I haven’t found anything like that on Lemmy. I recently got into meetup.com though.
The same for me (but 8 hour workday). Honestly, I couldn’t do the job if the working non-stop days were the default. I am wasted after such a high-stress day, so I need it to fluctuate. I also don’t feel bad on days where I do less, because I know I do a 110% on the other days. A workday is simply too long to be productive the whole time and the workload usually varies.
I can’t see the whole plant and I could be wrong, but you could have a variegated Monstera on your hands.
https://thursd.com/articles/monstera-deliciosa-albo-variegata-the-most-expensive-plants-in-the-world
My own Monstera is doing well, and I don’t water it too often. Usually once a week and limited. But I have the feeling that all plants are a little different. It could also lack nourishment.
I know it’s a joke and I appreciate the meaning of the original comment, but I don’t think you need to constantly challenge yourself to enjoy life. Sometimes it’s ok to sit back and enjoy what you have and what you know. Just as long as you don’t settle and forget to be open to new things that could enrich that life.
Oh this is a great one. I was once in a job, where we were introduced to a new system that was designed to count successes. The problem was, that it was a job where we worked with people and everything we did couldn’t be quantified. The new system only put value on what could be counted so 80% of our work became invisible and “worthless”. Great times.
Yeah, I mean, I’m not the most active, but I made a sublemmy (I’m still not sure about the naming convention here lol) and that’s something I never did on Reddit, because everything was usually already there in some form. I also did it to contribute, because I know that us being active actually counts for something. On Reddit I could go months without posting or commenting. So yes, I’m definitely more active and it feels like you are actually engaging with other people and not just consuming content.
Interesting question, I hadn’t thought about that. I assume they mean dingos.
"Australia’s Indigenous community has had a long relationship with dogs, dating back to the dog’s ancestor, the dingo. Dingo fossils in Australia date back thousands of years, and the first British settlers in 1788 recorded dingoes living with Indigenous Australians"
https://outbacktails.com/blogs/news/the-important-role-dogs-play-in-indigenous-communities-celebrating-naidoc-week-2022
And dingos are a dog breed
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dingo