jessa

Everyday Stories, Lived

  • Almost lazy

    Ah, the moment of choice when you could do everything else but what you should be doing. How easy it is to sleep through the day, except you have responsibilities to attend to. Neglect, yes. It could be an option now that you’re tempted to abandon all your responsibilities for more sleep. “Forget everything! What Read more


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  • When an AI writes a story

    I asked the WordPress AI assistant to “tell me a story about a man who would have talked to a woman, if only when the opportunity for him to confidently greet her happened but did not.” The statement in the parenthesis is the prompt I used to generate the content you’d be reading in the Read more


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  • Cheese hotdogs

    When we were out for a grocery run, I was surprised to see my husband take out a pack of cheese hotdogs from the frozen goods section. Why? Because he doesn’t particularly want them like I do. And seeing him grabbing a pack was confusing because you should expect him to get the regular kind, Read more


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  • Human evil

    Watching the Upload TV series was fascinating, where humans can upload their consciousness onto the internet and live forever (perhaps as long as there is internet). Imagine a digital afterlife, seeing dead people in real life still alive digitally. You’re in a long-distance relationship with them (because you can’t be with them in person but can still Read more


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  • Getting things done

    If you’ve been pondering how some people get many things done in a day, knowing that you spend the same hours but feel like you’ve done nothing (except binge-watching what’s new or doom-scrolling through social media) most of your waking hours. You feel like waking up from a stupor. “Something has to change,” you tell Read more


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  • Important tasks

    Big tasks, often due later, can be tackled by breaking them down into smaller pieces and scheduling dedicated time for each. But because of the lag between assignment and delivery, you could fall into the temptation of holding the task off until later, only to find yourself cramming one day because you realize that the Read more


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  • How to win an argument with a fool

    You may think that you can change the mind of a fool. But you are only fooling yourself. Why? Because a fool only wants to express his opinion and will not make the effort to understand. He is always in the right. A fool takes no pleasure in understanding,but only in expressing his opinion.Proverbs 18:2 ESV So, if you know the person taunting you is a Read more


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jessa

Everyday Stories, Lived

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