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00:03
So there is a rural expression used to describe someone as being excited or agitated: "He was all het up." I was wondering if "het" is used as the participle of "heat" ("heated") because of its similarity to some other strong verbs (well, at least one). You know, meet/met, heat/het.
I can't think of other instances, but I'm pretty sure there are some.
@Robusto Yeah, these sorts of unusual past/perfect forms are common in some dialects (Appalachian English in particular, as I recall)
Sometimes it goes in the other direction, e.g. knowed instead of knew
Yes.
Anyway, TIL that the protein bars I eat for breakfast are slowly killing me
You do have an option in that case.
But note that the things that aren't killing you are probably easier to count than those that are.
Indeed. I could just have a couple glasses of milk. Yet another lesson in the dangers of NMFs
00:10
@alphabet I think that's more common
@alphabet Either I heard a news story or else I dreamed or saw in some otherwhere that some famous person was on an all-milk diet and it was the reason he was so healthy.
@alphabet I'm highly suspicious of most 0 calorie sweeteners, but there's also no good reason for me to be consuming them instead of real sugar given my weight
@Laurel I avoid fake sweeteners. I eat sugar when I feel like it, and butter, and eggs, and don't give it a second thought. I'm healthy and active and toned and all those good things.
Dietitians continue to cover up the truth about the benefits of the milk diet
00:16
> Anything that makes you miserable or pushes you to the brink of starvation won’t give you the results you really want.
Hear, hear!
@Robusto Just curious, what do you do to stay active? I've been getting back into biking myself
If you drink whole milk, it's easy to get ~1800 calories
On this day in history: East German Balloon Escape en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_German_balloon_escape
@Laurel I ride my bike for 2-3 hours most days and on days when I can't or don't want to I walk 3-5 miles.
@Robusto I think some of these diets lead to binge eating, except people end up blaming their alleged poor self control instead of the fact that they're starving themselves when it happens
@Robusto That's a lot, but I guess it's not every day? Also aren't you retired?
00:21
@Laurel Yep, retired, so I can exercise as much as I want. When I was working I could only manage an hour a day. When I had little kids, that was my exercise. ;-)
For me, 3 hours was like 20 miles I think on bike which I used to do every now and then. Lately I've been doing like 40 minutes on a route I like that doesn't require me to use my parents' van to drive my bike out to the long trail
An hour a day worked out to about 16-20 miles. Of course, in most of the winter I would use a spin cycle in my house. But I hated that.
@Laurel Where do you live? A congested area?
I found that bicycling in winter is fine, until it hits colder than minus 15 C
It's not the cold, it's the snow and ice that keeps me from cycling.
I have studded tires for the winter
00:24
I bundle up down here and it doesn't snow much.
@CowperKettle OK, but I have to move in order to get aerobic benefit.
@Robusto The suburbs I guess? I'm mostly surrounded by 45mph roads with no room for bikes
@Laurel I used to live in Acton, MA, and I had several routes. There were a lot of good roads in most of those suburbs, but you have to look for them.
The 40 minute route I take has me crossing a 45 mph road twice in each direction and riding along a nice big shoulder for like 30 seconds. It's ok
They're building walking paths in the area but I'm not sure that they're ready yet for the amount of riding I want to do.
Can you ride to work?
I fail to understand how people spend an hour exercising every day. It seems to involve time management and planning.
00:31
@Robusto Most days I work from home lol so I just walk to the other room
How dare anyone expect me to keep track of things.
@alphabet idk, I've been managing it (looks at unwashed clothes and clean dishes in dishwasher)
At least I was when I was going to the pool
I'm planning to get a Y membership so I can go to their indoor pool
@alphabet I do it because I start jonesing for it if I miss days because of rain or intrusions.
Yeah, I think I'm starting to get some type of exercise OCD too. Like I feel guilty that I spent tonight on the computer and not doing any exercise
I don't feel guilty, just frustrated.
@alphabet That's the great thing about being a raccoon: nobody expects anything from you.
00:36
I think I would also feel compelled to weigh myself more regularly if I had a working scale (I need to find batteries that work :p)
Hm, none of this makes me sound mentally healthy lol
Kadyrov is apparently critically ill and in a coma, possibly because of kidney issues.
@Cerberus "Kidney issues"
Kidney issues.
Sure
First airplane issues with Prigozhin.. now kidney issues..
A lot of issues in Russia lately
00:39
Poisoned in the kidneys. Kidneys defenestrated. Something like that
He has been ill for a while now.
I don't know who we're talking about but I know what country
I have not heard of any grief between him and Putin.
So I have no reason to think Putin is behind it.
What do Playboy and Putin's friends have in common? They have a lot of issues.
Kadyrov is said to have buried his doctor alive, because he believed the injections he was given made him sick(er).
