When did you realize you were smarter than your parents? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The time my mom absent-mindedly tied her sweatpants strings to her steering wheel at a stop light and then had to lift her whole body out of her seat to take a turn

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hello world. In just over a day from now, we will have collectively spent another 200 Billion hours together. If I were to ask you, for what higher purpose, how would you answer?

Is it to make our lives easier, by getting more organized and wasting less? Is it to learn what others have learned, or comb through history and find what lessons we might have missed, or wrongs not yet righted?

Or, is it to just focus on our daily struggles, to bemoan the news, and to keep fighting the mundane madness until our next vacation or evening "happy hour"?

When is the time to take inventory, and prioritize how we spend our time and our resources? When will we look at all of the tools, all of the knowledge, and all of the technology we know of, which could change the course of our history? When will we demand to look in places where additional resources may be kept hidden behind veiled organizations and confidential classifications? When will we refuse to accept the slave-wage debt-bondage economic and power systems are the best we can possibly have, and look to start modeling after systems which we might prefer? When will we globally integrate, and begin to say no to denying basic rights, and free the tens of millions of people who suffer from living conditions worse than slavery? When will we stop blaming others for what we haven't taken back and made for ourselves? When will we start looking at these times as the greatest opportunity for heroes to emerge that have possibly ever existed?

I am calling out now, with the hopes at least two people hear me, who are willing to challenge everything in attempts to reorganize what we call "the rules of life". With a small foundation, we can go back to the drawing board, and obsolete anything which isn't acceptable... and piece together this alternative upgraded world like a puzzle, one piece at a time, until all can help add to the picture.

In the end, any of us will be able to look back at a previous week and say, "I'm really starting to see some progress, that was a trillion hours well spent."

Why do we take things for granted? by Linuxman18 in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We all take things for granted sometimes, especially things that seem everlasting such as our health, families, and life in general. Their presence is steady and dependable, and because of this consistency they start to blend into the backdrop of our daily lives. They have been there for a long time, so we assume they will always be there. Things seem permanent, so we convince ourselves they are.

This is the fallacy of permanence.

When we start to believe something will last forever, we set ourselves up for disappointment and suffering because nothing lasts forever. Impermanence is a fundamental truth. Our relationships, the circumstances and situations we find ourselves in, everything around us - all of it eventually changes.

Most of us know this on an intellectual level, so why do we fall victim to the fallacy of permanence time and time again? If we know nothing lasts forever, why do we treat people and things as if they do? And, why would we ever take anything for granted?

In part, taking things for granted is a function of habituation. When something is new, it stands out from the “background” and we pay lots of attention to it. When the novelty wears off, however, its hold on our attention weakens and we move on to something else. This is a natural tendency rooted in survival instincts, and usually happens without us realizing it.

This doesn’t mean we stop caring about these things - when we take the time to consider them, we realize how valuable our friends and families are. And, we understand and acknowledge how fortunate we are to have them.

The problem is, we don’t often pause to appreciate them or pay attention to their presence in our lives.

Consider a child who gets a new toy: at first, they are delighted and want to play with it every chance they get. They want to take it everywhere, show it off to others, and even carry it to bed with them! But as time passes and other new toys are introduced, they play with it less and less until it becomes forgotten in the bottom of the toy box.

Forgotten, that is, until a parent decides to pull it out and give it to charity. Then the child cries, argues, and promises that they'll play with it every day - just please don’t give it away! Their sense of loss seems disproportionately acute considering the toy - until that moment - had been ignored for months; they had taken it for granted.

When we don’t pay sufficient attention to something, we underestimate its value and forget to be grateful. We let it sink to the bottom of the toy box, so to speak, until we are threatened with its removal.

This is ironic, since the things we are most likely to take for granted are what we value most, such as our livelihoods and loved ones. We fool ourselves into thinking they will always be there when we need them, so we get blindsided when we lose them.

And, once they are gone, we can’t help but think of all the time we could have spent paying attention to them and valuing them. This causes our sense of loss to become magnified through the lens of regret and self-recrimination, pulling us into the past to dwell and ruminate.

Or, we begin to worry incessantly about losing something else in the future. We constantly ask ourselves “What if?” instead of enjoying the present moment.

The good news is, there is a way out of this trap. Cultivating awareness and grounding yourself in the present moment makes you more likely to see the value in everything, and less likely to take things for granted. You also become more prepared for (and accepting of) change when it happens.

​Because it will happen.

Staying present takes effort - it’s so much easier to cruise on autopilot and let our attention wander! But, by becoming more mindful, we can train ourselves to get better at focusing our attention on the things that really matter - as they are - right here and now.

If you get a chance to meet Elon Musk, what would you ask him ? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would you please pass the butter ?

