Free microsoft points generator download
OneNote
2012.07.10 16:31 hero0fwar OneNote
Join the /OneNote discord: https://discord.gg/qrzJT5xjk2 OneNote is now private supporting the protest for reddit limiting 3rd party apps. Welcome to /OneNote! This subreddit is dedicated to the discussion of the popular note-taking and organization software published by Microsoft. Pertinent stories, updates, or questions are always welcome here.
2013.03.20 03:29 evrydayzawrkday Microsoft Exchange Server
Microsoft Exchange Server subreddit. Post blog posts you like, KB's you wrote or ask a question. Open forum for Exchange Administrators / Engineers / Architects and everyone to get along and ask questions.
2008.03.09 20:50 Java News/Tech/Discussion/etc. No programming help, no learning Java
News, Technical discussions, research papers and assorted things of interest related to the Java programming language NO programming help, NO learning Java related questions, NO installing or downloading Java questions, NO JVM languages - Exclusively Java
2024.05.22 04:40 TheeGentlemanJoestar Haven't received OW coins?
I used my Microsoft rewards points to get the 200 overwatch coins and it's yet to be added to my account. I redeemed it two days ago. Anyone else experience this?
submitted by
TheeGentlemanJoestar to
overwatch2 [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:38 doomsenpai Who's the impostor?
2024.05.22 04:36 dark_stapler I've found one of the options bulls
I found 100% proof of who one of the bulls are on a short-term GME trade setup (not an investing entry point, but just a shor-term trade). It's Adam Khoo (source:
https://www.youtube.com/post/UgkxK_Q9qhR6d8LMXTlLKkULbwMbUOli9jqm ). Adam Khoo is a very experienced investor and teaches people about investing and trading for fun these days. He's created a variety of companies and made his fortunes long ago. He doesn't have a particular bias one way or another, as he's just interested in teaching and his family these days, instead of getting richer or taking over the world. I've watched him for about 5 years now, and can vouch for his authenticity.
It's very likely he has sent out a trade alert to his subscribers, and it's very likely a lot of his friends have also placed bullish trades on the current GME setup. Some of his friends are also extremely wealthy. Adam must have seen a bullish short-term trade setup on GME, and is so confident or interested about it he has now posted publicly about it.
Please keep in mind that Adam is a rather kind person, so don't go and post negative things on his content because he called GME a trash company. Adam and his group research stocks regularly, but they don't do deep dives on them like we do. We have extremely deep knowledge of GME, and modeled after RK's deep value strategy -- this is just a different strategy than Adam takes. He's very conservative, and built his wealth on conservative strategies. Adam will become bullish on GME fundamentals only when the quarterly reports start showing consistent profit growth. Don't shame him for this -- it's a valid point of view, just like our point of view is valid.
There's a lot of speculation about RK making bets on short term price action. I can tell you, these are false. If you actually watch RK content he specifically states, many times, that he doesn't like to predict short term price action, especially on GME. He prefers to get long-term securities (LEAP or stocks) and just wait out the short term noise. He didn't know what gamma squeezes were, and instead focused on his longer term play. It's not RK. He exercised all of his options upon expiry and is just sitting on his shares. He doesn't have another form of income to generate cash to make another play. His play is HODL.
submitted by
dark_stapler to
Superstonk [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:35 juniper-blossom [F4A] Medieval Arranged Marriage Roleplay
Hello fellow writers! I am once again on the hunt for a roleplay partner đ€
I want to do a medieval, arranged marriage roleplay where are characters are from rival nations, and perhaps even from different fantasy races. Enemies to lovers is one of my all time favorite plots.
I'd like the story to incorporate the differences between our character's cultures, have them drop their hatred and prejudices for one another, learn from the other and grow closer as their romance develops within their forced marriage.
Let's play up politics, love triangles, espionage, drama, life, death, magic, anything we can think of.
A little about me, I'm 30 female from the States. I've been roleplaying on and off for about 13 plus years. I'm semi to advanced literate, depending on the plot, the scene and my partner. I write mostly in 3rd person, I'm comfortable with themes that are đ romanticđ¶ in nature, and discord is my preferred platform for roleplaying. I prefer my partner to be 21 plus and also in the States, though I'm pretty flexible in that regard.
I do prefer stories that are long term, that can span over years of the character's lives with numerous plot points throughout. It always creates a more in depth story! I love chatting outside of the roleplay as well đ
I'm a mom to a one year old. My day job is very easy, so I'm free on and off for most of my working hours, evenings and the occasional middle of the night feeding lol I'm in desperate need for some creativity in my life
Please send me a message detailing some of your ideas for the story so we can discuss more. I really look forward to hearing from you! Let's get creative!
submitted by
juniper-blossom to
Roleplay [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:35 EclosionK2 The Horrify Film Festival Yxperience
The HRRFY.
Itâs the horror movie festival where something genuinely fucked happens every year. And I mean every year.
Like, there are some screenings that unleash hordes of bats while the movie is playing. You're free to leave whenever you want, but the movie will still play for 2 hours and 15 minutes.
Other screenings hire actors to turn at you and scream at some point in the movie. You have no idea when, or how many times.
It's a festival where the word "illegal" can't even begin to describe what happens. You'd only attend if you were a young, stupid edgelord like me who was trying to prove he was hardcore to his friends.
Trust me. DO NOT GO.
You have nothing to prove to anyone. Don't be stupid.
Wait for the lamer film versions to come out streaming. That's what everyone else does. They're neutered edits but they're fine.
All they lack is the real gleaming
thing everyone wants to see at HRRFY, but who cares. At least you donât get traumatized. At least youâre not risking your life.
Anyway, if you
really want to know what attending HRRFY is like. Iâll be quick and summarize the one screening I went to. It was the 20th anniversary, and I was lucky enough to get in.
***
I had signed up for the HRRFY mailing list, and joined the subreddit. Through a series of cryptic online emails I solved a sequence of riddles and was entered in the lottery for a HRRFY entry.
Lady Luck took a shine to me, because one day in my mailbox, I received a physical ticket. I had done it.
I was going.
The actual âticketâ was a black USB key that announced the location of the festival the night before (which I wonât disclose here) and it did force me to pay for a very expensive flight in order for me to make it on time.
You see, to prevent getting shut down, the location of HRRFY changes every year. Some years the local police have managed to stop it, but for the most part, authorities have given up. Whatâs the point of arresting or charging anyone, if all the organizers and attendees actually
want to be there?
Upon arrival, I had to pick between three participating theaters.
Based on title alone, I decided to go see
âMany Drowningsâ (directed by Oleksander GoĆaĆski.) It was in the theater that was furthest away from the downtown core, which meant it was likely the one where the
craziest shit was bound to happen.
Thatâs what I came here for right?
I lined up a solid two hours before the screening like everyone else. The entire line was jittering, just vibrating with excited twenty-somethings. Rumors flew left and right.
âI heard theyâre going to force everyone to take acid.â
âI heard an actorâs gonna run in and shotgun the ceiling.â
âI heard theyâre going to disappear like four more people this year. At this screening!â
Each year people disappeared. And each year the same people were
âfound.â And yes this is the worst part, and why should never, ever, ever go to this event.
Again I will repeat myself. DO NOT GO.
No one has ever truly gone 'missing' at HRRFY in any legal or physical sense, because every missing person always shows up a day later, convinced that they are fineârefusing to elaborate further.
There are some small support groups for people who have family members who had gone to HRRFY, and came back irrevocably changed after being
âfound.â These few unlucky people lose all semblance of personality. They donât want interviews, or help, or therapy, or contact of any kind. And they never, ever want to talk about what they saw.
Some HRRFY fans think that these
âfoundâ people were body-snatched. Cloned in a lab or replaced by a cyborg, or something stupid like that.
But I think thereâs a far simpler explanation. The
âfoundâ are still the same people. They're just terrified. They got shaken by something that shattered the foundation of their mind, body and soul. They got too scared.
They got HRRFYâd.
***
I should mention I had a cough the day I went. And I was worried my sickly appearance might give me trouble at the airport.
So I invested in an intense double N95 mask which I wore for the whole flight, and continued to wear even at the screening of â
Many Drownings.â It made my face hot and uncomfortable, but it still didnât stop me from yelling â
excuse me, excuse me!â as I ran to snag a seat in the back of the theater.
I always preferred sitting in the far back. You get a good view of the whole screen, and a good view of the whole audience.
Beside me sat a big dude named Sylvester, who apparently flew all the way from Australia to attend HRRFY.
âWorth the full Seventeen hours mate! Itâs gonna be epic!â he dropped a massive camping backpack beside me, which I assume contained all of his luggage.
The lights dimmed, and the production company logos started to play.
The whispering, giggling and suspense all stacked upon each other to create an electric feeling in the air. I was giddy. It's like the entire audience was embarking on a massive roller coaster.
The anticipation was the best part for sure. It might have been the only good part.
Then the movie started.
It was a wide shot of a gray, stormy sea. The waves were massive, and the thunderclouds were looming. There was no land visible in any direction.
All we could hear was the sound of waves foaming, swirling, and crashing over and over. Lightning crackled. Rain poured. The camera held perfectly still over this storm as if it was mounted on a perfectly hovering drone. A drone so resilient that it didnât waver at all.
I thought it had to be CGI.
The shot held like this for the next few moments. Everyone sat glued to their seats. Everyone was thinking the same thing.
Whatâs going to happen? How are they going to scare us? People chuckled. People cheered. People wanted to tease whatever was going to happenâto happen already.
But nothing did.
Five, ten, maybe fifteen minutes went by without any change. People started snoring.
I looked beside me and saw that Sylvesterâthe most excited audience member of them allâhad fallen totally asleep. The jet lag mustâve gotten to him.
Then I peered beyond the rest of the audience members and saw other people snoozing too. Heads were keeled over, some people were curled in their seats, some had even spilled out into the aisle and were dozing on the floor.
I looked above the bright screen, at the huge vents in the corner of the theater. I saw a faint white gas emerging from the vents.
Holy shit. What have we been breathing? I tightened the straps on my N95 mask, and made my breathing shallower.