So it rather sounds as though he received experimental, dangerous treatment that caused this?
00:41
Nephrotoxicity is toxicity in the kidneys. It is a poisonous effect of some substances, both toxic chemicals and medications, on kidney function. There are various forms, and some drugs may affect kidney function in more than one way. Nephrotoxins are substances displaying nephrotoxicity. Nephrotoxicity should not be confused with some medications predominantly excreted by the kidneys needing their dose adjusted for the decreased kidney function (e.g., heparin, lithium). == Types of toxicity == === Cardiovascular === General: diuretics, β-blockers, vasodilator agents Local: ACE inhibito...
In March, Bild reported that Kadyrov may be suffering from serious kidney issues.
Somehow I take comfort in that.
The Wagner rebellion was only in June.
@jlliagre thanks. The facial expression I was trying to evoke was that of interest, like when Spock says 'Fascinating'. So it is not a frown (which is lowering ones eyebrows) but raising eyebrows out of surprise. I can't think of anyway to say that in English other than 'raise ones eyebrows'. What would that be, if anything, In French?
Today I found that the past form of the verb (not the aux-verb) "will" is "willed".
An example sentence would be: "I had willed to purchase Yun Quan, but unfortunately, I cannot make a Taobao account."
00:51
That verb is only used in a very specific sense, though.
Dutch Prime Minister walking to a cabinet meeting.
@Cerberus Mark Rutte is still around?
Wow, Google tells me he's been PM since 2010
Yes.
But he is not up for reëlection later this year.
At least he's not one of the crazy far right people
Stalin walking to a SovNarKom meeting
00:54
@alphabet He is on the left side of the largest, centre-right party.
@Cerberus Better than that Geert Wilders guy
@DannyuNDos yeah that's a very rare usage and most native speakers would not recognize it. (I don't)
@DannyuNDos Doesn't really sound natural there. I would use "I wanted to..." (there's also not really a compelling case for the past perfect here)
@alphabet Absolutely.
@Cerberus Is he running? Or has the far-right selected someone else
00:56
Yeah... I suppose so.
@DannyuNDos The derived adjective is fairly common, though ("I'm willing to help")
You would still use the verb if you were writing a will (the legal document) or (sometimes) if you had conjured something into being through your willpower ("I willed it to be")
@alphabet He is always running. He has nothing else in his life.
But there are other far-right parties.
The most extreme one will remain very small.
@Cerberus How much of a chance do they have?
The latter's more moderate offshoot may disappear.
@alphabet Chance to gain power, zero.
00:59
@Cerberus Well that's refreshing. Better than in some parts of Europe
Europe? What about the US???
(spoken like a true American :p)
In the Kitchen Debate in 1959, Khrushchev claimed that Nixon's grandchildren would live under communism and Nixon claimed that Khrushchev's grandchildren would live in freedom. Khrushchev's son became a USA citizen.
There is a newish right-wing party, which is basically founded and paid for by the lobby of the meat, slaughterhouse, and animal feed corporations. It is populist and hates the environment, but it is not otherwise extreme. Until recently, it polled very well, but now there will be a new party these elections, founded by a very popular politician from a centre party. If he runs in all regions, he will suck most voters out of the meat party.
@CowperKettle Said one criminal to another.
@alphabet Yeah, Wilders' party will remain the largest far-right party. But his party is so hard to work with that the centre right may very well still not want to do so.
01:06
@Laurel The upcoming election cycle is going to be a train wreck
Nooooo
Don't worry, I'm sure Biden will do just great in his remaining moments of lucidity
LOL
Maybe there'll be a new candidate instead of Biden.
01:22
Nope. If anyone serious tried to take on Biden in the primary, they would (a) lose and (b) make Biden lose also
We just need Biden and a really good VP
I'd vote for John McWhorter
@Laurel Well do I have some bad news for you
He's running under the motto King Creole
John Hamilton McWhorter V (; born October 6, 1965) is an American linguist with a specialty in creole languages, sociolects, and Black English. He is currently an associate professor of linguistics at Columbia University, where he also teaches American studies and music history. He has authored a number of books on race relations and African-American culture, acting as political commentator especially in his New York Times newsletter. == Early life and education == McWhorter was born and raised in Philadelphia. His father, John Hamilton McWhorter IV (1927–1996), was a college administrator, and...
@alphabet Nooooooo
01:26
> No language makes perfect sense. — John McWhorter
Pete Buttigieg or Amy Klobuchar. I want one of those for next Prez.
@Laurel You may recall that Kamala's last campaign imploded because she decided to have her sister serve as campaign chair despite having no relevant experience
@alphabet I don't, if only because I try to keep myself isolated from politics as much as I can
I knew that people didn't like her but I didn't know why
@Mitch The facial expression is the same but we'd rather refer to the eyes or the mouth instead of the eyebrows; e.g. Il ouvre de grands yeux or Il reste bouche bée. Il (re)lève les sourcils is not unheard but doesn't as clearly convey surprise, it requires more information to do so.
