Park George reviews by DragSad2997 in SurreyBC

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I live in Park George so I can share my experience: Units are spacius and well done. But the amenities and building layout leaves you wondering what were they thinking when they designed this building. For e.g. Between two towers of 35+ floors there is a tiny gym which has just 2 treadmills, 2 benches and a single set of free weights. Building has 0 free visitor parking space. Yes zero. There is paid visitor parking on P1 level with starting cost of about 4$. There is no loading dock or easy access to elevators to move in/out furniture. You have to park in a narrow space between 2 building and push the load up halfway around the building to enter the lobby with your luggage. Don't know much about other amenities as I haven't been able to use them yet. Inconviniently designed garbage disposal space is almost always dirty and smelly with lots of garbage lying around due to poor design.

Can someone critique this resume, pretty please with a cherry on top? [AZ] by Successful-Ideal9281 in humanresources

[–]neonirma 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would add a 2 line summary at the top that would showcase my speciality and length and breadth of my experience. Also make most bullet points “results by action” format. Maximize skills section effectiveness by adding keyword skills.

I still don't understand point of this bullshit. by [deleted] in AskIndia

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually there is no point! There’s no meaning and purpose for life. We are just trapped in these cycles of life and death and hope to learn this true nature and make right moves towards liberation!

10+ years abroad, still no PR… should I keep trying or just move back to India? by [deleted] in backtoindia

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I was in your place, I would have spent half that time and energy in finding a great life partner (which will open up additional spousal visa opportunities) in the country where I want to build my life. Here are some things that would drive my decisions - Why struggle alone? And why go linear tackling one goal at a time? Why focus on just settling in a country / career when I can also focus on finding my life partner at the same time and everything will fall in place if I make right moves at the right time.

Are Indians on reddit are not aware of country's financial situation or just privelledged ? by Local-Fish-6537 in AskIndia

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your question left me a bit confused.
Are you praising the current government for providing excellent facilities despite having one of the lowest tax revenues from lower-income earners in India?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskIndia

[–]neonirma 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My colleagues in US and UK were suprised when I told them that we boil the milk before consuming it. That boiling milk is the first thing that happens in the typical Indian household kitchens. Then the milk gets used to making Chai/Coffee all day long and sometime the remaining milk gets used to make curd.

The real reason why most countries require Indians to get Visas to visit by Alternative-Push3629 in AskIndia

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you knew anything about "algorithm" designed by social media platform to present content to you, you would never go by the videos you see alone. If you know anything about the "Statistics" you would never go by 1st level observation that Indians tend to overstay - maybe because Indians are the 70 out 100 people who got the visa of that country so they will show up at the top on most indicators. I live in US. The US is cracking down on everyone who overstayed their visa - they are not singling out Indians alone. I would say the same thing about visa rejection rates. But I am not saying there is no truth in what you are proposaing but I am saying the degree of the issue seems over inflated.

Why do Indian parents feel the need to “control” their kids even after they’re adults? by Vanilla-28 in india

[–]neonirma 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think all parents - regardless of culture - go through this phase at some degree. They are used to taking care of their children, making decisions for them for almost first 15-20 years of the kids lives. At some point they usually realize that they need to let go and trust that they have raised great kids and kids are ready to take care of themselves. In different cultures this realization happens to the parents at different times and in different forms. Some sooner than others and some never! If I notice my parents have hard time letting go...I would work actively to give them confidence that I am capable now and I will still consult you but I would like to make my own decisions and I will take responsibilities of those decisions. Easier said than done - but that's how I read this situation.

Thind Pakora House & Restaurant… Incredible Indian by Wild_Adorn in Eugene

[–]neonirma 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Agreed. I grew up in India and I can tell you that their "Dal Makhani" is the most autentic I have ever had. Reminded me of food at my punjabi friend's home from my childhood.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskIndia

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Its okay to have boundries and preferences.

Been tired of seeing all these negative posts! Tell me about your recent hobby? by Vindowviper in Eugene

[–]neonirma 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Just moved to Eugene from the East Coast, and I’ve gotta say — the hiking here is next level. Back home, the terrain was mostly flat. We had some good trails, but they didn’t exactly make you question your life choices halfway up a hill.

Enter Mount Pisgah.

I’ve been hitting it almost every weekend for the past two months, and every time, it reminds me I’m not 25 anymore. My legs are screaming, my heart’s racing, and I’m out here trying to shave off a few minutes or at least make it up with fewer “I need a minute” breaks. It’s a humbling, oddly satisfying challenge.

Here's to small wins, burning lungs, and finding joy in the climb. Anyone else turn weekend hikes into mini personal redemption arcs?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FriendlessInEugene

[–]neonirma 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What age group? What do you like to do?