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01:07
@Tinkeringbell Oh, nothing, just made a remark on that "surprise-seeking wife" question. One answer said "I agree with Masked Man", another called out a specific phrase from my comment. Later my comment got deleted, which makes both those answers look... strange.
 
2 hours later…
02:44
I am getting vibes of the infamous tickling boss question from this question...
-3
Q: How to deal with inappropriate touches by colleagues (close friends)

Ashish RanjanI'm a guy. I don't like it when people inappropriately touch certain parts of my body, specifically the sides of my abdomen. In fact, I hate it. So much even I can't believe it! Now some of my colleagues are really close friends of mine. They occasionally deliberately poke the said area. It has ...

 
5 hours later…
08:09
@MaskedMan I'm afraid I missed that notorious question? Is it still around?
 
1 hour later…
09:16
@Tinkeringbell Unfortunately :P, that question was deleted for trolling by a mod.
When you have 10k reputation, you can use the above link.
09:36
@MaskedMan That's still a very, very long way away.
09:55
@Tinkeringbell About 2 months of HNQ should get you there.;)
10:24
@MaskedMan Somehow, I'm not that good about picking my HNQ's :P
 
3 hours later…
13:37
@Wow, I just got two downvotes to an answer that was 18 months old.
@RichardU harsh
although that might be a side effect of the recent rash of necro'd questions
@motosubatsu strange. Not that it hurts my rep in any meaningful way... but still. It is a bit odd.
@motosubatsu Nice answer to the noob Web Developer worried about his "credibility". ROFL! Harsh, but dead on!
13:55
Mr delete button has been getting a workout today.
@Tinkeringbell You will get better at it if you stick around for a bit. Picking bikeshed questions that are a tad bit "controversial" is almost guaranteed to work.
@RichardU thanks.. I think the continuing pain levels might be making me a bit more caustic than normal but I felt he needed a dose of reality
@MaskedMan Oh don't worry, I'll stick (as much as I hate being sticky)
8
A: Duplicate answers - What action should we take?

Masked ManYou have an XY Problem here. The most common cause of this symptom is the HNQ cancer, which has spread across StackExchange but it affects "subjective" sites like Workplace more severely. The problem results from a number of positive feedback loops, as explained below: HNQ → more views → m...

@MaskedMan Yeah, I am familiar with that piece of scripture :)
14:07
Greetings. I overhauled my resume. Do you guys have time for another glance?
@ryanyuyu sure thing.. post a link
@ryanyuyu Go ahead.
lol, IPS has now descended into "your answer wouldn't work if the question were something else". Ok, I guess that's a fair point. :facepalm:
@MaskedMan Can I have a laugh too?
14:12
"Works well on teams, good communicator" Remove this, doesn't achieve anything.
sure
If the OP were asking specifically about a workplace incident, your answer is insufficient, I think, given that perception by managers and colleagues around the office matter a great deal and your advice to the OP - to walk away and to stop trying to debate or reason with their colleague - could portray them as incompetent. (But, as the question stands, it's too broad.) — D.Hutchinson 19 hours ago
@MaskedMan Don't mind that one, never seen anything useful come out of it.
@ryanyuyu remember, the first rule of resume's is SHOW, DON'T TELL
@ryanyuyu My comment appeared needlessly brusque and curt, because I hit enter before I could elaborate. The thing is, while those are indeed good qualities to have, everyone else will claim the same.
14:15
THIS ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
@MaskedMan IPS is my go-to place for whenever I start to have faith in humanity again.
Right. So maybe include an example in the work section?
Or just be more specific in the qualifications?
@ryanyuyu it's much better than the last version
I'd drop the whole "Qualifications" section though
@ryanyuyu you'd need something extraordinary to show "works well"
Hmm. A lot of the examples I've seen have this summary information.
it doesn't add anything
14:17
@motosubatsu either drop it, or make it much more detailed.
and most of it is fluff which doesn't mean anything
@RichardU to me dicussions of such "soft skills" are best done in a cover letter
and yes in a more detailed way
so yeah I'd drop it - write some good, detailed discussion and examples of those qualities up for use in cover letters
@ryanyuyu Mine has a qualifications section, but it's meaty. C, C++, C#, SQL, VB4,VB5,VB6, VB.net..... a LONG list.
and use the space you get back in the CV to put the technical skills into a bullet point format
comma seperated is hard to scan
Ok I can do that.
@motosubatsu mine is comma delimited, but it takes up half of the first page of my resume.
for him I agree, bullet points are better
14:20
@RichardU yeah at that point it's worth the "price" of it being harder to scan to get them all in
but yeah for the OP I'd go bullet points every day of the week
@motosubatsu at it's peak, my resume was five pages long. Now it's back down to three.
If I can't submit a cover letter (don't know what the application allows to be submitted), what other options do I have to show the soft skills?
@ryanyuyu the work experience section is better now as well - you've got the info in there about the tech stacks you were using which is a big improvement
@ryanyuyu the interview is where you showcase them, in the form of CAR stories (challenge, action, result)
Overall, the resume is much better now.
Ok that makes sense.
14:23
@ryanyuyu there is simply no way to convey that you are personable on paper. However, going in, greeting people with a firm handshake, a warm smile, and polite deference demonstrates it quite clearly.
I'll remove more of the fluff and then start researching cover letters.
I appreciate all the help.
@ryanyuyu we've all been there....
@ryanyuyu there's an old story about a wealthy banker being interviewed that went like this...

