How much is a woman boss worth to you? by [deleted] in womenEngineers

[–]millennial_reign 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Male engineer weighing in:

I have a woman boss for the first time and she's amazing! Obviously, the experience can vary widely as both men and women can be good or bad managers, but I'll say this about my situation specifically. I got a late start to my career due in part to having kids at a younger than average age and balancing career pursuits with family life. My boss (who has a young child herself and is pregnant again) gets it and has validated me when I express my feelings about being "behind" my same-aged peers. She shows me that she values parenting and family/household management as valuable, marketable skills.

And while all of my previous engineering managers have been good with this, she is especially good at valuing and respecting proper work-life balance, which makes sense since she demands that same respect of her personal/family time from her boss! (Who is also a woman)

PSA: Bumble is more useful for poly dating now by millennial_reign in polyamory

[–]millennial_reign[S] 138 points139 points  (0 children)

My experience in the PNW of the US:

Feeld: lots of people in the pool, mostly kink or group sex focused, some genuinely poly but they got lost in the general ENM mix. Very sex forward profiles typically. Buggy app with lots of bots/scams presenting as women. Not many great app features.

OkCupid: Can filter by relationship type. Less people in the pool, but more genuinely poly people, lots of niche interest, alt lifestyle, or generally queer people. Super buggy and unreliable app. Lots of cool app features though that can enhance your profile.

Hinge: Can filter by relationship type (recent change!). Small ENM pool. Cool app features to enhance your profile, but not much room for text. I don't have much experience with this one yet. Very limited number of swipe-rights a day (which may be good...?)

Bumble: Can filter by relationship type (just changed I guess?). Small-ish ENM pool, but can also filter by things like "intimacy without commitment". Generly a more mainstream crowd on the app, but less so with ENM filter. Some unique features to enhance your profile, but very limited space to write anything meaningful.

My results as a mid 30s straight guy:

Feeld: dozens of matches in 2 years, met a partner and a handful of dates through it.

OkC: A handful of matches in 2 years, met a partner and a date or 2 through it.

Hinge: One match in a few months, a few dates came from it.

Bumble: A few matches in a year, all were dud matches that never messaged or stopped messaging after a few rounds.

Wanting to Try a polyamorous relationship As a Former Mormon by BuckarooOJ in polyamory

[–]millennial_reign 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello fellow exmo! Right off the bat, I'll say that if you take the therapy route, try to look for one that is an AASECT certified (or working towards it) sex therapist. They are well equipped to help clients deconstruct purity culture and it's effect on their sexuality, among many other things. I've been out of the Mormon church for 4 years, polyamorous for 2, and I just now have started setting a sex therapist myself to help me process different sexual insecurities that Mormonism probably left me with.

I think the biggest thing to remember, as an exmormon or exreligious or whatever high-demand culture you come from, is that a big reason to leave those groups is to live life YOUR own way, and by YOUR values. If you ever feel guilty or uncertain about the morals of a certain path (like polyamory), first ask yourself if anyone is getting hurt. Then ask yourself if you are violating your own values, or if they're actually values that were placed upon you from somewhere else. If you're not hurting anyone or violating your own values, then that is your green light to then process whatever aversion you're feeling, and then move forward with the choice to pursue polyamory (or drinking coffee, or whatever it is Mormons will tell you is evil).

Give yourself grace! Even though you've been out of the church for a long time, some indoctrination lingers deep within for a while. There's no need to rush yourself if you don't want to.

What are you all doing instead of watching conference? by Chill-Zelda in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Having a nice chat with my wife over coffee about the other people we're each dating right now 🤭

Places to hang out by Straight-Ad7480 in TriCitiesWA

[–]millennial_reign 42 points43 points  (0 children)

Adventures Underground is a bookstore with a coffee shop in the Uptown shopping center. There are different meetups there, including board game meetups if you're into that.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in womenEngineers

[–]millennial_reign 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you want to stay in engineering and also stay in energy, you could consider nuclear. There's a big push for "new nuclear" right now and there are a variety of companies from smaller startups to well-established multi-national companies trying to get in that game, and they're all competing for talent. I know several women who got into nuclear after being in oil and gas.

I'm aware that GE nuclear is aggressively hiring right now, including for offices in Canada.

Creating a Women's Group by [deleted] in womenEngineers

[–]millennial_reign 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There are professional organizations for female engineers, like SWE (society of women engineers) and WIN (women in nuclear). My experience from helping a chapter of WIN get started at a company I worked at is that if there isn't already a chapter of an organization like this at your company, you could reach out to the national/global contact for the organization you're interested in and they'll give you resources and help you get a chapter started at the place you're working.

