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Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.
I began working on this post in March and will slowly add to it until the publication date arrives.
Sometimes advice is funny because it’s horribly wrong and should never be followed by anyone.
In other cases it’s amusing because of how it makes you see the world or the way it plays with our expectations of what might happen among many other reasons.
I tried to come up with a mix of these types for my replies.
Piece of Advice #1
“Stop taking your antibiotics once you’re feeling better! That way you’ll still have some antibiotics to take the next time you’re sick.”
This is something a relative who does not understand science, medicine, public health, or how antibiotics work said a few years ago. Please do NOT follow her advice. The last thing we need in 2024 or beyond are more antibiotic-resistant superbugs getting passed around and causing life-threatening illnesses.
Piece of Advice #2
“Never do anything you wouldn’t want to explain to the paramedics.”
And, honestly, I think this is an excellent litmus test to apply when deciding whether to take a specific risk.
Piece of Advice #3
”Leave Canada geese alone.”
I had multiple Canadians tell me this when I first moved up here, and it’s something everyone should listen to. Yes, they’re beautiful birds, but they can also be quite territorial and aggressive, especially during breeding season. It’s best to give them a wide berth and admire them from afar.


I have already stayed in a haunted house! One of my relatives owns a townhouse that used to have shadow people in it a few decades ago.
One of the interesting ways my reading habits have changed since I was a kid or a teenager is that I’m much less interesting in reading long books these days. If something is more than 200 to maybe 250 pages, it generally needs to be a story I think will be a five-star read for me in order for me to finish it.
Paddle boarding sounds like a fantastic sport to me.
This is such a fun topic! I had to do a lot of searching online to find enough books I’d read to fit it, so I’m hoping the lists I found online were all accurate.

This is what I loved about this book:
I replace clothing and shoes as they wear out or no longer fit me, but I find it wasteful to replace perfectly good stuff just because an advertisement says that a certain pattern or colour is no longer in fashion this year. (This is not a criticism of anyone who loves fashion, only of an industry that often strongly encourages people to purchase things they may not need or even want a few months from now).
Other than a few rare exceptions (ahem, see #3 on this list which is something I will never revisit), I found something enjoyable about every book I was assigned to read from Elementary school all the way up through university. Some of them even became favourite titles and/or authors of mine!