To clarify, so my partner has been going through major life changes, (1)she has had to move, (2)she lost her job, (3)she also has not been good with her finances, and (4)she had to sell her car.
1.) I offered my help to help her move her things, store some of stuff, she didn't specifically ask me...
I have asked one question in the psychology SE site which has been closed and guided me to here.
The question is :
I have asked one question via my country question site (here), and I get some answer like below:
One of the problems is that psychologists speak kindly to people, and
unfortunately...
Yeah... jeans are especially bad. I've lived mostly wearing sweatpants/jogging pants during WFH, and they seem both warmer in winter and cooler in summer, probably because they're pretty loose fabric :D
i would love to wear shorts and our office is technically casual clothing... but with the amount of people who still wear suits... i'd feel immensely out of place
To be honest I often found it rather unfair... on hot days you see the females walk round in skirts or dresses, even for very formal stuff (though that is a bit more covered than the casual stuff), while the men still seem to feel they have to wear a suit.
learned it from the secretary that showed up to work wearing birkenstocks on a hot summers day, instead of the high heeled stuff that was mostly prevalent on such days XD
It's... good advice in some cases, but wholesome nonsense in others :D
@ExtrovertedMainMan Auuugh I hate when someone does something for me that I don't even want and then gets mad at me when I don't appreciate/reciprocate it.
@Tinkeringbell Anything between 10-21 is good.
@Tinkeringbell TBF when it comes to sexual difashionism, looking at the price and lack of pockets of women's clothes... I'll stick with male, thanks.
@AlexRobinson Be a trendsetter! Go in with shorts and a t-shirt. And sandals.
Well I have heard of people breaking their legs, then adding this whole cage on the outside to keep the bone broken, and by increasing the gap slightly at intervals, eventually their legs get longer.... The opposite is probably easier: Saw a piece out of the middle, let it heal :P
@Sarov Well, I knew one person that did this in high school, basically because one of her legs was a bit shorter than the other, and it could be fixed this way... It would mean she didn't have to wear orthopedic shoes that correct for the difference in length all her life, and she really was vain enough to just want to wear sneakers ;)
At the same time, there was something in the news about these surgeries becoming increasingly popular in Japan, just because people want to be taller.
Depends on your definitions of mutilate, I guess :P
On another note... holy shit. I have closed all doors and windows and I can still hear this neighborhood kid screaming as if she's standing next to my ears.
Throwing a tantrum because her brother, sister and mom all tell her to go play by herself.
Unattended children will be mostly ignored and yelled at if they come within 1,5m, as they are after all still all unvaccinated little super-spreaders.
Yeah, I'm very glad I don't have to take public transport anymore even if we were to get back to the office. My mom took the train with a few friends last week, and there were many people refusing to wear masks and acting aggressively when reminded they had to.
as much as i hate people not wearing masks / not covering their nose, i've decided its not worth my time to try to change it because to my mind someone not wearing a mask isn't going to suddenly start wearing one
I mean, I would love less talking with strangers, but on the other hand, I would also love it if strangers listened better if you told them about the rules.
But in general, yeah. Dutch people will tell you 'please shut up, this is a silence compartment, if you want to chat you need to go sit in another carriage', and get train staff if you don't oblige.
thats the trade off isn't it... the tube in london is always crammed but the only sounds you'll hear are the train itself and possibly someones headphones being too loud - however you can't change anything that is antisocial
Yeah. I've been on the london tube once, and now that you mention it... our class was probably the loudest thing there XD
I like the part where people hold others accountable though. The rules of public transport are often pretty clear and present, so breaking them really is something that should be addressed IMO :P
Tourists however hate it :P One of the buses I took regularly from the office back to the train station would come from the airport first, often filled with tourists. Asking (then telling) them that putting a suitcase on a seat was not allowed and that I am going to sit there and their suitcase goes in the luggage room... was not appreciated a lot XD
It is. It was quite entertaining to observe a bus full of tourists. Some are actually polite, giving up seats for elderly people and stuff... usually, these were often groups of people that were also being very loud and boisterous, something that for Dutch people is usually associated with a less polite mentality or drunk people.
Others were plain rude, breaking the rules, trying to circumvent paying the full bus fare by 'checking out' early, not staying seated, eating/drinking on the bus, and not listening when corrected.
when i'm on an overground train i always give up my seat if i'm alone and someone else clearly needs it more - normally a parent/child combo or someone elderly.
Though, with the introduction of a lot of handicap spots in trains, I admit I'm not as much on the lookout for it anymore. I just go read a book and I'm not going to stop reading at every station. If it's needed, someone will ask me, but usually I make sure not to sit in a handicap seat and then people will usually just go there instead anyways so.
Same for buses, most have 3/4 handicap spots, just make sure you're not sitting there and there's not much trouble.
There's been a change on Stack Overflow: Accepted answers are no longer pinned to the top of the list of answers. They ran a test on Stack Overflow, and the results of that are mentioned in this post. Some main things to note were that unpinning accepted answers for a while on Stack Overflow led ...
Oooh, essay incoming. First of all, this isn't "Interpersonal Stack Exchange", it's interpersonal skills. There's a reason it's limited to skills, to the behaviors people use to interact with others and achieve goals, and not just everything that involves two people.
If it were just a place for any question involving more than 1 person, there'd be a lot more subjective questions too... like whether or not something is rude/abusive. They're primarily opinion based, but right now they're also off-topic because they're not about interpersonal skills.
For intrapersonal things, there's also the aspect of 'we can't read minds'. You'd get questions like "Why do I feel the way I do", which just isn't something that can be answered with anything but opinion... or therapy. And therapy is just someone's opinion on your feelings a lot of the time :P
I'm not sure if there are such skills, but perhaps. There was a proposal some while back for a 'neurodiversity' SE, which would probably have included some intrapersonal stuff as well.
I dunno, I think it might be handy to approach from both angles. Intrapersonal is take distance. Interpersonal is how to stop people thinking you're tantruming when you take distance.
"How do I gaslight someone" Is a perfectly legitimate interpersonal skill question. ...Though I'm sure it would be closed here, I'm not sure what the close reason would be.
I guess off-topic because:
> Other types of questions that are off topic include questions that: [...] violate the Stack Exchange “Code of Conduct” rules by encouraging bigotry of any kind, harassment, or abuse of others. While not all interpersonal interactions meet these guidelines, our goals are to encourage respectful interpersonal skills.
It's still an interpersonal skill. It's just not one that happens to be on topic on this specific site.