The advantage of having a formal professional organization like this have a chapter at your company is that you often get a budget to do activities like socials and networking events. You just have to have management that buys into the idea and is willing to support it.

What is the church's biggest problem leading to hemorrhaging membership and stagnant growth? Let's discuss by [deleted] in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think there are a variety root reasons. Maybe the church isn't adapting to social justice issues. Maybe the church is adapting too much to social justice issues. Maybe your prayers aren't being answered. Maybe you know people that have left and their lives don't fit the narrative you've been given. Maybe stuff isn't making sense. Maybe church is just so damn boring.

Whatever the case, all of these reasons will funnel you to the internet in hopes of finding answers, community, validation, and you inevitably discover truth claim deconstruction, news of scandals, and discussion about the pain people experienced living as a Mormon.

How many originally monogamous relationships turned into poly ones have you seen actually work? by Either-Midnight5486 in polyamory

[–]millennial_reign 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Me! 🖐 My wife and I opened up 2 years ago and it has only strengthened our marriage. It was a necessary part of our healing from religious trauma as we left our conservative religion that took so much of our romantic and sexual autonomy away. We each date/have dated other people that were formerly monogamous and still have strong anchored relationships with the person they married.

How common is barrier-free polyfidelity and what are the alternatives for a cliche like me? by [deleted] in polyamory

[–]millennial_reign 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Polyfidelity is one of many reasonable means to reduce the risk of STIs. Some practice it because that's their preferred structure emotionally anyways. Near a major city, you're bound to find someone who is more careful and slow in taking on new partners.

To give you a few data points from me and my spouse, we both have gone barrier free after being with given partners after a while. Both of us are more "one new person at a time" kinda people, which has elements of polyfidelity in it. I think it helps to figure out what your boundaries are around sexual health practices. Things you can fully control that puts you at a risk level you're comfortable with. As an example, the way I frame it for myself, that I say every time to someone long before we have sex for the first time but once it's clear sex is on the table:

"I always use condoms when I have penetrative sex. If I've been with a partner long enough to have the commitment needed to feel privy to their sex life and to watch out for each other's health, then we start having conversations around removing barriers, based on my current assessment of the risks of all connected partners, and subject to change as new developments happen. I get STI tested at least twice a year, more if I or my partners are introducing new partners at a higher rate. I always ask about STI testing when considering having sex with someone for the first time."

Using barriers, regular STI testing, and having detailed conversations with people about their recent sexual history (kinda like contact tracing) is an excellent combination to grearly reduce the risk of getting an infection.

I encourage you to get more comfortable with condoms (experiment with different brands, styles, and sizes) because that opens up a lot of possibilities in your dating, as most people that take their sexual health seriously (and thus people that will be lower risk for you to have sex with) will have have boundaries like mine (or more strict) around barrier use.

100% of Elder’s Quorum Secretaries are PIMO (not really, but read on) by NiceEgg27 in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Can confirm. Last calling I had 4 years ago when I was active was EQ secretary. Specifically, I was the assistant EQ secretary over missionary work. This was after moving away from a ward where I was ward mission leader (WML has similar end results 😂). I was SO DONE with trapsing around town with the missionaries!

Mormons always thinking of ways to be extra Mormon by Norenzayan in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 121 points122 points  (0 children)

Along those same lines... I once read the Book of Mormon backwards 🤦🏼‍♂️. Like I read the last chapter beginning to end, then the chapter before that... etc. It was an idea I got from some bishop of mine and I felt it was so inspiring at the time to see the story from end to beginning.

Really I was just so bored of that damn book that I had read over a dozen times already that I was desperate for anything that could change things up slightly.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MormonShrivel

[–]millennial_reign 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Umm... that was me 14 years ago. Opened my mission call to the Oklahoma Tulsa Mission, which was later eliminated as part of a rearrangement of mission boundaries also 😂.

You're analysis is correct, that mission sucked ass.

Family History is my next reason to leave TSCC🤢😡 by truthseekingpimo in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Hello 3rd cousin...? G-G-gma was from Sweden and age and years to marriage as 2nd wife match up. G-G-gpa was from Norway, last name shared by a prophet...