Q: How did you become so successful
A: Right decisions.

Q: But how did you come to make these decisions
A: Experience

Q:But how did you get that experience?
A:WRONG decisions.
haha. Even at this point in my career that's true.
Q: How did you get to write modular code?
A: I atoned and learned from my past coding sins.
@ryanyuyu I started out as a maintenance coder. Do that once in your life and you will never again write sloppy code
oh I'm sure. I've read through some code older than I am. It's not great.
14:29
@ryanyuyu I took some code that was taking 10 hours to run, and got it to run in six minutes. It was that bad
Wow. Glad it's fixed.
Anyway, I have to get going. Thanks for everything.
@ryanyuyu there's some good info on cover letters over on Ask a manger about cover letters
@motosubatsu I avoid her like the plague. Much of her advice is terrible.
@RichardU I can't say I always agree with her advice but I'd say I agree with more than not
and much of her advice around the hiring process seems sound to me
it tends to more be the work place interaction stuff where I find her more hit and miss
14:44
I agree with @RichardU on this, I find most of the answers on that site pretty mediocre, especially because a lot of people sing its praises.
15:15
What do you guys think about this question? "Is it unethical to use internal transfer interviews as a practice for external job search?"
@motosubatsu as @MaskedMan said, her advice is mediocre at best, with some of it being clearly sexist and filled with misandry. Her advice for people with disabilities will pretty much ensure that they never work
@RichardU I haven't seen too much misandry from Allison herself.. the comment section on the other hand can be utterly swimming in in it
you can amuse yourself by playing the "how many comments before someone suggests it's sexism" game
15:33
@motosubatsu I've seen it myself, including her claim that "mansplaining" isn't a sexist term, and more nonsense. She's usually more subtle about it, but she eggs on the sexist comments. I got disgusted and haven't been there in months.
Probably don't have time to debate today, but put me solidly in the "just because you don't like the term mansplaining, that doesn't mean its sexist" column. The behavior it describes is absolutely more prevalent along gender lines, although clearly there are examples of 'splainers of all types.
@BradC how is it not sexist?
@BradC would Jewsplaining be racist?
@BradC the mere term suggests it's a fault inherent to men.
15:49
@RichardU Yes, the term suggests it is more prevalent along gendered lines. I'd imagine you would disagree with that characterization, no matter what term was being used.
Clearly everyone has experience with know-it-all boors of all genders. But overwhelmingly, women very much relate to the phenomenon of men who talk down to them, who assume (without evidence) that they don't know what they're talking about, and who think their own thoughts-off-the-top-of-their-head have as much validity as a woman who is an expert in the field. Yes, the phenomenon is a specific manifestation of sexism. Using a term that accurately labels it as such is not improper.
@BradC Hmm... I had such a colleague once. I wouldn't have called his behavior mansplaining though, just general 'being an a..'.
@BradC many people relate to Jews as greedy, so is the term "Jewed him down" racist?
@BradC Can that term also be used in cases where the genders are reversed?
@Tinkeringbell exactly!
I still laugh about the guy with the other male co-workers (and yes, in a mean way)
16:00
@Tinkeringbell back in my day, a guy like that would have gotten decked, by another man.
@RichardU Now that's sexist. I can handle such people by myself just fine
Got the guy fired in a way so.
Apparently the perfect reply to a manager asking 'who do you dislike the most' is 'I learn the least from that guy'
@MaskedMan Not typically, no. That would just be "being a know-it-all asshole" or "assuming you know more than you do". The term "mansplaining" is useful because it describes the phenomenon in a certain relevant context
@BradC Just like a woman forcing sex on a man is not called rape, you mean? Got it.
@BradC So, if it can only be used for certain gender-roles, it's at the least bordering on the google definition of sexist: relating to or characterized by prejudice, stereotyping, or discrimination, typically against women, on the basis of sex.
@BradC is the term "Jewed him down" a racist term, or is it useful because it describes the phenomenon in a certain relevant context?
16:06
@RichardU Stick to the mansplaining for now :) I don't think getting racism involved will help...
How about we use the term allisonplaining for self-declared experts dishing out rubbish advice?
@MaskedMan I think there was a Dutch word for that...
Yeah, I was going to make an analogy to "prejudice" vs "racism as an expression of institutional power", but I don't suspect that will help at the moment
Lemme look, there was some self-proclaimed global warming expert or something like that.
@Tinkeringbell it's along the same line. If you can paint any group with a broad brush and then claim it's not a slam against those as a whole, it requires a doublethink worthy of Orwell.
16:07
@Tinkeringbell It will. Is it ok if a white person abusing a black person is called "racism", but a black person abusing a white person is called "being an asshole"?
@MaskedMan ROFL!
@MaskedMan yep, the law of reversal.
@MaskedMan Just saying, if you have more than 1 example being discussed it tends to have the focus removed...
So, @RichardU. Do you believe that the behavior pattern observed by those who describe "mansplaining" is valid? Do you have a problem with what the term describes? Or only the term itself?
@BradC I dunno, do you think all Jews are greedy?
@BradC I'm still curious what made you state that 'just because you don't like mansplaining, doesn't mean it's sexist'?
16:09
@Tinkeringbell it was just a simple ad hominem attack against me
@Tinkeringbell Because I believe that Richard's primary object isn't about the term; its about the underlying observation.
Identity politics and identitarian politics are two sides of the same bad coin
@BradC Which would be?