The gas must have been pumping since the opening creditsâbecause how else would an audience of two hundred people all fall asleep?
As I moved my hand through the air in front of me, I could sense the thickness. It was definitely hazier than usual. I took the scarf off my neck and wrapped it around my mouth as well.
Then I spotted movement in front of the screen.
It was a tall blonde man, wearing a black trenchcoat and military-grade gas mask. Beside him arrived six hazmat suits who started pointing at various audience members.
I slunk in my chair, pretending to sleep like everyone else.
Two hazmats walked over to the front row and picked out a sleeping guy in flannel. They lifted flannel up, under the armpits and by his ankles, carrying him between them both like a hammock.
The hazmats walked back up to the stage, where the blonde leader inspected the flannel man and tapped his head. Something was approved?
The hazmats began to swing flannel back and forth, as if they were getting ready to toss him. Despite their masks, I could hear a very muffled, very distant countdown.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ â
OneâŠâ The flannel audience member was tossed into the screen.
I literally watched him fly into the image of stormy waves ⊠and
fallinto them. The flannel man sank into the gray water like a rock, leaving a few bubbles and foam. A wave came crashing down. All trace of him was gone.
What the fuck. All six hazmats began grabbing more audience members with much more urgency. It became a minute-long process where they would pick the sleeping person up, bring them beside the screen, and then swing-toss them into it.
How was this possible? I turned slightly to see if there was a projector above me, and realized there was none. Which meant maybe there was no screen on stage.
Which meant ⊠maybe it was a portal? I tried to wake Sylvester by shaking him. I pinched his leg and arm a bunch.
He was out cold.
The hazmats started grabbing audience members from the middle rows now. They were emptying the whole theater. What the hell was I supposed to do?
I waited until they grabbed another batch, only a few rows down from me. When all hazmats had their backs turnedâI broke into a run.
With my left arm, I tightly gripped my mask and scarf against my face, while my right arm vaulted me over seat after seat.
I had never breathed so hardâthrough so much fabricâin my life.
The hazmats all turned to me. âHey! Hey!â But their hands were full with their next victims.
I ran all the way down the aisle, to the big exit sign on the left. My heartbeat filled my head. My plan was to dropkick through the exit door.
I imagined myself breaking through like some flying gazelle.
I jumped.
I angled my kick.
It might as well have been a brick wall. I fell ass-first to the ground, followed by my head. Of course the door was locked.
Through a muffled mask I heard a sneering scoff.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â
Above me stood the one wearing a trenchcoat. I could see his piercing gray eyes through his gas mask.
I rolled aside and tried to run by him. He lifted a foot and tripped me without effort.
My forehead bashed into an empty seat. It dazed me.
The blonde leader bent down and grabbed me by the neck, tearing away my scarf and mask.
âNo! No!â
A sweet, ether-like smell filled my nostrils. I did my best to hold my breath, but I could already feel myself getting light-headed.
The other hazmats joined in, grabbing me from all sides. Even if I had the strength to struggle, there was no escape now.
Above me, all I could see was the dark theater ceiling, and some of the light behind me from the cinema screen.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ âNo. Please. Donât do thiââ
SPLASH.
I was plunged deep into cold, wet chaos. My head was completely underwater.
Gagging. Bubbles. Spinning.
I fought for dear life, dog-paddling like a maniac.
Churning. Freezing. Panic.
For a second, my head popped above the water. I inhaled all the air my lungs could muster. I stared across a vast, violent ocean.
An enormous thirty foot wave came in my direction.
My whole body lifted higher and higher as the wave approached. I did my best to tread water. It seemed to be working.
Then a series of smaller waves arrived and smacked my chest.
SPLASH.
Spinning. Kicking. Flipping.
My view alternated between the pitch dark ocean beneath me, and the moonlit night sky above.
Again I swam to the surface, popped my head out. Ravenously sucked in air.
There was a small lull in the water.
Around me I now registered the other theater goers. Most of them were lying face-down or sinking ⊠but a few were flapping about like me, fighting for their life.
And above all of us, a floating white
shape. It was painfully bright, I had to lift one hand to look at it.
My jaw dropped.
It was the movie screen, hanging completely still in the air. It showed a dark, empty theater. The exact same theater we all occupied moments ago.
It was tremendously high, above all of our heads. There was no way of reaching it.
Then I saw another thirty foot wave come our way. It grazed the bottom of the screen.
I knew what had to be done.
***
One of the theater goers happened to be on a college swim team. She was the first one able to traverse one of the giant waves and climb into the screen.
Once she was up there, she found a firehose in the theater and reeled it out to us like a rope.
One by one, we swam as hard as we could, praying to God we could reach the rope. Everyoneâs energy was sapped. Your body can only sustain itself on adrenaline and fear for so long.
By some miracle, five of us got out.
I was the last.
I climbed the rope coughing and vomiting. I had swallowed so much water that my stomach felt swollen.
When I reached the top and they pulled me into the screen, I sobbed. I couldnât stop crying.
My life had flashed countless times before my eyes. In bubbling, suffocating visions, I saw both my parents and my brother. I saw my highschool graduation. I saw my favorite Christmas from when I was six years old.
I had almost lost all of that. I had lost almost everything.
On the dirty, carpeted theater floor, I lay with my face down, savoring the fact that I now lay on a hard surface.
God bless ground. God bless this filthy, popcorn-strewn ground. Beside me I heard bantering, hugging, the wringing of wet clothes. Sylvester was the second last to be saved, and he was particularly vocal.
âWooooooaaaaahh!â He came and drummed me on the back, lifted me up. âOh my god dude! Holy shit!â
I sat on my knees, wiping the tears and snot off my mouth.
Sylvester clapped his hands, held his face and screamed some more.
âHoly shit dude! That was so fucking scary! Like literally people were dying beside us. Like I SAW people die!â
I nodded, shivering in my drenched clothes. â I know it wasââ
ââThat was craaaaazy!â
He laughed and stood up, patting everyone on the back. He kept clapping his hands like this was some sports event.
âThat was sick! That was siiiiiiiiick!â
He ruffled someoneâs hair then ran up to me with an open palm.
âHigh five dude! WE MADE IT! High five!
âDonât leave me hanginâ
dude!â
submitted by
EclosionK2 to
Odd_directions [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:34 juniper-blossom [F4A] Medieval Arranged Marriage Roleplay
Hello fellow writers! I am once again on the hunt for a roleplay partner đ€
I want to do a medieval, arranged marriage roleplay where are characters are from rival nations, and perhaps even from different fantasy races. Enemies to lovers is one of my all time favorite plots.
I'd like the story to incorporate the differences between our character's cultures, have them drop their hatred and prejudices for one another, learn from the other and grow closer as their romance develops within their forced marriage.
Let's play up politics, love triangles, espionage, drama, life, death, magic, anything we can think of.
A little about me, I'm 30 female from the States. I've been roleplaying on and off for about 13 plus years. I'm semi to advanced literate, depending on the plot, the scene and my partner. I write mostly in 3rd person, I'm comfortable with themes that are đ romanticđ¶ in nature, and discord is my preferred platform for roleplaying. I prefer my partner to be 21 plus and also in the States, though I'm pretty flexible in that regard.
I do prefer stories that are long term, that can span over years of the character's lives with numerous plot points throughout. It always creates a more in depth story! I love chatting outside of the roleplay as well đ
I'm a mom to a one year old. My day job is very easy, so I'm free on and off for most of my working hours, evenings and the occasional middle of the night feeding lol I'm in desperate need for some creativity in my life
Please send me a message detailing some of your ideas for the story so we can discuss more. I really look forward to hearing from you! Let's get creative!
submitted by
juniper-blossom to
roleplaying [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:34 Mylo-YT c4c
Can you accept my invitation so that I can get a free gift? Download Temu App and search the code below to accept my invitation! 242415437
submitted by
Mylo-YT to
TemuNewUsersASAp [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:34 EclosionK2 The Horrify Film Festival Yxperience
The HRRFY.
Itâs the horror movie festival where something genuinely fucked happens every year. And I mean every year.
Like, there are some screenings that unleash hordes of bats while the movie is playing. You're free to leave whenever you want, but the movie will still play for 2 hours and 15 minutes.
Other screenings hire actors to turn at you and scream at some point in the movie. You have no idea when, or how many times.
It's a festival where the word "illegal" can't even begin to describe what happens. You'd only attend if you were a young, stupid edgelord like me who was trying to prove he was hardcore to his friends.
Trust me. DO NOT GO.
You have nothing to prove to anyone. Don't be stupid.
Wait for the lamer film versions to come out streaming. That's what everyone else does. They're neutered edits but they're fine.
All they lack is the real gleaming
thing everyone wants to see at HRRFY, but who cares. At least you donât get traumatized. At least youâre not risking your life.
Anyway, if you
really want to know what attending HRRFY is like. Iâll be quick and summarize the one screening I went to. It was the 20th anniversary, and I was lucky enough to get in.
***
I had signed up for the HRRFY mailing list, and joined the subreddit. Through a series of cryptic online emails I solved a sequence of riddles and was entered in the lottery for a HRRFY entry.
Lady Luck took a shine to me, because one day in my mailbox, I received a physical ticket. I had done it.
I was going.
The actual âticketâ was a black USB key that announced the location of the festival the night before (which I wonât disclose here) and it did force me to pay for a very expensive flight in order for me to make it on time.
You see, to prevent getting shut down, the location of HRRFY changes every year. Some years the local police have managed to stop it, but for the most part, authorities have given up. Whatâs the point of arresting or charging anyone, if all the organizers and attendees actually
want to be there?
Upon arrival, I had to pick between three participating theaters.
Based on title alone, I decided to go see
âMany Drowningsâ (directed by Oleksander GoĆaĆski.) It was in the theater that was furthest away from the downtown core, which meant it was likely the one where the
craziest shit was bound to happen.
Thatâs what I came here for right?
I lined up a solid two hours before the screening like everyone else. The entire line was jittering, just vibrating with excited twenty-somethings. Rumors flew left and right.
