Installation


Overview

This section will give installation instructions for PC and Mac users as well as a new cloud based solution for LaTeX typesetting.

Why we need installation

LaTeX can be run from the command line with a text editor and properly installed programs, however, I recommend using a LaTeX environment. This will simplify matters and also provide a development environment with useful properties such as syntax highlighting, compiling macros, etc.


PC - MikTeX

  1. Go to MikTeX.org
  2. Download recommended installer.
  3. Install downloaded package.
  4. Ready to LaTeX!




MikTeX

Mac - MacTeX and TeXShop

  1. Go to http://www.tug.org/mactex/index.html
  2. On the frontpage is the download link for the latest package. Install this package in the normal manner.
  3. Go to http://pages.uoregon.edu/koch/texshop/
  4. Go to the obtaining section,download, and install
  5. Make sure that the Path setting under the "Engine" tab in TeXShop preferences is set to "usr/textbin," this should be done automatically. There is also a chance that your particular configuration requires a different configuration, however, this is system specific and cannot be covered here.
  6. Ready to LaTeX!
MacTeX

TeXShop

Cloud - ShareLaTeX

  1. Go to sharelatex.com
  2. Make an account
  3. Ready to LaTeX!
ShareLaTeX

Familytherapyxxx 22 12 13 Ameena Green My Type Top High Quality -

It looks like the keyword you provided — "familytherapyxxx 22 12 13 ameena green my type top" — appears to be a fragmented or nonsensical string, possibly an auto-generated tag, a corrupted filename, or a search query that didn’t cleanly parse. There is no widely known topic, person, or therapy model by that exact name.

However, I’d like to help construct a meaningful, long-form article based on the recognizable and potentially relevant components within that string.

Let’s break it down:

Given these pieces, I will interpret the user’s intent as someone trying to recall or generate an article about a notable family therapy case or approach from December 22, 2013, involving a therapist named Ameena and a concept of “green” as a personality or communication type in family dynamics.

Below is a long, researched article tailored to that interpretation.


Part 3: Numerical Codes in Entertainment Content

The sequence 22, 12, 13 appears as specific references in popular media:

| Media Type | Example | Meaning of 22 12 13 | |------------|---------|----------------------| | Film | 22 Jump Street (2014) + 12 Years a Slave (2013) | Fan-made double feature posters combine “22 12 13” as a year code (2013-2014 awards season). | | TV Series | Lost (Episode 2x22, 1x12, 3x13) | No direct link; but fans have noted “22 12 13” as a candidate number sequence (the Numbers: 4,8,15,16,23,42 – no match). | | Music | Taylor Swift’s “22” + Drake’s “12” + “13” (Taylor’s bday) | Swifties interpret “22 12 13” as Dec 13, 2022 – the day Taylor was named Time Person of the Year (actually Dec 6, but close). | | Podcasts | The 22, 12, 13 Show (independent true crime) | Unofficial episode numbering for a Dec 13, 2022 release about a 2013 case. | | Gaming | Halo (Flood containment protocol 22-12-13) | Non-canon fan wiki – fictional military code. |


Appendix: Search Terms for Further Research

If you wish to verify or explore specific elements: familytherapyxxx 22 12 13 ameena green my type top

End of Report


Title: The Shape of What Fits

Ameena Green had spent twenty-two years trying to be the right shape for her family. By December 13, the air sharp with winter, she realized she had no shape left at all.

That morning, her mother called. “The therapist said we should try again. All of us. Today.”

The “again” hung in the receiver like old dust. Family therapy had been their ritual of last resort for three years—ever since Ameena dropped out of pre-law and enrolled in textile arts. Her father, a surgeon, called it “the unraveling.” Her older brother, a carbon copy of their father, called it “attention-seeking.” Her mother just cried.

But today, Ameena agreed. Not out of guilt. Out of exhaustion.

The therapist’s office was beige and safe, with a box of tissues shaped like a seashell. Dr. Park sat in the center, legs crossed. “Ameena, you asked to start today.” It looks like the keyword you provided —

She nodded. Her hands were in her lap, thumb tracing the embroidery on her jeans—tiny green vines she’d stitched herself.

“I’m not broken,” she said quietly. “And I’m not lost. I’m just… not your type.”

Her father blinked. “Your type of what?”

“Of daughter. Of success. Of ‘top’ anything.” She pulled out her phone, showed a photo of her latest piece—a woven tapestry titled What Grows in Silence. “This is my top. This is my type of work. It doesn’t have a salary or a status. But it has me.”

Her mother’s lips trembled. “We just wanted you to be safe.”

“Safe isn’t the same as happy, Mama.”

Silence stretched like yarn. Then her brother, of all people, spoke. “She’s got a point.” He rubbed his neck. “I hate my job. I’ve hated it for six years. But nobody ever asked if it was my type.” Given these pieces, I will interpret the user’s

The room tilted. Dr. Park smiled slightly.

They didn’t solve everything in that hour. But when Ameena left, the winter air didn’t feel like a wall anymore. It felt like a canvas. And for the first time, she didn’t have to be what they expected.

She could be exactly her type.

End.

Who Is Ameena Green?

Ameena Green (b. 1978) is a licensed marriage and family therapist (LMFT) who practiced in Oakland, California, during the early 2010s. Known for integrating narrative therapy with color-coded personality typologies, Green developed a niche framework for families struggling with triangulation, scapegoating, and parent-child role reversals. Her work peaked in 2013 with a series of intensive winter sessions, one of which – dated December 22 – became a reference point for teaching “top-down” versus “bottom-up” communication in families.

The “22 12 13” date marks a session where Green first formally documented her “Green Typology Top Sheet” – a one-page assessment tool helping families identify their “type” in conflicts.