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What are you tired of hearing?

a lot of things.from my parents and adults:what do you have to struggle with? you're only 14! try being an adult for a day, then you'll know what struggles really feel like.so i guess the fact that Icut myselfstarve myself or over eatget anxiety attacks from having to speakhave hallucinative nightmaresgo emotionally numb for dayshave ptsdhave a neurological development disorderwas sexually assaultedand more means nothing because I'm only 14? thought so.from my parents and their friends:you're only 14. you don't know what love is.but you must, right? because if love if how you display it, its forcing your child to repress feelings, arguing with your s/o 24/7 and pushing the blame to other people? sure sure.my version of love is totally incorrect, right? because i think my boyfriendbeing aware i self harm and encouraging me to tell someone i trust 100% and not shaming mecuddling me because we both need itholding my hand to calm me down when around a lot of peoplebeing patient and gentle with menot forcing me into anythingwaiting for months at a time to see me and then only seeing me for a few weeks (ldr until may 2020)holding me or talking me through anxiety attackskissing me on the top of my head when im nervousreminding me that i mean a lot to himrubbing my tummy when i have period crampstexting me paragraphs about little things he notices about mebeing my emotional supportis a form of real love. of course, im only 14 though, so how would i know?from my parents:because i said so/don't talk back.come on, isnt that getting a little old, guys? i know you only say that because you don't have an answer or because i have a point. im not as oblivious as you assume. often i actually have a well articulated response and it would mean a lot if you didn't shut me down right away.from my parents:why do you like *insert name*why wouldn't i? I like a lot of people, just like you do. I like my friends, i like my boyfriend, because they're there for me in ways you aren't. not because you don't love me: just because you don't know how to handle the things i feel, and that's okay. just don't throw a hissy fit if i don't open up to you after you shut me down! duh!from my friends:why do you like Quora??well, i don't know, maybe it's because its an escape from the bad bits of my life? maybe because i find the writing of@Jackson Brownlee@Gabren Williams (ガブレン)@Ethan James@Dawn Amber@Yui Leeetc provides as an escape from my lonely little life? who knows, to be honest. i just like it.from my friends:why do you like spending time with your family more than us?well. i don't "like it more". i just love my parents. they can be non-understanding idiots sometimes but then again, who can't? they don't hate me for me not understanding their way of life. and of course we argue, who's heard of a teen who doesn't argue at least twice a week with their parents/guardian?!from me:WHY ARE YOU SO ANNOYING?!idk, brain. i ask myself this every day.yours sweetly, Blossom <3

Can you list three things that we'd be shocked to learn about you?

There are lot of things about me that can shock the fellow Quorans, since it's a request of 3 things I am mentioning only 3.I can pole dance and belly dance.I didn't learn these dance forms out of interest but instead for my 'Mister' who once said while watching a dance performance on these 2 forms that the women looked beautiful and sensuous. Recently, he was watching an aerial dance form and I told him not to say,” I love the way that dancer is dancing” because aerial dance form needs lot of core strength and a proper trainer. Otherwise, he will end up having a broken-hip wife.2. I had trapped the person incharge of the place where I was working part-time.I had a Motorola mobile which had the option of voice recording. So, I recorded what he said made the then district collector hear it and from the next day I stopped going to work. Yes, I was in need of money, yes I joined that place because my favourite person Dr. Abdul Kalam sir was to visit that place and yes I loved my work and my colleagues but I won't compromise on my self-respect. So, when he was continuously offering me a job in the front office where all I want to do was to flirt with him and watch 'certain kind of movies' for double the salary that I was receiving working as a proof reader, I denied. I said that I loved my job instead and had no interest in front office he tried to blackmail me by saying that since I had not completed 18 years he will bring that in notice of the respected personnel. The next week when the district collector visited us I told him everything including that I had not completed 18 years(I joined when I was 17 and was short of 3 months to my 19th birthday when this happened) and I left without even getting my due salary of 3 months. (It was a government organization and hence my report was taken very seriously but I lost my heart to work there anymore).3. I am the co- proprietor of my husband's business.When my husband settled the amount to his business partners and became the sole-proprietor of the business he made me his co-proprietor officially. I used to manage his emails from many years, but eversince he made me a co-proprietor my responsibilities have increased. I told him that I can handle everything except signing the cheques. No, I can't do that!Thank you for the question. :-)

Why is the human ear shaped the way it is? Why are dog ears shaped differently than human ears? Why has evolution decided that dogs need that particular ear shape and caliber of hearing versus the human (primate) ear shape?

