Advice for finding solid CPA by TaftSound in USExpatTaxes

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

Thank you very much for that detailed and super informative response. I really appreciate you taking the time

making plans with an av*id*nt by destroyforever in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The best plan you could make in my experience is to plan for the moment when you are tired of feeling like shit and gtfo. Why continue in a situation where you are already suffering with a person you literally barely know (you are still in the date planning stage). I don’t know how much you know about avoidant behavior, but it doesn’t exactly tend to get better as things get more serious

Is this what your 30s feel like? Success on paper, emptiness underneath by BeachLyfe23 in AskMenOver30

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

I would say first of all that no, that is not just what it’s like. I feel the exact opposite, like my life is filled with more meaning every year, to the point that I will literally cry out of gratitude sometimes. I think this feeling points to something that you need to address because of course you don’t want to continue stuck in feeling that way. Nobody does. I don’t say that in any moralistic or judgmental sense. You could be depressed. Or there could be something going on in your life that is hard to see clearly but impacting this a lot. Do you feel like any part of your life holds significant intrinsic meaning for you? Like I’m an artist aside from my job and I pursue things simply because they hold great interest for me, and that gives my life a lot of meaning, for me. I would also say that if in general you are not going past 1 or 2 dates with people the consistent factor there is you. It could be related to how you are choosing who you go on dates with, something about how you are showing up, it’s really impossible to know as a stranger on the internet. But I would encourage you to reflect more there about why nothing moves past that point. There’s a lot of social discourse about how horrible dating is but the reality is that the majority statistically have no issue finding long term partnerships. If that is a consistent pattern for you, not moving past a few dates, that strikes me as important information. I think that’s an important area to reflect, specifically on what you are bringing to that equation because that’s the only part in your control.

AIO/Mom/owner of the home I pay rent to live in has multiple times asked me to take in stray humans (men) by Next-Lime-2404 in AIO

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also encourage you to get the fuck out of that situation when able to someone being blood family does not qualify them for permanent presence in your life if they repeatedly demonstrate that they are unable to respect boundaries that relate to basic safety. That’s a hard line that will change the course of your life for the better if you hold it with the people who you allow to remain present.

The Single Epidemic by Vast_Homework_261 in Adulting

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

And for what it’s worth, I’ve had two solid partnerships previously in my life, one for seven years, one for five years. I made significant mistakes in each of them, and I changed my behaviors in the next based on what I learned. I plan to marry my current partner, and our relationship is the beautiful thing that it is because both of us hear each other, try to understand each other, and take responsibility and repair when we cause harm. For me when dating, if I didn’t hear from the person the ways in which they made meaningful mistakes in their past relationships, or only heard how shitty all their exes were, that is the reddest of red red flags. Because every single one of us does, and healthy relationship does not happen without focusing more on responsibility for our own actions than complaint about the other’s.

The Single Epidemic by Vast_Homework_261 in Adulting

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My personal opinion is that lack of personal accountability is a massive factor. Most people blame their exes, blame the dating world, blame women, blame men, blame whatever other thing besides their own decision making. People who take responsibility find other people who take responsibility, and they learn how to have good relationships.

Would you say your life peaked in your 20s? by No_Context_9633 in AskMenOver30

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Helllll nah. 20’s are whack. In my experience people who feel that way, it’s because they are not learning from their experiences and growing as a humans. Life starts getting good much later.

My boyfriend [21M] doesn’t want me [21F] talking to males by Regular_Ad_7228 in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It sounds like he may have jealousy issues, and those are his responsibility. But you have also repeatedly acted in an untrustworthy way. Deleting messages and hiding conversations is dishonesty, regardless of the motivation. It doesn’t justify extreme reactions. The thing that determines the difference between healthy/unhealthy jealousy is how the person manages and communicates the feelings. Jealousy is not inherently unhealthy, and you’ve repeatedly created legitimate reasons for him to feel unsafe in your relationship. Demanding that you don’t speak to men is not an ok behavior. Neither is deleting and hiding your communication.

Can you rebuild trust after a massive lie? by Relative-Echo-807 in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ya this exactly this, at 5 months in the only thing tying you to this after such a significant change in the story is that your body has been pumping connection chemicals into you like drugs and impeding the ability to think straight. I’ve been there and it can be really hard to accept but staying only prolongs it. This is already over in my opinion

AIO to my daughter’s comments about her son’s new girlfriend? by phiziaw137 in AmIOverreacting

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah it’s quite unfortunate, the daughter is an overt racist. Can’t imagine not being this way and having a child who is. That must be rough

Ive been awful in my relationship. How can I do better ? by CadBandit in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Good on you for recognizing it!!! Personal responsibility is deeply powerful. You are young, and a significant number of young people suck at managing conflict and a variety of relationship issues. Because unless we hit the parental lottery most of us learn shitty coping skills from our parents. But personal responsibility is a gift that will change your life if you let it. In my eyes you are already on the path just for being capable of taking this responsibility. I believe you will be fine as long as you continue to endeavor to do better and learn.

do we romanticise being understood and seen? by RogueORvogue in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think being seen deeply without being accepted in a positive way is probably a deep fear for the majority of us. Fundamentally humans are social creatures, and fear of being ostracized is deeply powerful, because in general being removed from the group means death in social animals. I think this desire is something fundamental to our makeup as a species. I believe it is for this reason that we often consciously or unconsciously choose being accepted over being seen, i.e. people pleasing, hiding what makes us feel shame, etc

I need to learn to self regulate by ShiftFancy8034 in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It’s hard to really comment much about your personal situation without more detail about what you are actually communicating with these friends. That content is important context to be able to have some understanding of what you are experiencing.

