Being an adult means realizing that while you love cat-sitting, having an actual cat will not work for you, because OMG, a week and there is so much cat hair! Everywhere!
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Open on mastodon.social Dr. Victoria Grinberg
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Dr. Victoria Grinberg
Being an adult means realizing that while you love cat-sitting, having an actual cat will not work for you, because OMG, a week and there is so much cat hair! Everywhere!
Dr. Victoria Grinberg
Met a friend I haven't seen for a while on the way home. I think the encounter made both of us happy!
Dr. Victoria Grinberg
You are never unobserved when running through the city... 😼
Dr. Victoria Grinberg
A visitor - unexpected but welcome.
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Dr. Victoria Grinberg
People post because they want to vent, to share their frustration, to make others laugh or shake heads. If ppl post to get advice, they usually ask. So: You want to give advice? Has the person explicitly asked for it? No? Then don't. But you really, really want to give advice! Still: no! But your advice is really relevant! Still: no. But you also know the person well (you follow them & they you & you interacted): ask if they want advice. If they don't explicitly say yes - it's still a no.
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Dr. Victoria Grinberg
A reminder, also to myself: if someone does not feel right, block. Block early. Block before you spend emotional energy. It's not a public forum (except if you want it to be). It's your space. Your little corner. (Your salon if you run it like I do mine.)
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Dr. Victoria Grinberg
We are all stardust. That oxygen you breath? That comes from dying massive stars, ending their light in a supernova. The iron in your blood? Some massive stars dying, but mainly white dwarfs, the leftovers of dwarf stars like our own Sun, exploding. The gold ring on your finger? Mostly merging neutron stars, leftovers from supernovae.
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Cybarbie
@vicgrinberg except the grey ones? thye must come from somewhere, where do they come from... all the others?
royal :terminal:
@vicgrinberg If you don't mind, a Q from a layman who loves science but lacks the math. Stars are incredibly far away, especially when not traveling at the speed of light. How does all that matter get *here*? Is the age of the universe ancient enough compared to the slow movement of matter moving through space enough to explain it? Did that matter get distributed when the universe was a lot "smaller" than it is today, and clumps of matter were closer together? 1/2 |