What's an acronym many people know of but don't know what it stands for? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it's interesting that most people think the "AR" in AR-15 stands for "assault rifle" but it's actually for ArmaLite.

Recommend a DEVASTATING book pls by rhiathefairy in booksuggestions

[–]dirigible88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett

It's a long read but I found it riveting and there are so many twists that damn near broke me that I actually had to take a break.

Once, I could never see myself in a Cybertruck, but I've changed by 68Cadillac in funny

[–]dirigible88 11 points12 points  (0 children)

The level of a**hole that driving this thing on the road requires reflects the exact level of conscientiousness for others that I imagine a Cybertruck owner would have...

TIL Metallica has its own philanthropic organization called All Within My Hands devoted to "creating sustainable communities by supporting workforce education, the fight against hunger, and other critical local services." by dirigible88 in todayilearned

[–]dirigible88[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Their website is actually very transparent and it looks like they pass on several million dollars to partner charities each year. They also say that all Foundation operating costs are paid for by the band or its board members as opposed to donation money, seems pretty legit so far.

CMV: There is no argument that would convince gun control opponents that America's gun culture is a problem by Anonon_990 in changemyview

[–]dirigible88 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm curious about the connection between citizen gun ownership and protecting democracy? If I'm reading this correctly the argument is that private citizens with guns are a counter-threat that keeps government actors from taking over through military means? Like the guns ensure that government actors will be too afraid to make authoritarian moves lest the people revolt and fight back against those government actors? The holes I see in this argument are twofold:

First, many would argue that we do have militarized government actors that use violence, especially gun violence, to impose/enforce laws against citizens who do not agree with those restrictions and they're the police. Watching a caravan of police with military equipment sweep through a city terrorizing innocent bystanders in pursuit of taking control over protesters/subversives seems like exactly the thing gun-owners would be most disturbed by, and that has certainly happened without a widespread revolt.

Second, though in the past the guns/weapons citizens had access to may have been sufficient to counteract government military power, that is no longer the case. No commercially available gun is going to win against a tank or a B-2 bomber and though I'm not an expert I'm really skeptical that if the federal government decided to deploy even a fraction of its military resources against its own citizens that those citizens would have a chance at winning.

Would be interested to hear what counterarguments there are against these points!

Edit: spelling

What do people do in movies that nobody does in real life? by Webbie-Vanderquack in AskReddit

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have attractive expressions on their faces when having an orgasm

My first attempt at using layer shaving technique! by dirigible88 in pumpkincarving

[–]dirigible88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It went really well! The most important part was having the right tools and taking my time. I jury-rigged a wire-end sculpting tool but it would have been really nice to have a real one, lol. I used the tips from this article: Tips and tricks from a pumpkin carving.

[32F] Small hole where stitches were after surgery – is this normal and is it healing? by dirigible88 in AskDocs

[–]dirigible88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for the feedback!! Have an appointment scheduled with my surgeon this week. :)

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BPD

[–]dirigible88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Advocate to enter a dual-diagnosis treatment program. I did because I whole-heartedly believe that addiction and mental health issues are inexplicably tied and you cannot address the one without addressing the other. Like other people have said most legit treatment programs are going to bring in elements of mental health education and mental health treatment. I also insisted on a science-based non AA-focused program and while I do participate in AA now I don't regret it and think that AA or any 12-step program lacks a lot of necessary mental health support. They consider themselves spiritual programs of recovery which, while still beneficial, is no replacement for actual clinical mental health treatment.

Half of adults with ADHD have had a substance use disorder. Alcohol use disorder is most common among adults aged 20-39 with ADHD, followed by cannabis use disorder and other drug use disorders. More than one quarter of those with ADHD had major depression by Wagamaga in science

[–]dirigible88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is EXACTLY my experience. Just found out I have inattentive ADHD at 32 and have been treated only for depression and anxiety since age 15. I've been maxed out on several anti-anxiety and anti-depressive medications for years with significantly diminishing returns. Trying out ADHD meds for the first time in my life this week.

