MapleCoffee

joined 1 year ago
[–] MapleCoffee@lemmy.ca 23 points 11 months ago (4 children)

The budget isn't super tight, but nothing is open yet where I am. I'm just a bit hungry at the moment, because I missed eating for most of yesterday.

When the stores do open, I'll be at work and will have to wait until after my shift to buy more food.

I hadn't heard about this aspect of fire safety before today, so I figured I would see if anyone on here knew more about it. Thank you for responding!

 

I live in an apartment building. Another unit recently caught on fire, and the building was evacuated. Smoke was everywhere. No heat reached my part of the building. I have not seen any soot, either.

I tried googling it, but I haven't been able to find a good answer that relates to things like chip packaging. They still have air in them, and the packaging doesn't fully match the descriptions of what foods to throw away.

Are things like this ok to eat after smoke exposure, or should I throw *** every *** type of food out? Thanks in advance.

[–] MapleCoffee@lemmy.ca 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I think it also has to do with the overall bad mental health that a lot of people have. We don't really have a lot of truly helpful solutions for most people.

Yeah, we have some facilities, but they can be inaccessible. If you're in denial over struggling, you might think that the amount you drink is ok, even if that amount might not actually be ok. Someone might see mental health or addiction stereotypes and think to themselves "I'm not as bad as that guy", and then that person believes that they are ok when they really aren't ok.

If someone seriously doesn't want to stick around, they're probably not going to care about littering. If someone hates everyone, they're probably more likely to feel ok stealing. If someone's constantly in mental agony, they might look for anything to escape it. If you think dinner is completely ruined, you probably won't fret about what drink you want to pair with it.

None of this makes the bad stuff ok, but I seriously think that bettering our country's mental health services would go a very long way in culling addiction. What we're doing now certainly isn't working.

[–] MapleCoffee@lemmy.ca 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Or football fields, can't forget football fields