Ask Carla: Why does it always rain on me?

Dear Aunty Carla I’m currently sitting at the back of the Mercedes hospitality unit, staring blankly at a lukewarm cup of Earl Grey. What on earth happened? Why did it have to be me? I am completely, utterly gutted. You saw what happened on Saturday. I drove my not-so-little socks off in the Sprint, and converted my pole into a win. It should have been celebrations and congratulations all round, but all anyone wanted to talk about was a microscopic bit of wheel-to-wheel racing that sent […]

https://girlinthepitlane.wordpress.com/2026/06/02/f1-canadian-gp-2026-ask-carla/

Reader advice requested: difficulty pronouncing a family member’s partner’s name

📰 Original title: I try! But I can’t pronounce my brother’s boyfriend’s name. Give advice to this Hax question.

🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Users: It's not clickbait ✅

View full AI summary https://en.killbait.com/reader-advice-requested-difficulty-pronouncing-a-family-member-s-partner-s-name.html?utm_source=mastodon_world&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=killbait.mastodon_world

#opinion #advicecolumn #relat...

Reader advice requested: difficulty pronouncing a family member’s partner’s name

The article presents a weekly reader participation feature from The Washington Post’s advice column series centered on Carolyn Hax. In this installment, readers are invited to respond to a submitted question rather than receiving a direct answer from the columnist. The prompt focuses on a relatable social dilemma: a person is struggling to pronounce their brother’s boyfriend’s name and is seeking advice on how to handle the situation respectfully and comfortably. The format is part of a recurring editorial approach in which the columnist is unable to address every submitted question, so selected reader responses are featured instead. The piece emphasizes community engagement, encouraging readers to think critically and empathetically about interpersonal relationships and everyday communication challenges. Although the specific question is simple, it touches on broader themes such as inclusion, respect for identity, cultural sensitivity in pronouncing names correctly, and navigating awkward family dynamics. The article does not provide a full answer within the text itself; instead, it functions as a call for audience participation and later curation of selected responses. This format highlights how advice columns can extend beyond a single authoritative voice and instead reflect a range of perspectives from readers. It also underscores how seemingly small social issues, like pronouncing a name correctly, can carry emotional weight in family settings and relationships.

KillBait

Reader advice requested: difficulty pronouncing a family member’s partner’s name

📰 Original title: I try! But I can’t pronounce my brother’s boyfriend’s name. Give advice to this Hax question.

🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Users: It's not clickbait ✅

View full AI summary https://en.killbait.com/reader-advice-requested-difficulty-pronouncing-a-family-member-s-partner-s-name.html?utm_source=mastodon_social&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=killbait.mastodon_social

#opinion #advicecolumn #rel...

Reader advice requested: difficulty pronouncing a family member’s partner’s name

The article presents a weekly reader participation feature from The Washington Post’s advice column series centered on Carolyn Hax. In this installment, readers are invited to respond to a submitted question rather than receiving a direct answer from the columnist. The prompt focuses on a relatable social dilemma: a person is struggling to pronounce their brother’s boyfriend’s name and is seeking advice on how to handle the situation respectfully and comfortably. The format is part of a recurring editorial approach in which the columnist is unable to address every submitted question, so selected reader responses are featured instead. The piece emphasizes community engagement, encouraging readers to think critically and empathetically about interpersonal relationships and everyday communication challenges. Although the specific question is simple, it touches on broader themes such as inclusion, respect for identity, cultural sensitivity in pronouncing names correctly, and navigating awkward family dynamics. The article does not provide a full answer within the text itself; instead, it functions as a call for audience participation and later curation of selected responses. This format highlights how advice columns can extend beyond a single authoritative voice and instead reflect a range of perspectives from readers. It also underscores how seemingly small social issues, like pronouncing a name correctly, can carry emotional weight in family settings and relationships.

KillBait

“There has never been a sadness that can’t be cured by breakfast food”*…

Eddy Chavey, AKA, “Mr. Breakfast,” with a site all about the most important meal of the day…

Mr Breakfast is committed to: 1) assisting breakfast lovers find the best possible breakfast, and 2) making breakfast lovers out of those who are not…

There’s an interactive database of recipes, a massive “encyclopedia of every breakfast cereal ever made in the U.S.” and a meaty blog stuffed with featues like “366 ways to enjoy toast,” “Recreating The World’s First Omelette Recipe,” “How To Make Donuts In The Microwave,” and “Breakfast In Africa.”

So much more at: “Mr. Breakfast.”

