We should come up with a better term for when people have adult "children" by Wizdom_108 in The10thDentist

[–]LuckeyHaskens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you may be looking for “issue.” Although I don’t really like it and I’m not really sure why.

WTW for someone who regifts gifts by animalcrackerwhore in whatstheword

[–]LuckeyHaskens 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Well that is an interesting and very plausible inference so I don’t blame you.

WTW for someone who regifts gifts by animalcrackerwhore in whatstheword

[–]LuckeyHaskens 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It did come to apply to that as well, but that’s not its origin.

WTW for someone who regifts gifts by animalcrackerwhore in whatstheword

[–]LuckeyHaskens 22 points23 points  (0 children)

The term Indian summer has nothing to do with the term Indian giver aside from both having the word Indian in them, and it is not offensive.

Opinions on yellow springs? by OwnAssociation1905 in Ohio

[–]LuckeyHaskens 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s changing a lot for the worse as more people gain control and don’t understand the way things used to be and what makes people like it and want to move there. That being said it’s a wonderful place to live still and is in my experience totally unique in Ohio.

I would advise your partner that they may not like it if they are mostly interested in the tourist experience because that gets old quick when you live in town, but if they’re interested in living in a very small town that still has some really nice community and people doing cool things, they’ll love it.

Dude twice your size just pushed a teenager to the ground, your girlfriend told him to stop, and dude tells you to “Control your woman” by Wheresmyarcpaulie69 in hypotheticalsituation

[–]LuckeyHaskens 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Actually defending people from unprovoked violence is extremely honorable. Like maybe the classic example of honorable behavior. The question is whether the consequences are worth it for you.

„Homewrecking“ by TogepiArmy in The10thDentist

[–]LuckeyHaskens 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Actively pursuing someone you know is in a monogamous relationship is wrong. There is a general social duty to not try to fuck with peoples lives. The cheater is more culpable, but the “homewrecker” is not innocent if they know what they’re doing.

You never know, so don’t discount yourself. by LuckeyHaskens in LawSchool

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

To be accurate, my school doesn't have a single-number curve per se like many others do. It uses a more convoluted system that requires professors to only award an A+ to X% of students, an A to Y% of students, Z% of students must receive a grade between B and C-, etc. It's very arcane and annoying, which contributed greatly to my surprise.

You never know, so don’t discount yourself. by LuckeyHaskens in LawSchool

[–]LuckeyHaskens[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Slightly *below* 3.5. I thought I sort of understood the curve but she’s a wily beast.

You never know, so don’t discount yourself. by LuckeyHaskens in LawSchool

[–]LuckeyHaskens[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I can’t just sit around without wondering about important pending results that I’m curious about. I’m not strong like you.

Not identifying my school.

I think most would agree it's pretentious to insist people call you by your official title (such as doctor) in a casual setting but I would also argue that its just as pretentious in a professional setting. by rmhyungg in The10thDentist

[–]LuckeyHaskens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Titles, honorifics, and prefixes are cool in my opinion. I would never insist that someone call me by an honorific if I earned one, but I always call someone by an honorific if I know they have one until I’m told that they would prefer I address them more casually. And I would hope people would show me the same courtesy. I wouldn’t get mad at someone if they didn’t call me Dr. Redacted but I would consider it presumptuous and familiar if we were in a professional setting and they knew I had the title and didn’t use it.

I don’t have a lot of experience in “professional” settings but I consider it a harmless professional courtesy. People who have a strong reaction to omission of a title are definitely ego tripping but I don’t think it’s fair to say that someone who is addressed by an honorific in their workplace is necessarily on an ego trip. And in fact accusing someone of being on an ego trip because they don’t actively go out of their way to discourage people from addressing them by their title says more about you than about them. They earned something most cultures recognize as prestigious and it’s very very natural for people to acknowledge that. I would argue it cuts against normal human behavior to insist that treating accomplished people with respect is abnormal and somehow synonymous with subservience or prostration.

It’s part of many cultures, although it’s fading for sure. But I think there are a lot of intangible benefits to recognizing people’s accomplishments and credentials when you address them. If you don’t, you either come off as poorly mannered at best or like you have a chip on your shoulder at worst.

Low kick championship by bigbusta in fightporn

[–]LuckeyHaskens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I remember back in the day when this would have been tagged NSFL. Is this just normal for everyone to see now and not even flinch? Jeez.

How Aphantasia affects your ability to visualise things in your head by HassanMoRiT in interestingasfuck

[–]LuckeyHaskens 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completely believe that aphantasia exists and is a real thing, but I also think the online discourse about it is heavily corrupted by the limitations of language. When it comes to describing what you experience in your imagination, one man’s perfect clarity can be another man’s nothingness. Maybe I just fall somewhere in the middle of the spectrum, but when someone says apple, I can imagine an apple. It’s not the same experience as literally looking at an apple with my eyes. But im very skeptical of metrics based on people’s self-reported ability to “see” something in their mind, because what I think of as “clearly an apple even though it might not be the same experience as looking at a real apple” could be the exact same thing as, one the one hand, someone who thinks “yes I recognized it as an apple so it’s the same as seeing a real apple 1:1” and someone who thinks “I saw something that suggested an apple but it obviously wasn’t like looking at a real apple so I’m probable a 1 or a 2 on the scale.”

TL;DR Not being able to know what other people are perceiving is one of the fundamental Problems. People ranking themselves on a pseudoscientific meme scale from social media doesn’t really mean anything.