My heartcase hurts.
HAMILTON GIVEAWAY
What’s up for grabs-
-Hamilton Playbill signed by Daveed Diggs, Renée Elise Goldsberry, Christopher Jackson, Jasmine Cephas Jones, Leslie Odom Jr., Okieriete Onaodowan, Anthony Ramos, Phillipa Soo, and Jon Rua.
-One dollar bill signed by Christopher Jackson
-Two dollar bill signed by Daveed DiggsHow it works-
Keep reblogging this until January 20th. On that day, I’ll choose the first winner who can choose one of the three prizes. After that winner gets back to me, I’ll message a second winner who can choose between the second two prizes. Then a third winner may get the one left.
Rules-
-Reblogs count as entries
-Multiple reblogs are cool
-If you spam, I promise I won’t pick you
-No giveaway blogs please
-Just followers please
-US only (tickets were expensive!)
-Winners have exactly 24 hours to respond
-Obviously you have to be willing to give your addressPlease !!!!! (Think James Madison’s in the election of 1800 :P)
27th of halloween
litttletom
litttletom
pinerd-of-the-hephaestus-cabin:
I love this okay it’s frickin accurate
probably about time for me to marathon the movies again…
20th of halloween
litttletom
For more posts like these, go psych2go. For our mission page, go here.
The second one is VERY important; *** being ostracized is more mentally damaging than being bullied. ***
Don’t know how many ways I can say this; being told “go away”, ignored completely when you speak, being chosen last for teams all say “you are worthless to us”
Kids think they are being nicer by not picking on someone that annoys them, and they are right. However, at least when a child is being picked on, however horribly, it means their existence has been noticed and has caused a reaction.
The cool kids hate it when the teachers pick the teams or assign students to work together in group. The ostracized kids are always relieved (of course by this point many would rather work alone after years of being rebuffed).
We need to teach our children not only to not bully and belittle, but to also be inclusive; to respond in some sort of non-negative way to kids they would rather ignore. It’s not easy, but being told by a peer that they are worthy of positive notice could improve - and maybe even save - a life.
This is important.
How does one tell a doctor that they feel absolutely miserable and hate everything about themselves without sounding completely whiny? Asking for a friend…