I really, really, really hate parties. The next one who proposes one to me can always dream. The last time I want to a party, I thought "no more work parties" but I thought I was exaggerating and that it "couldn't be that bad". Well, it was that bad and I hate it
(Also, I'm having insomnia right now and it's not fun, but still better than this %$#& party)
@Ælis I really, really, really hated parties too, at least until I went to some parties with people I really gelled with. Now I think parties are cool beans
@ElizB It wasn't that restful but, at least, it was almost full. I still want to scream at the person who thought that a Thursday night party was a good idea when you have to work on Friday
@Ælis Jesse's comment pretty much covers it, it largely just needs a little deeper of an explanation as to what happened and if they've tried anything etc
It's weird because I have to send it to HR (who I don't have any relationship with) and my boss (who I do have a relationship with). I feel like it should be a bit personal for my boss, but then it feels weird to also send it to HR.
@avazula I thought you would 1) ask for a meeting, 2) tell the person you are resignating 3) the other person makes you sign an official resignation letter that they wroted for you
@Rainbacon Can't you add a personal letter with the one for your boss?
@Ælis nah, it's more like you send them an email saying you're leaving and whether you'd like to discuss whether it'd be possible to leave sooner than in three months
@avazula I used to, but haven't gone regularly in a few years. My wife keeps saying that we should go to church, but we never actually go. I'm not opposed to going back if that's what she wants to do, but I'm not going to make an effort unless she starts saying "I want to go to church" rather than "I should go to church"
I think it's more of just that I don't want her to be in the mindset of "we go to church because we have to". I think that the church she grew up going to had a few adverse effects on her. It was very dogmatic and she's told me of a number of things that she did only because she felt like she had to if she was going to be a believer.
@Rainbacon there was a quesiton on either personal finance or academia a while back that attracted a lot of HNQ attention and the question itself was on maybe 70+ and had a top answer disagreeing with OP on ~130... but OP picked an answer on -26 or something as correct because it was what they agreed with... i guess it's all some people are looking for
@AlexRobinson not intended, just an example I can easily find
but yeah, that other answer was totally amazing
and with a downvoted example: here the owner of the question was changed so that the initially self-answered accepted heavily downvoted answer would still be on top: meta.stackexchange.com/questions/338270/…
@JAD you're right, remember when JNat put a question on Meta.SE and self answered it? it was accepted but not sticked to the top so they basically went changing the author the answer to other CM in order to get on the top
I did not have enough change at the vending machine and my classmate offered me 1 euro, however I have returned 50 cents immediately after purchasing the item. Should I return the remaining 50 cents?
I feel its her money and I should return it but at the same time I can't get my mind off about w...
@avazula It was not easy, but I'm finally in the train \o/ I can't believe I'm saying that but the hardest part is done! (Yes, it's harder to go from Paris to Paris, then to go from Paris to La Nièvre)
"Should I" questions are off-topic here though, you need to specify your goal. One possible scenario is "How do I approach my classmate to return her money?". — CaldeiraG1 min ago
@Rainbacon it did strike me as odd too. like, we say in the help center "we're not here to resolve disputes for you".. phrased the way is is, it kind of sounds like that's what OP is after. but I don't know that it's really close-worthy, it is focused on accomplishing a specific goal and all that