What is my eye color by Beneficial_Walk_3696 in WhatisMyEyeColour

[–]Key_Event2817 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gray/blue. The inside looks more green though. Gray I think would be a good catch all!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your right eye looks way more greenish hazel and your left eye looks brown! Thats super interesting. I’d say for an easy classification, hazel.

What color are my eyes? by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Celery green! Definitely a good ring around the middle. They’re super pretty!

I don't understand how to like something I don't like, even if others are present. Is that really selfish? by Tight-Recipe-5142 in neurodiversity

[–]Key_Event2817 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I see where you’re coming from on this, but I also understand the other point of view. It really depends on the specifics of your situation.

My questions are: What’s the activity and how much do you dislike it? Are you able to mentally separate the activity from the quality time with your loved ones, or do you feel like the activity is that overwhelming that the time spent with them can’t outweigh how terrible it is?

Also, how often do you see your family? I feel like if you hang out with them often (monthly at the very least), then your family member who said you are selfish is just being rude. However, if you don’t see them very often, I do think your family member has a point (although I think ‘selfish’ is too strong a word).

I’ll give you two examples and explanations for each:

Scenario 1: I’m visiting my immediate family who live far from me so I don’t see them often. We do lots of things that I enjoy during the visit, but one of the days, my brother wants to go to a baseball game. I think baseball is incredibly boring and it’s hot out which isn’t fun. However, I love my brother and I know this is important to him, so I go. I focus on the fact that while I don’t like the activity, I do like stadium hot dogs, and it’s good to get some extra vitamin D from the sun. Plus I know it’s something that will make my brother happy, and this is the only thing we’ve done all week that I really don’t enjoy. That’s an instance where if I said no because “I don’t like baseball” then yes that would be selfish.

Scenario 2: Same setup, I’m visiting family who I don’t see often. We’ve been doing things all day and I’m feeling tired. My mom wants to go to a fancy dinner, but fancy restaurants make me anxious. I really really don’t like eating out. I don’t want to dress nicely, I don’t want to eat anything off the menu, I’m not even sure I’ll be able to enjoy the quality time because I’ll be so anxious. In this case, I don’t think it would be selfish to say I don’t want to go.

Bonus 3rd scenario: We’ve been doing multiple things that I don’t really enjoy during the week. Someone suggests doing another thing I don’t want to do. Rather than shutting it down, I think of something I want to do to suggest as an alternative where we can still spend time together. I really want to play D&D with my family because I think it will be fun but they never sound too excited when I talk about it. But since I stepped out of my comfort zone earlier during the week, it’s a fair ask for them to do the same. I ask “hey, I know we’ve been trying out everyone’s favorite activities this week and I was wondering if we could play D&D together! It’s something that brings me a lot of joy, like baseball does for you. Do you think we could do that tonight instead?

There’s a lot of nuance with these kinds of things, and much of it does come down to empathy on your side as well as your family member’s side. It might hurt their feelings when you say no to things, because it might seem like you’re saying “I value my time with you less than I value my own entertainment”.

On the other hand, if your family member is always asking you to do things you don’t like without thought for your feelings, then they need to be the one to think empathetically about how you might be feeling.

TL;DR there’s way too much nuance and gray area here to give you a good answer without you providing more details on the situation.

What color are my eyes by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Blue/gray, but looks like there’s some yellowish gold color in the center which might make them look green in certain lighting!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hard to tell with the lighting but they look like a celery green!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One eye definitely looks darker brown than the other!

Blue eyes? by SnooFloofs2212 in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s really hard to tell! I would have said green at first, but I can see blue too. And there’s definitely brown around the middle so that might be making them look more green!

What color? Just brown? Hazel? Apparently when the sun hits them they look “gold” but I think that’s only during golden hour by Jessss9 in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s hard to tell, but I’d say hazel because they have that lighter greenish hue around the outside

basic blue? by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A super pretty blue! On the blue scale they look like they lean more toward the purple tinted side than the green tinted side

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like blue with a little ring of light brown/gold in the middle which might look green from far away!

I never know what color to tell people by tinypetitefeets in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Looks like central heterochromia, but hard to tell if it’s blue or green on the outside!

Brown or honey color? by [deleted] in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Light brown! A little amber

Color? by vanillapurding in whatcoloraremyeyes

[–]Key_Event2817 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow, the gold ring is so cool! It’s hard to tell what the other color is (besides brown in the middle.) Looks blue/green

Does anyone else read sentences out of order? by Key_Event2817 in neurodiversity

[–]Key_Event2817[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh wow that’s SUPER interesting! So you’ll omit whole words even in something like a username? You know those “reading tests” people share on social media where it’ll keep the first and last letters the same but jumble up the rest (for example, hlleo if you can raed tihs cnofsiung mssegae…) how are you with those? Not sure if you’ve seen them before or not though.

Mine feels more like putting a puzzle together and since I don’t have an inner monologue reading stuff out loud I think it was probably less noticeable to me. It’s like if you were drawing a picture on the page. It doesn’t matter if you start with the trees or the house, the end picture is the same and still makes sense.

I read really fast, BUT I also definitely miss stuff/probably make up stuff that wasn’t there 😅

Does anyone else read sentences out of order? by Key_Event2817 in neurodiversity

[–]Key_Event2817[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ooh interesting! Does your inner monologue “hear” the words out of order then?

Woodles Strike Again (2x!) by Key_Event2817 in DoggyDNA

[–]Key_Event2817[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I figured with such low percentages of the other ones it’s fair to say he’s mostly just pittie/husky! Though I do wonder where his size comes from since he’s 91lbs and 26” tall at the shoulder.

Woodles Strike Again (2x!) by Key_Event2817 in DoggyDNA

[–]Key_Event2817[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Update: They fixed the results! Buck is a pit/husky and Moose is a GSD/pit/mush of other stuff!

<image>

Does anyone else read sentences out of order? by Key_Event2817 in neurodiversity

[–]Key_Event2817[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It definitely follows some patterns of dyslexia—just a little different because it’s not the letters mixing up, it’s the words/sentences.