01:54
In the sandbox at school, we made holes filled with 'soft sand', which was money or gold or something.
We could be the bronze god, the silver god, or the golden god, and you had to do quests for the god to advance.
We also made fake money and tried to con each other out of it using false contracts (e.g. contracts with hidden fold-outs and stuff).
The children would be forced to carve out and carry large rocks, and they would be punished most severely, and there was no food, etc.
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03:01
In the first years of school, we played "knife in the sand" a lot, which was helped by the fact that there was a lot of hard compacted sandy ground in Noyabrsk.
In the simplest form of the game, two players divide a circle into two halves. Each must always stand on his part of the ground at the moment he throws the knife into the sand. If one leaves one's land, he has lost.
You must throw your knife into the opponent's land. If it sticks, good for you -- you could then cut a part along the path of the blade. You then add this part to your land -- provided that you could draw the line without your feet leaving your land.
Then the opponent throws the knife into your land, and thus until one of the players is unable to stand on his land while throwing the knife.
There was a lot of variations to the game, and there was another game with two round "cities" separated by a distance, and each player throwing the knife in the sand in a complex way in order to approach the opponent's city.
If you throw the knife from the position there the knife makes several turns while falling, it's a battle helicopter, for instance.
You draw a battle helicopter. You then are able to stand on this helicopter. You are one step closer to the opponent's city.
03:24
> Memory is malleable," Wixted says. "And because it's malleable, we must avoid repeated identification procedures with the same witness and suspect. medicalxpress.com/news/2021-11-urge-eyewitness-memory.html
> Even if the initial decision is "no, that is not him," the face will seem more familiar on any later test. Often, the witness loses sight of the fact that the face is familiar because of the previous lineup test and comes to believe that the face is familiar because it is in fact the face of the perpetrator (source misattribution).
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09:52
@Cerberus We all thought it was weird too. Or at least the very loud voice in my head speaking for everybody thought so. I wonder what that girl's voice-in-her-head said? Probably the same. Plus "Why are all these other kids that I didn't choose to sit next to, why are they always trying to interrupt?"
@CowperKettle I remember playing a much simpler knife game, which was more like a dare, you just threw the knife closer and closer to the next guy's foot.
1 hour later…
11:12
@Mitch Oh, I read about this game when I tried to found out about knife games in the West. I wondered why there there no safe games, like in Russia, and only such dangerous games.
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Mumblety-peg (also known as mumbley-peg, mumblepeg, mumble-the-peg, mumbledepeg or mumble-de-peg) is an old outdoor game played using pocketknives. The term "mumblety-peg" came from the practice of putting a peg of about 2 or 3 inches into the ground. The loser of the game had to take it out with his teeth.
Mark Twain's book Tom Sawyer, Detective recounts "mumbletypeg" as one of boys' favorite outdoor games.
== Overview ==
Mumblety-peg is generally played between two people, with a pocketknife.
In another common version of the game, two opponents stand opposite one another with their feet shoulder...
@Mitch I have a photo of my uncle in his teens, wearing a long trenchcoat and costume he tailored himself, and with long hair. So so decadent, and like Edgar Allan Poe
11:43
At the age we were playing it, we couldn't have gotten it from reading 'Tom Sawyer' directly, an I don't think it was in the movie produced during my childhood, so I'm guessing it was learned passed on by older boys (who may have read the book or picked it up in Boy Scouts where they play around with knives all day).
@CowperKettle For us it was plastic model airplanes and toy soldiers and the glue used to build them and very small firecrackers. Or at least that's what I saw older kids doing and what I aspired to.
@CowperKettle December is bleak? OMG, for us it is February. December can almost feel like extended fall. With March, even though it is usually as awful as February, at least there's hope.
14:04
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15:41
Hi. I wonder how to write a future conditional in past, it just doesn't feel quite right. Take this sentence: "If I go home tomorrow, I'll see my family". The week after, I want mention that fact again. I think it should be: "I knew If I went home the next day, I'd see my family". Is this correct?
16:40
Fluvoxamine has shown good results in a large (1500 people) covid trial: thelancet.com/journals/langlo/article/PIIS2214-109X(21)00448-4/…
regarding possibility, what I understand is possibility is subjective to some point in paste and somehow I have this feeling that being in future should not change this extent of certainty that I once had..
Let assume I have two different conditionals in my mind one is more certain, I use first conditional another is less possible, I use second conditional for this one.
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