The Messenger`S Box Full Movie Part 1
The Messenger`S Box Full Movie Part 1
Lingerie photographer, 21, fed-up with men sending her X-rated social media snaps gets the ultimate revenge.by forwarding one messenger's explicit image to his MOTHER. Some beer trading message boards also recommend using a smaller box inside a box when you mail beer. I’ve never tried that personally (or had it done with beer sent. Download free full unlimited movies! There are millions of movies, videos and TV shows you can download direct to your PC. From Action, Horror, Adventure, Children. The disney bloodline. 13 bloodlines of the illuminati. the skill of the skill. of lying, the art of deceit — part 1. My wife and I try to divide our household chores equally: She cooks, I do the dishes. She buys groceries, I do the laundry. My easiest chore is setting the table. It.
How to Mail Beer Across the Country Like a Pro. I really like beer. No, I really like beer. That means I’m constantly on the hunt for beers I can’t get in my current hometown of San Francisco and broker deals with buddies to mail me goods from across the country in exchange for sending them a few bottles of local stuff from the west coast. Over the course of the past decade, I’ve probably mailed 1. United States. Of all those shipments, I’ve only had one mishap: a crushed can that managed to slowly explode and soak a box. Luckily for me, and the recipient of the box that happened to be a friend of mine, the beer- soaked box was still delivered, although a few weeks later than planned (my guess being so it could dry and still, you know, be a box).
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In contrast, I’ve had a number of boxes sent to me with broken beer (the saddest thing in the world) inside. Through all those packages I’ve come up with a few tips for success. Line Your Box with a Garbage Bag.
Accidents happen. What you don’t want to happen is for a small accident like a crushed can or broken bottle to soak your box, cause it to break, and result in a whole box of lost items. For that, I recommend lining your box first (just as if you were putting it in a garbage can) with a plastic garbage bag. Sure, it’s not unstoppable, but it gives you an extra line of defense in case the worst happens. Also, a plastic bag means that if the box does get soaked it will be harder for individual bottles to fall out. Some beer trading message boards also recommend using a smaller box inside a box when you mail beer.
I’ve never tried that personally (or had it done with beer sent to me), but if you happen to have two similarly- sized boxes available, it wouldn’t be the worst idea. Line the Sides of Your Box with Bubble Wrap. Since I do this a lot, I have a TON of bubble wrap readily available in my house. If you don’t, then using crumpled up newspaper or packing peanuts can have the same effect.
The goal is to have a line of defense around the sides and bottom and top of your box. This box is absolutely going to get tossed around. Don’t let your beer be right up against the sides. Wrap Individual Bottles with Bubble Wrap or Newspaper. Of the few dozen broken packages I’ve gotten over time, the majority of them happened because someone didn’t wrap each bottle in its own. DO NOT just put a 6 pack in a box and mail it to someone. It will break. The person you sent it to will hate you.
The mailman will hate you. It’s a waste of good beer.
Don’t be that guy. The place where bottles are going to break is at the neck. Wrap the heck out of it (and the whole bottle). The best way to do this is with (a lot of) bubble wrap secured with a rubber band. If you don’t have bubble wrap, then you need something that’s going to keep the neck of the bottle protected. Think to yourself: “If I dropped this on the floor, would it break?” If the answer is yes or maybe, then you need to wrap it better.
Seriously. If I’m mailing 1. I sometimes pack them in freezer bags as well. It doubles up the water protection, and I can shove a lot of newspaper in the bag as an extra layer of protection. If you’re really fancy, you can buy these sleeves made for wine that will keep individual bottles secure. There are also a lot of styrofoam setups for mailing wine. They’re a bit pricey IMO for a one- time shipment, but if you’re trading regularly with the same friend then they could be a good investment and something you could use over and over again to send back and forth. Keep It Tight. When you seal the box up, you want to make sure nothing is moving inside.
When stacking bottles I recommend going top to bottom. So the top of one bottle is next to the bottom of another and packing them on their side, not up and down.
Ideally, you want to have an additional layer of protection (not just the bubble wrap surrounding the bottles) between each bottle. That busted can incident I mentioned earlier? It came from me thinking “Oh, a can won’t break” and putting it next to a bottle that crushed it mid- journey. Don’t be me. Before you seal the top, give the box a little shake and make sure there’s no movement. If there is, stuff some more bubble wrap/newspaper in there. Protect those cans just like bottles, and think about situations where they might get crushed. Tape Every Part of the Box.
Beer is heavy. It’s best to just presume that your box isn’t going to make it and reinforce it with tape. I’m not saying cover the box with tape, but make sure to reinforce the seals at the top and bottom of the box with tape in case the glue gives out while it’s being tossed around. Don’t Mail Beer in the Summer.
Heat is bad news for beer and the summer is hot. At some point of your box’s journey (or most of it), it’s going to be sitting in a hot warehouse or on a hot truck..
That’s going to hurt your beer. Save your beer trading for autumn and winter when the temperatures are cool, your beer and its recipient will appreciate it. Know the Rules. USPS doesn’t allow you to mail alcohol. USPS flat rate boxes are pretty great, and let you mail anything you can fit in a box across the country in two days for not a ton of cash.
