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How To Solve Litterbox Problems In Multi-cat Homes ... Here's a step-by-step guide to help stop litter box problems in a multi-cat home. first of all, act fast...

Quantum Leaps May Solve Impossible Problems ... Problems that used to be considered "unsolvable" or "incomputable" may be solved using the almost mystical properties of quantum mechanics. Are you scratching your head? Wait, it's only the beginning....

Solve Dog Potty Training Problems ... The first step to take when trying to solve dog potty traning problems is understanding your dog.  If your dog is actually a puppy, keep in mind that they have a limited amount of space in their bladder.  Puppies are going to pee and poop on your floor, there is no way around it.  Full grown dogs, on the other hand, can hold their waste a bit longer...   The second step when learning to solve dog potty training problems at home is remembering what YOU must do.  Lets say, just for example, you work from 8 AM to 5 PM every day, and we will say you wake up at 6AM.  When you wake up, take your dog out to do his business.  Let your dog come in and eat while you are getting ready.  Take your dog out again before you leave for work.  Do you understand what I'm getting at?  I'll explain better:  Make sure you aren't leaving a loaded gun (or dog in this case) out in the open ( or locked inside your house).  Make sense?  Great!...

The child who would be an adult must give up any lingering childlike sense of parental power, either the magical ability to solve your problems for you or the dreaded ability to make you turn back into a child. When you are no longer hiding from your parents, or clinging to them, and can accept them as fellow human beings, then they may do the same for you.
—Frank Pittman (20th century)

I tell you, sir, the only safeguard of order and discipline in the modern world is a standardized worker with interchangeable parts. That would solve the entire problem of management.
—Jean Giraudoux (1882–1944)

In pursuit of an educational program to suit the bright and the not so bright, we have watered down a rigid training for the elite until we now have an educational diet in many of our public high schools that nourishes neither the classes nor the masses.... We must evolve an adjustable curriculum which does not sacrifice the superior student to the drones at a period in our history when we need highly trained people in ever increasing numbers to solve the vast and complex problems which destiny has placed upon our shoulders.
—Agnes E. Meyer (1887–1970)