âI heard theyâre going to force everyone to take acid.â
âI heard an actorâs gonna run in and shotgun the ceiling.â
âI heard theyâre going to disappear like four more people this year. At this screening!â
Each year people disappeared. And each year the same people were
âfound.â And yes this is the worst part, and why should never, ever, ever go to this event.
Again I will repeat myself. DO NOT GO.
No one has ever truly gone 'missing' at HRRFY in any legal or physical sense, because every missing person always shows up a day later, convinced that they are fineârefusing to elaborate further.
There are some small support groups for people who have family members who had gone to HRRFY, and came back irrevocably changed after being
âfound.â These few unlucky people lose all semblance of personality. They donât want interviews, or help, or therapy, or contact of any kind. And they never, ever want to talk about what they saw.
Some HRRFY fans think that these
âfoundâ people were body-snatched. Cloned in a lab or replaced by a cyborg, or something stupid like that.
But I think thereâs a far simpler explanation. The
âfoundâ are still the same people. They're just terrified. They got shaken by something that shattered the foundation of their mind, body and soul. They got too scared.
They got HRRFYâd.
***
I should mention I had a cough the day I went. And I was worried my sickly appearance might give me trouble at the airport.
So I invested in an intense double N95 mask which I wore for the whole flight, and continued to wear even at the screening of â
Many Drownings.â It made my face hot and uncomfortable, but it still didnât stop me from yelling â
excuse me, excuse me!â as I ran to snag a seat in the back of the theater.
I always preferred sitting in the far back. You get a good view of the whole screen, and a good view of the whole audience.
Beside me sat a big dude named Sylvester, who apparently flew all the way from Australia to attend HRRFY.
âWorth the full Seventeen hours mate! Itâs gonna be epic!â he dropped a massive camping backpack beside me, which I assume contained all of his luggage.
The lights dimmed, and the production company logos started to play.
The whispering, giggling and suspense all stacked upon each other to create an electric feeling in the air. I was giddy. It's like the entire audience was embarking on a massive roller coaster.
The anticipation was the best part for sure. It might have been the only good part.
Then the movie started.
It was a wide shot of a gray, stormy sea. The waves were massive, and the thunderclouds were looming. There was no land visible in any direction.
All we could hear was the sound of waves foaming, swirling, and crashing over and over. Lightning crackled. Rain poured. The camera held perfectly still over this storm as if it was mounted on a perfectly hovering drone. A drone so resilient that it didnât waver at all.
I thought it had to be CGI.
The shot held like this for the next few moments. Everyone sat glued to their seats. Everyone was thinking the same thing.
Whatâs going to happen? How are they going to scare us? People chuckled. People cheered. People wanted to tease whatever was going to happenâto happen already.
But nothing did.
Five, ten, maybe fifteen minutes went by without any change. People started snoring.
I looked beside me and saw that Sylvesterâthe most excited audience member of them allâhad fallen totally asleep. The jet lag mustâve gotten to him.
Then I peered beyond the rest of the audience members and saw other people snoozing too. Heads were keeled over, some people were curled in their seats, some had even spilled out into the aisle and were dozing on the floor.
I looked above the bright screen, at the huge vents in the corner of the theater. I saw a faint white gas emerging from the vents.
Holy shit. What have we been breathing? I tightened the straps on my N95 mask, and made my breathing shallower.
The gas must have been pumping since the opening creditsâbecause how else would an audience of two hundred people all fall asleep?
As I moved my hand through the air in front of me, I could sense the thickness. It was definitely hazier than usual. I took the scarf off my neck and wrapped it around my mouth as well.
Then I spotted movement in front of the screen.
It was a tall blonde man, wearing a black trenchcoat and military-grade gas mask. Beside him arrived six hazmat suits who started pointing at various audience members.
I slunk in my chair, pretending to sleep like everyone else.
Two hazmats walked over to the front row and picked out a sleeping guy in flannel. They lifted flannel up, under the armpits and by his ankles, carrying him between them both like a hammock.
The hazmats walked back up to the stage, where the blonde leader inspected the flannel man and tapped his head. Something was approved?
The hazmats began to swing flannel back and forth, as if they were getting ready to toss him. Despite their masks, I could hear a very muffled, very distant countdown.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ â
OneâŠâ The flannel audience member was tossed into the screen.
I literally watched him fly into the image of stormy waves ⊠and
fallinto them. The flannel man sank into the gray water like a rock, leaving a few bubbles and foam. A wave came crashing down. All trace of him was gone.
What the fuck. All six hazmats began grabbing more audience members with much more urgency. It became a minute-long process where they would pick the sleeping person up, bring them beside the screen, and then swing-toss them into it.
How was this possible? I turned slightly to see if there was a projector above me, and realized there was none. Which meant maybe there was no screen on stage.
Which meant ⊠maybe it was a portal? I tried to wake Sylvester by shaking him. I pinched his leg and arm a bunch.
He was out cold.
The hazmats started grabbing audience members from the middle rows now. They were emptying the whole theater. What the hell was I supposed to do?
I waited until they grabbed another batch, only a few rows down from me. When all hazmats had their backs turnedâI broke into a run.
With my left arm, I tightly gripped my mask and scarf against my face, while my right arm vaulted me over seat after seat.
I had never breathed so hardâthrough so much fabricâin my life.
The hazmats all turned to me. âHey! Hey!â But their hands were full with their next victims.
I ran all the way down the aisle, to the big exit sign on the left. My heartbeat filled my head. My plan was to dropkick through the exit door.
I imagined myself breaking through like some flying gazelle.
I jumped.
I angled my kick.
It might as well have been a brick wall. I fell ass-first to the ground, followed by my head. Of course the door was locked.
Through a muffled mask I heard a sneering scoff.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â
Above me stood the one wearing a trenchcoat. I could see his piercing gray eyes through his gas mask.
I rolled aside and tried to run by him. He lifted a foot and tripped me without effort.
My forehead bashed into an empty seat. It dazed me.
The blonde leader bent down and grabbed me by the neck, tearing away my scarf and mask.
âNo! No!â
A sweet, ether-like smell filled my nostrils. I did my best to hold my breath, but I could already feel myself getting light-headed.
The other hazmats joined in, grabbing me from all sides. Even if I had the strength to struggle, there was no escape now.
Above me, all I could see was the dark theater ceiling, and some of the light behind me from the cinema screen.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ âNo. Please. Donât do thiââ
SPLASH.
I was plunged deep into cold, wet chaos. My head was completely underwater.
Gagging. Bubbles. Spinning.
I fought for dear life, dog-paddling like a maniac.
Churning. Freezing. Panic.
For a second, my head popped above the water. I inhaled all the air my lungs could muster. I stared across a vast, violent ocean.
An enormous thirty foot wave came in my direction.
My whole body lifted higher and higher as the wave approached. I did my best to tread water. It seemed to be working.
Then a series of smaller waves arrived and smacked my chest.
SPLASH.
Spinning. Kicking. Flipping.
My view alternated between the pitch dark ocean beneath me, and the moonlit night sky above.
Again I swam to the surface, popped my head out. Ravenously sucked in air.
There was a small lull in the water.
Around me I now registered the other theater goers. Most of them were lying face-down or sinking ⊠but a few were flapping about like me, fighting for their life.
And above all of us, a floating white
shape. It was painfully bright, I had to lift one hand to look at it.
My jaw dropped.
It was the movie screen, hanging completely still in the air. It showed a dark, empty theater. The exact same theater we all occupied moments ago.
It was tremendously high, above all of our heads. There was no way of reaching it.
Then I saw another thirty foot wave come our way. It grazed the bottom of the screen.
I knew what had to be done.
***
One of the theater goers happened to be on a college swim team. She was the first one able to traverse one of the giant waves and climb into the screen.
Once she was up there, she found a firehose in the theater and reeled it out to us like a rope.
One by one, we swam as hard as we could, praying to God we could reach the rope. Everyoneâs energy was sapped. Your body can only sustain itself on adrenaline and fear for so long.
By some miracle, five of us got out.
I was the last.
I climbed the rope coughing and vomiting. I had swallowed so much water that my stomach felt swollen.
When I reached the top and they pulled me into the screen, I sobbed. I couldnât stop crying.
My life had flashed countless times before my eyes. In bubbling, suffocating visions, I saw both my parents and my brother. I saw my highschool graduation. I saw my favorite Christmas from when I was six years old.
I had almost lost all of that. I had lost almost everything.
On the dirty, carpeted theater floor, I lay with my face down, savoring the fact that I now lay on a hard surface.
God bless ground. God bless this filthy, popcorn-strewn ground. Beside me I heard bantering, hugging, the wringing of wet clothes. Sylvester was the second last to be saved, and he was particularly vocal.
âWooooooaaaaahh!â He came and drummed me on the back, lifted me up. âOh my god dude! Holy shit!â
I sat on my knees, wiping the tears and snot off my mouth.
Sylvester clapped his hands, held his face and screamed some more.
âHoly shit dude! That was so fucking scary! Like literally people were dying beside us. Like I SAW people die!â
I nodded, shivering in my drenched clothes. â I know it wasââ
ââThat was craaaaazy!â
He laughed and stood up, patting everyone on the back. He kept clapping his hands like this was some sports event.
âThat was sick! That was siiiiiiiiick!â
He ruffled someoneâs hair then ran up to me with an open palm.
âHigh five dude! WE MADE IT! High five!
âDonât leave me hanginâ
dude!â
submitted by
EclosionK2 to
TheCrypticCompendium [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:33 Mylo-YT c4c
Can you accept my invitation so that I can get a free gift? Download Temu App and search the code below to accept my invitation! 242415437
submitted by
Mylo-YT to
temu_old_users [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:33 EclosionK2 The Horrify Film Festival Yxperience
The HRRFY.
Itâs the horror movie festival where something genuinely fucked happens every year. And I mean every year.
Like, there are some screenings that unleash hordes of bats while the movie is playing. You're free to leave whenever you want, but the movie will still play for 2 hours and 15 minutes.
