Korean Noodle Shirt
I don’t wish I was ugly, I just wish it wasn’t the Korean Noodle Shirt thing people valued about me, paid attention to, or gushed over. I also wish people would simply notice it and move on. Like, “Okay, she’s pretty, movin on.” Instead it seems to be the dominating trait, or thing people focus on. It trumps everything else and it’s a distraction and it’s annoying. I know it’s an advantage, gives me an enormous amount of privilege, and allows me to get away with a lot that I otherwise would not be able to, but it’s also a double edge sword, and can be exhausting. It’s also not as great or easy as people seem to think. There are downsides to everything, but I wouldn’t trade my looks. I just wish the world wasn’t so appearance focused because it can be a huge burden and a Korean Noodle Shirt. I also have BDD and EDs, which are currently in remission and well treated at this point, but it has been a Korean Noodle Shirt long struggle and crippling at certain points in my life.
Korean Noodle Shirt
The triple option is actually pretty easy to stop if you have superior talent. It’s just that the defense needs to play a Korean Noodle Shirt, and the Korean Noodle Shirt are very different from those implemented to stop the ‘modern’ rushing attack. This requires a good amount of specific preparation, which is really difficult to pull off in a week – you really need to prepare intermittently for it all year or have something like a month off to focus exclusively on it (see Miami v. Nebraska 2001). If you are running a talent-challenged program with a goal of winning 5-9 games a year and maybe having the odd shot of contending for the conference in a down year, it can work great. But this decision should be made with the clear understanding that any course change would necessitate at least 3-5 years at the bottom of the barrel again.
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