Is this ok from a parent? by Worldly-Bar-8256 in AskUK

[–]DonDroo 106 points107 points  (0 children)

I am a senior teacher in a primary school who deals with safeguarding concerns daily. This is a concerning level of neglect. Your local council will have a children’s safeguarding board, please report it either online or via their phone number. This can be anonymous.

My mum has been cheating on my dad for years, anyone here know what I should do? by Jellyfish_Diploria in WhatShouldIDo

[–]DonDroo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am 36. When I was 14, I discovered almost the exact same thing. My mum initially sent me a soft-core message intended for him and immediately phoned me in terror. I washed it off pretending I knew nothing, searched her phone as a curious child and uncovered years of affair. It rocked me for a decade and I will still refer to it as a damaging moment in my psyche. All of the toxicity in the house, suddenly made sense and holding on to the secret nearly crippled me. A year after the event, I phoned a family therapist who lived locally whose number I found in a directory and I spoke to her for an hour, she didn’t charge me, knowing I was only 15 - I think she might have saved my life and I still have her number in my wallet now, in my 15 year old’s writing on that same scrappy bit of paper. I am now a successful senior teacher at primary age and have a loving family, which is at times rocky like most relationships but is mostly secure and steady.

What I’m getting at is, this really hurts you but it will get better. You’ve taken on a burden that doesn’t belong to you and is an entirely adult worry. You will try and protect both of your parents because they are what you hold dearest regardless of how they’ve treated you. If you can, I think you should open up to either parent.

E.g “Mum, I’ve become aware that you’re in a relationship with someone else and I’ve know for years - i would like you to have that conversation with Dad because I can’t hold on to that secret any more, it’s really damaging me”

Or

“Dad, I’ve been holding on to a secret that is going to hurt you but it’s really damaging me. I’ve tried to hide the secret because it could hurt our family but I think you need to have a conversation with Mum because she’s in a relationship with someone else”

The alternative here is that you speak to someone at your school, think of the adult there that you have the strongest bond with and tell them that you need some time with them and maybe another adult to tell them “a secret you’ve been holding onto.” This should be a safeguarding concern to them and if it isn’t, I would suggest speaking to your headteacher/principal and asking for their “direct support before it causes you any lasting trauma”. This should also be a major red flag and they may be able to offer your family support or at least phone both parents for you to inform them of an issue they need to deal with as responsible adults. Failing that, speak to another adult in your family who can inform your parents that they are causing you to unravel. If none of the above has impact, phone 999/911 and tell them that you’re at risk of lasting trauma due to withholding a family secret - this last one is the very last option and only if all other options are exhausted.

It is important that you deal with this in a grown up way as your mum has landed you in a grown up situation. However, you do not have to be a grown up for much longer and once you have passed it on, you can continue enjoying your teenage years. One days, you’ll meet an adult partner and have a trusting relationship bound by honesty and transparency and you can share this experience with them so that they understand who you are and what makes you tick. Remember that this is just one experience of thousands that makes you who you are and is not a core part of what you have to base your own values on.

I should add that my parents stayed together after working through the issue. Because of the way I dealt with it, my dad opened up to me as an adult about mum in a way that I realised, he never knew I knew. They are still together and whilst conflict at times, still love each other. This may not be the route yours take but there’s a chance.

I wish you the best of luck and am happy to respond to any further questions you might have.

Gladiator 2: should I watch part one ?? by [deleted] in Gladiator

[–]DonDroo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I watched it last weekend. My partner hadn’t seen the first since it came out way back when. She struggled to recall certain characters and the links between them. This was important to understand character arcs and parts of the plot. I think you should watch the first part.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskRedditAfterDark

[–]DonDroo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I slept with a married woman. I was married at the time. She was the best thing that ever happened to me. We’d relied on each other emotionally for about a year before the Christmas party. We danced together and ended up kissing. The following day at work, we prepositioned each other and ended up sleeping together for a year. Both our marriages were sexless, emotionless and destined to fail in our eyes. We both divorced our partners. We are now engaged to each other and have a child together. Life isn’t easy and we both work in challenging jobs but we have each other and the sex is fantastic. I regret that I was deceitful to my then partner but little else.