Other screenings hire actors to turn at you and scream at some point in the movie. You have no idea when, or how many times.
It's a festival where the word "illegal" can't even begin to describe what happens. You'd only attend if you were a young, stupid edgelord like me who was trying to prove he was hardcore to his friends.
Trust me. DO NOT GO.
You have nothing to prove to anyone. Don't be stupid.
Wait for the lamer film versions to come out streaming. That's what everyone else does. They're neutered edits but they're fine.
All they lack is the real gleaming
thing everyone wants to see at HRRFY, but who cares. At least you donât get traumatized. At least youâre not risking your life.
Anyway, if you
really want to know what attending HRRFY is like. Iâll be quick and summarize the one screening I went to. It was the 20th anniversary, and I was lucky enough to get in.
***
I had signed up for the HRRFY mailing list, and joined the subreddit. Through a series of cryptic online emails I solved a sequence of riddles and was entered in the lottery for a HRRFY entry.
Lady Luck took a shine to me, because one day in my mailbox, I received a physical ticket. I had done it.
I was going.
The actual âticketâ was a black USB key that announced the location of the festival the night before (which I wonât disclose here) and it did force me to pay for a very expensive flight in order for me to make it on time.
You see, to prevent getting shut down, the location of HRRFY changes every year. Some years the local police have managed to stop it, but for the most part, authorities have given up. Whatâs the point of arresting or charging anyone, if all the organizers and attendees actually
want to be there?
Upon arrival, I had to pick between three participating theaters.
Based on title alone, I decided to go see
âMany Drowningsâ (directed by Oleksander GoĆaĆski.) It was in the theater that was furthest away from the downtown core, which meant it was likely the one where the
craziest shit was bound to happen.
Thatâs what I came here for right?
I lined up a solid two hours before the screening like everyone else. The entire line was jittering, just vibrating with excited twenty-somethings. Rumors flew left and right.
âI heard theyâre going to force everyone to take acid.â
âI heard an actorâs gonna run in and shotgun the ceiling.â
âI heard theyâre going to disappear like four more people this year. At this screening!â
Each year people disappeared. And each year the same people were
âfound.â And yes this is the worst part, and why should never, ever, ever go to this event.
Again I will repeat myself. DO NOT GO.
No one has ever truly gone 'missing' at HRRFY in any legal or physical sense, because every missing person always shows up a day later, convinced that they are fineârefusing to elaborate further.
There are some small support groups for people who have family members who had gone to HRRFY, and came back irrevocably changed after being
âfound.â These few unlucky people lose all semblance of personality. They donât want interviews, or help, or therapy, or contact of any kind. And they never, ever want to talk about what they saw.
Some HRRFY fans think that these
âfoundâ people were body-snatched. Cloned in a lab or replaced by a cyborg, or something stupid like that.
But I think thereâs a far simpler explanation. The
âfoundâ are still the same people. They're just terrified. They got shaken by something that shattered the foundation of their mind, body and soul. They got too scared.
They got HRRFYâd.
***
I should mention I had a cough the day I went. And I was worried my sickly appearance might give me trouble at the airport.
So I invested in an intense double N95 mask which I wore for the whole flight, and continued to wear even at the screening of â
Many Drownings.â It made my face hot and uncomfortable, but it still didnât stop me from yelling â
excuse me, excuse me!â as I ran to snag a seat in the back of the theater.
I always preferred sitting in the far back. You get a good view of the whole screen, and a good view of the whole audience.
Beside me sat a big dude named Sylvester, who apparently flew all the way from Australia to attend HRRFY.
âWorth the full Seventeen hours mate! Itâs gonna be epic!â he dropped a massive camping backpack beside me, which I assume contained all of his luggage.
The lights dimmed, and the production company logos started to play.
The whispering, giggling and suspense all stacked upon each other to create an electric feeling in the air. I was giddy. It's like the entire audience was embarking on a massive roller coaster.
The anticipation was the best part for sure. It might have been the only good part.
Then the movie started.
It was a wide shot of a gray, stormy sea. The waves were massive, and the thunderclouds were looming. There was no land visible in any direction.
All we could hear was the sound of waves foaming, swirling, and crashing over and over. Lightning crackled. Rain poured. The camera held perfectly still over this storm as if it was mounted on a perfectly hovering drone. A drone so resilient that it didnât waver at all.
I thought it had to be CGI.
The shot held like this for the next few moments. Everyone sat glued to their seats. Everyone was thinking the same thing.
Whatâs going to happen? How are they going to scare us? People chuckled. People cheered. People wanted to tease whatever was going to happenâto happen already.
But nothing did.
Five, ten, maybe fifteen minutes went by without any change. People started snoring.
I looked beside me and saw that Sylvesterâthe most excited audience member of them allâhad fallen totally asleep. The jet lag mustâve gotten to him.
Then I peered beyond the rest of the audience members and saw other people snoozing too. Heads were keeled over, some people were curled in their seats, some had even spilled out into the aisle and were dozing on the floor.
I looked above the bright screen, at the huge vents in the corner of the theater. I saw a faint white gas emerging from the vents.
Holy shit. What have we been breathing? I tightened the straps on my N95 mask, and made my breathing shallower.
The gas must have been pumping since the opening creditsâbecause how else would an audience of two hundred people all fall asleep?
As I moved my hand through the air in front of me, I could sense the thickness. It was definitely hazier than usual. I took the scarf off my neck and wrapped it around my mouth as well.
Then I spotted movement in front of the screen.
It was a tall blonde man, wearing a black trenchcoat and military-grade gas mask. Beside him arrived six hazmat suits who started pointing at various audience members.
I slunk in my chair, pretending to sleep like everyone else.
Two hazmats walked over to the front row and picked out a sleeping guy in flannel. They lifted flannel up, under the armpits and by his ankles, carrying him between them both like a hammock.
The hazmats walked back up to the stage, where the blonde leader inspected the flannel man and tapped his head. Something was approved?
The hazmats began to swing flannel back and forth, as if they were getting ready to toss him. Despite their masks, I could hear a very muffled, very distant countdown.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ â
OneâŠâ The flannel audience member was tossed into the screen.
I literally watched him fly into the image of stormy waves ⊠and
fallinto them. The flannel man sank into the gray water like a rock, leaving a few bubbles and foam. A wave came crashing down. All trace of him was gone.
What the fuck. All six hazmats began grabbing more audience members with much more urgency. It became a minute-long process where they would pick the sleeping person up, bring them beside the screen, and then swing-toss them into it.
How was this possible? I turned slightly to see if there was a projector above me, and realized there was none. Which meant maybe there was no screen on stage.
Which meant ⊠maybe it was a portal? I tried to wake Sylvester by shaking him. I pinched his leg and arm a bunch.
He was out cold.
The hazmats started grabbing audience members from the middle rows now. They were emptying the whole theater. What the hell was I supposed to do?
I waited until they grabbed another batch, only a few rows down from me. When all hazmats had their backs turnedâI broke into a run.
With my left arm, I tightly gripped my mask and scarf against my face, while my right arm vaulted me over seat after seat.
I had never breathed so hardâthrough so much fabricâin my life.
The hazmats all turned to me. âHey! Hey!â But their hands were full with their next victims.
I ran all the way down the aisle, to the big exit sign on the left. My heartbeat filled my head. My plan was to dropkick through the exit door.
I imagined myself breaking through like some flying gazelle.
I jumped.
I angled my kick.
It might as well have been a brick wall. I fell ass-first to the ground, followed by my head. Of course the door was locked.
Through a muffled mask I heard a sneering scoff.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â
Above me stood the one wearing a trenchcoat. I could see his piercing gray eyes through his gas mask.
I rolled aside and tried to run by him. He lifted a foot and tripped me without effort.
My forehead bashed into an empty seat. It dazed me.
The blonde leader bent down and grabbed me by the neck, tearing away my scarf and mask.
âNo! No!â
A sweet, ether-like smell filled my nostrils. I did my best to hold my breath, but I could already feel myself getting light-headed.
The other hazmats joined in, grabbing me from all sides. Even if I had the strength to struggle, there was no escape now.
Above me, all I could see was the dark theater ceiling, and some of the light behind me from the cinema screen.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ âNo. Please. Donât do thiââ
SPLASH.
I was plunged deep into cold, wet chaos. My head was completely underwater.
Gagging. Bubbles. Spinning.
I fought for dear life, dog-paddling like a maniac.
Churning. Freezing. Panic.
For a second, my head popped above the water. I inhaled all the air my lungs could muster. I stared across a vast, violent ocean.
An enormous thirty foot wave came in my direction.
My whole body lifted higher and higher as the wave approached. I did my best to tread water. It seemed to be working.
Then a series of smaller waves arrived and smacked my chest.
SPLASH.
Spinning. Kicking. Flipping.
My view alternated between the pitch dark ocean beneath me, and the moonlit night sky above.
Again I swam to the surface, popped my head out. Ravenously sucked in air.
There was a small lull in the water.
Around me I now registered the other theater goers. Most of them were lying face-down or sinking ⊠but a few were flapping about like me, fighting for their life.
And above all of us, a floating white
shape. It was painfully bright, I had to lift one hand to look at it.
My jaw dropped.
It was the movie screen, hanging completely still in the air. It showed a dark, empty theater. The exact same theater we all occupied moments ago.
It was tremendously high, above all of our heads. There was no way of reaching it.
Then I saw another thirty foot wave come our way. It grazed the bottom of the screen.
I knew what had to be done.
***
One of the theater goers happened to be on a college swim team. She was the first one able to traverse one of the giant waves and climb into the screen.
Once she was up there, she found a firehose in the theater and reeled it out to us like a rope.
One by one, we swam as hard as we could, praying to God we could reach the rope. Everyoneâs energy was sapped. Your body can only sustain itself on adrenaline and fear for so long.
By some miracle, five of us got out.
I was the last.
I climbed the rope coughing and vomiting. I had swallowed so much water that my stomach felt swollen.
When I reached the top and they pulled me into the screen, I sobbed. I couldnât stop crying.
