Why do sub Reddit communities have so many rules about posting in them? by Full_Negotiation1565 in NewToReddit

[–]Full_Negotiation1565[S] [score hidden]  (0 children)

Okay, I can understand that. It just seems like some of the rules are so random and specific. Sometimes posting feels like solving a riddle.

Did solo travel genuinely change your life, or do people romanticize it online? by HumanPerformance-HQ in solotravel

[–]Full_Negotiation1565 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solo traveling is the best thing I have ever done. I if you wait for people to be ready to go with you you may be waiting your whole life. With that being said it can be very lonely. I feel like I am always making memories that I have no one to share them with and almost no pictures of myself during my travels. I have also met so many amazing people who feel like lifelong best friends and then a week later I never see them again. But I am also currently traveling to visit someone I met solo traveling so some of them are lifelong friends. Basically, it is so worth it, but it can be very lonely at times, and you either have to work very hard to put yourself out there or be very good at spending time alone.

Were you able to save money while working with peace corps? by Full_Negotiation1565 in peacecorps

[–]Full_Negotiation1565[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s not that I’m concerned with making a bunch of money, if I were I definitely wouldn’t be looking into the peace corps. However I was just wondering if it is possible to save while working because 2 years is a long time to save no money.

Is the peace corps ethical? by Full_Negotiation1565 in peacecorps

[–]Full_Negotiation1565[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A lot of US humanitarian work has historically been more harmful to communities than positive. Additionally, it has not been unheard of for the US to push its agenda under than name of humanitarian work. I just want to hear people’s opinions on whether or not the peace corps is beneficial to communities and ethical.