303elliott
303elliott t1_jaahw79 wrote
Reply to comment by TacTurtle in TIL the deacon Saint Lawrence was roasted alive on a giant grill during the persecution of Valerian. The poet Prudentius tells that he joked with his tormentors, "Turn me over—I'm done on this side". He is now the patron saint of cooks, chefs, and comedians. by ALasagnaForOne
He need some milk
303elliott t1_ja82wam wrote
Reply to comment by Feeling_Glonky69 in LPT: When you dine in a restaurant in USA or Canada, don't leave a tip and there will no repercussions. by milkcowcafe
Easy fix, don't go to restaurants that don't pay their staff well.
303elliott t1_ja6hf56 wrote
Reply to comment by milkcowcafe in LPT: When you dine in a restaurant in USA or Canada, don't leave a tip and there will no repercussions. by milkcowcafe
Don't go to restaurants then.
303elliott t1_ja6gf99 wrote
Reply to LPT: When you dine in a restaurant in USA or Canada, don't leave a tip and there will no repercussions. by milkcowcafe
LPT: be an asshole
303elliott t1_ja6gct3 wrote
Reply to comment by milkcowcafe in LPT: When you dine in a restaurant in USA or Canada, don't leave a tip and there will no repercussions. by milkcowcafe
Nope, it's a shitty excuse to stiff the wait staff and blame the restaurant. Have fun saving a few bucks to fuck over someone else
303elliott t1_j9nj7gx wrote
Reply to comment by AcceptableAccount794 in [story] I (M28) started a job as a nighttime security officer in January 2022, changing my lifestyle which made me gain some weight. After trying my short-sleeved uniform from last spring, I’m only now realizing how bad it’s gotten, not able to button a single button. Need to start to reverse this. by MisterOwl_94
It's fake, from 2019. See my comment.
303elliott t1_j9akrn6 wrote
Reply to LPT: To stop being the “I have $300, so spend $300” person, put a sock on your money so that whenever you try to spend it, all you get is the sock by doyouhavetono
Did you think you were posting in r/SLPT
303elliott t1_j5hmydi wrote
He's always seemed like a total creep to me. His stand up is just misogyny masquerading as comedy. He's a piece of shit
303elliott t1_j4x82s7 wrote
Reply to Siri pulled a false alarm at the gym and caused 15 armed police officers to show up by CubingSoda
Really interesting premise. While mostly speculation, it sounds like something caused Siri to dial emergency services (maybe shock activated, maybe erroneous pressing on the screen), and the operator heard the gym trainer saying something along the lines of "good shot", which prompted the operator to assume it was an active shooting situation.
303elliott t1_j1fzo7a wrote
Reply to LPT: From now until midnight Christmas, give yourself a complete break of all your worries. by Boemerangman2
Bless your heart.
303elliott t1_j0ghtau wrote
Reply to Hi! I’m Dr Lucy Maddox from Bath University (UK). I’m a clinical psychologist researching compassionate care and things that can get in the way. I have a new book out called A Year To Change Your Mind, about how psychology can help with everyday life by UniversityofBath
Can you tell us about one of your best clinical moments? About one of your worst?
303elliott t1_iz9hbfc wrote
Reply to comment by Pascalwb in A new study focuses on the crucial question of why people are more vulnerable to catching colds during the months of winter. The answer hinges on an evolved defense system, innate to the human nose, that is numbed by frigid temperatures. by BoredMamajamma
This is a little different. In the US they have the same belief, and there's a lot of evidence that staying warm actually does prevent getting sick because your body isn't wasting energy on extra metabolism, energy which could be instead used on your immune system. His belief was strictly about inhaling cold air. No open windows at night, no going out without a scarf covering your mouth.
303elliott t1_iz9gykb wrote
Reply to comment by WellIllBeJiggered in A new study focuses on the crucial question of why people are more vulnerable to catching colds during the months of winter. The answer hinges on an evolved defense system, innate to the human nose, that is numbed by frigid temperatures. by BoredMamajamma
Huh. I mean, that would actually make sense. Viruses love clinging to moisture, and sometimes reducing viral load is enough to not get sick, depending on the virus
303elliott t1_iz6ss45 wrote
Reply to comment by stockjonesmackboy in A new study focuses on the crucial question of why people are more vulnerable to catching colds during the months of winter. The answer hinges on an evolved defense system, innate to the human nose, that is numbed by frigid temperatures. by BoredMamajamma
There wasn't enough information in the article for me to come to a direct conclusion. Their own conclusion was that developing these vesicles artificially could be a solution, which has nothing to do with temperature. But your question does have me curious!
