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☮ Social ☮ PD Social Talk Thread: Firly Swolks Discussing Mitillating Tatters Fithout Wilters

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Haha yeah, winning the lottery would be cool. Just because financial stress is a huge drag.

I've been using piracetam recently. I used to use it on and off for years but it's been a good 5 years probably. I've tried using noopept, which I like, and some others, most of which seemed no better than piracetam, or worse. Sunifiram was good sometimes, as a tiny bit of a stimulant, but didn't feel good to use a lot. I am finding I really like piracetam the best of that sort of nootropic. It really gets my morning brain fog cleared, and I feel very efficient and calm, and even more motivated at work. Much easier to stay on task. Overall I feel better and clearer. I have abused my brain recently in several periods of time, and this feels good, like I'm reversing some of that strain. :)
 
I work in the market research industry (as a programmer), and I have noticed a weird thing happening recently, within the past few months. Companies tend to come up with labels for generations of consumers. We're all familiar with "millenials" and "boomers" and "generation X" and maybe even "generation Y" (younger than millenials. But did you know companies are now referring to age 71+ as "the silent generation"? Is it just me or is that some combination of creepy and disrespectful/dismissive?
 
Perhaps because they're just not as engaged with the online interwebs like the younger generations? Or it could just be a sad way of labelling them as irrelevant for business purposes :(
 
Practiced loads in my baritone uke today, including an easy version of otherside by rhcp. So glad I finally found an Instrument I really take time to practice with.

I also decided to reduce my setup for electronic music and focus in learning Instruments. :)
 
Cool, what instruments do you play?I've been trying to learn the ukulele and banjo, I play guitar, bass, drums, trying to learn a bit of piano too :)
 
Well actually none properly yet. In electronic music, the Computer does the playing for you. I dabbed into keyboard, harmonica and Bass guitar though, and I want to continue learning those as well.

Right now, I am in love with my baritone uke though. It's almost like a high pitched tiny western guitar.

Mhm I recently found some incredible smoked wild salmon while dumpster diving, that shit is so good... Eating a creamy salmon sauce with pasta right now. :)
 
My girlfriend dumpster dives sometimes, or used to anyway. It's actually a great idea as long as you're discerning, because otherwise it's wasted food and there is a horrific amount of wasted food going on. Staggering really. I had a coworker when I worked at a grocery store in high school, who noticed all the food that got thrown out and was giving it to homeless people. He asked the store if they would let him set up a thing where he provided the wasted food to homeless people, and they found out he had been taking it. They fired him for stealing and were threatening to actually press charges but I don't think they did. They said it was corporate policy that to take the "trash food" was stealing, the manager even acted all outraged. I always thought that was so insane. Like what the fuck? You threw it away, why don't you want people eating it who need food??

Bagseed, you should just play whatever instrument feels right at the time and you can get into the most. That way you'll naturally learn the most and enjoy it the most. Learning to play an instrument is all about time spent on it, so just do it a lot... if it's meant to be you'll really WANT to do it a lot and it will all work out. :) When you can start to play comfortably, you might want to seek out others to play with because that opens up a whole new realm of learning and fun.

I'm 'bout to go sit down at my piano and play some random stuff, it's gonna be awesome. <3
 
Unfortunately your friend was pretty naive thinking that his bosses would like the idea... They run a for profit business and being all socially and environmentally responsible doesn't have a place there, for the most part. Thankfully some grocery stores overthink this mindset and give away at least part of their "waste" to foodsharing and the like. Still the amount of waste the food industry and supermarkets produce is sickening. Dumpster diving is getting harder as well, with stores replacing locks, fortifying entrances and shit just to protect what they just threw out. Unreal...

And about the Instrument learning, you are very right, I got my uke 4 weeks ago and am already better than with anything else I tried to pick up :)

I am learning a lot playing with my sister and her boyfriend. Playing together is Fun, even if all I know are some chords yet
 
Guarding the garbage doesn't even make sense from a "bottom-line" or economic point of view though. The grocery store makes no more or less money whether someone "steals" from their dumpsters. I know you agree with me, it just blows my mind how this mindset of guarding the garbage even came about.
 
I have been severely depressed off and on for the last six months or so. One of the main causes was benzodiazepine abuse. Instead of getting the most of out of my favourite drugs, psychedelics, I was even taking the with benzos, losing their teaching value almost if not entirely altogether. But I had also come to a point of stagnation in my life, so the depression gave me the chance to stop and reevaluate things and begin to see which way I wanted to go next and where I didn't want to go anymore. I also got in trouble with the police re drugs here in the UK, and am still serving a 2 year suspended sentence. So that didn't help. For me the three things that help the most are meditation, exercise (for me yoga is the best and the form I like the most is (gently practiced kundalini yoga). Psychedelics, as always, have helped me reach a point where I really am bored and fed up with most drugs. I don't have cravings for benzos anymore, don't really enjoy any drugs much except psychedelics and dissociatives, and am about go 6 months clean, maybe for the first time in my adult life. My heart goes out to anyone who is depressed, but I do find that trying to roll with it without letting it overcome you is the best way to get through the worst. I really believe depression has a lot of value to teach you.
 