Apposite: “The World Atlas of Sausages.”

* Ron Swanson (Nick Offerman), Parks and Recreation

###

As we set our timers, we might send helpful birthday greetings to Ponce Kiah Marchelle Heloise Cruse Evans; she was born on this date in 1951. Better known by her pen name, Heloise, she is the daughter of Heloise Bowles, who created “Hints from Heloise,” a domestic advice column that appeared in over 600 newpapers worldwide. Ms. Bowles died in 1977, at which point Heloise II took over. While the column has faded with the newspapers that use to run it, it continues to run. Additionally, Heloise II has written 11 books, hosted a national radio show, is a nationally known speaker, and contributes a monthly column to Good Housekeeping.

source

#advice #adviceColumn #breakfast #BreakfastCereal #Cereal #column #culture #Food #Heloise #HintsFromHeloise #history #MrBreakfast #newspaperColumn #recipes #sausages

My second opinion is: if you have to hustle someone at pool in order to make them a better person (curious about what bet YOU recently lost), you do the rug pull no later than the 4th game when they can still afford the bet, and then let the win speak for itself.

Teaching someone to be a better person by humiliating them, suggesting that they're lucky not to get beaten up, and then hounding their Dad for the money is highly correlated with not being welcome at Christmas.

#advice #advicecolumn

My first opinion is: don't. This has never once in the history of anything ever made anyone a better person. Just send them consecutive nightly hauntings, way more evidence-based.

#advice #advicecolumn

Apparently I have opinions about hustling your family at pool in order to teach them to be better people.

https://slate.com/advice/2024/12/nephew-lesson-gambling-family-advice.html

#advice #advicecolumn

I Decided to Teach My Young Nephew an Important Lesson During a Round of Pool. Uh, I’ve Been Uninvited to Christmas.

I went easy on him.

Slate
Finding balance in love, finance, and family: Amy Dickinson's festive advice

Have you read our first advice column? We've launched a series called "Dear Solarpunk Presents..." where we respond to questions or links or comments (etc) you've sent us about solarpunk and related things.

Not sure if something is solarpunk? Want the opinions of either @arielkroon or @xtinadlr?

We have a LOT of opinions, and we're very happy to be wrong but we can only learn if other people join our conversation.

So head over to our blog and let us know what you think!

https://www.solarpunkpresents.com/blog/dear-solarpunk-presents-is-it-solarpunk-when-billionaires-decide-to-build-a-solarpunk-city

(Disclaimer: we're not the arbiters of what is solarpunk or not; that would be very silly. This series hopes to provide a place for discussion where the solarpunk community can learn from each other!)

#solarpunk #solarpunkPresentsPodcast #blog #DearSolarpunkPresents #Advice #AdviceColumn #city #UrbanPlanning #Billionaires #SolarpunkCity #UrbanDesign #IsItSolarpunk? #QandA #Question #CaliforniaForever

Dear Solarpunk Presents… Is It Solarpunk When Billionaires Decide to Build a Solarpunk City? — Solarpunk Presents

When we make the podcast, write the blogs, and tend our Patreon garden, most of the time, it feels like shouting into the void. We occasionally hear from one of our supporters on Patreon and sometimes get comments on our various social media accounts, but what we’d really like is for discussions

Solarpunk Presents

Dear Solarpunk Presents...

We're launching an advice column! (Well, sort of...) Our first question is from a listener who wanted our opinion about the "California Forever" project to build a sustainable city in Solano County, California. Is it solarpunk?

Click through to see what California-raised @xtinadlr has to say about it, and join the conversation in the comments to share your opinion.

(Ariel also took a look at the project, but this is more in Christina's wheelhouse!)

-Ariel

https://www.solarpunkpresents.com/blog/dear-solarpunk-presents-is-it-solarpunk-when-billionaires-decide-to-build-a-solarpunk-city

#solarpunk #solarpunkPresentsPodcast #blog #DearSolarpunkPresents #Advice #AdviceColumn #city #UrbanPlanning #Billionaires #SolarpunkCity #UrbanDesign #IsItSolarpunk? #QandA #Question #CaliforniaForever

Dear Solarpunk Presents… Is It Solarpunk When Billionaires Decide to Build a Solarpunk City? — Solarpunk Presents

When we make the podcast, write the blogs, and tend our Patreon garden, most of the time, it feels like shouting into the void. We occasionally hear from one of our supporters on Patreon and sometimes get comments on our various social media accounts, but what we’d really like is for discussions

Solarpunk Presents