Starting doing something you've never done before? Getting back into something you used to do? Is it fun and exciting? Is it challenging?
I recently starting to learn roller skating (quad skating). It is so thrilling! I can't do a lot yet, I can barely stop, can't skate backwards, and definitely no transitions. I can skate forward, scissor, scooter push, and I am getting tight with turns.
I take classes on the weekends, which are an hour, and then I skate 3 more hours in the regular session.
I am inching my way through the fundamentals, and I am not falling as often as I did just a week ago. I am wearing a helmet, because I care about my head, but I have become comfortable enough to take it off since it is not required, just wrist guards.
I own my own skates, Riedell R3s with Sonar Caymans (indoors), and Sketchers 4 Wheelers (outdoors), which I modified by replacing the plastic plates and trucks with Sure-Grip Super X. Now they are not so scary.
ALSO! I just got my first skate board! I walked into a local skate shop I had no idea existed until someone mentioned it, and only went in to see what offerings they had for roller skates so I would not have to order online. They got wheels and bearings, plus tools and protective gear, which is all I need and expected.
I walked out with an 8.5 Real deck (recycled), Ventura trucks, Slime Balls 78a wheels, Bones Reds bearings, and black tape. Assembly was free in-house and the dude got it together under 10.
I have yet to ride it, but I learned there is a skate park near me, so I have a lot to look forward to!
I've started running, I got some proper running shoes and have started running a 5K loop around my house to try and slow down my weight gain. I'm only 2 days in and my legs are very sore, but it's good for my health, both mental and physical
Don't run everyday though. I don't know your history but I would recpmmend starting with 3 days a qeek or so and add distance or days if your body is okay with it. In any case you should have at least one rest day a week.
Thanks, yeah i basically have no athletic history so yeah, starting off with 3 days a week running 5k, then maybe after a couple weeks once my body has adjusted, bumping that to 4 days a week.
I've been getting really into DIY stuff lately, mostly electronics. As someone with a lot of sensory issues, mechanical keyboards are fantastic since you can tune them so much to your own preferences, and as a retro tech freak (and staunch believer in repair rather than replace), learning the basics of soldering and general electronics modding has been great (and custom Gameboy stuff is right up my alley). I'm even thinking about learning PCB design stuff and some general low level computing stuff I didn't learn before. Unfortunately, I haven't really been able to afford much in this regard lately since I'm disabled and I have been having nerve/joint issues lately, but friends did help me get parts for a slightly more ergonomic keyboard (Alice layout instead of standard) so I can use the computer more comfortably (and I guess I'll have to make getting a nice split keyboard a long term goal), and I'm planning on doing some visual stuff to make it look nice and distinctly mine (it's layered acrylic, so adding pressed flowers and stuff below the top layer).
That is awesome! I have been meaning to get into electronics. I got soldering irons. Solder. Mats. I even bought some starter kits off aliexpress just for the practice. I have a fuzz pedal I need to put together. Ask me how much progress I have made (please don't).
You have a great outlook on electronics. I also believe that things should be repaired or repurposed. I hate waste, I hate that things most things are made of trash quality to not even be worth preservation.
I hope you manage to build a keyboard that suits your needs perfectly!
Thanks! The awesome communities around a lot of this stuff really helped me get into these things too. I got lucky enough to get a decent soldering station recently too (gift from family) so hopefully I also start to make a bit of progress. Honestly, having things break that I know logically have to be simple to fix was what got me most interested; why should we throw a set of speakers or a kitchen appliance into a landfill just because there's damage to a single wire? And it really hasn't been too intimidating so far.
And this whole shift to the fediverse has made me super interested in running my own server locally, both for storage purposes (I need too much storage space >.>) and for the sake of having the ability to host whatever I want locally - but I haven't really played around with that yet since it costs a decent bit of money even buying used server stuff from China.
Neato! Care to share any favorites? I am slowly switching away from coffee and enjoying tea more. It is just so much easier, especially with an electric kettle.
I personally started drinking pu-erh, and I like it so much more than regular black tea, but not as much as earl grey.
Ooh, you might find teabox.com interesting for Indian tea. It's an Indian tea estate which sells tea online directly - and cuts out the middleman. Simply divine.
