InVOLuntary
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- Nov 11, 2012
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What i've learned today:
Venables will not be able to run his fancy disguise defenses because we go so fast. They will have to be in base defense and quickly decide what they want to stop. . . always leaving something open for us. They can't keep any success from that up for long.
Our defense will keep their offense on the sideline, watching as the life drains out of their defense. We'll start lighting them up about midway through the 2nd quarter and from about 10mins into the 3rd quarter. Our RBs are gonna have a huge day and our wrs should have several big plays.
All this is without considering what Nico is going to do to them with his legs, the new play variations, and what we will do to them before we wear them down.
They don't stand a chance.
I am scared of heights. Not so much in a plane though. It's surreal, like I'm not really off the ground.A little bit of heights, more of flying. Just feels wrong being 35,000 feet in the air and going 500MPH. Like it might shake apart.
That's my dad. He HATES heights -- when I was in grad school in CO I took him to the Royal Gorge in Canon City and we walked the suspension bridge and I thought he'd faint. But planes don't bother him a bit. For me it's the opposite. Heights I can deal with to a point (I don't like being right up on the edge of a high place but I don't have a problem with tall buildings or anything), but planes make me feel incredibly unsafe.I am scared of heights. Not so much in a plane though. It's surreal, like I'm not really off the ground.
I always thought it was wild how slow it looks like you're going when you're that high, compared to the same speed close to the ground.
I get anxious in a skyscraper, even if there are no windows visible. It's weird. I'm not really scared like I think something bad will happen. I just get really dizzy feeling and shaky legs, jittery hands, etc. It's weird because I'm not scared in my mind, but my body is. Hard to explain if it doesn't happen to you.That's my dad. He HATES heights -- when I was in grad school in CO I took him to the Royal Gorge in Canon City and we walked the suspension bridge and I thought he'd faint. But planes don't bother him a bit. For me it's the opposite. Heights I can deal with to a point (I don't like being right up on the edge of a high place but I don't have a problem with tall buildings or anything), but planes make me feel incredibly unsafe.
Anxiety is no joke. You know it doesn't make sense, but you can't control it.I get anxious in a skyscraper, even if there are not windows visible. It's weird. I'm not really scared like I think something bad will happen. I just get really dizzy feeling and shaky legs, jittery hands, etc. It's weird because I'm not scared in my mind, but my body is. Hard to explain if it doesn't happen to you.
That's me with planes. I know logically that I'm safer there than on the ground by orders of magnitude. I may feel in control in my car, I may even be in control, but I'm not control of the hundreds or thousands of other cars I will pass that could cause a catastrophe in an instant. But it isn't about what I know -- it's about what I feel. That part I've had to work on training, and not with total success.Anxiety is no joke. You know it doesn't make sense, but you can't control it.