Vegan_Joe

joined 5 months ago
[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 1 points 1 hour ago

I am currently finishing the Ellsworth translation of The Three Musketeers and it is phenomenal.

I believe I read the Buss translation of The Count of Monte Cristo years ago. For a book so long, it only felt like a couple hundred pages.

Both have kept me captivated, to the point that I searched lemmy to see if any similar books had been discussed. The Musketeers certainly feels more lighthearted and less consequential, but still difficult to put down.

If you have any suggestions for a next read, I'd love to hear suggestions!

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 26 points 3 hours ago

Same bitrate, file size, and metadata (with my tags still included), along naming schemes and occasional misspellings.

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 41 points 4 hours ago (5 children)

Many of the songs I ripped and shared via Napster in the late 1900's continued to appear on legitimate platforms years later.

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 7 points 4 days ago

Holy smokes! I see his online persona so often that I forgot he had a pen name!

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 12 points 4 days ago

"No man ever steps in the same river twice". Everything flows.

Similarly, impermanence is a fundamental aspect of reality, and fighting it ultimately results in feeling things are unsatisfactory in some way.

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 19 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Here's the author Jason Pargin riffing on the topic of nostalgia , and the key takeaways for him are that:

  • Nostalgia is toxic because it is the intense grasping for something that is definitionally forever outside of your reach
  • Nostalgia is a false rose-colored filter to view things through.

That said, I have a penchant for sentimentality, and fall victim to nostalgia at every given whim I get, especially when visiting my parents' house where I grew up.

I love to allow myself to be transported to the viewpoint of my younger self, which I feel I have lost some connection to.

I often find I was stronger and more worthy than I gave myself credit for.

If only I could properly translate that into the current moment, it would remove a lot of self-doubt that holds me back from living with confident authenticity.

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

PeerTube Link.

I am new to PeerTube, so hopefully this works

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 12 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

This topic is always at the forefront of my mind.

I am in education, surrounded by students aged 5 to 15, and I don't feel like my aging process would have been so pronounced this past decade had it not been juxtaposed against a setting of perpetual youth.

The curriculum demands "college and career readiness", but I believe the biological imperative at that age range is really focused on social and emotional development; students figuring out what life is about, and what directions they want to grow.

It forces a perspective on all the adults to consciously consider what aspects of life are genuinely important, and what skills and lessons to impart; which inevitably leads to self-reflection.

I quit skateboarding years ago, though I still felt youthful. A skateboarder at heart, work, education, and pursuit of vice all got in the way at the end of the day when I would normally grab my board.

The self-discipline and mindset of skateboarding transferred to a number of other skills I developed in the interim, and they have all served me well. It was as if I was cashing in on my youth.

Then, about a year ago, I quit drinking. Oddly enough, it feels as if it has accelerated the aging process. Though I have more energy, it makes me feel a bit rigid, having removed a lubricant that protected me from the coarseness of life.

Coincidentally, or perhaps not, around the same time I picked up skateboarding again. It feels as if, having sacrificed the drink, I've been gifted a piece of my youth back.

I don't know how long my old body will allow it to continue, but I will wring every ounce of joy out of it while I still can!

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 1 points 1 week ago

Another thought I had is, doesn't the kingpin add another point of stability/lock during smiths/feebles? Whereas if only the hanger touches the rail it's more prone to slide out of it?

I can see that being the case on ledges, but on round bars I could see the kingpin getting in the way and decreasing stability

[–] Vegan_Joe@piefed.world 7 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

I used to love Grind Kings with their inverted kingpin back in the day. They would inevitably loosen after skating a while, but I've heard they worked that out.

Aesthetically, inverted kingpins still look silly to me on anything other than Grind King.

I now skate Aces because I love the turn. They are squirlier than Indies, and have very little bite (though I've heard the new Grind Kings are almost impossible to wheel bite on).

Having skated mainly Indies, Ventures, and Aces lately, the smith and feeble issue is worked out within the first 5 minutes of trying a few grinds. So, it's pretty much a non-issue, and not exactly a selling point for me.

That said, Dan Corrigan kind of has me sold on trying out the new Grind Kings.

 

I can't imagine how difficult of a decision it was this year. There were so many worthy contenders.

I personally would have named Tom Schaar SOTY, and Joslin's tre flip down El Toro has the TOTY.

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