Regardless, if Biden becomes truly incapable of being an effective president, that would be a worse outcome for the country than if he'd died
01:32
Biden may yet decide not to run again, though it seems unlikely
Biden's approval ratings are almost exactly the same as what Trump's were at the same point in his term
His son Beau Biden.
An interesting piece in the NYT about Hunter Biden: nytimes.com/2023/09/10/us/politics/…
@CowperKettle Handsome Biden!
@jlliagre Yes. I wonder at the name. I thought at first it was a girl's name
That would be Belle.
01:36
Ah!
But I guess nobody in France would dare to call his son Beau.
> There are two kinds of blind dates in South Korea: "mee-ting" and "sogeting"
@jlliagre In the 19th century US, a lady's boyfriend was called her beau.
@Robusto Even when ugly?
Noun: beau-catcher (plural beau-catchers)
  1. (humorous, dated) A small flat curl worn on the temple by women.
  2. Synonym: kiss curl
Noun: cowcatcher (plural cowcatchers)
  1. (rail transport, principally US) The V-shaped device on the front of a locomotive (or other large vehicle) shaped so as to push objects on the tracks out of the way, to prevent major damage to the train.
  2. Synonym: pilot
  3. (radio, advertising) An advertisement at the start of a programme.
  4. Coordinate term: hitchhiker
01:41
@jlliagre Ladies don't notice such things. They look at bank accounts.
Ha ha ha
@Robusto Québécois call their girlfriend ma blonde regardless of whether she has blond hair or not.
@jlliagre And what do las blondes call their boyfriends?
I came across a question on Reddit with a great idea for language users.
> I am looking for a free AI tool, site (may be paid with free account limited options) that can do a summary of English article (like BBC, youtube) based on most frequently used English words, for example Oxford list of 3000 most frequently used words in English. In other words if word is not in that list it should replace the word with the one that is on the list or its definition.
@Robusto Mon chum.
Haha. Chum is fish offal. ^_^
01:53
I remember a soap called Helene et les Garsons, and there was a character named Cri-Cri
It was showing on the TV in Tuymen in the mid-1990s
The city had only about 4 TV channels, so every girl in my University group watched every part of Helene et les Garsons and they discussed it
But chum is also a colloquial word for friend.
> Christian est étudiant et partage une chambre universitaire avec ses amis Nicolas et Étienne, puis Sébastien. Il est batteur dans le groupe de rock qu'il forme avec ses amis. Il deviendra le petit ami de Johanna, qui le surnomme « Cri-Cri d'amour »
Looks like cricri means the chirping bird sound in French: en.pons.com/translate/french-english/cri-cri
@CowperKettle Hélène et les garçons was very popular in France but I have to admit I never saw any episode.
@jlliagre I first learned from it that France had its quaint pre-Internet computer net
I mean I first saw the actual terminal there.
The famous Minitel.
01:57
YEs.
Upload speed: 75 bps. No risk for us to run a server at home.
Russia at that time had the FIDONet
FidoNet is a worldwide computer network that is used for communication between bulletin board systems (BBSes). It uses a store-and-forward system to exchange private (email) and public (forum) messages between the BBSes in the network, as well as other files and protocols in some cases. The FidoNet system was based on several small interacting programs, only one of which needed to be ported to support other BBS software. FidoNet was one of the few networks that was supported by almost all BBS software, as well as a number of non-BBS online services. This modular construction also allowed FidoNet...
Although I never used it, having had no phone line.
02:14
> 1.a. 1756– The special vocabulary used by any set of persons of a low or disreputable character; language of a low and vulgar type. (Now merged in sense 1c.)
1.b. 1801– The special vocabulary or phraseology of a particular calling or profession; the cant or jargon of a certain class or period.
1.c. 1818– Language of a highly colloquial type, considered as below the level of standard educated speech, and consisting either of new words or of current words employed in some special sense.
1.d. 1805– Abuse, impertinence. (Cf. slang v. 3, 4.)
It's jargon of a particular class or period. So for example, the urban slang of the 1920s, with terms like zozzled, flappers, skidaddle, twenty-three skiddoo, the bee's knees, the cat's meow, or the big cheese. Remember when Boss Oxmyx demands heaters from Kirk or else it's curtains for him? All that stuff is slang. Slang is not uneducated/ungrammatical language.
Jump to the 1950s and find cool cats and hipsters, sock hops, and ginchy ragtops. Think of Happy Days.
I leave the period that gave us hoosegow and malarkey as an exercise for the reader, especially if he's Joe Biden. :)
wake snakes = raise a ruckus
fix one's flint = settle the matter
"Let's blow this popsicle stand" is from the twentieth century.
> Hornswoggle, honey-fuggled: to cheat; to pull the wool over one's eyes. 1856: Pardon me for using the word; but Sharp honeyfuggled around me. Mr. Bennet, Nebraska, House of Reps., Congressional Globe, July 22, p.965 1860: P.E is going to hornswoggle the Democrats. Oregon Argus, May 12 1862: Now we want the particulars as to how much honey fugling and wool pulling was done. Rocky Mountain News, Denver, August 14
