now that it’s june…
now that it’s june…
Oh, ho, ho, ho! A new house see a nuhaus-ee-a’gyinh! New ogon heeyew a’gyinh. Wee yeh Hod Ham Book Baguette? Oh, odds can’dat lil’ book bag - O, bong-hoe, see ‘dat? Hod Ham fourth grader! Hitch yo ass down! H’tchlo an huff lady gianlak heeguh some ezza do; young han nenn duss-ahdo! Ying goan nuddin’ wityo life…non-chan wit cholap. Noog-hing-dis eet?! Hm’guh lig myon talkin’ to you! Yoog then di-ha eez-i doan’d jou? Yoog’thin dieses promise! Hoe-aing nuthin’ prommit ta you! Loogen mah face…
haunting and infectious
when rappers used to actually freestyle.
The idea is that infants depend on their primary caregiver not only to meet their most basic needs for survival, but also for reliable, accurate, and empathic emotional responses.
When these emotional needs are either unmet, or met unreliably, the infant gradually learns not only not to trust the environment, but also not to trust the self. Psychoanalytically speaking, this basic mistrust develops because infants rely on their primary caregivers to accurately mirror their emotional experiences. It is through this accurate mirroring that infants learn not only how to label their own emotions, but to trust the validity of their internal experiences.
"http://lauraschenck.com/growth-and-strengths/authentic-self-vs-false-self