Answer:
- Listen to others. Don't make others follow you. Everyone has their own strengths.
- Make yourself heard. This might be the complete opposite to the tip I put before, but it's not. Everyone has their own strengths, including you. If you are smart, try to help your friend with their math homework, or if you are athletic, teach your friend football. Little things that make them feel better.
- Know who is your friend. Peer pressure is something that a lot of leaders struggle with. Don't lead your friends astray and don't get led astray by your friends.
- And lastly, Know your leader. Your leaders, parents, teachers, the principal. Remember to always listen to them, cause they have good advice for you.
The correct answer is
the first option. Edgar Allan Poe uses fear to create a single effect in “The
Fall of the House of Usher”? <span>The single effect is a paradigm created
by Edgar Allan Poe that signifies that a story must produce one specific and
consistent effect in the reader. The fear as a single effect is unified in this
story through carefully chosen words when describing the characters, settings,
actions and writing dialogs. For example, throughout the story, reader can
sense the depression and fear surrounding every element in the house of Usher.</span>
I’ll give you some ideas.
1. Asked for help when completing a math assignment. Felt embarrassed to need helpful but once I received the help I felt accomplished.
2. I had asked for help when I was unsure of which direction my class was. I felt okay to ask for help since it had been the first week of school. Once they helped me out I felt appreciative towards them.
3. I asked for help when searching for a certain book. I felt nervous to ask an employee, but once they helped me find it I realized I shouldn’t have worried in the first place.
This was super rushed. Sorry!