> Beat the Dutch: to beat all or beat the devil. 1840: Of all the goings on that I ever did hear of, this beats the Dutch. Knickerbocker Magazine, February
> Chirk: cheerful. Synonyms: chirp, chirpy. 1843: She is not very chirk, but more chirkier than she had been; and all our folks appear more chirkier than they really feel, in order to chirk her up. Yale Literary Magazine, p.26
Catawampous!
Many odd expressions!
I would say the original sense of 'lower class' is still present at the back of one's mind, even when it is used in a broader (metaphorical?) sense?
02:33
Soldiers have their own slang.
@tchrist ????
> - " I'll see where the twist flops".
> - "Ik zie wel waar 't wijf slaapt."
@Laurel I don't know that I'd call thieves' cant "jargon", exactly, but maybe.
Or that of the drug underworld, which has zillions of funny words and expressions for things.
Actually that tag is like but worse
All the weird things middle-school girls say that you have no idea what mean because you're too old.
They're the source of most of our innovations, you know.
By the time anybody old enough to vote knows what they mean, they've long ago moved on.
Remember back when wicked cool use to sound weird?
02:40
There was a 1980s comedy skit in which kids in the 21st century are having a party, dancing menuets and stuff to classical music. And their old grandparents upstairs are turning on some Heavy Metal music, so one of the children goes upstairs and asks them to tune this old-crumb stuff down a little.
at 02:35, the girl says to her grandpa, "tune it down, s'il vous plait"
Mixing Russian and French, like they used to back in the early 1800s
@tchrist I can't even keep up with what the people 3 years younger than me mean by slang
@CowperKettle How very fauciphticated of them!
fauciphticated?
fake sophisticated :)
faux
02:48
an adhoc coinage
It sound better aloud than it looks when read.
Somehow code switching with French is always higher in prestige than doing so in Italian or Spanish.
Unless you're an opera star.
Kutuzov, when fighting against Napoleon, still used French to jot down his written orders to troups. French was deeply ingrained then.
I'm sure the spies appreciated it. :)
:)
Upon taking Moscow, Napoleon was in a hurry for a peace treaty, since winter was getting close, and dispatched a Russian from Moscow to carry a message to the Tsar in St. Pete. But the poor guy was taken for a French spy when he ventured outside, caught by Cossacks and tortured, and managed to get to Moscow with the message 2 weeks later.
Probably looked too smart.
I've been listening to Adam Zamoiski's "1812", an interesting audiobook en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Zamoyski
> His parents, Count Stefan Zamoyski (1904–1976) and Princess Elizabeth Czartoryska (1905–1989), left their homeland when it was invaded by Germany and Russia in 1939.
03:19
@tchrist When we do it here, it goes unnoticed ;-)
03:32
Yes but all the regulars are polyglots and whatever the opposite of enfants terribles is, vieux terribles. :)
Pop fads are so bizarre.
@tchrist "All the weird things middle-school girls say that you have no idea what mean" -- An interesting relative clause, by the way. Breaks the usual gap constraints. Compare "That's a fact I don't know if is true."
Incidentally: I've been making a list of times I hear/see resumptive pronouns. An example from Reddit: "...which he spent most of it on Uber Eats." (Note the extra "it" used to get around the fact that you can't cleanly put a gap there.)
The things that you don't know what mean.
Was that curious clause earlier intentional, or can I add it to my list of unusual relative clauses?
It wasn't meant to be especially curiosifying, no. And it's an NP with a couple clauses.
The things they say which you don't know what mean.
I see the syntactic slingshot.
Which things do they say that you don't know what mean?
That chapter in H&P makes my brain hurt.
> It was this proposal that they sacked me because I criticized.
03:48
Mind the gap.
Try figuring out what the heck is wrong with that sentence (why the gap anaphoric to "this proposal" can't go after "criticized").
Because I criticized should just be for criticizing.
Or this one:
> What would to look at too closely create political problems?
Why can't a gap go after the "at"?
What would create political problems looked at too closely?
What looked at too closely would create political problems?
That's the intended meaning.
03:55
Do Americans routinely generate sentences like those of theirs?
> Here's a list of the objections that they went ahead despite.
@tchrist No they do not. The question is why these sentences are ungrammatical.
Despite which they went ahead.
As expected, there are a ton of different complicated rules about acceptable gap locations. It's annoying.
@tchrist Indeed. In that case the gap isn't a complement of "despite" anymore; the gap is now at the end of the clause, anaphoric to "despite which," in which "which" refers back to "objections."
> Judith Hallett, an emeritus professor of classics at the University of Maryland, described ancient Rome as “a place where there were many different definitions of masculinity.”
emerita
04:38
@CowperKettle I didn't know that one!
I assume it means, ik zie wel waar het schip strandt?
@tchrist Yeah I learn a lot from my pupils!
@tchrist Oh, Internet trends. Well, this one could be worse.
@tchrist Ouch!
 
