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Perhaps it's a regional thing. I'm in Oregon and grew up in a shoeless household. When it's rainy and muddy for the better part of the year it forms a routine to take your shoes off at the door. Offhand, I think about 3/4 of the houses I go to are the same. Most people won't ask you to remove your shoes if you're just there for a few minutes, but I definitely feel a bit weird wearing shoes on carpet. The people I know who wear shoes indoors don't keep a pristine household. They're not slobs or anything, but they're not going to worry about a bit of dust on the rug.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 06:03 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:22 |
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fineX posted:Do people in America/other countries really wear shoes inside the house? Aren't you afraid of getting dirt and stuff from outside all over the inside of the house? Or do you have a pair of house shoes that you wear inside the house? In that case, what kind of shoes would be used for house shoes? I live in Canada and noone I know wears shoes inside the house. Yes sometimes, usually when I've just got back from doing something or I'm getting ready to leave in a bit. No not at all, mats are there for a reason. I don't usually wear anything other than slippers inside. I certainly don't put on shoes if I'm going to be home all day.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 06:05 |
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Lots of households don't have any problem with their guests keeping their shoes on the whole time. Etiquette is of course to ask first.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 06:09 |
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I want to plug in a second keyboard and mouse to use as a gamepad, (I'm even willing to remap the keys, or use a program to make it emulate a 360 controller or something,) The thing is I can't find anything that would do this properly. I tried to google it and all I found was a program called Teamviewer, which was more for presentations and it really just locks the other keyboards out and allows multiple pointers. Is there a way to do this or am I sol?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 06:41 |
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Mescal posted:Of course you'd wipe after. But do bidet folks wipe before as well? That would seem to undo the supposed advantage of less abrasion. Sorry if my bathroom ignorance is disgusting! I was a bit too aggressive there, sorry. Yes, one wipes before and after. The advantage is not the lack of abrasion due to toilet paper but rather the shower-like effect of running fresh water over an unclean body part. Think of bidets as an extra cleaning step.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 06:57 |
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TheGame posted:Perhaps it's a regional thing. I'm in Oregon and grew up in a shoeless household. When it's rainy and muddy for the better part of the year it forms a routine to take your shoes off at the door. Offhand, I think about 3/4 of the houses I go to are the same. Most people won't ask you to remove your shoes if you're just there for a few minutes, but I definitely feel a bit weird wearing shoes on carpet. I'm from Oregon too and I grew up in a shoed house. The only shoeless people I know are either OCD about tidiness or germophobic about cleanliness. But I would never wear my shoes inside anybody's house (unless I know the house rules) because that's rude. And I would never tell someone to remove their shoes before walking around my house because that's extremely loving rude. Be a good guest, be a generous host, that's all. And if you can't be bothered to run a vacuum after you have people over, you should reconsider whether you really care to have guests. EDIT: The only time I've been informed ahead of time about a house's shoe situation was at the same place they told me about the house's toilet seat situation after I used their WC. So that should give you a clue.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 07:04 |
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fineX posted:Do people in America/other countries really wear shoes inside the house? Aren't you afraid of getting dirt and stuff from outside all over the inside of the house? Or do you have a pair of house shoes that you wear inside the house? In that case, what kind of shoes would be used for house shoes? I live in Canada and noone I know wears shoes inside the house. I think it really depends on who and where (what region). Growing up, it was completely normal to tromp around in shoes, but being careful to wipe off mud, snow, grit before doing so. Taking them off in some houses would be like coming in and taking off your pants--way too comfortable and intimate. Socks or bare feet can be just as offensive as shoes, depending on... I grew up in Minnesota/Wisconsin, heavily Scandinavian and rural areas. On the other hand, I've become completely anti-shoe inside my apartment which seems to be just as acceptable to visitors as shoes-on. This on the East Coast, and the Koreans and Turks I know take it one step further with special slippers for "wet" floors such as kitchen and bathroom in their homes. The only people who balk are maintenance guys, who, when I'm home to catch them, get a choice of shoes-off or little sterile psych-ward booties to go over their shoes. Evidence and logic can easily go both ways, and I've been at both extremes. If there's a question as to etiquette, ask or at least try to observe (shoe deposits outside or just inside door, host/other guests). Edit: Ouch--so it's possible I'm an OCD rude jerk, but it feels nice to have a home that's...mine. Plus I'm an OCD rude jerk shut-in, so it really doesn't damage a lot of lives/psyches. Liebfraumilch fucked around with this message at 07:38 on Apr 2, 2013 |
# ? Apr 2, 2013 07:32 |
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Liebfraumilch posted:
It's okay, you're Scandinavian! Like all etiquette, it would be solved if everyone were empathetic enough to ask before being told. I take my shoes off without asking until told otherwise. It's hard in the US because our social interactions are the worst of all worlds. We're not Japanese enough to be considerate, yet we're not German enough to say what we really feel.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 07:52 |
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In Scandinavia, the norm is to take off your shoes inside. If you go to a party or more dressed up thing at someone's house, you bring a set of clean shoes to wear inside.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 08:09 |
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Echoing others, it's neither common nor uncommon to remove shoes when entering someone else's home. A good clue is to look at your host's feet as you enter - if they're not wearing shoes, it's appropriate to ask if you should remove your own. I'm not particularly concerned about dirt. Then again, I live in a city, where many of my friends are unlikely to encounter dirt in their day-to-day lives. (Everywhere is paved.)
