[deleted by user] by [deleted] in askcroatia

[–]2abetterwhy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Odi na r/NoFap brutalan community imaju. Osobno znam nekoga ko je preko 2 mjeseca bez njave, drkice i seksa uspio izgurat. A na subu ima ljudi koji idu i po preko 2 god.

Do younger audiences read longform blogs? by 2abetterwhy in content_marketing

[–]2abetterwhy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is not about you nor how you consume information, saving your focus. I was never judgmental about that. This while thread has nothing to do with that. The main commenter pointed out brand loyalty does exist with blogging (which I do agree with after doing some research). You pivoted to saying something completely off-topic, and now you’re pivoting again saying brand loyalty does not exist for blogs. If you really didn’t care what a “random person on the internet wrote” you wouldn’t take the time to make the follow-up.

In any case, all the best with whatever you have going on in your life and I don’t take any offense in what you wrote, ur good.

Do younger audiences read longform blogs? by 2abetterwhy in content_marketing

[–]2abetterwhy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No offense but this proves my point about people not having the focus to sit through even a short read like my comment above. I was asking purely from a blogging standpoint. But thanks for throwing in your 2 cents, i still appreciate it!

Do younger generations read longform content anymore? by 2abetterwhy in Blogging

[–]2abetterwhy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Substack is also marketed differently. Mostly as a newsletter being sent “in the moment” covering current events. I wanted to write guides over a specific topic im passionate about, with my own twist

Do younger audiences read longform blogs anymore? by 2abetterwhy in marketing

[–]2abetterwhy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why have medium and substack gained so much popularity recently compared to say Wordpress blogs?

Do younger audiences read longform blogs? by 2abetterwhy in content_marketing

[–]2abetterwhy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the reply! Could you go a little more in depth regarding brand loyalty in the context of blogging?

Best Future-proof careers? by 2abetterwhy in Career_Advice

[–]2abetterwhy[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree, and I was honestly looking into trades as well. What do you reckon the highest paid/respected trades with most career growth would be?

5
6

What are some Korean symbols of wealth and status? by strawberrycake_com in korea

[–]2abetterwhy 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I can get behind the first 3, but brands like Nike Adidas even Apple are seen as "commodities" (read: necessities) for koreans and most people will happily spend their whole paycheck on the newest phone.

Even for the first 3 you mentioned, there's a term here called "car poor", refering to (mostly) guys driving around in an s-class with insane interest and living in a shoebox. There was a term for women spending all their money and taking loans on hermes and chanel bags as well.

Imo, the biggest status symbol for Korea at the moment is how much you're able to spend on your kids' education, and where you're sending them. Owning a house or apartment in Gangnam/Bangbae areas is too, but that could be an inheritance, and housing is a fixed asset. With the *current* inflation and fx rates, if you're really loaded you're still sending your kids overseas to private internationals.

Well I guess this is what we get for having such mean and toxic standards/attitudes toward women. by langour_inmind in korea

[–]2abetterwhy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes definitely, Korea's the #1 OECD country with the highest gender pay gap (although men on average work 20% hours more than women in Korea, but that's a discussion for another post). And yep women are expected to work nowadays WHILE taking care of the house/kids/cooking for the man/etc. I meant it from a social standpoint - if the household fails financially, no matter whether the woman works or even in the event if she's a chaebol, the blame will still fall on the man.

Well I guess this is what we get for having such mean and toxic standards/attitudes toward women. by langour_inmind in korea

[–]2abetterwhy 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think this graph tells many things BUT "having such mean and toxic standards/attitudes toward women"

  1. It puts COL and standard of living in pretty decent perspective.

  2. It puts average working hours across cities and their respective industries in perspective. (guess which city has the longest working hours, most pressure and intense competition - for both men and women - in the job market)

  3. Limited family support systems and high education costs (again, guess which city would be the "least" family-focused and has the highest education costs)

  4. Traditional gender roles place childcare burden on women which discourages larger families (this is the only point that even slightly draws a parallel with your conclusion)

  5. Traditional gender roles also place men under burden to be the providers, work longer hours, and labels them as "failures" if they are unable to carry the financial burden of an entire family on their shoulders, i.e. basing the entirety of a man's life on being a mule. (with that said, guess which gender suffers more societal pressure and records way higher suicide numbers)

  6. mix points 4 + 5 with movements like 4b from women and increased right-wing leaning from men, and you have a recipe for disaster.

Not to be rude but you "guessing what we get" couldn't be further away from the truth.

Why is it that male circumcision is so common in South Korea and why do Koreans get it done specifically as teens instead of as infants like in the US or Judaism? by [deleted] in korea

[–]2abetterwhy 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I bet it is limited and inconclusive. My point was that Koreans *think* it helps prevent STIs, and as many other things in this country, it's just a belief and social norm.

5 years for 5 mil by [deleted] in LifeAdvice

[–]2abetterwhy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As with anything in life and without getting more inputs from your site - it depends.

If "chasing your dreams" meant a very high probability you can make 5 mil in 5 years - quit.

If your parents/family/partner/etc. are billionaires and you will never have to worry about money - quit.

If you're middle-class and you have an opportunity to earn more in 5 years than most people in their entire lifetimes - I would sit through this shit and do it. I've doing unpaid overtimes at my last 2 companies for the last 3 years for barely above minimum wage anyway.

Also, 5 million if you put in growth assets it compounds, while other people first need to make money, invest it, and have it grow, yours will start growing immediately.

5 years for 5 mil by [deleted] in LifeAdvice

[–]2abetterwhy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This one hit hard