BrianM
BrianM
BrianM

It's all in your perspective. I worked in one library system (Wyoming) with 3 main buildings and 4 branches ~ a total of 50 employees including the admin and maintenance staff, and have only frequented 2 other libraries since where I don't bother the staff much ~ my perspective is small and all I said is true based

Of that I'm certain you're right. My family always laughs when we have something new and assume it came from CL (because, most likely, it did). We bought new because at the time we were living in Lander, Wyoming... go ahead and look at the Wyoming section of CL, there are a few things in Lander, but only one grill

Lol... good point. The key lay in knowing/understanding that the type of person who becomes a librarian is a social introvert as well. It's a weird dichotomy that the type of person who loves that job tends to be 100% socially opposite from what they have to do on a daily basis (interact with people). So, in other

Free admission to local attractions.

VOTE: Weber One-Touch line of Charcoal grills

I tried this approach back in 2007 (last time I bothered to load a FB page) and I spent 10 times more time blocking and hiding than I did actually getting anything of value, so I dumped it without remorse and haven't looked back. It was 99% noise, no matter how much I tried to de-clutter the system.

MMmmmm... I'm 100% ANTI-Shaving :)

Gov jobs (Public Health Service - Indian Health Services) don't pay very well, ESPECIALLY going in. The school loan repayment, full coverage health care and 100% retirement if you can survive 20 years (4 was a stretch) make for a Major amenities package ~ you don't go Gov for the up-front money, you do it for the

My wife is a Pharmacist and walked through graduation with $126,000 in debt (2004), we were married a month later and I added my $12k in school loan debt to the picture. We moved to the Navajo reservation in AZ as she took a job with the government making $36~38k/year (though with a $20k sign-on bonus and up to

Yup, I really do see a difference with ceramic (through a jewelers loupe).

OCD or basic hygiene? I think it's the later. All those body oils, dead skin cells, hair, etc... that comes off you gets trapped in the fabrics that touch you. You wouldn't wear the same underwear or t-shirt for weeks on end without washing them, why is it ok for the sheets and blankets to go for that long, or

lol, because I like the science and geekery behind sharpening... I never said, nor implied, that I was an expert when it comes down to knife skills or making "pretty" food.

Nope, I'm talking about the same thing you are. If you look at a knife edge when property sharpened (even to a Very coarse/low grit stone) as compared to one that's been sharpened and then "steeled" (with a normal quality steel, there are different levels of grit in those as well) it's abundantly clear that "steels"

Ditch the "steel" and go ceramic. "steels" (unless you went out of your way to find the One that's not too aggressive) tear large (relatively) chunks of steel from the knife.

Easier to wash a top sheet than a comforter.... even if you have a cover on said comforter. Me, I sweat.. even taking a shower right before bed I won't go more than a week without washing everything (they start to get a lil ripe).

Orly? Here's mine.... happens to by my wife (who's probably 15 years older than the girl up top):

It's tough because there's an Incredible work load that's piled onto Pharmacists. To give an example, one of my wifes prior employers had 2 pharmacists on staff (and 6 technicians, you can only legally have 3 per pharmacist) and considered the department "fully staffed" with 5 pharmacists and 12~15 technicians. This

Because, believe it not, not everything you read online is Correct or Current.

What, no Pizza!!