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Weird thoughts
Weird thoughts









weird thoughts
  1. #Weird thoughts how to#
  2. #Weird thoughts full#
  3. #Weird thoughts tv#
weird thoughts

“Saw it, wanted it, bought it, used it once, kept it in my house for ten years, gave it away.”ġ6. “My New Year’s resolution is to only dread one day at a time.”ġ5. “My parents moved a lot when I was a kid. “You’re welcome to take my advice any time. I’ve moved on to soap operas and political speeches.”ġ1. Can I interest you in a sarcastic comment instead?”ġ0.

#Weird thoughts tv#

“If it weren’t for Thomas Edison, we’d all be watching TV by candlelight.”ĩ. “Sometimes, the road less traveled is that way for a good reason.”Ĩ. “You’ll meet three kinds of people in this world: those who can count and those who can’t.”ħ. “If, at first, you don’t succeed, destroy the evidence that you tried.”Ĥ. “I said ‘No’ to drugs, but they wouldn’t listen.”Ģ. Leaving aside comments others are likely to find crass or creepy, consider the following list of weird things to say to your friends (or anyone else who’s listening). Get those ideas out onto the page (the weirder, the better), and see what you can do with them. Pick something - a word, a letter, an image - and play a word-association game without editing yourself.

#Weird thoughts full#

Brainstorm a list of adjectives that start with each letter of your full name.Think of a memorable moment and write a list of random thoughts about it.Pick a word and mind-map at least ten random, connected ideas.Doing the following exercises can help you develop this gift: It’s always looking for connections and shiny new paths to follow.

weird thoughts

Bonus.īut aside from looking through lists like the one in this post, how can you get better at thinking up weird things to say to your friends, family, and other unsuspecting people?Ī human brain is a tangent machine. But something still bugs me, to be honest.Why? Because you’re a good friend, that’s why. I cannot control every thought that enters my mind, but I can control how I react and if I dwell on them. I saw the “AHA” moment light up in my son’s eyes, and the obsession with the door knob, and most other OCD issues he dealt with, began the process of melting away. Replace them with something else that’s good. You don’t have to dwell on thoughts you don’t want. If you don’t like the song, he continued, what do you do? My son answered he’d listen to or sing something else.Įxactly, the counselor told him. That is an obtrusive thought, the counselor told him - one you didn’t ask for, but it came to you, nonetheless. The counselor asked him if he’d ever had a song pop into his head, uninvited, that he didn’t like. But he knew the thought wouldn’t leave him alone until after the 10th time he’d performed his lock ritual. My son could not identify exactly why he couldn’t accept that the door was locked after I locked it, or after each time he checked it himself. We took him to a counselor who talked with him about the thoughts that entered his mind about the lock. We fixed the hardware issue, but it remained an issue for my son. But all was well, and we discovered the latch was loose. This was not because we lived in a bad neighborhood, but probably had its root in the fact that the door didn’t latch one day and swung open on its own, causing our family to think the house had been broken into while we were out. This was after watching me lock the front door before he went to bed. He would go to bed, then get up and go downstairs, unlock the deadbolt and relock it, check the doorknob, then go back to bed. At its worst, as one example, my son was checking the front door to make sure it was locked at night, 10 times every night. One of my children has mild obsessive compulsive disorder. I honestly cannot control what goes through my head. The songs are anything from a praise song we sang at church the previous Sunday, a TV show theme song, Black Sabbath, a country song from the ’70s or a song from my childhood I didn’t even know I knew. I wake up singing silently sometimes, too. Nothing was anywhere near as weird as the stuff that floats from my head. How can NON-sense sentences make so much SENSE? I just spent a few minutes on Google searching for random nonsense sentence generators. Or maybe they’re just a random assemblage of words. Yes, most of the thoughts are questions - responses to whatever situation I was in before waking, I guess.

  • What if I’m just too handsome and famous for all my fans and they leave me?.
  • #Weird thoughts how to#

    But I don’t know how to fly on my own with just my corduroys.Why do icy hands not come with icy gloves?.Does Tom Cruise really weigh as much as a gummy bear?.If Mama Bear isn’t there to bring Papa Bear his porridge, who’s going to make sure he eats?.











    Weird thoughts