Homesteaders living on the great plains were what you call "Extremely Dramatic". There were lots of conditions on the great plains that affected settlers lives. Here are these problems; building houses, staying healthy, extreme weather, lack of fuel, Indian Attacks, lack of isolation, keeping clean, lack of water, and pests and vermin. The problem with the bugs were grasshoppers. Grasshoppers ruined their crops. Building houses from wood was expensive. The settlers couldn't afford building houses from wood, so they built it from sod. The walls and floors were infested with bugs and lice, because these homes were built from dirt and grass. It would leak in the homes when it rained. They also had problems staying healthy because of the insects. The insects that flew around would inject disease into their bodies. In other words, There are three things that helped them survive, and 3/3 of these examples issued technology. 1.) Barbed wire, 2.) steel plow, and 3.) windmills. The barbed wire was for housing reasons, the steel plow was for cutting through tough prairie sod, and the windmills for pumping water out of the ground. :)
Answer:
they don't
Explanation:
I'm a child and I get spanked and I never learn
Charise, who has just studied personality psychology in school, corrects Noreen by saying
a. "You're probably right, Noreen. Freud was really into subconscious motives."
Explanation:
In Sigmund Freud's theory subconscious is present as the plane of consciousness that is not readily accessible but operates from the back of our minds and makes sense of our actions that do not seem done consciously.
One of the telltale signs of this is actions like this which have little basis in actual reasons but people do anyway because they enjoy them or their subconscious is telling them to do them. One of these is also the famous Freudian slip