I had a friend who is Mexican, he told me he always wore a scarf out in the cold because Mexican culture believed directly inhaling cold air could make you sick. Looking back, I wonder if there was more wisdom in that claim than I originally gave him credit for
303elliott t1_iy6ck9m wrote
There are a lot of conflicting studies, many of which have their own flaws. As far as I can tell, we don't have any fully accepted theories. The best I could find was a phenomena known as compensation, where people are "ingesting calories later to compensate for energy deficit caused by [artificial sweeteners]". Basically, you trick your body into thinking it's going to get a lot of sugar, and then you don't give it any, so it sends messages to your brain that it's still hungry for sugar, leading you to eat more than you would have if you drank a soda.
303elliott t1_iy1kkg3 wrote
Reply to comment by peenutbuttherNjelly in ELI5 If fevers are the body’s defense against viruses, and the body’s top most interest is the preservation of life, then why does the body allow fever temperature to get life threatening high (104+)? by TheFaytalist
You say we don't have any control over it, and then follow that up by saying we've intervened to an unimaginable degree lol. What I'm saying is people will not naturally evolve a fever limiter, because death by fever is prevented with modern medicine. There's no evolutionary incentive for it, so if it happens, it's just a mutation that's not selected out. Therefore it's unlikely to be widespread.
303elliott t1_iy1g6b0 wrote
Reply to comment by peenutbuttherNjelly in ELI5 If fevers are the body’s defense against viruses, and the body’s top most interest is the preservation of life, then why does the body allow fever temperature to get life threatening high (104+)? by TheFaytalist
I love your enthusiasm, but you seem a bit misguided. Evolution has essentially stopped for humans, as natural selection no longer determines our survival. If anything, more evolved humans will be those that are better at getting laid with modern technology.
303elliott t1_iy0oc1f wrote
Reply to ELI5 If fevers are the body’s defense against viruses, and the body’s top most interest is the preservation of life, then why does the body allow fever temperature to get life threatening high (104+)? by TheFaytalist
Everything evolved because it was passed along. This doesn't mean the trait is perfect, but rather that it's good enough to survive evolution. One adaptation humans have to an infection is a fever. If you have unwanted guests, then turn up the temperature until they leave. Usually, this works great. You run a fever, the unwanted guests die off, and everything goes back to normal. But what if they don't die? Unfortunately there's not a backup plan for that. We keep cranking up the heat, waiting for the signal that the threat is gone, until we start causing damage to ourselves. Because this is relatively rare, we didn't evolve a better system. Thankfully, we did evolve a higher intelligence, which allowed us to discover medication, so this issue rarely leads to death if medical intervention is allowed
303elliott t1_iswauut wrote
Reply to comment by dbsgirl in LPT: When someone you know casually loses someone, read the obituary and comment on something specific. by dbsgirl
A lot of arm chair psychologists who clearly haven't experienced loss are in your comments. Sorry that your well intended and well spoken tip fell on narcissists.
As Rick Sanchez said, "Your boos mean nothing, I've seen what makes you cheer."
303elliott t1_isw4hwe wrote
Reply to comment by wildadragon in LPT: When someone you know casually loses someone, read the obituary and comment on something specific. by dbsgirl
You're so incessant on inconsequential semantics you can't pull your head out of your ass to see the whole picture. I'm done talking to you.
303elliott t1_isw2mcz wrote
Reply to LPT: When someone you know casually loses someone, read the obituary and comment on something specific. by dbsgirl
Good tip. I've been to enough funerals to know people want to speak up, but often don't know what to say
303elliott t1_isw2im4 wrote
Reply to comment by wildadragon in LPT: When someone you know casually loses someone, read the obituary and comment on something specific. by dbsgirl
Did you die and no one had anything good to say about you? I can't figure out why else you would act like such a toxic edge lord
303elliott t1_irenst6 wrote
Reply to comment by Lizasmuffmuncher in Widely used sewer pipe repair technology creates and emits nanoplastics into the air by ajwhelton
If you think that's bad, wait until you hear about Planck plastics!
303elliott t1_iremnae wrote
Reply to comment by drdookie in Widely used sewer pipe repair technology creates and emits nanoplastics into the air by ajwhelton
Thanks, corrected
303elliott t1_jada1jl wrote
Reply to LPT Request: how to mail a money to my landlord with absolute proof that money was delivered? by AethericEye
Cashier's check is the safest way