Skip Navigation
how's your week going, Beehaw
  • Hoping this week goes better than last week. The terribleness of it all peaked on Saturday, when I was rudely checking my phone at the funeral of someone who died in a very sudden, tragic way, because my dad was having emergency surgery >1000 miles away.

  • www.cpr.org Colorado built a park over I-70 to contain pollution. Is the air safe to breathe?

    CPR News tested the air quality at the Central 70 Cover Park to see whether it reduced pollution.

    Colorado built a park over I-70 to contain pollution. Is the air safe to breathe?
    2
    Adopting a 2 year old dog tomorrow. Any tips?
  • The number one secret of dog training: It is just creating a shared language between you and your pup so that they can be successful.

    Are they doing something you don't want them to? Teach them what you want them to do in that scenario instead. For instance, my dog used to sprint towards the road when he wanted to cross. I taught him to sit instead, and then we crossed whenever he asked by sitting to reinforce the much safer behavior.

    The point is to teach them how to tell you what they want/need in healthy ways, and actually listen when they do what you taught them. Another example, give them a way to tell you they need to go outside (bells they can ring is a good option) and then let them out when they ask in the way you taught them.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • The Humane Society has some suggestions for how to protect feral cat colonies from coyotes. Not sure if you've already tried all of these or if they would even work for your location, but it seems worth considering.

  • HOW AMERICA GOT MEAN
    www.theatlantic.com How America Got Mean

    In a culture devoid of moral education, generations are growing up in a morally inarticulate, self-referential world.

    How America Got Mean
    2
    Interview: Front Range Rail planners want to start with bare-bones service. Here’s what else you need to know
  • This sounds absolutely fantastic. If I could have ridden a train from Boulder to C. Springs in college, I would have never needed a car. With the number of commuters that live outside of Denver and commute to it (or more rarely in the other direction) having this option should greatly relieve the number of vehicles on I25

  • www.theatlantic.com Should We All Be Eating Like The Rock?

    Some researchers say Americans should eat double or triple the protein recommended by government guidelines.

    Should We All Be Eating Like The Rock?
    16
    Tiny Forest with Big Benefits
    web.archive.org Tiny Forests With Big Benefits

    Native plants crowded onto postage-stamp-size plots have been delivering environmental benefits around the world — and, increasingly, in the U.S.

    3
    how's your week going, Beehaw
  • I volunteered to moonlight in a second role at my day job. This week is the first time that the workload has been getting to me. I guess it's just going to be a stressful couple of weeks and then I'll get through it.

  • Rant: Worried I'll never get out of debt
  • I'm sorry to hear you are struggling. It may take time and it may be a tough road, but you can absolutely dig yourself out of this hole.

    I'd recommend focusing on one loan at a time, if the whole makes you feel overwhelmed. While I'm not the biggest fan, Dave Ramsey suggests paying loans off using something called the snowball method. I think this can help you, because it will allow you to have wins and see progress faster. Since it sounds like you are struggling with motivation and seeing progress, this method will be the most useful. Small, achievable goals are important!

    Basically, you pay the minimums on all of your current loans. Then you pay any extra on your loan with the lowest balance. Once that is knocked out, you take what you were paying for the first loan (minimum payment plus the extra) and put it towards your second smallest loan. A secondary benefit with this approach is that you will reduce your required cash outflow if you do end up losing your job. Good luck!

  • Test this randomized creative writing/world-building exercise for me?
  • Theme: Prehistoric Times

    Plot: Temptation

    Hero: Clever tinkerer

    Villain: Greedy business tycoon

    Side character: Scheming courtier

    Wildcard: Fey

    I'm not quite sure how to work a business tycoon and courtier into something set in Prehistoric times, but I'm definitely intrigued on the sort of story I could come up with for this prompt.

    Thanks for sharing this! I really enjoy it, especially since I want to write more. I think I might workshop this prompt a bit cause it definitely got some juices flowing.

  • Have you ever been at the junction of a fork in your life's road and not known what to do? How did you get through it?
  • At the end of the day, you know deep inside what the right choice for you is. The unknown is scary, but the future is always unknown, no matter what you choose.

    I went the route of going back to school for a fresh start, after my first career attempt didn't work out. It was absolutely the right choice. I went from feeling stuck in a bad situation and absolutely miserable, to a career that allows me to live my best life and I am infinitely more happy.

    I didn't know what was going to come out of the change. I knew I couldn't keep doing what I was doing. When I went back to school, I did as many different internships as I could, since I knew what I didn't want to do, but I didn't know what I wanted to do anymore. I ended up falling into a career field I never even knew existed, but matches up to my strengths perfectly. Bonus points for being paid more than I ever imagined I could make (I basically tripled my income from my old job when I started my current one).

