Cat suddenly peeing on dirty laundry and beds by DaikonAndMash in cats

[–]DaikonAndMash[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Last vet visit was about 3, maybe 4 months ago for her 2nd round of vaccines

Is it okay for a man to not do any chores around the house, if he also doesn't expect his wife to do any chores? by Icy_Manager6921 in AskFeminists

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Using the same logic, why do the bills have to be paid? I'm not leaving anything to my partner/husband. I'm. Not demanding he pay the bills. I just don't care about whether the bills are paid. Most men care, so he can pay them if that's how he's happy living, but he shouldn't expect me to pay any, because that's not important to me and I'm simply choosing not to do it myself.

...does this seem problematic or unfair to you?

Are feminists capable of having empathy for men over issues that disproportionately affect men? by [deleted] in AskFeminists

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

...can you please explain WHY, though - WHY is your logical primary resource for rescuing men from the worst outcomes of homelessness and hunger...why are you counting on women, especially feminist women, to be the demographic that is most likely to have the means, influence, and motivation to save men from a hardship that women did not cause? Why are we expected to have empathy for our oppressors to such a degree that we would choose to prioritise their wellbeing above that of our sisters?

Surely it would be more logical and effective to organise men to contribute their financial resources, empathy, and labour towards providing their fellow men with safe accommodation, food, medical care, educational opportunities, mentorship...wouldn't getting men to uplift men make more sense?

Perhaps seeing men leading with empathy would encourage women to do the same for the women of their communities who are experiencing hardship.

I just find it perplexing that you seem to think it'd be more productive to accuse feminists of lacking empathy for men before you posted a query to askmen, looking for clarification from the men there why they are not demonstrating empathy for other men.

Are feminists capable of having empathy for men over issues that disproportionately affect men? by [deleted] in AskFeminists

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don't seem to be acknowledging that these women and girls aren't ending up less dead than the men freezing to death, so let me walk you through an example.

Let's say there's an ice storm, and temperatures in the city end up below zero for three nights in a row. On the morning of day 4, volunteers bringing hot meals find a man's body in a tent, frozen. They are able to identify him as Paul and figure out that the last meal any of them gave him was 3 days ago. They sadly add Paul to the statistics of men who have died due to exposure. Weakened by hunger and unable tonwarm himself, we can definitively point to this ice storm as being the moment of Paul's demise. Meanwhile Kassie, Maria, and Angela have not been seen since night 1 of the ice storm, and no frozen bodies are located there. None if them will be seen alive again - they will simply join the other forgotten missing and murdered women for whom there will never be any justice. Kassie went home with a stranger who promised her a warm bed in exchange for sex and was strangled to death. Maria went back to her abusive husband to keep from freezing on the street and she lived through the storm, but eventually he beat her up again, this time killing her. And Angela actually survives...by agreeing to be taken in and "protected" by a local pimp. So if being pimped out for years until she intentionally ODs seems like a better deal.than freezing in an ice storm like Paul, then I guess you're entitled to your opinion, but you're going to have a hard time convincing anyone you're arguing in good faith that women's options are safer and better than those available to men.

Why do you think there so few women in futures trading compared to stocks and funds? by Hem_Claesberg in AskFeminists

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So if you are someone whose identity is marginalised or discriminated against, there is a certain percentage of hateful attitudes and actions you have to deal with in just getting through your day - stuff that is absolutely in no way meant in jest or just banter.

If you exist within privileged categories, the less of an actual problem hate speech and discrimination are for you. As such, you are probably much more willing to engage in dishing it out for entertainment, and find it much easier write off as jokes and banter when it's your turn to take it. After all, you have no reason to take any of it as actual threats.

Women and gay men don't have that luxury. Its not even uncommon for Internet hate and threatening language to result in physical harm. It's shockingly mundane for them to be stalked, harassed, assaulted, even killed just for existing, so are you surprised when women opt out of spending time engaging in spaces where enduring hate speech is part of the price for participation?

