When Ponyboy sees Bob's picture in the yearbook, he remembers the stuff Randy said to him about Bob having a nicer side to him, a side that Ponyboy hadn't seen and didn't kno about, and about Bob's parents thinking Bob was murdered because of them because they didn't treat him well enough.
Seeing Bob in the yearbook triggered Ponyboy's memories of the violent altercation between Bob and Johnny that ultimately led to Johnny killing Bob in self-defense. It made Ponyboy reflect on the underlying tensions that existed between the Socs and the Greasers, and the tragic consequences that stemmed from those tensions.
When Ponyboy sees Bob's picture in the yearbook, he remembers the stuff Randy said to him about Bob having a nicer side to him, a side that Ponyboy hadn't seen and didn't kno about, and about Bob's parents thinking Bob was murdered because of them because they didn't treat him well enough.
When Ponyboy sees Bob's picture in the yearbook, he remembers the stuff Randy said to him about Bob having a nicer side to him, a side that Ponyboy hadn't seen and didn't kno about, and about Bob's parents thinking Bob was murdered because of them because they didn't treat him well enough.
When Ponyboy sees Bob's picture in the yearbook, he remembers the stuff Randy said to him about Bob having a nicer side to him, a side that Ponyboy hadn't seen and didn't kno about, and about Bob's parents thinking Bob was murdered because of them because they didn't treat him well enough.
No, thoughts are not physical manifestations of the mind. Thoughts are mental processes that occur in the brain and are not tangible or physical in nature.
Thoughts.
Deep Thoughts from a Shallow Mind was created on 1994-09-13.
"On my mind" means you are thinking of the person or thing, as if it were literally inside your head sitting on your mind.
Thoughts :)
Thoughts do not exist in a tangible form; they are abstract concepts within the mind.
When seeing your reflection in the window, thoughts about your appearance, emotions, and self-perception may come to mind.
Sigmund Freud identified three distinct aspects of thoughts and feelings: the conscious mind, which contains thoughts and feelings we are currently aware of; the preconscious mind, which holds thoughts and feelings that are easily brought to awareness; and the unconscious mind, which houses thoughts and feelings that are hidden from conscious awareness but still influence behavior.