I feel weird calling people employed by my employer but whom I don't normally interact with "co-workers".
I tried "teammates" but that, I think, means something even closer.
So… suggestions? Does "colleagues" sound like it means a different group than "co-workers"?
I work for what is similar to a school "district," but not geographically based. The quickest driving route to visit all our locations and return to your starting point would 1000 km and our team is more distributed than that. I interact with 3/4 of the staff only a few times per year.
Join the cool crowd https://www.analog.cafe/r/giveaway-kodak-ektar-h35n-half-frame-film-camera-kne7
Christmas pyjamas are weird.
Unlike other seasonal clothes which a kid will grow out of so there's no point in "saving for next time" at the end of the season (unless there's hand-me-down purposes), Christmas pyjamas become out of season so quickly, it's kinda silly.
And that's why the kids have all worn Christmas pyjamas in the past few weeks.
In 2020 and years prior, I tipped the customary 20% and said that every year, I'd go down a 5% step. Well it's 2024 and here I am, tipping 0% everywhere (except if the person is not a stranger because I'm only a partial jerk). It's interesting how much more common it is to be asked for tips since I started reducing my tipping.
Sorry in advance to my friends who disagree with but I think I agree with LInus' take here, shockingly enough https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AluomlO9vhE
If you think I'm weird in cyberspace you should find me in meatspace.
❤🔥 Catholic
🇨🇦 Further north than you
🇳🇱 Billignualish
🍻 Brewing beer and kombucha
📷 Shooting and developing film
💼 Alt school IT sysadmin
🗳 TANSTAAFL in the morning