• Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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    6 months ago

    I have decided today is the day to buy a lottery ticket (an event that only happens once every few years). If I win 100 million in Poweball tonight I will buy all DT pets a treat. Plus some extra termites for Nellie.

  • CEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    My phone stopped recording data from my watch. So I played around with the both of them and now it’s working. I did technology and I’m very proud of myself because I didn’t get angry or throw anything.

    • Electronic_Owl@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      After years on pre-paid, I got a new phone on a plan yesterday. The initial setup went smoothly, settings and security all good , but I’ve spent the whole morning (and most of last night actually) having to re-login and setup most of my apps again. Thank dog for password managers, I would have been stuffed if I had to try and remember them all or rely on various scribbled post-it notes. What watch do you have?

        • calhoon2005@aussie.zone
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          6 months ago

          My 245 music has done that a few times. Currently it’s forgotten that a button press on my headphones is supposed to pause the track…

    • just_kitten@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Oh man, that really sucks - of all days!! Please don’t beat yourself up though, as hard as it feels to think right now that there’s always other jobs, you only have one body. You did the right thing to look after yourself, who knows it could’ve been a worse outcome if you tried doing the interview while in great pain. I hope these guys understand and give you a chance or that something else comes up.

    • Diffuser5593@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      I mean if they’re reacting poorly to a genuine reason for cancelling, then maybe it’s for the best. Seems they’re showing you what it would be like to work there. Remember that you’re also interviewing them.

  • Gibsonisafluffybutt@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    Crawled out of bed to make dinner, and heading straight back. Of all the days to get a migraine…

    I told the interviewer an incident had occured at work blah blah but they didn’t care.

    Ah well.

    Hasn’t stopped Gibson hassling me for treats though

  • StudSpud The Starchy@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    Been so tired this week, went to bed at 9.30pm last night and I’m still so tired. I blame COVID from last week; not positive anymore but I must have a sleep debt or something.

    Mickey woke me up by pouncing on my head and taking some of my hair with him. Love that asshole.

  • Ntcc661@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    Does anyone here have a recommendation a psychologist in the Monash Council area?

    GP is happy to give me a referral but needs a name.

    I need help with stress, anxiety & depression. Trying to avoid meds if possible. Need to get on top of this.

    Thanks for anything & everything.

  • Mittens_meow@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    We have little snow? peas growing !! Not sure how to tell when they are ready to eat. Still waiting for onion, garlic and spinach to sprout. Cauli, radish and carrot are all growing nicely.

    It’s my therapeutic veggie garden.

    • Thornburywitch@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Snow peas are ready to eat whole when you can juuuusssst see/feel the tiny little peas inside the pod. And can be eaten at any time after that until the pods dry up and go crispy, but you have to shell them at that end of the season. Jelly. Mine don’t grow over winter dammit.

      • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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        6 months ago

        Mine should grow over winter, but have so many critters eager to eat them that the plants often don’t get established. I planted some seeds a while ago, I need to go out and see if I have any that managed to sprout. I’m definitely a long way from actual pods even if they have survived.

    • Baku@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      I had a bad dream about people dying. Not so much a nightmare, more just a random, out of the blue, sad dream about someone dying 🫤

      • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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        6 months ago

        I had a dream that I bought a house which was perfect, except for the fact that it was in USA and the front yard was decorated in red, white and blue with multiple American flags. I was worrying the neighbours would be upset when I removed them. Then for some reason I was in a cemetery across the road from the house, which was very busy with multiple funerals and some sort of market/day of the dead festival event happening.

          • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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            6 months ago

            It was an improvement on my standard dream of random things stopping me from getting to work on time and also preventing me from calling in to let them know. They tend to feature lots of ludicrous scenarios. In one my taxi turned into a donkey for some reason, which was being held up by roadworks. In another the car I was in was unable to complete a river crossing, forcing me to swim and then get lost in a jungle. American flags and funerals is definitely a lot better.

  • CEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    After today’s little win for me it got me curious to know what everyone’s strongest and weakest link in life is?

    Weakest link - technology and its lingo

    Strongest link - I can read and follow instructions well.

