schwaglesbagels
Schwagle
schwaglesbagels

When I'm having problems convincing myself to work out (or do anything, really), I usually schedule the time in my calendar. My google calendar is my holy grail of planning; if it's in there, I'm committed (barring any extenuating circumstances). If someone asks me to do something that day or if I have any plans, I

I'm pretty sure if that was my work schedule, I'd have killed myself a long time ago. I don't know how people can do that.

It's epitomized in the phrase: "The trouble is, we compare our behind-the-scenes to everyone else's highlight reel".

It's also worth nothing that even if your passion is viable for making a living, it's not always the best idea. When your passion is just your passion, you do it because you enjoy it. When you turn your passion into your job, it becomes work, and you do it to make money. It's a fundamental shift in why you're doing

It's Evil Week. The point is to post evil lifehacks.

The flipside to this is the argument of "Wouldn't it be nice to by myself something cool for once?". Don't get me wrong, I'm all for saving money and spending it wisely, but that doesn't mean you can't splurge and buy yourself something nice once in a while. After all, what's the point of saving money if you're not

Funny, the case could be made that all of those are symptoms of adulthood as well

I did kind of a similar thing. I played percussion in band class for a majority of my time in school, starting in fifth grade. This laid a very solid foundation for me having rhythm and being able to play a percussion instrument, but I never actually learned how to play a drum set.

Credit cards are just another tool that is actually beneficial when used responsibly.

I get really sad every time I read about people being always tethered to their jobs in one way or another. I'm lucky enough to have a job that doesn't contact me when I'm not there unless it's a true emergency. I didn't realize I was in the minority though.

I'm having a hard time taking this chart seriously. For one, it doesn't take into account a lot of information, such as side quests in RPGs (as others have said) or multiplayer vs. single player. Additionally, they have expansion packs listed as DLC, when they're pretty different concepts in my mind. Finally, they

I've been saying it for years, and stick by my mentality: Time is only wasted if you say it is. If you're enjoying what you're doing, whether it be traveling to a foreign country, working 14 hours a day, playing video games all day, or sitting and watching paint dry, then more power to you. Don't let people judge you

I, for one, tend to like it when you guys post stuff about how to improve your mental or emotional state, or ways to trick your brain into being happier or more focused. Not all of it sticks, but the stuff that does can be pretty eye-opening for me.

Don't think for a second that you're the only person on the planet to nose dive. Often we look at other's success and assume they have everything together when the reality is that they encounter failure just as much as anyone. Some are better at hiding it than others, but failure is universal. Before you start bashing

Reading your post actually made me realize something, and I think I can now shed some light on why so many omnivores get defensive about this. Full disclosure: I am an omnivore, and admit that I get very defensive when I hear people discussing veg*ism (and I have a lot of veg*an friends, whom I support as best I