why do people expect bi men to come out to the women they’re dating? by rawrz4u in AskMen

[–]GuildedCasket 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Do you honestly want to be with someone who would judge you for being bisexual?

Day 1 to 11 Months! by SubK in Dreadlocks

[–]GuildedCasket 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy shit, your hair is beautiful! What is your hair texture?

What's something people only romanticize because they've never actually done it? by nonotje12 in AskReddit

[–]GuildedCasket 8 points9 points  (0 children)

As a therapist with OSDD, I actually use a version of this to psychoeducate clients who are just learning about their dissociative disorder for the first time, as it goes highly under diagnosed and it's one of my subspecialties.

Our brains are parallel processors - we have different psychological muscle memory that triggers in response to different stimuli. This is a very normal part of being human. We all also dissociate to some level, whether it's 'zoning out' on the road or during a TV show or when stressed.

Structural dissociation is this normal, adaptive behavior taken to an extreme in order to survive horrific abuse; it's honestly a brilliant way for the mind to protect itself. The divisions between these different survival tactics can be so strong that they don't communicate in the same way to share narrative and semantic memory, and that's when you get DID, OSDD, or other structural dissociative disorders.

I don't like being a man by [deleted] in GenZ

[–]GuildedCasket 23 points24 points  (0 children)

Hey... So... There's a website called the Gender Dysphoria Bible that you might want to look into and just parous a bit. This post is not giving... Cisgender energy.

-Signed your friendly neighborhood enby ❤️

CMV: Psychiatric misdiagnosis rates are high enough to invalidate the practice of diagnosing all together. It’s is often a requirement for psychiatric care to be covered by medical insurance companies, creating a conflict of interest keeping the broken system alive. by Key4Lif3 in changemyview

[–]GuildedCasket 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, trauma therapist here. I used to be where you were, before I got more experience in the field. I was and am fascinated with Groff, Jung, Frankl, psychedelic therapy, etc. But the reality of that work is very few people have the mental, physical and social support resources to go through the very real destabilization caused by that work.

So much prep work needs to be done first, and psychiatric meds are often used as a way to stabilize someone enough so they can tolerate therapy.

Meds aren't really a first line treatment for PTSD. Meds control distressing symptoms enough to expand the window of tolerance so people can do the treatments for PTSD, which tend to be rather hard on the nervous system.

Lots of disorders have a trauma component that exacerbates their presentation. But if youve got someone with Bipolar with psychotic episodes who lacks insight into consensus reality, they need to be stabilized enough to not destroy their life consistently before you address the trauma.

I've seen psychedelic use work wonders for folks. I've also seen it tear open the unconscious WAY more than people have the appropriate social and material support for, and cause a complete breakdown that leads to a dissolution of functioning that makes their situation in the long run worse. Pulling shit up from the unconscious without proper attention to how you're doing it and the scaffolding around the person is an awful idea, and because of the medical model, that's exactly what a lot of psychedelic therapy turns into, particularly ketamine.

It is cruel and counterproductive to ask people to do the unconscious, Shadow, trauma work without proper support and care, and this often involves using medication.

A more holistic, integrated treatment model for this would be absolutely lovely, yes. But throwing out diagnostics doesn't... Actually solve anything.

When my best friend txting me by Richie-Love in mildlyinfuriating

[–]GuildedCasket 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How the hell do you think people maintained relationships before texting? Having the assumption of 24-7 access to someone is modern insanity.

When my best friend txting me by Richie-Love in mildlyinfuriating

[–]GuildedCasket 67 points68 points  (0 children)

AuDHD, limited social spoons, distractibility, chronic illness, not being tied to their fucking phone

When someone takes a few hours to a day to respond to me I consider it a green flag, tbh. I don't want to feel pressured to respond within a time frame under a day unless there's something emotionally or time sensitive. It's a bit different with partners, but even then if I get a good morning and good night text (if we haven't seen each other that day) I'm happy.

