“No women, no kids” is good enough for me.
Semisimian
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Semisimian@startrek.websiteto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•What do you think the most famous phone number of all time is ?English111·19 days agoBefore Jenny, there was Pennsylvania 6-5000. From wiki:
“Many big band musicians played in Hotel Pennsylvania’s Cafe Rouge in New York City, including the Glenn Miller Orchestra. The hotel’s telephone number, Pennsylvania 6-5000, inspired the Glenn Miller 1940 Top 5 Billboard hit of the same name.”
And similarly, Transylvania 6-5000, which is where I first heard it.
Semisimian@startrek.websiteto Technology@programming.dev•Is Google about to destroy the web?English4·22 days agoThe AI summaries that Google spits out are often incorrect. I’ve gotten used to skipping them completely and telling others to do the same. I’m not impressed or expecting any real beneficial change from this new announcement.
“Wow, three whole openings!”
Semisimian@startrek.websiteto cats@lemmy.world•We're getting older together and it makes me smile as often as it breaks my heartEnglish19·2 months agoPets help us understand our own mortality in ways that continue to surprise me. When I was young, the first pet I lost was a young cat, just a few years old. I raised her from a kitten that was probably too young to ween so we had a close bond. She was indoor/outdoor and was attacked by a neighbor’s dog during the day when I was gone. Holding her and watching her die broke me, like she waited all day to die in my arms. She was mine and I felt like I let her down. Woof, it hurt. Still does.
But while I was holding her, our family dog (Allison) was next to me. She was older than I was, a feisty Lhasa Apso that had lost her ability to hold her bladder. We diapered her: we’d cut a hole in human diapers to pull her tail through to keep the hardwoods from getting ruined. She died a year later, after living a full life.
I buried both of them in the front yard, under a couple of pines that bordered our neighbor’s pet cemetery. Both times, digging those holes gave me the time I needed to be able to return them to the earth and say goodbye. I learned so much from their passing. It is the last gift our pets give us, their final act of love.
Now, older, with kids of my own, we have Sadie, who I am looking at as I write this. She’s a rescue, probably a golden mixed with some border collie, at least 16 years old. Her sister died last year and it was the first close death my kids experienced. Her passing taught my kids the alchemy of aging gracefully, the privilege of old age. Now, they find charm in Sadie’s rickety hips and excuse her incontinence. Getting old is okay; we are lucky to be able to do it. Watching your loved ones get old is a privilege we should cherish.
Edit: I wanted to thank OP for posting this. Reading your observations of your aging cat brought It all forward.
Semisimian@startrek.websiteto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•What's an absurd luxury you pine for?English3·3 months agoMy Thermador is no different, shitty ice maker.
Semisimian@startrek.websiteto Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•*HOW* can we coax search-engines in to being able to do the simple "lemmy" + "search word" thing..?English4·3 months ago“Screw 'em, do what you want” shall be the whole of the law.
Semisimian@startrek.websiteto Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Name an artist/group that you are surprised isn't more popular.English3·4 months agoHe’s great. I first heard him on a Ninja Tune compilation. I got to see him in a 100 seater doing a poetry night. All snaps!
Semisimian@startrek.websiteto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•I have never once have I had to descale my showerhead or faucets due to my city's water qualityEnglish1·4 months agoThat’s great! I think we need to pay close attention to our water supply and I appreciate that you are posting a positive take.
We have good water here, though it is the most expensive municipality in the country. The elevated price comes from our long-ignored sewer infrastructure and the layer-cake of band-aids that we are paying for. That said, we have steady rainfall and plentiful aquifers. Water here is almost taken for granted (except for that sewer bill, which is calculated on water consumption).
Even still, I have whole house paper filters to pull the iron out before it gets to any faucet, then a second stage of carbon filters for drinking water. Cheap to install and easy to maintain and it goes a long way to improving our water quality. I don’t know if you are using any other filters, but you can quickly turn an A- water experience to an A+.
In the immediate aftermath of a traumatic event, this response is completely warranted. After 9/11, it was difficult in America to celebrate anything immediately after. You had to address it. “I know we are all in pain, but my son was born today and I’m happy.”
The reelection was traumatic for those that remember the insanity of the 1st term. And it ended in a worldwide trauma that we are all still trying to wrap our minds around.
After a while, though, it can be seen as performative. But let’s give people time to grieve if they need it.