The term basically means "condescending in a sexist context"
@BradC then why doesn't it apply to women?
It's an ad homenem
16:10
@Tinkeringbell Ok, so here's the deal. It is 'sexist' only when the "victim" is a woman and the perpetrator is a man, just like it is 'rape' only when a man forces sex on a woman, or 'mansplaining' is only when a man speaks patronizingly to a woman. It all makes sense.
Because its simply "condescension", then, not "condescension in a sexist context"
@BradC So, you're saying women can't be sexist?
@MaskedMan I understand. Recasting Samuel L Jackson as Nick Fury is "diversity", casting Tilda Swinton as "The ancient one" is "Whitewashing"
@RichardU No, I didn't say that. But in a patriarchal culture, its clearly different. But of course you don't believe that is accurate either.
@BradC You're begging the question, which is a logical fallacy
@BradC what is the term for women being condescending or belittling to men?
You know, like #Killallmen?
@RichardU I don't know, condescension?
16:14
@BradC So, again, you're saying women can't be sexist
@BradC Why not womansplaining?
Hey, didn't I tell you that you should add "#killallmen" to your "this is sarcasm" category? I think you need to go back and revisit that, since you keep bringing it up.
@BradC I don't take orders from you.
If you didn't have double standards, I doubt you'd have any
But if you're still not understanding the history and context of that sarcastic hashtag (along with #maletears), then again, we can't possibly have a productive conversation.
@BradC Oh, I understand perfectly, far better than you, it seems
@MaskedMan there is no such thing as "womansplaining" because... PATRIACRHY!
and other buzzword BS
16:17
@MaskedMan Make it happen, you have my blessing
As I said before, #maletears and #killallmen are a sarcastic response to the worst their enemies accuse them of, not a sincere belief. Like atheist who joke about eating babies, not because atheists eat babies, but because its the most absurd accusation the other side throws at us.
@Tinkeringbell I will settle for allisonplaining, that would be far more constructive. :P
@BradC Yes, I find it hilarious when #maletears is used to shut down talk about male suicide. God, you're a riot and a half.
@BradC How about the French #BalanceTonPorc? It's pretty sexist because it puts all men in the same category... that of pigs
I do believe in sexism, but it goes 2 ways, not 1.
@MaskedMan It is not this Orwellion newspeak that distresses me so much as the eagerness with which it is being embraced
16:19
@MaskedMan Would cut the discussion short, I agree :D
I have seen more than a handful of instances where a genuinely good answer (not mine) was criticized only because some "Allison Green" said otherwise, with no other explanation.
@MaskedMan yeah, I have had the same experience
Some of her advice is career suicide
@RichardU Well, to be fair to her, the site is "Ask a manager", not "ask a good manager". You can have a manager give career suicide advice.
@MaskedMan SPLORT! Good thing I swallowed my coffee BEFORE reading that!
@Tinkeringbell back to earlier. In my day, you didn't misbehave towards a woman, and if you did, there'd be at least five other men ready to show you the error of your ways. It's how we were raised. Now, we're in the position, where if we don't act, it's "Chivalry is dead", and if we do, it's "sexist"
@RichardU Damned if you do, damned if you don't.
16:27
@RichardU Look, I've not seen #maletears used in that context; and if it has been, I would object. I see #maletears primarily used in response to men complaining about very minor inconveniences they encounter in efforts to move to more equality. Like complaining about having to set aside an hour a year to attend sexual harassment training. Or complaining about adding a few more stalls to the women's restroom or something.
That's why its sarcastic: it's basically, "boo hoo, I really feel for your minor inconvenience (not)"
It doesn't even have to go that far. Thanks to some self-declared feminists, we now have the "Door Dilemma". Should you hold the door for a woman to pass through? If you do, you are "sexist" because obviously the woman doesn't need your help. If you don't, you clearly think the woman is "inferior" and doesn't deserve your help.
Sooo.. if anyone wants to lose their fate in humanity again: interpersonal.stackexchange.com/questions/11008/… ...
@BradC it's used specifically to mock men, again.... sexism
@Tinkeringbell I only wish I were surprised :(
@Tinkeringbell I had to look that up, "#BalanceTonPorc" apparently means "Out your pig". Not sure if all the same connotations are there in French as in English, but doesn't sound like they're calling all men pigs; sounds like they're calling abusers/harassers pigs.
16:32
@Tinkeringbell I hope moderation tightens up over there, that kind of abuse shouldn't be tolerated
@RichardU Its mocking men who object to equality
@BradC so, wanting to do something about male suicide is objecting to equality?
@RichardU No
@Tinkeringbell I've flagged it on general principles
@BradC it's used in that context, and when the 93% of workplace fatalities being male, and the need for male shelters is brought up. So, I guess everything is equal in those regards, and wanting to do something means you object to equality
16:34
@Tinkeringbell I do agree with one of the comments though, it is Western-culture centric, which is entirely fair since the question is tagged germany. Here in India, asking anyone out politely wouldn't be such a huge deal (unless, of course, you do it in an a-holish way), at least not in the more "modern" urban areas.
@MaskedMan It's a HUGE no-no in Germany.
@MaskedMan another huge cultural difference is asking about one's family. Do that in America, and it's considered rude unless you are close to that person.
@BradC I'm curious as to where you've ever seen those hashtags used in any context other than clear and blatant misandry. Please provide a specific example.
@RichardU 99% of questions on IPS can be posted as examples on Cannot Spit It Out.
Folks, this question is not a duplicate of the suggested questions ...
8
Q: My notice period is much longer than the time prospective employers are willing to wait