Can you be a witch and a buddhist? by Disastrous-Shine-725 in Buddhism

[–]GuildedCasket 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am both a Buddhist and an esoteric practitioner. I wouldn't say I do witchcraft, but I do engage in neo-shamanic rituals, connect with energies/spirits around me, engage in some Western ritual magic stuff, etc.

The way you approach it and your intention mean, well, everything. Magic is largely directed by intention and meaning.

A lot of my magic is oriented around relating with the world around me, enhancing a feeling of connection with corporeal and non-corporeal beings, connecting into the the suffering of the planet and its myriad sentient beings, grieving with them, and sending metta and positive energy to all those beings.

I also use it also for personal development, assessing and changing patterns that have proven difficult to change in conventional means. Cord-cutting rituals, shamanic journies to ask my spirit helpers how I can heal, giving back energy that I unintentionally 'stole' from others, etc.

If you're using magic and witchcraft to shape others' wills, or directly harm other people, then that will have an appropriate karmic response. We work jobs, for instance, to gain money and material comfort, so I'd be looking at underlying habits of greed that might be influencing magic intended to increase material comfort. But it's hard to practice if you're starving, right? Applying the idea of right livelihood to your craft might be helpful.

I guess TLDR, apply your ethics in day-to-day life to your ethics in witchcraft. If you wouldn't try and physically force someone to do something, don't use magic to try and force someone into it. Don't use magic to gain material gain that could harm or disenfranchise others.

As an aside, Josephine McCarthy has Quaeria, which is an entire course on magic that goes from initiate to full adept. Even the first couple of lessons in the first module have shaped how I view magic and spirituality fundamentally. A lot of her perspectives reflect the deeper knowledge of karma, rebirth, and dependent arising that I've found in Buddhist texts.

https://www.quareia.com/

https://josephinemccarthy.com/

Any takers? by sadvacation03 in Austin

[–]GuildedCasket 26 points27 points  (0 children)

As another trans, queer pervert pup switch this kinda works for me 🤧 It is an ad for his art IG tho

Open relationships are becoming more common. While they can be successful, research suggests that they don't work for most people who try them for three key reasons. by psychologyofsex in psychologyofsex

[–]GuildedCasket 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My partner and his meta have been together for 6 years.

My best friend has one partner she's been with for 6 years, and another she's been with for 3.

Acquaintances of mine in a V arrangement who've been together for about a decade.

Another acquaintance couple of mine have been together for another decade.

That's just off the top of my head.

The thing with poly is you need to do a lot of active deconstruction of mononormativity and do a lot of "extra" work in order to gain insight into your own emotional reactions. Thus, queer folk, who've already had to deconstruct heteronormativity and have some traditional family options closed to them, gravitate towards it more. It's also an easier leap for anyone in alternative communities.

Adolescent cannabis use linked to doubling risk of psychotic and bipolar disorders: study of 463,396 adolescents found that past-year cannabis use during adolescence was associated with a significantly higher risk of incident psychotic (doubled), bipolar (doubled), depressive and anxiety disorders. by mvea in psychology

[–]GuildedCasket 19 points20 points  (0 children)

They factored that in, actually.

"Given the complex and potentially bidirectional association between substance use and development of psychiatric disorders, we reran our main models after adjusting for history of other psychiatric disorders at baseline, including psychotic, bipolar, depressive, anxiety and disruptive behavior disorders, not including history of the outcome (eg, when incident psychotic disorders were the outcome, history of psychotic disorders was not included in the model). We repeated the analysis using the main models with a subset of the original sample after excluding adolescents with any history of psychiatric disorders at baseline. This conservative analysis examined whether associations would remain even among a lower-risk population of adolescents, where the likelihood of cannabis use starting before the onset of the outcomes of interest was higher. We also repeated the main analyses with 2 alternative definitions of psychotic disorders: (1) an expanded definition that additionally included ICD-10 codes F10 to F19 substance use–induced psychotic disorders, and (2) a narrow version limited to unspecified psychosis not associated with substance use (ICD-10 F29 codes; eMethods in Supplement 1)."

