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Star Wars The Child Talking Plush Toy with Character Sounds and Accessories, The Mandalorian Toy for Kids Ages 3 and Up. & Mandalorian Water Bottle with Straw

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Yoda's most memorable quote, bar none, and one of the greatest in all of Star Wars. This is another line from the X-wing sequence on Dagobah, and are the last instructions the Jedi Master gives Luke before he attempts to raise his fighter from the swamp. Within the scene, it was a lightning bolt of dialogue, another great nugget of undeniable wisdom that teaches Luke to have a more serious mind. Yoda had consistently tried to teach Luke to focus on the present, and essentially, to grow up. In this moment, with these words, he makes it clear. Outside of the film, the line has become a modern slogan -- a reminder to commit oneself to something completely, win or lose. Unless you’ve been hiding in a galaxy far, far away, you will know that Yoda speaks with a distinctive grammar. He inverts pairs of phrases before speaking. If Yoda says “Believe you I don’t”, we know what he means is “I don’t believe you.”

During the Clone Wars, Anakin Skywalker had grown more powerful and experienced. But Yoda was aware of the young Jedi’s shortcomings that still lingered from his childhood: his fear and his inability to let go. With that in mind, Yoda assigned Anakin his own Padawan learner, Ahsoka Tano. Yoda believed that by becoming a teacher, Anakin would grow emotionally. He hoped that when it came time for Ahsoka to go off on her own, Anakin would understand that he need not be attached and feel so protective of those he loved. The wrong question that is.” Here's the truth we all need to hear: Ezra's journey both literally in the temple and figuratively in his life are his to decide. Most of the time when you're choosing between two options, they both have pros and cons, but one thing is for sure: No one can make the decision but you. The exception is this: You should use extra punctuation if a sentence contains more than one clause, often split with 'and', 'or', etc. For example: "Put your hands up and step away from the turnip." should be "Put your hands up, and step away from the turnip." or "Put your hands up. Step away from the turnip." Now the first part of the puzzle. For each of these following annotated Yoda sentences, write down the original.

Yoda speaks in the way he does to honour his own Jedi master. That’s not some random bit of trivia from Wookipedia either; that comes from Dave Filoni, the guy behind a lot of the Star Wars series you know and love. Another line that works both in-context ("I'm looking for a great warrior," Luke says to Yoda, which prompts this smart response) and standalone. It all filters into one of Yoda's great lessons: aggression and violence do not make a Jedi or a person strong. The meaning behind this quote is strengthened when one sees that Yoda knows the reality of war and battle in the prequel era.

Rarely does life go exactly as planned, and that's OK. But if you convince yourself that you know exactly how this is going to play out, you're setting yourself up for certain failure. Just because you're delivered directly into the rancor's lair or the belly of a sandcrawler doesn't mean all hope is lost and your fate is sealed. Assess the situation at hand, figure out your options, and take decisive action. However, that doesn't get you off the hook on making terrible life decisions because... In the same vein, making decisions out of fear or anger is going to be a disaster. Seriously, Luke, go ask your father! PLEASE NO SPOILERS. Please write all comments using the Yoda notation, and if possible also in a silly voice.After Luke comes to Dagobah, Yoda initially withholds his true identity. He's trying to get a sense of who Luke is as a person; Yoda understands that there's a lot at risk in training Luke to be a Jedi, especially considering what happened with his father. And Yoda is not impressed -- Luke is impatient and selfish. With "Adventure. Excitement. A Jedi craves not these things," the Jedi Master makes clear that Luke must understand the significance and meaning of the journey he thinks he wants to make. It's an important lesson for Luke and for audiences, because when Luke faces Vader at the film's climax, we see the stakes involved in the life of a Jedi. Worrying about what we can't control and clinging to what we think is ours is wasted time and energy. The only constant in life is change. “Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter,” as Yoda says. Or as many a sighing parent has said — the world does not revolve around you! The Rebel Alliance is bigger than any individual person, Luke! Leia knows it. Han, even from the depths of his carbonite slumber, probably knows it. But Luke is still just learning that his decisions impact other people and sometimes he's not very good at weighing out all the factors. Where's C-3PO when you actually need him to tell you the odds?

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