jasapeno
ReginaPhalange*Namastayinbed
jasapeno

I don’t think the point is to perfectly or even closely replicate living grass, it’s more that grass happens to be green so we made some green carpet stuff for outside. Where I live turf lawns are always small and almost always surrounded by living landscaping. Aesthetically, I’ll take the turf over dryscaping every

Note to the older generations from a millennial: Outside is good. You should quit destroying it. Millennialsgo outside” more than the generations before them. Looks like your pompous ass left a skid mark you didn’t notice.

Didn’t say anything about “getting ripped” I said your heart beating faster isn’t a good thing in and of itself. Being morbidly obese causes a faster heart rate at rest, its also profoundly unhealthy. 

I lived in a Taiwan hi-rise apartment for awhile; Poured concrete walls and polished stone and hardwood floors. Not a baseboard in the place. The Taiwanese carpenters are highly skilled and are able to trim those tiles and wood planks to a precision that no baseboards are necessary, and it looked fantastic.

Is it working your heart more? Yes it is. Will that cause any notable physiological adaptations that will make you more fit? Nope.

cardio, arguably, somewhat yes in a very litteral sense. Calorie burning, not really no ^^

You will not lose weight going to a sauna. You’ll not gain the stamina to run a marathon from it either ^^.
You’ll get mild benefits, mostly because it’s relaxing and relaxing is good for you, but you’ll neither get ripped nor

Your body regulates heat by sweating, but also by shunting your warm blood to the capillaries near the surface of your skin, primarily in the arms and lower legs. The increased blood flow in a sauna is simply a function of the body trying to get as much blood as possible as close to the air as possible to try and cool

If my broken glasses and bags of sugar consumed were a 1:1 ratio I’d probably be a much happier individual, but sadly it is nowhere close.

I cherish my lines, especially the ones by my eyes and my mouth. They show I’ve smiled and laughed a lot.

xxfitness was talking about this a lot 7 or so years ago when I was first getting into lifting.  Nice of them to revive this weird insecurity for a new bunch of women.

You’re right. I apologize. It’s not support this way, it’s attempting and at best it’s boorishly chauvinistic and does nothing to improve thought or conversation.

How can I best rephrase to say “you are who you are, don’t let a brief moment on the internet give you a complex about something out of your control”?

It really is all they think about. Tiresome, isn’t it?

I have a coworker with a particularly annoying habit... every time she’s talking, it’s all one long run-on sentence. The words just keep flowing, uninterrupted, with barely a breath in between topics. Just continuous talking.

It will, have a pitcher of hot water to rinse them out after, the grime will flow right out the holes on the outside of the window casing, assuming your windows have them.  If not stick to the wipe it with a towel method on the video.  

I’m an introvert and have social anxiety especially around new people so my buddy and I are quite opposites when talking to people. He’s good about telling people about his Asperger’s and if it seems like they can’t get a word in I’ll speak up and ask him to let them finish. It’s usually a good mental que for him.

Thank you contributing this. I was coming in to tell the same story...though about myself. This article is not helpful. It took me decades to recognize that the intensity of inner experience that I have is matched by an intensity of outer expression. But all the while the response from even the people close to me was a

I have a buddy with Asperger’s, he takes over every conversation with a story and tend to run on, especially when he’s nervous. Sometimes you have to pause them and say, “hold on, let me finish” to get your point across. It’s sort of a mental shorthand between us that he is running on.

...the amount of cash you possess at any given point is not relevant to this rule. This rule is only about seriously considering things that amount to 1% of your salary.

I came here to say this - 1% is far too high. I wonder if it shouldn’t be 0.1%...

I don’t really see why this would work any better or worse for someone who makes over $200,000. I mean spending thousands without giving it a second thought seems crazy when you first think about it. But a millionaire only applying this rule to purchases over $10,000 is not objectively any crazier than someone who