Commented 4 years ago2020-11-17 22:15:06 UTC
in poll: Tis the SeasonComment #103046
I enjoy Summer the most, with all its warmth and green. But Spring is my favourite, because it gets brighter and more colourful and you can feel Winter's dark, cold misery be replaced with Summer, all of which lies ahead. It's a time of optimism. I wish I could move down to New Zealand or something during Sweden's dark months. Or at least southern Asia. Northern Europe is not fit for human life this time of year.
Commented 4 years ago2019-11-21 22:49:56 UTC
in journal: How many years ago?!Comment #102437
I love the image you posted in "Desktops of August" last time you came here, a decade ago:
Very retro
My day is fine, happy there's a new HL in the works. How are you?
PS. you don't happen to have a copy of fy_something somewhere? Jessie is going through ALL the maps in the Map Vault and trying them out while streaming, once a week
I was in London for three or four days a couple of years ago. I spent a day at the British Museum, and when I left I seriously considered going back the day after. So much to look at!
I didn't think anything was expensive other than the hotel, but I'm Swedish so I guess I'm just used to high prices, especially for trains.
Commented 5 years ago2019-05-29 00:49:26 UTC
in journal: Giant DumpComment #102028
Good luck to the both of you.
In my experience (I have an Asperger's AKA Autism Spectrum Syndrome diagnosis and know and have met lots of people with different neuropsychiatric diagnoses) it's common when one is first diagnosed with something like Autism to have some weird feelings about it. Sometimes shame and a fear of inferiority, sometimes pride and a sense of being smarter and better than neurotypicals. If, God forbid, you ever find yourself thinking in those kinds of tracks, it might help to remind yourself that your diagnosis doesn't define you, it just describes a few aspects of you. It can help you and others to understand you better, but it's just some papers and always remember that being one of the many people with the same diagnosis doesn't make you any less of an individual.
Also, Mission McPoker
My day is fine, happy there's a new HL in the works. How are you?
PS. you don't happen to have a copy of fy_something somewhere? Jessie is going through ALL the maps in the Map Vault and trying them out while streaming, once a week
Atom #28=Ni/Nickel. Nickel is also what Canadians call five cent coins. 5*5=25
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I didn't think anything was expensive other than the hotel, but I'm Swedish so I guess I'm just used to high prices, especially for trains.
In my experience (I have an Asperger's AKA Autism Spectrum Syndrome diagnosis and know and have met lots of people with different neuropsychiatric diagnoses) it's common when one is first diagnosed with something like Autism to have some weird feelings about it. Sometimes shame and a fear of inferiority, sometimes pride and a sense of being smarter and better than neurotypicals. If, God forbid, you ever find yourself thinking in those kinds of tracks, it might help to remind yourself that your diagnosis doesn't define you, it just describes a few aspects of you. It can help you and others to understand you better, but it's just some papers and always remember that being one of the many people with the same diagnosis doesn't make you any less of an individual.