    • Gibsonisafluffybutt@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Weakest link : getting sick (no one to help me really and feeling very alone and isolated)

      Strongest link: will and determination (quitting the top 3 most addictive substances on earth by myself and making a somewhat normal life without giving up)

    • Thornburywitch@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Strongest : peopling. Also other species-ing. Mostly due to lots of practice. When I realised that tech was operated by people, a lot of things that were in the skills black hole suddenly became understandable and therefore doable. Weakest : I am the world’s WORST procrastinator. Particularly when it comes to my personal lifestyle. I really do have to prioritise life admin, and quite a lots of things are a lot further down the list compared to almost everyone else I know. Also not a film/movie/tv person - just the wrong format for me. When forced to watch a ‘show’, I have a strong temptation to heave half a brick through the screen. No matter what the show is. Haven’t actually done that yet, but give me time.

    • Seagoon_@aussie.zoneOP
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      6 months ago

      Weakest- ignorance of too many life skills and ignorance of too much life knowledge

      Strongest - I learn well

    • Catfish@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Strongest: I am creative, format near irrelevant I can and do make pretty stuff. [this is as much about a neat line of code as it is well turned hem]

      Weak: peopling, and pretending to be polite about it. Sometimes I just can’t.

      • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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        6 months ago

        I have managed to find myself one of the few jobs that allow you to deal with people and not be polite - in fact sometimes being abrupt and rude can be an advantage! Being able to cut people off and focus single mindedly on getting the information you need is an asset in emergency situations.

        • Catfish@aussie.zone
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          6 months ago

          Congratulations! Drilling to essentials that fast is a real skill. If I understand what you do do properly, the burnout rate is pretty terrible.

          Thank you 😻🚑

    • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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      6 months ago

      Strongest link - organisational skills & the ability to create systems

      Weakest link - social skills, including all abilities that allow me to be in positions where my strengths can be usefully employed ☹️

      • AJ Sadauskas @lemmy.ml
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        6 months ago

        Weakest points:

        There’s many.

        I’m atrocious at sports and physical activities. I’m not handy at all. There’s a lot of stuff, particularly in more advanced math and science, that I don’t know much about. I don’t watch much TV or many movies compared to most people, and end up with little to say when the topic comes up. I know nothing about cars.

        Strongest points:

        I’m modest enough not to mention them 😂

        • CEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zone
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          6 months ago

          If someone is talking about stuff I just nod and then they go “oh you know about that” and I go “nah. No idea”. Usually makes them laugh.

          • AJ Sadauskas @lemmy.ml
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            6 months ago

            If it’s a one-on-one conversation, I tend to ask questions about whatever it is.

            Unfortunately, this sometimes leads to them thinking I’m actually far more interested in learning about their GX-Holden-whatever than I really am, and they decide to tell me all about it next time we meet as well… 🙂

    • Llabyrinthine@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Oof…

      Weakest: Self-application (failure to capitalise on endless opportunities).

      Strongest: All-rounder (not sure if I would say quick study, but I do learn fast on the job).

      • CEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zone
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        6 months ago

        See I’m the opposite. I don’t particularly like social situations but they don’t bother me. With tech shit I can make things disappear and then I get asked what happened and I don’t fucking know.

  • Baku@aussie.zone
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    6 months ago

    When I first moved in, I thought the housemate was a little stuck up and a bit out of touch, but when we started speaking more I realised that we’ve actually had quite similar lives and we get along really really well. He didn’t grow up in the system, but he still got to “enjoy” a lot of the same things I did. Moving around a lot, changing schools more than yearly, etc etc. And knowing that he’s managed to get through it actually helped a lot with some of my deep seated fears about the future.

    These days we pretty much just talk shit about the system and people in the department, but it’s always nice talking to him. It’s a massive shame he’s moving out so soon, but he’s been here for longer than I was at the last place, so I can’t fault him for wanting to move on. If I was in his shoes I would too. I hope the next LT/mentor they’ve lined up is as easy to talk to and get along with

    • dumblederp@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      I went to eight primary/high schools and have lived at around 35 different places, the longest for eight years (where I was born).

      • Baku@aussie.zone
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        6 months ago

        I’m having trouble remembering every school I’ve been to, but I’ve been to at least 10 (+1 kindergarten, if you count that). I think you have me beat on houses, I’ve been in 20 or so

      • Baku@aussie.zone
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        6 months ago

        I’m not gonna go into details about the housemates situation because it’s not my place, but I moved around a lot mostly because of affordability. My mum was disabled, but according to Centrelink not disabled enough for the DSP, so we were just on regular jobseeker/family benefits. We lived in outer Melbourne (which would’ve probably been classified as country at the time) when I was born, but the landlord tried to double the rents when I was born on account of “children = mess”, which was probably illegal but whatever. We lived in a decent sized country town for a couple of years, but moved because of rents and such.