I will let you use that information how you’d like. Here’s a rundown on what you need to do to mail alcohol using traditional shipping services. Inform yourself before you show up with a box, not after.
How to Share the "Mental Load" of Chores With Your Partner. My wife and I try to divide our household chores equally: She cooks, I do the dishes. She buys groceries, I do the laundry. My easiest chore is setting the table. It takes about one minute and she has to remind me every time.
The problem isn’t the task itself; it’s keeping it in mind. If she doesn’t remind me ahead of time, I’ll only notice at the last minute and get in her way, squeezing by her to grab the silverware while she plates the food. French comic artist Emma describes and addresses this problem in “The Gender Wars of Household Chores”: Among straight couples, even when men do equal work carrying out household chores, women still disproportionally bear the “mental load” of keeping track of those chores. This creates a kind of continuous partial attention that takes up energy and raises stress.
It also creates an invisible hierarchy where men feel like employees running afoul of the boss. Men often fail to appreciate or share this invisible management job. If you can help carry the load, you can relieve your partner’s stress and feel less like an underling.
Anticipate needs. Part of the solution is simply raising your awareness.
Don’t just “do the laundry”—monitor the hamper and take the initiative to run a load. Examine when your tasks usually need to be done, and plan ahead for them. I’m learning to set the table an hour ahead of time. And my kind and patient wife is learning that if she says, “Don’t worry, you have plenty of time,” she’s just enabling me to avoid that mental load. Write it down. I have a short attention span and a bad memory. Thankfully, I also have a smartphone.
I make calendar events for the rent check; I keep a grocery list so when my wife asks what we need, I have an answer. Writing down the most minuscule chore is still better than forgetting, and it’s the first step to learning how to simply remember. Automate it. Turn your phone into your manager and eliminate the mental load altogether. Add alarms to those calendar events.
Set location- based notifications that remind you, when you’re passing the drugstore, to stop in. Move regular shopping trips onto Amazon Subscribe & Save. Outsource it. A wave of apps has made it even easier to outsource chores like laundry and dog- walking. Depending on your budget, consider a housecleaner—but pay attention to who’s responsible for hiring, managing, and paying them. You probably spend quite a few hours each week on household chores. If you're time- crunched…Read more Read. Learn the skills.
Some chores end up in one person’s domain according to ability or interest. My wife loves to cook, so I never learned.
Usually this works, but when she’s sick or busy, the system breaks down. On those nights I take over and handle the Seamless order, but to really reach some kind of equity, I have to learn to cook. Next time your partner handles their chore, ask them to teach you. On your second try, have them step back and simply advise, while you carry out the physical task yourself.
At first this will slow you both down, but from then on you’ll be a more reliable “backup”—and you might discover that you’re just as interested in the chore as they were. Transfer the resources. A lot of chores rely on access to specific resources, especially logins or files. Just because one of you provides the health insurance doesn’t mean the other can’t manage it.
Sit down with your partner and exchange logins for everything that affects your household, like shared bank accounts, insurance, doctor portals, your children’s school portals, or shared mobile plans. Most popular password managers provide shared vaults for all this data. Using a password manager is basically internet security 1. Read more Read. Prepare to handle phone calls for each other too. Depending on your comfort level, share identifying info like your social security number, and check if your doctor or accountant will let you talk to them on your partner’s behalf.
Some require a signature in advance.)You can share any Amazon Prime account with family members, even across different locations. Share the login for streaming services so you can manage family playlists and queues. If you can bear the intimacy, share calendars so you can get a feel for each other’s availability and workloads. Hold a family meeting. A lot of mental loads stay invisible until the responsible partner speaks up. Unfortunately, that often happens during a fight.
Fend off conflict by regularly discussing upcoming responsibilities in a friendly, info- sharing context. Sunday evening is a great time to discuss your upcoming week and swap certain responsibilities. Even when the conversation doesn’t lead to any specific action, it builds your awareness of each other’s mental loads. Then when there’s a discrepancy to address, you’ll have much less work to do, and less chance of using your responsibilities as ammunition.
It’s just common sense that in order to keep peace in your household, chores should be split evenly …Read more Read. Put the kids to work.
Kids should help with chores as soon as they’re able, but they often need management. Hand off some mental load by teaching them to self- manage. Lifehacker writer Beth Skwarecki asks her kids to “be the boss of cleaning the table,” telling her what to pick up while she does all the work.
They love their little power trip but I love that they’re actually paying attention to what the mess is and how to clean it.” This management- only outsourcing even helps kids learn how to cook before they’re old enough to do dangerous tasks themselves. Prepare for major changes. The most crucial application of all these techniques is during a major life change: a job loss (or gain), an injury, or having a kid.
This is when unrecognized mental loads, which take more time to transfer or outsource than physical chores, blow up. The more flexible you are with your partner, and the more chores you both feel comfortable swapping, the more you can handle in a crisis.