Yes
YesSay No to drugs.
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YesSay No to drugs.
My 13 year old is going through the voice change part of puberty. Seems to be happening with a minimum of squeeks and cracks, but sometimes I don't recognize his voice when he speaks! Kinda freaky-deaky.
I will try that tonight. But, he'll probably sound like Batman and freak me out even more. His voice is so deep now...he sounds like a completely different person. I remember it being more gradual with the oldest, so not as disconcerting, when he opened his mouth and a different voice came out.Get him to say "I'm Batman" before his voice changes all the way.......
My 13 year old is going through the voice change part of puberty. Seems to be happening with a minimum of squeeks and cracks, but sometimes I don't recognize his voice when he speaks! Kinda freaky-deaky.
If you don't eat your meat, you can't have any pudding;Is there any album more perfect than The Wall?
So this morning I was driving to work. I pushed the button for the heat but did not realize I had turned it down to the "blue" part of the dial (as opposed to red)I wonder why you don't always see your breath when it is cold enough to see your breath. Anyone have the answer on that one? Say like in the fall when the temps drop, you notice the white fog of your breath each exhalation. But that...whatever...seems to disappear...you don't always notice it. I wonder why? It's like it isn't even there...like...what? You're dead and you don't know it? Or maybe once you've been outside long enough...what? the inside of your lungs have cooled off? Or maybe it does fog and you don't notice it as much anymore?
Foggy breath!
I'm not sure what you're asking. Are you saying that if a person outdoors can see his breath more so than after he's been outside longer? Or are you asking why a visible breath disappears?I wonder why you don't always see your breath when it is cold enough to see your breath. Anyone have the answer on that one? Say like in the fall when the temps drop, you notice the white fog of your breath each exhalation. But that...whatever...seems to disappear...you don't always notice it. I wonder why? It's like it isn't even there...like...what? You're dead and you don't know it? Or maybe once you've been outside long enough...what? the inside of your lungs have cooled off? Or maybe it does fog and you don't notice it as much anymore?
Foggy breath!
I've got two ideas. One is that you've gotten used to the temperatures enough not to feel a difference when it gets a little bit, say one or two degrees, warmer. The other idea is more scientific and something I'm ignorant about: how much, if at all, a difference in humidity effects breath vapor.It seems like there are times when one should be able to see one's breath, considering air temperature...perhaps humidity has something to do with it? Or relative humidity? I'm saying it seems like one can see one's breath when the season starts, when the cold hits, when one goes outside, one begins to puff like a steam engine. But only recently I've begun to notice that as the winter wears on, that phenomenon is no longer present...not always...the temps are as cold or colder when the season began, when one readily saw one's breath. I dunno...maybe it is still happening, but one does not notice one's breath later in the season...as one does early in the season.