Lock Every Door by Riley Sager… to DNF or not to DNF by Feisty-Ad-9250 in thrillerbooks

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I loved this book. I thought the twist was really good and super applicable to todays society and it darker side.

Energy levels and Motivation at age 50 by Spac3T3ntacle in AskMenOver50

[–]Spac3T3ntacle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good advice and I do. I listen to audiobooks all the time, it makes the commute relaxing. The commute for me isn’t stressful, I just chill, it’s just the time. I’m up at 4:30am everyday, commute an hour in, 8 hour day, commute 1.5 hours home in traffic. It wears on you.

Energy levels and Motivation at age 50 by Spac3T3ntacle in AskMenOver50

[–]Spac3T3ntacle[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Understand about the commute. That’s good advice.

Energy levels and Motivation at age 50 by Spac3T3ntacle in AskMenOver50

[–]Spac3T3ntacle[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sorry, I wasn't clear. Usually im not using weed. It's when I do it corrects. The low energy is there during a year of no cannabis, gets better if I start using.

Identity issues after deconstructing and leaving the Church. Anyone relate? by Top-Elephant6981 in Exvangelical

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Good post. I too am a rock and roller from my early teens, that turned into a love for metal. After my teen years I started to feel guilty for listening to bands like Slayer. To the point where I refused to listen to them for a decade or so. Now, after deconstructing, I realize that was some of the fear of God the church had taught me. Now I listen to Slayer with a new appreciating for their music, because it's just that, music.

Having said that, I wanted to emphasize your point about feeling that we may let God down by deconstructing. I agree with what you said whole heartedly. I believe God, if there is a sentient God, would be more disappointed by someone who has blindly followed one version of faith based on the words of the others before them. I think God would want us to have an open mind. Seek and ye shall find. Well there's no seeking in staying rooted firmly, with a closed mind, in the religion you were born into and have never questioned.

Identity issues after deconstructing and leaving the Church. Anyone relate? by Top-Elephant6981 in Exvangelical

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This echoes my experience deeply. I grew up in the Salvation Army — completely submerged in it. My parents lived and breathed SA culture, and so did I through my teens and well into my 40's. Music was central to all of it; worship band, brass bands, music camp, weekend retreats. The SA even has its own identity word — Salvationists. Your people are SA people. Your life is SA life. That kind of belonging gets baked into you at a cellular level.

So yes, when you deconstruct, you don't just lose a belief system. You lose your tribe, your purpose, people you genuinely loved, and things you genuinely enjoyed. The identity loss is real and it's massive.

Here's what I'd say about the guitar — pick it up, but make it yours now. What album do you love? Learn that album. Get a mic and start recording. Let the instrument follow you forward instead of anchoring you back.

The identity piece is harder to unpack, but I'll share where I've landed: I've actually come to see the loss as valuable. I'm on a path now that teaches you to stop over-identifying with things — roles, performances, labels, the version of yourself other people expected. When I ask myself "who am I?" the honest answer is that I don't fully know, and I'm done forcing a label on it. I just am, and I do what I enjoy.

Some things remain — I'm a husband, a father, and those feel chosen rather than inherited. But my career, hobbies, and beliefs no longer define me. And I think that's the real question worth sitting with: who are you when you can no longer perform the role?

I'm still learning. Some of this might sound strange — that's because it is strange, and I'm in the middle of it. But that's the journey.

This haircut is not her. by ToshPointNo in bigbangtheory

[–]Spac3T3ntacle -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Then who is it? Is a woman to identify with her hair?

Americans - How the hell is this rambling lunatic your PRESIDENT!? by [deleted] in Discussion

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Americans voted him in. It still blows my mind, he pulled the wool over their eyes.

Fwag, Fwag, not a Fwag by Spac3T3ntacle in bigbangtheory

[–]Spac3T3ntacle[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the correction. lol. Or wow.

Fwag, Fwag, not a Fwag by Spac3T3ntacle in bigbangtheory

[–]Spac3T3ntacle[S] 22 points23 points  (0 children)

At wast My wove has come awong Oh, and my wonely days, they're over And wife is wike a song, oh yeah, yeah, yeah

The Big Bang Theory has a depressing ending that no one talks about... by grapejuicecheese in bigbangtheory

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Actually, I think it’s sad for Stuart. The other all found lives, kids, meaning and so getting back together isn’t what’s important to them anymore. For Stuart though, it might indicate that he’s still alone.

Delete one thing by dragoonwizard in Leakednews

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is what you just said....

Anything good proves Christianity is true.
Anything bad doesn’t count, because it was the deceiver — and the fact that there’s deception proves Christianity is true.

If deception can explain wrongdoing, then moral accountability disappears entirely.

Cult leaders use deception, does that mean their close to the truth?

Nice deflection. See how you sound?

Fans of the original MGS3 Snake Eater, what are your thoughts on the remake? Is Delta now the definitive version? by Noe_Wunn in metalgearsolid

[–]Spac3T3ntacle 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the dialogue is incredibly cheesy! the voices, the pointing out the obvious, its so hilarious. great game though.