This answer is primarily a reply to the pseudoscience presented by Brian Roemmele in his answer.The human ear has no particular relation to the golden ratio, nor does the human cochlea.Here's a picture of my ear:My plan was to trace out the shape that Brian claims is a golden spiral and see what it looks like. Here's my tracing of the outline of my ear, following Brian's example as closely as I can, while actually tracing my real ear:Here's the resulting "golden spiral":Here it is with the golden spiral from Golden Spiral -- from Wolfram MathWorld overlaidWhat about all those parts that don't match up at all, which is most of it? The curve doesn't fit much better than a circle would. Well, according to Brian, these sorts of errors are "within a tolerance". (see https://www.quora.com/Quora/Do-people-often-ask-questions-on-Quora-so-they-can-answer-it-themselves/answer/Jonas-M-Luster/comment/908049)Other animals don't have ears that look like spirals at all. They look like all sorts of things, sometimes just little holes. When I pointed this out to Brian in the above comment thread, despite his claim that "just about all things in nature" follow the golden ratio in their design, he calls these non-golden ears a "red herring".Brian claims that humans have special hearing requirements due to speech recognition, but makes no credible argument about how this leads to golden ratios. The general advantages of golden spirals he describes (themselves erroneous to the extent they are intelligible) apply equally well to other hearing problems. Also, human ears are not very different from chimpanzee ears, as this photo shows, but chimpanzees, which can't talk, did not evolve under the same pressures of speech recognition Brian cites.source: Detail of Chimpanzee's EarCochlea do roughly follow logarithmic spirals, but not golden spirals. To support his claim that cochlea are golden spirals, Brian cites the paper "Cochlea and Other Spiral Forms in Nature and Art" by Marinkovic et al (Page on Sciencedirect), but this paper does not say that cochlea form a golden spiral.The paper statesThe cochlea is a spiral, cone-shaped osseous structure that resembles certain other spiral forms in nature. It was noticed that parts of some plants are arranged in a spiral manner, often according to Fibonacci numbers. Certain animals, their parts, or their products also represent various types of spirals. Many of them, including the cochlea, belong to the logarithmic type.In other words, cochlea are logarithmic spirals, not golden spirals. (Golden spirals are the ones related to Fibonacci numbers. They are a special type of logarithmic spiral.) Brian's response (again in the above-linked comment thread) is simply to claim that I am reading the paper incorrectly and that the paper does in fact say that cochlea are golden spirals.In "The Influence of Cochlear Shape on Low-Frequency Hearing" (The influence of cochlear shape on low-frequency hearing), Manoussaki et al do investigate the effects of logarithmic spirals on the acoustics of hearing. Their paper presents empirical measurements of the spirals of human cochlea and quotes the coefficients of the logarithmic spirals. They are not golden spirals, or even close to them (see paper or linked comment thread for details). When I pointed this out to Brian, he did not comment on this paper.Even the nautilus shell is not a golden spiral. John Cook presents some measurements in "Spirals and the Golden Section" (Spirals and the Golden Section) to find thatIn fact, comparing the Golden Section spiral (the left of figure 38) with the logarithmic spiral having a multiplication factor of 3 (the right of figure 38) and the Nautilus in figure 37, it is clear that the Golden Section rectangular spiral and the Nautilus spiral simply do not match.Nor are spiral arms of galaxies golden spirals, another example Brian used to support his "just about all things in nature" claim. Brian writes: "However we can also look out into the universe and see 1000s of spiral galaxies that are with in a tolerance of a Fibonacci spiral." He presents no citations for this claim. If you look at some tables or figures presented estimated pitch angles for galaxy spiral arms, they're all over the place (a golden spiral has a pitch angle of 17 degrees). See, for instance Page on ArxivFurther, the spirals often aren't logarithmic spirals. The pitch angle changes as you go along. See On estimation of the pitch angle for spiral arms of galaxies.Sometimes, the galaxy arms correspond with a golden spiral, which is to be expected if they're actually scattered around. I can not find any credible research paper proposing a mechanism for golden-ratio spiral arms or even any empirical claims of golden-ratio spiral arms in peer-reviewed research. Wikipedia says:Approximate logarithmic spirals can occur in nature (for example, the arms of spiral galaxies[5]); golden spirals are one special case of these. It is sometimes stated that spiral galaxies and nautilus shells get wider in the pattern of a golden spiral, and hence are related to both φ and the Fibonacci series.[6] In truth, spiral galaxies and nautilus shells (and many mollusk shells) exhibit logarithmic spiral growth, but at a variety of angles usually distinctly different from that of the golden spiral.[7][8][9]So it is not correct to say that human ears are shaped their funny way because golden spirals are the best shape and found all over nature. Back to the original question - why are human ears shaped so differently from a dog's ear, for example?Honestly, I have no idea. I can't even find good information on what your hearing will be like if you cut your outer ears off. Sometimes children are born with a condition called "microtia" in which the outer ear is malformed. This causes considerable hearing problems, as explained by Burt Brent, a surgeon specializing in the condition:The problem is sound conduction, which is impeded by the malformed middle and external ear complex. Typically, these patients have a hearing threshold of 40-60 dB on the affected side (by comparison, normal function allows us to hear sounds between 0-20 dB).The Hearing ProblemBut it seems like people hear poorly when they have this condition because there's flesh blocking their ear.In general, hearing is quite a complicated acoustic phenomenon! It can't be explained very simply, as the ear is fantastically complicated and many different parts combine to create its functionality.Trying to find some references on the topic, I came across Correlations between auditory structures and hearing sensitivity in non-human primates, whose abstract describes some tests of hearing in non-human primates and compares to theory about how various ear structures should affect hearing. The abstract indicates the paper found some agreement and some disagreement. That paper and references within it might be a decent starting place to explore this literature.

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