Without pronouns, language itself would be impossible.

I decided I wanted to be an archaeologist at age 7. I went to a field school at 16, got a BA in anthropology, and an MA in Archaeology. Got my first paying field job in college and have made a living doing it for 45 years. There are often volunteer opportunities, but if you want to make a career of it, you will need a degree and a grounding in relevant preservation laws and regulations.. You will also need to be able to write (proposals, memos, reports, etc.).

With a degree, you should be able to make a living in a job with benefits. Due to ups and downs in the field, be ready to change jobs, especially if you want to move up in responsibility.

So wait a second. If they're twins, how can one be born prematurely?

Also, if she does throw you out, wait a week and then dime her out to Child Protective Services or the equivalent where you are. Those kids need help.

Call them yourself and complain about them. Then, the police have two opposing viewpoints on whatever is going on that they need to resolve. And if there's no crime and no one is injured, that's most easily done by having everyone just walk away.

Over in the old world, I recall that Medieval archaeologists would complain that people looking for earlier sites would shovel off the layers that were of interest to them. Then Post-medievalists started yelling at the mediavalists for doing the same thing to the layers that they were interested in!

That sort of thing can be dangerous. I heard an almost apocryphal tale of a research project in the Northeast where, after preliminary testing, the archaeologists brought in heavy equipment to remove later deposits than the period that they were interested in. Only to discover when they got out into the field--with paying field school students--that they had pretty much removed the entire site.

Also someone with a long history of CRM in the Northeast... We nearly always screened the plowzone as a single context within a shovel test or unit. As it was a mix of topsoil and substitute that was largely in the same place, material in the plowzone can tell you where there are more likely to be precontact features in the underlying soil. Also, farm fields are often repositories for material discarded by the farm household, and we didn't want to miss that.

At one point, we found an entire ca. 1810 dump from a redware pottery in NJ in a plowzone context. Sherds from damaged vessels discarded by the potter and fragments of kiln furniture, with a lot of information on style and technology.

There's no "I" in "team," but you can't spell "team" without "me."

This is partly a stupid question. I would differentiate between "finding someone attractive" and "being attracted to someone." As long as he's not acting on it in inappropriate ways or attracted to women under legal age, (or attracted to his daughters), I wouldn't sweat it. As I've gotten older, though, the upper end of the age range of women I find attractive has gone up. I'm in my 60s, and my current partner of 20 years is 6 years younger than I am. [Rushes off to google Sydney Sweeney!]

Obviously the justice system is being "weaponized against him because he is a Christian and a Republican.

As an archaeologist, I have just 3 words... Venus. Of. Willendorf.

Fucking Wyoming. Put two random residents in the same room, and inside of 20 minutes, they'll figure out half a dozen jokers they both know. It just ain't nacheral!