I get these, I thought it was the front and back of my lung touching and behaving like universal velcro, which explained why breathing in hurt, but also why taking a full breath made it go away (fully separated.) I guess not?
deltapi
The dawning realization of how little time we have on this earth hits really hard for some people, harder still for those that aren't making the best out of their time.
When I was told I needed to come in for meetings I started booking the conference room. After my third time, I was asked why I was booking it.
"If it's so important that I come in to the office to attend these meetings, clearly I need the privacy and collaboration space of the conference room for it, otherwise I could just take the calls at my home office, right?"
I now don't need to come in unless it's an "all hands" meeting.
This is why safe consumption sites are important
I noticed an increase in the variety of onscreen talent and more animatics, but I haven't noticed a decrease in the production value
I'm a big fan of the b1m.
https://youtu.be/EruSZNI4th4 <- tunnel under the Faroe islands & world's only undersea roundabout
Oh, absolutely. I'm just trying to use it as a marker to try to figure out where the goal posts should be for what we are calling "middle class."
I have a friend who works in central Ontario for a fortune 500 and they take home ~80k/year, and I've considered them and their family middle class for a while, but they also were telling me that they're overextended and struggling to keep up on interest payments...while also being denied a consolidation loan. So maybe they are not really middle class..?
What qualifies as "middle class" these days? Roughly 24% of Ontario public sector workers are on the sunshine list. While this doesn't give us a ton of insight into the private sector, this would still suggest that if we say the 19% is the middle class that to be middle class you have to be making more than $100k/year...
Not trying to argue, just trying to understand where the goalposts are.
The argument against inheritance tax seems to be that we don't want to screw the inheritors out of the ability to own a family property or something, but it seems like it's be REALLY easy to draw a line and make it such that the estate is taxable if more than $X value is going to a single recipient and/or if the estate is valued in excess of $XY that it's taxable and/or if the recipients assets exceed $Z that entitlements exceeding $X are taxable. I'm sure there'd be a few edge cases that would miss the mark, but it seems like it would be a lot better than the current system of generational wealth building up with the new generations literally not needing to work a day in their lives and still pass on wealth to their kids.
Of course, the men's room is just always covered in urine. Old men and young kids miss, even people with aim splash back out of the toilet enough to get it on the walls/floor/under the urinals.
I don't know what happened to them, but it used to be where I live that the bathroom would have floor-to-belly-height urinals and the entire bathroom floor would be gently sloped towards them, and the walls would be tiled to the same height.
This meant that cleanup could be done by blasting everything with industrial detergent/disinfectant and literally power washing it all into the urinal drains.
Now in New construction I only see the wall mounted urinals, and a floor drain in the middle to meet code requirements, but often the cleaners don't know that they have to put water into that drain to prevent it evaporating out and letting sewer gasses flow into the room (ew.)
Overall a downgrade for both staff and visitors.
Facts, who needs 'em?