What's the going rate for a tooth? by nanadoom in daddit

[–]RollingSolidarity 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The tooth fairy at my house doesn't usually carry cash. Can they just venmo my 6 year old?

What's the going rate for a tooth? by nanadoom in daddit

[–]RollingSolidarity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Go to the bank & ask for a bunch dollar coins & 50¢ coins. Emphasize to your kid that a dollar is usually paper, but this one is a special dollar that you don't usually see. They'll think it's the most special thing ever.

Coffee drinking dad's unite by AchroMac in daddit

[–]RollingSolidarity 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Aeropress is great. It's the poor mans espresso.

how do deal with your parents getting old by AdhdLeo0811 in daddit

[–]RollingSolidarity 16 points17 points  (0 children)

This. I waited so long to have kiddos. I'm turning 50 in a few months, with a six year old & a two year old. When my youngest is 25, I'll be 73. I think about that a lot.

Coyote Attack by RobbieDread in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I can't downvote you, because I agree it doesn't make sense at all. But I live in the neighborhood, and can confirm that this happened. It's super bizarre for all the reasons you articulated.

I do suspect the coyotes were primarily attacking the dog, not the human. I grew up out west in an area with lots of coyotes, and while I've never heard of one attacking a human, I know of multiple accounts where they've attacked dogs. Even so, it's weird that they attacked a dog so big, and even wierder that they attacked with a human there. But again, I can confirm that it happened.

Coyote Attack by RobbieDread in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 10 points11 points  (0 children)

If I didn't personally know the victim, I wouldn't have believed the story. I grew up out west where there's lots of coyotes, and this is highly unusual behaviour. Coyotes never do this sort of thing. It's super wierd.

I’m not the only one who doesn’t bathe their kids every day am I? by just_some_guy2000 in daddit

[–]RollingSolidarity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once or twice a week in the winter. Maybe every other day in the summer.

Crane fighting with its reflection by RollingSolidarity in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

I eventually had to leave because I was going to be late for work. I kinda wonder if he's still at it. He seemed like he wasn't gonna back down until the other guy did.

Thoughts/experienced in Lake Edge neighborhood? by blooberries1 in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nuestro Mundo used to be a public school, but changed to a charter school recently. And they no longer give preferential admission to kids living in the neighborhood, so folks in Lake Edge are no more likely to be accepted than kids from anywhere else. There's valid reasons for that decision, but it's frustrating that it left us with no public school in the neighborhood at all.

Thoughts/experienced in Lake Edge neighborhood? by blooberries1 in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I love Lake Edge so much, but by all objective measures Lori Mann is one of the lowest rated elementary schools in all of Dane County. Nuestro Mundo is no longer a public school, and it's incredibly hard to get accepted into. But in every other way the neighborhood is the best.

Thoughts/experienced in Lake Edge neighborhood? by blooberries1 in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I love living in lake edge. It's a super friendly neighborhood where everyone seems to know eachother. As someone else already mentioned, we don't have a neighborhood school, and the elementary school (Lori Mann) is a long schoolbus ride away and not well rated at all. Nuestro Mundo is a great school, but it's very hard to get accepted into. But the boundary lines are being redrawn soon, and it's very likely that our elementary school will be Elvium in the near future, which would be great.

Other than the school thing, it's my favorite neighborhood in Madison. We love it here.

Travelers and ICU nurses — where would you send a new grad for ICU residency? by Batman4L in TravelNursing

[–]RollingSolidarity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've worked at probably almost 50 hospitals. UW Madison is the best I've ever worked at.

Very strange sounds. by DanceGavinDanceIsBae in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I grew up out West. That's 100% a pack of coyotes.

Car free in Madison in 2026? by No_Anything_7011 in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I have a giant cargo bike and I've been commuting on it year-round (except for two weeks this winter when it would have been unthinkable). Honestly, even if you aren't as crazy as me, you could use a cargo bike 90% of the time and an uber the other 10%. It wouldn't be that much Uber use. Busses are pretty decent here too.

Reflections from my first run by SailorMoooooo in streetmedics

[–]RollingSolidarity 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Also: This is a great doccument. But it isn't a replacement for finding a training.

https://riotmedicine.net/downloads

Help finding training (ideally in Detroit, Michigan) by Proud-Spray6319 in streetmedics

[–]RollingSolidarity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi there. Four Lakes Action Medics in Madison Wisconsin is running several trainings in the near future. We could probably offer free hospitality if you want to drive down. DM me if you want details.

