Friday: How Did Last Night's Warm-Up Date Go?
1) Find out which quadruple the Mesos put you in!
Search for your name in this document and see your quadruple assignment.
2) Pretend all four of you went on a date last night.
Post in your quadruple’s thread/discussion in the Warm-Up Date category.
Share (imagine/invent) how your date went from your perspective.
Build on each other’s account, and/or contradict each other about the nuances.
Was it comfortable? Awkward?
What went right? What went wrong?
1) Find out which quadruple the Mesos put you in!
Search for your name in this document and see your quadruple assignment.
2) Pretend all four of you went on a date last night.
Post in your quadruple’s thread/discussion in the Warm-Up Date category.
Share (imagine/invent) how your date went from your perspective.
Build on each other’s account, and/or contradict each other about the nuances.
Was it comfortable? Awkward?
What went right? What went wrong?
Are you a Thermophile who needs Love? Watch our Intro Video
Read How to Play
You can read about the 5 Genders here
or find out which Gender you are most like here.
Read How to Play
You can read about the 5 Genders here
or find out which Gender you are most like here.
Let your personality shine in public posts and comments only
(no private conversations!)
so the Mesos can put you in the perfect quadruple later in the week!
(no private conversations!)
so the Mesos can put you in the perfect quadruple later in the week!
Anybody else keep Escherichia coli as pets?
I personally own two E. coli, Tito and Phyllis, and they're the sweetest little love-bugs. I've tried keeping a lot of different bacteria over the years, but E. coli are by far my favorites. There's nothing like coming home to the wagging of those cute, spirited little flagella! I know some people are deterred by the fact that E. coli are exotics and require specialized care, but I think it's totally worth it. Anyone else share this opinion? I'd love to hear about the E. coli in your lives!
Comments
@acido_joee If you're interested in getting into keeping E. coli, I'd be happy to help you get started! First, I would check your local pet and wildlife laws; I know some regions don't allow exotic pets, or require you to get a permit first. It's a pain in the butt, I know. Who are they to tell you what pets you can and can't keep, right? If it weren't for the steep fines and the threat of having your E. coli taken away, I'd tell you to just do what you want. It's all a power play, but yeah, don't break the law; it's inconvenient. The next thing you have to take into consideration is the cost of importing an E. coli. Their natural habitat is actually the digestive tract of certain primates! That makes it hard for breeders to get ahold of them, and the breeders pass that cost along to you, the prospective buyer. Not to mention the cost of food. Your concern about having time for them in your busy life is also very valid. If you don't have the time to train a proto, I'd suggest adopting an older E. coli. Also, as nice as it would be to have three E. coli (most strains are very social!), I'd start off with one. If you have any questions on your path to E. coli xaotherhood, please ask me! I'd be happy to help with anything I can. I also work a veterinary clinic, so I may be able to get you some discounts on food and supplies. Best of luck!
@feliscatus2 Oh my goodness... I'm so sorry to hear that. I know how hard it is to lose a beloved pet. My thoughts and good vibes are with you. Are you going to hold a memorial for xem?
@obli_beatles Four E.coli! Wow, you must have your hands full, but I bet each day is more rewarding than the last. Are they all from the same strain? And if not, do they get along well? Tito and Phyllis are siblings from the same strain, and even they fight now and then. I would love to hear more about John, Paul, Ringo, and George. Are they long-flagellated or short-flagellated?
@Acido_EColi I saw your post on the other discussion (I'm going to answer it right after this, I promise), and I want to clarify that this isn't in any way a copulation thing. I know some people are into that kinky bestiality stuff, but it's not really my jam. I won't judge those who are (whatever floats your organelles, right? ), but again, not my thing. Or are you coming at this from the perspective of "it's not right to keep other bacteria as pets"? I know that's been a real controversy lately.
We are not your "sweetest little love-bugs," we are crucial constituents of microbiomes and arguably the most important cloning vectors. We're humanitarians, have jobs, produce insulin en-masse for those who aren't even in our domain! Some of us, myself included, even consider ourselves on the acidophile spectrum.
So my question is, why would you keep us as pets?
Because we're not as Thermophilic™ as you are?
Look, I've seen some degrading and downright cruel things happen to my cousins (poor cells didn't even stand a chance during antibiotic selection...), but that's to be expected from our human overlords. What I can't stand, though, is when other cells get so hoity-toity that they think they can follow suit and strip us of our CELL-VIL LIBERTIES just because other organisms do!
Maybe you were right all along--I'm not enough of an acidophile to handle such a toxic environment.