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I LOVE WAFFLES. Thank you for cheering me up!</p>
<p>I’m curious about the mini-stroke analogy, though. What kind of thinking are you referring to that is hard to notice and can lead to a mini-stroke?</p>
<p>Kommand, although you wasted your own time by ignoring my disclaimers and my clarification of the pronoun “you”, I have no interest in spending mine to respond to most of your post.</p>
<p>Other than that misunderstanding, there is the issue of mental agility. I don’t buy the assertion that hesitation is a sign of misunderstanding material. You’ll have to support that claim if you want to sound convincing. And deal with the counterexample of a dyslexic English teacher who appears incoherent to the casual observer but, given time, can beautifully use the English language via refinement.</p>
<p>That’s a start to deconstructing my contempt for children who call their parents dumb for not-so-instantly recalling what they (parents) learned in school and not-so-easily applying it to their (childrens’) homework.</p>