I’m now a pro magic the gathering player! Never thought I’d ascend to such heights, I’m terrible at magic lol
weirdly I’m still a Linux administrator but with way more fun services to maintain.
Professional slanderer of programming languages.
I’ve spent more time than I care to admit
Hate the player not the game.
Professional YouTube Watcher or Professional Hobbyist Language Learner.
Guitarist/cross stitcher, with a side job as a professional TV watcher lol
Professional Cat Petter! 😻
Sleeping
I’m a professional social media browser.
I think I’d actually kill myself.
Linux admin 😌
I really don’t want to play Arma professionallyI misunderstood the questionProfessional sleeper.
That should pretty much be the answer for anyone with a full-time job.
I get the spirit here but not sure I agree that it MUST be true mathematically.
A full time job is 32+ hours a week. Even if I use the American 40, that’s still only 23% of the week not counting vacation or holiday.
Most people don’t get more then 8 hours off sleep a night. That’s 1/3 the day. 43% of the week for everything else.
That’s enough time for you to do something more than sleep or work. Then count in time for vacation and holiday and if you don’t sleep eight hours every night. And if you do stuff at work that isn’t necessarily in your job title.
Due to my meds I can only sleep 4-5 hours a night.
My reasoning was that you sleep some amount of time every single day (let’s say 6h). I doubt that many people will spend 6h on one specific activity/hobby every single day.
Might have misunderstood the wording - unless you do a lot of sleeping during working hours?
Oh, you mean something you do at your job that isn’t actually your job. In that case eating launch? Though that’s technically break time.
Either a Game Developer or a Writer. If only…
I basically do farming at the level of a second job, so I suppose it would be that even though I don’t do it commercially (yet).
How is this going, where do you live, and what do you grow? I hobby-garden, have more space to plant and wouldn’t mind selling some of it but afraid of growing too much of one thing and throwing everything out of whack.
I live in a rural area in northern Japan.
We just started a few months ago (we were supposed to get the house last year but, due to various factors, we couldn’t take possession and get moved in until just before April). We’re definitely learning a lot about farming and what works for our land and environment but, because of the time we got the house, we’ve been super rushed. I think we’ll do better next year.
My goal is to position myself to deal with a lot of products foreigners living in Japan want and have trouble getting. That’s a lot of peppers, different types of beans, etc.
Opposite climate here in Florida, it’s okra season now & not much else wants to grow except the basil and mint but in the fall, winter and spring we can grow a lot of different things. We did get a couple of watermelons to harvest too, that was nice. Apparently they don’t mind the 35C temps everyday, but once the rains start in earnest it’s just okra time.
Fennel isn’t fussy, that might be good too for you.
Nice! I hadn’t really thought of fennel.
Cucumbers and okra have been our two most successful things so far. Most of my herbs are doing OK as well, I suppose. We’ve hit 35 a couple times this year. The forecast has us mostly in the upper 20s and low 30s for the next few weeks. I just got second planting potatoes in, so we’ll see how that goes. I planted a bunch of daikon radish, it came up nicely, then died a couple of days later. I’m not sure if it’s the intense sun and heat or if I needed to get water to them again sooner. I’ve still got more seeds, so I might try planting them again later in the season.
I watch anime professionally? I guess I’m writing anime reviews now, or something?
Dad
I really hope everyone’s answer is professional sleeper, otherwise we have some very unhealthy people.