Damn, that's a hard choice. I don't really want kids either, but sometimes the hormones hit hard. Definitely get your sperm frozen at least.
greedytacothief
Just need a little bit of gender fluid to make things right lol
At the moment eating a lot is very advantagous to me, I know a couple of people who are way too skinny because they do tons of exercise and don't eat enough. And some who will just chug some olive oil because calories. But I'm a healthy weight and I get to eat all the time, I'd say it's a good position to be in.
Damn I wish, I'm more like: Body: I'm hungry Brain: but I just ate a child sized burrito Body: don't care, want more Brain: yeah you're right, we should probably eat some more
I have such a hard time identifying with people's hatred for golf and I'd really like to understand more. For context I played golf in highschool, so I got to use the course for free since I was a member of the team. For clubs I used either inherited clubs or ones I found in the dumpster. I've still got those clubs and I can still hit in the direction I want the ball to go.
I live in a very rural mountainous region that gets plenty of rain and has some of the strictest environmental guidelines in the US. The closest golf course to me costs $17 to play all 9 holes.
What I get is that there are some regions that could not support a golf course naturally and where space is at a premium and could probably be used better (like as another fucking parking lot or something, zoning laws are stupid sometimes). I also get that these courses can over fertilize and run off heavy metals into the watershed. Or waste precious water.
What I also get is that golf is not a fun sport to learn. It is not fun until you start making good swings. But once you do it feels as good to me as snowboarding or mountain biking. You also usually golf with friends (drinking can be a big part too), and doing stuff with friends is fun.
It seems to me that most hatred for golf comes because of capitalism and not because of golf. It's associated with the capitalist class, buying new equipment is expensive (nothing like hockey though, serious WTF), and capitalists are irresponsible with land.
One of my good runner friends (3000+ miles a year and owns 100+ pairs of shoes) is the biggest sketchers fans I know of. Apparently their good running shoes aren't even cheap anymore, like $110+.
I imagine these kids aren't wearing super shoes anyway, or else they would know the puma's are faster
Yeah, I always feel a little embarrassed to bring it up. I'm liking that there are more underground games coming out now like turnip28 and trench crusade, but they don't scratch the same itch in the same way yet.
The article really doesn't say anything about art papers or how hemp compares to cotton(rag) papers. It sounds nice, I'll try to buy some. But fine art papers and specialty papers being what they are, efficiency and price are much smaller concerns.
I've never written on hemp paper, I wonder what the differences are? Do different binders work better or worse with hemp? Is the bleaching process more or less intense? I'm coming at this more just curious about art papers that usually have high cotton content and how hemp would change them
Canada likes to play a little looser with the rules. I've seen how they re-forest by just planting millions of black spruce
The little ones were great for clearing snow off roofs and used the same batteries as the tools we used. But if you buy a big one now you've also got to Invest in a new battery ecosystem. Then you may as well buy an electric chainsaw and pole saw/weed whacker. And now does the entire ecosystem make sense to switch yet?
$1200! I could buy like 2 snowboards for that(1 split board), or another bike. Are concerts like a status symbol now?