Well, I just checked Wikipedia and we are both right:
" Even if it is strongly associated with the production of thermosetting polymers, the term "curing" can be used for all the processes where a solid product is obtained from a liquid solution,"
Glue that reacts with oxygen in the air is a process that produces a solid from a liquid.
Epoxy is a really long hydrocarbon chain.
There is no mention of curing and solvents. I normally think of drying as water leaving because no chemical reaction occured, and the original substance properties return with water added.
Shrug, I learned that it shouldn't be a pet peeve.
There is a glue that is stinky and not advertised much: e6000. I use it for misc projects like this. Yup your method works..
Also I have a mild grammar pet peeve: a chemical reaction that makes a liquid become a solid is not "drying" but is rather called "curing". If you got your glue wet and it reverted to a liquid, then it would only be " drying".
Living in the "self esteem" part of Maslow's pirimid when you are battling basic needs aka allergies, sleep, dehydration, dimentia, etc is a good way to be depressed. Focus on preservation of assets and restoring basic functions.
Very clever! If I were confronted with the same task, I would have filled it with a hot pad bean bag then put something heavy on top.
Well unsecured consumer debt has technically no legal consequences if it is not paid unless you get permission to garnish wages from a court. Most consumer debt collectors use the "badger and harry" approach of constant phone calls to collect debt.
Secured debt will just take the collateral.
Of course try the high fico score debtors first.
Or just forgive the debt.
Well, it seems like you have a good BS detector. I would still go to chatgpt and ask for "what types of psychologist approaches are there to sadness". It will then respond with " behavioral, cognitive, etc") then I would ask what would a therapist for each approach say to a person who "is sad, and other characteristics and circumstances of yours". Then pick the ones that you haven't tried or you only did halvsies the first time you tried it.
Good luck!
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