I am the Most Stupid PersonI work in the software industry in India. I will look for new jobs after April. The notice period at my current job is 2 months. However, from my experience, most employers wait for a maximum of one month, and sometimes just 1 or 2 weeks. Most of the time, employer will hire new employees becau...

@MaskedMan yeah, I call it "Advice for the lovelorn"
@MaskedMan I always cringe when I see "duplicate" as a reason. It usually means "Both posts have words and punctuation"
@RichardU It is tight already, but asleep for most of Europe day ;)
@RichardU I suspect any examples I find you will immediately label "clear and blatant misandry". But to answer your question, here are a few links:
So much #MaleTears https://twitter.com/existentialcoms/status/963506639402778624
(Original quoted tweet):
16:44
@BradC It can be interpreted both ways, as a call to out any man that once did something insensitive and just call them a pig before you even know what they did, or like you said
> Woman: *describes events that occurred*
Dude: whoa whoa, this whole #metoo thing is going too far. Where is the due process??
@MaskedMan Even when that person is just doing their job? I agree that it shouldn't be as much of a problem when you're out partying...
To the #starwars fanboys who think Rey is too good to be true. #maletears #Feminism #TLJ https://twitter.com/syfyfangrrls/status/959494593753632770
@BradC Uhh.. female here that has the same reaction after seeing what some of my friends posted
So, while talking about Rosalind Franklin, noting that two white men got the Nobel prize for HER discovery instead of her, is "unnecessary political commentary" and "out of place". Oh poor guys. #maletears #34c3 #sorrynotsorry
16:47
@BradC right, let's put an end to due process, let's just shoot every man accused.... it's not like there are ever false accusations or anything
3 easy to find examples, of where #maletears are being used to describe whiny complaints from men, not about real problems like male suicide.
@BradC yep, all misandry
I'm not going to dissect these examples.
@Tinkeringbell We don't have such a sharp barrier between work and personal life here, so yeah, it is perfectly acceptable.
@BradC no need, they're prima fascia examples of misandry
16:49
@MaskedMan Ah, okay... Remind me to stay on this side of the globe then!
Or is a very rude rejection also perfectly acceptable?
@RichardU Clearly we're not going to agree. What about the last one?
@Tinkeringbell it's amazing at what can be an insult in one culture can be expected in another.
Whether or not you agree with the underlying point being discussed, none of these are making fun of male suicides, which was your claim.
@RichardU If I can go wild on the rejection part I might reconsider XD
@enderland I was curious as to why this answer was deleted. It essentially asks the OP to back off from the fight and look for alternatives. While it is arguable if that is good advice, it does answer the question.
I don't feel strongly about it to open a meta post, and in any case, I am not questioning your decision, just asking for clarification.
16:54
@Tinkeringbell I've worked for numerous multinationals, if you want a REAL headache, try to speak Japanese without offending anyone.
@Tinkeringbell Not sure why the rejection needs to be rude. Someone asks someone out, if they don't like it, just say no. No need to make a song and dance about it.
@RichardU No, thank you :) I already have enough trouble with English
@MaskedMan Not really what I meant, but over here when working retail you should be polite at almost all times. If I would say 'you don't even know me' out loud and start laughing for example, that would not be rude per session, but it would be rude for retail...
@Tinkeringbell Right, it is hard to thread the needle between "remaining customer friendly" and "firmly turning down an unwanted date request".
The thing is, here in India (and also in many Eastern cultures), we don't really consider anyone a "stranger" per se, so it would be rather odd to say, "you don't even know me". Though of course, going to the cashier you have met for the first time and saying, "I want to go on a date with you" would fall into the a-holish territory.
@MaskedMan hmm... Interesting concept.
17:04
@MaskedMan I'll tackle your question above regarding race: yes, it is worthwhile to distinguish between "prejudice because of skin color" in a general sense, and "prejudice because of skin color supported by 250 years of US history involving slavery, Jim Crow laws, and a (debatable) degree of ongoing institutional prejudice".