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 08:47 |
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Peristalsis posted:There are some downed trees on my property, and I'd like to determine what kind of trees they are/were. Is there a way to do this without paying a tree expert to come out to my house and identify them? The web sites I've found don't look promising for a quick identification. I'll take a rough guess at a type of poplar, but those pictures aren't much to work with. I'd really need to see a picture of leaves (even dead ones)/seed pods/buds.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 10:30 |
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Mescal posted:I'm from Oregon too and I grew up in a shoed house. The only shoeless people I know are either OCD about tidiness or germophobic about cleanliness. But I would never wear my shoes inside anybody's house (unless I know the house rules) because that's rude. And I would never tell someone to remove their shoes before walking around my house because that's extremely loving rude. It's got to be a regional thing. I'm in Virginia and I never wear shoes in the house (out of comfort, not a sense of cleanliness), but I would never take my shoes off in someone else's house unless they asked me to. I would consider it rude. If they're Arab or Iranian or from a culture where I know people never wear shoes in the house, I'll ask if I should take them off. If they're just plain old American, I won't.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 12:40 |
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kimbo305 posted:Is there a real or slang term for not being able to recognize any songs from having never listened to them? There's illiteracy for not being able to read, innumeracy for not really being able to do math... what for having no musical knowledge? A person is said to have a tin ear if they don't really have the capacity for music or sounds. It could be said that George Lucas has a tin ear for dialogue, because no real people talk the way he writes. It can also refer to being unable to sense differences in tone or pitch for both music and speech.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 15:58 |
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CzarChasm posted:A person is said to have a tin ear if they don't really have the capacity for music or sounds. It could be said that George Lucas has a tin ear for dialogue, because no real people talk the way he writes. It can also refer to being unable to sense differences in tone or pitch for both music and speech.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 16:06 |
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Bought a $150 nvidia f2p card from ebay for $35. Paid immediately via ebay with Paypal, got the code from seller, everything worked fine. Now a month later I get this from Paypal:quote:On Feb 28, 2013, you sent a payment to x@y for $35.00 USD. Quickly after this I get an email from the seller which asks me to do another payment to a different paypal account, which is (apparently) not registered to the seller's ebay account: quote:I never received the $35. I just got an email from Paypal saying they sent I asked about ebay what to do, and the answer looked like they couldn't care less: quote:Thank you for your email. I understand that you have purchased item (#xx), but the payment was returned back to you in PayPal because of an issue with the seller's account. Now the seller has contacted you asking you to pay to a different email address using PayPal, and you are wanting to know how to proceed with this transaction. I understand your concern for protecting yourself on this transaction, and I will be happy to assist you today with this issue. So... my question comes here: Is the seller honest or trying some kind of scam here, should I be honest & make another payment or be a dick and just forget about the whole thing?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 18:02 |
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Ihmemies posted:Bought a $150 nvidia f2p card from ebay for $35. Paid immediately via ebay with Paypal, got the code from seller, everything worked fine. Now a month later I get this from Paypal: Here's my first question: Has the money, in fact, been returned to your paypal/bank account? If so, if I'm reading this right, you have the product, he doesn't have his money. That seems fairly straightforward. Give him his money. If the money is still out of your paypal account, try to contact them directly (not ebay) and see if a refund is coming. If it is, go ahead and send the money to the seller again. If paypal says that things are all paid up and no money is coming back to you, tell the seller to take a hike. Again, on the surface, it sounds like you have the product, and the seller doesn't have his money due to paypal fuckery.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 18:10 |
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CzarChasm posted:Here's my first question: Has the money, in fact, been returned to your paypal/bank account? If so, if I'm reading this right, you have the product, he doesn't have his money. That seems fairly straightforward. Give him his money. Yes, I got the money back to my bank account. I'm just wondering why he didn't claim the money or resolve whatever issues he had with Paypal in the first place. Will it cause any problems to make a payment without ebay? I won't get any "Express Checkout Payment Sent (Unique Transaction ID #itemid)" and "Shopping Cart Contents" data when using Paypal directly so the payment can't be linked to the product I bought :/ I'll just pay the dude again to his other (why have multiple?) paypal account and hope there won't be any further complications.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 18:32 |
