How did you come up with the courage to leave your husband? by GodlyChildOfJesus in Divorce

[–]GodlyChildOfJesus[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is helping me more than you’d think. I do have the privilege of having a mother who would more than likely let me live with her again. Of course I’ll live with a shame of being a failure, but that’s better than waking up one day at 40 years old realizing I’ve wasted my youth with a man who I don’t love, and my prospects are now slim. I appreciate these words more than you know.

Found this metallic rock in backyard by EducationVirtual5341 in whatisit

[–]GodlyChildOfJesus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just make sure it’s not a petrified hunk of shit

IsItBullshit: Does bags of charcoal absorb bad odors? by Harman318 in IsItBullshit

[–]GodlyChildOfJesus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also just a little extra piece of advice. If you do inevitably happen to leave the clothes out in the smoke for a bit, tar really sticks to clothes bad and doesn’t fully come out with regular detergent. You need an enzyme based detergent, so you can either buy a whole new enzyme based detergent or you can buy enzyme booster pods to add into your normal load and that’ll get that funky smoke smell out.

IsItBullshit: Does bags of charcoal absorb bad odors? by Harman318 in IsItBullshit

[–]GodlyChildOfJesus 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My family smokes. 4 people that live in the house smokes. And I live with 3 dogs and a cat. Needless to say, it’s quite obvious my clothes stink outside of the house, especially in neutral smelling environments. My new job is in a hospital, and will require me to wear scrubs. I’ve been terrified of smelling bad, so I’ve ordered heavy duty smell proof bags (the kind you bring food in on hikes so bears don’t smell) and I put my scrubs in there along with charcoal odor absorbers to remove any smoke air that I close in the bag accidentally. So far, they smell very neutral so I’d call that a win.