Oh mine is super frizzy too! And dry, most of the time. But fine hair is softer than medium or coarse, that’s all I mean.
I find that most glitches happen when Morpholio needs to be updated. Did you check that?
No idea otherwise, just thought I’d chime in with a little Computer Science 101.
My hair is very soft, and there’s also not much of it. Yay!
I know, I’ve literally done all but 2 shrines, and they are crystal ones. The crystal ones annoy me because they are repetitive (to me).
It’s not a hot take or anything, I just don’t find them to be fun, and prefer the in-shrine puzzles.
I get that it IS the puzzle, but I bored of the same puzzle over and over again.
Yes but they are almost all about bringing the crystal over from somewhere, and once you figure that out once, there’s no puzzle to figure out.
Agreed! Too many bringing the crystals over, too few puzzles. I haven’t finished the last 2 shrines because I don’t want to tote another freaking crystal across the sky.
You look like you have fine hair. I have fine hair and can tell you from lots of experience, pure CGM is not for me. Co-washing? Nope, I need shampoo or my hair gets greasy, limp, and lifeless. And I wash every other day. And no oil, light products only.
The after shower routine is similar to regular CGM. I use stuff on the fancier side, but here goes: Davines OI all in one milk as a leave-in light detangler conditioner etc, Oribe curl gloss (creams are too heavy), R+Co chiffon mousse. Diffuse or air dry, then scrunch!
Sounds like a few things could have happened here by your description.
1) no matter how detailed you think your list was, there are always outstanding questions, coordination items, conflicting ideas, etc. This is not at all a knock against you, but Architects are trained to think through these things differently than non-Architects. I can tell you, I work with some absolutely brilliant engineers and clients, but the Architect way of thinking is just… a different perspective than most people. Especially when you see things star to flesh out on paper.
2) you say you gave your Architect full control of the design. Simply, that’s just not how Architecture works. You, the end user, need to provide consistent input throughout the design process to answer outstanding questions, coordination items, conflicting ideas, etc. Also, and this happens often: an idea written down can be translated a million different ways in a plan, or may simply not be translatable. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had the aforementioned brilliant people tell me an idea, and I know absolutely that it won’t work, but I have to walk them through drawing it out for them to see that it won’t. The plus side of that is, it generates more ideas to solve the problem at hand.
3) bad Architects exist, so do mismatches. It’s unfortunate, but true. Architects are human.
My advice would be to be more involved in the upfront design process, have meetings throughout so they can show you how your words can translate into plans, and then you give feedback. Design is iterative, and you need to be involved in those iterations. It’s your house, after all, and for me, there’s nothing better than successfully completing a design that’s thoughtful, well-coordinated, and loved by the client.
I love them. I separate and freeze them immediately so they don’t stick together, and then just usually warm them on a dry pan.
Yes, they are a little gummy, but I prefer that to my tortilla falling apart.
Late afternoon is prime thunderstorm/tornado time, and May/June is prime thunderstorm/tornado month in Den. And our taxiing can be loooooooong. I prob wouldn’t risk it, especially if you’re trying to catch an international flight after you get to SFO.
ETA: the benefit of a ground stop is that all flights are stopped (been there many times in DEN), so there’s that, but then I just had a friend with an afternoon flight diverted to Wichita. Also sometimes, they just meter landings and use specific runways only.
Thank you, this is great info!
Leave. It. Alone.
I am not your audience. Spend your time elsewhere.
Turns out, I’m allowed to live my life however I want, with no regard for you and your ideas. And will be happier for it. So please, and I’m saying this with heartfelt kindness, f- off and stop wasting precious time in both our lives.
I loved Axios, and the owner was a sibling of a friend of mine. They were doing pretty well, but decided to get out of the restaurant business and moved. Was sad when it moved out, but everything that’s been in there since has been really sub-par.
Precisely why I won’t look at a Tesla. The Musk fanboys also drive me crazy (see comment by Bubbles).
Charging infrastructure is fine where we’ll be going, if we even need it at all.
Thanks for your insight! I’ve been a little wary of VW, being caught up in Diesel-gate years ago, but will def give it a look!
There are literally no Tesla charging stations along a major corridor where we would travel for hiking, and 5 or 6 (even at state parks) of CCS with high reliability ratings.
Do you not do anything except shill for Tesla?
I am obviously not your audience. Cool it already.
There’s more to life than Tesla.
Noted. I won’t rule them out.
Rode in/drove a few Santa Fe’s years ago, and was not a fan. Sounds like they’ve changed.
Yep, more for summer, and just out and back for hikes etc. really more of a nice-to-have and not a need, really just looking at range, and what could work.
“Would like flexibility” means that it would be cool to have a car with higher range that’s not a Tesla. I’m not asking about charging infrastructure. It’s not that hard.
Every other day now that I’m older. Used to be every day, especially when I was younger and the hormones were a-ragin’. But my hair is fine, thin, and gets greasy limp & lifeless so quickly, and dry shampoo just piles on. Tried the co-wash too many times to count and it was more and more gross the longer I went.
do you wash your hair everyday?
curlyhair