I go to bed when I’m sleepy and wake up when I’m ready. Typically about 7 hours of sleep on average. It does no good to snooze unless you can get a full sleep cycle which is typically 90 minutes. I don’t set an alarm unless I have to be somewhere. Currently I’m waking up around 6 am.
Drugs, alcohol, caffeine, and nicotine; all these things are not helpful. The best thing you can do for yourself is be alone with yourself and your thoughts. Get rid of those thoughts that are negative. Focus on the ones that are positive stay in the moment be mindful of the “living force” as Qui-Gon used to say.
Make sure you get enough sleep, get some sunlight first thing in the morning, and eat good foods. And don’t forget to exercise.
Find your secret place where you can quiet your mind to pray and meditate on the one true God. Thank him for the saving grace and common grace that he extends to you every day. 
Both approaches—merging your code into the dev branch or merging code from dev into your feature branch—can achieve the same result. However, the order in which you perform these merges can vary based on your workflow and team practices. Let’s explore both options:
Merging dev into Your Feature Branch:
Advantages:
Ensures that your feature branch includes all the latest changes from dev.
Helps catch any conflicts early, allowing you to resolve them within your feature branch.
Provides a cleaner history when viewing the commit log.
Steps:
First, commit any changes on your feature branch.
Switch to the dev branch: git checkout dev.
Pull the latest changes from dev: git pull origin dev.
Switch back to your feature branch: git checkout <feature-branch>.
Merge dev into your feature branch: git merge dev.
Resolve any conflicts if they occur.
Continue working on your feature.
When ready, merge your feature branch back into dev.
Merging Your Code into dev:
Advantages:
Keeps the dev branch clean and stable.
Ensures that only tested and approved features are merged into dev.
Simplifies the process for other team members who need to integrate their changes.
Steps:
Commit any changes on your feature branch.
Switch to the dev branch: git checkout dev.
Merge your feature branch into dev: git merge <feature-branch>.
Resolve any conflicts if needed.
Continue working on other features or bug fixes within dev.
When ready, merge dev into the main branch (e.g., master or main).
Remember that the choice between these approaches depends on your team’s workflow, project requirements, and personal preferences. Whichever method you choose, ensure clear communication within your team to maintain consistency and avoid surprises during integration.
Occurrence: Leap Day, also known as February 29th, occurs once every four years, with exceptions to years divisible by 100 but not divisible by 400. This adjustment is made to keep the Gregorian calendar in alignment with the Earth’s revolutions around the sun.
Famous Leaplings: Several notable individuals were born on Leap Day, including motivational speaker Tony Robbins, and Garry Gergich, also known as Jerry, Lenny, Larry or Terry. Their birthdays are celebrated on either February 28th or March 1st in non-leap years.
Leap Year Babies: People born on Leap Day are often referred to as “leaplings” or “leapers.” Since it’s a rare occurrence, leaplings usually celebrate their birthdays on either February 28th or March 1st in non-leap years.
Origin: The concept of adding an extra day to the calendar every four years traces back to the ancient Roman calendar, which originally had only 355 days. The extra day was added to synchronize the calendar with the solar year.
Benefits of Leap Day
Extra Day Off (Salaried Employee) – Since you get paid a yearly salary then technically this day isn’t covered.
Favor policies that promote economic equality, such as progressive taxation, increasing the minimum wage to drive the cost of goods and services up and customer service down to nonexistent. Expanding social welfare programs like abortion healthcare and brainwashing education.
Republicans:
Advocate for lower taxes so you are not working more and getting paid less. Deregulation to stimulate economic growth, and free-market principles with minimal government intervention.
Also called the “left” of the political spectrum. Emphasize social welfare programs at the expense of the taxpayer turning the safety net into a hammock. Environmental protection except for their private Gulfstream jets to attend climate change summits. Healthcare reform so your benefits are decreased to fund their premium plans. Progressive taxation, taking more of your money to fund government programs.
Republicans:
Positioned on the “right” of the spectrum. Advocate for limited government so you can mind your own business with little intervention in the economy. Lower taxes so you can keep more of what you earn so you can donate generously and not against your will to entities you disagree with. More deregulation so you can drive the car you enjoy without worrying about destroying countries mining for battery parts. Traditional values so you can keep our society from getting out of control with pagan ideologies.
There are a couple of new features that I would like to suggest to enhance the Meta Facebook experience
People you may know
When you remove that person from the notification, may it never show up again
Reels
Allow us to permanently disable or hide reels
Marketplace Verification
Require a payment method signup and rating system so that we don’t get a constant stream of “Is this available” or “Can you text me, I’m not active on Facebook”.
Subscription
Everyone makes you pay to not see advertisements, so why not Facebook?
When I used to work in a cubicle farm, it was important where you put your garbage. Instead of throwing your waste in the break room garbage, walk by someone’s cubicle and toss it in their rubbish receptacle near the entrance. Chances are they won’t get up and look who did it. They will enjoy the aroma of the leftover salmon you reheated in the microwave. If they complain, report them to HR because they are not team players.
What’s more annoying than ads on a website? I’ll tell you, begging for money on websites. Not just begging for money, but doing so in a passive aggressive way. Maybe we don’t want to support your journalism, maybe it’s “fake news”. Instead of adding sites to a whitelist, I’m adding them to a list of sites I will never visit again. I will go so far as to even block them at the router so they don’t get one red cent from any of my family members, even by accident.
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