I'm keeping it off the wall in a car that boils down to a sprint car on roids, you're just picking the wrong lane to avoid a wreck
I was on the bottom, then moved up to avoid, then the guy turns his wheel the other way and flies up to the top, had my brakes on the entire time. -shrug-
Assuming you are an average human living in an average country Happy Approximate 1/4 to 1/5 of your lifespan xD
I'm unbelievably bad about procrastinating. I've been sitting here for 8 hours, it's 2am, and I have absolutely nothing done. If I don't have this stuff done tomorrow I'm absolutely screwed. 3am update: still absolutely nothing done, I think it's gonna be an all-nighter. 4am: Still nothing.
I did about 70% of my college year in two and a half days, at almost 35 hours of no sleep shit gets weird. How I managed to do a (shitty) 2d animation, a reasonable 3d animation and all the paperwork in 2 days is still beyond me. Passed pretty nicely though. Maybe wouldn't recommend.
That's what I need to be doing right now. I can and have pulled it off in the past, but I'm just not for some reason. I need to turn in missing assignments to pass decently, and my teachers probably won't take any late work after today. But I'm not doing anything, I'm just sitting here, and I've managed to waste about 10 hours. I'm very unhappy right now. Update: It's 4:26am and I am officially giving up. I'll have turn this stuff in the day of the final and hope the teacher doesn't crucify me.
Lucky me my upper wisdom teeth came through pretty straight and my lower ones came through perfectly.
To be fair, non cosmetic dental work is only covered by the NHS in the UK if you are under 18 (or on benefits/low income I think). As far as I am aware they almost always use a local anaesthetic in the UK (via injection into the gum, sometimes they will numb the gum first with a paste anaesthetic before injections, other times not) in order to prevent other complications/ impracticalities as opposed to getting people off their tits and unable to care for themselves, although I can understand why they would want to do that especially on kids who may not react so well to the procedure. Last time I was at the dentists was when I was getting fillings done, I told them not to bother with the anaesthetics since getting needles stuck into my gum is not something I have ever been fond of, it wasn't too bad tbh, just got a little bit towards major pain towards the end of drilling each tooth. However with wisdom teeth that would not be advised for obvious reasons.