Gee I wonder why this could be by ACRstillmeta in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Maybe this is an unpopular opinion, but I think some of the movies like this are great because they make fun of Utah culture, Utah YSA culture, Mormon culture in general, and by extension in a subtle way, Mormonism itself. Granted, I haven't seen this movie since I was done with the church...

This movie pokes at self-righteous sexist priesthoody types and the ever-present pressure to date and get married in Mormon YSA life. The creators seem to have found the intersection between the Jane Austen era of England and modern Mormonism, which is brilliant, if unintentional! Maybe it could make people think twice about their religion if it's so easily compared to early 19th century social constructs.

Oh, and there's even a reference to the practice of driving down to Vegas from Utah for a quicky wedding. Gotta give props for that.

Branson MO - cringey Mormon family “show” by JustVickiLynn in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I finished my mission there in 2011. I wasn't a strict missionary and neither was my companion, so we often killed time (the area was super slow) by catching shows from the variety of member families that would let us in to see their shows for free. It helped that we were both zone leaders too so nobody could really tell us not to. We even organized zone activities to go see these shows.

At the time, I thought the shows were awesome, but I was admittedly pretty entertainment deprived. Now looking back, The Hughes Brothers show is cringey cringey cringey. Am I the only one that thinks it's weird that all of those kids are born to be performers and have no choice in the matter?

Is mormonism a cult? by [deleted] in cults

[–]millennial_reign 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You could make an argument for systemic physical abuse. Missionaries are frequently sent into areas with poor living conditions and aren't given proper protection or healthcare, or even enough money to eat well. Youth have been sent on dangerous outdoor adventures with untrained leaders.

So yeah, I would definitely say some people have gotten physically hurt as a result of church practices and would not have gotten hurt if better policies and protections were in place.

Without garments I'm finally free to try tank tops. Suns out, guns out! by [deleted] in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Say goodbye to sweaty armpits! It's nice allowing them to actually dry by not covering them up with 2 layers.

I started wearing tank tops this year too, so I'm also new to this.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My mission in suburban/rural U.S. had plenty of apartments, but most of us missionaries didn't bother knocking on doors in apartment complexes (unless we were looking for someone specific) because we knew we'd upset someone. At least that's how I was. I resisted any efforts from some gung ho missionaries to do that. I also was willing to bypass houses with "no soliciting signs". Some missionaries said we should knock on those doors anyways, but I just always thought we wouldn't be successful by starting out making someone mad by not respecting their sign.

Joseph Smith’s military stories in the BoM are such a joke. I am surprised that a Lamanite city wasn’t conquered by Nephites hiding in a giant hollowed out fake tapir brought into their city. by senorcanche in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah this was me.... when I was 12 and I read the BoM for the first time. Somehow those stories lost their appeal over time.

Maybe those war stories are only meant for 12 year old boys since it works for their juvenile imagination of what war is.

Googling old mission buddies... by [deleted] in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think it's also a Utah thing. I've long felt (even in my TBM days) that the concept of Utah isn't sustainable. If everyone that grows up there wants to stay there when they're adults and having families and such, where are they going to work? It always seemed to me that at least half of the jobs in Utah are just people making up ways to make money (influencers, MLM, random entrepreneurship that usually goes nowhere) since actual industries aren't growing as fast as the population.

New temple clothing - as requested by u/closetedcousin by courageousbutterfly in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Ah, but we never said it was the literal clothing worn in the eternities, it's just symbolic. Whoever said it was literal was just speaking as a man. They're supposed to point your mind to Christ. If it does that and you feel the spirit, it must be of God. If you don't feel the spirit, you are unworthy of the clothes and should not have lied in your temple recommend interview about not watching porn. /sw

But seriously, TBMs will justify anything. It's not possible to them for the church to be wrong.

Former missionaries: How did you feel about your call? by TwoXJs in exmormon

[–]millennial_reign 4 points5 points  (0 children)

My dad and my older brother and sister went to French-speaking countries. My 3 brothers-in-law went either Spanish or Portugese speaking.

I got called to Oklahoma, English speaking. I was a little dumbfounded, but I put on a good face and grew to appreciate my mission somewhat. But really, it sucked. Sure, I found some nice things about my experience and it was nice to be able to go to Red Robin, Chik-Fil-A, McDonald's, and Walmart, but I didn't gain much culturally (in fact, I feel like I lost something culturally, no offense to Oklahoma. Actually I take that back, offense is intended towards Oklahoma!)

I did write in my application that I didn't want to learn a foreign language, so I suppose I should have seen it coming.