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  2. List of films featuring time loops - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_films_featuring...

    This list of films featuring time loops in which characters experience the same period of time which is repeatedly resetting: when a certain condition is met, such as a death of a character or a clock reaches a certain time, the loop starts again, with one or more characters retaining the memories from the previous loop.

  3. Three Hours To Change Your Life - images.huffingtonpost.com

    images.huffingtonpost.com/2013-01-04-ThreeHours...

    to create this process. Before we started to think of the year ahead, it seemed natural to review 1980 and what had happened for each of us. Expecting the worst, we both found that we’d accomplished far more than we thought. We started to feel a bit more enthusiastic about ourselves and what lay ahead --- an experience which, by the way, has

  4. Rosy retrospection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosy_retrospection

    Rosy retrospection is very closely related to the concept of nostalgia though still different respectively in being rosy retrospection being biased towards perceiving the past as better than the present. [6] The English idiom "rose-colored glasses" or "rose-tinted glasses" refers to perceiving something more positively than it is in reality.

  5. Time loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_loop

    The time loop is a popular trope in Japanese pop culture media, especially anime. [15] Its use in Japanese fiction dates back to Yasutaka Tsutsui's science fiction novel The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (1965), one of the earliest works to feature a time loop, about a high school girl who repeatedly relives the same day.

  6. Temporal paradox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Temporal_paradox

    A bootstrap paradox, also known as an information loop, an information paradox, [6] an ontological paradox, [7] or a "predestination paradox" is a paradox of time travel that occurs when any event, such as an action, information, an object, or a person, ultimately causes itself, as a consequence of either retrocausality or time travel.

  7. Why Diversity Matters Catalyst 7-16-12 - HuffPost

    images.huffingtonpost.com/2013-03-21-why...

    Leaders working to create diverse and inclusive workplaces in which women can advance must make the connection between diversity initiatives and their organization’s business goals.1 Effective business cases set the context for diversity and identify organizational challenges that must be addressed in order to create change.

  8. Flashback (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashback_(psychology)

    Due to the elusive nature of involuntary recurrent memories, very little is known about the subjective experience of flashbacks. However, theorists agree that this phenomenon is in part due to the manner in which memories of specific events are initially encoded (or entered) into memory, the way in which the memory is organized, and also the way in which the individual later recalls the event. [5]

  9. Good old days - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Good_old_days

    Good old days – commonly stylized as "good ol' days" – is a cliché in popular culture used to reference a time considered by the speaker to be better than the current era. It is a form of nostalgia that can reflect homesickness or yearning for long-gone moments. [1]