    Life's short. Change is constant, no matter what you choose. Do what makes you happy, even if it's scary. We all end up as worm food, do you want to live your life as a series of "What ifs?" Or do you want to take a chance and try new things?

  • What does everyone think of bots on Beehaw?
  • I'm here for the people. I don't want to be a part of a community that is bots talking with bots, which is what I felt like places like Reddit had become. When I found Beehaw, it was a breath of fresh air to actually see intelligent conversations between real people. I'd hate to see that be lost.

  • What are your hobbies?
  • It can depend on where you're located and how deep you get into the sport. For beginner classes, in my area, they are ~$100 for 6 weeks. It gets more expensive once you need your own gear and if you choose to compete and/or take private lessons.

    I think the most comparable comparison in costs are probably club hockey and club soccer.

  • What are your hobbies?
    • Walking my dog - Better awareness of my neighborhood/getting to know my neighbors. Fresh air, sunshine, and time to work through my thoughts helps me stay clear headed. Cardio is good for you.

    • Fencing - both physically and mentally challenging. It is basically violently enforced meditation. Hella fun and is great stress relief. Cons - can be expensive and relatively few adults.

    • Reading fiction - I enjoy getting lost in other worlds. Helps to disconnect from the internet from time to time

    • Yoga - reduces random aches and pains from sitting all day at work/high impact activities. It just generally feels good afterwards.

    • Curling - team sport I do with my spouse. Throwing shit and drinking/eating afterwards is nice. Good community to socialize with.

    • Watching movies/tv/YouTube - Lots of great stuff out there. Easy to do too much of this one, especially youtube.

  • What food did you not try until you were an adult? Did you have a "where have you been all my life" moment?
  • Most recently... empanadas.

    But there are so many foods i hadn't been exposed to but absolutely adore. We didn't have much "ethnic" foods as a kid, so there's been a lot I've tried as an adult and loved. Butter chicken has become a staple for me. Saag paneer. Pad see ew is another great one. Savory pies in former British colonies (I had a butter chicken pie at a takeaway in NZ that was incredible). The list goes on...

  • www.smithsonianmag.com Archaeologists Uncover Oldest Evidence of 'Curry' Outside of India

    Ancient spice processing in Southeast Asia reveals an early trade of ingredients for dishes that Westerners often call “curry”

    Archaeologists Uncover Oldest Evidence of 'Curry' Outside of India
    0
    Why America stopped building public pools | CNN Business
  • I spent so much time at our neighborhood pool as a kid. We would get dropped off by a parent and then they'd come pick us up either around dinner time or when a thunderstorm rolled in. Other days, we would go after dinner and stay until it got dark and the pool would close.

    I just looked it up, since my hometown had budget issues a few years ago, and it is now owned by the YMCA.

  • www.cnn.com Why America stopped building public pools | CNN Business

    “If the public pool isn’t available and open, you don’t swim.”

    Why America stopped building public pools | CNN Business
    7
    Fed launches long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing system
  • It sounds like a platform private companies can use to develop instantaneous peer-to-peer money transfer, as opposed to a true service run by the feds. Either way, the fact that it would allow someone to make a direct payment to another person's bank account anywhere would be a huge upgrade.

  • www.reuters.com Fed launches long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing system

    The U.S. Federal Reserve has launched a long-awaited service which will aim to modernize the country's payment system by eventually allowing everyday Americans to send and receive funds in seconds, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, the central bank announced on Thursday.

    Fed launches long-awaited instant payments service, modernizing system

    Looks like the US is finally catching up to the rest of the world for transferring money

    3
    www.cnn.com Banks are leaving savers shortchanged as interest rates soar | CNN Business

    When central banks raise interest rates, mortgage borrowers can expect higher monthly repayments, while savers are supposed to be rewarded with bigger returns on their deposits. Or so the theory goes.

    Banks are leaving savers shortchanged as interest rates soar | CNN Business
    3
    Giant kites could pull cargo ships across the ocean – and slash their carbon emissions
    www.cnn.com Giant kites could pull ships across the ocean – and slash their carbon emissions | CNN

    French company Airseas has developed the Seawing, a kite to help propel cargo ships, which it says could cut their carbon emissions by an average of 20%.

    Giant kites could pull ships across the ocean – and slash their carbon emissions | CNN
    15
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)YE
    yenahmik @beehaw.org
    Posts 11
    Comments 35