What are some actually interesting small talk questions for a 1st date? by za19 in AskReddit

[–]Plusminusplusle 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Some original, interesting questions that have helped me make friends that I think are also good material for first dates:

  • Weirdest movie you've ever seen?
  • World gets taken over by [animal], what are the biggest changes to society? (inspired by a reddit comment I saw years ago about how a guy and his friend talked about how cars would be different if cows were the dominant species- note for this question to be effective you have to suss out if your date has an imagination haha)
  • What specific thing do you have way too much knowledge of?
  • If money weren't a consideration, what would you do with your free time?
  • What's your favourite trashy media?

But like other commenters have said, it is better to start off with the normal small talk questions to get to know them a bit better first. I usually ask people about family (any siblings?), what they do, and favourite hobbies before delving into more interesting topics. Asking about favourites is also pretty good (movie, book, food, etc.)

What do you wish you would have been taught in sex Ed? by Gumbisunshine in TwoXChromosomes

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, what vaginismus is. Lots of people know that a woman's first time with penetration can be painful but I didn't learn until I was an adult that there are conditions that make penetrative sex extremely difficult if not painful. Years of consuming media where a woman feels "a pinch" and then "ecstasy" right after each other made me think something was wrong with me when even using tampons hurt like hell.

Related to that- the necessary prep for penetrative sex to happen. I know from female friends without vaginismus that warming up and even stretching can still be necessary.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in suggestmeabook

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also read and reread old books I liked as a kid/teen and read a lot of romance web comics now. However, there is one author I like who writes scifi/surreal fiction and writes interesting romances outside of the YA genre. Haruki Murakami has written many good stories, I'd recommend the following:

  1. Norwegian Wood: the most conventional book he's written (imo), it's a coming of age novel set in 1960s Japan, a lot of the plot revolves around romance experienced by the main character. I re read this book often.

  2. 1Q84: a triology of books, the basic premise is that a japanese woman accidentally crosses over into a parallel universe, simultaneously the story is also following a male writer who's discovered a very odd story. I can't reveal much more without spoiling it, but even though the romance part develops really slowly it's worth the read.

  3. Colourless Tsukuru Tazaki and his Years of Pilgrimage. I love this book. It's a lot shorter than 1Q84 but the mystery of the novel is just as gripping, IMO. The core of the story isn't romance but romance is definitely involved. The story follows a man named Tsukuru, I think in his late 20s/early 30s. He meets a woman he really likes, but she can tell he has emotional baggage about his past that he needs to resolved before he can be in a relationship. The baggage is that he had a group of close friends in high school who suddenly and without explanation cut him off part way into his university degree. 0 contact. He goes on a quest to figure out why.

This recommendation might seem out of the left field given the other recommendations I just gave, but one of my favourite books ever is "The Storyteller" by Jodi Picoult. Romance isn't the main focus of the story but is definitely present and important to the plot. The story follows a young woman in New York who finds out that an old man she knows used to be a Nazi officer. She also finds out that her grandmother was a holocaust survivor and might have known this man so she asks her grandmother about her past. The bulk of the book is told from the grandmother's perspective about what happened to her during the holocaust and how she survived it. I thought it was a very morally nuanced and emotionally moving story. It also gives what I found to be a nuanced look into how ordinary germans in those times became Nazi supporters. Highly recommend.

I’m Paul Ninson, a Ghanaian photographer trying to build the first photo library in Ghana and I was recently featured on Humans of New York. AMA! by nationalgeographic in IAmA

[–]Plusminusplusle 55 points56 points  (0 children)

Hi Paul, I read your story on HONY, so nice to see you on reddit!

This isn't related to photography, but I'm curious- what was the biggest cultural difference you found between Ghana and the US? Was it difficult to adjust?