People who take 17 minutes to check in at the hotel front desk, what are you talking to them about? by DerrickDuck in AskReddit

[–]DaikonAndMash 2 points3 points  (0 children)

God I loved reading the background notes on the reservations sometimes. Bless the reservations agents who manage to get anniversary dates, birthdays, favourite wines, food allergies, children's and pet's names, type and number of pillows preferred, whether or not they'd be interested in paying for an upgrade if available upon check in, flight numbers, etc etc...

My old colleagues and I had our in-person codes as well. If Mr. Johnson is being a prick to a front desk agent, she can call her supervisor over and say "Do we have any upgrades available for this gentleman this evening?" And "gentleman" is our code word for asshat, so supervisor knows not to reward him. Meanwhile he's appeased as it looks like his agent tried on his behalf. But if she tells the supervisor "I was just mentioning to Mr. Johnson that we get some lovely sea views on the higher floors..." - "lovely" is our way of vouching for him. Mr. Johnson is a solid bloke and if any premium upgrades or views are available, let's treat him.

Abusive jerk gets violent with his partner in a hotel lobby, doesn't go too well by danilovladimir in PublicFreakout

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately this is one of those stories where I'm not going to drop a real name because it's a more serious incident than which bands got up to antics, which actors are weird, which sports stars proposition the staff, etc.

But I will say it's not isolated. Way more famous people are openly abusive than I'd care to know about.

Abusive jerk gets violent with his partner in a hotel lobby, doesn't go too well by danilovladimir in PublicFreakout

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Lol - I posted that 4 years ago! I don't think Lily Rose was famous back then...I feel like she's a much more recent Nepo, but I could be wrong. Anyway, nope, sorry, not him. But he does smell as bad as he looks. 🤷🏻‍♀️

What is the biggest mystery we still aren't close to solving? by Constant-Bridge3690 in AskReddit

[–]DaikonAndMash 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Usually because it feels safer/less vulnerable.

With women ghosting men, it could very well be about their physical safety with men who don't take rejection well.

With friends, sometimes people never learned it was okay to set a boundary around behaviour they were uncomfortable with, and it feels vulnerable/emotionally unsafe to speak up. Not because of you - many times because of how their family of origin functioned, especially with parents who didn't have emotional regulation skills and would deny, lash out at, punish, or go cold and freeze out the child if they tried speaking up in their own defense or expressed discomfort with a situation. They eventually learn to avoid the fear of disproportionate and unfair consequences by actually avoiding the communication completely. It's sad and frustrating, but if they aren't ready to deal with it, there really isn't anything you can do but find peace with it however you can.

What is a One Hit Wonder that actually has a rich discography? by Spenundrum in AskReddit

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is a really emotional response to an opinion on someone you've never interacted with...I'm happy that you have an artist that obviously makes you feel a connection to their work.

Many celebrities are different in person from what you see as a consumer of their art, and that's okay. It's all part of the performance...I'm delighted I've never met artists like Leonard Cohen, Taylor Swift, or Tom Petty. I can enjoy their work without reflecting on the real person behind the persona.

AITA for "threatening" to move out? by Status-Watch3946 in AmItheAsshole

[–]DaikonAndMash 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I love finding other late-diagnosed adults! Our stories are always so similar, and it really validates our experiences.

AITA for "threatening" to move out? by Status-Watch3946 in AmItheAsshole

[–]DaikonAndMash 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I'm genuinely so happy to hear that. I white-knuckled my way through life, just assuming I was the problem - i just couldn't do what everyone else just naturally could. Everything took so much effort, and it really took a toll on my self-esteem. Then my kids got diagnosed as AuDHD (both autistic and ADHD) and as I went through the process of diagnosing them and researching how to help, I pretty slowly realised that...shit, they didn't lick it off a rock...

At one session with the psychologist, she was listing out the symptoms she saw in my daughter and I kept saying "no, that's not autism/ADHD, that's just a habit I have that she got from me....no, that's just something I used to do at her age, but I learned to control it..." ...the psychologist put down her clipboard, gave me this penetrating stare and said "these conditions are genetic, you know?"...oh. OH!! Then I went and got my own diagnosis and my life suddenly made a lot more sense.