There are some who use "prejudice" in the first (general) context, and "racism" in the second context. Clearly not everyone understands the distinction, and it make some conversations difficult and confusing.
But yes, that's why (using these definitions) some people summarize it as "black people can't be racist" as a shortcut that actually means "clearly black people can be prejudiced, but when they do, that isn't supported by the ongoing institutional racism of our system, so its at least somewhat different"
On one level, this is about terms and making sure we understand each other, but on another level, its about a disagreement whether the "institutional" aspect of racism and sexism still exist (or ever did)
17:21
Morning everyone
How's stuff?
Pretty stuffy. How's your's?
At work great, we had a breakthrough last Friday :D
on a project that we had more than 6 months doing
Now it's basically done, just some tuning
@DarkCygnus Nice! Love it when a plan comes together (lights cigar)
@BradC What has US history got to do with it?
@MaskedMan Well, if the conversation is happening in the US or in relation to events in the US, then its a relevant distinction. And a common misunderstanding of terminology. So depends on the context.
17:35
Here, please explain to me why the above article uses the word racism, and what US history has to do with any of it.
@BradC And why is it assumed that the conversation is happening in the context of US? I don't seem to recall ever stating it when I asked the question. I point this out because you specifically said you were responding to my question.
... and here we go with the follow-up to that story: theguardian.com/uk/2007/oct/02/cricket.sport
An Australian cricket umpire accuses Asians of racism. Even though there is no such "250 years of history" of "institutional racism" between Asia and Australia, and in any case, it has nothing to do with US, which doesn't even play cricket (not at any serious level, anyway).
I'm certainly more familiar with the US, but my broader point is that discussion of prejudice/racism/sexism doesn't take place in a vacuum, they take place in a specific context of historical prejudice/racism/sexism. I'm clearly not qualified to examine that with regard to Australian/Pakistani history and I have no comment on that specific case.
And as I said before, some people do use "racism" to simply mean "prejudice" in a broad sense.
So here is the deal... If X doing bad things to Y is named Foo, then Y doing the same bad thing to X should also be called Foo. Doing it any other way, and justifying it for whatever reason is just wrong.
@BradC So just use the word "prejudice" in all cases, problem solved. Not sure exactly what is gained by inventing words for one case, not the other, other than stirring up old sh**.
@MaskedMan I agree that prejudice (in any direction) is wrong. I think we agree on that.
@MaskedMan One important consequence of the distinction I've outlined above between prejudice (generally) and racism (prejudice supported by our institutions) is that the proposed remedies are different. Prejudice is more of an individual question: "what can we do to improve people's heart?". Whereas examining the lingering institutional aspects of racism is an altogether different question, and has altogether different solutions.
Or going back to the original point that started this whole thing, if condescension is good enough to describe women speaking patronizingly to men, then it is good enough to describe men speaking patronizingly to women. There is no need to invent additional words, and defend them, just because someone has a blog to write.
@BradC So you mean white people's hearts cannot be "improved"?
@MaskedMan what? No, I simply meant that addressing individual prejudice is a fundamentally different problem than addressing institutional racism.
And distinguishing the one from the other helps us examine solutions for each differently.
Regarding our original topic, "mansplaining". The experience seem to resonate with many women; they tend to find it supported by their own life and experience, specifically as a gendered issue; above and beyond "everyday condescension". No, the term does not come from a male-centric viewpoint, but I'm not going to deny their experience nor their right to call it what they like.
17:58
Hello world
18:11
Here's the best explanation/justification I've heard for the term "mansplainer" (its buried down in the comment section of a page, so linking is hard), by a commenter named "staranise":
