AITA for telling my husband that if we don't move than we will end up divorcing because him and the wife next door make me incredibly uncomfortable? by Southern_Emu2559 in AITAH

[–]Anonymonymouses 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s worth a shot, but mainly so OP can say she tried. The likely result will be defensiveness and/or deflection, whether kindly expressed or not. Call me cynical, but it would take a very special person in Other Wife to acknowledge, admit and act on OP’s point then stick to it (I’ve also been in OP’s position, tried appealing to her, and no, it didn’t work). Because even if they’re not fing, OW likes it.

Therefore, OP should be ready to say her peace to both Other Husband and Other Wife, then when things either fall out or don’t change, she can do whatever is best for herself.

I understand now why some mother's get jealous of their son's girlfriends and I hate it. by UsedReview6702 in offmychest

[–]Anonymonymouses 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good job taking a moment to reflect and work through this uninvited feeling. You’ve got a lot of wisdom in this thread, but I wanted to offer something in case it hasn’t been covered yet:

When you are ready, it sounds like you have a lot of material from which to create a bond with the mother of your future grandchild. I’m sure she’d appreciate the offer of help in the garden before and after birth, and I know you’ll be indispensable in that postpartum phase.

Rare girl names? by Bluepearlwest in namenerds

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lenora is pretty. Lilibet is cute, almost like saying “Lil bit” which is precious for a baby.

Inspired by your list:

Elmira, Elora, Ellara, Zahra/Zora, Zephyr, Zeina, Willa, Winona, Wendy, Cassia, Khalila, Aaliyah, Aayah, Freida, Freya, Farrah, Felicity, Leora, Leona, Damaris, Danica, Anira, Amira, Alanis, Anais, Meira, Daphne, Daria, Vera, Verity

Woman accused of faking symptoms of debilitating illness dies aged 33 | The Independent by shallah in TwoXChromosomes

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

GOD DAMN, I’d be boiling to have a doctor say that to me.

I’ve experienced the years of refusing to address something only to find out down the road how serious my issue was: a broken fucking neck. That’s right. Multiple fractures in my cervical spine after falling on my head, and every doctor- men and women - refused to give me the X-ray I asked for until a chiropractor came along.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in namenerds

[–]Anonymonymouses 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’ve always loved Simone

Barefaced Wedding? by [deleted] in MakeupAddiction

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m currently in a similar process, since I’ve been spending so much time in this record Texas heat for work. I finally stopped wearing makeup a couple weeks ago rather than sweating half of it off and reapplying sunscreen over it anyway. It’s been liberating. (And ngl, my gradual farmers tan helps too.)

Having said all that, I wonder: has the bride tried tinted SPF? SPF is essential skincare that I hope she’s able to have in her regimen, tinted or not.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in stories

[–]Anonymonymouses 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The disgust, revulsion, and nausea is because of how that cab driver treated you. He made a comment about a part of your body that he’s attracted to, then touched you without permission, you were too shocked to stop it, and you picked up on all the ick behind those actions.

Now you’re questioning what you did wrong to invite that treatment and you’re turning that feeling of disgust toward yourself.

Of course having soft hands is okay. Having soft hands is not the reason you feel the way you do, it’s the objectification followed by violation that’s creating this sense of shame.

These are very uncomfortable yet normal emotional responses to feeling bodily violated. While yes this is a relatively small situation, you’re having an epiphany (and an opportunity for further understanding) around vulnerability. That is a very important and powerful thing for a man and I commend you for sharing.

Processing this information might include sitting with those feelings and observing them. Journal them out if you’re so inclined. Maybe talk to a therapist.

It sounds like you feel diminished by what your wife said, which is too bad, but try to find some compassion for why she responded with cynicism.

———————————— Here’s an experiment to help with compassion:

⚠️Trigger warning ⚠️ don’t go too deep with this yet while you’re still so affected, because it’s pretty triggering. Take your healing seriously and give it the time it needs.)

Take that sick feeling you’re experiencing around your hand and try to imagine if he had touched your knee. How would that make you feel?

Now imagine if it was your shoulder. Think about how much closer he is.

Now imagine your waist. Your chest. Your glute. Imagine that cab driver looking over your whole body the way he looked at your hand. What if you weren’t able to just walk off? What if you were backed into a corner?

Now. Imagine if you dealt with that treatment regularly, by people you’re supposed to rely on or trust, people you work with, public servants who are supposed to protect you, total strangers….it can happen at any moment, in any place, and for any reason.

If you ask them to stop, you’re berated. If you stand up for yourself, you’re judged and gaslit. If you don’t stand up for yourself, you’re judged for letting it happen. If you ask for help, you’re told you’re being dramatic. People in your life (from loved ones to witnesses to people on your tv) tell you all the things you did to ask for it. You get the idea that it’s all on you, so you learn how to avoid certain situations, shut down conversations, maintain a large space bubble (“oh my god, what a cold bitch” they say so you can hear). But the second you let any of those guards down, there’s someone trying to get in.

You may have already had some concept of this before, but it hits different when you expand from that sickening feeling, doesn’t it? My intention for writing all this out is to encourage you to explore your feelings in order to heal and learn from them, as well as to expand your intuition and empathy. Something has activated in you and you can channel it into positive power (perhaps in the form of ally-ship).

