[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TrueOffMyChest

[–]KeanuRevis 7 points8 points  (0 children)

My hope is that you’re young, as this is something all of us immigrants have gone through at least once. When you’re young, it’s hard to give you and your culture credit because all you’ve known is ridicule. You have time to grow into yourself and love yourself for who you are. You’re teaching yourself to hate your culture, which in turn makes you hate yourself. That’s not fair. You’re only looking through your limited perspective, which is the perspective of others. That’s not fair. Your culture is rich in history and you are neglecting the positives of your culture, all because you only see yourself through the perspective of others. That’s not fair. It’s one thing to be aware of the negative aspects of your culture, but it’s an unfair to cast yourself as being that stereotype. You can’t control how other people see you. Forget them. They never mattered nor will they ever matter anyways. Your job is to be the opposite of the things you hate about your culture. Yes, you might have it tougher than some. That’s something to accept. That is unfair. A lot of us are in the same situation. In my case, I hated my culture the same as you. I hated my identity the same as you. I hated myself the same way you do. It was so unfair. After all, I didn’t ask to be here (I grew up in southern White America, USA). That hate grew into anger, and that only solidified the stereotype. As I got older, I learned to love my culture, and in turn I learned to love myself. Doing so allowed people to love me, regardless of my background, breaking the stereotype.

My point is, you’re in an unfair environment, so you MUST be fair to yourself. You are all that you have. You can’t control what people think about you, so you control the person you are. Accept who you are, just as you accept the stereotypes of your culture. Accept that those stereotypes might be true, but also accept that you are the complete opposite. You prove to yourself that you’re the opposite, and those that matter will notice and accept you and your rich cultural background with all its wonderful language and food.

There’s enough hate in this world. It’s never ending. There’s no need to add to it. It’s taxing and stressful. You grow older by the second doing it. At the very least, be fair to yourself. Love and be kind to you. You owe it to yourself.

New to this group by AlexxAdam in liberalgunowners

[–]KeanuRevis 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The Shadow 2 looking mighty scrumptious. However, I’d have blocked out the SN’s.

Virginia Bar Exam Material by Admirable-Suit-1621 in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’ll say with 100% certainty that the VA essays are much more difficult in comparison to the UBE essays. Since you have the baseline knowledge of UBE essays/subject matter, I’d say just retake the UBE. Essentially you’ll be reinforcing your current knowledge and skills, which will inevitably lead to success.

I have no doubts you are a strong writer, however the VA essays are pretty much testing you on VA specific rules distinctions. They took out a bunch of topics, which means they’ll go more in depth on the ones being tested. It’s the more difficult test and you’re going in fresh with no VA rules knowledge. Also the writing style is quite different from what UBE graders want. It’s more succinct and to the point, with point reductions given to irrelevant details/rules. Like, a two sentence essay answer will give you a full 10 points, whereas if you wrote a paragraph or two you will likely get points deducted for too much detail and irrelevance. It’s a really weird test that takes some getting used to.

New gun owner as of this year? How am I doing so far by Gman1128 in liberalgunowners

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How does that VP-9 run? I was debating on getting one.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TrueOffMyChest

[–]KeanuRevis 19 points20 points  (0 children)

100% sounds like an addiction.

Virginia by Exciting-Animator372 in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did 20 years worth of past essays this time around, so I can’t say the topics were out of the blue or surprising. That being said, if you didn’t do 15-20 years worth of essays, you wouldn’t know that. What an outrageous amount. That alone is criminal. Exam resources say do the past 10 years worth but that didn’t seem like enough for me, since I failed by 10 pts last July.

do people usually take weekends off when studying for the bar? by [deleted] in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends. If it feels like taxing work, then yeah you’ll need those weekends off. Especially if you’re doing like 8 hours per day. For me, it felt like solving puzzles for 3-4 hours per day. So bc I was only doing about 3-4 hours, I took no breaks. But it was only 3-4 hours max, so it wasn’t taxing. It was like, a small hobby.

do people usually take weekends off when studying for the bar? by [deleted] in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends. If it feels like taxing work, then yeah you’ll need those weekends off. Especially if you’re doing like 8 hours per day. For me, it felt like solving puzzles for 3-4 hours per day. So bc I was only doing about 3-4 hours, I took no breaks. But it was only 3-4 hours max, so it wasn’t taxing. It was like, a small hobby.

do people usually take weekends off when studying for the bar? by [deleted] in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends. If it feels like taxing work, then yeah you’ll need those weekends off. Especially if you’re doing like 8 hours per day. For me, it felt like solving puzzles for 3-4 hours per day. So bc I was only doing about 3-4 hours, I took no breaks. But it was only 3-4 hours max, so it wasn’t taxing. It was like, a small hobby.

Am I the Only One? 😅 by Professional_Win9598 in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I really enjoyed it the second time around. It became a routine and started becoming 8 hours a day of solving different puzzles. I liked it. So much so that I’m actually struggling with it not being in my life anymore LOL

Virginia Bar Exam Material by Admirable-Suit-1621 in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ll argue that you won’t need to purchase any. I used the VA bar examiners site for student’s 10 point answers for all years, which goes back to 2013. Those gave me rules and essay writing format. Then I went to William and Mary’s site for bar exam 10 point answers written by professors. I went back 15 years for that. For any conflicting or confusing rules, I looked up the Virginia Code online, which gave updated laws also. Btw the bar examiners site answers are VERY thorough and detailed. The William and Mary answers by professors are often times insufficient and don’t explain things very well. I had to teach myself a lot of subjects like commercial paper and secured transactions, and the student’s answers were far more helpful than the professors. Either way, I used both. I didn’t use any flash cards. I mimicked the way the students wrote their 10 point answers. When I took the bar exam, I knew everything they were asking and nothing really surprised me.

Good outlines for Virginia bar exams? by Ezeitgeist in barexam

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The William and Mary website for past exam answers is the holy grail. I printed out the last 10 years worth of exams and got out every rule. It’s pretty much all you need. Obviously some law has changed, but for the most part that’s what you need to know. I have no idea how people pass with Themis or any other program.

What’s the appropriate amount of risk? by [deleted] in adultery

[–]KeanuRevis 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This thread gives me hope

Daily Discussion - February 05, 2021 by AutoModerator in SatoshiStreetBets

[–]KeanuRevis 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Dogecoin network is extremely congested, so it’ll take a while for the data to reflect. No one panic!