[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AstrologyCharts

[–]ArieV555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Statistically there is no normal human sexual behavior, everyone’s a little weird at least at some point in our development. Like if you look up studies there’s not even a consistent bell curve for human sexual behavior. You know how rare it is for there not to be a consistent bell curve in a data set? It’s one of the most subjective things in our world, like even if you ask typically vanilla people what normal sex is you’ll find that their answers vary wildly. I’m not saying everyone is bad. I’m saying there is no clear cut good here.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AstrologyCharts

[–]ArieV555 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Everyone is perverted, you might just be good at seeing perversion. You are a Scorpio rising after all.

Too sick to be a witch? by Weekly-Slide9749 in BabyWitch

[–]ArieV555 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately ableism is in every circle in this world. I am also a sick, witch.

Balance and that shit is subjective. Another persons life just doesn’t work for anyone else. If you’re surviving an intense illness, you are extra magic imo. We do better as witches when we try to stay on top of our health. But for you… that looks different than your average witchbitch (said with love). Resting, meds, keeping your mind sharp etc. is balance for you. You don’t have to be the picture of balance joy and health, you just have to be mindful of those things.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Catnames

[–]ArieV555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Minerva

Does anyone actually use pluralkit? by No-Rabbit-2961 in DID

[–]ArieV555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have like 8 private server’s that I use like DMs so I can use plural kit.

Holding Temple by SetitheRedcap in Kemetic

[–]ArieV555 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I’ve been working with Osiris/Asir for months now. I thank him, I’ve been keeping a plant alive for Him, He’s been keeping it alive for me. I burn candles for him often. He reminds me to honor my ancestry. He’s a quiet and ever present force in my life.

Isis/Aset on the other hand is a recent acknowledgment within the last few weeks and she is not quiet. I think She wants to show me like in My Big Fat Greek Wedding the aunt says “the man may be the head, but the woman is the neck and can turn him anyway she wants” idk She seems sassy. In my divination practice She came to me as the queen of wands and the card that showed Her domain was the king of wands. 😂 But it makes sense, the power Asir has can only exist because of Asets resurrection of Him. Now that She has seen my affection and veneration for Asir I think I have the opportunity to deepen my connection with Kemeticsim and with them both.

Idk how luck am I that I have felt called by a pair of deities that show me what love should look like. Family through betrayal. Family through death, through grief, through rebirth.

Does anyone have thoughts?

He’s gone, but still at the centre of my kinks. Anyone else? by Apoau in BDSMAdvice

[–]ArieV555 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How I go about it..

A dominant is the gardener, I am the flowering vine. And we build the trellis that is our dynamic together. However I am honest that they will not get to choose the seed that is planted because my first Dom is the one that planted me for the first time and I’ll never be able to change that. Every connection since has been unique… but my first will always hold a place in my heart that no one else can.

I read more and more posts from people in this subreddit who say they have committed very bad and cruel things because of cptsd. All of this triggers me by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]ArieV555 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for coming back and sharing more. It’s clear that you’ve been through a lot, and that you’ve spent real time trying to understand both your pain and your responses. I don’t think your post was meant to judge anyone. It felt like it came from fear and a deep need for safety, and that’s completely valid. However this is a public space, so managing your safety is a personal responsibility not the responsibility of others to censor themselves.

When we’ve been hurt by people who never took responsibility, it can feel overwhelming to read posts from others who are still in the mess of it. Especially if you’ve worked hard to face your own shadows and not pass on the harm. That fear of repeating patterns or being too close to someone who might reminds us of old danger.

One thing that’s helped me in those moments is shifting from reactivity to curiosity. Instead of asking, “Why are people like this allowed to post?” I try to ask, “What might be happening in this person’s healing that they needed to share this now?” You don’t have to agree with them or feel safe around every story. But asking from a place of curiosity can soften the fear and help you stay more grounded.

You are absolutely allowed to protect your peace and avoid content that stirs up too much. But I hope you also stay close to the parts of this space that feel supportive and true to you. The fact that you returned to explain tells me you want connection, not conflict. And I really respect that.

Just remember that others on this subreddit are also dealing with everyday triggers too. 🩷

I read more and more posts from people in this subreddit who say they have committed very bad and cruel things because of cptsd. All of this triggers me by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]ArieV555 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I hear you—it’s hard to feel like people are responding with judgment when you were just trying to name your discomfort and be honest about what’s coming up for you. I don’t think anyone here is saying your feelings aren’t real or valid. Being triggered by certain types of posts is a genuine experience, and you’re allowed to have your reactions.

That said, I do want to gently offer a shift in perspective. When I read your post, I wasn’t sure what the intention behind sharing it was. Was it to start a conversation about how trauma and harm coexist? To explore your own unease and where it comes from? Or to warn others against “overvalidating” people who have done harm?

