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Welcome back to /comfy/ Anon :)
Friends: >>>/late/ ¤ /kind/
board rulesonionshelter


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share your comfiest desktops here!
(image is not mine)
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>>10805
it is but there is also so many compatibility issues :(( audio gets distorted when i try to watch movies from web, so i use falkon for that kind of thing. but most of the time pale moon is berry good and it has the best ui imo
>>10806
Agreed. I knew i was going to install Chicago95 before switching to Mint. But when I saw the UI of Mint Xfce, I couldn't decide for a while.
I recently went back to it, it really is. Works a lot better than it used to, too.
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cube
>>10286
this is really well done, the windows wrapping around the bar as well.
i guess i should try fvwm, also to all you people that desire retro aesthetics, old kde versions, windowmaker, fvwm, twm etc are also worth investigating
>>10554
holy comfy
what are you using

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Art thing
Reminds me of mandalas but then again the second one is more varied. But thr first one looks like a globe if nurgle and tzeentch were architects in the middle east

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To get away from the world. Post comfy cabins.
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Replies: >>1130 + 1 earlier
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I hope to move soon, and I'd like a house with a LARGE garden. There I want to plant all sorts of fruit trees and bushes, especially cherry trees. Those are comfy. A little teahouse next to a tiny pond wood be lovely.
Replies: >>1130
I randomly bumped into somebody I know while walking round outside a music festival and mans just got a house on the farm where he builds extra segments and weird caca. He's doing it right
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>>1125 (OP) 
yes one day i wood love to move to the woods and build a little cabin like this from scratch and have a little wood fire stove inside
>>1128
that sounds lovely i hope you get to move soon
Replies: >>1131
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>>1130
I haven't moved yet, I shrimply haven't found anything attractive and within my financial means. Inflation could make home loans distinctly uncomfy, and we all prefer the comfy way.

Meanwhile I am planting cherry and plum trees in my garden which makes for lovely flowering during spring, reminding me of the time I lived in Japan. I'll see if I can build a tiny pond and an equally tiny teahouse. I don't need planning permission for a garden shack, but the pond can be a problem.

Sitting inside, nice and warm, while looking and listening to the rain, is berry comfy.
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/comfy/ cabin in the woods :)

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Getting ready for my final exam! How do you all relax after a busy week or day?
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I basically just change out of my work clothes and sit down at the computer for the rest of the night . I'm pretty much stay there other than eating or going to the bathroom until I'm ready for bed. I like to have some baked sweets late at night too on occasion.
chocolate, food, quality time on the computer and mostly opioids of all kind
Replies: >>8582
I had a "fantastic" team building today. It was airsoft. My comfy level is at negative infinity. Send help!
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>>8578
>opioids
I had very comfy times when I was into this myself.
And really uncomfy ones to :(
Glad I've weaned myself off :)

Be careful with opiates anon.
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HOT SHOWER
despite my love for cold showers, i only ever take them before noon as they can disturb one's sleep if taken too late in the day
hot showers however are perfect in the evening and make for a good transition between the work day and rest

naturally, shower means clean comfy clothes

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Having a cup of tea.
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>>10282
Think so. Gonna do it again.
Replies: >>10419
>>10280
I hated it, but it's hard to qualify why exactly.  Probably better with sencha instead of genmaicha, and I probably oversteeped.
Replies: >>10460
>>10364
What did you get? How was it?
>>10280
>>10366
Why not brew it normaly and then cool it?
Replies: >>10462
>>10460
When it's stupidly hot outside, I don't want to run the kettle and then leave boiling hot water on the counter.  Or worse, put it in the fridge.

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‘’’Book thread!’’’ Anon, what is the best book you have ever read? Why do you like it? Has it changed the way you view the world?
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For children's books, I will have to go with 'The Little Prince'. 'The Secret Garden' is a close second. Both are berry beautiful philosophical pieces that you enjoy as a child and truly appreciate as an adult. I heard that 'Night on the Galactic Railroad' was another good one, and I watched the anime movie featuring the two cats but not the novel (Movies don't count). It's something on my to-do list once my Japanese improves.
Now, as for literature aimed at an older audience, one of my favorites has to be 'The Confederacy of Dunces'. As a short summary, you may as well call it 'Anon's Eberryday Life' (And yes, my phrasing of the summary is a reference to that guro manga). I was told to read 'Don Quixote' next so that'll be my next stop.
'The Brothers Karamazov' is also one that I have read a bit of and have yet to finish, but already I am enjoying it immensely. Dostoevsky has so far touched my heart with what I've read from him, and that is rare. People make fun of his prose but he enriches the heart, right down to its core.
Now this next book, 'Memories of My Melancholy Whores' isn't a contender for my best book but I mention it because I hear so little of it. It's by the same man who wrote 'One Hundred Years of Solitude' and the prose (well, the english translated prose by Edith Grossman) was berry bretty. Subject matter is somewhat similar to Lolita, take that as you will. I find it funny how two books about older men taking advantage of young girls can have such wonde
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I picked up The Count of Monte Cristo recently and am enthralled.

France in the 1810s or so.  Napoleon's era seems to have ended, but he's still around.  A 19 year old gigachad is thrown into a gulag on behalf of a member of a managerial class and other lowlives who are mostly lashing out at a better man out of ressentiment.