> “Mansplaining” is that rare thing, a word that assumes a female POV. It was invented by women, talking among each other about their experiences with this phenomenon. So if you’re a man, doubtless it feels weird and disorienting to have a word where you always have to mentally say, “Oh, I am not the default gender in this worldview; I have to stop and picture things from the other gender’s point of view to make this word make sense.”
> Most women have had to do that mental displacement trick since we were small children trying to understand language the first time around when there are phrases like “farmer’s wife” but not “farmer’s husband”. Our attempts to change language to make it less essentially disorienting (eg. “policeman” to “police officer”) have been difficult and frustrating.
> So when a man says, “This term which makes perfect sense to you is disorienting to me because I am not the default gender of its point of view” we tend to know exactly where he is coming from… but to us, finding a gender-neutral “mansplaining” falls down on the priority list past finding a gender-neutral entire rest of the English language. We’ll get around to it! …Eventually.
> Is it the most noble and strictly egalitarian impulse in the world? No. We get criticized a lot for our “hypocrisy” in having such an explicitly female-POV word. But on the other hand, having the word in our lexicon is an excellent litmus test. If a male ally is not willing to bear with the potential discomfort hearing it or using it gives him, he is probably not ready to do the more advanced work of re-examining his own privilege either.
I'm sure you'll have objections to that as well, but I for one think it is a good way to look at it
18:42
@BradC anything that needs that much explaining isn't worth having around.
19:42
you didnt get what i mean your answer is not what i was looking for. sincerly — T-student 2 mins ago
Well, you're welcome. Next time, please be a bit more clearer in your written communication then.
On a serious note, what do I do with the answer now? Delete it, since it's apparently NAA?
19:53
@Tinkeringbell look at the latest comment under the OP's question.
@Tinkeringbell and on a serious note, leave the answer. We go by "death of the author" on SE anyway. His question belongs to the stack now, not him.
@RichardU Okay. Will do that then.
@Tinkeringbell I was a bit.... evil >:)
@RichardU Yeah, I noticed. I still don't get where the lines are on SE though, and I've seen enough nasty comments today to the extent that even yours didn't make me smile :/
@Tinkeringbell when in doubt, leave it in. A good answer to a bad question is still a good answer.
@RichardU I will, don't worry.
20:07
@Tinkeringbell while skating as close as possible to the edge of the "be nice" policy, I suspect that if the OP was fed Viagra, the only effect would be that he would grow taller.
@RichardU Wish that was a side-effect, I'd take two every night then.
I stopped growing a little too soon.
(or, better put, I went from growing vertically to horizontally very quick)
Did you see me having mandatory fun?
@Tinkeringbell I'm old enough so that I'm going the other way. I lost an inch in height.
@RichardU I mean, you can see my height/width ratio there XD :P
@Tinkeringbell I'm 70 lbs off my heaviest (about 32 Kilos)
@RichardU I'm currently still hitting above the 100 kg... :/
20:16
30 lbs to go until I am at my High school weight.
I lost maybe 5 of my heaviest ever, but I'm a bit stuck... doctor says I have to quit birth control first, but I don't want to do that unless she agrees to a hysterectomy, so we're having an impasse...
Im currently at 88 kilos. My HS weight was 74.5 kilos, my heaviest was 120.5 kilos.
@RichardU I've already agreed to the fact that I'll never reach high school weight again :)
I have no choice, it's lose the weight or die at my age.
it is that serious
@RichardU It's the same for my age, it isn't healthy... but yeah, I'm not going to stop enjoying life once in a while. I can lose weight, but it would require not eating anything nice.
20:23
@Tinkeringbell My approach has been to load up with healthy foods so that I feel "full", then eat any treats I like. I can still enjoy things, but I won't ever pig out on them.
I also made my food very colorful and flavorful. When I cook, each plate looks like a work of art.
@RichardU I don't pig out... but if I choose to eat a portion of crisps, I gain weight. The only thing that seems to working is salads and apple juice, because it gives me diarrhea
@RichardU I can make dinners that look very fancy. I take a pic, send it to mom and dad and mash everything together in a big bowl to eat it in front of the tv without messing
@Tinkeringbell The other biggie is... dun dun DUNNNN.... EXERCISE. NO way to avoid it.
20:44
-1
A: How do I tell my supervisor I have other engagements after my shift is over?

