I guess if you can develop a feel for what your opponent will play?
The only way to really strategize is by thinking two or three moves ahead and trying to figure out how your opponent follows up with a move. Some people will do the same thing every single time to follow up a particular move. If you can catch their tell, you're golden. I can beat my DH nearly 85% of the time because he has certain moves that he just can't break out of.
I've gotten out of dog walking and dirty diaper changes with this.
I just watched Revenging Angel, the cartoon ep of Farscape.
Love.
(I know this belongs in Boxed set, but I am never going to get caught up there. )
If you can catch their tell, you're golden.
Yes. Watching the hand movements can be key.
I've gotten out of dog walking and dirty diaper changes with this.
And to think just a couple of years ago, you were a newbie. I guess getting out of dog walking gave you a lot of practice for ducking the diaper change. Maybe you weren't such a newbie. Still? It brings a tear of pride to my eye.
(I know this belongs in Boxed set, but I am never going to get caught up there. )
That's the best thing about Natter. Everything belongs here. It's the kitchen junk drawer.
Thanks, Cindy. Mom's doctor is a friend of my sister and a very good geriatric physician. We review her medications with him regularly. I've done a bunch of research and talked to a bunch of doctors, and I think she's getting the best care possible. It's not the medication; it's the disease, and there's simply nothing that can be done.
copeing ma toyou and your family , Zenkitty
I'm so sorry, Zenkitty. That's got to be so hard on all of you.
All possible -ma to you and your family, with a little extra for your sister -- it's so draining, physically and emotionally, to be a parent's primary caregiver.
What they all said, Zenkitty.
You all are good folk. And yeah, JZ, it's definitely harder on my sister than me. I don't think I'm even emotionally capable of handling being a primary caregiver.