![]() ![]() There's less of a chance for your own RSD to become a problem because the goals are very achievable. No one likes playing limbo with someone who suddenly moves the bar two feet lower than it was before. Inching the limbo bar up each time isn't stressful because your bar is so low to start with and you're moving it up very slowly. Your bars should be incredibly low so that rewarding yourself for moving a dirty dish from the counter to the sink is ridiculous. If you set too high of a bar, especially for step 1, you're setting yourself up for failure and this won't work.Ī huge part of the low bar reverse limbo is laughing at yourself. *The lower the bar you set, the greater chance for success. Throw in a reward each time you complete the limbo and/or raise the bar. New in 2013, this is a sturdy, more robust Limbo set from Uber Games that is specifically designed. Stretch out and extend wide - Limbo as low as you can go and test your strength, flexibility and agility. ![]() No? Set another low bar but maybe inch it up a little. A great party game for events and fairs, Limbo is uproarious entertainment for children and adults alike. Was that as bad as you thought? Yes? Okay, set the lowest bar possible again. Identify: What is the absolute lowest possible bar you could set? No bar is too low! See examples below.*Ĥ. I've adapted this as the years have gone on to what I'm calling the low bar reverse limbo.ġ. Why? Takes the pressure off and honestly it is kind-of fun. Your goal is no longer to write "the introduction" or "an introduction," your goal is to literally write "a bad introduction." It's a variation of taking the pressure completely off and just write something, but your honest goal is to write poorly. ![]() Yep, you have this huge paper to write, you can't get started, setting a timer for ten minutes and working isn't going well, so write a horrible introduction. I was reading writing tips from a fiction author, and she recommended writing badly. I didn't care about the consequences of not writing the paper, so anxiety as a motivator wasn't going to work. Like most of us, I had a paper to write that I could not possibly have been less interested in. Agents Nicholson and Sokoler expertly pixelated their photos for the mission report.We often have trouble getting started on a task, especially if it's boring, has multiple steps, and isn't going to result in an easy dopamine hit. Of course, we were still walking around the train in our underpants, so we got plenty of reactions from actual strangers as well.Īgent Haskel did an excellent job pixelating the video, and Agent Gross did some great color-correcting for the agents whose underwear didn’t quite match their skin tone. A few of the agents gave us staged reactions for the video, posing as regular train riders. One regular and one skin-colored pair underneath. Last year we acted like we had staged a prank at a funeral.įilming the beginning of the video in an empty park with Agent AdamsĪgents arrived at the meeting point wearing two pairs of underwear. We post prank videos year-round, so for April Fool’s Day we like to change things up and try to fool our online audience. I think most folks who fell for it assumed that it was an April Fool’s joke on the people riding the train, not on them. We saw several major news blogs around the world reporting it as fact. We were pretty surprised at how many people actually fell for it. The “uncensored” version of the video embedded above will show you what we actually looked like. Although we claimed that 1,000 people had exposed their genitals on the train, we actually just filmed 20 actors wearing skin-colored underwear, and then pixelated the footage to make them look naked. Produced by Charlie Todd and Matt Adams / music by Tyler Walkerįor April Fool’s Day this year, we uploaded a new video that made it look like we had staged a No Underwear Subway Ride (in the tradition of our annual No Pants Subway Ride event.) The video was a hoax. (Watch No Underwear Subway Ride Uncensored in HD on YouTube)
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