There's usually one that comes out on top, but what makes it even more interesting is my perfectionism.
shadowedcross
Hey it's me.
Neither as much as I'd like. My mum died 5 years ago, and my dad is in his late 70s and likely suffering from dementia. So between that and my own issues, there's not really much opportunity to develop our understanding of each other.
Remember when buying a PC was semi-affordable? That was nice. Now it's transitioning into a luxury product.
That's me with Battlefield 6. I fucking hate it, but I have too much fun playing BF6 with friends to only have Linux.
I'm not bi, but I can still appreciate masculine beauty. Beauty is beauty, after all, regardless of someone's gender.

Ehh. It's definitely going to be more than traditional consoles. Whether it's worth it to you depends on how much you care about having a console like experience on your TV, except with your steam library, and all the goodness that comes with a Linux-based OS.
Very Private Now, pls.
Makes sense. I've only seen accessibility toilets be dedicated rooms, and without a stall since they usually aren't big enough anyway.
How big are the stalls in the US? That looks absolutely massive compared to any I've seen here.
And what about people who feel exhausted by every type of social interaction? Because that's my experience. I'm not saying it cannot change over time, but labels can still be useful. When someone describes themselves as an introvert, nobody assumes they are drained by every single interaction. People generally understand it as a way of describing how someone responds to strangers or groups, rather than how they respond to all interaction.
There is nothing wrong with that. A label can help someone express a pattern they recognise in themselves without believing they are trapped by it. It is simply a way of communicating how they tend to feel in certain situations. Many people adopt mindsets that feel natural or comfortable without assuming those mindsets define them forever.
It's why so many of us hate ourselves, because until we get diagnosed, all we have to go on is what people think and say about us.