Curse
The objective answer is Whiteface Mountain.
The Iroquois or Haudenosaunee, the most profound and most powerful indigenous group encountered by the United States before its full size was reached, deemed Whiteface Mountain to be the home of Tawiskara, the dark god of the Winter, and forbade anyone from going near it, a mistake made by the fertility goddess Onatah as a story once told.
Today, the mountain is a hub both for avid hikers as well as people who like snow activities, since it snows like crazy at the top, said to be the work of Tawiskara, which is half of the explanation of why the mountain has its name (the other half being the Haudenosaunee believed Caucasians to be descendants of Tawiskara and were basically like "yeah that's where your divine ancestor lives"... the things a bad impression will do to people). When you get to the top, it's said that if you look to the North, you can see the Canadian capital from there, which is like hundreds of miles North in a completely other country.
It's actually the same exact gene as the colorblindness gene, except it manifests as tetrachromacy in females while manifesting as colorblindness in males. If you have any colorblind people in your family, chances are you also have tetrachromats in your family too.
It's a rather double-edged sword, especially as an artist. For example, you lose a little of your natural appreciation of differing shades, and it doesn't transfer over to technology, so a picture of a bird you see on a device is going to have less color than the same bird if it were right in front of you. Personally I could do without the extra colors.
By law they must.
Really? If I was a mom (still afraid of becoming one), that's the last thing I can imagine. You don't raise any unwanted alarm bells. I seriously hope things work out, and I'm always around if you need someone to talk to 💋
Funny you say that, I'm actually a tetrachromat, which means I'm the opposite of colorblind. The purple skittles just didn't seem purple. They chose such a drab shade of purple that, even to me (or even especially to me), rather than being recognizable as the same vibrant color as grapes, it appears to be the kind of purple you get from the sky on an exceptionally rainy droopy day.
It also helped that, after looking at such a drab sky, I ended up seeing the rainbow, thinking back to the skittles commercial, seeing what colors were actually in the rainbow, and thinking "wait a minute..."
What things do you do throughout the day? If you help her out, I see that as a relative plus.
I thought the "purple" skittles were supposed to be brown (I still think they look brown). One day I looked on the package. The rest is history.
I am original.
You know, someone versed in therapy can often tell what kind of issue is going on by the way they phrase things. You might be clouded by your own local circumstances/experiences. Have you ever tried seeing if a change of setting changes your luck?
As a side note, having a job means nothing. Some people contribute more without jobs than others who have them, especially if only one group does it for free.
There are many hotlines, but they all lead you to the same place, which makes the amount of them dumb.
I cannot speak for such individuals and I wouldn't say anyone can speak for another's intentions, but historically, it has been said that, if tragedy becomes an expected effect of authority carrying out undesired action, the authority would think twice. What comes off as odd though is here we have overly consequential thinking on both sides. There's a quote that comes to mind, "avenge smarter not harder", and I look down on those who spread the fight like that.