Ugh. You know, I don't expect the Motherfucking Website framework, but here are some of the external domains (excluding numerous subdomains) accessed when viewing this <i>text article with a few images</i>:<p><pre><code> cloudfront.net
stripe.com
googleadservices.com
optimizely.com
webtype.com
bootstrapcdn.com
ads-twitter.com
disqus.com
facebook.net
optinmonster.com
google-analytics.com
twimg.com
optnmstr.com
mstrlytcs.com
facebook.com
newrelic.com
disquscdn.com
stripe.network
fastly.net</code></pre>
This is my kind of humour too, it's silly, creative, and in spite of it's surface crudeness can oddly be a strong way of communicating your true feelings.<p>It's probably best left unspoken but my interpretation is that it's likely the little girl was initially being sincerely spiteful, but then being intimately spiteful can sometimes backfire with empathy, gradually transforming her attacks into this loving joke. I actually prefer that interpretation because it shows the capacity for change, but I might be seeing things that aren't there... His interpretation of her being so insightful from the start is also a nice interpretation, consciously or not.
The language barrier might be a big reason that prevents people from making friends very easily<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13651981" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=13651981</a>
Is it weird that I think this blog post invokes the same sentiments as the anime "Your name"? Sometimes human life is like being alone, swimming in the sea, only for brief periods finding other swimmers that share your fate.