the irony. Don’t mourn any change of decision here.
“Stay away from what might have been and look at what will be.” ~Marsha Petrie Sue
a structured approach to help you think through problems and solutions in a logical way. There are six basic steps
Define the problem. Figure out what is causing the problem and how it’s causing problems.
Set goals. Decide what you want your solution to address. It’s important that your goals are realistic and concrete.
Think of solutions. Brainstorm possible solutions. You can also ask friends or loved ones for ideas.
Look at the pros and cons. Pick a few possible solutions that you think might work best, and consider the positives and negatives of your choices.
Pick a solution. Remember, it should describe who does what and what you want to achieve.
Evaluate the results. After you put your plan into action, see if it worked as expected. If it didn’t work, see if your solution needs to be modified or if you need to try a different approach.
You may find that getting a tattoo with ‘tsuyoku naritai’ isn’t your solution.
mate thank your for your help, I hope interpals would work out there for me, The thing is I don’t want to go meta on this, it’s just a reminder for myself and that’s it, it wasn’t designed as a solution for something else
I want to have ‘tsuyoku naritai’ tattoo and wondering how it should be written properly on hieroglyphic
the irony. Don’t mourn any change of decision here.
a structured approach to help you think through problems and solutions in a logical way. There are six basic steps
You may find that getting a tattoo with ‘tsuyoku naritai’ isn’t your solution.
Your response is rather cryptic. What does that content have to do with LizzardWizzard wanting to get a tattoo with a classic Less Wrong phrase on it?
I promise to take care of my rationality skills when the work is done
mate thank your for your help, I hope interpals would work out there for me, The thing is I don’t want to go meta on this, it’s just a reminder for myself and that’s it, it wasn’t designed as a solution for something else
Japanese ideograms are not the same as ‘hieroglyphics,’ but here is your sentence:
強くなりたい
Thank You! You are my hero, tho I’m not your princess
oops seems like I misclicked, this was off course a reply to Clarity