Hihihi PD. :) I'm sad that I haven't really had the time to engage in much discussion here, I miss you guys. But I've been collaborating with my little sis' on a creative project that we're both really excited about, and you all will get to hear it soon...!

Anyway, depression. I've said this before, but a key moment for me was the realization that happiness is all a matter of perspective. There's nothing inherently good or bad about life. No matter your circumstances, whether you're sick or well, rich or poor, etc., you can see your life as a blessing, or a curse.

Another major obstacle for me was a fear of pain. It was hugely empowering for me to begin to accept that there's nothing wrong with pain; it's an important part of being human. Life is like getting a tattoo you're really excited about, or eating a fiery hot Thai dish, or feeling your muscles burn in an intense workout. Is the pain a burden, or is it an exciting rite of passage into something wonderful? Again, all a matter of perspective.

This is totally the case for me too. When I started making art and especially playing music again, my depression became a thing of the past. I put a lot of time and energy into it, and the action itself is so rewarding because I love it, it makes me feel great, and I feel like I am doing what I am supposed to be doing.

Totally agree. It's kind of a chicken or the egg thing, though. When you're depressed, it can be really difficult to drum up the inspiration to engage in your passions. Which makes depression quite a vicious cycle.

That and winning the lottery so I can quit working and just skydive and hike aweseome mountain trails and have a personal chef that follows me cooking indian food because I'm lazy as fuck.

I dunno man. Money is power and all, but if all the money I ever needed just landed in my lap, I think it would strip me of the necessary motivation to do something productive with my life. I'd love to think that I would follow my passion for music just for the sake of bringing joy to the world, but honestly without the carrot at the end of the stick called a paycheck, I might just browse Bluelight and play video games all day.

Plus, how much fun is it to spend money that you didn't really earn? Wealth is cool because it represents all the blood, sweat, and tears that went into it.

Come to think, even my shitty, low-wage day job is a source of happiness for me, but I would never do it in a million years if I didn't need the money. I think it's a blessing in disguise that we have to work for a living.

I've been using piracetam recently. I used to use it on and off for years but it's been a good 5 years probably. I've tried using noopept, which I like, and some others, most of which seemed no better than piracetam, or worse. Sunifiram was good sometimes, as a tiny bit of a stimulant, but didn't feel good to use a lot. I am finding I really like piracetam the best of that sort of nootropic. It really gets my morning brain fog cleared, and I feel very efficient and calm, and even more motivated at work. Much easier to stay on task. Overall I feel better and clearer. I have abused my brain recently in several periods of time, and this feels good, like I'm reversing some of that strain. :)

Hmm... now I want to try piracetam.

I say depression, but not many cases are clinical depression I think. How depressed are you if you have a very good reason to feel bad?

This is an excellent point. Are you clinically depressed, or just rightfully disappointed?
 
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If I won the lottery I would like to think that the majority of it would go to helping others.
 
Just heard on the radio that the Trump administration has announced it's going to reverse the Obama policy of turning a blind eye to federal marijuana laws that has been allowing states to make their own laws without the feds interfering, and enforce illegalization of recreational marijuana. Wonder how that's gonna go? It's a huge industry at this point, especially in Colorado. I can't see that being successful. I think that dude just keeps saying he's going to do ridiculous stuff so people talk about him every day (like the whole forcing Mexico to pay for a Mexico-US border wall thing). Which is working. Hell, I just did it. 8)
 
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Just heard on the radio that the Trump administration has announced it's going to reverse the Obama policy of turning a blind eye to federal marijuana laws that has been allowing states to make their own laws without the feds interfering, and enforce illegalization of recreational marijuana.

The recent California legalization in my home state was one of the only outcomes of the election that made me happy. I even germinated a few seeds in honor of my freedoms recently, so I expect a harvest this fall. I've lost interest in smoking pot altogether these last few years but growing it is still fun and I should have a couple plants this year (hopefully both female). My neighbor is an older lady with health problems that loves it when I give her a little weed smoke and of course I try it. Anyways, if that orange-faced excuse for a president wants to take my crops, I won't take to kindly to that.
 
It's never even been close to legal where I live, but it sure does piss me off to hear about that. I've got a family trip to Cali planned for early summer and there's no way in hell I'm not gonna hit up a pot shop and smoke down hard. Fuck you government!
 
You know what would be really freaky? A movie about two guys in the semi-far future just chilling future-style and watching a movie, one that is set in their past, 2017... not sure what it would be about but it seems funny to try and replicate what they think our time is like, with a lot of gross unrealistic generalizations or assumptions we might make about our past..

still following? ok i smoked a little weed so what
 
I work in the market research industry (as a programmer), and I have noticed a weird thing happening recently, within the past few months. Companies tend to come up with labels for generations of consumers. We're all familiar with "millenials" and "boomers" and "generation X" and maybe even "generation Y" (younger than millenials. But did you know companies are now referring to age 71+ as "the silent generation"? Is it just me or is that some combination of creepy and disrespectful/dismissive?

It sounds like programming to make the populus dismiss the worth of older people. I doubt they took a survey and "The silent generation" topped the list. More like "Well set the trend and start this shit"
 
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