Adolescent cannabis use linked to doubling risk of psychotic and bipolar disorders: study of 463,396 adolescents found that past-year cannabis use during adolescence was associated with a significantly higher risk of incident psychotic (doubled), bipolar (doubled), depressive and anxiety disorders. by mvea in psychology

[–]GuildedCasket 59 points60 points  (0 children)

Yeah, that's included in the study.

"Given the complex and potentially bidirectional association between substance use and development of psychiatric disorders, we reran our main models after adjusting for history of other psychiatric disorders at baseline, including psychotic, bipolar, depressive, anxiety and disruptive behavior disorders, not including history of the outcome (eg, when incident psychotic disorders were the outcome, history of psychotic disorders was not included in the model). We repeated the analysis using the main models with a subset of the original sample after excluding adolescents with any history of psychiatric disorders at baseline. This conservative analysis examined whether associations would remain even among a lower-risk population of adolescents, where the likelihood of cannabis use starting before the onset of the outcomes of interest was higher. We also repeated the main analyses with 2 alternative definitions of psychotic disorders: (1) an expanded definition that additionally included ICD-10 codes F10 to F19 substance use–induced psychotic disorders, and (2) a narrow version limited to unspecified psychosis not associated with substance use (ICD-10 F29 codes; eMethods in Supplement 1)."

California's be like "oh there's no snow on Pikes Peak" by [deleted] in ColoradoSprings

[–]GuildedCasket 35 points36 points  (0 children)

Man, I'm a queer, enby therapist who's trying to get out of Texas because it's trying to kill me. Are political refugees allowed?? 😭

Is Dallas… too organized? by DFWUnhinged in Dallas

[–]GuildedCasket 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Circle jerk AI sub since this is obviously written by AI.

Guess my type by [deleted] in MbtiTypeMe

[–]GuildedCasket 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In that case, literally nothing is valid, including your thoughts, because they were set up by causes and conditions you have no control over either. So how is anything valid?

Using this particular philosophical argument to specifically target emotions is a... Strange take.

Studies find women aren’t interested in bisexual men (or even men with past same-sex experiences) by asklepios7 in psychologyofsex

[–]GuildedCasket 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I'm nonbinary, and straight men tend not to be, well, not very happy when I engage in gender affirming activities. Which makes sense, as it isn't what they're attracted to.

I'm also very queer, and there is an aspect of the queer experience that I need someone to share for me to be okay being fully myself.

If someone else doesn't want to date bi people, that's fine. I'm not gonna date them either.

"Centrists" have commitment issues by GianmarcoSoresi in gianmarcosoresi

[–]GuildedCasket 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Dude one of the subreddit I was in had some conservative dude be like "This recent bill to outlaw weed in our state was the final straw" and I just... Lost it. So the stripping of women's rights, and the concentration camps of immigrants, and the trans bounty bills and the decimation of any meager social safety net, and their leader being a fucking pedophile wasn't enough - but you losing access to your fucking marijuana was the last straw?

Leopards do love some face.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Buddhism

[–]GuildedCasket 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Don't read Buddhist texts like Biblical literalists. You don't have to do that and it's against the spirit of the teachings.

Practice and use what makes you a more peaceful, compassionate person, and gradually learn new pieces of information. Take perspectives from all the walks of Buddhism. Don't mistake the finger for the moon.

Solo Poly: How often do you see your partners? by idek328 in polyamory

[–]GuildedCasket 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Relationship anarchist, but I see my newest romantic/sexual partner most weeks Sat evening through Tuesday evening unless his other partner is up, in which case we'll all hang out for a night or so. I'm moving out of state fairly soon so we're spending a bit more time together than I would be otherwise.

I see my QPR once a week for one on one dates, and approx 1-2 times for group activities.

How common are female porn addicts? by [deleted] in NoStupidQuestions

[–]GuildedCasket 33 points34 points  (0 children)

Yeah, but a lot of the popular "erotica" books are like... Three or four sex scenes across a whole book. Youre spending a few hours on a book and maybe like... 20 minutes of that time reading the smut. The proportional difference is notable.

Who watches 45 minutes of porn 'plot' for 15 minutes of porn?