erik111189

joined 1 year ago
132
Down and to right? (lemmy.world)
 

Charts are from 2018.

55
Up and to right! (lemmy.world)
 

Take this, doomers!

 

So far my list includes Comcast, EA, and Nestle. Tell me yours, and I'll help out.

[–] erik111189 2 points 1 year ago

Sonic Mania - Hydrocity Zone Act 2

[–] erik111189 2 points 1 year ago

Gonna go visit black canyon national park.

[–] erik111189 16 points 1 year ago (7 children)

I'm embarrassed to be American at this point... Republicans are literal fucking nazis, democrats continue catering to the whims of corporate lobbyist bribes, and corruption is everywhere. Nothing will change until the boomers start dying off ~2032, and that's assuming we can remain a democracy that long.

 

I'm a millennial with boomer parents, who are famous for their hands-off parenting approach. Just wondering.

[–] erik111189 5 points 1 year ago (6 children)

Did it hurt?

[–] erik111189 9 points 1 year ago

Sometimes the best decisions are made while intoxicated. Optimism overflow.

[–] erik111189 14 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I used to have ~8 beers daily. Felt terrible majority of the time. Now I workout 4 days a week and only drink 2 beers every Friday. It's great.

[–] erik111189 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

We're considering moving to Europe soon for a job opportunity, but moving away from family is the major downside.

 

I'm talking about life decisions that worked out perfectly and left you with no regrets. Here are mine:

  1. Quitting Facebook - I quit using facebook about 2 years ago. It's a toxic platform that destroys your privacy, worsens your mental health, and endangers democracies. Much happier since I quit, and no regrets at all. Talking to friends and family face to face or through text is way better.

  2. Quitting my old toxic, stressful job - I quit working at a top 500 software firm a while back and have been much happier ever since. There was little to no work/life balance, co-workers were extremely antagonistic, the work was amazingly both boring and stressful, and management didn't care about anything. Quit for another job that paid around the same with a much better culture. No regrets.

  3. Reading books - Books have completely re-shaped my world view, and I would be much worse off without them. Here is my list:

    • "The Better Angels of Our Nature," "Enlightenment Now," and "Factfulness" by Steven Pinker (first two) and Hans Rosling (last). The world is improving overall, not getting worse like the media makes it seem. Reading the facts convinced me it is logical to be an optimist.

    • "Ultralearning" by Scott Young and "A Mind for Numbers" by Barbara Oakley. Two books that teach the science of efficient learning. These books helped me understand the best strategies for long-term knowledge retention. Every public school in the world should be teaching the concepts in these books.

    • "The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing," "The Millionaire Next Door," and "Your Money or your Life," by Taylor Larimor, Cotter Smithand, and Vicki Robin (in that order). As well as various FIRE blogs. These books helped me learn the basics of personal finance, investing, and early retirement. Previously I thought that working until you die was an unavoidable fact of life. Reading about FIRE and smart money management made me question that assumption, and freed me from the shackles of corporate nonsense.

I'm interested in hearing what other people have to say. Give me what you've got.

[–] erik111189 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Sounds like I should give it a try. Thanks, everyone.

131
Anybody play Golden Sun? (self.retrogaming)
submitted 1 year ago by erik111189 to c/retrogaming
 

How is it?

[–] erik111189 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Have lemmy.world admins said anything about this yet at all?

[–] erik111189 38 points 1 year ago

Oversized trucks and new BMWs. Every fucking time...

[–] erik111189 4 points 1 year ago

I ended up buying a rice cooker, and plan on buying an e-reader. Thanks, everyone.

 

For me it has to be:

  1. Helix mattress ($1,217). Sleep is great.
  2. Home gym power cage & weights (~$1,000). Look good, feel good, get strong.
  3. Netgear Nighthawk AXE7800 ($339). No more random, annoying internet disconnects/slowness.
  4. Books ($0 @ library)
    • "Ultralearning" - Scott Young (how to learn efficiently)
    • "Enlightenment Now" - Steven Pinker (the world overall is improving)
    • "The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing" - Taylor Larimore (how to invest)
  5. PS5 ($500). So many great games like witcher 3, god of war, spiderman.

I'm searching for some more deep value purchases. Give me what you've got.

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