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Is there a way to train myself to like seafood? I grew up my whole life hating seafood. Fish, shellfish, anything that came from the sea, I can't stand the smell and taste of it, and they all give me the gag reflex, but it certainly can look delicious. I'm pretty sure it is not all in my head, because I have accidentally eaten seafood without knowing, and I knew something tasted wrong with it. I've eaten anchovies on a pizza in the dark, and I've mistaken fish for chicken a few times on occasion, and I just knew something went horribly wrong in my mouth. It sucks because I feel like I'm missing out on a large amount of cuisine out there. Is it possible to make myself gradually like seafood, or am I hardwired this way and just screwed out on a lot of seemingly delicious food?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 21:46 |
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Maybe start with something that doesn't have a strong fishy taste? I was much like you when I was growing up in that I really didn't like any seafood at all. I enjoy a lot of different kinds now, though I still don't do shellfish. Try some salmon some time--not the canned stuff, a fresh/frozen filet. It can be a little pricey depending on where you live and the season, so it might be something you have a bite of from a friend's plate at a restaurant or something rather than something you drop a bunch of money on only to find you can't finish it.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 22:12 |
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Yoshi Jjang posted:Is it possible to make myself gradually like seafood, or am I hardwired this way and just screwed out on a lot of seemingly delicious food? Certainly is. Studies seem to suggest we are more likely to enjoy foods we are familiar with, so if you eat something regularly, over time you'll come to like whatever it is. Also, amazingly, if your mother ate strong flavoured food when she was pregnant with you, you'll like those flavours too. There was an interesting BBC doc (Horizons) recently which discussed exactly this. You can find it on iPlayer here and on youtube (while you can): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8qdmBEF-Hk
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 22:16 |
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If I cancel my Audible account can I still listen to my backlog?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 22:20 |
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Yoshi Jjang posted:Is there a way to train myself to like seafood? Do you not like shrimp or scallops? Mussels? I've found that shrimp don't have much of a "seafoody" flavor to them and are better at picking up the flavors of what they are cooked with. Is it entirely based on flavor and not texture? I have some issues eating a few foods based entirely on how they feel in my mouth, and I could understand someone being put off by the texture of a scallop, shrimp, or mussel. What I would suggest would be preparing a dish containing either shrimp, scallops, or mollusks yourself, in whatever style of cuisine is your favorite. If you enjoy asian, a simple stir fry of shrimp, scallops, and veggies in soy sauce, orange juice, and ginger is very simple to prepare and very difficult to gently caress up. If you go to a good fishmonger or grocer, you can purchase the shrimp already peeled and de-veined, so you can avoid that since it's a pain in the rear end. edit: do not purchase frozen shrimp or scallops as they always tend to taste a little off and have a chewier texture. WHEEZY KISS A DUDE fucked around with this message at 22:49 on Apr 2, 2013 |
# ? Apr 2, 2013 22:47 |
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I have a 2011 Cruze, and recently rented a new Focus. Both have the door lock button on the center console rather than the armrest as in previous cars. Is this a new trend, or just something Ford and Chevrolet have done recently? What's the reasoning behind it, if any?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 22:56 |
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Yoshi Jjang posted:Is it possible to make myself gradually like seafood, or am I hardwired this way and just screwed out on a lot of seemingly delicious food?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 23:05 |
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2 questions: If you are lying next to someone facing each other is it bad to inhale when they exhale? I was thinking if you exhale at the same time then inhale at the same time you are both inhaling the exhale. Are you inhaling all the carbon dioxide they exhale since you are in such close quarters? I saw two male ducks trying to have sex with a female duck, they were almost drowning her so I waked over and waved my arms to scare them so they would let her up for air. Can ducks hold their breath under water for long periods of time? I see this a lot on campus during the spring, and I have seen a few dead female ducks during mating season, and I guess I am trying to stick up for the lady ducks. Should I just leave them alone?