        We moved again to an absolutely tiny country town, but eventually the landlord decided to sell the house. This was the case with the next house, too. Probably went up for sale as some sort of attempt to bypass tenant protections, as the houses were both dumps and sold extremely cheaply, even for the time. The next house we moved because of extremely abusive neighbours. Next house was an emergency house for families facing homelessness, which we were only in for a couple of months. Then we moved to a housing commission flat (still in the country).

        Then I ended up in foster care with an abusive carer, so eventually the placement broke down and I was removed and placed in kinship with a family friend. Then I went back home. Then a couple years later I ended up in state care, was bounced to an emergency foster carer a fair ways away, then a few days later went to a contingency but slightly longer term foster carer place. Then a few weeks later I was moved into a contingency residential care house which was converted from a residential aged care place, they “matched” me to a “long term” Resi in the same town my mum was living in a few months later, but that broke down a couple days in and I was kicked out. They sent me a few hundred KMs into the city where I was placed in 2 different hotels. Then eventually I was moved into a long term contingency residential placement, then they finally matched me to the one I was in last. I did a 4 year stint there and Eve tually transitioned into a lead tenant placement (mostly independent living, but still under the purview of child protection) where I currently am.

        The longest I’ve ever lived at 1 house was at my last residential placement where I was for 4 years. School wise, I was still in primary school when I entered the last place which I moved to midway through year 6. Then I bounced between 3 different high schools while I was there. First I was at a flexible high school 30 mins away, but I left due to an incident that occured. I did school online for a while post COVID, but that broke down because they didn’t suit my needs, and then to an alternative school. Averaged out, I’ve changed schools something like every 9 months. But at a number of my state care placements, I hadn’t even been there long enough to be enrolled in a school. I’ve never stayed at one school for more than a year and a half or so (maybe 2, I’m having trouble remembering the dates from a couple of them)

        • Gibsonisafluffybutt@aussie.zone
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          6 months ago

          Thanks for sharing your story. I’ve got some similarities, but I think it’s really good you’ve got some stability at the moment.

          It’s hard to give advice without sounding like a fuck knuckle, but if I can say this:

          There are really good people out there. People that you might think of as family. It doesn’t always help ease the ache of what’s missing, but give it a chance.

          Sorry if that comes across oddly. It’s just been my experience as someone who had no one from age 14 onwards.

        • Jay Stephens@mastodon.social
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          6 months ago

          @Baku woah that’s an interesting backstory thanks. I was thinking like “me=unstable parents, him=military parents” level of detail lol.
          I was asking coz I’ve noticed that I (child of hippies, always movin’) have a lot in common with children of military folks (always posted elsewhere, always movin’), and wondered if you’d hit a parallel dynamic.

  • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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    6 months ago

    What a terrible shock, I did not win Powerball. At least I am not alone, no one else won either. Sorry pets, unfortunately you shall have to remain treatless ☹️

    • Nath@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      I didn’t win, either. Perhaps my odds of winning will improve slightly if I actually buy a ticket. But only very slightly.

      • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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        6 months ago

        I usually figure the chance of someone randomly giving me a winning ticket are not that different to the chance of winning by buying one, so I choose to save my money instead. But occassionally I feel I should buy a ticket, just in case all the laws of physics and mathematics are just for show and we are living in some Matrix like simulation or in a fake world created by some sort of deity, who has decided due to my absolute wonderfulness that I should be rewarded with riches the next time I buy a ticket. Every time I discover nope, the statistics were right.

        • Nath@aussie.zone
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          6 months ago

          You can beat those pesky statistics! You just need to increase your chances. A $27 Powerhit ticket for example increases your odds of winning from one in 134,490,400 to one in 45,379,620! You’re guaranteed the powerball. How awful would you feel to get all seven numbers and not the powerball.

          In fact, you could go all the way! Simply buy 45,379,620 powerhit tickets and you are guaranteed a Division one winning ticket. In fact, it’s so easy I’m amazed that nobody has thought of doing this before!

          • Rusty Raven @aussie.zoneM
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            6 months ago

            Amazing plan, I’ll do that for next week. All those people at work with their $50 a share syndicate and their “but you’ll feel so awful if we win” will be so jealous.