Richard USeveral approaches: Push back your appointments so that work doesn't conflict. Tell your supervisor that you have a doctor's appointment Show up late occasionally to your appointments. Go to HR. The first one is out of the question, and the fourth one is unwise as HR IS NOT YOUR FRIEND If ...

@RichardU wuut why you got DV?
and, hey, Richard is back huh
@RichardU I walk 20 minutes to the train each day, 15 during lunch and 20 minutes home from the train. In the weekends, I go on hikes of about 10 - 12 km.
I think I can check the exercise button :)
21:03
@Tinkeringbell have you been checked for hypothyroaidism? One of my exes had it, got put on sythroid and dropped over 50 Kilos
@DarkCygnus I've got one down voter who is very angry at me right now.
21:22
@RichardU I don't have any other symptoms. I'm just fat.. The doctor want's me to see a food advisor, but they also want to see what happens when I leave my meds...
@Tinkeringbell Good luck, and keep on your doctors. Something is going on. If you're moving that much, and not pigging out, there has to be a reason why you're not 60 kilos max
@RichardU Probs the meds preventing me from losing right now, and keeping me just stable. (I must admit I did gain the weight by doing all the wrong things)
@Tinkeringbell still 15-20 mins walk each day? That should be more than enough.
@RichardU Blame the hormones :P

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