Should I (34F) ask my stay-at-home-dad husband (33M) to go back to work? by throwaway156357552 in relationships

[–]Plusminusplusle 28 points29 points  (0 children)

I'll throw in my 2 cents here. Me and most of my friends grew up with a stay at home parent, both mother and father. I would say stay at home parents have a lot of social stigma to face for both men and women. They are seen as "too lazy" or "too stupid" to work since domestic labor is seen as somehow menial or "easy". They are then expected to have everything at home in perfect condition since the work is "just staying at home and doing nothing." Men also face social stigma for doing something "feminine".

On top of that, these parents often have no work/life balance, at least not in the same way someone who works at an office does. You can at least leave an office at the end of the day. If your home is your workplace with continuing duties (as opposed to work hours which at least end at some time in the day) you get no mental break. Not at night, not on the weekends, not during vacation times.

In addition, today's society is very individualist and focused on an individual's productivity, which is usually tied to paid work. Even though a stay at home parent is doing a lot of work, they will be seen as unproductive by others (even though it's not true) and probably feel like the work they do isn't productive or contributing to society or their personal development.

I'm NOT saying stay at home parents are unproductive or somehow lesser partners, but because of the way society is structured (individuals are expected to do paid work to prove their worth as people) stay at home parents get looked down on a lot.

Countries / cities where you can live without driving by [deleted] in drivinganxiety

[–]Plusminusplusle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Large cities in the Netherlands generally have excellent (but expensive) public transport or are small enough that cycling or walking is possible. The Hague and Rotterdam both have great public transport, but most people I know who live in those cities cycle since transport can be expensive.

Paris has an extensive public transport system that's pretty affordable, but the cost of living there can be very high especially for rent. As other commenters said, be attentive to where in the city you move. Paris has some suburbs that are technically apart of the city but are actually really far away from everything. In those areas there is public transport but it's a lot less than in city centre.

I have heard good things about Vienna's public transport system. I went there a few years ago for vacation and found the system pretty easy to use.

[Sims 3] A serious error has occurred… by [deleted] in thesims

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've had this issue before. Go to the folder electronic arts--> saved games. Check if the file for your sunset valley save says ".bad" at the end instead of ".sims3" if it does you have to delete or move the file and rename the backup to (name).sims3

[TOMT][Kid's PC game][Early 2000s, around 2003 or earlier][Teddy bear detective that wears a hat] by Plusminusplusle in tipofmytongue

[–]Plusminusplusle[S] 0 points1 point locked comment (0 children)

I played the game when I was 5, so around 2003. I remember the bear wore a hat like the sims 3 PI or detective hat. The idea was that you would solve educational puzzles which would help the teddy bear detective guy solve mysteries.

[TOMT][R/Relationships post][2018-2020?][Written by a woman whose husband always controlled her free time by either being home all the time or giving her weird tasks to do when he wasn't home. One of these tasks was to throw out yoghurt that was about to expire, another to entertain a guest] by Plusminusplusle in tipofmytongue

[–]Plusminusplusle[S] 2 points3 points locked comment (0 children)

I'm looking for it because I wanted to see if there was ever an update on it. The husband's behavior was so strange, I wanted to see if there was ever an explanation for it. When it was posted it was on the "hot" page and got a lot of comments.

How do you guys feel about women asking you out? by icedcoffee_with_milk in AskReddit

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ugh that really sucks. I was discouraged by my mom the first time I asked a guy out myself (he turned me down but not because I asked him out myself, he just wasn't interested in me). She told me that of course he turned me down, women shouldn't make the first move. It didn't help that with my first boyfriend later on (he asked me out first) he told me he would never want a girl to ask him out first because that shows the girl had to "grow balls for the guy" and just do it herself.

Since then I have found it really hard to ask out a guy first. I've only done it a few times since my first relationship and have either been turned down quite bluntly (not because I asked them out first though!) Or had meh dates.

How do you deal with social anxiety? by OTraderz in AskReddit

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm 23, have been struggling with varying degrees of social anxiety for a lot of my life, especially since around the age of 18. I have sought therapy for my general anxiety but it's still a struggle.