2 hours later…
06:51
@Cerberus Oh, it's a quote from "Miller's crossing", meaning "I'll see where this woman spends the night" (where is her apartment in which he lives)
"twist" is slang for "girl", from the twist of a skirt, and "to flop" is to fall down to sleep.
The movie uses some old slang, but this particular phrase I remembered, because it was impossible to guess.
So I even added this quote to Wiktionary.
Miller's Crossing is a 1990 American neo-noir gangster film written, directed and produced by the Coen brothers and starring Gabriel Byrne, Marcia Gay Harden, John Turturro, Jon Polito, J. E. Freeman, and Albert Finney. The plot concerns a power struggle between two rival gangs and how the protagonist, Tom Reagan (Byrne), plays both sides against each other. In 2005, Time chose Miller's Crossing as one of the 100 greatest films made since the inception of the periodical. Time critic Richard Corliss called it a "noir with a touch so light, the film seems to float on the breeze like the frisbee of...
07:03
It's curious that the Dutch word for "bitch" is cognate with English "wife"
 
1 hour later…
08:24
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in body, potentially bad keyword in body (95): Rajacasino88 : Link Alterantif Raja Casino88‭ by user487541‭ on english.SE
 
1 hour later…
09:35
It looks like our honorable PM has started the propaganda that by naming opposition alliance INDIA they are actually destroying our past cultural values.
09:54
How unarjunlike of him.
Oh, turns out it's a word.
10:20
I have read this summary about 10 times over, and I still can't understand even the general meaning: sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666979X23002185
 
