I feel you on the tomato thing. I got acclimated eventually, but for a long time I'd frequently need sports drink (to put it politely) the day after eating pizza or spaghetti.
Currently drinking coffee.
Per my usual Saturday routine, I finished a stroll through the farmer's market and walked a couple blocks to a favorite coffee joint for the uzh, a plain cold brew. I might have added a little too much cream, but it's still good.
Same here. One of the instructions was "write your name on the board." Hardcore shaming.
A former boss used to make at least one person at every meeting recite the company's mission and vision statements--yes, two different statements, and if you missed even one word, no matter how inconsequential, he'd get on your ass about it in front of everyone. No surprise that he constantly listened to and quoted management podcasts and audio books, rarely questioning any of them.
Psst, it's "err", not "air". Pronounced the same.
Pumpkin spice old fashioned. With real pumpkin puree!
I heard on a podcast a long time ago that the Army considered it one of their most successful recruiting tools. Not because it brought in more recruits, but because fewer recruits dropped out, apparently because playing the game led to fewer surprises after joining.
I ask myself "why?" after most Steam sales, one of which was earlier this month. Six or seven new games to join the backlog. Relatively cheap, to be fair.
Source?
Can't talk about grease disposal without posting this.
I'm not a fan of the "new car smell", for some reason. The "new computer smell", on the other hand, is a rare treat.
Most seafood doesn't get me too badly, though I still don't like it. Cooking shrimp, on the other hand, makes it hurt to breathe for some reason. Not the same as nausea, but it still sucks.
I have a few that some others in the thread have already mentioned, but I can also:
- wiggle most of my scalp back and forth
- retract the middle of the tip of my tongue so when I stick it out, it looks like an ass
- stop peeing mid-stream. Maybe this is perfectly common, but people talk about not being able to just stop, or at least not for longer than a few seconds.
Same here. Someone else in the thread said that's your tensor tympani muscle.
Seems as good a reason as any to post this.
Good luck getting it out of your head, by the way.
That's... what Americans do. I live about 1500 miles from my parents, and only use time as a measurement if I'm planning to drive that far, mainly in days.
My favorite/least favorite instance of this kind of oh-so-subtle dysphemism is when CNN (I think) ran a piece about some marketing suit's complaint that millennials are "brand promiscuous", for basically the same reason as we're seeing with these streaming services applied to other products. This sort of thing is what led to r/DeathByMillennial.
The story was written for an audience of about 5 aging hipsters from Brooklyn.
Well said. The whole "epilogue" read like a hypercondensed Manifesto of the Pathological Twat.