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ragsy:

hey btw, maybe you should have a regularly updated backup of all your digital files. i’m not going to get into the discourse around physical vs cloud backups, but just. something.

drives can fail, devices can break or get lost or get stolen, malware can happen, data can get corrupted. if the only copy of a file (photos. drawings. writing. game saves. software license keys. anything.) is on exactly one device or uploaded to a social media website, you should have it backed up somewhere else too.

rubinaito-inactive:

foldingfittedsheets:

kooldewd123:

thejakeformerlyknownasprince:

sarifel-corrisafid-ilxhel:

kooldewd123:

kooldewd123:

actually the craziest impact animorphs has had on me is that i never really got an urge to eat cinnamon buns from reading them BUT the phrase “the refreshing beverage known as vinegar” has forced its way into my head every other week for years to try and convince me it would be a good idea to chug a whole glass of it

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tyhe voices in my head are gettinh louder

Vinegar is what we used to use as the acid in our sodas before we switched to Carbonated Water in the 19th century, and vinegar-based sodas trace their roots all the way back to the Bronze Age Meditteranean! The Romans called it Posca! The Ottomans adopted it from the Romans and called it Sharab, which means “Drink”, and then American colonists acquired the recipe from the Ottomans in the 17th century and changed the name to Shrub!

There’s a famous example of Posca that most people misremember because we don’t drink Vinegar much anymore. If you’re familiar with the Crucifixion of Jesus in the Bible, you probably remember the bit about the Roman soldier offering Jesus a sponge full of vinegar to drink. Most people think the Roman dude was mocking Jesus, but that’s wrong. That was a sponge full of Posca. The Roman dude was like “Well this sucks. Want a Sprite?”

…Fun fact, I know this because the phrase “Refreshing Beverage known as Vinegar” got stuck in my head one night at work, and I started googling “Does anybody drink vinegar”. I had to know. It turns out the answer is yes! And you can still find vinegar-based soft drinks today! Switchel is a vinegar-and-ginger drink you can find at some bars in the US, and it goes back to pre-carbonated soft drinks.

Also, I know several people who drink pickle juice regularly, and white vinegar is a key component of pickle juice! So that’s also where vinegar as a drink can pop up in your day to day life.

There’s also a trendy New Age beverage called fire cider that’s literally just vinegar, cinnamon, spice, and pretensions. RIP Ax, you would’ve loved the fire cider craze.

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op here. imagine how i feel. i’ve been dealing with this propaganda in my notifications all week.

Alright so one of my past jobs was working at an on tap place called Oil and Vinegar store. It’s supposed to be for salad dressings and stuff. People would bring in their bottles and we’d fill them up.

Vinegar is basically just made from fruit sugars so we had. The most. Amazing vinegars. There’s this one made with mango pulp that I straight up would have just drunk but if you add it to soda water it was truly the most decadent beverage imaginable. So there’s like passion fruit, raspberry, elderflower- just every wonderful sharp flavor imaginable.

We had pregnant ladies who’d buy several bottles at a time because it’s really great for nausea.

What I’m saying here is that Ax wasn’t wrong at all, that dude knew what was up even if he was probably chugging boring household white vinegar.

The things I learn on this godforsaken website.

weedstoner:

I think that learning how to deescalate conflicts between children is a really useful skill to have, even if you don’t have and don’t plan on having children, because you will inevitably have to use those skills to deescalate conflicts between grown adults as well. generally you should kind of expect that, as a calm rational adult, you’ll have to parent other strangers from time to time. this is part of living in society.

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