• InverseParallaxEnglish
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      I really wish I’d spent a day learning regex 2 decades ago or so.

      End up finding more complicated ways around everything because I never learned it properly.

  • stelelor
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    If I pay attention to a written piece of information (name, phone number, address, short instructions, that kind of stuff) I will remember it for months and years. Comes in handy when working with complex policies and legislation!

    This is balanced by the fact that I have trouble retaining auditory information. If you tell me your name, I’ve forgotten it before you’ve even finished talking. (But if I catch it on your badge out of the corner of my eye, I’ll remember it for years.) The only exception are dog names - those I have no trouble remembering.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️English
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    I have an extremely high tolerance to mundane, repetitive tasks because of my vivid imagination. I can just keep doing the same mindless bullshit all day while I’m somewhere else in my head.

  • TexMexBazooka
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    Ability to calm down and read instructions or manuals. I don’t understand people’s insistence on figuring EVERYTHING out.

    Don’t get me wrong I love solving problems, but sometimes the solution to the problem is just finding the answer- literally right there. RTFM.

  • GraniteM
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    I know how to enunciate, speak with a voice supported by my diaphragm, and increase the intensity of my speaking voice without actually yelling. It’s incredibly useful. Virtually no one ever misunderstands me on the phone. I can have a conversation in a loud crowded place. I’m actually fairly conflict-averse, but when I need to “switch on, I can usually short-circuit people’s inclination to argue by using a more focused voice.

    Everyone should take a decent Acting 101 class where they teach you these skills.

    • rammer
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      increase the intensity of my speaking voice without actually yelling

      People will still consider it yelling even when you’re not actually doing it.

    • Valmond
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      I just imagine if everyone was able to do this 😅

  • jpreston2005
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    When I was a kid I did gymnastics, and skateboarded/rollerbladed. This combination of activities meant I was falling on my ass all the god damn time.

    It also means that I am so accustomed to falling, that even as I age, those instincts survive, and in turn, help me survive. When I fall, I tuck, I roll, I break my fall with any number of instinctual responses. This has lead to me surviving some scary falls I’ve taken whilst home alone (off a ladder, in the shower, fainting once when I got up from a long squat), and I think will help me survive more in my elder years.

    • secret300
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      Same here. It took me a while to realize not everyone rode bike or skated then ate shit as kids so now they eat shit.

    • LemmyKnowsBest
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      That’s great now, also have you considered working to improve your balance so you stop falling doing normal everyday tasks?

      You might be so accustomed to falling your entire life, maybe it hasn’t occurred to you that falling off ladders and falling in the shower and getting dizzy from squatting to the point you fall over when you get up, those are not normal or healthy events. Quite the opposite of normal & healthy.

  • some_guy
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    Good at google. Which should be easy for everyone to learn, but a lot of people don’t.

    • RBWells
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      I am good at that too, and think it may come from being able to understand some computer syntax. It’s being able to form natural language queries. Asking things in a way a machine can understand.

  • WoolyNelson
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    Poker face.

    No matter what I am thinking internally, it does not show externally. Essential skill for customer service.

    • BougieBirdieEnglish
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      I do not have a good poker face, I think more customers need to get laughed at.

      It would be good for some of them.

      • WoolyNelson
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        Oh, some of them need laughed or yelled at, for certain.

        I, however, need continued employment.

  • ramenshaman
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    My moderate skill at hacky sack has surely prevented many things that I’ve dropped from becoming damaged.

  • RBWells
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    Neat handed, so good at caulking and cake decorating. Not afraid to figure things out or make mistakes that helps with a lot of stuff and is less helpful with some other stuff.

  • MrShankles
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    I can carry 3 full pint glasses in one hand and 2 in the other. If they’re empty, I can carry 4 in one hand and 3 in the other. It comes in handy more than I would expect

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    I can cook and I’m good at it, I know how to grow veggies, I know how to fix things, both mechanical and electrical/electronical. But the best skill I have is that I know how to spend time when wifi/power is down.

  • That_Devil_Girl
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    A strong sense of spatial awareness, accurately eyeballing measurements, and reverse engineering things in my head without physically taking them apart.

    It comes in really handy as a welder, machinist, and a 3D print hobbyist.