• @[email protected]
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    07 months ago

    Buddy, I have bills and the options were “see totality and lose job” or “see 99% coverage and keep job”.

    • @I_Has_A_Hat
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      7 months ago

      Unless you are a surgeon or something else that could result in lost lives if you took off 2 hours to see possibly the most spectacular thing our planet has to offer… I think you really need to reevaluate your job if you would have gotten fired for that. Personally, I’d be bitter as fuck.

      99% coverage is essentially the same as 1% coverage. Things may get a little dimmer, but it’s completely different from 100% coverage. It’s not a gradient, you don’t get 99% of the experience by being in 99% coverage. I really can’t stress how much you missed out on, and hope that you make an effort to see the next US one in 20 years, or travel internationally to see a sooner one. Hopefully you’ll have a better job by that time.

      Here’s a relevant xkcd on the matter. I think the alt-text sums it up. “A partial eclipse is like a cool sunset. A total eclipse is like someone broke the sky.”

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        You act as though I’m not bitter about it. You pointing out how great it was and how much it sucks that I missed it only makes me more bitter.

        There is no job market where I live. As in within my friend group, we have collectively applied to ~30 jobs in the last year and gotten 2 responses. My employer was very clear that they were not giving time off for the eclipse, so that wasn’t an option. And had I just left, bye bye job. Can’t pay rent, can’t afford food.

        If you want to point out how much it sucks, by all means. But don’t act like you know my situation, like I don’t know what I had to miss out on, and then point to fucking xkcd saying “see? I’m right”.

        Grow some fucking perspective.