u/cryptocowduck
If you could remove one city out of Germany and replace with a foreign one, which ones would you choose?
reddit.comIf I gave €1,000,000 to the average person in your country, how would they spend it?
Or, how would you spend it and where might you go with that money?
First oil change '26 Honda Civic Sport. Oil life 60% at 9.5K
The dealership I leased from keeps telling me that I should get an oil change every 6 months or 9k (although the last person said 8k) and that the built in maintenance computer may not always be set properly.
It's showing oil life 60% right now and I only drive on the highway. My family has a CR-V back home and the dealership there told us to just follow the maintenance computer built in.
I'm at 9.5k right now (I only drive on the highway, had the car since December 2025) What should I do? Listen to the car and do what we always did or listen to the dealership people?
First oil change '26 Honda Civic Sport. Oil life 60% at 9.5K
The dealership I leased from keeps telling me that I should get an oil change every 6 months or 9k (although the last person said 8k) and that the built in maintenance computer may not always be set properly.
It's showing oil life 60% right now and I only drive on the highway. My family has a CR-V back home and the dealership there told us to just follow the maintenance computer built in.
I'm at 9.5k right now (I only drive on the highway, had the car since December 2025) What should I do? Listen to the car and do what we always did or listen to the dealership people?
Where do people typically go for a life reset in the UK?
I [24M] am Canadian but am increasingly interested in living abroad. I moved across Canada recently and it was an amazing experience and adventure to start a new life after graduating school so I want to try it again; people from big cities like Toronto, Vancouver, etc often go to Praries and the Maritimes when they want to start a new life, settle down away from the hustle and bustle of big cities. What are similar places in the UK where people dream about settling down or running away to?
Hello everyone, I[24M] am a recent nursing school graduate who recently started work as an RN. I am increasingly thinking about grad school and potentially going into law school. It's always been a field that interested me and I wanted to practice in health and injury law to advocate for vulnerable people - it would have good relation to my nursing career because I have more insight into healthcare. I live in Atlantic Canada now but I am from Western Canada and super open to moving just about anywhere because I am pretty independent and don't have anything tying me down.
I have not yet started studying for the LSAT, but I have enough free time that I could do it outside of my work schedule (I work 4 shifts a week and then have 5 days off). My cumulative GPA in my BScN was 3.65 which isn't great but I hope to make up for it with work experience and a high LSAT score (I do well on exams and did good on my NCLEX board exams); I also did better on the tail end of my degree. In terms of personality, I am very personable and warm.
Does anyone have advice on me going through this process? I was also wondering which law school would be the best for me to apply and which ones to avoid; I would rather go to the best and really excel in this new career or continue in healthcare.
Thanks and I look forward to reading your thoughts.
Hello everyone, I[24M] am a recent nursing school graduate who recently started work as an RN. I am increasingly thinking about grad school and potentially going into law school. It's always been a field that interested me and I wanted to practice in health and injury law to advocate for vulnerable people. I live in Moncton, NB, but I am from Edmonton, AB and more interested in the UofA law school so I can live closer to home. However, I can move just about anywhere in the country.
I have not yet started studying for the LSAT, but I have enough free time that I could do it outside of my work schedule (I work 4 shifts a week and then have 5 days off). My cumulative GPA in my BScN was 3.65 which isn't great but I hope to make up for it with work experience and a high LSAT score (I do well on exams and did good on my NCLEX board exams); I also did better on the tail end of my degree. In terms of personality, I am very personable and warm.
Does anyone have advice on me going through this process? I was also wondering which law school would be the best for me to apply and which ones to avoid; I would rather go to the best and really excel in this new career or continue in healthcare. My timeline is to prep for the LSAT, write the exam (aiming for once only and getting a great score the first time), and continuing work alongside this for the next few years and then applying (by 2028 or 2029).
Thanks and I look forward to reading your thoughts.
Hello everyone, I[24M] am a recent nursing school graduate who recently started work as an RN. I am increasingly thinking about grad school and potentially going into law school. It's always been a field that interested me and I wanted to practice in health and injury law to advocate for vulnerable people. I live in Moncton, NB, but I am from Edmonton, AB and more interested in the UofA law school so I can live closer to home. However, I can move just about anywhere in the country.
I have not yet started studying for the LSAT, but I have enough free time that I could do it outside of my work schedule (I work 4 shifts a week and then have 5 days off). My cumulative GPA in my BScN was 3.65 which isn't great but I hope to make up for it with work experience and a high LSAT score (I do well on exams and did good on my NCLEX board exams); I also did better on the tail end of my degree. In terms of personality, I am very personable and warm.
Does anyone have advice on me going through this process? I was also wondering which law school would be the best for me to apply and which ones to avoid; I would rather go to the best and really excel in this new career or continue in healthcare.
Thanks and I look forward to reading your thoughts.