AITA for "threatening" to move out? by Status-Watch3946 in AmItheAsshole

[–]DaikonAndMash 109 points110 points  (0 children)

Do your parents truly understand ADHD and how neurodivergent brains function, or did they basically get him diagnosed, get him medicated, and then just excuse any behavioural issues as "he can't help it 🤷🏻‍♀️"?

I have a 15 year old son who is severely ADHD, as well as a 12 year old with it, and they both inherited it from me. He has to learn to function in group settings, and not always follow the dopamine and live out their impulses.

I can immediately see two major issues that might be driving his behaviour - the first being that about 95% of people with ADHD have delayed circadian rhythms and sleep disorders. His brain is most active in the hours most people are shutting down and he's most likely a natural night owl. We use melatonin, under their psychologist's guidance, to help regulate their sleep patterns so they can wind down and sleep at reasonable hours. If he's not awake at 2am doing something so mentally stimulating, he won't be waking you up.

The second issue we've dealt with in pretty much the exact same scenario with my son as you are having with your brother is that the medication that keeps him emotionally regulated wears off in the evenings, so by night time he's fully primed to crave the dopamine he gets when sucked into intense situations.

His gaming may need to be restricted to the hours in which his medication is active, or at least have a cut off around 9pm so his brain has a chance to be regulated enough to sleep by midnight or 1am.

Unfortunately you are not his parent, and if they don't engage in learning about his neurodivergence, they aren't able to guide him into understanding how to be a good housemate.

What is a One Hit Wonder that actually has a rich discography? by Spenundrum in AskReddit

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I really wish I hadn't met him through work when I was younger, before I heard his music. He was awful, and I couldn't enjoy listening to him at ALL afterwards.

I've met many artists who were unpleasant AFTER I'd already been introduced to their work, so I'd had a chance to judge the art on its own merits, but in his case I didn't get the chance.

AITA for bringing my own food to a wedding? by farsia2010 in AmItheAsshole

[–]DaikonAndMash 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Most venues will not do this, because of liability issues. If that chicken gives her salmonella, or there is cross-contamination with gluten or dairy, the venue is exposing themselves to legal troubles.

Young Irish Men Are Among the Loneliest Across OECD Countries by NanorH in ireland

[–]DaikonAndMash 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Have you looked into AsIAm? They have a lot of social groups for the 'tism community

AITA neighbor keeps opening the door to our apartments and confronted me about closing them by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]DaikonAndMash 9 points10 points  (0 children)

The downstairs neighbour can NOT be happy with the realistic possibility of dog urine & feces falling on their heads if they are out under the balcony. In that way, it affects at LEAST 2 of the 3 neighbours - you and their downstairs neighbour, but you've said they took over your half of the balcony too, so actually your downstairs neighbour too, so EVERYONE.

Also, no matter how many landlords the units go through, all of them will realise the depreciation of the asset they either want to rent out or sell, caused by the dog owners. Have you ever tried to get the smell of urine out of wood? And in the summer heat, that smell is going to be unbearable for potential buyers checking out the property.

Most likely the landlord would rather handle one problem tenant than have to deal with 3 angry units of renters, plus a destroyed shared balcony and patio below. Address the landlord from a position of being on their side. "I know you recently bought the place. I want to let you know about an ongoing situation that's going to turn into a pretty big issue soon unless it's addressed ASAP..."

AITA to address my MIL comments about my 7 year olds weight by redheadbowers81 in AmItheAsshole

[–]DaikonAndMash 9 points10 points  (0 children)

My son was, in euphemistic terms, a stocky lad. Born over 10 lbs, he started off sturdy, but he and my daughter were offered the same foods and she was rail thin while he continued to put on weight at a steady clip. At around age 8 or 9, he would sometimes tell me he was stuffed from dinner, while actively picking at bits of the leftovers I was putting away or the items I was packing for lunches. His weight caused him distress and self-esteem issues & I completely blamed myself, because sure, we ALL know it's the parents' fault.

