Image 1 — Brand new Glock 26 gen 5!
Image 2 — Brand new Glock 26 gen 5!
Image 3 — Brand new Glock 26 gen 5!
▲ 96 r/Glock26

Brand new Glock 26 gen 5!

Finally found one that was in stock at my local gun shop and they only had 1 left. Brand new Glock 26 gen 5. Paid 540 out the door. Added strike industries base plate and handleit grips. I haven’t take it to the range yet cuz i want to keep it brand new haha. I will eventually of course.

u/TooFlySpaceCadet — 12 days ago
▲ 9 r/TIdaL

Reinstalling the app fixed my issues

Songs wouldn’t play or be stuck, randomly disconnect, downloaded songs wouldn’t play or won’t download at all.

I was ready to unsubscribe but the sound quality is just too good to let go. Deleting and reinstalling the app fixed my issues. Only thing sucks is that you will have to redownload all your songs.

If you’re having issues with the app, give this a shot

reddit.com
u/TooFlySpaceCadet — 2 months ago

LV GP Corsa Evo exhaust too loud?

Hello fellow riders. I’m looking to upgrade my stock exhaust to LV GP corsa evo on my 2025 Ninja 500. I live in a fairly nice apartment complex and I work nights so I don’t get home until 4-5am. Thing is, I don’t want to be a nuisance to my community so my question is, will the GP corsa evo exhaust be too loud even with the DB killer? Should I stay stock for now? I don’t want to wake everyone up when I’m arriving home 😅 thanks in advance!

reddit.com
u/TooFlySpaceCadet — 2 months ago

LV GP Corsa Evo Ninja 500 - Advice

Hello fellow riders. I’m looking to upgrade my stock exhaust to LV GP corsa evo on my 2025 Ninja 500. I live in a fairly nice apartment complex and I work nights so I don’t get home until 4-5am. Thing is, I don’t want to be a nuisance to my community so my question is, will the GP corsa evo exhaust be too loud even with the DB killer? Should I stay stock for now? I don’t want to wake everyone up when I’m arriving home 😅 thanks in advance!

reddit.com
u/TooFlySpaceCadet — 2 months ago

Update: thank you all for the advice. I was worried because people always say to be careful of burning the clutch, but i guess that’s more with cars. Feel more comfortable practicing now. Thanks again!!!

Hey everyone,

I recently picked up a new-to-me 2025 Ninja 500 and I’m still pretty new to riding. My shifts are a bit jerky right now, and I know I need more practice with the friction zone.

My concern is, I’m worried that practicing slow-speed control and riding the clutch might burn it out. I’ve heard mixed things, and I don’t want to mess anything up while I’m learning.

Is using the friction zone a lot actually bad for the clutch, or is that just part of the learning process? Any tips to smooth out shifting and get better clutch control would really help too. Appreciate any advice!

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u/TooFlySpaceCadet — 2 months ago

Every time I tried quitting before, I’d start by tossing everything out. And almost every time, I failed and ended up buying another one. My anxiety would spike knowing I didn’t have it anymore. I’d start thinking things like, what if the store is closed later? or what if they don’t have my flavor? OMG I CAN NEVER HIT IT AGAIN?? and next thing I knew, I was back at the store.

After a lot of failed attempts, this is what finally worked for me. I didn’t throw it away at first. Instead, I focused on breaking my habits and triggers. I told myself I can still hit the vape if I want to, I just won’t do it RIGHT NOW. That alone made a huge difference. It took away the panic.

I started noticing my biggest triggers were when driving, after showers, after eating, bathroom breaks at work. Then I made small changes to interrupt those patterns. For example, I powered off my vape and kept it across the room so I had to physically get up and turn it on (no more mindless hits). I stopped bringing it into the bathroom or keeping it next to me after a shower. I’d get fully ready first, then decide if I still wanted it. I didn’t vape while driving anymore but still allowed myself only after I got to my destination.

Eventually, I stopped bringing it to work at all and only allowed myself to use it once I got home.

These little changes helped me separate vaping from my daily routine. That made quitting feel way more doable. When I finally started my quit, I still kept the vape, just powered off, out of sight, and far away. Knowing it was there (even if I didn’t use it) kept my anxiety low. I honestly didn’t think I could go 24 hours. But I did. Then I kept going.

After a couple days, something clicked and I didn’t want it anymore the same way. Eventually, I threw it away when I felt ready, not forced. One mindset shift that helped me a lot was that cravings aren’t the enemy. I actually appreciate them now, because every time one passes, it means I got stronger. Also, you don’t have to announce to everyone that you’re quitting.

This is your journey. Do it for yourself, without the added pressure. I’m about a month in now, and I feel amazing. My resting heart rate dropped a lot, my energy is better, and I just feel more in control.

Be nice to yourself. Break the patterns first. Remind yourself that you can hit the vape if you wanted but you’re choosing not to. Remember, progress. Not perfection.

Y’all I’m not gonna lie, my English sucks so I had chatGPT write it out much better for me to share. Real post lol

reddit.com
u/TooFlySpaceCadet — 2 months ago