All seriousness aside.... 6:44 Resignation: "The engine is running rough.... Now it's on fire.... Oh well...." 😂 Now that being said, a certain amount of resignation can also be beneficial in emergency or stressful conditions. Many people have a tendency to panic, which can lead to a cascading effect, compounding the situation either perceptively or actually (if they begin over controlling, "mashing" buttons, becoming "all thumbs," etc.). A certain amount of balance/equilibrium must be achieved in order to make rational decisions and take meaningful action. People who have experienced imminent danger or have "come close to death," will understand this concept well. As a personal example, once while I was surfing, the conditions deteriorated rapidly with the current, swell size and breaking point of the waves. I was caught in an uncontrollable and inescapable situation that likely would have resulted in drowning. The initial panic caused me to try to fight the situation, which led quickly to fatigue (a big no-no in rough, open water, hundreds of meters from shore). Until I was able to force myself to resign to the situation, lay back, float and wait for a more opportune moment to save myself, I was only making things worse. The brain has the ability to manipulate time perception in these moments, slowing everything down, helping you focus and reason, when focus and reason to someone looking in from the outside, seem impossible. You should never fight this natural process of slowing down or resigning, since it could save your life. Cheers!
This is so helpful as a student preparing for their PAR exam. Thank you so much Cyndy!!
So many negative comments. I thought it was informative and got the point across well. Thanks for uploading.
Great video, thanks for making the learning process enjoyable
Thank you, very helpful.
Thanks for uploading this!
All seriousness aside.... 6:44 Resignation: "The engine is running rough.... Now it's on fire.... Oh well...." 😂 Now that being said, a certain amount of resignation can also be beneficial in emergency or stressful conditions. Many people have a tendency to panic, which can lead to a cascading effect, compounding the situation either perceptively or actually (if they begin over controlling, "mashing" buttons, becoming "all thumbs," etc.). A certain amount of balance/equilibrium must be achieved in order to make rational decisions and take meaningful action. People who have experienced imminent danger or have "come close to death," will understand this concept well. As a personal example, once while I was surfing, the conditions deteriorated rapidly with the current, swell size and breaking point of the waves. I was caught in an uncontrollable and inescapable situation that likely would have resulted in drowning. The initial panic caused me to try to fight the situation, which led quickly to fatigue (a big no-no in rough, open water, hundreds of meters from shore). Until I was able to force myself to resign to the situation, lay back, float and wait for a more opportune moment to save myself, I was only making things worse. The brain has the ability to manipulate time perception in these moments, slowing everything down, helping you focus and reason, when focus and reason to someone looking in from the outside, seem impossible. You should never fight this natural process of slowing down or resigning, since it could save your life. Cheers!
Thank you for the upload
thank you! great video
the first e in the decide model actually stands for estimate.
The videos a little boring, it’s hard to hear you clearly and the video quality sucks. Just some criticism
Who cares, long as the information reached ur big ass head