My life had flashed countless times before my eyes. In bubbling, suffocating visions, I saw both my parents and my brother. I saw my highschool graduation. I saw my favorite Christmas from when I was six years old.
I had almost lost all of that. I had lost almost everything.
On the dirty, carpeted theater floor, I lay with my face down, savoring the fact that I now lay on a hard surface.
God bless ground. God bless this filthy, popcorn-strewn ground. Beside me I heard bantering, hugging, the wringing of wet clothes. Sylvester was the second last to be saved, and he was particularly vocal.
âWooooooaaaaahh!â He came and drummed me on the back, lifted me up. âOh my god dude! Holy shit!â
I sat on my knees, wiping the tears and snot off my mouth.
Sylvester clapped his hands, held his face and screamed some more.
âHoly shit dude! That was so fucking scary! Like literally people were dying beside us. Like I SAW people die!â
I nodded, shivering in my drenched clothes. â I know it wasââ
ââThat was craaaaazy!â
He laughed and stood up, patting everyone on the back. He kept clapping his hands like this was some sports event.
âThat was sick! That was siiiiiiiiick!â
He ruffled someoneâs hair then ran up to me with an open palm.
âHigh five dude! WE MADE IT! High five!
âDonât leave me hanginâ
dude!â
submitted by
EclosionK2 to
scarystories [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:33 MinuteRadish3003 Playground Etiquette
My son is 20 months old. We live in a big city and there are a lot of playgrounds around. Now that heâs older and the weather is heating up, weâve been taking a lot of trips to local playgrounds. We only go to playgrounds that are age appropriate. Today we went to a playground thatâs suitable for a wide range of ages. It was pretty crowded and there were kids of all ages from infants all the way up to ten year olds.
My son is very mobile, but heâs still young. Heâs super curious and gets into everything, so I walk around the playgrounds with him. I give him his space and room to explore and socialize, but I stay close enough to intervene if heâs in a situation thatâs unsafe.
Iâve noticed that Iâm one of the few parents that does this. Iâve been in situations where other children are being unsafe, but I would never discipline a child that isnât mine; I usually just redirect my son or pick him up when this occurs. However, today was a lot.
There are multiple slides on this playground and my son was playing on the smaller toddler double slide. Two girls (probably 3 and 5) came over and were playing on the slide. No problem, I was helping my son to take his turn and moving him aside when the girls went down. However, my son went down the slide and when he reached the end the other little girl went down to soon. I tried to grab him but I wasnât expecting it and she kicked him in the back. I didnât say anything, but I picked him up and calmly walked over to another slide that was free. The two girls followed us to the slide and were being rough and literally giving my son dirty looks when he tried to take his turn.
I picked him up and moved him to another area to play in the sand. Then a girl (probably around 8) came running around a corner and literally ran right into my son sending him flying and ran off. At this point I was just overwhelmed and we left.
We donât have a yard and I want to be able to take advantage of all the beautiful parks in our city, but Iâm not sure how to navigate the chaos of the playground. Any advice?
submitted by
MinuteRadish3003 to
toddlers [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:32 ThrowRAunsure69 I went on date this past weekend and hated how much I enjoyed it
I (28M) went on a date with a woman (29F) this past weekend. Some back story, I've been single for 8 months. The break up was mutual but still really mentally and emotionally exhausting. I decided to download a dating app just to mess around. Well I match with this girl (Y) and I was not being serious in the conversation at all. SOMEHOW the conversation actually went really smoothly and Y ended up giving me her number. After talking for a day I find out she's only in town for the weekend. So we decided to meet for dinner. Well when we met up for dinner I saw Y and got immediate butterflies in my stomach. And the conversation was even better in person. We ended up spending the entire weekend together and I came back home to get ready for my morning shift for work...yesterday.
I'm annoyed. I didn't expect to like her this much. I didn't want to like her this much. I WAS TRYING TO BE UNSERIOUS AND EMOTIONALLY DISTANT, NOW I'VE BEEN SENDING DEEP FRIED MEMES DURING MY FREE TIME.
Anyways we're trying to figure out when to see each other again >:(
submitted by
ThrowRAunsure69 to
offmychest [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:32 EclosionK2 The Horrify Film Festival Yxperience
The HRRFY.
Itâs the horror movie festival where something genuinely fucked happens every year. And I mean every year.
Like, there are some screenings that unleash hordes of bats while the movie is playing. You're free to leave whenever you want, but the movie will still play for 2 hours and 15 minutes.
Other screenings hire actors to turn at you and scream at some point in the movie. You have no idea when, or how many times.
It's a festival where the word "illegal" can't even begin to describe what happens. You'd only attend if you were a young, stupid edgelord like me who was trying to prove he was hardcore to his friends.
Trust me. DO NOT GO.
You have nothing to prove to anyone. Don't be stupid.
Wait for the lamer film versions to come out streaming. That's what everyone else does. They're neutered edits but they're fine.
All they lack is the real gleaming
thing everyone wants to see at HRRFY, but who cares. At least you donât get traumatized. At least youâre not risking your life.
Anyway, if you
really want to know what attending HRRFY is like. Iâll be quick and summarize the one screening I went to. It was the 20th anniversary, and I was lucky enough to get in.
***
I had signed up for the HRRFY mailing list, and joined the subreddit. Through a series of cryptic online emails I solved a sequence of riddles and was entered in the lottery for a HRRFY entry.
Lady Luck took a shine to me, because one day in my mailbox, I received a physical ticket. I had done it.
I was going.
The actual âticketâ was a black USB key that announced the location of the festival the night before (which I wonât disclose here) and it did force me to pay for a very expensive flight in order for me to make it on time.
You see, to prevent getting shut down, the location of HRRFY changes every year. Some years the local police have managed to stop it, but for the most part, authorities have given up. Whatâs the point of arresting or charging anyone, if all the organizers and attendees actually
want to be there?
Upon arrival, I had to pick between three participating theaters.
Based on title alone, I decided to go see
âMany Drowningsâ (directed by Oleksander GoĆaĆski.) It was in the theater that was furthest away from the downtown core, which meant it was likely the one where the
craziest shit was bound to happen.
Thatâs what I came here for right?
I lined up a solid two hours before the screening like everyone else. The entire line was jittering, just vibrating with excited twenty-somethings. Rumors flew left and right.
âI heard theyâre going to force everyone to take acid.â
âI heard an actorâs gonna run in and shotgun the ceiling.â
âI heard theyâre going to disappear like four more people this year. At this screening!â
Each year people disappeared. And each year the same people were
âfound.â And yes this is the worst part, and why should never, ever, ever go to this event.
Again I will repeat myself. DO NOT GO.
No one has ever truly gone 'missing' at HRRFY in any legal or physical sense, because every missing person always shows up a day later, convinced that they are fineârefusing to elaborate further.
There are some small support groups for people who have family members who had gone to HRRFY, and came back irrevocably changed after being
âfound.â These few unlucky people lose all semblance of personality. They donât want interviews, or help, or therapy, or contact of any kind. And they never, ever want to talk about what they saw.
Some HRRFY fans think that these
âfoundâ people were body-snatched. Cloned in a lab or replaced by a cyborg, or something stupid like that.
But I think thereâs a far simpler explanation. The
âfoundâ are still the same people. They're just terrified. They got shaken by something that shattered the foundation of their mind, body and soul. They got too scared.
They got HRRFYâd.
***
I should mention I had a cough the day I went. And I was worried my sickly appearance might give me trouble at the airport.
So I invested in an intense double N95 mask which I wore for the whole flight, and continued to wear even at the screening of â
Many Drownings.â It made my face hot and uncomfortable, but it still didnât stop me from yelling â
excuse me, excuse me!â as I ran to snag a seat in the back of the theater.
I always preferred sitting in the far back. You get a good view of the whole screen, and a good view of the whole audience.
Beside me sat a big dude named Sylvester, who apparently flew all the way from Australia to attend HRRFY.
âWorth the full Seventeen hours mate! Itâs gonna be epic!â he dropped a massive camping backpack beside me, which I assume contained all of his luggage.
The lights dimmed, and the production company logos started to play.
The whispering, giggling and suspense all stacked upon each other to create an electric feeling in the air. I was giddy. It's like the entire audience was embarking on a massive roller coaster.
The anticipation was the best part for sure. It might have been the only good part.
Then the movie started.
It was a wide shot of a gray, stormy sea. The waves were massive, and the thunderclouds were looming. There was no land visible in any direction.
All we could hear was the sound of waves foaming, swirling, and crashing over and over. Lightning crackled. Rain poured. The camera held perfectly still over this storm as if it was mounted on a perfectly hovering drone. A drone so resilient that it didnât waver at all.
I thought it had to be CGI.
The shot held like this for the next few moments. Everyone sat glued to their seats. Everyone was thinking the same thing.
Whatâs going to happen? How are they going to scare us? People chuckled. People cheered. People wanted to tease whatever was going to happenâto happen already.
But nothing did.
Five, ten, maybe fifteen minutes went by without any change. People started snoring.
I looked beside me and saw that Sylvesterâthe most excited audience member of them allâhad fallen totally asleep. The jet lag mustâve gotten to him.
Then I peered beyond the rest of the audience members and saw other people snoozing too. Heads were keeled over, some people were curled in their seats, some had even spilled out into the aisle and were dozing on the floor.
I looked above the bright screen, at the huge vents in the corner of the theater. I saw a faint white gas emerging from the vents.
Holy shit. What have we been breathing? I tightened the straps on my N95 mask, and made my breathing shallower.
The gas must have been pumping since the opening creditsâbecause how else would an audience of two hundred people all fall asleep?
As I moved my hand through the air in front of me, I could sense the thickness. It was definitely hazier than usual. I took the scarf off my neck and wrapped it around my mouth as well.
Then I spotted movement in front of the screen.
It was a tall blonde man, wearing a black trenchcoat and military-grade gas mask. Beside him arrived six hazmat suits who started pointing at various audience members.
I slunk in my chair, pretending to sleep like everyone else.
Two hazmats walked over to the front row and picked out a sleeping guy in flannel. They lifted flannel up, under the armpits and by his ankles, carrying him between them both like a hammock.