The description of such banal evil, and of this guy languishing in a hole without trial made me think ah caca, this is too real, but I don't think this is going to be 117 chapters about how eberrything is terrible and only gets worse over time.

I'm hoping for some Ulysses returns home levels of bloody vengeance, but I'll just have to find out.  I don't want spoilers, obviously.
Replies: >>10125
>>10120
No spoilers but I heard that book was awesome. Not a revenge type of guy, but that's something I really want to check out.
Replies: >>10128
>>10125
It had my interest up until chapter 12.  Then it also had my admiration.
I'm not this anon >>10089 but I just finished Brave New World. I won't make a super long analysis on it but I will make a small note on how I really enjoyed John and Bernard's characters.
I think failed-pedestrian is the perfect way to describe Bernard. He's one of those guys who loathes society, in the guise of how they hate the way it functions, but really it's because they aren't able to reap the benefits of it in the way others can. I find it entertaining how quickly he changes the moment he reaches a higher status among his peers. It's really pathetic but berry human, and I'm glad we were able to have him as our protag for the first couple of chapters.
John was an extremely personal and tragic character. He truly belonged no where, a true outcast of society, and because he lamented being alone, he eventually gave in to pressure and betrayed his morals and his philosophy in the end. And when he truly realized the extent of what he had done, he couldn't bare himself any more. To live was to go against all in what he believed in, to live was to be a hypocrite. What I found interesting is that the author later wanted to give John another ending, I wonder how that wood have tied into the story.
There's so much to say about both of these characters but I'm not going to make my post too long, but to different extents I related to them, so that's why I made 
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What's you favorite season anon?
I usually love autumn for the melancholy feels and the smell of the forests under the rain.
Winter is really nice if you have a warm and comfy place to spend time in. I like being outside for long walks in the cold night tho, especially if there is snow.
Spring is pleasant, lot of flowers and nice perfumes in the nature. I can feel deep into my soul and my body the rebirth of the nature.
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Replies: >>7792 + 2 earlier
>>23 (OP) 
That was wonderful. Thanks to whoever OG OP who posted this back in the day.

I used to love Winter snow, but I hate to admit it, but I'm starting to prefer Summer now. But nothing beats a crisp Autumn day meandering throught changing leaves of the woods. OTOH, what can compare to Spring's eternal call to clear skies and renewal?
>tl;dr
Don't make me choose, Anon!  :)

>>7791
'You can do it Anon
May you warm & snug today.
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If you could add a season in Earth and make it in any way you want, what wood it be like?
Replies: >>10116
I love the autumn and winter. As a kid I loved the summer but it's been so hot recently. For me, there is nothing better than listening to the quietness of the leaves falling or the fresh snow in the winter. It's so nice to get chilly and then go inside to cuddle up and get comfy with some tea or coffee.
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>>7794
>If you could add a season in Earth and make it in any way you want, what wood it be like?
You mean even including impossible fantasy scenarios? It wood be interesting if there was a season that had the appearance of winter but was warm instead. I can definitely see the beauty in snowy winters but can't handle the cold in the last.

My dream season wood be like the warmest part of summer with the greenery and all the flowering plant life of late spring. Dandelions, for example, woodn't have to turn into ugly puff balls as part of their life cycle. There wood be the occasional warm rain, but otherwise it wood almost always be sunny without the vegetation getting scorched.
i like winter the most because im a big fan of the snow

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Yay!
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Replies: >>9987 + 4 earlier
what the heck this is an almost year old thread lol
Replies: >>7052
>>7051
Eh, I guess it's never too late to wish an happy birthday XD
Replies: >>7054
>>7052
Its anon's birthday & 2/3rds!
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>>4118 (OP) 
Huh? Habby brithdwy!
Habby birthday, my dearest anon!!

May you have many auspicious and fulfilling years ahead of you.

What are some activities that you find are good for late at night? I find loneliness hard to keep at bay and thus difficult to relax.
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Replies: >>5014 + 3 earlier
bit of a goofy video, but the song itself is nice and right on-topic.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EL0pTo9Z_XU[Embed]
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>>4999 (OP) 
Just an idea for a late activity : >>>/late/125
smoke a joint and listening music or reading a book.
>>5003
I envy you, anon. Unfortunately I can`t see neither the sunrise or the sundown from my windows.
I have an old radio which I bought on Craigslist awhile ago. Restored it, gave it a cleanup and it works just fine. Sometimes I just turn all my screens off and choose a random station playing calm music... And just listen to it, maybe drinking some coke and slowly smoking some cigarettes. Yes, this does it for me.

There is nothing more comfy than midnight coffee with a light snack during some nightly watching or playing. I prefer quick sandwiches so it's usually honeyed and buttered toast, PB&J/PB&H, or bean toast.
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>>4841
Does it taste any good, I like black coffee and black tea, wood you suggest I try it?
looking for a good but fairly cheap whiskey/scotch, i really like chivas but im not comfortable with spending $40+ a bottle that won't last a week. elijah craig is really good but local liquor store doesn't have it
Replies: >>9641
>>9604

If you are looking for a 1.75L bottle for less than $40, I would sugest Cutty Sark or any of the widely available cheap bourbons like Jim Beam.  I don't iamagine anything in theat price range is going to be great.  I've probably become too snobbish in my whiskey taste over the years.  What sort of flavor are you seeking in a whiskey?
>>832
I usually have two or three at once.
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having some wine and peanuts

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