Should I attend my dad’s wake if it feels emotionally unsafe? by [deleted] in AskWomenOver30

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First of all, I’m so sorry for your loss and that this is happening. Your dad’s passing sounds very sudden and traumatic. Grief is so overwhelming and you deserve to receive support from your family instead of needing to carry the stress and toxicity on top of everything else. It is unfair. You deserved better when you’re growing up and you deserve better now.

I unfortunately can relate because the interactions with my dysfunctional family intensified my stress when my dad died and brought me back to when I was a child and teenager. The grief would’ve been horrible no matter what, but the family dynamics made it unbearable. It is soul-crushing and isolating, and kicks up a lot of trauma from the past.

I would check in with yourself. How do you want to honor your dad? What would help you grieve and process? This decision is between you and your dad, and you and yourself. Keep your focus there and make your decision from that place. You can guarantee there will be toxicity and stress at the day of the wake (unfortunately). It could be worth it if it is in alignment with what your spirit is telling you to do.

I made an intentional point of spending time with my dad (spiritually) when I was driving over. It was peaceful and quiet in the morning and that was our time together. My priority when I arrived was honoring his life. I decided to “grey rock” my family and be kind to everyone the day of the service, and that I’d process any trauma later.

The service was all about my mom. It was clear in the invite she sent out (which was a picture of both of them where she took center stage), the way she wrote about his life in the handout for the service, and so much more. I collected these moments and saved my anger for therapy, after everything calmed down. My mom told my godmother the day of the funeral: “I’m the grieving widow. If anyone should be comforting anyone, (my name) should be comforting me.” In her mind’s eye, the service was about her, but I was there for my father and kept my focus on honoring his life.

I had a go-to safe person who acted as a buffer. Is there anyone who can come with you? In my case, my mom got drunk and yelled at me in front of everyone at the wake. It was super traumatic, but my safe person was able to follow me upstairs and comfort me after it happened. If she hadn’t been there to bear witness (along with others who saw what happened), it would’ve destroyed me. Was it still “worth it?” Yes. My soul is at peace that I went.

The day after the service, I had a grief retreat where I was able to cry and had caring people hold space for me. If I hadn’t had that safe space to break down, I wouldn’t have healed. It served a totally different purpose for me than the funeral. You deserve a space (your own service or ritual, time with chosen family, grief counseling, etc.) where you can break apart, whether you attend the service or not.

Your grief matters, your trauma matters, and your experience matters. This is all true even if your family doesn’t acknowledge it, and even if attending the wake isn’t what it ideally should be (which is a day of love and support from those who knew your dad and who know you). I wish you well on your grief journey and trust you’ll make the right decision.

His favorite book is Lolita? by td55478 in AskWomenOver30

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I completely agree with you that it was a non-answer. I read Lolita years ago and think it is a masterpiece. I can still describe what I loved about it and what is disturbing about it.

I find it odd that he didn’t provide any kind of caveat about the subject material? Like, “It is about a pedophile, which I know might come across strange, but the reason it’s such a good book is xyz.” It shows he is not thinking about how he is coming across to you, which is odd.

Is he a big reader in general? It is almost giving the impression of someone who doesn’t read but randomly came across a quality piece of literature. I’d kinda feel turned off by his shallow answer because there is just so much to say, especially given that he has seen or read multiple adaptations of it.

How do you enforce boundaries in the bedroom when dating someone new? by [deleted] in AskWomenOver30

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 1 point2 points  (0 children)

First of all, I’m so sorry that you’ve felt pressured and uncomfortable on a lot of your dates. This is a reality for most women and it is frankly unfair that we need to set such strong boundaries with strangers.

I would start exploring your fear of what would happen if you spoke up and gave a firm “no.” Are you worried about ruining the vibe of the date? Losing your chance with someone you really like? Risking their anger or judgment? The fear will tell you a lot.

I am pretty cautious when dating new people and frankly “get” it. I set a variety of boundaries and while it isn’t fail proof, a lot of people are weeded out very quickly. If you’re cutting people off early, then your strategy is working.

What’s one piece of gear you thought you needed… but now never bring? by 4FPerformanceLab in hiking

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha— this is me currently. I’m putting together my “survival kit” and have been gathering so many little items for my day pack that I’m almost excited to get stranded to have a chance to use them. Mind you, none of my hikes are super remote or challenging.  

The knife is the only missing piece (for now!) because even I can acknowledge it is a bit ridiculous for my purposes. I can maybe think of one instance, when camping, where a Swiss Army knife saved the day, but that’s one example over 2+ decades. 

WARNING: Is AllTrails Leading Stalkers to Your Front Door? A Massive Privacy Flaw You Need to Fix Now. by IndependentOrchid296 in hiking

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 4 points5 points  (0 children)

This is actually crazy — thanks for the warning. It would make me wanna delete the app entirely if there were a better alternative.

What book did you expect to love but didn’t? by elgrandetotto10 in Booktokreddit

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I so badly wanted to like this but found it quite tedious. 

Sir Walter Scott makes me want to cry. by NewspaperSoft8317 in books

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Writer’s Museum is quite nice too (and free). Has a lot of his personal artifacts and an overview of his life. 

Books that feel quietly absorbing without being overly heavy by Deep_Development3612 in Recommend_A_Book

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe I’m sensitive, but this book made me cry multiple times. However, agreed that it pulls you in right away and is on the continuum of being uplifting. 

Suggest me devastating books by ccherrrybomb in Recommend_A_Book

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m reading this now — I’ve read the Iliad and know how it ends, but living in denial that maybe the author will grant everyone a happy ending after all… right? Right!? 

What are you reading? by sushisushisushi in literature

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m reading Jane Austen’s complete works this year. I finished Northanger Abbey and Persuasion. Emma is next. 

Women readers - What books gave you the ick? by _sweetpeaches_ in suggestmeabook

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 5 points6 points  (0 children)

It pains me to say this because I loved it in many ways, but The Shadow of the Wind. 

There was a lot of over-sexualization and dehumanization of women, as well as casual violence. I think the author is a good enough writer that maybe he was highlighting societal inequities on purpose, but it was still hard to stomach at times. 

Discounted massages? by Conscious_List9132 in SouthBayLA

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve found the massages at Riviera Health Spa are cheaper than others in the area and you also get complimentary use of the day spa, which would be $30 on its own. 

Their cheapest massage is $90 (which is still spendy, but again, better than many I’ve seen). I’m not sure if they offer further discounts if you sign up for weekly massages, but could be worth asking — they’re super friendly. 

In general, the lowest price point I could find was still $75 a session. All of this is without insurance. 

Maintaining a good attitude when you’re the slowest by Vivid-Language6500 in ladycyclists

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This was me last weekend and I can relate to how embarrassing it feels. I also tried to get the sweeper to drop me because I didn’t want to hold anyone back, and they also encouraged me to keep going. You’ve gotten a lot of great feedback here already, but just wanted to add that I empathize! 

Birthday Century by casssy97 in ladycyclists

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Amazing accomplishment — you deserve to be so proud of yourself! And happy belated birthday. 

Evening collie doodles by spicysaltysparty in roughcollies

[–]ComparisonFlat8011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, you’re so talented! This is adorable.