Note: Since this is a personal question, I will use my own experience. Feel free to change anything and adapt it to yourself and your reality.
Answer and Explanation:
About a year ago, I realized I was growing more and more anxious. There came a time when I didn't feel like leaving home at all, for fear of having to deal with rude or aggressive people. I had had a good number of bad experiences, and had become fearful of social interactions.
However, anxiety was only making things worse. It was as if i never let my guard down. I became more isolated, nervous, irritable. Instead of protecting me, anxiety was making me see others as enemies, as if the whole word was ready to attack me at any moment.
One day, I hit an emotional rock bottom, and it felt awful. I was becoming the wrong kind of introvert - a recluse who blames the world. I did not appreciate that situation, so I began to seek help. I realized I would have much more to gain by leaving my fears and resentment behind, and opening up to the world. Meditation, therapy and, most importantly, patience with myself were crucial to make me feel better. I began to see that I was dwelling on bad experiences and choosing to ignore the good ones. In other words, I was focusing on the dark side of people. Once I cleared my vision, tried to shed my prejudices and fears, I began to see there is more good in the world than I could imagine.
They are all geographic features of <span>India.</span>
Answer:
The "Strawberry Shortcake Strategy" refers to:
C. The practice of creating a line of toys, and then creating a TV show solely for the purpose of selling that line of toys.
Explanation:
It was around the 1980's that the Strawberry Shortcake Strategy started being employed in marketing aimed at children. Before then, if a TV show was popular, a line of toys would be created because of it. The Strawberry Shortcake Strategy does things the other way around. It creates a line of toys and, with the purpose of selling it, a TV show is then created.
Answer:
Under Article II of the Constitution, the President is responsible for the execution and enforcement of the laws created by Congress. Fifteen executive departments — each led by an appointed member of the President's Cabinet — carry out the day-to-day administration of the federal government.
Explanation: