Why does feel this moment sound familiar




















Kids aren't perfect and they sometimes do things that get them into trouble. Saying "I'm sorry" can help. Saying you're sorry is called apologizing. When you apologize, you're telling someone that you're sorry for the hurt you caused, even if you didn't do it on purpose.

People who are apologizing might also say that they will try to do better. They might promise to fix or replace what was broken or take back a mean thing they said.

When you apologize to someone — and really mean it — it's because you have stopped to think about how the person may have felt because of what you did or said. When you stop to think about the other person's feelings, you begin to feel sorry for your behavior. You might even feel embarrassed or ashamed if you did something that you knew was wrong.

Even if what happened was an accident or you did something you didn't mean to do, you would probably still feel sorry if you knew the other person's feelings were hurt. After apologizing, you might feel a little better the other person probably will, too. When you apologize in a caring way, you can feel good because you are trying to make things right again. When you apologize to someone, he or she might apologize back to you: "That's OK, I'm sorry, too. I shouldn't have teased you. Kids might need to apologize if they hurt or teased someone or lost something that belonged to someone else.

But for anyone alive and listening in , the track's distinctive reggaeton groove was already instantly familiar. In this case, the source material serves as a launch-pad — it's impossible for Tyler's verses to exist without the bed on which they rest, but the rapper undeniably brings fresh wit and worth to the table. Technically, this was an authorised sample — a tradition which dates to the birth of hip-hop, when rappers progressed from toasting over looped beats from juggled records.

As samplers got more sophisticated, so did the music — and by the late '90s, the practice had been thoroughly embraced by the mainstream — as evidenced by Coolio's bestseller Gangsta's Paradise , built on Stevie Wonder's charged Pastime Paradise. These old tunes combined to create a compelling newness. I Like It sported its sampled source material as a talisman.

Originally a hit for Pete Rodriguez, I Like It Like That was among the most definitive songs of the brief boogaloo boom — tellingly built around one of history's most hypnotic chord sequences. And, later picked up as both the theme of a same-name movie and the backbone of a marketing campaign for a major fast food chain, today I Like it Like That sounds to the average ear like the very definition of Latin music.

Cardi B knew this well. A group endeavour which lists no fewer than 16 songwriters, I Like It liberally layers the original groove with intoxicating, but reverential trap beats — serving a frenetic canvas for the star's razor-sharp rhymes.

Say you go paddleboarding for the first time. Most agree it likely relates to memory in some way. Below are some of the more widely accepted theories. The first time you see something, you might take it in out of the corner of your eye or while distracted. Your brain can begin forming a memory of what you see even with the limited amount of information you get from a brief, incomplete glance. So, you might actually take in more than you realize.

In other words, it can happen as a sort of mix-up when the part of your brain that tracks present events and the part of your brain that recalls memories are both active. When your brain absorbs information, it generally follows a specific path from short-term memory storage to long-term memory storage. The theory suggests that, sometimes, short-term memories can take a shortcut to long-term memory storage.

Another theory offers the explanation of delayed processing. You observe something, but the information you take in through your senses is transmitted to your brain along two separate routes.

One of these routes gets the information to your brain a little more rapidly than the other. This delay may be extremely insignificant, as measurable time goes, but it still leads your brain to read this single event as two different experiences. Adele was pictured with the year-old, who has signed the likes of Lebron James, at a basketball game in July.

She has since posted a photo with him on Instagram. Adele also got real about her recent struggles with her mental health—the Vogue U. The singer expressed annoyance at the intense press scrutiny over her weight loss, which she said was due to a strict exercise regime during lockdown rather than any diets.

Part of her therapy involved returning to feelings of abandonment in her childhood—her father, Mark Evans, who died of cancer in May, left her mom soon after Adele was born. Music has been a source of comfort for the singer from a young age. Writing her latest album was no exemption. Contact us at letters time. Adele during her 'Saturday Night Live' monologue on Oct.



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