You may like an outdoor festival instead. You can get as close to or far from the stage as you like and you usually can bring your own seating. They last all day and can have multiple stages with food and vendors in between so if you get tired or overwhelmed you've got somewhere to go recover. You get exposed to a lot of bands in a short amount of time so you can get an idea of the different ways they perform and may discover music you enjoy.
Some 2 or 3 day festivals offer camping on-site and keep the music going from 12PM to 2AM. Being surrounded by music like that for days in a row lets it start to feel like a normal thing instead of the condensed experience of a concert.
Wouldn't this require sharing information with the school that organizes the course and any vendors that support them? Schools, payment processors and student information systems eventually sell or leak data.
I think it's pointing out that people will ask still themselves, "What was I waiting for?" even when there were valid reasons to wait. It reminds me of internalization or self-blame.
I believe it is a major cause of violence and suffering in the world, like the majority of religions. Reading the scripture considered canon is enough of a source to turn me away.
Maybe some kind of morality calculator. You could monitor the internal self report of every being capable of experience to see if there is something like objective morality.
Individual sites will have their data leaked then aggregated by data brokers. Those data brokers both sell the aggregated data and experience data leaks themselves. The data keeps moving from actor to actor while the aggregation is continued until eventually finding it's way into a public repo or security researcher data sets.
You may like an outdoor festival instead. You can get as close to or far from the stage as you like and you usually can bring your own seating. They last all day and can have multiple stages with food and vendors in between so if you get tired or overwhelmed you've got somewhere to go recover. You get exposed to a lot of bands in a short amount of time so you can get an idea of the different ways they perform and may discover music you enjoy.
Some 2 or 3 day festivals offer camping on-site and keep the music going from 12PM to 2AM. Being surrounded by music like that for days in a row lets it start to feel like a normal thing instead of the condensed experience of a concert.