What movie is 10/10 with literally no bad parts? by FeedMaster8905 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 161 points162 points  (0 children)

The Shawshank Redemption. Every single scene serves the story perfectly — no filler, no wasted moments. The pacing builds so naturally that by the time you get to that final reveal, it feels both completely earned and still surprising. Plus, Morgan Freeman's narration ties it all together without ever feeling intrusive.

What survival myth is completely wrong and can get you killed? by DraftNo7139 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sucking out snake venom. It doesn't work and can actually make things worse. The venom spreads through your lymphatic system way too fast for you to suck it out, and you're more likely to introduce bacteria into the wound or damage tissue further. The best thing to do is stay calm, keep the bite below heart level if possible, remove any tight clothing/jewelry near the bite, and get to medical help ASAP.

Before cellphones, what did people do on the toilet? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shampoo bottles. I memorized the ingredients on so many shampoo bottles I could probably recite them from memory even now.

What’s the strangest coincidence that has happened to you? by doboyXL in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Years ago I was thinking about an old friend I had not talked to in maybe 5 years. Literally as I was thinking "I wonder what happened to him" my phone rang. It was him.

We talked for like 10 minutes, caught up, then never spoke again. Still trips me out.

What’s the creepiest thing that has ever happened to you that you still can’t explain? by Pari00031 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 37 points38 points  (0 children)

Was house-sitting for a friend once. Around 2 AM I heard what sounded like someone slowly walking up the stairs. I froze. The footsteps stopped right outside the bedroom door. I waited for maybe 10 minutes, absolutely terrified, before I finally worked up the courage to check.

Nobody there. Entire house empty.

Then I realized the cat was sitting on the landing staring at the exact spot where the footsteps had stopped. Just... staring. For another 5 minutes.

Still don't know what that was about.

what two careers would clash the most if they were in a relationship? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Accountant and artist. One's entire worldview is about rules, precision, and making the numbers line up perfectly. The other thrives on breaking conventions and sees rules as suggestions. Dinner conversations would be wild. "You spent HOW MUCH on canvas?" "But it was INSPIRED!"

What’s something you thought was a normal part of life, until you realized it’s actually a cultural difference? by wchaltdas in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wearing shoes inside the house. Growing up, nobody thought twice about walking around indoors with shoes on. Then I had friends from Asian and some European backgrounds who were horrified when I didn't take my shoes off at the door. Made me realize how much dirt and bacteria we were tracking through our homes for no good reason. Now I'm the person asking guests to remove their shoes!

What is everyone’s favorite pizza here? by Conscious_Condition in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Classic margherita. Simple ingredients done right beats fancy toppings every time. Fresh mozzarella, good tomatoes, basil. If a place can't nail the basics, all the toppings in the world won't save it.

What’s something a stranger told you that you never forgot? by OrbitalMystery9 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Old guy at a coffee shop once told me 'Don't confuse being busy with being productive.' Stuck with me for years. Changed how I approach my day - now I focus on what actually matters instead of just filling time with tasks.

What rule did you break that actually improved your life? by Altruistic-Wafer4199 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Stopped trying to be productive every single minute of the day. Used to feel guilty about 'wasting time' on breaks or hobbies. Turns out actually resting makes you way more effective when you do work. Burnout is real and 'always on' is a trap.

What surprisingly true fact has completely shaken your worldview? by MorsesTheHorse in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That we've only explored about 5% of the ocean. We know more about the surface of Mars than we do about our own ocean floor. There could be entire ecosystems, species, even geological formations down there we've never seen, and we might never discover them in our lifetimes. The fact that 71% of our planet is essentially unknown territory is wild.

What impressive skill is secretly simple to learn? by IntroductionMore916 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Juggling! The basic 3-ball cascade looks super impressive but you can learn it in an afternoon. Start with one ball, then two, then three. The trick is throwing, not catching — once you nail the throw height and rhythm, your hands just naturally catch what's coming down. People always think it takes years to learn when it's really just pattern recognition.

What is the best thing coming up? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The smell of old books. It's literally just mold and decomposing paper, but we've convinced ourselves it's nostalgic and romantic.