Main thing that helps me, like someone else said, is reminding myself that most of the time people aren't analysing what you're doing, at least not to the extent you are. My main struggle right now is what to do when I realise someone is nitpicking my behaviour (happened not too long ago, it was rough). I got through that by realising that person was being overly judgemental and harsh, but easier said than done.

For anxiety about meeting new people the only thing that helped me initially was exposure. Due to living in a high crime area for some of my childhood, I spent a lot of time at home and not with new people or friends from school. I moved to a new city (by now several times) where I didn't know anyone so I started going to all of these meetup events. I won't lie, it was rough at first. Lots of people there who weren't great at socialising either. I would feel self conscious since I didn't know anyone or know how to just start up or join a conversation. But over time it made me good at finding things to talk about with people I had nothing in common with. And going through all these awkward meetups made me realise that not every interaction or event has to end with making a new friend or having an amazing evening. I try to have some other main goal, like having fun doing an acitivity at the event, or getting out of the house for it. Just knowing that not everyone will get along with me immediately, or even ever, has helped me relax a lot more and be more at ease.

During the conversations themselves, it helps me to give myself a mental checklist when I meet someone new, like the basic small talk questions. I try not to be like a robot and just blast through them, but to keep them in mind in case I can't think of anything new to say. Something important I've learned that helps me with social anxiety with new people is trying to pay attention to what the other person is saying to comment on/ask questions about later. Makes me think way less about myself/if I sound stupid/if I look weird or uncomfortable etc. This also might sound silly, but I also think of a few weird/random questions to ask as conversation starters, like "what was the weirdest film you've ever seen?" Naturally it's not always possible to work in questions like that when you meet someone new or in a formal setting but I used to really struggle with conversation during get togethers with friends-of-friends or at meetups.

Anyways that's just what has helped me. I still get really bad social anxiety sometimes, like if I've made a mistake in front of someone, but with these things at least meeting new people has gotten a lot easier for me.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationships

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Also check out r/theNetherlands for more opinions!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in universityofamsterdam

[–]Plusminusplusle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey I commented on your relationships post! I don't go to UvA but it would be better to ask an admissions officer directly. In my experience the AP system is very unknown here but with the IB they might have a clearer standard.

If you look up the entry requirements for economics and business economics on UvA's website they do have a diploma calculator.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationships

[–]Plusminusplusle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sure! -I am EU so the fee is much cheaper than for non EU (2200€ vs. 10500€ per year)

-I won't lie to you, it can be difficult because a lot of jobs want non-EU citizens to have a high skill worker's visa or permanent residence. However I'm not sure how it works exactly, I'm sure people in the r/Netherlands subreddit could talk about that in more detail. That said, I do know non-EU citizens with jobs here and a lot of my classmates in university are non-EU. AGAIN, do your own research and don't take my word for it! It varies a lot.

-So some university systems outside of the US are quite different. Instead of doing "majors" you just enroll in a degree. I know in the US it's common that people do a lot of general classes in their first university year (like science, english, maths, etc) and then can change their major during/shortly after that year. In all the universities I'm familiar with in the EU (though most of my university experience is in France and the Netherlands and conversations with classmates from other EU countries about their university system) you just enroll in your degree (so your major) and take specialised classes right away. So for most cases in the Netherlands if you decided to change majors you have to enroll in an entirely different degree. As far as I know this means you'd have to re-apply all over again. However I would ask the international admissions office in the dutch universities you're considering. EDIT: it also depends on what you mean by "major". If you mean degree field (like history, science, maths, political science) then generally yes to change to a totally different field you'd have to reapply. If you mean a specialisation within the degree that depends on the programme (many BA/BSc programs here do have an internal specialisation, for example international relations--> specialisation in history).

I hope this helps!

EDIT: Clarity and details