joebloeidaho
JoeBloeIdaho
joebloeidaho

Um... from the article...

Wait,,, what part of psychology as a whole isnt bull? It’s nothing more then hoping to map an ever changing “norm”, a task in and of it self impossible? that is until the “norm” is to believe it is possible anyway

Chrysler Baby stroller brake hack.

Already exist for golf...

That’s what i thought as well.

Yeah, just running along with your music in your ears, zoning out not having to look at your baby, nothing at all can go wrong....Oh, wait.

Yeah, my thoughts exactly. I would not use this if it was the only stroller available. I would just carry the baby everywhere.

You’d figure they’d set it to lead, not follow an adult. That way it can be kept in sight.

Gee, nothing can possibly go wrong here, right?

my god it’s full of barnacles

I feel like you’re not Actually Sincere, but that’s actually just how I feel

Hey you guys tied!

That is funny. I’ve never known a manager, business owner or really anyone higher up the food chain who could actively ignore phone calls.

Well, there’s a difference between screening calls and ignoring them. Most professionals I know and work with also screen calls and let the ones from #s they don’t recognize go to VM first, but as far as ignoring calls and voicemails, that’s just it. In most white-collar jobs, whenever I email someone, I have no idea

It’s just me, and my anxiety talking on the phone, but I actively ignore most phone calls, from numbers I don’t know, and wait for a message first. Now that I am on Project Fi, it’s even better since I get the voicemail transcription right in Hangouts. I actually tend to respond faster to emails and texts, as I know

People who use their phone for work? I work from home. I’m on the phone a lot, and people leave me voicemails if I can’t answer when they call. Go figure. Pretty sure a lot of people use their cellphones for work.

Amen. There are certain situations where a text session could last a half hour, but a phone call could cut that down to 5 minutes. The opposite is also true; a quick text response (yes/no) could take 10 minutes on a phone call (dial,answer,talk,hang up ). Unfortunately, my teen daughters never want to call, so it

Bingo. There are clearly a sh*t ton of out-of-touch people here if they don’t think that voicemail is still widely used. In fact, most business people have learned that texts and emails are too easily ignored, and the phone is generally a much quicker, better way to get a response when you need one.

Or pretty much anyone who works in a professional setting. I make at least a dozen phone calls a day and receive just as many. Double that if I’m on a business trip.

I know what you are but what am I?