Answers I liked
Moderator: Marduk
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Re: Answers I liked
I just liked this:
"Basically, I hope you're wrong because Facebook stalking is pretty much my favorite and only hobby."
-Ms. O'Malley
"Basically, I hope you're wrong because Facebook stalking is pretty much my favorite and only hobby."
-Ms. O'Malley
Re: Answers I liked
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
Re: Answers I liked
Bimbo is delicious.
Also, calling someone "negrito" does not have near the same negative connotations in Spanish as it does in English.
Also, calling someone "negrito" does not have near the same negative connotations in Spanish as it does in English.
Deus ab veritas
- yayfulness
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Re: Answers I liked
In Chile, as far as I could tell, it was used literally the same way we would use "black" in the US, referring to people.
Re: Answers I liked
I knew a guy from the Dominican Republic who told me that where he lived, taco was more associated with the heel of a man's dress shoe than the food item.
Reminded me of a funny bit in which the terminology for people and products is mixed.yayfulness wrote:In Chile, as far as I could tell, it was used literally the same way we would use "black" in the US, referring to people.
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
Re: Answers I liked
"This is one of the many times Full House featured astonishing scientific accuracy." This made me giggle, I don't know why. Thanks MODAQ! Could a writer please let me know whether or not someone has already jumped in and asked "What other times did Full House feature astonishing scientific accuracy?" If no one has yet, then have I got a question for ya.
ETA: More good quotes today: "Babies, and newborns in particular, are really bad at being humans." Ms. O'Malley!
And, both the question and Zed's answer. Haaaah! PS Making out in the movie theater sounds fun but then actually is pretty awkward and why are you even spending money to make out somewhere that isn't comfortable and NOT watch the movie?? (I know some reasons, but still.)
ETA: More good quotes today: "Babies, and newborns in particular, are really bad at being humans." Ms. O'Malley!
And, both the question and Zed's answer. Haaaah! PS Making out in the movie theater sounds fun but then actually is pretty awkward and why are you even spending money to make out somewhere that isn't comfortable and NOT watch the movie?? (I know some reasons, but still.)
Re: Answers I liked
I'll take Rhetorical Questions for $600, Alex. Beautiful and unhappy, no question: I don't want to be completely unrecognizable to myself. ^_^ /rimshotyayfulness wrote:Imagine for a moment that happiness and beauty were completely unrelated—if you had to choose between being happy and unattractive or being beautiful and unhappy, with no other alternatives, which would you choose?
I find the American obsession with happiness neurotic. It seems so performative, rather than a reflection of authentic feeling. There are plenty of things to get down about in the world (and that have nothing to do with your nose or cheekbones). So, go do something about them.
Re: Answers I liked
In my elementary school, there was an aphorism we often repeated:
It really is the only reliable prescription for contentment I know.Happiness is a byproduct of doing for others.
- yayfulness
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Re: Answers I liked
There are some pretty serious drawbacks to pursuing happiness for the sake of happiness. I mostly wrote my answer the way I did because I suspect that it's the best way to reach this particular person. When you dedicate your life to a Thing in order to achieve Happiness, chances are you'll fail on both counts. And in my opinion, the first step towards a healthier understanding of happiness is to see that the Thing prevents both Happiness and happiness.
Really, though, that elementary school quote is pretty spot-on.
Really, though, that elementary school quote is pretty spot-on.
- TheBlackSheep
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Re: Answers I liked
I'd agree, of course, but just to play devil's advocate, and because I went to therapy today and am correspondingly melancholic, it can be taken too far.
- yayfulness
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Re: Answers I liked
And I likewise agree with you. (Honestly, one of my biggest fears about giving advice on the Board is that people will take it.)
Re: Answers I liked
Reminds me of the chorus line from The Money Song from Avenue Q.
♫When you help others, you can't help helping yourself!♫
Quod gratis asseritur, gratis negatur.
Re: Answers I liked
So what do we think the real major was for "underwater basket weaving"? Ceramics? Gender Studies? Family Life? Vocal Performance? I'm scratching my head at what field is both unemployable, a turnoff to men, but something one would get highly attached to.
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Re: Answers I liked
Some sort of really specialized science? You can't do anything with a BS in Neuroscience, you'd have to go to graduate school. But it sounds intimidating enough to turn off men.
Re: Answers I liked
But I think l neuroscience is the opposite of an arts and crafts field: highly masculine,by enrollment considered very selective.
Maybe I'm thinking too literally...
Maybe I'm thinking too literally...
Re: Answers I liked
I'd guess some kind of performing art. Maybe theater?
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Re: Answers I liked
I guess my experience at BYU is that men are typically more turned off by women in a masculine field than women in the arts. But I've never been an arts major so I guess I wouldn't know the difference
Re: Answers I liked
Based on the way the question was asked, I wonder if men are turned off by the major itself or the woman's (unending?) talking about it.
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Re: Answers I liked
How on earth do you get rejected from BYU with a 3.89/34...? Must have been some weird confounding variable like ecclesiastical endorsement or something but still....
- The Happy Medium
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Re: Answers I liked
Seriously, I'd guess they were lying about something. I got in with a 3.4/31 and I didn't apply for any other schools. BYU is tough to get in to but not that tough.