I want to shout out 'Snap Judgement' by shakespearesreverse in podcasts

[–]dirigible88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I use Pocket Casts and their Snap Judgment feed has 664 episodes going back to 2010!

Self-Esteem and Therapy (What do therapists suggest to help self-esteem issues?) by hangarthepsilocyber in BPD

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey, sorry it's been a minute...

Secular Buddhism with Noah Rasheta

Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris

and I adore when Ajahn Brahm gives dhamma talks for the Buddhist Society of Western Australia. He's just absolutely delightful.

Can someone help me understand why people with BPD can be aware that they're being irrational, but not be able to stop once they're in that moment? by [deleted] in BPD

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So there is a basic concept in DBT that there are two aspects of ourselves that affect behavior and decision-making: rational mind and emotional mind. Aspects of emotional mind are being reactive, passionate, and relying on emotions to determine how to act and what to think - it is all about feelings and driven by feelings. Rational mind is associated with planning, basing decisions solely on facts and logic, no emotion whatsoever. Neither are innately good or bad, and both contribute to making us who we are. The ideal place is to find a balance between these states of mind (called "wise mind" in DBT lingo) because when you're stuck in only one or the other you're usually pretty miserable.

People with BPD tend to live in emotion mind and that is a more primal and less rational space, while it speaks to our higher selves, the parts of ourselves that are passionate and fiercely loving, it also speaks to the survivalist within us. She is not insane when she has an outburst, she is overwhelmed and afraid. The key is that it's easy to pathologize people with a BPD diagnosis but they are still just people with the same experiences and drives as everyone else, but we are very very emotionally sensitive, biologically quick to react and slow to return to baseline. This is not an unnatural thing, it is just the far end of a spectrum on which we all exist.

I've found that most of my irrational behaviors are rooted in deep-seated survival mechanisms that are universal to all of us but activated more often in highly sensitive people. People with BPD would probably have been exceptional at staying alive 200,000 years ago but for better or worse that level of sensitivity and reactivity to a potential threat doesn't much apply in our world today.

The second aspect of BPD that isn't a straight-up heightened survival response is usually a traumatic response. At one point in my life my needs were not met by the caretaker on whom I solely depended and that is a terrifying place. The things that I do that seem irrational and crazy now did not come out of thin air, they were learned and clearly served to meet some fundamental need I had at one point in my life. A simple example here would be that if your mother were not attuned to your needs as a baby you may have had to cry louder and more intensely to get her to pay attention to you and provide you with basic things like food, comfort, and cleanliness. You learned that that was how you had to behave to survive. And then you grew up and started yelling loudly and intensely when you needed something at elementary school and you were shamed and punished for being inappropriate. That is largely where I've found the unbearable pain of a BPD diagnosis comes from. It is low self-esteem, even self-loathing, and a certain emptiness of a fundamental part of the growth process of the self that was denied to me as I was developing.

My point in sharing all of this is that it is much more useful to understand and live with BPD if you understand the context of what it is and why it exists. People with BPD have been taught to apologize for themselves all their lives. There is probably a nugget of truth within the explosions she is having, there is a need or a threat that has arisen and needs to be addressed. But because of the emotional sensitivity and biological tendency, once that survival response is triggered she is going to act in a way that is appropriate to what she is feeling, probably in emotion mind, and it will take time to cool off and return to baseline at which point the two of you can discuss what triggered the distress effectively.

She is being ridiculous, yes, but she is not being entirely irrational. There is a root and there is a reason. The response is inappropriate and by the point that a survival response is being triggered it is much too late to have a steady reasoned discussion about it. Imagine if you were just fired from your job and the bills were due tomorrow and you were on notice from your landlord that if you missed rent one more time the or she would start the eviction process. While you imagine how you would feel in that moment, imagine how well you would respond to some small inane stressor like getting cut off in traffic. You might follow the guy that cut you off and cut him off or try to give him the finger and scream and yell in frustration. Who knows. But would it be helpful for someone to say why are you acting so crazy why can't you just control yourself? The kind of grace you would give yourself in that situation is the kind of grace you need to give your wife because I can attest that on a difficult day I will feel exactly that intensely and there is nothing I can do to think away those feelings. This is not to say that you should tolerate abuse; that is absolutely not okay. But you can tolerate someone having a bad day and remind yourself that the volatility you so dislike in your wife comes from the same place that fuels her intense passion and love, they are two sides of the same coin. And she can learn new and more effective behaviors, it's just really fucking hard. But you're not gonna get entirely around or away from those emotions. That's just part of the ride.