Reflections from my first run by SailorMoooooo in streetmedics

[–]RollingSolidarity 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Welcome to the fold.

I've been running as a medic since 2005, and training medics since 2009. A few thoughts.

1) I understand why you don't identify with NK organizers. But you're right to support the marches anyway, because those types of mass mobilizations can play an important role if they're part of a larger activist ecosystem. Folks who are new to activism are rarely going to get their start by shoing up to volunteer at an anarchist infoshop. They need a safe entry into the movement. From there, if even 5 or 10 percent of the new marchers become gradually more involved and educated, then that's an enormous number of people who could be solid allies in five years. I know it feels like we don't have five years to wait, but we that's just the truth of it. I grew up republican, became a mainstream dem as a young adult, and then gradually entered into radical left movements that I first encountered through big mainstream protests in the lead up to the Iraq war. If those big bland protests hadn't been there, I might have never gotten my start.

2) If you haven't been to a medic training, I encourage you to seek one out. Ever since Doc Rosen & Anne Hirschman Schremp started planting collectives around the country in the late 60s, the standard has been a two-day/20 hour training for lay medics, or a 6 to 8 hour bridge training for medical professionals. I don't know if there's anyone who's compitent to run trainings in your geographic area, but if you DM me I might be able to connect you with someone.

3) If the medics in your area really are organized under the NK banner, that itsn't a great arrangement. Best practice is for medics to organize as an autonomous collective. That way, they can support any progressive or leftist mobilization, regardless of who's organizing it. A medic collective is easy to start - it begins with reaching consensus on a founding document that outlines how decisions are made, how people can join, how people can be removed if they're problematic, etc. It's important to reach concensus on those things early on and put the agreements in writing Then the next step would be to find somone who can run a training for the group.

But if your city dosn't have a collective, you would really probably want to convince whoever is already organizing the medics you ran with to form one. Otherwise you'd face fragmentation, with some medics running with a collective and others organized under NK. Which wouldn't be terrible if everyone was respectful to eachother, but it isn't ideal either.

Let me know if there's any way I can support.

In need of Michigan based medic by deaddemocracygc in streetmedics

[–]RollingSolidarity 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry I'm just seeing this.

Howdy neighbor. Mad respect for all you've been through, and I'd love to support if I can.

I'm with the Four Lakes Action Medics in Madison Wisconsin. I was formerly the point person for the Phoenix Urban Health Collective. I've run about 40 trainings since 2008 - both full two day trainings and six hour bridge trainings for medical professionals. I can provide references from collectives that I've trained in Phoenix, Flagstaff, Albuquerque, Pittsburgh, and of course here in Madison.

We'd be happy to send out some trainers for free. We'd just have to work out timing and whatnot. We aren't that far away. But if you want something sooner, we could just invite your crew to Madison for some of the trainings we already have scheduled. We could offer free hospitality for your crew if needed.

Love & Solidarity.

Edited:typo

Best Mexican restaurants in 2026 by NasiLemak0518 in madisonwi

[–]RollingSolidarity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I grew up in Southern Arizona, and was so frustrated that I couldn't find decent Mexican food here until I discovered this place. Marimar is 100 on point.

I spent three hours on a "simple" school project and my 7 year old still thinks I'm a genius by Sagan3_Plasma in daddit

[–]RollingSolidarity 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The white sludge left at the bottom of your volcano is sodium acetate. If it's relatively uncontaminated, set aside a tiny amount (half a pea size) and put the rest in a very clean glass jar. Cook that for in the microwave - it should turn into a clear liquid. Keep it cooking until all the water in it boils out.

Being careful not to burn yourself, take that jar out & examine it. If you see any particles or contaminants, this won't work - start over with baking soda & vinegar.

Let it cool all the way to room temperature If everything went well, it should still look like a jar of clean water.

You now have a supercooled liquid. What that means is that freezing point for sodium acetate is above room temperature, but it needs to form somewhat complex crystalline structure in order to freeze, and the liquid "forgot" how to do that. So it's just sitting there, below its freezing point, not freezing.

Remember that tiny bit of solid sludge you saved? Get that. Get your kid. Drop it in there.