I've had my 90-degree impacted wisdom tooth for decades at this point, it's been fine so far!
The main thing I've found is making sure no food particles get stuck in the gaps it causes. I find a kind of water jet cleaner thing like a Waterpik really helps.
If you'd like a bigger sensor in a compact, maybe the Ricoh GRiii. It has a fixed lens, but for street photography it is absolutely brilliant at what it does while still being truly pocketable.
For landscapes and nature you'd likely want swappable lenses, water resistance, and things that let you take nice vistas, which means it'll be unlikely to be as convenient as your phone.
The phrase Japanese First was meant to express rebuilding Japanese people’s livelihoods by resisting globalism.
This isn't such a bad thing, by itself. For one, Japan's entirely beholden to the American tech giants for its tech sector and really should start its own buildout.
Might be worth mentioning that modern wheat and grains aren't the same as older varieties that might've been consumed a century ago. Grains are also affected by the environment they were grown in. This paper touches on the topic and may be interesting reading:
Personal gripe but I've never agreed with the term artificial sweetener, they are genuinely sweet, is it because they aren't sucrose/fructose/glucose?
Either way I remember reading about Erythritol from a study on nature.com a while ago. It's one of the unfortunate low-caloric sweeteners that are still linked to obesity and all the problems related to that condition. Best avoided to be on the safe side.
Hard to do that when you're hungry. Blaming the victim increases shame/guilt/stress and makes it worse, since that causes hormone production that result in weight gain. Working on a sustainable way to lose weight such as by reducing known obesogens is much more constructive.
I haven't any idea how they'd work with your hearing, but what about bone conduction headphones? They can be wiped down easily and are often waterproof.
I've had my 90-degree impacted wisdom tooth for decades at this point, it's been fine so far!
The main thing I've found is making sure no food particles get stuck in the gaps it causes. I find a kind of water jet cleaner thing like a Waterpik really helps.