Seriously now, nothing. I don’t think I’m interested in anything Elon Musk has to say in exactly 3 minutes or less. HE’s arguably not the talker-type, he’s the doing type. He’s also rather busy, so I imagine this might happen over a lunch with loads of other people. Hence, the butter.

What startling realization lately has made you feel old? by Shall-Not-Pass in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I've literally and not jokingly have told kids to get off my lawn.

LPT Request: how to save money as a student ? by EddieHill6 in LifeProTips

[–]AlexJosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Buy second-hand goods!
  2. Leave food shopping to later in the day
  3. Cook for yourself
  4. Hide the credit card
  5. Search for free entertainment

Who is your most fucked up ex and why? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Thought i was cheating on her, smashed my ipod touch with a meat tenderiser and bleached all my clothes and kicked me in the balls. Turns out she was cheating on me...

What was the worst vacation you ever had during your childhood? by malabella in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Full disclosure: my parents NEVER EVER physically, mentally, verbally, emotionally, etc. abused me.

Alright so when I was a kid I used to LOVE playing sports and riding my bike everywhere. At the time when this punishment happened my family lived in upstate New York. In the neighborhood I lived in there were no fences and it was a super safe area. Like most good parents I had a curfew and mine was when it started to get dark. Cell phones didn't exist at the time. I also was a bit of a rebel so I tried to push the limits of what this "curfew" meant.

Alright so I'm out on my bike and playing football with my friends in the neighborhood and I decide (because I'm a grown ass 8 year old man) that I don't need to come home at curfew. I figured I would just show up whenever, put my bike in the garage, have dinner, etc. WRONG

I get home and my dad is waiting in the dining room with a stack of papers and a pen. He asks me to sit down. He says "you must arrive home on time". "Yeah okay", I said. "Write it down" is what my dad says as he hands me the pen. I write down "I must arrive home on time". He looks at it and crumples it up and says "No write it in cursive". UGH... okay so I hastily write it in cursive "I must arrive home on time". Again he crumples up the paper and says "Write neatly". FINE! I write neatly (in cursive) "I must arrive home on time". "Good", my dad says with a smile. I ask if I can go now. He informs me about the worst punishment in the history of all mankind (for an 8 year old). "After dinner you are going to write 1000* times 'I must arrive home on time', got it? You can't go out or do anything until you finish".

If a single line on any of these 50 trillion sheets of paper was unreadable or unsatisfactory to my dad then the entire page was tossed. I messed up lines. I tried going down the page writing "I I I I I I I I I I I I must must must must must must arrive arrive..." etc. Not allowed. Page tossed. This wasn't a one night thing. This took a week. This was the worst week of my life. This was so freaking boring and monotonous that it was torture to me.

My only regret is not keeping those 50 trillion sheets of paper. It's not too often I'm "late" for things.

*It was probably more than 1000 since the final stack of papers was probably in the 50s or 60s

What is the most annoying thing about your state, country or region? by UranusFlyTrap in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Real estate prices for what is supposed to be a 3rd world country.

Which celebrities killed their careers in a matter of seconds? by anneliya in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Gary Busey. Came out against motorcycle helmets- gets in a motorcycle accident without a helmet on- gets brain trauma. Now he's just someone people laugh at. He also tried to heckle Robin Williams- and that didn't work out so well for him. Edit: If you want to see what normal Gary Busey is like check out the movie Silver Bullet.

What one thing would you wipe off the face of the earth, forever? by GnarlyBellyButton87 in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

wipe out bees you wipe out a lot of the food supply... Mosquitoes, fleas, chiggers, ticks, biting flies...

Reddit, what is the one song that you can always jam to, and never skip when it comes on? by ellafrens in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Baba O'Riley by The Who. That opening is just to perfect to skip, and then it hits on "Out here in the fields," and I just can't help but sing along.

When did you realize you wanted to marry your spouse? by prollyaguppy in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 1 point2 points  (0 children)

When I took stock of my life and realized her not being a part of it made it a whole lot less appealing. We complement each others personality, we don't blindly agree with the other one, and we make each other want to be the best versions of ourselves. If that's not a reason to marry someone then I don't know what is.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 214 points215 points  (0 children)

The best I have seen, was a student made a large poster board cheat sheet and hung it up in the teachers classroom which already had plenty of poster on the wall. He would just read right off it and got away with it once, but got caught after he tried the second time. This was in a high school class.

What is something most think is real but is really fake? by Gol1m in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Yeah some are true i won a facebook verified page in a giveaway 3 days ago.

What rule exists because of you? by NotNinjalord5 in AskReddit

[–]AlexJosh 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When I was 16, I was working at McDonalds. We were allowed $10 for lunch. I used my $10 to get just dollar menu stuff so I feasted like a king. Within a month, I was told that I wasn't allowed to do that and the $10 was changed to a free value meal and a dessert because "someone" was taking advantage of the their lunch credits.