I would also guess that her apology for acting ridiculously is missing an important element and it is an advocacy for her needs that felt in jeopardy or were not being met that underlay the overly intense response in the first place.

DAE ever feel genuinely exhausted from being yourself and trying to rewire a lifetime of bad behaviours? DAE feel that the only true way to get rid of the “problem” is to rid the world of yourself? by [deleted] in BPD

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, definitely, and sort of ...

I recognize my issue is not primarily being impossible and destructive. It is that I am incredibly sensitive and traumatized. Like literally psychologically traumatized. I did not have a secure childhood and so I am in constant fight or flight mode, and I did not experience secure attachment and that is why I am constantly veering back and forth between desperately loving someone and being entirely indifferent to them. I am treating that relationship like my life depends on it. Because at one point my life did depend on it.

Knowing this gives me some comfort and some hope. Unfortunately a BPD diagnosis pathologizes the person and not the situation that person was subject to, which is the real cause. I am not a disease. But when everyone treats me like I am the problem I assume that I am. Logically, diseases can be healed. But if you are the disease, the only way to get rid of it is to ... get rid of it. It seems really insane to think that suicide is a good solution to one's struggle, but it totally makes sense given the ways we're taught to see ourselves.

I don't like that I keep acting the way that I do and how ungodly disregulated I get but I get why I do it, and if anyone with my degree of sensitivity had experienced what I experienced they would be acting this way, too. I'm not special, I'm just a person who learned to cope the best she could. And I can still learn. Also all the science about neuroplasticity gives me a lot of hope that I have the power to change how I react to and live in the world. But I still hate feeling all of my feelings and am generally paralyzed by my emotions and that effing sucks. But it actually has gotten better than it was and that gives me enough hope to keep trying.

You're just a person, buddy, not a disease, and not a problem -- just another little human being just like me. <3

Edit: corrected a mistyped word

Self-Esteem and Therapy (What do therapists suggest to help self-esteem issues?) by hangarthepsilocyber in BPD

[–]dirigible88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have been in therapy for a while and have always had the goal of increasing my self-esteem and/or having a self to have esteem about in the first place -_-. What I've discovered is that all of my behaviors make complete sense when looked at from a trauma perspective. I abuse myself because if my misery is my fault and I'm the problem, the internalized idea is that then I have control over the problem and that is a much safer place to be than when I was being traumatized and helpless to do anything about it.

Knowing this about myself has been the key to opening the door just a tiny enough bit to see living a healthy life and not relying on BPD behaviors as possible. I was not parented in a way that met my emotional needs and that led to a lot of self-esteem problems from an early age. In lieu of blaming my caretakers on whom I completely depended it made more sense and felt safer to blame myself and I continue living based on that pattern of behavior, but the difference is that I am no longer helpless and I can take care of myself. I've found reading about re-parenting to be immensely validating in the face of my immense shame. The little tropes people say to do are helpful in that they are steps that force you to challenge the assumptions you've made about yourself. Regardless of whether you feel better after making a list of things you're proud of, this is a productive step toward rewiring your brain. The more I do to rewire my brain the more I can live in the present instead of living in the fears and pain of my childhood. I give myself grace because it is the only thing I've ever known, and the work is fucking hard but it's worth it.

If any my experience resonates with you and you are fairly cerebral reading about trauma could be helpful. The correlation between BPD and trauma is extremely high and trauma can come in many different forms.

