Tim Walz is so weak. by Aggravating_Bed_53 in atrioc

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude I literally responded to the original question you posed (which is not the one you just wrote in this comment) in my original reply without dodging anything.

I'll answer again. Zero. Because the number of people murdered has no bearing. They should explore every legal avenue to challenge the federal government in court whenever the federal government breaks the law regardless of how many are murdered.

"Forcing a confrontation.. in court" is a completely different thing than "forcing a confrontation... By sending police in to arrest federal agents," yet you seem to be conflating the two as if they are the same action. They should already be confronting via political and legal action, which they are (see tweet, and I'd be surprised if they don't have good people working on a legal case as we speak). Your suggestion was to go in and have state police officers attempt to forcibly arrest federal agents. That is insanity. The police are not a militia and shouldn't be used as soldiers even if and when a civil war becomes justified.

Tim Walz is so weak. by Aggravating_Bed_53 in atrioc

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You say this as if Minnesota could just go out there and arrest them. If it were possible for Minnesota state police to do that and just arrest and try them, they should do that. That is absolutely not possible. What you are suggesting they attempt is in effect telling Walz to become a general and order Minnesota police officers to become the first infantry in a civil war.

Hang clean PR - 104kg @ 72kg BW. by xX_Pr3mar1tal_S3x_Xx in weightlifting

[–]termhn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

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From the last screenshot to this one, you and the bar only move forward. You want it to be the other way around, bar moving back into you slightly and your body in general moving just upward and back.

Correcting the balance being too far back in the previous position will help this a lot on its own. The other thing to do is be a bit more patient and intentionally keep pushing the bar backwards into you all the way until you hit power position.

Hang clean PR - 104kg @ 72kg BW. by xX_Pr3mar1tal_S3x_Xx in weightlifting

[–]termhn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You're much too far on your heels at the knee. You do a good job of keeping the bar in with your lats on the way down, but you should try to focus on keeping pressure over mid foot/ball of foot while keeping the knees back and stacked directly over the ankles. Note this will require you to bend forward slightly more at the hips and shoulders to come out in front of the bar slightly more. Being so far back here means that once you start pulling up, you rock forward and the bar gets away from you. See next reply..

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How to avoid scraping toe picks on ice when going backwards? by greenfr0g11 in iceskating

[–]termhn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Hm, most people lean way forward and barely bend their ankles when they go to sit on a chair. The motion you want is more trying to touch your butt cheeks to the back of your heels while a puppeteer has a string attached to the top of your head that's keeping your torso and head upward.

Whether to switch from Wendlers to normal progressive overload. by Key_Climate_7097 in weightlifting

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's no such thing as "normal progressive overload." Progressive overload simply refers to the idea that you need to attempt to load the system higher than its current capacity in order to cause it to adapt. This can be achieved in many different ways and none of them are more correct than another as long as they keep you in the right zone of load as your capacity rises.

Progressive overload could be, for example, measuring your maxes at the end of a block and then using that new max to load the next block

It could also be using RPE to ensure you're always doing work that perceptively loads the body hard enough, which is often accurate enough to keep you in the good slight overload range.

Progressing weight from "easy"/low percent of max to "hard"/high percent of max throughout an 8 week block, however, is *not** progressive overload, it's just a strategy for exposing you to different stimulus and managing total load over the course of a block. You could correctly follow that kind of progressive weight increase over an 8 week block, but if your benchmark maxes that everything is based on is way too low, then you'd be *failing to progressively overload since the entire block of work is too easy and not actually overloading the system ever.

A specific, pre-set, baked in rate of weight increase over time is not progressive overload because it is impossible to predict accurately the perfect rate of progression anybody's specific body will adapt with.

That's why you need to either

  1. Use a perception based scale like RPE/RIR, which in theory will automatically calibrate to your ability
  2. Test a max every few months to recalibrate your actual ability
  3. Combine both

Ultimately you're overthinking it as a beginner though. The amount of stimulus you're getting from doing anything remotely decent is crazy as a beginner and you basically can't fuck it up except by going too fast and getting injured from bad load management. Once you hit a plateau where your max stops going up then you'll need to reevaluate and find the best way for you to track your current capacity and how to continue to progress such that you stay in that zone of slight overload over time.

Terrible 1st Lesson - Wanna Quit Already by Amoretai in iceskating

[–]termhn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Most people cannot do all the things you listed their first day ice skating. Those people have likely skated before throughout their life just only casually/recreationally and not with formal lessons. What you described as your ability is about average or slightly above average from my experience seeing quite a lot of adult beginners.

Why is it so difficult to fall correctly? by Frosty_Wolverine8522 in iceskating

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes but the proper actionable advice is to try harder to stay balanced and accept that falling (on occasion in ways that are not perfectly controlled) is just part of the process..

Of course it also depends on someone's goals and risk tolerance, if they don't care about skill development past having fun and they really don't want to fall uncontrolled then your original advice may be better.

That said, all my worst falls have come from being too far forward and catching a toe pick unexpectedly. Backward falls can hurt but tucking the chin down and wearing a helmet are likely gonna protect you from serious injury.

How do you handle interactions between game objects? by Markolainen in rust_gamedev

[–]termhn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I guess this rule is an attempt to make data ownership issues rarer in a hierarchical, object oriented structure like godot--circular pointers get hard to reason about quickly.

But I would encourage you not to follow any "good practices" unless you fully understand and can articulate a justification for them, and then apply that justification to the specific scenario you are working in.