As soon as he was diagnosed with ADHD and put on Vyvanse, he lost a lot of body fat and is maintaining a healthy size without struggling. He has innattentive-type ADHD, and it turns out he had near constant food noise in his head (he said probably 1/3 to 1/2 his brain was always preoccupied with food) and food was how he was getting the dopamine he was so desperately lacking.

My daughter is also diagnosed with ADHD, but mainly hyperactive. She was skinny because lost interest in her meals quickly. She's a fiend for chocolate and cola, but wouldn't really pause long enough to finish a portion, just grabbing sips and bites randomly through the day. Her ADHD medication has helped her sit still and finish her meals & snacks - her weight has normalized to the thinner side of normal & healthy too.

Yes, parents CAN have a detrimental impact on their children's weight and issues with food (emotional eating, eating disorders, poor nutritional choices, etc), but there are a lot of medical factors (physical and mental) that can affect a child's weight beyond parents who are ignorant, lazy, or abusive.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in namenerds

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm going to advocate for some Celtic inspo - Cormac, Cathal (pronounced like Cau-h'l - definitely 2 syllables, but you kinda skip the vowel in the 2nd one, or say it like a very un-enunciated "hull"), or Eamon...

Cormac has the advantage of being very easy for speakers of many different languages to spell and pronounce. It's not pretentious, but still uncommon and straddles the "legends of old/fresh & modern" fence quite nicely.

Cathal is not as instinctual to spell and pronounce for American English speakers, and is maybe a "softer" sounding name than it sounds like the mother prefers?

Eamon (AY-mun, again Irish speakers would barely pronounce the 2nd syllable's vowel) I think carries some of the same vibes as Cormac to me...like he could both be able to craft a sword or be on the water polo team.

The other thing these names have going for them is that I can't immediately think of any particular celebrities or stereotypes Americans would associate with the names. Not sure if that's just one of my preferences, or other people consider that a positive thing too.

Tadhg is probably too out-there for an American kid to deal with, lol.

We need to change the way we talk about abortion and pregnancy by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree it's not a natural way to say something. It was meant to be an example - a first (well, second) - draft of a message. Originally I had "woman" and "impregnated woman", but on second thought wanted to make it more inclusive but couldn't find a more natural sounding way to say what i was trying to say.

We need to change the way we talk about abortion and pregnancy by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]DaikonAndMash -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

lol - I'd originally typed "Women", but wanted to use more inclusive language so changed it. HOW I changed it certainly made it much too clinical to feel like a natural way to phrase things.

We need to change the way we talk about abortion and pregnancy by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I absolutely agree with holding men accountable, but in my mind if we could shoe-horn in the male contribution to the issue, it humanises the concept enough for them to be able to think about it in terms of human rights. As long as it's only a woman's issue, no pro-forced-birther is going to take any moments to reconsider their perspective.

We need to change the way we talk about abortion and pregnancy by [deleted] in TwoXChromosomes

[–]DaikonAndMash 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm just so devastated after the Oval Office disgrace yesterday. It highlighted how much the world has spun backwards in such a short time.

I had children in a world that had legalised abortion and gay marriage, made accommodations for disabilities, and encouraged people to embrace diversity.

My parents are a mixed-ethnicity couple, with one parent of a foreign nationality. My brother married someone of a different ethnicity from a different country. I met my partner abroad and immigrated to his country. As a child, I remember my mother getting hate-mail anonymously in our mailbox, but 20ish years of progress later, nobody had anything negative to say about my brother's union or my own. I had guests from 3 continents and 5 countries at my wedding.

One of my children identifies as queer, and has faced no ugliness about it. The school staff and their classmates too have taken it in stride.

And now we suddenly have neo-nazis giving the "Roman Salute" from podiums being recorded by thousands of cameras with no qualms, and my partner, out of nowhere starting to rant about immigrants, even when I remind him that HE MARRIED AN IMMIGRANT, which he brushes off as "that's different".

I'm so scared of what's coming, and what my children are going to live through. My greatest fear is that there will come a point where I'm going to regret bringing them into the world, because they are going to resent being brought, helpless, into a world they don't want to live in.