The hazmats walked back up to the stage, where the blonde leader inspected the flannel man and tapped his head. Something was approved?
The hazmats began to swing flannel back and forth, as if they were getting ready to toss him. Despite their masks, I could hear a very muffled, very distant countdown.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ â
OneâŠâ The flannel audience member was tossed into the screen.
I literally watched him fly into the image of stormy waves ⊠and
fallinto them. The flannel man sank into the gray water like a rock, leaving a few bubbles and foam. A wave came crashing down. All trace of him was gone.
What the fuck. All six hazmats began grabbing more audience members with much more urgency. It became a minute-long process where they would pick the sleeping person up, bring them beside the screen, and then swing-toss them into it.
How was this possible? I turned slightly to see if there was a projector above me, and realized there was none. Which meant maybe there was no screen on stage.
Which meant ⊠maybe it was a portal? I tried to wake Sylvester by shaking him. I pinched his leg and arm a bunch.
He was out cold.
The hazmats started grabbing audience members from the middle rows now. They were emptying the whole theater. What the hell was I supposed to do?
I waited until they grabbed another batch, only a few rows down from me. When all hazmats had their backs turnedâI broke into a run.
With my left arm, I tightly gripped my mask and scarf against my face, while my right arm vaulted me over seat after seat.
I had never breathed so hardâthrough so much fabricâin my life.
The hazmats all turned to me. âHey! Hey!â But their hands were full with their next victims.
I ran all the way down the aisle, to the big exit sign on the left. My heartbeat filled my head. My plan was to dropkick through the exit door.
I imagined myself breaking through like some flying gazelle.
I jumped.
I angled my kick.
It might as well have been a brick wall. I fell ass-first to the ground, followed by my head. Of course the door was locked.
Through a muffled mask I heard a sneering scoff.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â
Above me stood the one wearing a trenchcoat. I could see his piercing gray eyes through his gas mask.
I rolled aside and tried to run by him. He lifted a foot and tripped me without effort.
My forehead bashed into an empty seat. It dazed me.
The blonde leader bent down and grabbed me by the neck, tearing away my scarf and mask.
âNo! No!â
A sweet, ether-like smell filled my nostrils. I did my best to hold my breath, but I could already feel myself getting light-headed.
The other hazmats joined in, grabbing me from all sides. Even if I had the strength to struggle, there was no escape now.
Above me, all I could see was the dark theater ceiling, and some of the light behind me from the cinema screen.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ âNo. Please. Donât do thiââ
SPLASH.
I was plunged deep into cold, wet chaos. My head was completely underwater.
Gagging. Bubbles. Spinning.
I fought for dear life, dog-paddling like a maniac.
Churning. Freezing. Panic.
For a second, my head popped above the water. I inhaled all the air my lungs could muster. I stared across a vast, violent ocean.
An enormous thirty foot wave came in my direction.
My whole body lifted higher and higher as the wave approached. I did my best to tread water. It seemed to be working.
Then a series of smaller waves arrived and smacked my chest.
SPLASH.
Spinning. Kicking. Flipping.
My view alternated between the pitch dark ocean beneath me, and the moonlit night sky above.
Again I swam to the surface, popped my head out. Ravenously sucked in air.
There was a small lull in the water.
Around me I now registered the other theater goers. Most of them were lying face-down or sinking ⊠but a few were flapping about like me, fighting for their life.
And above all of us, a floating white
shape. It was painfully bright, I had to lift one hand to look at it.
My jaw dropped.
It was the movie screen, hanging completely still in the air. It showed a dark, empty theater. The exact same theater we all occupied moments ago.
It was tremendously high, above all of our heads. There was no way of reaching it.
Then I saw another thirty foot wave come our way. It grazed the bottom of the screen.
I knew what had to be done.
***
One of the theater goers happened to be on a college swim team. She was the first one able to traverse one of the giant waves and climb into the screen.
Once she was up there, she found a firehose in the theater and reeled it out to us like a rope.
One by one, we swam as hard as we could, praying to God we could reach the rope. Everyoneâs energy was sapped. Your body can only sustain itself on adrenaline and fear for so long.
By some miracle, five of us got out.
I was the last.
I climbed the rope coughing and vomiting. I had swallowed so much water that my stomach felt swollen.
When I reached the top and they pulled me into the screen, I sobbed. I couldnât stop crying.
My life had flashed countless times before my eyes. In bubbling, suffocating visions, I saw both my parents and my brother. I saw my highschool graduation. I saw my favorite Christmas from when I was six years old.
I had almost lost all of that. I had lost almost everything.
On the dirty, carpeted theater floor, I lay with my face down, savoring the fact that I now lay on a hard surface.
God bless ground. God bless this filthy, popcorn-strewn ground. Beside me I heard bantering, hugging, the wringing of wet clothes. Sylvester was the second last to be saved, and he was particularly vocal.
âWooooooaaaaahh!â He came and drummed me on the back, lifted me up. âOh my god dude! Holy shit!â
I sat on my knees, wiping the tears and snot off my mouth.
Sylvester clapped his hands, held his face and screamed some more.
âHoly shit dude! That was so fucking scary! Like literally people were dying beside us. Like I SAW people die!â
I nodded, shivering in my drenched clothes. â I know it wasââ
ââThat was craaaaazy!â
He laughed and stood up, patting everyone on the back. He kept clapping his hands like this was some sports event.
âThat was sick! That was siiiiiiiiick!â
He ruffled someoneâs hair then ran up to me with an open palm.
âHigh five dude! WE MADE IT! High five!
âDonât leave me hanginâ
dude!â
submitted by
EclosionK2 to
DarkTales [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:32 mutcholokoW Why does my PC stutter SO MUCH?
Okay, I finally got so mad about this to actually have the will to come here and type all of it.
First, my PC specs:
- AMD Ryzen 7 5700G
- AMD RX 6750 XT
- Galax B550M
- 32GB (2 x 16) RAM DDR4 3600MHz (capped at 3000MHz because of mobo)
- Corsair 650W PSU
- Windows 11 installed on an NVME SSD
Okay, so my PC does fine most of the time, I can for example run Forza Horizon 5 at 4K 60 fps HDR with no frame drops at all, beautiful experience. But then, there are SOME types of games like Alan Wake 2, Dead Space Remake (I know it has traversal stutters, but mine are definitely much worse and happen way more often, even while not walking at all), Hellblade 2 that just released today, Ready or Not, and some other games have the worst stutter I ever saw in my life.
I actually just
recorded this because my friend didn't believe how much the game was stuttering for me. He has an RX 6600, which is supposed to be much worse than mine, but it turns out he was running the game with better graphical options than me and the game didn't stutter at all for him. Every time something like this happened, I just assumed that the game was poorly optimized or something like that, but in this case, I have a friend to compare with.
Initially I tried lowering Hellblade 2's graphics to the lowest resolution possible and lowest graphical options possible, but no matter what, it kept having these stutters (to be honest at this point it's not even stuttering anymore, it's just halting basically). And what I noticed is that these types of long stutters have been happening to me all this time of owning this PC, specially with Hellblade 2, Alan Wake 2, and Ready or Not. It feels like these 3 games are cursed on my PC tbh. I'd say it happens with most Unreal Engine titles on my PC, but then Alan Wake 2 is not made in Unreal and has the same weird behavior as those other titles. Also, Persona 3 Reload is made in UE4 and it does not have those weird stutters (apart from shader compilation stutters, that go away after 15 min of playing). I know this also happened with other games, but I can't remember from the top of my head at the moment, but yeah, the same exact type of long stutter happened with other games, independently of graphical options.
I built this PC myself, and I like to consider myself
somewhat versed in computers. I've been building computers since 2013, and I always successfully solved problems like this myself. But after 2 years of having this rig, I honestly don't know what to do anymore. The funniest part is that I recently bought a gaming laptop that has an RTX 4060 in it, which I thought would have less performance than my PC. I got so mad today with this Hellblade 2 situation that I decided to install it on that laptop just to test it. I got literally zero stutters there, and the performance is remarkably better. I didn't even consider putting heavy games on it at first because I thought that my PC would naturally handle those much better. And tbh, it was a long time since I had a gameplay this smooth on a PC that I own on a recent good looking game like that.
Okay so...
What I have tried:
- Checked that my RAM is at 3000MHz (which is the fastest my Mobo can do).
- Updated my BIOS to the latest version (which btw is from 2022, if this info helps).
- Disabled fTPM on the BIOS.
- Updated GPU drivers to the latest version.
- Did a clean install of Windows 11.
- Enabled/disabled Free Sync on my monitor.
- Lowering the graphics to hell.
- Called Saul (no answer)
If anyone manages to solve this, I will honestly buy you two cookies. I figured this has passed my current knowledge limit, or it could also be that I'm ignoring a gigantic detail. I really don't know anymore. Thank you for reading through all of it!
submitted by
mutcholokoW to
buildapc [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:31 False_Interaction_86 Let's Get This Done!!! I Need Hattrick Help
Can you accept my invitation so that I can get a free gift? Download Temu App and search the code below to accept my invitation! 234944348
I am 4.5 cents away, I can't do it with out you. I have all my clicks for today and I might be able to do a couple of Shein ( new user)
submitted by
False_Interaction_86 to
TemuNewUsersASAp [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:31 EclosionK2 The Horrify Film Festival Yxperience
The HRRFY.
Itâs the horror movie festival where something genuinely fucked happens every year. And I mean every year.
Like, there are some screenings that unleash hordes of bats while the movie is playing. You're free to leave whenever you want, but the movie will still play for 2 hours and 15 minutes.
Other screenings hire actors to turn at you and scream at some point in the movie. You have no idea when, or how many times.
It's a festival where the word "illegal" can't even begin to describe what happens. You'd only attend if you were a young, stupid edgelord like me who was trying to prove he was hardcore to his friends.
Trust me. DO NOT GO.
You have nothing to prove to anyone. Don't be stupid.
Wait for the lamer film versions to come out streaming. That's what everyone else does. They're neutered edits but they're fine.