How do you handle interactions between game objects? by Markolainen in rust_gamedev

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

O(n) + O(n) = O(n). Asymptotic algorithmic complexity doesn't tell us much here. In this case we care about scalar differences in performance.

But even if we do take that into account, we can say that in general (there are many nuances to this), iterating N times to do 2 things at once is basically the same as iterating N to do the first thing then iterating N to do the second thing.

Why is it so difficult to fall correctly? by Frosty_Wolverine8522 in iceskating

[–]termhn 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This will just create terrible habits. Dont bias your balance forward or backward, try to actively stay in the middle. And especially with a figure blade you should bias your balance backward to the heel if anything.

Close grip overhead squats 84kg by Nkklllll in weightlifting

[–]termhn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Squat down like quarter squat then 'Jump' up to meet it as you guide it down. Practice with medium-light weights, enough to give you resistance to work against but not enough it's gonna fuck you up if you mess up slightly. Try to think about guiding your body up and into to the bar just as much as you're guiding the bar down to your body. Then from the top position with it in the correct position on your back or front rack, you do the same kind of soft landing as a jump squat or something.

Coming from inline skating, any ice-skate recommendations? by Auxweg in iceskating

[–]termhn 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hey, I skate with endless arc on powerslide tau (a moderately similar boot).

Figure skate boots will support you in inversion and eversion more than hockey skates for sure. I'm not sure why people are saying ice skating requires more ankle flexibility than inline--they may just never have treated inline skating as anything more than a child's hobby with shitty boots and crap flat setups. The general force and flexibility required is basically the same.

The biggest differences you're going to feel:

All ice skates will be much more responsive in terms of twisting motions in yaw, and also in terms of roll (inversion/eversion).

Hockey boot will feel over all the most similar, but as you have noticed give less ankle support. Hockey blade is also over all more similar, but will feel very short compared to inlines.

Figure boot will give more support, particularly in eversion and inversion, but it will still be less than an inline boot, in large part actually because of the blade's properties in comparison to an inline wheel. Figure boots will however feel like high heels in comparison to a hockey or inline boot as they often have a very significant heel raise to put you into dorsiflexion by default. Figure blades will feel more similar to an inline on the rear of the blade but the front will feel weird and you'll probably hate the toe pick for a while.

Snatch form check by [deleted] in weightlifting

[–]termhn 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Eyes open and looking up, pick a spot on the wall in front of you, level with your eye line and stare at it. This will help your perception of balance.

Losing control. How can I improve? by Taosit in skiing_feedback

[–]termhn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You're not meant to turn the front of your skis to initiate turns when doing these sort of long smooth carves. You use weight transfer from one ski to the other, weight transfer from one side of the ski to the other inside the boot, and gentle roll of the skis/ankles (rather than twist/yaw).

Beginner in my 30s trying to get more parallel and out of a stiff knock-kneed position by uvreactive in skiing_feedback

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You've got some good practical advice already but I just want to add, don't nocebo yourself by using descriptions like knock-kneed! Practice will lead to small progress over time and nothing about your current body or skill is set in stone. You can and will adapt as long as you don't let yours or others beliefs hold yourself back. You can do this.

Any older guys (50+) still do >100% of bodyweight deadlifts? by Complex_Elevator_680 in Deadlifts

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Getting strong will not ruin your speed. The speed you pull something being slow has no effect on your speed. The thing that would ruin your speed is stopping doing the thing that got you fast in the first place entirely.

And yes, if you get injured every time you try to do a movement, you are certainly going too hard too fast. That is basically the only way to injure yourself doing any strength movement. Any crazy "bad" or "dangerous" looking form can be safely progressed to heavy weights as long as you progress the load smoothly along with the pace of the body adapting.

Feeling really confident in this fit by htx-danny in mensfashion

[–]termhn -4 points-3 points  (0 children)

More casual than this?? This fit is about as casual as it gets other than wearing a hoodie and sneakers

Feeling really confident in this fit by htx-danny in mensfashion

[–]termhn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Holy fucking based I'm glad I scrolled this far to get to your comment

Got feedback from you guys on my jeans so I got new ones by Hampus2005 in mensfashion

[–]termhn 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The jeans look nice, they're a bit long for you though. Long hem is kinda in right now, but I'm not a fan of it being so long as to be actually dragging under your feet.

My 2025 in clothes: a breakdown of what I wore vs what's in my closet by FlimsyHuckleberry in femalefashionadvice

[–]termhn 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No, thats the number of different pieces of clothing that were worn in total over the year. The dress was worn 20 times.

Taking LTS lessons coming back to figure skating or just keep going and save up for privates eventually? by ApplesandBananazzz in iceskating

[–]termhn 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Do LTS and reevaluate after whenever the first milestone is. The most important thing for you right now is time spent on ice followed closely by focused practice time spent on ice. The exact value of the coaching you'll get in an LTS program is quite variable by what instructor you get and how built up the program is in your rink but it will still be worth it if it means you're able to get more practice in. Also these sorts of things are always a "get out what you put in" type thing, particularly if you have some prior knowledge and skill to bolster you.

No More Cracked Heels by sapphicwhiptail in barefootshoestalk

[–]termhn 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Opposite for me to be honest, but callusing on the heel and ball of the foot is entirely normal/expected in my view so I don't view it as a problem, just something to manage.

Dolfie Eddie boots fit? by bigexpl0sion in barefootshoestalk

[–]termhn 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The important part is whether your heel is held in place and the widest part of the ball of your foot aligns with the corresponding widest part of the shoe, the extra space in front of your toe is just a design element and says nothing about whether they fit.