No the title has nothing to do with this photo. This photo is where things stand more or less. I've got a van with a dead battery, a camper with rotten wood replaced but still need to adjust the siding, it's too hot to do anything, so I'm working on shoes, working with rubber is painful but I'm almost done retreading my shoes, and my dog tolerates me being less active in this brutal weather. I think she has the right idea on how to spend summer.... If you want to know more about retreading shoes see the last post.
One more thing about shoes. I have obtained book titled "The Ultimate Survival Guide" and besides generally covering everything you would ever need to know in the event that the SHTF, it also goes into detail on how to make shoes out of tires. If you think about the mileage rate most tires have; if you put car shoes on human feet those feet will probably be set for life, unless the wearer spends all day every day running. I think you would be hard pressed to reach 10,000 miles. I could be wrong I haven't done any math or research. 10,000 miles just seems like a long way for a person to travel - especially in a year - you know the general lifetime of a shoe? If you want to prove me wrong I'm all for it I just didn't want to do any research.... anyway.
Related to Title section!:
Folding a fitted sheet. If you know how to fold a fitted sheet congratulations, you're special! Every time I bring up folding a fitted sheet I usually get a few people saying: "I just wad it up and throw it in the closet." So either these people
a: know how fold a fitted sheet but just don't want to, or
b: it's complicated enough to require practice and instruction
(or you know, c: people have more important things to think about than the storage configuration of their linens, which I agree is pretty likely) But! I have watched the videos and practiced. I can fold a fitted sheet (trumpets sounds as I toot my own proverbial horn).
If you have ever seen a movie where someone is describing a worm hole you will see them putting a two points on a piece of paper and then folding the paper so that the two points meet.
What I'm suggesting is that hyper dimensional travel is probably more complicated than folding a piece of paper. If you try to just fold a fitted sheet you end up with a right mess. I think hyper dimensional travel is more like folding a fitted sheet. The dimensions aren't simple and flat but if you re-frame your reference points from "what is a corner" or "what is the extra floppy bits" you can make it make sense. I truly believe that astrophysicist that want to understand hyper dimensional travel should first master folding a fitted sheet. I mean I guess origami would be the exact same sort of lessons, and possibly more interesting... However the last time I was folding a fitted sheet I got confused as to where my corner references were. I wasn't able to make sense of any of the 1-5 dimensions of my sheet. Maybe I had a peak into an alternate reality where I was a pet and dogs were the predominant species while my head was inside the tangle of planes of textiles, who's to say. Maybe I'm getting too tropish because I always think of hyper-dimensional space-time travel while consolidating my elastic constrained bed covers. Whatever. What do you think of while you fold laundry?
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