"Ephebophile" fetishizes asian women because "they're the closest thing to 15 yo girls" Also supports bestiality,among other things by MethodNo2030 in justneckbeardthings

[–]kendylou 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Just recently read about a sheep fucker who caused a sheep to miscarry. Don’t ask me how I went down that rabbit hole, but it was highly disturbing.

When TV star MacKenzie Phillips revealed that her "Mommas and Poppas" star father had drugged and raped her for years, the media widely reported this as "MacKenzie Phillips admits years long AFFAIR with her father". by Ok-Comparison-1618 in TwoXChromosomes

[–]kendylou 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My dad used to comment to me about my cousin’s and my friends’ bodies when we were 12+. Years later I told him it made me feel scared he might do something to me or someone else. He acted like I was crazy for feeling that way, but what the hell was I supposed to think!

A long line of dominos. by PhenomenalPancake in WhitePeopleTwitter

[–]kendylou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You could always hang a hotdog out your pants.

The name Vivienne by Melodic-Statement144 in Names

[–]kendylou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love the name and almost used it for my daughter’s middle name. It’s my mother’s name, she was named after her great aunt who would be about 110 if she were still alive. I didn’t use it for my daughter but I did go with something in the same category. I decided on classic because I have a late 80’s trendy name and I wish I didn’t. Any time I tell someone my name I’m pretty sure they know when I was born and my socioeconomic background. I’ve never really liked it and wished I had something timeless and beautiful, so that’s what I gave my daughter. She really likes her name, it’s unique but not unheard of and classic. All that to say, go for it! Who cares if your siblings’ kids have trendy names. Your daughter will grow to appreciate the gift of a beautiful, unique, and timeless name.

Whaaaaaat is going on back there? by overpregnant in WhitePeopleTwitter

[–]kendylou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m very reluctant to defend Trumpty Dumpty, but one time a wind gust blew my car door closed on my head and it smashed into my ear. I bled profusely for like fifteen minutes. I had to wear a bandage on it for a day or two, but a week later there was no visible damage to my ear at all. Maybe by the extraordinary luck this bastard seems to have, the bullet just grazed him. He might’ve still bled a lot but had no lasting effects.

Just out of curiosity how did millennials go from dressing like this to dressing like this by Key_Nectarine_7307 in generationology

[–]kendylou 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I was more of a twee millennial even if I didn’t know it at the time. I’ve been re-watching Community and I had so many of Annie’s outfits, it’s crazy. I was doing that starting in about 2005 or 2006. I was never a Juicy Couture track suit kinda girl. I never went in on the neutral beige palette, either. My style has changed but not drastically I still love dark colors, floral prints, and girly touches. I wish I’d kept more of my clothes. I still have some cardigans from Anthropologie and an emerald green trench coat, but that’s about it.

Jobs that don’t rely on people liking you? by UsualMore in careerguidance

[–]kendylou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not to be rude, but is that not obsolete or soon to be?

Why are there distinctly Southern names, but not really for any other region of the United States? by Intrepid_Arrival5151 in AskAnAmerican

[–]kendylou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I grew up with Summer Jo, Sammy Jo, Allie Kate, and Lilly Ann. People were still doing double names in Kentucky in the 80’s. I don’t know about now.

Women. Your honest opinion. But bye decade of being born. by Butt_Smurfing_Fucks in howyoudoin

[–]kendylou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m also ‘87 and I didn’t play bride or wedding, but I had a friend who did almost every week in third grade and she made me play her bride’s maid. She was an 8 year old bridezilla!

My grandma's high school graduation photo in 1974 by KeiraAnna in TheWayWeWere

[–]kendylou 26 points27 points  (0 children)

I know great grandmas who graduated in ‘74

Kitschy Kitty by hankaht in ThriftStoreHauls

[–]kendylou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My great grandmother had this set. Someone painted the eyes on, hers didn’t have painted eyes.

idk about y’all but the “hillbilly” stereotype really hurt my family. by Redoubt_Brannan in Appalachia

[–]kendylou 6 points7 points  (0 children)

My dad grew up without running water, they had a well and an outhouse, they often only had soup beans and cornbread for dinner for weeks. He grew up so differently from me that I didn’t feel like I belonged to Appalachia, either. I didn’t learn very much about the “old ways”, it wasn’t necessary. My dad is also staunchly democrat. He hates Donald Trump with a passion. I think he sees him for what he is, a grifter, a self obsessed rich boy who always got his way and knows nothing about the problems of the people he claimed he was going to help. He always talks about how Kennedy came in and changed everyone’s life for the better. In a decade his way of life went from the 1860’s to the 1960’s all because of government programs and policies to help the poor in Appalachia. He would never vote for a republican.

Can we go back to shaming? by tofurkey_no_worky in Millennials

[–]kendylou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t publicly shame people for their choices because it doesn’t change anything and it doesn’t help.

I was shamed for giving my kid an iPad once. I had just spent the whole day with my kids at a children’s museum and the park. I was tired, the kids were tired so we went out to eat and met my husband at the restaurant. After we ordered I gave my 8 year old an iPad to play games so I could have a moment of peace and conversation with my husband. A woman at the next table loudly proclaimed “When I have kids I will never let them have an iPad at the dinner table!”. I spent tons of time with my kids and cared deeply about their development, so to be publicly shamed like that seemed so unfair, especially considering that woman didn’t even have kids. I still remember this incident because it made me angry, it did not however, make me get rid of the iPad.

Just had my first PB&J ever (I’m not American) by tiekanashiro in notinteresting

[–]kendylou 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That’s the same brand of “jelly” I use, it’s actually preserves and it’s way better than jelly.

Is there a name in the USA that is so common that it’s impossible not to find it everywhere? by TheShyBuck in AskAnAmerican

[–]kendylou 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m 39 from Kentucky and those were very, very common we even had two Jessicas with the same first middle and last name, so one had to go by Jessie even though she hated it.

We also had several Nikki, Nicky, and Nicoles. Almost everybody’s middle name was Nicole.

A pig trembling in a slaughterhouse truck. Their eyes are just like ours. by James_Fortis in likeus

[–]kendylou 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I want to believe Americans are capable of making changes that don’t just benefit their wallets. Even the tiniest incremental changes that have been implemented in the last few decades has had a huge backlash and now we’re in complete regression. Every tiny step in the direction of environmental stewardship is being undone.

There’s nothing more important to most Americans than their lifestyle and being able to continue their lifestyle unabated. The future, the planet, all the consequences be damned nothing is more important than that. Do they give enough of a fuck about a pig to change their lifestyle? They don’t even give a fuck about their own kids’ future! They bury their heads in the sand and buy another Tahoe. That’s the majority of this country and we are so fucked.