Skip Navigation

User banner
Shambling Shapes
Posts
0
Comments
168
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • "The fifth" is American. They have the same or similar concept in other countries, they just have different names for it than "the fifth amendment".

    Plead "the fifth" in NZ and they'll tell you that you watch too much American television.

  • I'm sorry, I'm going to one up you. Look away now if squeamish.

    I woke up with one climbing into my ear. I ran to the bathroom, bashing into furniture and walls because feeling it wriggle around in my ear threw my sense of balance off so badly. And also, you know, panic. I jumped into the bathtub fully clothed, dropped to hands and knees to put my head under the faucet, and turned the water on full force to flush it out.

    This was during college years, during a gap between semesters and I didn't have an apartment. I was couch surfing at a friends. After that night, I left and lived in my car for a couple of days instead. There was no way I would be able to fall asleep again in that place.

  • Yes. I rent and my state requires that my landlord have so many based on the number of rooms and square footage.

    Glad it worked out for you. For future reference, there are additional steps for grease/oil fires in the kitchen:

    Turn off stove

    Cover with lid

    Then smother with the extinguisher, or baking soda or salt if you don't have an extinguisher handy. Never water.

    The first two steps cutoff energy and oxygen, and will minimize the splatter that the extinguisher causes.

  • Getting an instapot was the difference maker. It made it a setup-and-walkaway operation. It's also very easy to sanitize first, running a quick boil cycle with just water

    And then I figured out less starter results in a thicker yogurt on the "Greek" end. It was counterintuitive, at first; I thought "more starter" = stronger end result = "Greek", but that was not the case.

    6-8 hours gives me a milder yogurt, while 8-10 hours gives me a tarter yogurt that I like for smoothies.

  • Thanks. That's what I've been finding as well. Unfortunate, such a wealth of community-built knowledge and they had to go and ruin reddit.

    I had a nightmare last night that Wikipedia started to enshittify. I woke up and donated $. I desperately don't want them to follow down the drain chasing reddit and YT.

  • I got significantly better at brewing beer.

    I make my own Greek yogurt now. I like it much better than store-bought.

    I improved in two languages. I'm not great at either but they've helped me build rapport with work colleagues and have come in handy while traveling.

    I finished a master's degree and all the skills that entails.

  • I've been thinking about giving this a go. Any resources you recommend to start out with?

  • In response to a question of whether transgender people can be baptized, the doctrinal office said they could with some conditions and as long as there is "no risk of causing a public scandal or disorientation among the faithful".

    A transgender person would "cause a public scandal" according to any priest that doesn't want to include trans people. This announcement is pointless, it changes nothing.

    When the system allows racists, sexists, homophobes, etc. to wield authority, then the system is racist, sexist, homophobic, etc.

  • I generally don't downvote. I report a comment/post if they break rules. I block users that are stupid, mean, comment in bad faith, or are otherwise negative to my experience. I use an app that allows me to apply unique labels to users that only I can see if I am not quite ready to block them but want to be ready on next offense. I.e., someone who uses dog whistle language but I'm not sure it was intentional.

    Most of the accounts I made for Lemmy are on instances that disable downvoting. That wasn't planned on my part, but I don't mind.

  • So many uses. They are a convenience and not really necessary when I really drill down into it, but the convenience factor is significant.

    Maps and navigation. I can change plans on the fly and still confidently navigate cities I have never been to before, with a good estimate of when I will get somewhere. Could I plan from home or use paper maps/atlases? Sure, but a smartphone is way easier and more flexible.

    Communication. It simplifies keeping in touch with people and maintaining relationships. Could I call them from my home landline once a month? Sure, but a smartphone allows me to send them a quick text or a dumb meme anytime from anywhere. Smaller, more frequent communication to supplement the less frequent larger effort helps a lot with relationship maintenance.

    Having a computer in my pocket any time I am away from home and my home PC.

    People who eschew basic modern technology are weird. It's just a fact. Could I move to a remote mountain cabin and throw out all electronics and let my inner, introverted, weirdo quirks run rampant? Sure. But I don't really want that. I want to have friends and to be generally well thought of by my community. I want people to text me to invite me to go out. I want to pull up the latest artist I'm excited about to share with someone when we're out and about. Smartphones are so ubiquitous, it is a radical statement not to have one and I simply don't want to be a radical.

  • Drinking alcohol does not always equal problematic drinking. I consider beer a hobby. I keep tasting notes on beers I try, I read books on brewing techniques and history, I search out beers with specific ingredients and of specific styles. All while staying within recommended limits for people of my age, weight, and gender.

    How is that not a hobby?

  • Day 2 after a promotion at work that's giving me a significantly larger amount of responsibility and people to manage. I am terrified and exhilarated. Trying not to let my emotions leak out all over my new team, while also being human and not pretending to have all the answers.

  • The US and UK have both used data from period trackers to spy on women and monitor for "suspicious" miscarriages.

  • Following the advice of my dentist, in the morning after finishing my coffee and in the evening before bed.

  • If it it were my instance, as in I run it and mod it, I would boot them. I can't moderate a language I don't understand.

    If it's an instance I have a profile on but it's not mine to run or moderate, I don't care. I would mute it if there were a lot of posts.

  • They're still run by evangelical Christians, so I wouldn't expect a Pride month advert campaign coming from them any time soon.

    But yes, they stopped donating to a particular group of charities in 2018/2019. Part of the "then they started donating again" claim was timing and tax records, but the actual donation was made before they changed policy and stopped.

  • The goal isn't "taking down" a company. It's to influence their behavior/policies.

    ChikFilA stopped donating to anti-gay charities when they were boycotted.

  • Boycotts aren't going to kill a company. They are to influence them.

    I did boycott ChikFilA when it came out they were supporting homophobic asshats. And once they announced they were dropping those charities, I stopped boycotting.

    I use CVS over Walgreens as long as I can get my prescriptions at CVS due to Walgreens stances against women's health. If Walgreens ever cleans up, I would happily use them more often because they are more convenient and inexpensive for me.

    I only go to Shell gas stations as a last resort because they blast ads at you while pumping gas.

  • Ope, jinx. Just adding that to my comment when you commented. ๐Ÿป