I have got to the point now, on my days off, I constantly feel like I should be doing something. Also, when you work that much, you have a ton of stuff that doesn't get done, so that 1 day, I really should be cleaning, doing laundry, and grocery shopping, but I just don't care to do it.
Right now I have half a box of cereal, a half kicked gallon of milk, a can of soup, and some frozen chicken patties in my fridge. I have not a single care to go shopping. Way too tired. This isn't mentioning, I should be looking for a new job. Don't have the desire to do that either.
This is how I am as well. Get home and don't want to do anything. I have 4 more production Saturday's coming up, I like that I get time and a half for OT, but I don't have time to do anything.
__________________ "I don't know what the stronger emotion would be, the joy of winning or the pain of losing"-Sidney Crosby.
This is how I am as well. Get home and don't want to do anything. I have 4 more production Saturday's coming up, I like that I get time and a half for OT, but I don't have time to do anything.
working 6 days a week was the worst. I was useless on my sundays off. So glad I'm about to be back to working a teacher schedule even with summer school or whatever I'll do this year, its just such a good consistent schedule.
Hey, everyone. A few months ago I posted about my acceptance into a program located in Moscow/Saint Petersburg, and I recently just received my International Student Identity Card (ISIC). However, I may have a problem.
My name is Douglas, yet the identity card reads "Dooglas". Should I ignore this and assume it's the Russian name for Douglas (which I read online it loosely may be) or bring this up to my professor? I don't want to look like an idiot.
My Russian visa, passport, regular university ID, and other information all use Douglas.
This probably sounds petty, but I've been told numerous times how difficult it can be in Russia when there's even a minuscule suspicion of inaccuracy.
Last edited by Iggy Smalls: 01-25-2013 at 12:21 AM.
According to the Danish government my name is Kenn.
My name is not Kenn.
__________________
“The most terrifying fact about the universe is not that it is hostile, but that it is indifferent. If we can come to terms with this indifference and accept the challenges of life within the boundaries of death, our existence as a species can have genuine meaning and fulfillment. However vast the darkness, we must supply our own light.” - Stanley Kubrick
Hey, everyone. A few months ago I posted about my acceptance into a program located in Moscow/Saint Petersburg, and I recently just received my International Student Identity Card (ISIC). However, I may have a problem.
My name is Douglas, yet the identity card reads "Dooglas". Should I ignore this and assume it's the Russian name for Douglas (which I read online it loosely may be) or bring this up to my professor? I don't want to look like an idiot.
My Russian visa, passport, regular university ID, and other information all use Douglas.
This probably sounds petty, but I've been told numerous times how difficult it can be in Russia when there's even a minuscule suspicion of inaccuracy.
I am pretty sure the international student identity card is meaningless and nobody will look at it. I had one when I went to Spain (or maybe both Spain and Costa Rica) and I never used it. If I recall right it was supposed to be used in practice primarily as a thing to get you discounts, but I never used it. And as a piece of identity, your passport/visa are the only things that you need.
Last edited by Florentino Ariza: 01-25-2013 at 10:41 AM.
3 day weekend for me now. No work today due to a dye in a stamping press being broke. No work tomorrow bc it's worse than they thought and have to fly it in from Japan. Paycheck in 2 weeks isn't going to look that good lol.
3 day weekend for me now. No work today due to a dye in a stamping press being broke. No work tomorrow bc it's worse than they thought and have to fly it in from Japan. Paycheck in 2 weeks isn't going to look that good lol.
Thank God that it's allowed - no, my God given right by the Constitution, to have more fire power in my apartment than the entire army of The Seychelles.
I met an old Danish couple in the airport yesterday while waiting for a delayed flight. The guy was pretty cool. But his old lady kept talking to me like I was mentally challenged and incredibly simple. She started drawing a map to show me where Denmark is. You know, since it is impossible for an American to have any sense of geography. She was genuinely shocked that I knew Copenhagen is the capital, haha.