I work at a plant that uses one of those alternative flocculants (due to our source water chemistry). Our logistics are incredibly shaky at the best of times, due to the extremely limited number of producers.
I work at a plant that uses one of those alternative flocculants (due to our source water chemistry). Our logistics are incredibly shaky at the best of times, due to the extremely limited number of producers.
“Natural consequences” is the buzzword. Make sure the consequences fit the action. You squirted most the toothpaste into the aink? You don’t get access to toothpaste, and mom/dad have to do your toothbrush.
This works with my kid because they value their autonomy very highly. Your child may value things differently.
Something to keep in mind: the goal isn’t to be a high-discipline parent, it’s to be a consistent parent. Express expectations and consequences, then hold to them. This helps children feel secure, and dramatically reduces testing behaviors (not to zero but much lower).
If you see other players. Probably less awkward to try to find a club.
Most bottled water comes from a municipal water system somewhere, i.e., is tap water.
Some water supplies have issues with sulfur or algae, so that can be unpleasant if your sense of smell is particularly sensitive. My sense of smell is pretty weak so I drink the tap water most places, while my spouse had an RO system installed in our house due to their sensitivity.
Supplements suck that way, sorry. I’ve found a couple brands that work for me (Nature’s Way, Horbäach), but I’m no supplement expert. I’d try to find a mid-price option that didn’t seem too sketchy.
As for nootropic stacks and whatnot: never heard of them, although they seem interesting. I personally take 2g of tyrosine along with vitamin D and a vitamin B complex (plus a couple medical rx). I would start at 500mg-1g, and add more after a week if you felt you needed to. I have taken tyrosine with omega 3s but never regularly; I didn’t notice an interaction at the time.
Tyrosine. It’s a dopamine precursor. By itself, it mildly increases focus just enough to get non-preferred tasks started. It also makes completing tasks much more rewarding, which can start a positive feedback loop that leaves your space much more livable/less depressing.
Laser printers don’t burn anything. They make static on paper that ink/toner clings to.
Good luck. I’ve already lost hope that we can rein in gas companies in Colorado but it would be amazing if you did.
Both alcohol and weed are the only pain management some people have access to.
Naked Capitalism started me on the road to communism, so I still appreciate it for that.
And he can have one once he stops playing all the notes.
Look into public works.
It’s a chunk of plastic on your wrist. It’s always going to be a bit tacky.
The link leads to a page for Half Earth Socialism…
This seems much less effective than the Espiku system covered in OSU’s Engineering Out Loud podcast.
Boulder has a height limit on bldgs in the city (unless you’re fucking Google) so shitty McMansions are what’s being built after scraping a few lots
Dylan Carlson, frontman of Earth, actually gave Kurt the shotgun. He was convinced someone was gonna do a Lennon on Kurt.
Over a basic backing track in a MacBook, yeah.
Most boring concert I’ve ever been to. The Wood Brothers were more exciting.
That decision comes years or decades after practice and learning, which people do because A) they find just noodling on the instrument fun, and/or b) they find improving their skill deeply rewarding, and/or c) they think guitar/music is just really cool.
A bad instrument can make the experience miserable, though. My first acoustic was fucking awful, just straight trash. How long does yours stay in tune?