Calendars
How do Americans cope with calendars that split the weekend in two? HOW?
I need a calendar for next year, and I guess I'm just going to have to print out pages from timeanddate.com because I can't seem to find any normal calendars, that start with a freaking MONDAY.
It's a freaking weekEND, and it's SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. So why the idiotic insistence on putting one at the END of the week and the other at the beginning, where any weekend plans are visually separated from each other?
Between the lack of the metric system, the AM/PM thing, and calendars that start with Sunday, I'm not sure how this county managed to crawl out of the morass of the 18th century, let along prosper. Imagine how great we could have been, all the things we could have accomplished if we weren't busy calculating in sixteenths of an inch and trying to visualize a month of projects and weekEND trips and plans split over two weeks!
Maybe I'll buy some random pretty calendar and just print out pages from timeanddate and glue them over the stupid Sunday on the left Saturday on the right pages.
I need a calendar for next year, and I guess I'm just going to have to print out pages from timeanddate.com because I can't seem to find any normal calendars, that start with a freaking MONDAY.
It's a freaking weekEND, and it's SATURDAY AND SUNDAY. So why the idiotic insistence on putting one at the END of the week and the other at the beginning, where any weekend plans are visually separated from each other?
Between the lack of the metric system, the AM/PM thing, and calendars that start with Sunday, I'm not sure how this county managed to crawl out of the morass of the 18th century, let along prosper. Imagine how great we could have been, all the things we could have accomplished if we weren't busy calculating in sixteenths of an inch and trying to visualize a month of projects and weekEND trips and plans split over two weeks!
Maybe I'll buy some random pretty calendar and just print out pages from timeanddate and glue them over the stupid Sunday on the left Saturday on the right pages.