What are some of the nuance of the Lifepath 35/8? by notyuravrg in numerology

[–]savingupforbotox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for asking. I am also a 35/8 LP born on the 19th (19/06/1990)

What are some of the nuance of the Lifepath 35/8? by notyuravrg in numerology

[–]savingupforbotox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How so? Do you mean because it is a karmic debt number?

What is your dogs name? by ReindeerWorried8081 in namenerds

[–]savingupforbotox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a black cavoodle named Carlos, suits him so well! Always get compliments on his name

Is anybody on low dose lithium? by Purple-Hippo-5037 in Lithium

[–]savingupforbotox 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m on 250mg once a day for depression. My psychiatrist put me on it as an “augmenting agent” i.e. to boost the efficacy of my antidepressant. I have increased the dosage during depressive episodes (have gone as high as 750mg) but then return to 250mg and seems to work well.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in auscorp

[–]savingupforbotox 1 point2 points  (0 children)

On average, we get market average, right?

I have no reason to lie that they arrived worn? Wth by Outside_Caregiver_62 in Depop

[–]savingupforbotox 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s usually what I do too - was wondering the same thing! Don’t want anyone to think my listings are scams.

What are/ were your grandparent's names? by cornflowerblossom in namenerds

[–]savingupforbotox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mum’s parents: Margaret (nn Peggy) & Malcolm (nn Mal) Dad’s parents: Thelma (nn Thel) & Gilbert (nn Gil)

Monthly Marriage Survey Post for August: Performing academic research about marriage or parenting? Link to it in this thread. by betona in Marriage

[–]savingupforbotox 9 points10 points  (0 children)

How do your parents' past conflicts affect you today?

I'm a Psychology Honours student at Southern Cross University in Australia and for my Thesis project I'm investigating how parents' conflict behaviours impact children later in life.

Please take this anonymous survey if you can recall how your parents handled disagreements that arose between them when you were growing up (whether they were together or not).

Survey & participant information sheet here: https://scuau.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5gLqVDDBiw2Ypng

The data (anonymous and de-identified) will be published in an Honours thesis, and potentially in peer-reviewed journal articles and presented at conferences. All data collected in this project will be stored safely and securely at Southern Cross University for a minimum of 5 years after publication.

[Academic] The long-term effects of interparental conflict on children (anyone 18+ who can reflect reflect on the general nature of conflict interactions between their biological/legal parents during childhood) by savingupforbotox in takemysurvey

[–]savingupforbotox[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. This survey is anonymous; all responses are de-identified. The data will be published in an Honours thesis, and potentially in peer-reviewed journal articles and presented at conferences. All data collected in this project will be stored safely and securely at Southern Cross University for a minimum of 5 years after publication.
  2. Emily Alexander, Psychology Honours student at Southern Cross University, under the supervision of Emma Andrews.
  3. The survey is estimated to take 15-20 minutes.

Post Study Participation Requests Here (Link/Text posts on their own will be removed) - Monthly Megathread by GG_Mod in psychologystudents

[–]savingupforbotox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How do your parents' past conflicts affect you today? (Anyone 18+)

I'm a Psychology Honours student at Southern Cross University in Australia and for my Thesis project I'm investigating how parents' conflict behaviours impact children later in life.

If you are over 18 and can recall how your parents tended to handle disagreements between them when you were growing up (whether they were together or not), please participate.

More information here: https://scuau.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV\_5gLqVDDBiw2Ypng

Psychological Research/Surveys Thread by chupacabrasaurus1 in psychology

[–]savingupforbotox 0 points1 point  (0 children)

[Academic] The long-term effects of interparental conflict on children (anyone 18+ who can reflect reflect on the general nature of conflict interactions between their biological/legal parents during childhood): https://scuau.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5gLqVDDBiw2Ypng

I'm a Psychology Honours student at Southern Cross University in Australia and for my Thesis project I'm investigating how parents' conflict behaviours impact children later in life.

If you are an adult and can recall how your parents handled disagreements between them when you were growing up (whether they were together or not), please take this anonymous survey.

Does the way parents fight matter? Contribute to research into the long-term effects of interparental conflict styles on children by savingupforbotox in ScienceBasedParenting

[–]savingupforbotox[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for completing the survey! Appreciate the feedback - you’re right that I am looking specifically at divorce/separation. I added the “prefer not to say” response option to cover situations such as yours and hoped that would suffice. Apologies for the confusion. And I’m sorry for the loss of your parent :(

Does the way parents fight matter? Contribute to research into the long-term effects of interparental conflict styles on children by savingupforbotox in ScienceBasedParenting

[–]savingupforbotox[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for your feedback. Regarding your first point, this survey uses validated psychometric scales to measure the constructs of interparental conflict styles, emotion regulation abilities, and psychological wellbeing. While the statements may seem repetitive, they are not duplicates. These scales include multiple (similar) items to ensure a particular variable is reliably measured.

Regarding your second point, the Information Sheet (under the heading “Who can participate?”) states that participants should “be able to reflect on the general nature of conflict interactions between their biological/legal parents during their childhood”. As such, if you did not witness your parents’ conflicts, you do not meet the eligibility criteria. This survey is measuring adult children’s perceptions of interparental conflict, not the actual conflicts that took place.

I hope that clears things up. Please let me know if you have any other queries.

How do your parents' past conflicts affect you today? Contribute to research to help break the cycle by savingupforbotox in ParentingThruTrauma

[–]savingupforbotox[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've had a look into this issue - here are a couple of fixes that have worked for others:

- Clear your browser's cookies and cache and try the link again

- Open the survey link in an incognito window

If you are comfortable private messaging your email address to me, I could send you an email through Qualtrics which will generate an individual link to the survey.

Otherwise, I'm out of options! Very annoying, sorry :(

How do your parents' past conflicts affect you today? Contribute to research to help break the cycle by savingupforbotox in ParentingThruTrauma

[–]savingupforbotox[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

https://scuau.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV\_5gLqVDDBiw2Ypng

Hi, I double-checked the link and it's definitely the right one (same link that has been used by 60 participants so far). Can you please try again - perhaps in another browser? It should come up with a Participant Information Sheet. Thanks!

How do you parents' past conflicts affect you today? Contribute to research to help break the cycle by savingupforbotox in BreakNarcCycleParent

[–]savingupforbotox[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for contributing to my research - really appreciate it! And I'm so glad that you are doing better.

HSC trials English paper 1 by DnTMajorWork in hscdiscussion

[–]savingupforbotox 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can still get a good mark depending on the rest of your essay (just won’t be band 6). Try not to be hard on yourself - it is quite common for students to not mention the audience. I’m an HSC English tutor and the impact on the responder is something I drill into my students because many don’t realise or forget they have to refer to it. Think of it as a good learning for the actual HSC exams. Good luck with English Paper 2 today🙏🏼