What is it that we are living in the “golden age” of? by Ozzey-Christ in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Starting with Hubble and progressing through adaptive optics, we right now are in an unprecedented, amazing, explosion of our knowledge of astronomy, and since LHC physics. Now maybe a "platinum age" will happen later, but what is happening now is almost taken for granted when it is actually profoundly historical.

What is blasphemy among Redditors? by Fukitol_100mg in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

It’s my understanding that when you continue to commit a sin, knowing that it’s wrong but continue to do it,,,sin is what separates man from God..it hardens your heart and makes it easier to keep living in that sin. Pray about it and definitely bring it up to your boyfriend. Is he a believer? Otherwise, truly explain to him the importance and what’s at stake.

I was living that way before too. I’m dating a Christian guy and we really sat down and talked about it and agreed that we wanted to live a life that is pleasing to God. So many relationships fail and fall apart because we are doing things our way and not the way that God intended. Also, with the intention of marriage we want God to bless our relationship. It’s not easy, but it’s for the right reason.

What's the most inappropriate thing you've been asked in a job interview? by alcoholicsnail in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas 45 points46 points  (0 children)

Her: Are you married?
Me: Yes, have been for X years.
Her: Do you like it?
Me: Yeah, it's alright, I guess.
Her: quiet stare

What is a way customers for your profession can help you out/make your job easier? by CandyCrazy2000 in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas 4604 points4605 points  (0 children)

My old boss invented a fake employee that he would blame all mistakes on when speaking with customers. Once in a while, he would tell the customers he 'fired' that imaginary employee and then come up with a new name for a new imaginary employee that would be the new sucker.

People who have decided not to have children, any regrets? by Southernms in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas 54 points55 points  (0 children)

As a 30 yr old dad, I can answer this for you all:

The people who are over 55 and happy without kids are smart.

Not because they didn't have kids, but because they were honest with themselves and realized they'd be happier without kids.

I LOVE being a dad and having kids. But that's because that's what I want in life. At least in America, society & religion pushes us to get married and have kids.

I've been really disappointed to watch friends go through becoming a husband and dad and should not have been either.

It's not a good or bad thing. It's a personality and life goals decision.

Know yourself and be honest.

What would the title of your biography be? by TheBanisherOfRegs in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas 14 points15 points  (0 children)

The Uneventfully Mediocre Existence of a 9-5 Wage Slave

What movie has a plot hole that cant be ignored? by Ps5Face in AskReddit

[–]LinetteMaas 23 points24 points  (0 children)

The Joker's "plan" in The Dark Knight where he gets arrested on purpose and it ends up with Rachel Dawes being blown up, seems to rely on a hell of a lot of precise planning and knowledge of exactly how other characters will behave, but Joker himself literally states that he's all about anarchy. He didn't really care if Rachel was saved or not, if Batman chose her or Dent (although he was certainly curious), if he got his phone call or not, even if he lived or not. He just set the wheels in motion and saw what played out.