I'm a Preacher's kid, now an atheist. But I have been wondering the same thing. It's interesting I am not alone in that. In the last week I have seen the subject come up twice, once in this post and once at The Free Press.
I suffer night terrors, not horribly frequently, but frequently enough that they are memorable experiences. I wake up screaming and I apparently scream very loudly.
Entertainingly they have a common theme across all the years I've been having them (they started in my teens, so over 40 years). The always feature men in black leather trenchcoats (think SS), dogs, concertina razor wire, an cliff's edges.
I always end up dead either from machine gun fire or going over the cliff.
I blame The Great Escape.
I would love to be able to wake up before the screaming starts.
My wife and I weren't sure what to expect. We took one run at it, failed, then a few months later took another run. We are now thinking we need to watch it again. Truly wholesome.
I think there is a lot of wisdom here. I'm old, many of my meaningful relationships were formed before three was an internet. Now I use online tools to stay in touch with friends who are friends I have interacted with face-to-face, not people know solely online.
That's not to say meaningful relationships cannot be owned online. I have met a number of people IRL who I originally met playing Football Manager or on XBox Live.
But online relationships are not a substitute for real face-to-face interactions.
I tell people that making friends needs to be intentional. It takes work and commitment.
We're playing on XBox Series X, and it behaves reasonably well. We typically split-screen while exploring, and merge the screens during battles.
When playing Divinity:Original Sin 2 we remained in merged screens 90% of the time, but for some reason it feels off in BG3, so we go with the merge only in battles.
No we wouldn't, there's a documentary about this kind of thing. We'd send a super-talented pilot and the World's greatest hacker (who no one listened to). And they would fly into the Alien ship and the hacker would hack it and it would blow up.
I agree it's disrespectful. I have often picked butts up and handed them back.
For people in motor vehicles, I tend to pick them up and tuck the butt under their windshield wiper. This is relatively easy if I'm on my motorcycle stopped at a traffic light.
I'm a Preacher's kid, now an atheist. But I have been wondering the same thing. It's interesting I am not alone in that. In the last week I have seen the subject come up twice, once in this post and once at The Free Press.