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What would reepbot say?

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You are certainly in full gnashing mode today.

Why do you care what I choose to spend my money one?

Go cheer yourself up and get one of those toypedos into you!
You really nailed spelling that two letter word :p It's a tricky 'on'![DOUBLEPOST=1456549035][/DOUBLEPOST]Edit LOL. You're editing like an editor!
 
How did you meet this woman? That is indeed an age gap but age is all relative. I have friends who are the same age as you and me with partners not much younger than that, but my mum is in her late forties so I don't think I could ever go there.

Okcupid
 
You should've finished school. They might have taught you that "you're" is a conjunction of "you are".
Yes I know that, I am just glad you realised before your precious edit window expired.

You took my post - which you saw had been corrected - then you edited it and bolded it, even though it had already been corrected in the five minute edit window, I merely returned the favour.
 
OMG!!

I am lolling like a loller!

Witty isn't smarter than you're after all!!!!

Looks like it is back to school for our self proclaimed grammar genius!!!

:laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh:
The consolation of you owing reepbot eternal thanks was worth the humiliation. How are you going to make it up to him?
 
Don't get nervous, get excited...do you get nervous before your speech making?

Reframe Nervousness As Excitement Before You Give A Big Speech
(etc, meet new people, dance, whatever)

There are a lot of great ways to calm your nerves before you step into the spotlight, but it might also help to refashion what you’re feeling instead of trying to suppress it.

A recent study, led by Alison Wood Brooks at Harvard Business School, and published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology, suggests that a simple shift in mindset can help you use your own nerves to your advantage. In the study, participants who announced that they were excited, not nervous, were perceived as more persuasive and competent during their speeches. The researchers explain that nervousness and excitement are both high states of arousal, so you can manipulate your mind-body connection to make what you’re feeling seem positive. Basically, your mind is tricking your body by switching the circuits. By verbally acknowledging your feelings as excitement, you can harness that nervous energy instead of fighting against it. You’re not shaking because you’re anxious, you’re shaking because you can’t wait to say what you have to say.

Get Excited: Reappraising Pre-Performance Anxiety as Excitement [Journal of Experimental Psychology via Inc.]
 
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