Yes? Yours doesn’t?
Yes? Yours doesn’t?
Something different. The button in question is great for adding stuff to your Amazon Wish List when not on Amazon. It’s one of those things that I’m sure did its job well (funneling more sales to Amazon), but the new option seems to do the job even better, from Amazon’s perspective, as it gives them more information…
so just to be clear, does this mean I can’t click the ‘add to wishlist’ button on an Amazon product page unless I have the Amazon assistant browser plugin installed (and activated)? Or is this something different?
70% of adults can be wrong about something.
What % has a card and pays it off every month, though? I don’t care about my APRs because I don’t carry balances. Maybe I’m living in a bubble but it’s got to be some appreciable fraction of that 70%...
If you need to know your credit card interest rate, you’re living wrong.
Oh man.. after reading this guide, I’m now itching to get back into the ladder grind again. I lapsed at LoV due to various excuses reasons. I figure the game changed so much, that getting back into it should feel like a brand new experience.
Your build order can and should be flexible. Don’t be afraid to change things up if your opponent decides to go all in, or tries to build Photon Cannons in your base. It’s just useful to have a blueprint for where you’re heading.
The staying calm part is also super important. Nothing causes a person’s skill to stagnate worse than being prone to raging. Just ask IdrA...
Before I quit out of SC2 I was a low to mid range Master level Protoss player putting myself around the top 1.5% of players in 1v1 ranked. I had an average APM of 55 if ANYONE tells you your APM is too slow to play SC2 they don’t know what they’re talking about. Game sense and predictive ability is far more important…
This was six or seven years ago, so I don’t remember all of the specifics, but it was the kind of intimately awkward stuff you don’t say to someone you’ve never met in person. I remember the final straw being, “lets make a baby together.”
This is definitely what happened and I can’t say I blame him for that part of it... curiosity would probably get the best of me as well.
Is it wrong that I’m suspicious that Letter #3's wife may have slept with at least one of his friends in this timeline?
“Here’s my general thought on radical honesty in relationships: it’s severely overrated. The idea that lying is always, always bad is far more black and white than I find to be reasonable.”
YESSSSS!!!!!!!!
Here’s the thing. People are dishonest. Some people are dishonest for really noble reasons. Telling a lie is not…
“I am a National Guard member where integrity, (honesty) is a vital part of my core values.”
Vet here alternating between cringing and laughing hysterically
I agree it’s a dumb thing to feel hurt over, but I disagree about it being a dumb thing to get into a disagreement about: I love moral debates about wacky sci-fi/fantasy scenarios like that.
That first letter was really interesting and the last two were... odd. I’ve definitely failed to orgasm on several occasions with my wife of almost 6 years, but I feel like that’s always been due to the fact that, for many men, sex is 90% about trying not to orgasm too soon. When I fail to orgasm, it’s often because…
“I met this girl online and we ended up getting very close, a relationship that lasted almost 2 and a half years, we never met but skyped regularly.”