Finding balance is important because it helps one improve overall health and wellbeing. These are steps to follow to improve a balance between things, and they can be:
- Setting boundaries.
- Asking for help.
- Take a break.
<h3>What is a balance?</h3>
Balance is simply known to be creating time for the things you have to do as well as the things you want to do.
Setting boundaries is a method of safeguarding one's emotional and physical space, and this can be hard because most often, people feel responsible for the feeling of others and this can be overcome by telling someone how something they're doing makes you feel and asking for what you need from them instead.
Hence, we can see that creating a balance helps to prioritize important things and pay attention to body needs.
Read more about <em>balance</em> here:
#SPJ1
<span>Dear J.K. Rowling
I really appreciated your book "Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince". The serious tone Harry uses when speaking truly underlines dire times felt within the wizarding world. I could never find the right words to use when setting my plot, but I was truly inspired by your use of diction to control the tempo of a long narrative. This tempo control ran throughout the text, emotionally tying specific plot devices to the perspective of a character and framing their state of being.
In conclusion, I hope my writing can glimpse a shadow of your craft. When I write in first person, as you did with Harry, I often now compare my use of language to your descriptive tendencies and search for improvements. Not writing extremely long sentences, or using out of character phrasing, but instead giving just enough detail to paint a vivid picture. If this gets to you, I hope you can write me back, I've attatched a pdf of a recent poem and hope you can give me some notes.
Thank you,
Sincerly...</span>
It would be D)-So because
even though
So is before, it connects improve and literary rate
The writer's world is another way of saying; "The scene that is being set for the story to be told. Time, Location, Characters, Mood, Situation, etc.
For example, If you were telling a story about Dungeons and Dragons, perhaps you would mention that the main characters, Corlon, a Fighter and Esmerelda, a Sorceress are Trapped in a Dragon's Cave guarded by a Large one-eyed Cyclops and a Very Large Hungry Green Dragon. And so on.