goddammnick

goddammnick t1_jds55mr wrote

Not sure if anyone read your post, but what you are going to want to do is find a personal trainer if you want someone to show you the ropes. However, you can also just look online for beginner routines.

It's all about how many times a week you can go and consistency. Everyone does their own thing that works well for them, and while some are better than others, the most important thing is consistency.

After you do that, go get a planet fitness membership (try not to pay a sign up fee if you can help it) and spend the $10 a month learning about lifting and getting comfortable. At some point you may want to upgrade to a higher quality gym and as others have said, fit lab is good, YMCA and then you start getting into more "country club" style places that offer more than just a gym but other benefits as well.

Good luck!

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goddammnick t1_j9u6ypo wrote

> But apparently, Rep Ross Berry (R) Manchester wants to change all that. He is on a special committee on Child Care (and also runs a child care business- conflict of interest much?) and would (if I read his quote correctly) want these deregulations to impact child care.

He is your average undereducated young republican.

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goddammnick t1_iz6l5s9 wrote

A couple things - the Dealership doesn't care about you or 'your' car anymore. The payments are made to a different company than them, and trying to return it to them just means they have another opportunity to sell it at more profit. NOW:

First, take a step back and breathe. Car issues are no fun, but trying to get out a lease early can put you in loads of debt.

  1. calmly and coherently, type out each individual problem you have, with records of when service happened. Have someone proof read this, because whether its emotions or not, your post is jumbled together and emotional people wont get very far when dealing with the next step.

  2. reach out to the parent company. Do this via email first, and if you are not getting anywhere, start putting them on blast via social media. This should get the attention of the regional or national reps who will work to help solve this problem, either with free service/repair or more.

  3. if this doesn't work, look at your lease contract and review what the residual value is at the end of your lease. This is what you owe at the end, now see how much you have left on the loan.

  4. check to see if Jeep allows you to sell the lease to 3rd parties. IF they do, you may be able to sell it to a carmax or the like.

IF you do go that route, make sure at the very minimum you are being covered for the lease buy out. e.x

IF you have $40,000 left on the car, with a residual value of $25,000 - that means you really should be selling it for $40,000 to break even. Depending on how many miles you've put on the car will dictate how much they will buy it for.

At the very least, you need to stop driving the car to avoid adding unnecessary miles.

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goddammnick t1_iy5g40g wrote

you do realize that the large majority of NHs population lives in Manchester and Nashua right? lets say you dont for educational purposes.

Manchester has approx 115,000 people
Nashua has approx 91,000 people
Concord has approx 44,000 people

So you are right, lets limit it to Nashua - $1.25m will give each person in Nashua $13...so again, I think you underestimate how much that will provide.

You're reasons may be legitimate. But, to disregard half of everyone else as being freeloaders makes your argument less valid.

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goddammnick t1_isxtcue wrote

tirerack.com and then have them shipped to your tire center of preference. I got some fantastic crossclimate 2 last year, with a rebate and they shipped to my local tire shop within a few days.

edit: wow, didnt even realize those were the tires you were looking at - ive had mine since last fall and they were simply amazing last winter.

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goddammnick t1_irceom5 wrote

history repeats itself. We dont have a modern world war going on but we do have one being waged in the shadows and online. COVID vs 1918 flu - now we have the roaring 20s - people are spending money faster than they can earn it but they dont care, they are having fun again. Major conglomerates are buying up all the properties and rent prices are getting out of control.

Wont be long before we see shanty towns being common (they already are in major cities, its just we have tents now. And We avoid a great recession but how long can we keep that up? Everyone is burnt out.

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