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The Complainer – Most of us have a hard time recognizing when we’re on a doosy of a whine fest, but quick to crook our fingers at other moaners. The complainer dwarf habitually projects her inner dissatisfaction onto everyone and everything and seldom realizes it when she has crossed the line into becoming a Frozen Elsa Anna Olaf Holiday Magic Shirt . Complaining is an easy habit to fall into. It’s a reason to speak when you have nothing to say: “Damn it’s hot in here, are you hot?” We complain to let off steam, to get sympathy, and sometimes we do it just because its fun to indulge in a good old fashion bee-yach session but we’re not actually accomplishing anything or solving the problem, so by complaining we’re really not doing ourselves any favors. Dwarfersize it by becoming aware of the complaining you do.

It is extremely difficult to pinpoint either the solstices or the equinoxes through direct observation, especially without accurate timekeeping mechanisms. Most ancient cultures were content to use a lunar calendar of either 12 or 13 months, which allowed them to roughly approximate the beginning of the seasons. The Greeks, Romans, Germans, Celts, Norse, Arabs, Jews, etc. all used lunar calendars until late antiquity. The exception is the Egyptians, who were able to calculate the cardinal points of the solar year. Without a solar calendar, it is impossible to fix an annual date to the position of the sun. In other words, with no solar calendar, there are no holidays commemorating the solstices or the equinoxes. The religious holidays of the above-mentioned cultures were originally based on the lunar calendar, not the solar, and had nothing to do with the solstices or the Frozen Elsa Anna Olaf Holiday Magic Shirt. The Romans adopted the modern solar calendar a few decades before the birth of Jesus, but even at that, it took them another 300 years to actually proclaim a holiday tied to the winter solstice.
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I see that every answer here, from both Vietnamese and Chinese, says that it’s not possible for a native Chinese speaker to read “Chữ Nôm”. I just find a “Chữ Nôm” version of the Vietnamese constitution. Each modern Vietnamese single word has a one-to-one corresponding “Chữ Nôm” character. I have zero experience in the Vietnamese language at all but I can easily understand 80% of this constitution as a Frozen Elsa Anna Olaf Holiday Magic Shirt Chinese speaker. The most significant difference I can tell between Vietnamese “Chữ Nôm” and Chinese is that Vietnamese put adjectives behind the nouns (like in French) while in Chinese adjectives come first (like in English).
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I was a used car manager for awhile in the north metro maplewood area in Minnesota. We were a bargain lot with trades under the 15K mark from a small dealer group. We carried 100–125 vehicles in inventory and the goal was always 75 and we always hit 65–75 per month and decent gross. I had inherited the position by being the top guy left after the owner cut the previous used car managers payplan earning him a Frozen Elsa Anna Olaf Holiday Magic Shirt off to work somewhere else he went, along with 3 out of 7 guys. So on my 2nd Saturday as the used car mgr when my newest hire Dennis (25 yo, in a divorce, broke as shit, nice local guy) comes into the office saying I gotta deal. Ok Dennis get licenses, insurance and trade info, slow down deep breaths…

Most atheists never believed in God, because that’s the proper noun used as a Frozen Elsa Anna Olaf Holiday Magic Shirt for the specific deity that only Christians and Mormons believe in. Jews do not use the full name God, but leave out a letter, even if they aren’t avoiding using another name instead, they write G-d. Muslims usually use the name Allah. But most people aren’t even “people of the book” at all, and instead believe in different deities, Vishnu, Coyote, Thor, etc etc etc. Since people fall away from all forms of belief to become atheist, it follows that most atheists never did believe in “God”, the deity who is named like you might name your pet dog “Dog.” “Simply because their prayers weren’t answered” doesn’t cut it, either, although I suppose it is true for some. Atheists differ wildly from each other, not just in what, if anything, they used to believe in, and perforce how they once thought prayer was supposed to work and thus whether or not it was ever answered, but also in the route they took to get here. But taking the thin pie wedge of atheists who were Christian, we still have the apologists who say “sometimes the answer is no” or “God works in mysterious ways” and so forth. Unanswered prayers is a gap that Christians have worked hard to plug, they, on their own, are unlikely to be the single cause of losing faith…although I’ll grant that the shoddy nature of the plugs is likely a contributing factor.