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#1
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Pierce Brosnan is the man.
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“The fundamental question is, will I be as effective as a boss like my dad was? And I will be, even more so. But until I am, it's going to be hard to verify that I think I'll be more effective.“- Little Carmine
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#2
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I fault him much more, it’s why I didn’t talk to him for nearly a decade. But I don’t hold her without any fault. It’s the partner’s responsibility to take care of themselves if remotely feasible | |||
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#3
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^
Otherwise if two can play at that game I’d be like “what’s the matter wifey? Don’t you like my personality? Wow, it’s not all about looks yknow, stop being so selfish and still have sex with me” | ||
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#4
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Ha, take that, Dad, who keeps telling me my knees will be shot by the time I’m 50…
“Surprisingly, they found no association between an increased risk for knee or hip arthritis and the number of years someone had been running, the number of marathons completed, their weekly running mileage, nor their running pace. Given the survey respondents’ wide range of weekly mileages, paces, ages and cumulative years spent running, the results could apply to average runners who never get close to marathon-level distance, the researchers said. “Runners should be encouraged by our results,” Tjong said. “They refute the current dogma that long-distance running predisposes an individual to arthritis of the hip and knee … “We’re often compared to being like a car,” Hartwell said. “If you liken people to cars, intuitively it makes sense that the more you use your joints, the more you’re going to wear them out. But the joint is really an active, living part of the body, almost like an organ. The “wear-and-tear” notion doesn’t account for the ways running can benefit joint health and potentially offset deterioration, said Jeffrey Driban, an osteoarthritis researcher at Tufts University who wasn’t involved in the Chicago Marathon study. The activity can improve muscle function around the joints and encourage the body to produce more of what’s called synovial fluid, a viscous liquid that lubricates the joints” | ||
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#6
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Yeah that’s bull shit dude I’ve been running a while and I’m 57 and Alaska’s cold hurts my joints like a mother fucker and my wife is fine (doesn’t run)
I’m 180ish lbs though. Maybe marathon runners are only 140-150 pounds and float like a feather
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God Bless Texas
Free Iran | ||
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#7
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It goes right back to how it was when the nerve was displaced. Freaks me out and makes me think I fucked it up again, but it’s just due to the cold | |||
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#8
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Sucks because I hate all other forms of cardio exponentially more than running
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God Bless Texas
Free Iran | ||
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#10
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Also, I think I could adapt to alaska for the perks but my wife did not enjoy having an Iranian community of precisely zero. It’s more likely we’d move to Vancouver than here since half of her family lives in Vancouver and the other half in Irvine, cali and the rest of mine lives in sydney and Canberra So while we’re still in Texas it’ll have to be running. Gonna try New Hampshire next year, but I think we’re going to run the same problem in that my wife will not enjoy being in a place with zero Iranians (not even sure why we’re going, I like the adventure and I welcome my wife letting me escape urban life which doesn’t really agree with me)
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God Bless Texas
Free Iran | |||
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