<span>True.
Reaction time refers to the description above. It is a skill related fitness
component that is very important during the start of competitions (e.g. gun
start). It refers to how fast the stimulus gets to the brain and how it
directly sends signals to power the reactions of the muscles making the body
move and perform work. </span>
Answer:
Complicated grief.
Explanation:
There are a few kinds of grieving:<em> yearning-searching, hormonal grief, shock-numbness, complicated grief and disorganization-despair. </em>Alex is going through complicated grieving and I'm going to focus on that. Almost every person loses a loved one and it's the darkest time of one's life. As the time passes by, a person feels better and relieved. Some people don't feel better and the feeling of loss does not improve over time. In this condition, pain, emotions and grief last longer and are very severe, so it blocks a person from moving on with their own life. Some of the symptoms: sorrow and pain over loss of our loved one, not being able to focus on anything but their death, problems with dealing with the fact that they're gone, numbness, bitterness, wishing we were dead too, etc. This condition usually occurs in people who lost a loved one under very complex and heavy circumstances, like: suici*e, ra*e, car-crash, murd*r, etc.
Certain ones do it depends i hope this help
It is true. if you feel sad, you wont want to go on a run. if you feel happy, youll be more than happy to. it does make a difference. if you dont like soccer, you wouldnt play it. if you had a bad expiernce with golf (somehow xD) you most likely wouldnt feel up to playing it.