All they lack is the real gleaming
thing everyone wants to see at HRRFY, but who cares. At least you donât get traumatized. At least youâre not risking your life.
Anyway, if you
really want to know what attending HRRFY is like. Iâll be quick and summarize the one screening I went to. It was the 20th anniversary, and I was lucky enough to get in.
***
I had signed up for the HRRFY mailing list, and joined the subreddit. Through a series of cryptic online emails I solved a sequence of riddles and was entered in the lottery for a HRRFY entry.
Lady Luck took a shine to me, because one day in my mailbox, I received a physical ticket. I had done it.
I was going.
The actual âticketâ was a black USB key that announced the location of the festival the night before (which I wonât disclose here) and it did force me to pay for a very expensive flight in order for me to make it on time.
You see, to prevent getting shut down, the location of HRRFY changes every year. Some years the local police have managed to stop it, but for the most part, authorities have given up. Whatâs the point of arresting or charging anyone, if all the organizers and attendees actually
want to be there?
Upon arrival, I had to pick between three participating theaters.
Based on title alone, I decided to go see
âMany Drowningsâ (directed by Oleksander GoĆaĆski.) It was in the theater that was furthest away from the downtown core, which meant it was likely the one where the
craziest shit was bound to happen.
Thatâs what I came here for right?
I lined up a solid two hours before the screening like everyone else. The entire line was jittering, just vibrating with excited twenty-somethings. Rumors flew left and right.
âI heard theyâre going to force everyone to take acid.â
âI heard an actorâs gonna run in and shotgun the ceiling.â
âI heard theyâre going to disappear like four more people this year. At this screening!â
Each year people disappeared. And each year the same people were
âfound.â And yes this is the worst part, and why should never, ever, ever go to this event.
Again I will repeat myself. DO NOT GO.
No one has ever truly gone 'missing' at HRRFY in any legal or physical sense, because every missing person always shows up a day later, convinced that they are fineârefusing to elaborate further.
There are some small support groups for people who have family members who had gone to HRRFY, and came back irrevocably changed after being
âfound.â These few unlucky people lose all semblance of personality. They donât want interviews, or help, or therapy, or contact of any kind. And they never, ever want to talk about what they saw.
Some HRRFY fans think that these
âfoundâ people were body-snatched. Cloned in a lab or replaced by a cyborg, or something stupid like that.
But I think thereâs a far simpler explanation. The
âfoundâ are still the same people. They're just terrified. They got shaken by something that shattered the foundation of their mind, body and soul. They got too scared.
They got HRRFYâd.
***
I should mention I had a cough the day I went. And I was worried my sickly appearance might give me trouble at the airport.
So I invested in an intense double N95 mask which I wore for the whole flight, and continued to wear even at the screening of â
Many Drownings.â It made my face hot and uncomfortable, but it still didnât stop me from yelling â
excuse me, excuse me!â as I ran to snag a seat in the back of the theater.
I always preferred sitting in the far back. You get a good view of the whole screen, and a good view of the whole audience.
Beside me sat a big dude named Sylvester, who apparently flew all the way from Australia to attend HRRFY.
âWorth the full Seventeen hours mate! Itâs gonna be epic!â he dropped a massive camping backpack beside me, which I assume contained all of his luggage.
The lights dimmed, and the production company logos started to play.
The whispering, giggling and suspense all stacked upon each other to create an electric feeling in the air. I was giddy. It's like the entire audience was embarking on a massive roller coaster.
The anticipation was the best part for sure. It might have been the only good part.
Then the movie started.
It was a wide shot of a gray, stormy sea. The waves were massive, and the thunderclouds were looming. There was no land visible in any direction.
All we could hear was the sound of waves foaming, swirling, and crashing over and over. Lightning crackled. Rain poured. The camera held perfectly still over this storm as if it was mounted on a perfectly hovering drone. A drone so resilient that it didnât waver at all.
I thought it had to be CGI.
The shot held like this for the next few moments. Everyone sat glued to their seats. Everyone was thinking the same thing.
Whatâs going to happen? How are they going to scare us? People chuckled. People cheered. People wanted to tease whatever was going to happenâto happen already.
But nothing did.
Five, ten, maybe fifteen minutes went by without any change. People started snoring.
I looked beside me and saw that Sylvesterâthe most excited audience member of them allâhad fallen totally asleep. The jet lag mustâve gotten to him.
Then I peered beyond the rest of the audience members and saw other people snoozing too. Heads were keeled over, some people were curled in their seats, some had even spilled out into the aisle and were dozing on the floor.
I looked above the bright screen, at the huge vents in the corner of the theater. I saw a faint white gas emerging from the vents.
Holy shit. What have we been breathing? I tightened the straps on my N95 mask, and made my breathing shallower.
The gas must have been pumping since the opening creditsâbecause how else would an audience of two hundred people all fall asleep?
As I moved my hand through the air in front of me, I could sense the thickness. It was definitely hazier than usual. I took the scarf off my neck and wrapped it around my mouth as well.
Then I spotted movement in front of the screen.
It was a tall blonde man, wearing a black trenchcoat and military-grade gas mask. Beside him arrived six hazmat suits who started pointing at various audience members.
I slunk in my chair, pretending to sleep like everyone else.
Two hazmats walked over to the front row and picked out a sleeping guy in flannel. They lifted flannel up, under the armpits and by his ankles, carrying him between them both like a hammock.
The hazmats walked back up to the stage, where the blonde leader inspected the flannel man and tapped his head. Something was approved?
The hazmats began to swing flannel back and forth, as if they were getting ready to toss him. Despite their masks, I could hear a very muffled, very distant countdown.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ â
OneâŠâ The flannel audience member was tossed into the screen.
I literally watched him fly into the image of stormy waves ⊠and
fallinto them. The flannel man sank into the gray water like a rock, leaving a few bubbles and foam. A wave came crashing down. All trace of him was gone.
What the fuck. All six hazmats began grabbing more audience members with much more urgency. It became a minute-long process where they would pick the sleeping person up, bring them beside the screen, and then swing-toss them into it.
How was this possible? I turned slightly to see if there was a projector above me, and realized there was none. Which meant maybe there was no screen on stage.
Which meant ⊠maybe it was a portal? I tried to wake Sylvester by shaking him. I pinched his leg and arm a bunch.
He was out cold.
The hazmats started grabbing audience members from the middle rows now. They were emptying the whole theater. What the hell was I supposed to do?
I waited until they grabbed another batch, only a few rows down from me. When all hazmats had their backs turnedâI broke into a run.
With my left arm, I tightly gripped my mask and scarf against my face, while my right arm vaulted me over seat after seat.
I had never breathed so hardâthrough so much fabricâin my life.
The hazmats all turned to me. âHey! Hey!â But their hands were full with their next victims.
I ran all the way down the aisle, to the big exit sign on the left. My heartbeat filled my head. My plan was to dropkick through the exit door.
I imagined myself breaking through like some flying gazelle.
I jumped.
I angled my kick.
It might as well have been a brick wall. I fell ass-first to the ground, followed by my head. Of course the door was locked.
Through a muffled mask I heard a sneering scoff.
âWhere do you think youâre going?â
Above me stood the one wearing a trenchcoat. I could see his piercing gray eyes through his gas mask.
I rolled aside and tried to run by him. He lifted a foot and tripped me without effort.
My forehead bashed into an empty seat. It dazed me.
The blonde leader bent down and grabbed me by the neck, tearing away my scarf and mask.
âNo! No!â
A sweet, ether-like smell filled my nostrils. I did my best to hold my breath, but I could already feel myself getting light-headed.
The other hazmats joined in, grabbing me from all sides. Even if I had the strength to struggle, there was no escape now.
Above me, all I could see was the dark theater ceiling, and some of the light behind me from the cinema screen.
â
ThreeâŠâ â
TwoâŠâ âNo. Please. Donât do thiââ
SPLASH.
I was plunged deep into cold, wet chaos. My head was completely underwater.
Gagging. Bubbles. Spinning.
I fought for dear life, dog-paddling like a maniac.
Churning. Freezing. Panic.
For a second, my head popped above the water. I inhaled all the air my lungs could muster. I stared across a vast, violent ocean.
An enormous thirty foot wave came in my direction.
My whole body lifted higher and higher as the wave approached. I did my best to tread water. It seemed to be working.
Then a series of smaller waves arrived and smacked my chest.
SPLASH.
Spinning. Kicking. Flipping.
My view alternated between the pitch dark ocean beneath me, and the moonlit night sky above.
Again I swam to the surface, popped my head out. Ravenously sucked in air.
There was a small lull in the water.
Around me I now registered the other theater goers. Most of them were lying face-down or sinking ⊠but a few were flapping about like me, fighting for their life.
And above all of us, a floating white
shape. It was painfully bright, I had to lift one hand to look at it.
My jaw dropped.
It was the movie screen, hanging completely still in the air. It showed a dark, empty theater. The exact same theater we all occupied moments ago.
It was tremendously high, above all of our heads. There was no way of reaching it.
Then I saw another thirty foot wave come our way. It grazed the bottom of the screen.
I knew what had to be done.
***
One of the theater goers happened to be on a college swim team. She was the first one able to traverse one of the giant waves and climb into the screen.
Once she was up there, she found a firehose in the theater and reeled it out to us like a rope.
One by one, we swam as hard as we could, praying to God we could reach the rope. Everyoneâs energy was sapped. Your body can only sustain itself on adrenaline and fear for so long.
By some miracle, five of us got out.
I was the last.
I climbed the rope coughing and vomiting. I had swallowed so much water that my stomach felt swollen.
When I reached the top and they pulled me into the screen, I sobbed. I couldnât stop crying.
My life had flashed countless times before my eyes. In bubbling, suffocating visions, I saw both my parents and my brother. I saw my highschool graduation. I saw my favorite Christmas from when I was six years old.
I had almost lost all of that. I had lost almost everything.
On the dirty, carpeted theater floor, I lay with my face down, savoring the fact that I now lay on a hard surface.
