Average Lumifer is most definitely not a good model of average person. Does “one weird trick” promotes improvement? I don’t know, but I do know that your gut reaction is not a good model for the answer.
Average Lumifer is most definitely not a good model of average person
Oh, boy, am I not :-D
I do know some “more average” people, though, and they don’t seem to be that easily taken by cheap tricks, at least after the first dozen times :-/ And as OrphanWilde pointed out, the aim of clickbait is not to convince you of anything, it is solely to generate the ad impressions.
I would surprised if “one weird trick” diets promoted any improvement, in part because most any diet requires some willpower and the willingness to stick with it for a while—and the weird tricks are firmly aimed at people who have, on a good day, the attention span of a goldfish...
Beware of other-modeling!
Average Lumifer is most definitely not a good model of average person. Does “one weird trick” promotes improvement? I don’t know, but I do know that your gut reaction is not a good model for the answer.
Oh, boy, am I not :-D
I do know some “more average” people, though, and they don’t seem to be that easily taken by cheap tricks, at least after the first dozen times :-/ And as OrphanWilde pointed out, the aim of clickbait is not to convince you of anything, it is solely to generate the ad impressions.
I would surprised if “one weird trick” diets promoted any improvement, in part because most any diet requires some willpower and the willingness to stick with it for a while—and the weird tricks are firmly aimed at people who have, on a good day, the attention span of a goldfish...