Have had her experience a couple times. It's always kind of sad.
edit: funny thing, both people who tried to involve me in their moneymaking schemes were heavy duty Christians. Too small a sample size to draw any conclusions of course. One was a typical Amway-style pyramid scheme where I would sell cutlery door to door, recruiting others to do the same so I could get a cut of their commissions, the other was a tiered investment scheme that took me all of 5 minutes online to find out was a well-known scam.
Depends on who you talk to. I always thought the atmo was pretty chill. When I was there around 2010 as a contractor for a couple years they had a strange work schedule: 9-hr days Mon-Thurs and half day Friday - which was almost universally regarded as a screw-around day, along with at least half of Thursday.
Shoutout to Chris Perkins! I got to help playtest parts of 5E back in the day and he was the DM. Getting paid to play D&D is nice work if you can get it!
People have to do what's best for them. If they need to commute to a job to have a social life, let them. This is absolutely not a reason to force other people to do it.
Boomer here, software developer, I started fighting the telecommuting battle with managers in the early 90s. They'd say, "We need you here." I'd ask, "Why? I can dial in. You have contractors in India you've never even met, and that works out fine." "That's different." "How?" They never could come up with valid reasons why we really needed to physically be there, and would generally shut down the conversation with like, "Well, I can see we don't agree on this." Correct, and 30 years later they're still making the same ludicrous arguments.
It comes down to planning meals and a certain amount of acceptance that what you've got in the house is what you eat, period, even if the specific food isn't what you're in the mood for at the moment. Fast food, doordash etc are difficult habits to break. They reward your desire to have what you want when you want it, which is a big reward, and can make living on your own food feel like a punishment by comparison. But that feeling is just part of the habit. Eventually it goes away.
Eating and drinking are almost entirely habit. I would say the main driver is parents not teaching kids to just fucking drink water. You don't need something with fizz, color or flavor. Water's been keeping humans alive forever.
We've had this capacity for several decades now, and it seems ridiculous that our culture has not fully embraced it with open arms. If that's not a sign that "we the people" aren't running the show, I don't know what is. Freedom my ass.
I feel like we're not even having the same conversation here. I explicitly object to the argument that medical measures are necessary to validate a trans concept. You say I'm focusing too much on that, then explain that being transracial isn't valid because of exactly that.
Saying you can't make your body change in the various ways you list invalidates being transgender - you can't make your body naturally produce the hormones to create secondary sex characteristics, you have to artificially take them. But again, so what? I don't think the body changes are relevant - if you're trans then you've always been trans, you just might not have understood it. To me the transracial concept seems equally valid, and I don't see how your biological objections relevantly differentiate them. I mean, you're not even being accurate - people do modify themselves in all the ways you list. Cosmetic surgery and body mods are more than a $100 billion/year industry in the US alone. I just don't see how you're making a point.
These examples seem mutually exclusive, but I'm not sure why you're asking that. I'm saying the RPG landscape is much more varied than two opposing edge cases - which is how memes tend to misrepresent the world.
I don't think it's weird at all. Being attached to physical objects is a totally normal part of being human. The comfort of familiarity is natural and nothing to be worried about. The personal example I can think of right away is that when a wallet wears out and I transfer my driver's license etc to a new one, I'm aware of the same feeling of attachment. Throwing out the old one feels like a small betrayal. I think feelings like that are completely natural. In fact my childhood cuddle toy - a stuffed dog named "Poody" is still up on a bookshelf over my desk. I hardly ever think about him but he's always up there, kind of watching over me.
Makes sense on the surface, but people have reacted that exact same way to the whole transgender concept. "You can be in touch with your feminine side but your still male" or whatever.
Are you saying hormone injections or other medical measures are necessary for you to consider someone transgender? I'm pretty sure most people wouldn't agree with that. Correspondingly why would that be required to be transracial? You're right that hormone differences aren't involved in race, but how does that invalidate the whole concept? TBH it sounds the same as the anti-trans argument, "it just doesn't make sense." I mean I can see people reacting like, "If we allow this then it would be easy to abuse." Well maybe, but that seems like another issue. I'm just now dipping into this and trying to understand it.
I don't know anything about this issue but apparently the presumption here is that your view is the right view and you're just asking how to splain it to the person. My question is about the "I've already blocked this person" part. Instead could you possibly just limit your conversation to other subjects? It keeps looking like we're all getting more and more isolated from each other as we develop extreme aversions to anyone not having our exact POV about everything, so we shove them out of our world. It reminds me of survivalist bunker mentality.
I would say it in Stephen Hawking's voice.