God bless ground. God bless this filthy, popcorn-strewn ground. Beside me I heard bantering, hugging, the wringing of wet clothes. Sylvester was the second last to be saved, and he was particularly vocal.
âWooooooaaaaahh!â He came and drummed me on the back, lifted me up. âOh my god dude! Holy shit!â
I sat on my knees, wiping the tears and snot off my mouth.
Sylvester clapped his hands, held his face and screamed some more.
âHoly shit dude! That was so fucking scary! Like literally people were dying beside us. Like I SAW people die!â
I nodded, shivering in my drenched clothes. â I know it wasââ
ââThat was craaaaazy!â
He laughed and stood up, patting everyone on the back. He kept clapping his hands like this was some sports event.
âThat was sick! That was siiiiiiiiick!â
He ruffled someoneâs hair then ran up to me with an open palm.
âHigh five dude! WE MADE IT! High five!
âDonât leave me hanginâ
dude!â
submitted by
EclosionK2 to
libraryofshadows [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:30 jsimm1540 Hydro driven minibike
| You may have seen the pic posted before but my plan is to go hydraulic drive with this one. Red represents motor,green is a pulley(which will be a belt driven pump motor-pump-drive). Yellow is the pump hydro lines and drive. The orientation will be different once I cut the frame to fit the rear wheel properly into the frame. I'm going to be using a pump and drive unit from a commercial walk behind mower. The plan is to not paint the frame and go for an industrial look. Now I could buy a new engine and give it paint. But I have some old options for a motor that would match the build. One has a started generator which could be cool for a light setup the other might have a charge coil but not sure if either of these run yet but not are free I actually have 2 of the non starter generator engines. The drive will be rigidly mounted to the frame of the bike to the wheel and the other side of the wheel with have a pillow block bearing to the other side of the frame for added rigidity. The HP I have should be more than enough power to run the hydraulics. submitted by jsimm1540 to minibikes [link] [comments] |
2024.05.22 04:30 Aggravating-Beach801 gemini proćșçșżæé«äșïŒéžéžïŒççïŒćŠčćŠčïŒèżèœçäčïŒïŒ
2024.05.22 04:29 bloodblush I'm (21M) always more excited to see my girlfriend (26F)
I could be just worrying over nothing (I'm an anxious person) so I want some opinions. Also we're both trans.
I have been seeing my girlfriend since January and we made things official about two weeks ago. The thing is, our relationship is pretty damn great. We call mostly everyday for 2-5 hours on average (unless either of us is busy with friends), and we message a lot. She has depression and has been going through a bad bout lately, but even through that she tells me she loves me and misses me randomly throughout the day, compliments me and says sweet things like "you're the light of my life". We have very open and honest communication, we never fight/argue and she's meeting my parents soon.
I have a LOT of issues myself (autism, depression, anxiety, OCD, CPTSD), and I'm also recovering from codependency. Therefore, even though I know she's there for me, I try not to burden her too much and tend to attempt to self-soothe instead of going to her when I'm struggling. She always asks how she can help and tries to distract me if I get in my head while on a call, but outside of that I make sure I never get in the way of her having her own life.
Recently, it's been bothering me how chill she is about making plans. We only live 200 miles apart, but neither of us drive. It's about a 3 hour train or 6 hour coach journey. We saw each other two weeks ago, and there is a very vague idea of when we'll next see each other. It'll be either mid-June or early July. I'm autistic, so the uncertainty of that drives me a little crazy. She's really not that far, so I get a little sad about how even though I want to spend a lot of time together (I'd happily travel down every week or two), she seems completely happy and content with this inconsistent once a month kind of thing. She also doesn't tend to like longer stays as someone who needs her alone time.
I will say, she gets excited when we do have a plan in place, the day before and as I'm on the way. And whilst I'm there, it's PERFECT. We're great together. It's so lovely, but as it goes I always get sad and wish I could stay a bit longer whilst she's okay with me leaving at the end.
I'm not sure how much my codependecy and attachment style (fearful leaning anxious) are tainting my view of things and making me want to spend so much time with hearound her (she has a secure attachment style). I guess I'm also concerned because I'm moving to where she is for uni in September. Will she still want to hang out at this frequency when I'm nearby? She just seems SO MUCH MORE okay with the distance than I am. Is there a positive way of looking at this? Once she did say it's because she trusts that we're seeing each other again at some point soon, but idk.
Any outside opinions welcome and feel free to ask anything.
submitted by
bloodblush to
LongDistance [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:29 pandamore11 just created free URL shortener & Whatsapp generator
Hi, I've just developed a URL shortener to help manage my links. It's simple and doesn't require signing up. Also, I've created a WhatsApp link generator to simplify sharing contact details. the good thing it's free and no need to sign up
Kindly you would like to try it out at
https://vist.li/ and let me know your thoughts!
submitted by
pandamore11 to
ProductHunters [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:29 Litttlelightskin Marijuana induce psychosis
I went through marijuana induced psychosis my junior year of high school. I am now 20. The psychosis lasted for about I think what was four months. I had auditory and visual hallucinations. I couldnât look at my hands or look at myself in the mirror. I didnât think that I was me. I just felt like the world was moving too fast if that makes sense to anybody else that has went through this. I can no longer smell weed or be around any kind of smoking without getting anxiety other than vaping which Iâm fine with. I hated the feeling of eating because it felt like I could feel everything going through my body and the whole process of swallowing and processing the food, (which has now caused problems with how I eat today) at one point, I didnât eat for an entire week and my delusions got worse I looked into my black phone screen and saw spiders crawling out of my eyes. Itâs so frustrating trying to talk to people about how scary it was and not truly understanding. One part of me is making this post because I wanna know that there are other people out there who understand my pain and struggle every day, and another part of me is making this post because last night me and my boyfriend were drinking I had one shot and it hit me too quickly and it made me feel like how I did back when I was going through psychosis. Ever since my psychosis, my anxiety has been unbelievably bad and just my thoughts in general Iâm not sure what to do how to cope I feel like Iâm out of touch with reality constantly and just not here . This is definitely the scariest experience that I have went through in my entire life and Iâve went through some pretty scary shit.
If anybody has any coping mechanisms please let me know, every time I talk to a therapist about it they donât know what it is so feel free to comment anything.
submitted by
Litttlelightskin to
Psychosis [link] [comments]
2024.05.22 04:29 BondBuyer221 Some ideas for Sailing I'm going to put through the crucible of 2007Scape Reddit
I've done some brainstorming that should be taken with a grain of salt. Per the request of the recent stream asking for ideas, I have a few. Everything is phrased as a question for reason that if the OSRS team or the community doesn't like it; I'm not pushing but I think it provides value.
- Smuggling goods/NPCs (PvE) Sailing exp + Resources Ship Cabin Hold (ship upgrade) of 2-10 NPCs or Cargo Hold (opposing ship upgrade) of 10-50+ resources?
- Trading between ports (PvE) Sailing exp + Resources Coffee, Tea, Rum, Tobacco(Dwarf Weed)?
- Combat suggestion (PvE, PvP) Giant Salvage (Higher tier salvage) from destroyed ships Scavenger mechanic? Cannon usage on ships are: click on cannon -> cannon achieves a "Use Cannon" variable, then free clicking and turnage of ship toward target that is clicked on, then reload cannon
- PvP "flag" (toggle) option Suggesting Team Cape mechanics added in? Ship Buyback mechanics (50k-250k [based on ship size] GP) instead of real asset losses?
- High Seas Achievement Diary
- "Ratch" mechanics (I made that term up) Similar to Archeology levelling in RS3 to return to previously out levelled areas Similar to the OSRS team's ideas of higher Sailing levels to pass rock reefs
- Trapped Islander / Wrecked Ship mini event Choose to either rescue the trapped islander or ship wrecked crew, or steal their goods and (MAYBE?) turn a higher profit Requires Cargo Hold or Ship Cabin Hold
- Navigator mechanics Magical Compass item UI Element pointing directionally toward point of interest Magical in the way of PoTC Jack Sparrow compass (tell the compass what you want most) Visual rather than text based (and maybe toggleable?) Or maybe exp based like trimming sails
- Harpoon gun (cannon slot?) No whales or dolphins Memelore based sea creature for oil for lanterns (also possibly magical?) Open waters content
- Crow's Nest upgrade Boss sighting/finding/islandewreck Exp granting?
- Charter Ship Take port passenger(s) A from port A to port B, take passenger(s) B from port B to port A, repeat Port C -> A -> B -> A -> C -> infinite loop that the player decides when to unload completely (Cargo Hold, Cabin Hold) With potential ability to not have to disembark Ability to unload passengers anywhere/timer (a healthy/hefty timer) on passengers onboard
- Simplified unloading of cargo Much like the menus of Make-X menus, should sailing have a special dock for players with an "Unload-X" for cargo (and possibly passengers) Should leaving your ship only be for getting specialty tasks from the board? Additionally, would an autopath or "red click" for docking at a port be appropriate? But also disembarking anywhere in the world should still be possible.
- Should Sailing have a LootShare like feature from RS3 for Salvage and Resources and a new feature like EXPShare when Sailing in a group (for bossing or group/semi-group [but also soloable content])?
- When doing the proposed Trade Routes or Smuggling/Charter, should additional crew members be given LootShare, EXPShare?
- Should Captains be able to abandon their crew without giving them any EXP or share of the loot? Should crew gained loot be separate (and, or, reduced) from Captain loot when playing as a group?
- If PvP is considered, should the Trade Routes or Smuggling/Charter idea give additional rewards for being flagged (PvP toggled ON)?
- Should there be specialty (PvE) missions from the board (at port) inside of PvP zones, if there are pvp zones? (AKA Salvage 5 wrecks inside of a PvP zone, rescue 3 Shipwrecked crew, save 1 islander, smuggle 20 goods[resources]) Should a "double prompt" be required/always required when taking these missions so Sailors absolutely know the risks?
- Should any amount of movement reward 1-5EXP (or more, or less) in Sailing (per sea tile, per 5 sea tile)?
submitted by
BondBuyer221 to
2007scape [link] [comments]
http://activeproperty.pl/