I'd suggest connecting the ability to swim to what it means on a larger scale: how it contributes to our ability to learn, helps involve us in community settings, and provides a pause and release from stress. They're not things unique to swimming yet its something many individuals have in common, things that help build us up and keep us emotionally and socially healthy. You can choose to directly connect this to a childhood development or keep it to a more vague adulthood idea.
You could also go in a different direction (in my opinion much more boring haha) of the physical ways swimming is beneficial. Its reduced pressure on joints during a swim (low impact), how it increases motor skills, and reduces inflammation, all things which prevent the process of aging.
<span>Marijuana
has many side effects, such as feelings of general relaxation and increased appetite.
The
increased appetite also results in marijuana users feeling the munchies.
</span>
Answer:
She would act rudely but talk about how important it is to be polite.
Explanation:
Children are the reflection of their parents. So it is common that in adulthood, they reproduce the same behavior that their parents adopted. Nicole's parents are contradictory, say it's important for her to be polite, but act rude. Nicole will probably absorb this behavior and be as contradictory as her parents. Nicole is likely to tell her children that it is important to act polite, but she will act rude.
All three could actually fit. But the most logical is ashtray.