Its an extremely sad regression, and things are going to have to get a lot worse before they get better. Because unfortunately people usually won't take to the streets until things are really desperate.
wscholermann
I feel like at some point Australia has become a very soulless country of paying off a mortgage and that's about it.
Or people that are just more optimistic have them (whether the optimism is reasonable is a matter of opinion I suppose).
As much as I cherish my nephews and nieces, I myself could not in all good conscience bring a child into this toxic world.
I think once certain things are resolved which at this stage looks like will take six months to resolve it will be better.
Start again, shut the blinds, I swear the rhythm bout to save my life.....
It's weird. Sometimes I'm good for 12 months, then something yanks me back.
Sometimes I think about running away to a foreign country and starting again with a completely clean slate.
Circumstances of late have forced me to think about old jobs and the horrible things I went through and it's quite triggering.
"The real concern driving CEO resistance is the fact that remote work involves a previously unthinkable change in the way productive activity is structured and organised. If workers can do without the physical presence of managers, perhaps they donβt need managers at all, at least in the way they currently operate. The eagerness of CEOs and other senior managers to wish these changes away suggests that, at some level, they realise this."
Yes, it's all about optics.
Interesting. Well I just found out this guy has been scammed by a phillipino woman before. Guy bought the woman a farm in Thailand then she dumped him.
So this is actually round 2 for being scammed. At this point I want to believe it's some kind of mental illness.
Everyone is always so sad allegedly when someone dies. Were you there for them when they really needed it? Did you even pick up the phone?
All this talk about mental health is incredibly cheap.