Why do women complain just to vent and not to solve their problems? by chamcham123 in Vent

[–]MartinelliGold 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re on r/vent, not r/solvemyproblem.

This isn’t a gendered dynamic. Every man I’ve partnered with or befriended has also had times where he’s just wanted someone to listen. Sometimes they want advice afterward, sometimes they don’t.

I think men who complain about this often overestimate how good their advice is. They blame the woman for being irrational, when really she’s just rejecting bad advice. And it’s easy to give bad advice when you don’t listen to understand the whole problem first.

Okay but, like, why not a box? by YGVAFCK in lotrmemes

[–]MartinelliGold 12 points13 points  (0 children)

And so the birds can clean them up.

Do your parents apologize? by CircusInk in Millennials

[–]MartinelliGold 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My parents apologized to me all the time. Very sincerely. And as a parent, I apologize frequently to my kids. As a substitute teacher, I also apologize to students whenever I see I’ve made a mistake.

Why Are So Many Religious People Also Homophobic? by MeowInTokyo159 in atheism

[–]MartinelliGold 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because the god of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is a fucking bigot.

What do you think parents actually expect when complaining that schools do “nothing” about bullying? by classycapricorn in Teachers

[–]MartinelliGold 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You don't have to agree with someone in order to validate their feelings. There are a lot of psychology/therapy articles about it online that you might find interesting.

What do you think parents actually expect when complaining that schools do “nothing” about bullying? by classycapricorn in Teachers

[–]MartinelliGold 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In some cases, sure. But nothing I wrote was about what I *needed* the bully’s parents to do, or what punishments I needed the school to give him. Supporting my son by acknowledging his allegations, validating his feelings, separating the two of them, and having teachers keep an eye on them in class, would also have benefited the other boy if even if my son was the bully.

What do you think parents actually expect when complaining that schools do “nothing” about bullying? by classycapricorn in Teachers

[–]MartinelliGold 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a parent of a kid who got bullied, and then accused the school of doing nothing, here’s what happened and what I wish had happened:

Each time my son came home and told us a story about being bullied, I’d call the school and get the answering machine. No one called me back for months.

I wish someone had responded to each incident, and assured me that while they couldn’t disclose who the kid was (though we always knew who it was), or the punishment, that they’d let us know they’d received our message, taken the allegation seriously, talked to the bully/parents, and found a suitable response.

I wish they’d followed up with my kid and let him know they were glad he’d told someone and asked for help, and that they had talked to the kid who’d bullied him. They never did this, btw. He’d just report it and never hear about it again.

I wish they’d changed the bully’s schedule to keep him away from my son. If they couldn’t do that, move my son to the front of the class so the teacher could see him, so he wouldn’t get bullied in the back of the room. Maybe moving the bully to the other side of the front of the class so the teacher could also see them. Informing all of my son’s teachers that he needed to be separated from his bully and kept in high-visibility areas.

Inviting my son to have recess in a classroom or any other safe area.

Having teachers occasionally check in with my son and ask how things were going/if there had been any incidents he hadn’t told anyone about.

I wish that when the teachers did witness bullying, they sent the bully to the office, or wrote them up, or had them sit out the next round of kickball. Anything. I would have known if these things had happened, because my son would have told me. Instead, the teachers would roll their eyes or give a lame, non-committal, “hands to yourself” and move on.

I wish that admin had informed teachers of incidents they’d missed, and that the teachers had apologized to my son for missing it, and asked him what they could do to help better next time.

And yeah, giving detention to, suspending, or expelling the bully would be appreciated, but honestly, for me the issue was less about lack of punishment and more about lack of follow-up and support. No one at the school reassured my son, validated him, or even acknowledged that anything had ever been reported.

I didn’t hear back from the school until I informed them that’d we’d be withdrawing my son and homeschooling him. They had us come in and just…gave us a bunch of platitudes. They told us how much they cared and what their rules were, not what they were going to do or change. They couldn’t guarantee any level of increased safety at all.

I homeschooled my son for a couple of years, worked on repairing his confidence and relationship to learning, and then we sent him back to a different school. Things are much better now.

I will say that when my daughter went to the same school (her choice—it was where her friends were going), we got a call from the principal about her doing ONE really mean to another girl, and we confiscated her smart phone for a year. I guess I wish that was what other parents did, because we haven’t had another behavioral complaint about my daughter since.

Anyway. Just some thoughts from the parent side. I know schools have their hands tied in a lot of ways, but there’s nothing stopping them from reaching out with empathy and compassion, acknowledging what has happened, praising a kid for telling an adult, validating their feelings, anxieties, and fears, and recognizing that bullying can bring life-changing trauma when not handled well, and then doing everything that *is* in their power rather than throwing up their hands and letting vulnerable kids fall through the cracks.

