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No pain, no gain (or "No gain without pain") is a proverb, used since the 1980s as an exercise motto that promises greater value rewards for the price of hard and even painful work. Under this conception competitive professionals, such as athletes and artists, are required to endure pain (physical suffering) and stress (mental/emotional ...
No man can serve two masters; No man is an island; No names, no pack-drill; No news is good news; No one can make you feel inferior without your consent; No pain, no gain; No rest for the wicked; Not all those who wander are lost – "All that is gold does not glitter" J.R.R. Tolkien (1954) Nothing is certain but death and taxes
There are more and more studies pointing that way. Pain is an alert signal from your body, it doesn't exist for no reason. Think it like the "earth is flat": this is what your eyes tell you, yet it couldn't be more wrong. Same goes for "no pain no gain", it's an incorrect observation made without seeing the big picture.
Get through Monday with these hilarious memes.
Modern life is difficult. Maybe not as much as it was in the Middle Ages when the plague was looming on the right and an angry mob with pitchforks were chasing "witches" on the left but still ...
Wojak was also paired with the template phrase "that feel" or "that feel when", often shortened to "tfw" or ">tfw ". [ 6 ] [ 7 ] Some variants paired him with the character Pepe the Frog (with catchphrases "feels good man" or "feels bad man"), in what Feldman describes as a "platonic romance within the memescape".
Depression is so much more than feeling sad. This meme rings true because while the stereotype of depression is feeling too many sad or difficult feelings, the reality is that depression is a ...
Pain-related activity in the thalamus spreads to the insular cortex (thought to embody, among other things, the feeling that distinguishes pain from other homeostatic emotions such as itch and nausea) and anterior cingulate cortex (thought to embody, among other things, the affective/motivational element, the unpleasantness of pain), [50] and ...