traductor de goolge
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Hello and greetings to everyone in advance. I'm more than motivated by our friend @Emiliorios's invitation to talk to ourselves.
It's true that since adolescence, at least in my time,
one of the resources we were taught to learn something was to talk out loud to ourselves in our room, and if you had a mirror, even better. Even for dancing, they told you to count your steps out loud and look in the mirror, so if it works, it's not a bad tool.
I've always been one of those people who talk out loud, first in childhood—as normal for girls—with my toys, and then in adolescence as a tool to learn the goals I'd set. However, I've increased this in adulthood.
Yes, because over the years I've been doing it more often, but I realize it's not so much to remember what I need to do as to reaffirm that I'm doing well on my to-do list.
I have a strong character and a loose mouth. I always say it. I don't know what goes faster, my thoughts or my words. And I've been working on using talking to myself as my main tool to calm myself down. I tell myself softly, Zoraida. If I'm going up the stairs, I tell myself "Up you can do it," but since I do it out loud, everyone looks at me strangely. However, this small, lively conversation has allowed me to reach great goals, the one I like the most is in the mornings,
I open my eyes, look at the ceiling and there I start a great conversation alone, who said you're tired, come on, don't be lazy, you'll see that if you stand up, the sleepiness will go away jjjj and I'm like that for about 10 minutes and the laugh is that my poor husband always falls, YOU TOLD ME NOT TO LISTEN TO YOU, jjjj, but really talking to myself helps me a lot.
Now, the vast majority of us do it because then we're capable of casting unfavorable judgments on those who are talking to themselves. Regarding all young people, not that I think in their entirety, but I think it's a tool they use very little. Technological
development does most of the brain's work. We all know that our brain is the biggest and best hard drive, as they say, but if we don't develop it, it's as if going out to look for the answer in the same technology, doing copy-and-paste work, adhering to the law of least effort, won't allow them to increase their cognitive development.
Verbal language, and why not body language, is one of the tools we use the most, but not as a learning tool.
Talking to yourself brings spiritual growth and creativity, but it's something that should be reinforced in our adolescents. Laughing at someone who's talking to themselves at the moment doesn't mean they have psychological problems or need help.
Talking to yourself is the ability to give your ideas and your life in general more organization and control, it increases your concentration levels, and it can even help you recover memories while you're walking through them. Talking to yourself is definitely healthy.
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traductor de goolge