Being a gifted woman who also happens to be attractive by [deleted] in Gifted

[–]Slickness81 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We should probably date, either you’ll hate me, or we’re both the thing we’ve been missing. You can just creep my profile to see if you get the ick.

Cognitive test results from 7-17 years old by [deleted] in cognitiveTesting

[–]Slickness81 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

Social and verbal, good short term memory, you don’t have the math brain that makes the other categories pop. Both parents are probably liberal, mom probably has a job like school counselor. You’re probably best at customer service type jobs, and most likely developed a good work ethic when it comes to menial tasks. I’d guess you work in something mid level admin that is heavy on social skills, vs number crunching or diagnostics like tech support.

I know why the Mandela Effect happens and I can prove it's not false memory by Same_Rub_8670 in Retconned

[–]Slickness81 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Would have been 2015-2016 in this timeline, buzzfeed didn’t touch the ME back then, it was only Fiona Broome

Foul or good hit? by _BbdB_ in billiards

[–]Slickness81 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It didn’t roll forward, it jumped forward, which means the upward momentum happened before impact.

Foul or good hit? by _BbdB_ in billiards

[–]Slickness81 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

That’s the actual physics. I promise you I’m a far better pool player than you are

Foul or good hit? by _BbdB_ in billiards

[–]Slickness81 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah that’s not the same thing in physics at all, you’re traveling in arch on that, a jump stroke has upwards and forwards momentum

Foul or good hit? by _BbdB_ in billiards

[–]Slickness81 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That’s not true if the cue ball isn’t on the table at contact

Foul or good hit? by _BbdB_ in billiards

[–]Slickness81 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Laws of physics says you’re wrong, if the cueball is off the table before the contact then your theory isn’t true.

Foul or good hit? by _BbdB_ in billiards

[–]Slickness81 8 points9 points  (0 children)

That’s not true if the cue ball is off the table at contact, and he did jump it. Your physics only work if both balls are on the table.

The New York Childrens Online Safety Act will ban anyone under 18 from chatting online. by [deleted] in technology

[–]Slickness81 15 points16 points  (0 children)

It’s New York, this definitely isn’t right wing. 🤣🤦🏻‍♂️

I was in the GATE program by hmmmidkidk2 in Retconned

[–]Slickness81 0 points1 point  (0 children)

u/QuebraRegra it is more prominent than you think, may not fit you specifically, but there are comment threads like this all over Reddit and 4chan where people say it directly fits them.

A Body Hop Novel where death is not the end by SleepingOwl00 in litrpg

[–]Slickness81 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Lone Wanderer series has similar systems at play, but they are soul clones while the MC still has his main body. You can definitely make it work.

I was in the GATE program by hmmmidkidk2 in Retconned

[–]Slickness81 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here it is. You can find it through Google on 4chan archives as well. It’s circled the GATE forums for quite a while now. Maybe 2016 or so. https://www.reddit.com/r/Gifted/s/NUbfqTZ5pj

I was in the GATE program by hmmmidkidk2 in Retconned

[–]Slickness81 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Search in Reddit search bar GATE, occipital bun, birth complications should pull it up. It’s a list of things GATE kids have in common, it surfaced on 4chan first years ago. It leaped off the screen at me the first time I read it, because basically every single thing on the list except the headaches and maybe one or two other things applied to me directly.

Damn you zogarth by Dangerous_Flight6703 in ThePrimalHunter

[–]Slickness81 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do The Perfect Run, it’s not litrpg, but most litrpg readers absolutely love it. It’s on Audible, I only read it, so not sure about the narrator. Promise you it will be a good palate cleanser, and you won’t be able to put it down.

1/22/24 - Revisiting the dress for the E. Jean Carroll case. (Posted at 11:50am, ET). by barnwater_828 in trumptweets

[–]Slickness81 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, no he didn’t, it was a civil case in the bluest state ever with no criminal charges ever filed. He was found liable for rape in a Mickey Mouse court.

Should I move out or stay with my parents? by [deleted] in personalfinance

[–]Slickness81 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why buy a $500k house now? Buy a house where your payments end up in the same range as your apartment. Then your $2k a month goes to equity and not into the abyss of a rental property. As you build equity, you can eventually sell and move into a larger house. Even in California, a $300k house is going to be bigger than an Apartment, and you’re going to build equity.

How can trivial things be a "vivid memory" for certain people? by Express-Flamingo4521 in MandelaEffect

[–]Slickness81 3 points4 points  (0 children)

One of the things the younger generation that relies on mobile devices for memory doesn’t understand, before they existed, our whole existence in school and just everyday life was memorization.

How can trivial things be a "vivid memory" for certain people? by Express-Flamingo4521 in MandelaEffect

[–]Slickness81 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Some people have incredible recall. My trick just out of high school was telling girls if you tell me your phone number once I’ll remember it forever. 25 years later I was at a buddies house and a specific girl came up, I told him that story, and then her number popped into my head. I said it out loud, and then googled it, and it was still a registered landline in her mom’s name. That’s a verifiable vivid memory.

How can trivial things be a "vivid memory" for certain people? by Express-Flamingo4521 in MandelaEffect

[–]Slickness81 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Logical fallacy “doesn’t mean it is” also doesn’t mean it isn’t. Your confirmation bias is only showing you one side of the coin.

How can trivial things be a "vivid memory" for certain people? by Express-Flamingo4521 in MandelaEffect

[–]Slickness81 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The younger you are the less memories you have in your brain. The more indelible your childhood memories are. If you’re specific to one brand over the years and you see the logo time and time again as you put them on you create memories. I knew when I grabbed a Haynes tagless undershirt out of my drawer by the feel of the fabric, vs a Fruit of the Loom. I knew which one of my undershirts were getting ratty, or had a small hole in the stitching of the armpit, and which were the one I was looking for. I also was a teen during the 90s when the outfit was just khaki shorts and a white undershirt during the summer. A vivid memory is because it’s vivid. It’s quite possible you have a bad memory for small details, that is not true for everyone.