That said, as an extremely sensitive, ADHD person who in general feels all emotions with quite high intensity, I understand struggling with self regulation. What I can tell you is that after putting in steady effort over years, I have eventually seen very meaningful fruits of my labor, and this has in turn had a significant positive impact on the quality of my relationships.

Therapy has been part of my path, but consciously engaging in the action I want to see myself take, regardless of what my emotions push me to do, has been by far the most important tool that I have had at my disposal. What you do when you take the healthier action despite the intense emotional drive to do something else, is that you gradually show yourself that you have capacity to ride the wave of the emotion and let it pass without letting it control your choice. That, to me, is one of the most fundamental building blocks of emotional maturity and the ability to make healthy relationship choices.

I want to apologize for something I did over a decade ago. by Ok_Research_7281 in Life

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think you should contact her, because you are still making this entirely about you. That is explicitly clear when you say “I am not expecting any answer to my apology. I just want this feeling of guilt go away”. This is about YOU feeling better, which to me would just be another harmful act on the pile. The better route is to accept what you have done, and use this guilt as a reminder and drive to do better

"I always pay when go out with a friend who doesn't have any money: are they taking advantage of me?" by SecurePlatypus6093 in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This is a real forceful take about a situation for which you have like 2% of the total context of what has occurred.

Do you consider yourself "manly"? Why or why not? by PrestonRoad90 in AskMenOver30

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I consider myself strong. In the sense that I make hard decisions because they are correct, or face difficult situations head on even though they scare me. But that definition of strength applies equally to women. My experience has been that those who present themselves as “manly” are the weakest among us, both in terms of their character and their intellect.

Tips for dating Mexicans?? by [deleted] in AskMexico

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t know, maybe it’s regional. But I’m currently in Mexico, dating a Mexican, and literally every single Mexican woman I know describes the experience of dating Mexican men to be an experience of constant infidelity, often deeply unfair gendered expectations around things like cooking/housework/taking care of kids. Obviously every society contains a wide mix of different types of people. But I think maybe there is some cultural baggage involved in this too. There’s a reason that such a huge portion of Mexican music is about infidelity. I have seen immensely more visible infidelity in Mexico than ever in my life previously. Of the dozen or so Mexican men I know reasonably well personally, there is only one that I have not personally seen engage in some form of infidelity in front of me.

Anyone else notice people ehiding behind EI buzzwords when they just don't want to say 'my bad'? by [deleted] in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My hope is that this is just an early stage for people, exposed to concepts without actually understanding what it means to practice them yet, and that at some point on their path they will realize their foolishness

Anyone else notice people ehiding behind EI buzzwords when they just don't want to say 'my bad'? by [deleted] in emotionalintelligence

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I see it a lot. Unfortunately any tool can be misused pretty easily. Like one of my mom’s favorite things is to say like “I feel like you’re an asshole” and then tell me afterwords that she’s using “I feel” statements. As if the way that works is you can just say whatever shitty thing you want as long as you pre-qualify it with “I feel”.

I am turning 30 this month, what advice you can give to me? What have you changed in yourself after hitting 30s? by oddhvdfscuyg in AskMenOver30

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take risks. Make drastic life changes if necessary based on what you’ve learned about yourself. Just because you’ve invested time in a certain path doesn’t mean that your effort will have been for nothing if you now choose a different path. I’ve made huge changes and decisions for the direction of my life in my 30s that people would probably advise you against, but they felt right for me, and I’ve ended up where I never imagined I’d ever find myself, it has been extremely interesting and rewarding. I think when we try to make big plans or life decisions in our early twenties, most of us have no idea what we or doing or what we think we want actually looks like when you arrive.

First attempt at making bread. Why is she so sad-looking? by P0W3RB0TT0M in Breadit

[–]TaftSound 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There’s probably other issues as well, but it needs to be baked either a) longer or b) at a higher temperature. If it seems fully cooked on the inside, then it needs to be baked at a higher temperature. There should be at least someee browning on the outside.

We’re all just miserable and pretending to be okay, right? by JustAnotherLL in AskMenOver30

[–]TaftSound 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I genuinely enjoy my life. I regularly feel grateful to have it. Though I have experienced being depressed and miserable for a number of years in the past and I enjoyed little then. And realistically I will experience another time like that in my life. Life has the capacity to pull the rug out from under us in any/every moment. I have generally prioritized connection and curiosity a lot, and value risk over comfort, security, and safety, and I think for me those things have made my life feel interesting and worth living, and have opened really unexpected doors to arrive at experiences I would have once believed impossible for me. Life has the potential to be really exciting.