everyone i know in their late 20s is having an existential crisis because we skipped our mid 20s in the pandemic. relationships fast-tracked, careers faltered, we lost those core identity-building years and now we feel like 23-year-old brains in bodies approaching 30
Nope. Women are generally hypergamous and tend to date/marry upwards. Female doctors sit at the pinnacle of the intellectual pyramid, and the pool of men at or above that is quite small.
It's either fellow doctors, engineers/lawyers/b/men doing quite well financially, or none.
Major cheat code for life: Be fully where your feet are. When you're at work, work. When you're with family, be with family. When you're resting, rest. Most people are physically present and mentally everywhere else.
@cra46159@Rossva1189 You don’t have humidity. I don’t know why we are still continuing this argument of other countries versus UK heat.
Humid heat stops your body cooling down, it is much more dangerous.
@enterenity I grew up in the foster system, I was supposed to have an education plan in place to help support me with the decisions of GCSEs and A-levels.
At 29, I am only now studying medicine because of the decision-making (or lack there of) at age 16. It has been incredibly difficult.
we live on a planet where trees warn each other of danger through a fungal network. Where octopuses dream.
Where elephants return to the bones of the deceased and stand over them in silence. Where bees use dance to communicate where to fly and where the flower is.
Where crows remember the faces of people who were cruel to them and pass this memory to their children.
Where ants build cities. Where cats purr at a frequency that accelerates the healing of bones.
Where, after a forest fire, the first thing the earth does is grow flowers.
@Deano13131373@macka66926 I rent a flat in London, cheapest I found was £2100, in Zone 6, after flat hunting for 6 months with every flat being offered up to someone else BEFORE I had a chance to view it.
The NHS is bloated with employees who are neither capable nor willing to make competent clinical decisioms. The institution which exists solely to attend to patients is paralysed and leeching money to superfluous staff, at expense of those who can deliver competent healthcare.