It seems absolutely exhausting to live inside your head.
If you’re in your teens, I get it, you’re still developing, you’ll get over it… But if you’re an adult… Oh boy… Please talk to a therapist about all this, you need to vent.
This seems like something you all should be discussing in family therapy.
Yeah me and my husbands messages are mostly memes and cat pictures.
“Why buy anything else” is a bad title, comes off as a condescending ad.
Would you keep the sentient one as a friend?
Not helpful for the current predicament, but good general advice for the future.
To be fair most people’s faces are not the shape of the first letter of their name either.
In my country companies are forced to give a certain amount of hours of free training a year to employees or they pay heavy fines.
They usually fill it up with compliance training bullshit though.
I’m in Europe and haven’t seen it yet either, so I guess it’s just random and we’ve been lucky.
I’m so with you on that. All these little steps towards that outcome make me so giddy and hopeful.
I really don’t know why, but it’s just such an amazing thought knowing that life thrives or thrived somewhere else.
Fun aside, that was an interesting fact.
TBF I really wasn’t thinking of pedestrians, though I should have because that’s the point of the whole post.
I’m not German and it would never cross my mind to not stop at a red light, I’m pretty sure that’s the norm in every country, no?
My dad was one of those working overtime, I remember he was so tired that Christmas.
Annoys me nowadays when I see people say stuff like… All that panic and no problems at all!
There were no problems because people worked really hard for no problems, Kevin!
Didn’t the rich dude tried to sue the random dude? Or was that a weird dream I had?
Only the mean ones.
This has been my experience as well this week. I’m so disappointed, it’s mostly just clickbaits and ads.
I was born in the 80s. Mom was a teacher, Dad worked in IT.
Both conversations were not especially made out to be a… ok listen carefully we’re going to talk about this now. They were not made out to be a big deal, just happened naturally.
It was part of everyday life, if the subject arised it was not ignored, we were kept up to date on news and when we hadl questions about any subject, we always had an answer, we were encouraged to think critically about subjects being politics, sex or drugs, didn’t matter.
At the time my country was going through a very serious drug crisis, so it was impossible to ignore.
Fortunately the decriminalisation of all drugs lowered the drug problem significantly, but I was in college at that point.