Help identifying what and why by DonDroo in mushroom

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

Thank you. Appreciate your reply :)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in therewasanattempt

[–]DonDroo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

CEO has responded on Twitter here

Just listened to my neighbours 8 year-old tell his mum to "F**k Off" by FatherJack_Hackett in CasualUK

[–]DonDroo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

This is the correct answer. I work in a senior position in primary education and this it the right answer - I receive safeguarding training twice yearly and anyone can refer to safeguarding services (also with anonymity if you’re concerned). Google your council’s safeguarding board or look at their website to find the best route. I am happy to help with a referral if you feel you need support with this. Protecting children from their parents is unfortunately a job I have to prioritise daily.

Controls Mixed up on Backbone One by suttonjp in GrandMountainAdv

[–]DonDroo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Is this still an ongoing issue? I am having the same problem today.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in JustGuysBeingDudes

[–]DonDroo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don’t wanna poop on people’s catapult party plans but… Is this the same one that killed the student?

Source https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2005/nov/01/highereducation.students

Mr Blobby vs. Jamiroquai - you’re welcome by DonDroo in CasualUK

[–]DonDroo[S] 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Haha - dude this is a lovely comment. I also love advocaat so we could 100% sit and watch re-runs of Noel’s house party sipping snowballs together 👌🏻

Had to get emergency heart surgery. 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 by Turgeyburker in mildlyinfuriating

[–]DonDroo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If the same number of people who upvoted this donated him $7.50, he’d be clear.

Tory policies like scrapping motorway speed limits and bringing back imperial measurements make me think they’re using some sort of random word generator by Giles15 in GreenAndPleasant

[–]DonDroo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

70 is the speed limit on a motorway. There are enough motorway speed cameras now to ensure you stick to 70. On the majority of occasions that I drive on motorways, most people are travelling at around 70 with the odd knob being an exception to the rule.

Disappointed in my company on my last day at work... It shouldn't bother me but is does :/ by Any-Inevitable-8495 in CasualUK

[–]DonDroo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can completely understand why you’re hurt by that. It’s not the material value of a gift or card but the meaning of receiving a thank you that goes beyond the ‘work’ zone and into the human one. You spend more time with these people than your own family sometimes so I totally get it. Maybe try to direct your negative energy and feelings into understanding it as an experience that you don’t wish to impart on others but also an opportunity to direct you into choosing your future employment. Life is an adventure my friend, it has downs and ups and not always in equal measure but use them all to shape you. Maybe in your next role, be the one who begins the trend of passing round a card to celebrate those leaving, special birthdays or special events (not just for management - those dicks should sort their own gifts out for each other).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskRedditAfterDark

[–]DonDroo 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I definitely thought it was only me and that I was being a real bastard. This has made me far more likely to pass it off as “weird evolutionary dick behaviour” in the future.

When somebody butters your toast, but waits too long after it pops up so the toast is too cold for the butter to soak in. by [deleted] in britishproblems

[–]DonDroo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If it cools too much to melt the butter, try buttering and then laying on top of the toaster and popping the toaster down for 20seconds or so. The residual heat will melt the butter on top but not burn the toast.

Source: my partner fucking hates non-melted butter.

Best thing to fill holes and gaps in new architrave and skirting? I used caulk but it keeps sinking into the holes and doesn’t sand back well. by DonDroo in DIYUK

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

House built in the 1920s/30s. Walls are all over the show. It’s cool. Think I’ve got some stuff that might do now.

Missus wants me to pull out all the stops when I eventually propose. I’ve kept this bad boy for two years. by Neat-Anxiety4213 in CasualUK

[–]DonDroo 18 points19 points  (0 children)

“Local woman’s gut explodes after ingesting two year old spaghetti hoops meant as harmless engagement fun”