Sisyphus (AustinCaskie) Mac OS

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Sisyphus was the son of King Aeolus of Thessaly and Enarete and the brother of Salmoneus. He married the Pleiad Merope by whom he became the father of Glaucus, Ornytion, Thersander, Almus, Sinon and Porphyrion. Sisyphus was the grandfather of Bellerophon through Glaucus, and Minyas, founder of Orchomenus, through Almus. Adobe Illustrator CC 2020 v24 0 1 341 (MAC OS) Multiling 6 8 4,098 2,743 2 months 9.92 MB Adobe Premiere Pro CC 2019 13 2 0 96 Patch (Mac) 8 4 4,094 2,722 10 months 1.06 GB Windows 10 Pro v 2121 En-US (64-bit) ACTiVATED-HOBBiT 11 9 4,081 2,719 3 months 1.54 GB. One of the most influential works of this century, The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays is a crucial exposition of existentialist thought. Influenced by works such as Don Juan and the novels of Kafka, these essays begin with a meditation on suicide; the question of living or not living in a universe devoid of order or meaning. With lyric eloquence, Albert Camus brilliantly posits a way out of. I don't know how widely these extentions are used. I know that in Mac OS 10.4, metadata including resource forks are supported, but I think they implemented them using thier normal flat-file hacks (.myfile holds metadata for myfile), and not the pax extentions. This man file freebsd.org has a little more information.

  1. Sisyphus (austin Caskie) Mac Os 8
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  4. Sisyphus (austin Caskie) Mac Os Catalina
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One night I got up in the middle of a nightmare: I had done a bad thing (in life that is), and was desperately attempting to undo this bad thing by pressing Ctrl-z, but it wouldn't work, as it was real life (even if it was in a dream!)…
Whether we want it or not, shortcuts are part of our computer world life. Here is a list of useful shortcuts that I use everyday at work.
from this website
Ctrl-z (undo in most applications) or Cmd+z on a Mac, literally saved me hours of work. So let's thank the creator of Ctrl-z, who ever he might be.

Sisyphus (austin Caskie) Mac Os 8

My dad still copies and paste through clicking in the menu bar. Well, I'm not sure how miserable I would feel without Ctrl-c and Ctrl-v (copy and paste).
Ctrl-y (redo) is an underestimated one. Note that is not limited to the inverse of Ctrl-z. If you just did an action under Excel, you can repeat the same action ad-infinitum using Ctrl-y (ad-infinitum).
Ctrl-s (save) saves your file, and saves you time. Careful, it quickly becomes an addiction . A bit more advanced, F12 (save as) works on most applications.
Ctrl-a (select all) is a fairly useful friend when you have tons of items to select.
Alt-F4 (close current window) is a bit nerdy, but can be useful when you have multiple windows to close and your wife is asking you to stop working.
Sisyphus
Windows+d (show desktop under Windows) gets windows out of the way so that you can see what's on your desktop.
From this website
Windows+e (under Windows obviously…) opens windows explorer in a jiffy.
Ctrl+tab (go to next window, in a browser or in Excel), pretty nerdy as well, to impress colleagues for example.
One night I also dreamt about expanding Excel formulas: a pretty bad memory after a full day working on Excel. From all these days spent with Excel, here are my favorite shortcuts to impress your boss:
Ctrl+page up/down, go one sheet backwards or forward.
Ctrl+arrow: go to end of series of non-blank cells
Double-click on + at bottom-right of cell (does this even qualify as a shortcut? I guess if it can help you then it deserves to be in here): expand formula down to end of series of non-blank cells based on column to the right of the one you just clicked on (well, just try and see what it does).

Sisyphus (austincaskie) Mac Os X

F4 when editing a formula: sets and removes $ for you
Happy shortcutting.

I've written in the past about my fear of being in the shower. One thing my therapist suggested last week was to take some small steps to work on overcoming those fears. Those of you who have done any sort of cognitive-behavioral therapy or taken a psychology class on therapy techniques or learning and behavior (a la Skinner or Pavlov) will probably recognize the term 'systematic desensitization'.

The basic idea behind systematic desensitization is first to teach the client effective relaxation technique and then have him/her use those techniques when confronting an object or situation that elicits fear. So, in essence, you retrain the mind to not get anxious or scared when confronting an anxiety provoking stimulus.

I've pretty much got the relaxation techniques down. I've pretty good at the deep breathing and I have a quick and dirty version of progressive relaxation.

My therapist's suggestion was to run the shower and stick my arm in it. Eh… I'm not much on getting wet when I don't have to. Plus, it would probably elicit too many questions from my grandmother and brother as to why the shower is on for extremely short periods of time. And as I don't really feel comfortable with talking to them about this stuff, the fewer the questions the better.

Sisyphus (austin Caskie) Mac Os X

So I came up with my own version (yippee me for being pro-active). I decided that every time I went to the bathroom, I would step into the shower fully clothed and leaving the shower door open (as I tend to start feeling a bit claustrophobic when the door is closed). As I get ready, I take about five deep breathes. Then I step in. As I'm in there, I tell myself what the date is to reinforce in my mind that this is the present and I tell myself that there is nothing in the shower that will hurt me. All the while making sure I'm breathing. I'm one of those people who seems to forget to breathe when I start getting extremely anxious.

Sisyphus (austin Caskie) Mac Os Catalina

Last week when I started this, I could barely make it ten seconds before I started to freak out. Now, I can make it for roughly a minute. My goal is to make it up to five minutes. Then I'm going to start back at a few seconds with my shirt removed. Work myself back up to about five minutes. And then start again with both my shirt and pants removed working my way back up to the five minute mark. Then start again with the water running and actually taking mini showers. I figure by the time I actually get to this point my brother will have moved out of the house and gone back to college. I can work on it while my grandmother is napping.

So that's the plan. I don't know how well it's going to work.

Sisyphus (austincaskie) Mac Os Update

I think this weekend I'm going to go to Bath and Body Works with my best friend and smell some bath stuff and shampoos. I'll need the moral support. I doubt that I'll actually buy anything, but it's just one more small step.





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