Don't learn to ride at the skatepark, go to big smooth parking lot. Top floor of a parking garage is usually empty and nice and buttery concrete.
Also, DONT PUSH MONGO!
Thank you for the advice! I definitely plan to watch a lot of youtube videos before taking it out to the street. I am so not ready for a skate park, I just love the discovery of one near me.
I will be on the lookout for smooth asphalt. The roads were I live are awful.
My main hobby since February has been learning how to program. I decided to start with python since it seemed to be the best way to focus on programming and not fighting the syntax. I've been following the 100 days of code course on Udemy and I love it. Right now I'm working on a project to scrape the bill board top 100 chart for a given day, then use the Spotify API to create a playlist from the scraped data.
That is a dope project. Really well defined. I think you already have a good programmers mindset just by being able to define a problem and solution at all, and so well.
Playing board games. I am designing some myself and so I bought some games that where similar that I hadn't played yet and that kinda got me into a rabbit hole and now I am just into any kind of board game with interesting themes (Spirit Island is one that I will get today and look forward to trying out)
That sounds like a lot of fun. Boardgames have been our family's obsession for a long time. What are some games you are working on? if you don't mind being asked.
I recently learned to enjoy dry wines. Still don't enjoy California wine though, to me it tastes like cheap vodka, pure alcohol. I spent a couple days planting grapes for a vineyard owner in my area. In 3 years those grapes will be ready to be made into wine. I can't wait to go there and try some wine that might have come from grapes I planted.
This was a couple years ago, but my doctor told me I should walk but that didn't sound very interesting, so I picked up longboarding. I always felt too uncoordinated to do stuff like this, but I've really taken joy in it.
I have started to set up a homeserver, since I wanted a NAS and a bit extra...
Currently running TrueNAS Scale baremetal. I have a HomeAssistant Docker setup on a Pi and am feeding that data into an Influx DB on the NAS (hosted as a container from TrueNas).
I also host Jellyfin and Nextcloud from the NAS.
Now I want to open my nextcloud instance to family and friends and there's ssoooooo much debate over what the best way is (tailscale, reverse proxy, vpn service, etc.)
All of which is a) probably too much hassle for non-technically savvy people to implement on their own on their devices and b) is probably really complicated or not viable with my current setup.
I will probably wipe the server, set up VMs with proxmox and have dedicated VMs for the NAS software, a docker host, etc.
Now I just need to figure out how I can backup the data from the containerized InfluxDB and re-feed it into the new instance once I set it up.
Because somehow I can't touch those files even as root. sigh it's a fun hobby.
I'm into cooking, fermenting and hot chili peppers. I like experimenting to see how it comes out. I currently have lemons and yellow fatallii peppers fermenting and want to try a type of marmalade with them seasoned with saffron. I'm also working on a fermented cherry based barbecue sauce.
I'm moving to a swedish speaking area in few weeks so I started learning swedish on duolingo a bit over two months ago. I've had studied swedish in school since it's our other official language, but I was never interested in it and went with the lowest grades usually.
68 day duolingo streak, reading swedish wews and swedish communities on reddit/lemmy/mastodon as well as watching childrens' shows in swedish on netflix has done wonders restoring my long forgotten swedish skills.
Basically a free hobby, unless you count netflix subscription, but I had it anyway before starting.
That is awesome! There is nothing more rewarding than learning a new language. It is even more rewarding to relearn a language you had dismissed and reach new levels of understanding and fluency. I hope you are conversational by the time you move!
I doubt I'll be conversational by the time I move because that is what I lack in my language immersion at the moment, but I'm sure I'll soon be after I move since I'll be needing to use it constantly :)
Nice!! I will admit I am ambivalent about golf courses, due to their sheer enormity, the razing of nature (all them trees) just for the landscaping, the awful amount of water it takes to maintain the grass, and the classist nature of golf club memberships.
Yet, I adore mini golf, they are so damn fun. And, connecting that driver to the ball and feeling it blast straight ahead is an awesome feeling.
I hope you and your partner get a lot of enjoyment golfing!
I do not like the classist nature either. We agreed that we likely won't play actual courses just pitch & putts or par 3 because there are many in our cities that are run by the local govt and are cheap so anyone can participate with low cost of entry.