> it's 100% fine (and healthy) to care about things in life.
Yes it is and I didn't claim it wasn't, so this is a strawman.
There's nothing personally indicting about having low testosterone. It's relatively common and it's potentially a serious medical condition. There is no reason to take offense from this.
There is absolutely nothing normal or healthy about being so attached to a source control repo that you cry when you replace it. I'm not saying OP is right about testosterone levels (how the hell would I know, I'm not a doctor), but everyone telling Mitchell "it's ok to feel things" is doing him a grave disservice. He has a very unhealthy attachment to Github and he needs to work on it, not have people validate his unhealthy behavior.
This is not good intentioned, you're a jerk, and it's 100% fine (and healthy) to care about things in life.
> This is not good intentioned
On what are you basing that?
> it's 100% fine (and healthy) to care about things in life.
Yes it is and I didn't claim it wasn't, so this is a strawman.
There's nothing personally indicting about having low testosterone. It's relatively common and it's potentially a serious medical condition. There is no reason to take offense from this.
Becuase you're associating their reaction to "a serious medical condition" because it is "not normal."
I wanted to add a counter to that and say they are very normal and support them rather than suggest they go to the doctor.
My assessment of your intentions was wrong, as I can't know that, but I stand by the other two statements.
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There is absolutely nothing normal or healthy about being so attached to a source control repo that you cry when you replace it. I'm not saying OP is right about testosterone levels (how the hell would I know, I'm not a doctor), but everyone telling Mitchell "it's ok to feel things" is doing him a grave disservice. He has a very unhealthy attachment to Github and he needs to work on it, not have people validate his unhealthy behavior.