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 23:07 |
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RebBrownies posted:2 questions: You breath out enough oxygen/etc and mixing with the air around you it wouldnt be a problem.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 23:18 |
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RebBrownies posted:If you are lying next to someone facing each other is it bad to inhale when they exhale? I was thinking if you exhale at the same time then inhale at the same time you are both inhaling the Yes that is bad, but not normally dangerous, this will lead to elevated CO2 levels for you both and if carried on for a while you'll feel how you do when you hold your breath and need to breathe, however this instinct will save you and you won't die. If you were to do this with a baby or pet they would almost certainly die, 18 children died from this form of asphyxia last year in the US.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 23:19 |
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RebBrownies posted:I saw two male ducks trying to have sex with a female duck, they were almost drowning her so I waked over and waved my arms to scare them so they would let her up for air. Can ducks hold their breath under water for long periods of time? I see this a lot on campus during the spring, and I have seen a few dead female ducks during mating season, and I guess I am trying to stick up for the lady ducks. Should I just leave them alone? Ducks can hold their breath for a while, but nothing spectacular, and they can drown accidentally while mating. The whole Mallard gender dynamic thing is sort of upsetting if you're feeling empathetic. But it's just ducks being ducks.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 23:30 |
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Yoshi Jjang posted:Is there a way to train myself to like seafood? I am in the same boat. Every now and then I'll try a bite of fish or shrimp or whatever, but 9 times out of 10 it will just make me shudder. The only things I've had a second taste of in recent years were mussels cooked in white wine and some fried shrimp (I think) in a Vietnamese restaurant in Berlin... And in both cases the other flavors were strong enough to overpower the seafoody taste. I feel bad, because it's healthy and I'm missing out on lots of stuff, but the situation hasn't really changed much in 31 years.
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# ? Apr 2, 2013 23:42 |
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Fire Safety Doug posted:The only things I've had a second taste of in recent years were mussels cooked in white wine and some fried shrimp (I think) in a Vietnamese restaurant in Berlin... And in both cases the other flavors were strong enough to overpower the seafoody taste. The best advice I could give is try grilled or baked seafood instead. Tuna filets have a mild, meaty flavor and a sort of tough texture, it's probably the most similar thing to land fare I can think of and it's pretty different from canned tuna. Grilled shrimp is basically chicken from the water. Salmon is much more flavorful, on top of being easy to get and having a ton of seasoning options. Don't buy "smoked salmon" unless you know what you're doing, and I'd recommend getting a fresh cut since the vacuum packed stuff is all over the map quality-wise.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 00:09 |
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Crankit posted:Yes that is bad, but not normally dangerous, this will lead to elevated CO2 levels for you both and if carried on for a while you'll feel how you do when you hold your breath and need to breathe, however this instinct will save you and you won't die. If you were to do this with a baby or pet they would almost certainly die, 18 children died from this form of asphyxia last year in the US. Is this a joke answer? Exhaled breath is almost the same as inhaled breath in terms of gas composition. It looks like a single "breath" of air could be used 4 or more times before being too saturated with C02. Since gases mix freely though, breathing in someone's exhale would never be an issue other than cases where your both in a small airtight box, and even though it doesn't seem like it would kill you any faster. Wikipedia posted:The air we inhale is roughly composed of (by volume): Xenoborg fucked around with this message at 00:56 on Apr 3, 2013 |
# ? Apr 3, 2013 00:52 |
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I will second both salmon and tuna. Salmon baked with lemon and dill is incredibly tasty and got my girlfriend from "I don't like seafood" to "salmon is goddamn delicious." Tuna steaks are a great fish as well. Very fast to sear up in a pan and very tasty with a minimum of spices or condiments. That is, if you enjoy tuna to begin with. I find that many people who don't like seafood still like tuna, interestingly enough. Things like crab, shrimp, mussels and such are all much more seafoody and harder to take when you're iffy on the seafood thing. You can also try a mild whitefish like Tilapia, since you can cram it full of other flavors you like and still be eating fish.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 00:54 |
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WHEEZY KISS A DUDE posted:edit: do not purchase frozen shrimp or scallops as they always tend to taste a little off and have a chewier texture. Scallops too (sea and bay.) edit: try fried seafood to get into it. If you don't like it fried you'll never like it prepared any way. randyest fucked around with this message at 01:18 on Apr 3, 2013 |
