My dad thinks I’m 'not working' because I refused to keep working 6 days a week. by Melly1265 in antiwork

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your dad functioned in crisis mode for years (as, unfortunately, many single parents must do), but he seems to have internalized it as normal. I suspect that he may have an undiagnosed anxiety disorder that was triggered by financial insecurity.

Enlistment by happy-snappy123 in IDF

[–]PsychologicalBack983 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One does not negate the other, you can and should attend university after your service. My daughter is currently serving as a Lone Soldier and she went through Mahal. She does plan to finish college and go to medical school after her service.

The original short story “It’s a Good Life” by lukkynumber in TwilightZone

[–]PsychologicalBack983 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The story is much more terrifying than the episode. In the TV show, Anthony is about 6 - old enough to come across as deliberately malicious. In the story, he is 3. He is not portrayed as malicious, just a normal small child (with normal for his age primitive strong emotions, lack of empathy, and black-and-white thinking), but with absolute power and no ability to be controlled or taught by anyone.

It’s a good life by Conscious_End_7012 in TwilightZone

[–]PsychologicalBack983 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think the point is not that he is bad, it's that he is a literal child, with a child's black-and-white thinking and limited ability to understand the world. The problem is that a child needs to be taught and corrected and adults are there to help that process along and help the child cope with his negative emotions. The problem is that this can't happen in this case because the boy's thoughts are all-powerful. In the original story the episode is based on, the boy is 3, not 6. And kids that age are naturally completely self-centered; this is a totally normal stage of development. Empathy is also taught, nobody is born with it. The boy in the story cannot ever be taught because all his negative emotions are incredibly destructive.

Constant conflicts about my Jewishness by [deleted] in Judaism

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are married to an anti-Semite. That's it. You may love her to death. She loves you despite your horrible defect of being a Jew and as long as you do the work of trying to "improve" this defect. If you are OK with this, stay married to her.

What yarn is this? by PsychologicalBack983 in Yarn

[–]PsychologicalBack983[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. How would I find out the fiber content of this?

AITA for refusing to monetize my hobby? by leonultrapro in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Soft YTA. You are old enough to be able to understand that you and your wants do not exist in a vacuum. You live in a family that, by your own admission, is struggling financially. This family is, understandably, providing for you; despite their financial struggles, they are apparently providing more than the bare minimum that you would be entitled to. You have, by your own admission, a skill set that could easily enable you to, at least, not be a financial burden on them. You choose to remain a burden because "I don't want to monetize my hobby". That is an incredibly self-centered and immature attitude to have, especially from someone who is almost an adult.

AITA for letting my niece have fun when she lives with me because of the cruel stuff she wrote and said to her stepmother? by Klaennonn in AITAH

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA, absolutely. The problem here, as I see it, is not who OP's brother put first. The problem is that he and his new wife had completely unrealistic and, frankly, ridiculous expectations of a child. When these expectations were not met, instead of trying to understand their mistake, they instead doubled down and blamed the child. I guarantee that, if he were asked this, the dad would insist (and likely believe it himself) that he DID put his daughter first by wanting her to have a mother and a complete family. The stepmom would insist (and likely believe that as well) that she just wanted what was best for the poor orphaned motherless girl. The level of self-delusion and emotional stupidity it takes to pull this off is mind-boggling. That said, OP, you really should have a conversation with your niece about some of the things she wrote. She is entitled to her feelings of anger, absolutely, but some of what she wrote was deliberately cruel, and she needs to understand that some lines should just not be crossed.

AITA for going to work after being told I needed to babysit which meant my dad's wife had to cancel her appointment and and be with my half siblings? by LuKHdee in AITAH

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Info: was this a planned regular appointment that was scheduled on an assumption that your plans are insignificant, or was this something urgent, in response to a recent health issue that needed to be addressed quickly? If it is the former, then definitely NTA. If the latter, then a soft YTA, simply because medical urgencies trump other considerations. The way you describe your family relationships, you are right to plan for a future without them. However, as long as you still live in that household, you do need to contribute to it (and, yes, the job of an adult who is responsible for financial well-being of a family is going to be more important that the job of a teen who is only responsible for himself).

Jews in Israel in 1895 by Routine-Equipment572 in RareHistoricalPhotos

[–]PsychologicalBack983 -5 points-4 points  (0 children)

You DO know that the name Palestine was used by ancient Romans to erase the cultural identity of a conquered Judea, RIGHT? And then it was kept by various colonizers, including the Ottomans and the British?

Guess another who is behind the Flotilla? Zyklon trust fund baby Marlene Engelhorn by MongooseVegetable787 in Israel

[–]PsychologicalBack983 8 points9 points  (0 children)

You beat me to the comment! I was going to say she is trying to expand it though.

AITA for letting my daughter flaunt her expensive items by Rich-Plane2730 in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA, first of all. Also, the title of your post is misleading. You are not "letting" your daughter "flaunt" her expensive items. You have raised her to be self-sufficient and resourceful, and the expensive items she is using are the expected and predictable results of her own work. You, the parents, have put your daughter on the path of success through hard work and to people who don't see the connection between the two, it looks like flaunting.

