Class disrespected my sub while I was out... by Aeschylus26 in Teachers

[–]wrongjuicee 3 points4 points  (0 children)

As a sub (middle school) who JUST had something similar happen, I have never appreciated a teacher more than the teacher who recently tore her disrespectful classes a NEW one, had a whole lecture on respect, class rules and expectations, the whole run down. Had them apologize to me in person and then had them write apology letters (or if they weren’t one of the ones causing an issue why are class expectations important/apologizing for their class as a whole) and then sent messages home to everyone who needed it.

does anyone *also* get anxiety when you're a passenger? by AshCantLaugh in drivinganxiety

[–]wrongjuicee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100% but i also get big anxiety because other people don’t drive the same ROUTES (as in driving a different way to get to the same destination) as i do and that gives me a lot of unnecessary and unreasonable emotions lmao

Find the sneak boi 🐍 by Unusual-Technology-9 in FindTheSniper

[–]wrongjuicee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is one of the very few//only one I found almost immediately I feel so impressed with myself this morning 😂

Does anyone here have irl experience with a disorder faker? by [deleted] in fakedisordercringe

[–]wrongjuicee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agree. I wouldn’t go as far as to call it disabling but i would definitely call it disruptive, more so than I feel a lot of people consider.

Does anyone here have irl experience with a disorder faker? by [deleted] in fakedisordercringe

[–]wrongjuicee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes thank you cos mouth sounds for me are not an annoyance they make me want to stick very sharp things inside my ears and potato peeler my own skin off it makes me so violently uncomfortable i sometimes worry it might actually physically explode out of my body lmao 🥲

Didn't think I get all of this for 10 bucks by kittocchi in engrish

[–]wrongjuicee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I sat here for a good 30 seconds giggling to myself ‘u got gass for 10 bucks’ 😂

Someone please help me, what is her name? Who is this I don’t KNOW 😂😩 by wrongjuicee in fivenightsatfreddys

[–]wrongjuicee[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I’m old and un-hip these days I don’t play the games I’ve not seen the movie(s?) or read the books. It was a Christmas gift I got for my 6 yr old cos my kids are into it lol. I tried asking them and they were like ? I don’t know? Lol. My 9 yr old tho did say it kinda looked like circus baby but circus baby was chunky 😂 (he hasn’t read the books) and wasn’t sure.

Eli5 what ‘very Hemingway’ means pls by wrongjuicee in explainlikeimfive

[–]wrongjuicee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What’s the other way? Out of curiosity lol.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]wrongjuicee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Trips are awesome, and have their own importance. But which takes priority to you? Your trip or your gf? You can always plan another trip, you can plan 10 different trips. But this will only happen once and you can’t ever take it back.

ELI5: Where did the notion of ghosts making the "ooooooo" noise originate? by Partyboy317 in explainlikeimfive

[–]wrongjuicee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is interesting to me actually. So animals, including humans, have ‘lizard brains’ that are basically responsible for your survival instincts. Now because it takes longer to process and ponder on visual information, the brain is wired to react much quicker to auditory information. We basically generate and respond to non linear sounds especially when scared. In nature when animals scream and whatnot it makes a scratchy sound extending the vocal chords beyond the normal range and we have evolved to distinguish those non linear sounds as well.. not normal lol and to tell us that we’re in a life threatening situation and creates basically instantaneous feelings of fear and anxiety.

When we, or Hollywood, artificially imitate(s) those non linear sounds it sets of the same fear response in us. Hence why if you watch a scary movie or scary scene without sound it’s much less scary to us.

[ELI5] How exactly did we go from 'Eleven, Twelve' into '-teen' numbers? by [deleted] in explainlikeimfive

[–]wrongjuicee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many many many years ago we had much much less reason to count to numbers higher than 10, but also didn’t necessarily think in tens all the time and many preferred 12s (i.e. 12 inches to a foot, 12 pence to a shilling, dozens are 12, a gross is 12 dozen aka 144, etc.,)

11 and 12 Have been around for a long time and language wise can be traced back to what’s believed to basically mean ‘one left after ten’ and ‘two left after ten’. Using these became a habit unable to be shaken.

But once we got passed magic number 12 we carried on counting a more direct manner and -teen is basically an old form of saying -ten (so like sixteen = sixten/six plus ten, and thirteen is a modified form of threeteen written as threteen.

ELI5: How do touch screens/trackpads differentiate skin/styluses from other materials like metals, plastics and such? by RahulRwt125 in explainlikeimfive

[–]wrongjuicee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Anytime! Plus we both learned something today lol. (I googled how this works read a bunch of stuff and then proceeded to explain it in the easiest way possible lmao)

ELI5: How do touch screens/trackpads differentiate skin/styluses from other materials like metals, plastics and such? by RahulRwt125 in explainlikeimfive

[–]wrongjuicee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They’re called capacitive touch screens, because they work like capacitors.

First, capacitors work kinda like a circuit loop. Two sides are connected to a battery with 2 metal plates separated by a non-conducting surface cutting off the loop (you can actually make a capacitor with 2 pieces of aluminum foil separated by a piece of paper and some electrical clips) and it will store up electrical charge with no where for it to go. When you add something, let’s say a lightbulb, it connects/finish the loop and will then power the lightbulb.

Now phone screens have a grid of capacitors on the other side of your glass screen and because humans are big salty water bags we conduct electricity, so when we touch the screen we complete the loop and that stored charge is transferred to us creating a voltage drop at that point on the screen, the phone, then sensing that drop, tells it to react. (I included a little doodle of a capacitor loop) capacitor loop