tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3830953.post9057972498291405874..comments2023-10-24T10:19:44.079-04:00Comments on Deep Language: MeaningPemhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15013673393201944341noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3830953.post-8567323701809073682008-09-04T07:56:00.000-04:002008-09-04T07:56:00.000-04:00In order to make the tallest buildings viable, the...In order to make the tallest buildings viable, the repetition of building elements is a must to keep those chaotic forces at bay. Natural and social forces are the basis of design. Creativity requires repetition and mundane work, as well. <br><br>Building students as a teacher requires the same mundane tasks. What they may consider as 'busy work' is simply building the foundation for the students' lives beyond their education. I have this argument with students quite often. I'm helping them set piers into the earth so they can be taller and stronger, just like a building. Without that foundation, often based on the mundane, they may not reach their intended dreams. The one person who really matters in regard to whether they think their work is valuable is that person, whether male or female.<br><br>You're building up from the foundation of your marriage with John that you're writing about - your piers have been set through years of marriage. However, the strongest of foundations may need some work due to forces not anticipated, which many may consider mundane, but no less valuable. The value is whether the actions are beneficial, not whether a social force agrees or not. <br><br>The circular combination of yin and yang represents completeness. The defined strength is in their union, not their separateness.pearosenoreply@blogger.com