2 hours later…
12:47
Even though it's hard to understand, looks like it's some amazing technology capable of finding which genetic variations, out of thousands discovered through large-scale analysis of millions of genomes, can actually affect the activity of genes in a particular type of cells (here, a neuronal progenitor, picked to to see whether the variants might affect brain development).
Tagging thousands of genes on such a tiny scale, and weeding out variants, to narrow down the range of variants which could be later researched one by one.
13:29
Wordle 819 4/6

⬛🟨🟨⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛🟨🟨⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
13:40
Rootl game #107

⬛🟩🟩⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

⬛🟩⬛🟩⬛⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩

⬛🟩⬛⬛🟩
⬛🟩⬛⬛🟩
⬛🟩🟩⬛🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
#Worldle #603 2/6 (100%)
🟩🟩🟩⬜⬜⬅️
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🎉
⭐⭐🏙️🪙
https://worldle.teuteuf.fr
Neem (Azadirachta indica) tree.
Huh. Here they use it in "natural" insecticides. Dunno how well it works.
13:55
This tree?
🌎 Sep 16, 2023 🌍
🔥 32 | Avg. Guesses: 4.31
🟥🟩 = 2

globle-game.com
#globle
Wordle 819 4/6

🟩⬛⬛🟩⬛
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟨⬛⬛⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
Daily Quordle 600
7️⃣6️⃣
5️⃣4️⃣
m-w.com/games/quordle/
Daily Octordle #600
7️⃣4️⃣
8️⃣3️⃣
5️⃣🕚
🔟9️⃣
Score: 57
14:58
@M.A.R. Generally speaking, you won't find me saying: You are [noun or verb] to make personal comments.
15:23
@Vikas Nice!
@Vikas "Margosa leaves are dried in India and placed in cupboards to prevent insects eating the clothes, and also in tins where rice is stored."
In July 2023, Russia saw the smallest number of births since 1945.
Maybe it's for the better, because the planet is overpopulated.
@Vikas I wonder how fast this field will be covered in a thick forest cover if it's left untouched.
16:08
For insects with an exoskeleton, diatomaceous earth is the way to go. Really great for ants, bedbugs, fleas, etc. Can't be beat.
16:26
@CowperKettle Ah, so it is not a fixed expression with its own special meaning or anything?
16:36
I've found anecdotal evidence that people who study math "think" more than people who study physics.
130K mentions of "think"
vs
65 K
@user726941 How many messages are there total in each room?
How do you find that?
@user726941 room description
I.e. "info"
A better question might be: "How many thinkers can think on the head of a pin?"
I think it's the lower right number
Lower left is number of unique users
Also ooof I ended up accidentally joining the room
Welcome 😁
Don't at me lol
@Laurel you can make it un-awkward by unsheathing the baton and pretending you're there because of a flag
Be righteously angry and pin messages with three links in each
"Alright, I'm here to delete a bunch of messages in this room I'm entering for the first time, nobody panic."
16:48

