That’s very kind, thank you
That’s very kind, thank you
I’m on (just barely) Gen Z and I still get called retarded for symptoms of neurodivergence
Imo what’s key to a cosy game is that you choose within the game how much you want to challenge yourself. Take stardew, for example. My mum was content just farming crops. I went into the difficult mines with lots of combat etc. You can enjoy the game if you don’t do the hard parts, or you can do them sparsely, or all the time. You choose, and that’s what makes it so relaxing.
I’m not a hardcore gamer, but usually mostly into RPGs. But I’ve also got hundreds of hours in stardew and thousands in the Sims. When I play one of those, I’m always low key scared to grow bored because I LOVE those games and I know that there won’t be another good one right around the corner.
When I got bored of Skyrim, I played the Witcher, and when I got bored of that, I played Fallout. Repeat ad nauseam, because there’s more playable, entertaining RPGs out there than any one human could play in a lifetime.
With cosy games, not so much. When you grow bored of one, chances are, there won’t be another one that’ll be enjoyable to you at all, and you’ll have to hope and wait that something good will come out at some point.
I have the opposite problem, where people assume chronic means it’s permanent and it can’t get better. I know it often does, but not always. So I get accused of lying and faking when people see me do a thing that I previously didn’t want to do because it caused me pain.
Don’t answer if you don’t want to, but how are you finding thyroid free life? My doctor is kind of recommending it for me, but I’m on the fence (context: I have Graves’ disease, autoimmune hyperthyroidism)
Congrats on that decision, sounds like it’s good for you!
Pretty sure you have to pay if you back out as well, so that’s not an incentive to kill you either.
Mmmmmh yes, being super ableist in a post that’s calling our ableism
You can tell her you met someone, me, who has two of the things on your list and has been vegan for 3 years.
You can get help setting everything up, but you have to be the one to push the button, pick up the lethal medicine, etc
Intuitively, it seems like it’s hard to catch even when you know the symptoms. I’d get almost all of those from a combination of stress and a period.
You keep saying ‘clarifying what she meant’ everywhere. I just don’t get where you get that that’s what she meant. She just said she sees a bias against pro-Palestinian protesters. That’s not implying the bias has anything to do with Judaism at all.
There’s many such nickname based on trumps fake tan. We can’t really claim superiority on the nickname thing. It IS funny though.
I’m pretty sure one of my parents wouldn’t have had kids if he’d fully realized it was a choice. Let me tell you, growing up with such a parent isn’t great. I don’t know how they justify this to the public.
This is a twofold problem. One part is that your ethical beliefs aren’t compatible, one is his disregard for your needs.
Whether you can live with the first one, only you can tell. It’s valid to want to date someone who holds the same beliefs as you, and it’s valid to be ok with some ethical differences. The latter of course comes with some logistical difficulties that can be a lot to handle, maybe even too much.
The second isn’t something that’s healthy for you or the relationship. You’ll have to talk about that. If he can’t respect your needs, that’s a pretty fundamental incompatibility.
I’m not neurotypical at all, you can’t tell with a lot of us if you don’t talk to us
Omg very similar here! My best friend, who lives oversees now, is coming to visit for 3 weeks. It’s been about 2 years since I’ve seen him. If I didn’t know him, I wouldn’t think it possible for another human to understand me on such a fundamental and intuitive level as he does. I’m stoked!
Interesting, where are you? It’s more or less the opposite here (Austria). Hospitals will let you wait for ages (like 2 hours, possibly even more if it’s particularly busy) if you walk in with something that doesn’t require immediate treatment and/or their more advanced machines, and they’ll tell you you shouldn’t waste emergency resources for that stuff. I’m talking about COVID or the flu or things like that as a healthy young adult. But GPs will always take walk-ins for immediate issues. Mine has a wait time of 10-30 mins for walk-ins.
Depending on how much you hate hair that’s only half dry, towelling the shit out of it or only using the hair dryer for a shorter time. Then air dry. I do the latter over night so I don’t notice the wetness, keeping a towelly bonnet on. Also, the dryer works better if you brush your hair the whole time while holding it into the air stream.