it's ok to keep secrets, everybody has some skeletons in the closet. Wraiths in the attic. Ghosts in the bedroom. Mummy in the kitchen. Enchanted armor on the stairs. Slimes in the basement. Maybe a giant spider in the backyard. Beholder or two in the garage. Vampires are also in the closet
The other thread on this was started by chuds so I'm gonna reboot it myself: it's really sad that people don't understand the Midwest is where food gets grown and we're supposed to grow a lot more of it.
Suggesting people just move to the cities is astonishingly clueless and would only make the situation worse. Some Americans have truly no idea what it's like out there, tiny communities separated by hour long drives if you even have transport, millions of people really are just abandoned and left behind by what we consider progress and have no way out.
my biggest piece of advice is that you need to get comfortable with the idea that in your life you will hurt people, you will be the asshole, and thats okay, and youre not inherently a shitty person because of it. people have sensitivities you dont know about, people have bad days and they just took you in the wrong way, people project their shit onto you, and sometimes you were just an asshole.
what this doesnt mean is to go off and be a dick for the sake of being a dick, but if you cant accept the idea that youre going to hurt people in the future, youre going to tear yourself up over the smallest of infractions, and you possibly are in danger of guilting the people you love into not telling you when youve hurt them. not that you cant be sad about hurting the people you love, no healthy person likes doing that, but if you are paralysed with fear at the thought that you might hurt someone, you need to work on that.
Ice age children frolicked in 'giant sloth puddles' 11,000 years ago, footprints reveal
More than 11,000 years ago, young children trekking with their families through what is now White Sands National Park in New Mexico discovered the stuff of childhood dreams: muddy puddles made from the footprints of a giant ground sloth.
Few things are more enticing to a youngster than a muddy puddle. The children — likely four in all — raced and splashed through the soppy sloth trackway, leaving their own footprints stamped in the playa — a dried up lake bed. Those footprints were preserved over millennia, leaving evidence of this prehistoric caper, new research finds.
The finding shows that children living in North America during the Pleistocene epoch (2.6 million to 11,700 years ago) liked a good splash. “All kids like to play with muddy puddles, which is essentially what it is,” Matthew Bennett, a professor of environmental and geographical sciences at Bournemouth University in the U.K. who is studying the trackway, told Live Science. Read more.
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