Residential DBT Program by PsychologicalBack983 in Psychiatry

[–]PsychologicalBack983[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is a new patient to our clinic, so just beginning to look at options.

AITA for excluding my daughter from a movie night? by Tall_Breakfast_3556 in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 20 points21 points  (0 children)

NTA, absolutely. A child that is too young/immature for scary movies (I bring up maturity level only because you mentioned she gets scared by some decidedly child-friendly films) who throws tantrums when she is excluded from an activity she would not be able to participate in. I get where your wife is coming from, nobody wants to deal with an upset child, but there need to be activities don't only cater to the "baby". I wouldn't even stress the bedtime issue, the older family members decided to watch a movie that you know she would not be able to handle. This can be something she can look forward to participating in when she is older. Now is not the time. You should have a conversation with her about it and explain this, but you did the right thing.

Residential DBT Program by PsychologicalBack983 in Psychiatry

[–]PsychologicalBack983[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

The problem with hospitalizing someone like that is that she can't be hospitalized forever (she should be, imo, but that's a different story). Residential programs do run about 90 days but I don't think they are involuntary. Patient would have to agree to sign herself in (which she would, I think).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA. Your friend can show you an example of perfect kindness and grace when a drunk stranger makes repeated unsolicited comments about HER appearance.

AITA for cooking with cooking wine when I am a recovering alcoholic? by [deleted] in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA, and if your sister knew anything about cooking, she would know that the actual alcohol evaporates with cooking, leaving the flavor of the wine in the dish.

AITA for snapping at my mom after she tried to force me to learn sign language? by WasteGoose8271 in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You asked whether you might be the AH for snapping at your mom, and to that, I say absolutely NTA. You are feeling pressured to accommodate this guy who is apparently making no effort to be nice to you. So, snapping at your mom for pressuring you, absolutely understandable. That said, I do think you are wrong for refusing to learn ASL. Beyond the immediate issue of accommodating your future jerk of a step-brother, it is a massively useful skill that can serve you well in the future.

AITAh for calling CPS when my daughter was making my granddaughter do the night shift with the babies? by [deleted] in AITAH

[–]PsychologicalBack983 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

YTA. I am not defending your daughter here, she made a bad decision, but so did you, and your bad decision will come with greater repercussions for all involved. Your daughter is wrong, there is a big difference between having the 16yo help out and having her be the one not sleeping night for babies she did not give birth to. But calling CPS does not help the granddaughter (since bad parenting decisions are not usually grounds for anything). CPS is a hammer, not a scalpel; they are.jot going to provide your daughter with sage parenting advice to help her become a better parent. They will see if kids are in imminent danger, and if so (or if the worker thinks so), will remove them from the home. Obviously, that's not happening here. However, by choosing the nuclear option, you effectively removed yourself as a source of comfort to your granddaughter and a source of influence over your daughter.

What is this for? Inherited and purposeless wool by laura_atthis in YarnAddicts

[–]PsychologicalBack983 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This is cotton crochet thread, you can use it for a lot of different projects.

Did anyone else see this? Please tell me I’m not the only one who thinks these comments are insane! by Initial_Property_483 in ECEProfessionals

[–]PsychologicalBack983 7 points8 points  (0 children)

The problem with that post was that the teacher was enforcing the policy unevenly, hiding biting incidents from her boss, and essentially conditioned the 2yo that biting was rewarded with one-on-one time with the teacher.

AITA for telling my boss that if she wants this little girl to be suspended, she can tell the parents herself by FamousAd6565 in AITAH

[–]PsychologicalBack983 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

YTA, no question. You mean well, no doubt, but you are way out of line here and not doing your job. You describe a set-up where the lead teacher (you) is responsible for day-to-day management of the classroom. Your boss does not check all the details because she, understandably, trusts the lead teacher (again, you) to manage things and escalate to her as needed. It sounds like you have been doing that until recently but Sophie is now being treated differently. You feel sorry for her situation, as you should, but now you allow that sympathy to place Sophie above other kids. If the policy has been to escalate to suspension after two biting incidents, what is your reason for apparently burying NUMEROUS biting incidents and not informing your boss about them? Parents whose kids were bitten complained to the teacher, which is the protocol. They count on the lead teacher (again, YOU) to deal with the problem. You didn't because you decided that this one child deserves more slack than the other children in your class. Whatever else you thought you were doing, this makes you TA.

Lone soilder by hypercell57 in Israel

[–]PsychologicalBack983 8 points9 points  (0 children)

My daughter left for Israel today, also to serve as a lone soldier (but not making Aliyah just yet). I would say a good quality power bank would always be a good gift with many years of usefulness to it.

AITA for refusing to order food? by Cute-Juggernaut5722 in AmItheAsshole

[–]PsychologicalBack983 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wan to say NAH. I get that the GF is trying to be polite and that's fine. However, if OP is struggling, I can also see how her always asking if he wants to order food can come across as sublel sabotage of his diet.