A few hours. For me home is always a few things: my current residence, the place I grew up, and any place I slept last night that I’ll sleep again tonight.
They don’t all mean the same thing, but let’s go home could mean any of those.
A few hours. For me home is always a few things: my current residence, the place I grew up, and any place I slept last night that I’ll sleep again tonight.
They don’t all mean the same thing, but let’s go home could mean any of those.


That will work in some regions. In others you may need to rent a bear canister. Talk to your local rangers to find out what’s appropriate, it depends on the local bears.


Which country?
If the question were about books instead of movies/shows Anne of Green Gables would be my answer.
The show’s on my list to watch, but that only grows, never shrinks.


I tear up at most movies. It’s not a sad movie, but Everything Everywhere All at Once holds the current record for most cries.
Generally if a movie doesn’t make me tear up at least once that’s a bad sign. At the same time I don’t gravitate towards tearjerkers, they can feel emotionally manipulative and heavy handed.
I almost never cry for TV shows or books.


AI aside, different voices may be immersion breaking. I tend to avoid audiobooks with more than a single narrator.


This is standard in US-style carrot cakes


We also check to see if the word that popped into our heads actually rhymes by saying it out loud. Actual validation steps we can take is a bigger difference than being a little more robust.
We also have non-list based methods like breaking the word down into smaller chunks to try to build up hopefully more novel rhymes. I imagine professionals have even more tools, given the complexity of more modern rhyme schemes.
And the temperature and sound changes too. Also it’s pretty neat to be in a crowd for a moment of communal awe.