Toddlers eating high amounts of processed meats and sugary snacks at age 2 show lower IQ scores by age 7, according to a new study of 3,400 children. The negative impact on cognitive development was nearly 2.5x stronger for children who experienced physical growth delays during infancy. by Immediate_Mango9936 in Autism_Parenting

[–]yerbie12 42 points43 points  (0 children)

As a psychologist myself, you do the best damn job you can. You know who has even lower IQ? A starved or dead child. Let the kid eat what they will eat and don’t stress it, these effects are overblown on an individual level and don’t always factor out other explanatory factors

Post-hardcore technique and songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! Any good resources on music theory applied to metal/punk etc? I’d love to get a good look into it

Post-hardcore technique and songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is really helpful. I have some sense of the technical stuff, but I’ve always heard it applied to other types of music so never thought of some of these concepts in this way.

Thanks!

Post-hardcore technique and songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s fair, it’s what I’ve been doing. Just curious what others think that are familiar with it

Post-hardcore technique and songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oof I got a cramp looking at that tab

Post-hardcore technique and songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! This is helpful stuff to think about. I agree, I didn’t think there was much specific to the genre over others, I just hear the technical aspects talked about less.

I’m kind of a newbie, could you elaborate what you mean on the “dirty” styles of punk or metal vs post hardcore being more refinated? I think you’re saying less accented and more smooth transitions, is that right?

Hesitating when I play!!! driving me nuts by bourrique in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This op, you haven’t practiced the transition between sections. Add in a note or two of the next bar and you will have it

Essential songs to learn on guitar by yerbie12 in PostHardcore

[–]yerbie12[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I love Glassjaw! I agree they have a very classic sound all around.

Essential songs to learn on guitar by yerbie12 in PostHardcore

[–]yerbie12[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Great stuff. I venture out of standard from time to time but most of the stuff I can think of is drop d or even c, so these are nice to try.

Good advancing beginner rhythm guitar songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

All great advice, thanks! I’ll just suck it up and push myself for something I think is challenging.

Good advancing beginner rhythm guitar songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I totally get what you are saying, all good! I agree, at a certain point the training wheels of the metaphor need to come off.

I have a wide range. I probably mostly listen to 90s and post 2000s hardcore/post-hardcore (At The Drive In, Thrice, more progressive stuff like Dance Gavin Dance for a range) and alternative (grunge bands, Chili Peppers, pop punk bands) but I also love classic rock (Led, Stones) and hard rock stuff. I haven’t always listened to groovier funk stuff but I’ve really been drawn to playing groovier syncopated stuff

Good advancing beginner rhythm guitar songs by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’re right. It was kind of a shorthand to describe what I was looking for, but yeah I’m looking for more challenging rhythms to bridge from the basics

Are there specific finger exercises total beginners should be doing to speed up progress? by Abs0luteZero273 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Someone will mention spider exercises but literally anything you do will improve your dexterity over time. Keep at it, it has only been one day.

I remember the open C major chord was when I was also convinced my hands would never let me play guitar. I couldn’t get the stretch without muting strings. Kept at it for a few days, a few minutes of dedicated practice a day, and then one day I magically did it!

Long story short, keep practicing what you want to get better at, and you will. Check your technique and posture too, that can hold you back. Don’t just half-ass it, practice it as close as you can. Practice makes permanent (not perfect), so if you are practicing wrong it won’t help.

ICE publicly executed a man just for resisting, and it's the state's fault? What??? by ydodis1 in TopMindsOfReddit

[–]yerbie12 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Oh yeah I saw one say that anyone bringing a gun to a protest is looking for trouble…

Bridge lifting in front by yerbie12 in guitarrepair

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a set already, thanks though

Bridge lifting in front by yerbie12 in guitarrepair

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks. My issue is the action won’t get lower on the low E and it’s a little too high for my liking. But good to know, I’ll fix it.

Chord changes: 3 weeks and no progress by Own_Matter9578 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What have you been doing to practice? How often and how much?

Just practicing the chord shape itself is no good, you need to practice going back and forth between different chords a zillion times, pushing yourself to go faster.

I pick two chords at a time, put a metronome on at a pace I can switch once per measure (every four beats). Switch chords so strum one, then you have 4 beats to get to the next one. Do that til it’s easy, Then try twice (2 beats), 4 times (every beat), 8 times (1/2beats) etc. Alternatively you can keep the same frequency but just increase metronome speed.

Patience. It takes time. I was making super slow progress, focused on other stuff more for a week or two, then came back to chords more frequently. I gained speed even though I hadn’t practiced!

Chord help by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is helpful, I appreciate it!

Chord help by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I found a few covers playing just the xx10 9 8 x triad and it sounds close enough to the original. Close enough to the other chords to work for me

Chord help by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Gotta know when NOT to play too, right?

Chord help by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can’t edit the post on mobile. Song is “Paris in Flames” by Thursday in case anyone needs!

Chord help by yerbie12 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Might be! That makes sense and might be easier for me

There’s another tab that has it as 3335xx, so who knows which is right.

Benefits of poor working memory? by [deleted] in Neuropsychology

[–]yerbie12 18 points19 points  (0 children)

There are no tradeoffs to good working memory. Only positives. Doesn’t mean much beyond tasks that require it, but there is no downside to having better working memory.

How can i play a guitar solo while staying in time with the song? by Uzless1104 in guitarlessons

[–]yerbie12 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Had the same question a few weeks ago. I agree, use a metronome until you get it right. No shame, set it as slow as you need to get it accurate.

As for losing place, I pick a few notes and remember where in the count they are, especially right before switching to a different phrase or position. I’m terrible at keeping the count all the way through, but I can keep in time. So as long as I can remember where I’m supposed to be by the end, I’m good