TWO BEES IN A BUCKET MOTHER MOTHER

I'm going to fix this chair if I have to go to hell forever for it. I don't care. I'm going to fix it if it kills me.

  • What you say?

    1308°
  • to be fair, i didn't expect it. for five dollars, i was expecting dissapointment, but here I was a broken chair, and grasping at straws looked like a good idea. i can skip dinner.

    i was not prepared for what came next. the chair was fixed as if by the hand of God. that jb weld stuff is magic. i can't believe i've lived for twenty five years and never noticed that it was there, beckoning me, giving me those eyes.

    It looks like a crazy mess, but everything is. Now I want to weld things together for fun, but for now I will save it in case i need it again.

    1309°
  • Han Soup Bar 寒舍汤铺 Chatswood
    27/369 Victoria Ave, Chatswood NSW 2067, Australia

    YAYOI Chatswood
    38 Albert Avenue, Chatswood 2067 NSWd

    Tea Journal
    Next time you’re looking to treat yourself (or a mate!), head to Tea Journal for specialty tea and freshly baked, tea-infused chiffon cake. Look forward to exploring over 30 different teas and rotating daily cake flavours. Take time to enjoy the ritual and don’t rush!
    Shop 44, 436 Victoria Avenue, Chatswood Interchange

    Gelateria Gondola
    77 Archer Street, Chatswood

    1805°
  • Alice's Makan
    Chatswood Chase

    Gram's pancakes

    1806°
  • Poor kid, he has succumbed to his illusions

    1807°
  • How To Do Intermittent Fasting To Lose Belly Fat (Science Explained)
    Life by Science
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RNkqsattTBY

    Bonus~
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xJAL5eUBpIQ

    1808°
  • Yeah it's just gado gado tho. Or is it? Who knows. It's a greedy friend.or really, a slave. Or, a master. Don't matter. It is in hell, and nothing of me, shall remain for it

    1809°
  • Hello

    1810°
  • https://elliot.my/im-34-heres-34-things-i-wish-i-knew-at-21/

    I'm 34. Here's 34 things I wish I knew at 21
    January 22, 2026

    People communicate most honestly through jokes. Pay attention to them.

    If you can't refuse something, it owns you.

    Fear of being cringe will stop you living fully. Get over it.

    Don't take criticism from someone you wouldn't take advice from.

    Expect no applause for telling the truth. Sometimes doing the right thing costs you – friendships, comfort, peace. But always pay the price without question.

    Whatever scenario you're in, just act like you belong.

    The lazy person works twice as hard.

    Curiosity is a superpower.

    Honesty without kindness is brutality. Default to kindness. Though know when to be firm.

    Life never meets your youthful expectations. As an adult, you need to learn to find joy nonetheless.

    Death can come any day. Every day is a gift.

    Adults make a lot more sense when you realise they're just children in big bodies.

    Bears don't need motivation to hunt salmon for 12 hours straight. But put them in a circus and they need constant prodding to wave at an audience once. Motivation is a human problem – because we don't fit our 21st century environment. You must not be a circus bear.

    Humans struggle to mentally combine their "now" self and their "future" self. So treat your future self as someone you love and want to see thrive. Today's laziness is tomorrow's burden. Do them a favour.

    The obstacle is the way. Get used to it. Learn to love it.

    Books are a cheat code – many of life's problems were solved and written down long before you were born. But reading is half the equation. Without action in the real world you get limited results. Action backed by theory is a potent mix.

    The opinion of the person who rarely offers it is listened to more closely.

    1826°
  • Bonus Lessons
    Reading history teaches you that events are cyclical. Most problems, confusion, and fear come from people who haven't learnt this yet.

    The days, weeks and even months go by slowly. But the years go by fast. Before you know it you'll be dead or 60.

    Humans are almost as impulsive as dogs. Don't keep a cupboard full of snacks.

    If you're a non-conformist in thought, be a conformist in dress. Offset one with the other.

    Listen to your favourite music regularly. Your soul needs it.

    Bathrooms are more dangerous than you think. They're slippery and full of hard surfaces – be careful.

    The time is going to pass anyway, so why not live well and be happy?

    There’s a reason most religions and cultures built fasting and renunciation into their traditions: the power isn’t in avoiding bad things, but in the exercise of restraint itself. Willpower is a muscle, and abstinence is the gym.

    Seek not just knowledge, but the wisdom to question it. Challenge what you read; think, debate, and write to refine your beliefs. Learn to recognise biases and errors in thinking. Opt for reasoned understanding over mere information consumption.

    Stock picking is gambling light. Do it in small amounts, for fun, knowing you'll eventually lose.

    The wealthy utilise debt to make more money. The poor abuse debt to lose money. Taking on debt can be a useful tool, but outside of large essential purchases like homes and cars or for sensible business investing, it’s best avoided.

    Don’t be tricked or sucked in by the fact that “candidates for political for office with obvious character flaws seen more real than bureaucrats with impeccable credentials” ("Skin in the Game"). People will vote for awful politicians with big mouths because they “tell it like it is” and “at least they’re honest”. Don’t be fooled — boring, considerate politicians are a good thing.

    1827°
  • >>1827
    People are naturally peculiar and often their actions defy explanation. Unless they're harming themselves or others, learn to accept their inherent oddities. Trying to get to the bottom of quirks is a maddening exercise. Avoid it.

    Eating meat is quite clearly immoral. Unless it will be detrimental to your health, eat as little as possible.

    Any well-functioning society should have optimistic young people, and cynical old people. If it’s the other way around, something’s wrong.

    1828°

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