Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sorry for another bathroom post, and maybe this isn’t really a commonly known thing, but I didn’t know people stand to wipe.
I didn’t know that people didn’t!
When we were building a new bathroom my DH and I had to discuss the layout and somehow this came up. Apparently he stands, though he didn’t teach the children to stand as far as I know.
Standing to wipe closes the butt cheeks. You’re missing dingleberries.
I didn’t know how many grown folks don’t know how to wipe their behind.
People stand to wipe!? That’s gross.
Anonymous wrote:Reposting link
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.buzzfeed.com/amphtml/andyneuenschwander/16-super-obvious-things-that-people-just-realized
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That all Asians are not universally referred to as “orientals”. Thanks rural Ohio.
In the same vein... that “chinky” is not a cute nickname for a white kid with almond-shaped eyes. I’m from rural Illinois.
Anonymous wrote:That all Asians are not universally referred to as “orientals”. Thanks rural Ohio.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in grad school when someone had to explain what “take a dump” meant.
In high school, one guy said he’d meet us an hour later. Completely naive, I asked what could possibly be that necessary. At which point he choked out that he needed to use the bathroom. Everyone was snickering, and I obliviously asked why he couldn’t just take about three minutes and go. So, this poor guy was completely red and told one of the girls to explain while he fled. I’d never been constipated in my life, so taking 30 minutes to just sit and then needing to shower and relax after (figure out a year later that he was going to manually handle the issue, since we were all going dancing) was completely foreign.
Anonymous wrote:That you're supposed to wipe front to back.
Truthfully, I don't get how people do this! My arms are not that long. Unless I'm wiping from over my butt (instead of between my legs), it's just not physically possible.
I still wipe back to front, but have only ever had one uti, and that was at 37.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite both being Christian, white people and black people don't go to the same churches
Nor do they use the same funeral services. Found this out when my white father died and used a black funeral home. His family from rural VA was surprised, to say the least.![]()
Yes, to all of the above, and we sing our gospel songs differently. We yell obnoxiously and dance everywhere, our white Christian believers like Christian rock. But my eyes are opened to the entire world of Christian music now, thanks to the internet and not being limited to Southern Baptist churches where everyone gets the holy ghost and starts sweating at 12:30PM.
- A black Christian
Not all black Christians are Protestants. You were this many days old when you found that out.
Wait what? Did I miss the Protestant part?
They can be Catholic. A Protestant is a non Catholic Christian.
Pp here, my dad was black catholic, mom was black southern baptist
There are also thousands of Ethiopian Christians in this area. They are both non-Catholic and non-Protestant. It’s an ancient Orthodox form of Christianity.
Interesting. What do they believe? Is their worship different?
Orthodox. Like Eastern Orthodox like you get in Russia but slightly different theology.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That you are supposed to give a hostess gift when you go to someone's house. I grew up middle class, and the only people we ever entertained were lower middle class family.
I learned this in college. Extremely embarrassing.
I'm fifty and just learned this right now. None of my middle class / lower middle class family and friends did this
Isn’t this just done when one is hosting a party?
No. When someone invites us over, we take a bottle of wine, a six pack of beer, some cookies, whatever. My DD has a friend who brings over a snack every time they have a playdate, I think it's great of her parents to teach her such good manners at an early age, we've started doing it too - either a snack or a craft.
I grew up solidly middle class and our family friends were of a varied socioeconomic group, this was always the case. I grew up in the midwest, so perhaps that's why. In my opinion, people are more polite, generous, and mindful of others in the Midwest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In recipes, tablespoon has a capital T (Tbsp) while the smaller teaspoon has a small t (tsp). We could probably have a whole cooking thread.
b = tablespoon (tbl); and p = teaspoon (tsp)
I mean. No, the p does not = spoon. They both have tsp in them. The sp = spoon...