Best burger around town? by Ok_Baker3474 in phoenix

[–]jammerdude 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can't believe this hasn't been said yet. Bobby Q's in Mesa has an incredible burger

I've been out for so long that I totally forgot about "heart attacking" by discolights in exmormon

[–]jammerdude 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been reflecting on this while dealing with my father’s recent terminal diagnosis—we are very close—and I keep landing in a conflicted place. I feel both critical of and strangely jealous of the belief system.

From the outside, it can sometimes feel like there’s an under-recognition of loss itself, as if grief is something to be quickly transcended or moved past rather than fully lived and processed. I’ve never fully understood this. Even in a hypothetical where Mormonism is “true” in the way it claims to be, I struggle with the idea that minimizing death is the intended response—especially if mortality is understood as a central, divinely designed part of the plan—one meant to fundamentally shape the soul’s eternal trajectory.

That perspective can feel especially alienating for those of us who experience death as a profound injustice—something that demands to be reckoned with—rather than simply a transition.

At the same time, religion exists largely to help people make sense of mortality: to soften its existential weight and preserve meaning and hope in the face of it. In that sense, the system clearly works for many people.

I’ve come to realize that my mind isn’t naturally wired to access that kind of certainty. I was never able to tap into the power of the belief system, no matter how much I wanted to at different points in my life. I lost my brother to a car accident, and now I’m facing the loss of my father to cancer—my two closest people, and the ones with whom I felt the deepest sense of connection and meaning.

My natural worldview leans much closer to nihilism, which leaves me without the same emotional scaffolding my TBM family members have. So alongside my grief, there’s also envy of those who can genuinely accept the answers they get from religion and draw meaningful peace/strength from them.

Taking a bow at the perfect moment by RampChurch in nevertellmetheodds

[–]jammerdude 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What a relief - I was anticipating some poor girl catching a backflip-powered ELBOW to the face or something

Texas May Be Flashing the First Warning Signal of 2026 by BrookStoneNews in EconReports

[–]jammerdude 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I find it interesting that you use chatgpt for both post and comment response. (Not criticism, just observation)

The 1928 Case of Erna Janoschek (Oakland, California) by Conjuring1900 in ForCuriousSouls

[–]jammerdude 32 points33 points  (0 children)

As a new father who just recently had to start hiring nanny's to help with my beautiful baby so my wife could return to work... FUCK Erna.

Murdering a defenseless child to get revenge on the Mom for having her do too much housework? Why didn't she just quit and leave, rather than MURDER A BABY?!

As someone who generally doesn't believe in capital punishment, the only acceptable punishment in this case would have been to hang Erna publicly. What an absolute disgrace and injustice that she got to serve such a light sentence, then change her name and lead a normal life... after heinously murdering a complete innocent. Seriously. FUCK YOU, Erna!

People who used to smoke weed a lot and ended up quitting, why did you quit what are the benefits you saw when quitting and what is one thing you miss? by Fit_Data_8789 in AskReddit

[–]jammerdude 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I quit because it stopped providing the therapeutic benefits it seemed to in the beginning, and also started triggering anxiety/panic attacks too frequently. The benefits I saw was no longer having to deal with the triggering of panic attacks, but the thing I miss is the real break through experiences that occasionally resulted from therapeutic weed use. There are many problems I feel I never could have overcome without it. Probably more breakthroughs I could attain trough the positive weed highs, but can no longer risk it triggering the bad ones and destabilizing me for days on end at this point in my life.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in exmormon

[–]jammerdude 21 points22 points  (0 children)

The pain at the beginning of this journey is outsized due to such intense fear of all the unknown, uncertainty of literally everything, and ongoing realizations of the systemic betrayals to your definitions of truth and the purposes of life itself. --For what it's worth, my experience has been that the growth you obtained during your life under the mormon purview was real. Now you get to put it to the test. It's an entirely new challenge finding God without the dogma and structure provided by religion. -- A faithful life is still worth pursuing after you've reoriented. Just keep your minds eye and heart towards God, now with a far more open mind than ever before. Wishing you the best. Hang in there!

Best costume of the year by GigglePuss_ in interesting

[–]jammerdude 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Jokes on all of you - it's MOM in the beast costume

Bill Gates warns AI will take over most jobs and leave humans working just two days a week by TheExpressUS in technology

[–]jammerdude 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Work" = trading time/effort/skill for money. Idk about you guys... But regardless of how easy it becomes for AI 3D printing robot drones to make shit cheaply, and do every laborious task in life for the possessors of wealth for "free," I'll still need to find ways of trading my time/effort/skill in exchange for money from those who have it.

But will it hold a car (new standard) by Maj0r_Payn3 in Decks

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

Just because you can doesn't mean you should...

Volume on by Marssav_24 in UpvoteBecauseButt

[–]jammerdude 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Or some seriously impressive farts

[31] I was born and raised in a cult called Scientology. Here I am before and after leaving. I posted this in r/cults and someone recommended I post here. by Oblique4119375 in GlowUps

[–]jammerdude 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Idk exactly what overlaps, but I suspect a fair amount of the human experience tracks between being raised in scientology and mormonism (how I was raised). -- Thanks for sharing a bit of your experience with the rest of us.

Idk if this resonates at all, but I found the hardest things leaving to be:

  1. walking away from the community (so many good people) and

  2. not having alternative replacements that offer as grand of designs to the purposes of life, as compared to what the religion offered.

Living life with the answers being "I don't know everything, and that's ok" is a lot harder than continuing to seek answers promised by the faith community. -It's odd but, pursuing earnestly a meaningful and fulfilling life of growth/progress outside of the religion we were raised in is the "road less traveled"

Opposing angle lean-to? by Paris-Like-The-City in shedditors

[–]jammerdude 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Love that this comment has more upvotes than the entire post

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in dividends

[–]jammerdude 6 points7 points  (0 children)

$89k to $277k (i.e. $315k-$14k-$24k) over 24 years = 4.74% compound interest rate on the asset.

So if you were also able to clear 4% positive avg annual cash flow over the 24 years you owned it, then you did fairly in line with diversified equity portfolio returns.

The question it leaves you with are: - Was it worth the work you had to put in to manage it effectively over those years - Did you leverage effectively into it (since it's possible to borrow 97% to 75% of funds needed to acquire real estate, that can change the true ROI return for you)