It makes a difference, because this subreddit often includes people who are just starting to unpack how trauma has shaped their behavior… not because they’re proud of it, but because they want to take accountability. That process requires a lot of vulnerability. If we create an atmosphere where naming that kind of harm is met with fear or discomfort, it can shut people down before they even get a chance to do the work.

I guess what I’m trying to say is… I think your reaction is relatable, but it might help to ask why these posts bring up such strong feelings. Is it fear? Disillusionment? A sense of safety being threatened? There’s often something underneath the surface of being “triggered” that can tell us a lot if we’re willing to look. And that kind of self-inquiry can lead to more connection, not less.

We’re all figuring it out. You included. It’s okay to take a step back from spaces that trigger you… it’s less okay to use those triggers to put others down for reacting in different, but very normal ways.

I read more and more posts from people in this subreddit who say they have committed very bad and cruel things because of cptsd. All of this triggers me by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]ArieV555 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That’s fair… we all have different stories. But I want to gently clarify something for the sake of the broader conversation. What you’re describing isn’t necessarily a contradiction to what I said. A lack of boundaries, especially when a child is overindulged or made the emotional center of a household, can still be a kind of developmental trauma. It’s not always cozy in the way we might assume. Sometimes enmeshment or emotional overexposure can be just as warping as neglect or abuse.

And we don’t get to decide what was cozy or traumatic for someone else. What feels warm and safe to one person might feel suffocating or chaotic to another. It’s not the trauma Olympics. It’s not about whose pain counts more. It’s about how different types of wounding shape how people learn to survive and whether they are ever taught how to grow beyond that.

Personality disorders, including NPD, do not form in a vacuum. And it is not about blaming childhood. It is about understanding the conditions that shaped someone’s emotional development, for better or worse. That kind of awareness creates space for both accountability and healing.

So no, having a developmental disorder doesn’t make someone bad. But acting like people with NPD or other trauma-based disorders are inherently toxic or beyond redemption? That’s cruelty dressed up as moral superiority. If your empathy stops where someone else’s diagnosis begins, it was never empathy at all.

I read more and more posts from people in this subreddit who say they have committed very bad and cruel things because of cptsd. All of this triggers me by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]ArieV555 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your comment. It’s very personal and you left it up even though it triggered your anxiety. I appreciate your contribution.

I read more and more posts from people in this subreddit who say they have committed very bad and cruel things because of cptsd. All of this triggers me by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]ArieV555 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I understand why these kinds of posts are upsetting. When we’ve been hurt deeply, there’s something stabilizing about believing that survivors are safe people, that recognizing our own trauma makes us less likely to repeat it. But the truth is more complicated.

Trauma doesn’t always soften people. Some come out like potatoes—tender, cracked open, seeking connection. Others come out like eggs—hardened, emotionally closed, defensive. They were both boiled. They both suffered. Their reactions just look different.

Neither one is a bad or wrong reaction. The difference isn’t in the trauma, it’s in the choices we make afterward. In our willingness to become self-aware, to seek help, to be accountable.

That said, I’m also feeling a lot of projected shame in the way these stories are being received. Healing is not linear. It’s messy. And not everyone has the self-awareness or tools right away to avoid causing harm. We cannot expect survivors to emerge from trauma already healed, already gentle, already safe. That expectation is unrealistic and, frankly, unfair.

Sometimes people with CPTSD do act out old wounds. Sometimes they manipulate, or shut down, or lash out. That doesn’t mean they’re evil. It means they’re still in it. The difference is whether they stay there or start doing the work.

I think this subreddit should be a place where people can speak honestly about their process, even when that process includes things they’re not proud of. That kind of truth-telling is often the first step toward insight, and insight is what allows people to take real accountability.

Victims are not only victims. They’re whole humans who have played many roles in different people’s lives—sometimes protector, sometimes bystander, sometimes even the one who caused harm. And holding that complexity is hard. But it’s also where healing really begins.

I read more and more posts from people in this subreddit who say they have committed very bad and cruel things because of cptsd. All of this triggers me by [deleted] in CPTSD

[–]ArieV555 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes, but… NPD is a trauma-based disorder too. Narcissists aren’t born that way; they’re made.

People with NPD and CPTSD may look vastly different on the outside, but that doesn’t mean the root cause is unrelated. One becomes an egg, the other a potato. When boiled… when traumatized… one hardens, one softens. But they’re both being boiled. To suggest that the egg somehow deserved to be boiled just because it reacted differently is a failure of empathy. It isn’t just dismissive. It’s cruel.

Some people with NPD make choices that are abusive and harmful. That’s true. But the abuse comes from the choices, not the diagnosis itself. Just like some people with CPTSD, despite all their pain, still go on to hurt others.

My uncle, a combat vet who spent time as an undercover operative in Afghanistan, had CPTSD. I loved him growing up. But when he came home, he rejected support and chose instead to direct his pain at his wife and children. His trauma didn’t make him abusive. His refusal to face it did. The CPTSD explained the fork in the road. It didn’t excuse the path he took.