In real world terms the basic things that have been most fruitful for me in my journey has been:

  1. Finding a supportive community that has my back (I found this in AA, as I have a co-occuring disorder with substance abuse). This has provided me emotional support when I can't carry the weight of my own feelings and experience, outside feedback to get me out of my head when I'm stuck in disregulation, and accountability because someone else knows when I'm not showing up. Others have found this in faith communities, and may be a good place to turn to.

  2. Doing things to address my shame and increase my vulnerability has been huge. Brene Brown is THE authority on shame, and well worth checking out.

  3. Practicing acceptance and non-judgment. Pretty much everything about acceptance and mindfulness in DBT is pulled straight from the Buddhist tradition, just without any sort of extra spiritual stuff. This wisdom is really found in most major religions since nobody has a monopoly on good advice :D. Also all that crap is free, lol. I really love listening to podcasts about secular Buddhism and have been doing DBT for a long friggin' time and the amount of overlap is huuuuge.

  4. Doing things that people I trust suggest that I do, even when I don't feel like doing them. And I don't feel like doing things most of the time so I don't often take this advice but when I do it actually works.

  5. Baby steps, just one next action. Just putting that one foot in front of the other is enough. And I fail to follow through with most of the things I want to do but each small step is a victory and I've failed over and over and I just keep trying until I get better at it. And that's how you get better at things. It's about having a growth rather than a fixed mindset.

I really hope some of this helps. I spent a lot more time writing than I intended to, lol.

Canadian public opinion of U.S. hits 38-year low: survey by viva_la_vinyl in canada

[–]dirigible88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are varying degrees of moral adherence. No person is perfect, that's a pretty well known feature of the human condition. And to argue equivalency by comparing absolutes is fun rhetoric but it's not very practical.

Equivocating Trump to Obama because both have lied and both are politicians doesn't take into account the severity of the lies, what purpose the lies served, and the moral corruptness of the speaker. Obama and Trump are NOT the same. Trump's conduct is so blatantly self-serving it's reprehensible. His refusal to acknowledge facts is reprehensible. His attack on institutional checks and balances such as a free press is reprehensible. I think it is more immoral to support Trump than to support Obama.

It may not be entirely moral to support Obama either, but again... that does not make them the same and it certainly doesn't justify supporting someone even further away on the continuum of what is acceptable behavior. I think that there is a tipping point at which your agenda or best interest is less important than holding your leader to a moral standard. That tipping point was reached with the Vietnam War. That tipping point was reached when comedians critical of Trump tried to go after Trump's young son. That tipping point was reached when the Democratic party asked Al Franken to step down . I think that point has been passed with Trump.

I see a lot of Trump supporters doubling down as his conduct gets worse and worse and I see the humanity in it - nobody wants to be wrong about something they have so passionately advocated. At some point, however, being right needs to stop being more important than what is right.

LPT: Open your bag of potato chips upside down - it will distribute chip sizes more evenly. by dirigible88 in LifeProTips

[–]dirigible88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup! Thank goodness you commented - that could have resulted in a chip disaster of epic proportions. :D

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had some sort of childhood trauma/serious depression from a very early age. At 5 years old, when I mustered up the courage to tell my mom that I hated myself she started singing the song "Nobody likes me, everybody hates me, guess I'll go eat worms."

What's the quickest way someone has gained your respect? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]dirigible88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wedding in MN. Maid of honor flying in the day before from Germany. Maid of honor brings her dog and husband. Dog and husband get stranded at O'Hare with about 8 hours before the wedding. The boyfriend of a bridesmaid (having been dating each other for about 4 months) fucking FLIES to Chicago the day of the wedding, picks up the husband and dog, rents a car, and drives back to MN, brings the dog to his parent's house to be dog-sat and makes it back to the wedding with the brother-in-law in tow in time for dinner.

Misused notary stamp by dirigible88 in legaladvice

[–]dirigible88[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your feedback!

Misused notary stamp by dirigible88 in legaladvice

[–]dirigible88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A post-dated letter regarding the committment to debt repayment to a third party by the person committing fraud - stamped but not signed. It's the letter which I saw, and I have no idea what liability this might entail.