You take a piece of flat land, about five squares to five squares. In each corner, you add three pieces of obsidian. After making four pillars, you then make a roof. Make it low enough, so you can't jump, but you can move around. It works as a sort of hut. Between each pillar, should be three spaces. Dig those spaces out, and replace them with "Sticky Pistons." facing up. You should then have nine squares in the center. Stand in the middle of those nine spaces, and put a pressure plate on every other space, apart from the one you are on. Your trap is done. In the empty space you were in, put a chest in it, and keep it empty. You then put a sign saying "Free diamonds for anyone who can get in and out first." Quick, simple, and you can wait till they get really angry and try to break the machine. It lasts for about five minutes, before they escape. Simply dig a three by three square, two squares deep. One layer, place TNT. The other layer, place sand/dirt/gravel over it. Something that explodes. You pop a sign next to it, and also a dispenser. On the sign, you write "Free diamonds. Step on and wait." They will step on the Pressure plate that you have placed in the center of the nine squares, the TNT will ignite, and BOOM. Instant death.

Summary: You can make a simple Obsidian trap, and it would be Impossible to escape on Survival. They will walk in, realise they were tricked, then when they step on the pressure plates, they won't be able to get back out. 2 You can make a simple TNT trap.


Contact your doctor or your child's pediatrician for a list of recommended speech and language therapists. Your healthcare professional will be able to provide a referral based on the needs of the patient, which allows for a more targeted approach to care. Also, if your doctor provides a referral it is more likely that the professionals will coordinate care to ensure a complete and effective approach to treatment. Most referrals provided by healthcare professionals will be to private clinics. While they tend to have more targeted approaches to care, they also tend to be more costly. If you are looking for a speech therapist for a child who is older than 3, contact the child's school or school district. School districts are responsible for all special education programs (including speech therapy) until the child graduates from high school. Contact the special education department at your child's school to schedule an evaluation or to speak to someone regarding referrals. Early intervention programs service children under 4 years of age, or who are not of school age yet. Every state has a special education department that manages early childhood intervention. Contact your state department directly to receive a list of programs available in your county and area.  The Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center has a list of contact information for each state's special education department.  You do not need a medical diagnosis or professional judgement to make a referral. As soon as a delay is suspected, families are invited to make a referral for services. Local colleges or universities who have audiology or speech therapy programs may offer assessments and treatment provided by college students or interns. The interns are shadowed by fully licensed professionals and are usually under the direction of a fully licensed clinical director.  A few benefits of this option are the ability to help students in their professional endeavors and a lower cost than private providers. One disadvantage of this option includes less continuity of care because students may rotate in and out of the program or trade shifts.

Summary: Get a referral from your family doctor. Contact your child's school. Utilize an early intervention program. Check with local colleges.


Patch cables are short lengths of quarter-inch cable that are used specifically for connecting a sequence of pedals. It would quickly become unwieldy to patch together more than one or two pedals with 12-foot lengths of stage cable, so patch cables help to keep your set-up tidy and easy to manage. Patch cables are also recommended to maintain signal quality. The longer an audio signal must travel, the worse it will eventually sound, so short patch cables help to keep your signal of the highest quality possible. When you're chaining together a sequence of pedals, the order of the pedals is very important. The first pedal in the sequence is the one connected directly to your guitar and the last pedal in the sequence will be the pedal that connects to your amplifier. Different rules apply to different pedals, but the one pedal you want to make sure is first in any chain is a tuning pedal, if you have one. Tuning pedals need clear, direct, unfiltered signals to work properly. If you installed a distortion pedal in a sequence before a tuning pedal, the tuner would be reading that degraded and distorted signal. It might sound cool, but it'll make the tuner go all wonky and give you a bad reading. Put your tuner first so your guitar will stay in tune. Basic rule of thumb when it comes to sequencing guitar pedals: Pedals that create tone need to go before pedals that manipulate tone. Wah-wahs, envelope filters, and other pedals that compress the natural sound of your guitar should be placed early in the signal path, following any tuners that you use. Some of the most common pedals used in playing rigs are the fuzz boxes. Distortion, overdrive, and other types of pedals that create great-sounding gain and distortion for controlled bursts of chaos in your sound should come after the tuners and the wah-wahs. The specific order of your distortion and overdrive pedals is up to you. When it comes to playing guitar, the rules are meant to be broken. Experiment with different orientations of your pedals to see what sound works best for you. Flangers, phasers, and chorus pedals work by modulating the signal and creating an atmospheric effect to that tone. It works best chained in the sequence after any distortion pedals that you might have in your chain. Volume and reverb pedals should always be placed last in a sequence. These work best when used to adjust a finished signal, and won't work properly placed in the middle of the sequence. Reverb pedals can go out of control if placed before distortion. There's no "wrong way" to chain together pedals. For some guitar players, looking for control and reliability and quality of sound, these rules of thumb are absolutely essential to getting a "correct" signal. For others, you can make noise symphonies just by twisting some dials and never touching your guitar. Spend an afternoon chaining together pedals in different sequences. See what happens. If something starts feeding back, go for the modulators and reverb units first. Anything that echoes and repeats, or loops a signal is the likely candidate for feedback, instead of distortion pedals, as you might expect. You can also turn down the effect knobs quickly to get control of the signal, if necessary. When you patch pedals together, you can also invest in a power-patch cable, to allow you to power all your pedals through a single 9-volt adapter, rather than trying to lug around adapters for each one of your pedals. This is usually the most efficient method for trying to power your pedals, rather than batteries or individual adapter units. It’s basically a long string of A/C jacks attached to a single cable, which you can link straight into the pedals. onsider investing in a pedal board. A pedal board allows you to keep your pedals organized on stage, as well as keeps your pedals ordered in a sequence that you like. If you’ve stumbled upon a set-up that works for you and produces the sound you’re looking for, it’s a lot easier to organize it on a board and keep it connected in the same basic order, rather than having to reorganize every time you want to play.
Summary: Use patch cables. Always start with your tuning pedal. Place compressors and filter-type pedals early in the sequence. Put overdrive and distortion pedals second in the sequence. Chain modulation pedals after distortion. Play with the order of the pedals to get the sound you’re looking for. Power the cables in sequence. .