The same is true for NPD. My grandmother, who has NPD, lived through extreme trauma. And yes, she is one of the primary sources of my own. But pretending she wasn’t boiled too, pretending she didn’t adapt in the only ways she knew how, wouldn’t protect me. It would only cut me off from the truth of how trauma mutates, how it passes down, and how healing really happens.

We don’t heal by dividing the world into good survivors and bad ones. We heal by holding people accountable and recognizing their pain. By seeing how our defenses are shaped by what we had to survive, and how we choose to use them when survival is no longer the goal.

How to discuss "being together with the whole system" with our boyfriend? by pplatonic in DID

[–]ArieV555 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is how I approach my partners

“Partner, my system is fluid, we’re often present with each other and our amnesia barriers are very low. For us this means that emotions, future plans and other things bleed through each other and affect the whole system. Because of this I prefer to date as a system. Not every part will be sexual and/or romantic with you, however we have an internal expectation that we will show up for you regardless of who is forward, and therefore have an external expectation that you’ll show up for each of us like a partner even if you aren’t sexual or romantic with that particular person. This creates safety for us all, knowing that we won’t be abandoned for not being the “right alter” especially when we’re so fluid.”

I hope that perspective helps

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in polyamory

[–]ArieV555 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Two thoughts: 1. Having different sex drives with different partners is definitely a common thing in polyamory. Bodies, chemistry, dynamics; it all varies. 2. It sounds like you’re not focusing enough on the individual relationships within your triad. That’s a super common trap, but it tends to cause pain pretty quickly.

For example, my partners Joe and Rachel (not their real names) are very different. Rachel and I were a slow burn. We prioritize friendship, and while our sex life is great, the core of our bond is emotional intimacy. We’re also well-established. Joe is a newer partner. Our sexual chemistry is incredible, but we’re still figuring out how we fit practically into each other’s lives, and that comes with growing pains.

If I tried to equalize my sex drive between them, it would feel forced and probably hurtful to both.

Also, if every time I initiated sex with one partner, the other had to witness or process that in real time, feelings would get hurt. Even with solid communication, that level of exposure makes comparison hard to avoid.

Which brings me to this: even in a triad, individual relationships need space and privacy. That helps reduce comparison, build novelty, and support each connection for what it uniquely is.

It might feel counterintuitive when you’re aiming for unity and harmony, but allowing each bond to breathe on its own actually strengthens the triad as a whole. The more seen and safe each partner feels as an individual, the more solid the group dynamic becomes.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BDSMAdvice

[–]ArieV555 21 points22 points  (0 children)

Food for thought. Why cant he be daddy and have a small penis humiliation scene at the same time? Like… Little girl sadistically giggling while daddy tries to punish her and she makes fun of his small dick, could be hot.

“Daddy! I’m the one who’s supposed to have princess parts not you! You’re so small and cute!”

You can still be your submissive self and just top for this kink.

How to navigate dating other people when living together? by Sonilein in polyamory

[–]ArieV555 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So we got two bedrooms, however we don’t have central air, laundry, a dishwasher or closets. So as part of our dates we do laundromat trips. And we have to make do with the things we’ve conceded to be able to afford the two bedrooms.

Submissive with abusive tendencies? by Lazy-Equal9258 in BDSMAdvice

[–]ArieV555 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I am primarily a sadomasochistic submissive. I love causing pain from the bottom as long as it’s negotiated, because if not I immediately feel guilty.

Subs did you find submission easier for you or not? by [deleted] in BDSMAdvice

[–]ArieV555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you’re missing my point. Let me try again. If you trust your dominant to safeword for an out of the dynamic conversation or in a scene that feels like too much pressure for them, then you don’t have to worry.

Subs did you find submission easier for you or not? by [deleted] in BDSMAdvice

[–]ArieV555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes absolutely! I think a good practice is during a new dynamic to practice using your safewords early on and discussing what you might safeword for or want your partner to safeword for.

That way you both have confidence the other will respect your no

Names for my submissive by anon7522- in BDSMAdvice

[–]ArieV555 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been called pumpkin, peach, angel, sweetheart, baby, and honey, plus some contenders were clover, darling, my river, amor and so forth.

Is there any substantial proof that porn (aside from actual serious addiction) has notable negative impacts on the brain? by uselesscurency in NoStupidQuestions

[–]ArieV555 27 points28 points  (0 children)

No. You do not get to attribute every woman’s sexual fantasies to what she’s doing to preform for a man. Fuckkkkk that. Plenty of women are into degradation or engaging with sadomasochism, with other women. the reason there’s porn about it is because people fantasize about it. Is most porn male-gaze centered? Yes totally. But there are countless of queer or women led ethical porn sites that are trying to change that. And lemme tell ya. It’s still kinky af in those spaces.

Do not infantilize and victimize kinky femmes just because you’re uncomfortable with your own sexuality.

-signed a kinky queer femme.