ChristopherKellen
ChristopherKellen
ChristopherKellen

AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!

nice! public transport when traveling internationally seems like a no-brainer in a lot of places, too bad it doesn’t work everywhere :/

One thing I would check is if the hotel provides from shuttles from the airport. I remember I went to San Diego once and was in line for a taxi when I turned around and saw a shuttle with my hotel on it. I went up and asked if it was the going to the hotel just to be sure and it was. I hopped aboard and saved me some

Yeah, we really struggled with the headline here for that exact reason. Glad the article didn’t tread that territory :D

Worse, “being yourself” is often represented in the media as being a loudmouth, a goofy stereotype of an alternative kid, or an outsider with a quirky wardrobe and a penchant for manic hysteria.

“I’d never be lame enough to commute 2 hours each way”
oh... an adolescent. nevermind.

Except, in this case, I don't think the end result would be that the last few books are of better quality than the rest of the series.

But I don’t want to fool anyone. I want to ‘fake laugh’ to let them know my contempt for making such an unfunny comment in the first place.

At the Lifehacker Institute of Scientific Research and Awesomeness, we have spent several years researching ways to avoid Compulsory Humanistic Whoopsism (aka stupid shit). After multiple lab tests, our researchers we’re unable to prevent stupid shit completely. Causes of stupid shit ranged from imperfect motor

1) Stop doing stupid shit*

Strategies for hills:

If you're comfortable with it, you can also try your hand at wit in the real world (e.g., dinner parties, the office, the coffee shop, in the elevator, family reunions). Part of this real world exposure is in exposing yourself to the spontaneity that wit requires. If you're new to it, or nervous or reserved about it,

I find it best to have steaks involved. "Do that workout and you can have steak for dinner."

"The other pitfall of duct tape - applies to work. No matter who you work for, once they understand your range of skills, hey I can program in 4 languages, I KNOW Excel (you can't say that if you've never even hit Alt+F11), photoshop, I can schedule in Primavera 6, I got a BSEE with a focus on electronics, I've spent