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*confirmed adulterer
*confirmed adulterer
Maybe we just have less tolerance for bullshit here?
I’d name it “In Communist Russia, fantasy football team name you!”
Living wages in exchange for work.
If it’s not of historic significance? Modify it.
Know anyone who does metal work? Ask them to change it to something interesting.
Got a Dremel? Buff away the Nazi bits until it’s smooth metal.
There are lots of different ways to change it!
And if you know anyone who does leather work, they can remove or replace the nasty bits on the scabbard.
You can buy lead fuel additives to drop in your gas tank.
That’s what people still do, if they have a car that requires leaded gas.
That’s a really great way of thinking - “Understand the logic of the emotions, rather than the emotions.”
I hope you’re getting the help you need to cope long-term.
Focus on the tangible, objective details of the memory. And if you don’t have your own “why,” that’s okay! Focus instead on what the facts deem likely.
For example:
“I remember liking the woods. There aren’t really words for how I felt, but I’ll help you see it how I might have seen it: Sunny days shaded by the leaves. Cool, damp nights. The sounds of different birds. The sounds of rustling branches. Twigs and leaves under foot.”
Hopefully you can see what I did there. That’s all a linear statement of facts. You’re literally just writing the things that you, or anyone else, might have experienced while in the woods.
BUT - and here’s the important part - everyone else will form their own emotions around it, based on their own experiences. So the listeners will believe you’re sharing emotions. And it’s okay if you aren’t feeling them.
So just describe things from memory, maybe adding in extra likely details.
Also, if someone questions your word choice, it’s acceptable to say something like, “you and I may process emotions differently. To me, those were the right words.”
In Soviet Russia, AI goes almost a full minute without reading disparaging comments about YOU!
A utility to map extruded lines/objects/shapes to STL files. For example, say you have an STL of a curved vase. You want to add a spiral to it. So you place the photo of a spiral on the object. The utility lets you decide where on the STL it’ll be placed, then you can decide the extrusion depth (positive or negative).
Possibly including some type of LLM, too. So you can import your STL, then type something like “picture of the Simpsons in the style of ancient Greek amphora vase paintings.” It’ll appear as line art on the 3D object
Note that I don’t need this, myself. You want to work on something interesting, so I thought for a few minutes and came up with this. :)
Masterpiece? Where’s the Thousand Island dressing???
(not serious)
I bet you’re someone whose nose almost imperceptibly points downward.
I remember a few years ago, my feet started bothering me. Then I realized it happened after I moved to a house with hardwood floors.
Sanuk house slippers fixed me right up.
True, that’s two pandemics when people refused to wear masks and quarantine. Makes for much better data to include that. Thanks!
Probably depends on the bird.
Many birds live all year round in cold, rainy environments. Their bodies developed to be able to handle it, so either they are kept warm by their feathers or they shelter in warm places.
Other birds, such as toucans, are native to tropical environments and would probably be very unhappy in the cold.
Hey, Fat Tony! You of all people should know Geno had it comin’.
She still owes me $10, the jerk.
I agree with all of that, except for the part about people being focused on trying to stop the next one.
If anyone was actually serious about that, we wouldn’t average more than one per day across the U.S.
Not a specific post, but if you browse around there, you’ll find one pretty early.
Asking us is so questionpunk.