You should see more hands than available pieces. Explain that you would like to give them the candy, but there is a problem: the candy supply is limited and cannot be given to all students. Tell them that it is a common problem in society; people want more than is available so decisions must be made about how to allocate resources, goods and services. Remind them that allocate means to distribute or give out shares of a total amount. Ask students if they can help you brainstorm a few different ways to allocate the limited pieces of candy in the classroom. Record their ideas on the board. After discussing a few suggestions, tell students that you will make a decision about how to allocate the candy at the end of the lesson.Explain that every society needs a system for allocating resources, and that different economic systems approach the problem differently. But, regardless of the system used, there is never enough to satisfy everyone because resources are limited and wants are unlimited. Because resources are limited, the goods and services they are used to produce are also limited. Remind students that economies have various rules about allocating resources, and those rules determine the type of competition that takes place in those economies.
Distribute copies of the First Come, First Serve Allocation Game. Explain the rules of the game to students as shown on the handout. Have students complete their times for starting to wait and collect their answers. Determine the winners using the formula on the handout and announce the winners. (Note: you may want to have a prize for the top ten.) If there is a tie for the 10th winning place, give all those who arrived at the same time $100 as part of their score also. To reduce the probability of ties, allow the students to state their arrival times down in quarters of hours (3:00 a.m. or 3:15 a.m., for example). Of course, it is important for students to choose their arrival time independently, so that no student knows what another student is doing. 2ff7e9595c
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