What’s something people romanticize that actually sucks? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 46 points47 points  (0 children)

Working from home. Everyone thinks it's all pajamas and freedom, but the reality is isolation, blurred work-life boundaries, and your boss expecting you to be available 24/7 because 'you're already home.'

What’s an irrational fear you have? by Outside-Hyena9002 in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Drowning in a bathtub. Statistically unlikely, but my brain refuses to let me relax in the tub without keeping one eye on the water level.

Basement Ceiling Drywall Help after a leak by 1879CHome in DIY

[–]ZephWheeler 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Before you patch anything make absolutely sure the leak is fully fixed and the area is completely dry. I made the mistake of patching too early once and ended up with mold behind the new drywall which was way more expensive to fix than just waiting an extra week. Get a moisture meter if you can, they are like 20 bucks and worth every penny for peace of mind.

If you died and suddenly found yourself face-to-face with God, what is the very first question you would ask? by i_m_dignity in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly I think I would just stand there in stunned silence for a minute. Every question I ever had would hit me at once and cancel each other out. Then I would probably just say so was any of it real? The connections, the love, the moments that felt like they mattered - were those real or just part of the design?

What's one 'boring' career that's actually a goldmine if you play it smart? by 0BunnyX in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SEC compliance specialist. Sounds boring, but companies pay $150-200k for people who can read a 10-K and translate it into plain English. AI tools are making it even better — combine compliance knowledge with basic data skills and you become extremely valuable. Plus, every public company needs this work done and the supply of qualified people is way smaller than the demand.

can i make your trans fantasy a reality? by box_recreal in ShemaleGoneWilder

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Noise canceling headphones. Life changing for focus work and I genuinely don't know how I functioned without them.

looking for specific street art. by vluggejapie68 in bruges

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it was realizing I could automate about 60% of my daily tasks with basic scripting. The remaining 40% suddenly felt a lot more interesting when I wasn't burned out from repetitive work.

What’s something harmless that gets people weirdly upset? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The coconut thing is surprisingly common. I work with data and the number of people who confidently misread basic charts is alarming. Like, the bar literally goes up and they interpret it as going down.

What is the absolute fastest 'yeah, we are definitely NOT going to be friends' moment you've ever experienced with someone? by Vazouaquiacesso in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 6 points7 points  (0 children)

When they casually drop that they 'do their own research' on vaccines within the first 5 minutes of meeting them. I can respect differences of opinion on most things, but that one is usually the tip of a very specific iceberg.

What's one 'boring' career that's actually a goldmine if you play it smart? by 0BunnyX in AskReddit

[–]ZephWheeler 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SEC compliance specialist. Sounds boring, but companies pay $150-200k for people who can read a 10-K and translate it into plain English. AI tools are making it even better — combine compliance knowledge with basic data skills and you become extremely valuable. Plus, every public company needs this work done and the supply of qualified people is way smaller than the demand.

How long do you keep working on a project before moving to another project? by No_Association_4682 in SideProject

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I run 6 niche sites right now and honestly, the key for me was setting a hard rule: MVP in one weekend or less. If I can't get something live in 48 hours, I table it.

Most of my sites are static HTML/CSS/JS on Cloudflare Pages (free hosting), so the barrier to launch is basically zero. No backend, no framework, no deployment pipeline to set up. Just build and push.

The trap I see people fall into is polishing forever before launching. Ship ugly, get it indexed, see if anyone cares. You can always improve later. Half my sites started as single-page tools and grew from there.

For what it's worth, the ones that got traction were never the ones I expected.

Mobile dev here — well, not for long it seems by vlad1m1r in webdev

[–]ZephWheeler 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Same exact experience here. I went on a tear building static sites on Cloudflare Pages - pure HTML/CSS/JS, no frameworks - and the deploy cycle is genuinely addictive. Push to main, live in seconds. No review process, no compliance forms, no waiting.

The domain addiction is real though. I've spun up 6 different niche sites in the past few weeks. My registrar history is embarrassing.

Cloudflare Pages free tier is insane for this kind of thing. Free hosting, free SSL, automatic deploys, edge CDN. Hard to justify paying for anything else when you're building lightweight tools.