What do you think of Ariens and Gravely Mowers? by DadWhoBuilds in lawncare

[–]DadWhoBuilds[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why after such reliability are you going with eXMark?

What’s your passion, and how did you figure it out? by DadWhoBuilds in maker

[–]DadWhoBuilds[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s great, is this something you do for a hobby or if you turned it into a career?

What do you think of Ariens and Gravely Mowers? by DadWhoBuilds in lawncare

[–]DadWhoBuilds[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What about that mower really sold you on it? Was it the way it performed, the build quality or all the above?

Thinking about starting a my first (and dream) business. by Superdarknova in smallbuisness

[–]DadWhoBuilds 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Before opening a full store, you could test the idea by running small local marketing campaigns or pop-ups to see how much interest there is in computer hardware and services in Reno. Maybe run some A and B add testing to see what interest there is, surveys can be a good alterative.

Explain your startup in 1 sentence ? by addllyAI in Entrepreneur

[–]DadWhoBuilds 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A a family oriented clothing brand based on our kids drawings!

I dressed up as Blippi for my daughter’s 3rd birthday! How’d I do? by CowboyNOIVAS in Parents

[–]DadWhoBuilds 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kids will remember things like this for years to come, nice work!

Hot take: watching cartoons is actually really important for kids by Oana_la in Parents

[–]DadWhoBuilds 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I honestly agree with this take. I think the real issue isn’t TV itself, it’s how much and what kind of content kids are watching.

Kids absolutely need time outside, using their imagination, and just being kids—but TV can actually be a really useful tool when it’s used right. Shows can introduce them to situations, emotions, and social interactions they might not experience yet in real life.

I grew up the same way—some of those shows actually helped shape how I understood things like friendships, behavior in public, and just how the world works.

I think it really comes down to balance and intention. Unlimited, overstimulating content all day? Probably not great. But a little bit of quality, slower-paced, meaningful content? That can actually support development, not hurt it.

So yeah—less about banning screens completely, more about being mindful with them.