# ? Apr 3, 2013 00:57 |
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hooah posted:I have a 2011 Cruze, and recently rented a new Focus. Both have the door lock button on the center console rather than the armrest as in previous cars. Is this a new trend, or just something Ford and Chevrolet have done recently? What's the reasoning behind it, if any? I'm not sure if it's becoming more common in general or just on Chevy/Ford models, but the reasoning behind it is that the center console is less likely to be impaired in an accident. Side impact crashes may render the buttons ineffective, which makes getting an injured person out of the vehicle more complicated.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 01:19 |
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Fishchat: Rather than easing in with battered/baked/tasteless fish, try going to a good sushi place and get the widest variety of sea-things. The biggest combination of stuff you can afford. Be adventurous and pay attention to all the different flavors going on. And enjoy it; you'll feel nourished but not stuffed afterward. You won't love everything but quality and variety will guarantee you find one new favorite. You like pickled herring, canned anchovies, smoked salmon? I love those, but I totally understand if somebody hates them. They're mad fishy. But there's nothing fishy at a good sushi joint except the roe. Fishy fish is fishy cause it isn't fresh.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 01:48 |
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I read an article recently about some sort of website or app that would allow you to enter in pictures of yourself (giving you guidelines to follow) every day so you could track your progress in fitness, gaining/losing weight etc. does anyone know what I'm thinking of? I can imagine there might be more than one of this sort of thing out there.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 02:15 |
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Mescal posted:Fishchat: I think this is the best answer. I find that most people hate fish because it's rarely made "right" (over cooked, over seasoned, etc) and/or certain common types. I hate salmon, oysters, muscles, clams, and a couple others (even fish and chips because it was made terrible) so I decided seafood wasn't for me. I decided to try tuna tartar and was amazed and then I moved on to sushi because the quality of the seafood was always amazing (you get what you pay for though). (still don't like the ones I mentioned but eat seafood all the time.)
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 02:22 |
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I had to go to the emergency room a while back. I've received two bills. One is from the hospital, and the description of the charge on that bill is "emergency department charges." The other bill is from "[NAME OF MY HOSPITAL] Emergency Physicians," and the description of the charge on that bill is "emergency department visit." The second bill lists the name of a doctor who I did not see while I was at the emergency room. I'm assuming it's the doctor who looked at my x-rays and signed off on whatever the nurse practitioner told me. Why do I have two bills? Giant Squid fucked around with this message at 03:58 on Apr 3, 2013 |
# ? Apr 3, 2013 03:44 |
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Giant Squid posted:I had to go to the emergency room a while back. I've received two bills. One is from the hospital, and the description of the charge on that bill is "emergency department charges." The other bill is from "[NAME OF MY HOSPITAL] Emergency Physicians," and the description of the charge on that bill is "emergency department visit." The second bill lists the name of a doctor who I did not see while I was at the emergency room. I'm assuming it's the doctor who looked at my x-rays and signed off on whatever the nurse practitioner told me. You may have seen a PA or NP for the doctor and you're being billing the name of the actual physician? When I've been to the ER I've always received a separate bill for the physician and for the ER itself. If you're not sure though, call and check - I'm hearing so many stories of people just accepting their medical bills not checking everything, and being charged for services they didn't even receive.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 04:12 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 03:22 |
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Miranda posted:You may have seen a PA or NP for the doctor and you're being billing the name of the actual physician? When I've been to the ER I've always received a separate bill for the physician and for the ER itself. If you're not sure though, call and check - I'm hearing so many stories of people just accepting their medical bills not checking everything, and being charged for services they didn't even receive. Thanks. I hadn't been to the emergency room in over a decade, so I wasn't sure what was going on. This is a really annoying situation. I had a fall at work, but felt perfectly fine. Several coworkers told me to go to the emergency room so that I would have documentation in case it turned out that I actually had been injured. I went to the ER, I got an x-ray, the LP told me I was fine, and I went home. Total cost to find out that I was just as fine as I felt? Roughly $1700.
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# ? Apr 3, 2013 04:17 |