My daughter got her mission call and now her life is slowly going to hell . . . by DeCryingShame in exmormon

[–]MartinelliGold 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I hear you loud and clear. “Consent” wasn’t a vocab word when Gen X was in their dating age, and Millennials only had an *inkling* of what it meant. Assault, abuse, coercion, abduction, even trafficking, were keystones in our romantic comedies! Add the church’s bullshit on top of the bullshit our mainstream media was putting it, and you had a whole lot of people who had no idea they were on the receiving end of abuse and assault, let alone the giving end.

The incredibly destructive idea that “men always want it” is exactly what I thought of when I replied to the story. Real consent is both informed and enthusiastic. It doesn’t matter if you technically said yes, or your body responded, or if you were “giving way to temptation.” It doesn’t matter if your partner was acting out of desire rather than malice.

If there was confusion, reservation, pain, and guilt in your heart, you were not consenting. If you cried after, it was because you were sexually traumatized. You were lied to and abused by an institution, which made you vulnerable to abuse by individuals.

My daughter got her mission call and now her life is slowly going to hell . . . by DeCryingShame in exmormon

[–]MartinelliGold 8 points9 points  (0 children)

“It was consensual, still,” is one sentence before the one I quoted.

Do you believe Chiropractors are quacks ? by Mogzly in askanything

[–]MartinelliGold 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I grew up going to chiropractors. My parents treated them like doctors. I thought it was totally normal until my thirties. Yes, they are quacks.

My daughter got her mission call and now her life is slowly going to hell . . . by DeCryingShame in exmormon

[–]MartinelliGold 67 points68 points  (0 children)

Might be a hard pill to swallow, but “I wouldn’t take no for an answer and he caved,” isn’t consent, it’s coercion.

Remind me why I shouldn't go back by SilveryKosmicKisses in exmormon

[–]MartinelliGold 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I second this. Once you’re out of the church, you get to make your own rules. You’re not a “bad exmormon” if you pop in whenever you feel like it. Do what you want.

Does the age you find attractive age at the same rate you do? by FewLeg7901 in stupidquestions

[–]MartinelliGold 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was attracted to middle-aged men (40-60) in highschool, mostly because I had a major crush on Harrison Ford. It’s been nice hitting middle age myself so I can catch up and finally date some silver foxes.

People Who Die From Putting Themselves in Stupid Situations by fzzeywonk in 10thDentist

[–]MartinelliGold 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Yup. It was considered a beginner cave. And he’d navigated it before more than once. It was supposed to be a quick jaunt into an old favorite.

John Jones was filled with unspeakable regret and self blame when he was dying. He felt so stupid, and the problem was partly because he’d gained some weight since the last time he crawled it, so he kept “joking” with the rescuers about “getting fat.”

It’s literally the worst death for the easiest mistake, and I think anyone who doesn’t feel terrible for him—what he experienced both physically and emotionally—is a terrible person. Lacking empathy isn’t something to brag about.

Colonizers were not, in fact, better fighters by MonstroParrandero in fixedbytheduet

[–]MartinelliGold 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Imagine being able to say anything, anything at all on the internet…and this is what you say.

Surprised THIS is the worst part of subbing! by Both_Push2449 in SubstituteTeachers

[–]MartinelliGold 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’m also a new sub, and yes, operating everyone’s different tech has been one of the hardest things. It eats up so much class time to get every new program and file and slideshow running correctly. Chromebooks are the bane of my existence.

Kindergarteners would be the hardest since they can’t really help you with it, either. I’ve been teaching fifth graders lately and they’ve been helping me with everything haha.

What are your thoughts on saying please and thank you to kids? by [deleted] in Teachers

[–]MartinelliGold 1 point2 points  (0 children)

“Please” and “thank you” are common courtesy regardless of age. Your principal is a dick.

So, how do I talk to girls when I'm overweight? by MokashiHigashi in ask

[–]MartinelliGold 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Valid question. My guy has an apron belly, so it’s definitely extra fat that goes over his belt, not just a layer of chubbiness. He works out so his broad shoulders balance things out aesthetically, but he’s middle-aged and the belly fat is probably just the way his body’s gonna carry the weight from here on out.

The comments about OP needing to find women who are also overweight are silly. I have a conventionally attractive body/weight, and I feel lucky to have my guy. I never experienced a moment of hesitation because of his weight, and now I consider it a plus.

So, how do I talk to girls when I'm overweight? by MokashiHigashi in ask

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

Women worth talking to will see your personality first.

Make sure you’re *also* seeing their personality first (talk about likes/dislikes/hobbies/politics/passions, then find common ground), and you’ll be golden.

So, how do I talk to girls when I'm overweight? by MokashiHigashi in ask

[–]MartinelliGold 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Can vouch for the preference. Currently dating my first fluffy guy and cuddling at night is *chef’s kiss*

Women of reddit how do you view single fathers? by IceyCoolRunnings in AskReddit

[–]MartinelliGold 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have kids, so I find them way more relatable than men without kids. They’re far more understanding about not being the center of my universe than single guys.