 The h Bar

General chat for Physics SE (physics.stackexchange.com). For M...
This room as 80K mentions
🤔
@user726941 Assuming I'm looking at the right rooms, it looks like Math is about twice as popular a room as Physics and also has about twice as many uses of the word "think" so it's about even
Ok, thanks for checking.
Of course there are other factors we're missing like if there are about the same number of words (good luck finding that lol) or if there are certain chatty members of either room that are biasing the count
@user726941 This is the same type of stuff I do on ELU main so it comes pretty naturally
Coolio
Search for "COCA" if you're curious
17:02
Search where?
The main site
English SE
Whod've thunk it?
17:25
@alphabet I thank you gat even more confusing
Daily Octordle #600
🕚7️⃣
🔟5️⃣
6️⃣3️⃣
9️⃣8️⃣
Score: 59
17:37
@M.A.R. I really snucker at that comment.
17:47
@CowperKettle I've seen similar practices in my and relatives' homes.
@CowperKettle Most of it is crop, not proper trees. The trees stay while the crop keeps changing with season. Sometimes there is not crops so it's empty field.
 
2 hours later…
19:40
> Here we report that some brainwave activities involving phase resetting reflect the depressed mood at the time, which can be easily monitored by measuring the resting EEG with eyes closed for 1 min with a few electrodes. nature.com/articles/s41598-023-40582-y
Diagnoze depression at home in 1 minute.
@CowperKettle Or you can take this fun online quiz
@CowperKettle what if you don't think you're depressed (and have no concerns about it) but it tells you yes you are depressed?
@Laurel Everybody scatter!
@user726941 you think so?
20:36
@Mitch Now you really have something to be depressed about.
all those kids on tiktok, taking EEGs and diagnosing themselves with depression
Take the EEG challenge!
Step 1: Eat a Tide pod.
Step 2: Take an EEG!
Step 3: Find out you're really depressed!
Everybody's doing it. Why not you?
@Robusto the people with anxiety who take the anxiety quiz, test positive, then 🧨💣💥
I get anxious just thinking about that.
Yeah everybody says 'I like a clean bathroom. I'm OCD'
That's the healthy version of OCD
I'm not down with that
21:01
What, with Other People's Paranoia?
@Robusto which is definitely a non positive, and you may very well worry about -that-. But you don't need to worry about that 3rd order worrying, it won't cause any problems in addition to the blood bursting high blood pressure you already have from 2nd order anxiety.
@Robusto Obsessive Personality Psychedelia
A little mild visions is one thing
Dementia is a little much
But quasireligious delirium is the source of a lot of creatures city
Just don't give away your sources
It's not still your food after you put it in the trash, though.
@Mitch Did you mean dementhia ... taking the mint out of things that don't need it, like dental floss?
@alphabet I may be giving out too much info, but if the food is still mostly wrapped and not too deep, it's fair game
21:10
@Robusto I acquiesced. That's just too much work
@Mitch Sure, but once it's out on the street it's abandoned property.
Touché @Robusto
RIP
Ayup.
@alphabet that's fair.
Does Ayup = Amen?
21:28
Nope. It means yup or yep or yes.

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