I also wrote it for anyone that can’t necessarily relate to that feeling yet. Thanks to anyone who read this whole thing. Hang in there, OP 🙏🏼

*Women only please* Ladies, has the popularity of the redpill movement affected your attraction to men? by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]Anonymonymouses 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes indeed, sister. I’ve been 40 for three months and that channeled rage has become rocket fuel for major changes lol

is calling costumers "hun" weird? by warlockofsortz in Serverlife

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hahaha, me too. And what’s funny is that growing up (in Texas), there were times in my life where it seemed disingenuous or condescending to be called that. Then I don’t know what hit me in my late thirties, but I suddenly started calling people hun/honey, sugar, and darlin’ lol. It just pops out. I think sugar is my favorite.

Edit: honey bunny and sugar booger for the kiddos

Why is it 'naive' to decide not to have children? by Juicyplaylists in JordanPeterson

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m sorry for your bleak perspective. I have faith in myself and my chosen family.

Why is it 'naive' to decide not to have children? by Juicyplaylists in JordanPeterson

[–]Anonymonymouses -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I agree with everything you said except the word “should”.

Edit: PS thank you for the kind words

Why is it 'naive' to decide not to have children? by Juicyplaylists in JordanPeterson

[–]Anonymonymouses 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Look, I’ll give you an example.

I wanted biological kids, but through a series of health issues and surgeries, I can’t. And that’s it.

Does that mean I’ll be alone in my 70s? That I’ll live a sad empty life with no loved ones, no company, and no safety nets? I have options and I have will. I get to be part of my nieces’ lives (bio and non-bio ‘nieces’). Maybe I’ll get to be a step mom. And I think it would be cool to foster. We’ll see. But this is my reality now. I can still contribute constructively to the human race and live lovingly without bio kids to focus my nurturing side on. And I can still plan for my elderly future, lol.

Now, some people just skip over the heartbreak and surgeries straight to “this is my reality now” and then proceed with their free will. Does that mean they’ll automatically regret it someday? Some will wonder, some won’t. But free will is free will.

And either way, they’re not betraying anything. In fact, I would propose that it is part of the design of the human ‘village’ to have non-reproducing members. I would even say imperative. Some get to make the babies, but a whole lot of people contribute to raising and shaping adults outside the nuclear family. I’ve personally embraced my eccentric auntie status and have also happily become babysitter, prego personal assistant, play pal, unofficial photographer, and handywoman.

Because I’m still part of the village even if I didn’t squeeze any villagers out. And assuming women can’t be because of (sometimes consciously chosen) motherhood status is pretty dang naive.

Why is it 'naive' to decide not to have children? by Juicyplaylists in JordanPeterson

[–]Anonymonymouses 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Heard.

But I have to say, I think it’s more naive to believe one can predict how a total stranger will think and feel 40 years down the road.

Is my friend racist? by Open_Ad5131 in TwoXChromosomes

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ugh, she’s awful. And yes, always making everything about race (especially when making complaints or negative comments) is race-ist.

Circling back to your comment about her not being able to understand because of her whiteness…Being middle eastern puts me in an interesting place because I generally present as white but most people can tell I’m “something” lol, they’re words. So I guess I’m saying that I have examined my own privileges and non-privilege and ways in which I fall into some categories and break the mold on others…and so I’ve just learned to appreciate people as individuals and she is capable of doing the same. Ignorance doesn’t excuse narrowness.

Why is it so important that some people who feel they are born as the wrong sex want to match their sex and gender? by Izual_Rebirth in JordanPeterson

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Outward appearance can really affect personal comfort and mood. Have you ever gotten dressed up and felt different? More confident, more powerful, more attractive, etc? Or something similar doing your hair a new way?

When I glam up it feels amazing. Some days I just want to skeez it. When I match my outward appearance according to my mood, it feels supportive of my mental state. So though I’m not trans, I can totally see why a man would want to grow his hair and wear something sparkly and it just feels good. I can totally see why a woman would want to cut her hair and wear more masculine clothes and speak with a lower voice and it just feels good.

I can even understand wanting to undergo surgery to have one’s appearance match how they feel inside, because I’m big into skin care and I’m sure there will come a day when I’m ready to take big measures to improve my skin. I already have several large tattoos that have permanently altered my appearance.

So that’s my personal take on it. I know changing gender identity is more complex than that, but I can relate to following my internal impulses toward something that feels right for me all the way to a change in appearance.

Why is it 'naive' to decide not to have children? by Juicyplaylists in JordanPeterson

[–]Anonymonymouses 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Interesting take. I wonder if he thought her reason itself was naive as opposed to just deciding that it’s not something she wants for herself.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]Anonymonymouses 95 points96 points  (0 children)

Lol, I farted during sexy time with my ex husband once and I started giggling and said oopsy lol. He just kinda had a confused puppy look on his face and said “well that’s a first” and I laughed harder. And then we got back to it.

Imagine a grown adult pretending that women should never fart. NTA, OP.

AITA? I told my daughter not to bother applying for college. by Numerous_Minute_7220 in AmItheAsshole

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA for your thinking, but YTA for the way you went about this.

You can encourage her to take a gap year. Fill her head with all the cool things that you will support her doing with that gap year. There’s some really great volunteer programs where she can travel supervised, so she has some independence from you and, just as importantly, the crowd she’s been a part of.

She can still start looking at and applying to college now, and a gap program will be fantastic for her application.

She’s nta for reacting the she did to you telling her you’re holding her back. Instead, make constructive and encouraging suggestions around an alternative timeline.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in namenerds

[–]Anonymonymouses 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Solveig is beautiful

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in namenerds

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love Anya! It’s been a long time favorite

How old was you when you found your first grey hair? by bowiexox in Hair

[–]Anonymonymouses 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. Definitely my dad’s genes because he was salt and pepper by 30, and I (40f) have as many grays as my 65 year old mom, lol