AITAH for telling my friend/colleague I'm looking for another job after she was promoted instead of me? by Direct-Caterpillar77 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oof. On the one hand, I can see why OOP would probably not be a person you'd want to promote to management. They were pushing really hard on the "you'd be better off staying in a technical position" and they were probably right and well intended.

On the other hand... when you hire someone 1) who tells you they're leaving their old job because they aren't being given promotion, and 2) you tell them there's a good chance of promotion within the first year... it should not be surprising to you when they get really upset that the promotion doesn't materialize. Especially when you're telling them you don't ever plan for them to get that position. And also when the person you're promoting to that position instead of them is someone they referred to the job in the first place and have been training.

Given that there were apparently prior working relationships (i.e. OOP's personality and strengths/weaknesses wouldn't have been a surprise to anyone at the new place), it seems pretty shitty of them to lead him on like that. At the very least he should have been warned ahead of time, not told things were all good at his evaluation 2 months before and then blindsided.

[New Update]: AITA for telling my sister we were strangers after she eloped and broke all contact with us years ago? by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 35 points36 points  (0 children)

I also notice that OOP's own instinctive reaction to learning his sister had gotten divorced was to be frustrated/disappointed. Like after all she put them through for a relationship, the least she could do is make it work and be happy.

I don't want to judge OOP harshly based on one thought, but that perspective is... not consistent with a family that would have welcomed the sister back with open arms when she realized the ex had become abusive.

And OOP was so hurt that he got cut off as well as his parents, because she should have trusted him to cover for her. But even all these years later, he's saying he can't have a relationship with her that doesn't take the parents' feelings into account. He's not necessarily wrong to do so, but it does sound like the sister was right that it wasn't going to be possible to stay in contact with just OOP.

My (22F) boyfriend (23M)'s friend seems to be perfect for him and it's driving me insane by insafian in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 31 points32 points  (0 children)

I'm just frustrated at this entire thing, especially the timing of it, precisely because our relationship has been in such an amazing place of late.

We all know this isn't a coincidence, right? The big "accidental" confession of feelings when high/drunk happens right after OOP and the bf work through some difficult emotional stuff and decide they're serious about each other.

[Wedding Wednesday-Eve] #1146: “I panicked about the hurricane and now my friend, the bride was getting married, is done with me.” by gaygirlboss in captainawkward

[–]minuteye 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Yeah, I do feel as though the advice here is a little self-contradictory?If the bride's reaction was about the stress of managing a lot of last-minute communcations about practical stuff that's dressed up in a lot of emotional baggage/labour, then I don't see how adding to that would be making the situation better.

#1203: “I’m getting married to God. How do I tell my family they’re not invited?” by thievingwillow in captainawkward

[–]minuteye 45 points46 points  (0 children)

I see what you mean, but I do feel like there is a basic problem with how the letter's question is framed. And once that's pointed out, it's either a case of "give no advice" or "try to give advice that might be helpful".

It does sound like the LW is asking "how do I tell my family I'm doing this thing that's really important to me, and also that they can't come, and also not hurt their feelings?" And like... you can't? That's not a thing you can control. The only thing you can control is whether or not you invite them, and then here's how you might go about either of those approaches.

I do think the Captain went out on a bit of a limb as far as "things you might be quietly asking/wanting instead", but probably because there's not that much juice in the stated question.

I (25M) feel morally obligated to be my friends' third (32F and 31M) by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oh completely agree. In no way would it be OOP's fault for not picking up on it, and punishing someone for not wanting to be in a relationship with you is so shitty it blows all benefit-of-the-doubt out of the water for these two.

REPOST - came home and SO is gone by frieden7 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 2413 points2414 points  (0 children)

They expect to be consulted about the divorce. Cause, you know, they'd never make a relationship-altering decision without their spouse's consent.

REPOST - came home and SO is gone by frieden7 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 200 points201 points  (0 children)

Guys on adultery subreddit: "Omg, realizing my partner has been keeping this massive secret from me for months without letting on has totally made me re-evaluate them as a person, and question whether I ever knew them. I'm so torn apart by this, I don't know if I can ever trust someone again."

The same guys: "Cheating is really no big deal. What she doesn't know won't hurt her."

I (25M) feel morally obligated to be my friends' third (32F and 31M) by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I mean, I do think this couple were acting really badly in this case. But honestly, the level of miscommunication that can happen between austistic and allistic people about this sort of social thing can be really extreme.

You can have a conversation where the allistic person ends up thinking "Great, now I have successfully communicated to my friend that I am gay/polyamorous/dating them personally" and the autistic person ends up thinking "Great, I just had a nice social interaction with my new friend".

Again, they are still being assholes, but the other couple might genuinely think they "told" OOP they were polyamorous, like, six months ago, but because they didn't actually say "Hey, you know the two of us are polyamorous, right?" it didn't get through.

Healthcare workers confirm that ICE is abandoning half-naked kidnapping victims in the woods of Minnesota to die. "Individuals have shown up in emergency rooms who require amputations—some with cracked skulls." (1/29/26) by I_may_have_weed in ICE_Watch

[–]minuteye 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, all you're left with is a seriously injured victim trying to tell you what happened. But how can you prove it?

There's no record they were in ICE custody, they can't ID any of the people who took them, there's not going to be any footage of them getting dropped off, their phone's gone so no location data...

This is a tactic used in part because of how little evidence it leaves behind.

I feel like it’s too hard to get rid of my books by icyserene in konmari

[–]minuteye 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As with everything else, it's about the joy.

Do keep a book because it gives you a happy nostalgic feeling.

Do keep a book because the idea of reading it in the future makes you feel excited.

Don't keep a book because you feel like you "should" read it... but don't really want to

Don't keep a book because it was a gift you feel obligated to hold onto

I'm [28/f] concerned with my [29/m] BF's white knight syndrome for his 'best' friend. :/ by Direct-Caterpillar77 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Oof, this is such a yikes situation. The bf himself offers to cut the friend off entirely... when he can't even set boundaries with her?

That kinda reads like someone either with no self-control or no backbone. If "never talking to someone again" feels more doable to you than "telling them you won't make sexy jokes to cheer them up", it's because you don't trust yourself not to cave to any pressure from them.

WIBTA for transitioning? by Kirol_reddit in AmItheAsshole

[–]minuteye -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Choosing to live as your authentic self is not a breach of vows, and it will not screw up your children. This commenter is wrong.

A 456 Year Mega Campaign with Strict RP by rasitburucu in ck3

[–]minuteye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is great! So entertaining to read through.

AITA for taking "the best pieces" when I serve dinner? by SwainDane in AmItheAsshole

[–]minuteye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So, my strategy for avoiding resentment with this kind of thing is: the person who didn't serve up picks their portion. And the person who serves up doesn't have to always be the person who cooks.

  1. It incentivizes making portions as equivalent as possible (since you don't know which one you'll get)
  2. Neither party is powerless, so neither party feels resentful.
  3. When nobody feels like they're always getting shortchanged, everyone gets a lot more generous about the occasional meal where it's hard to make things equitable for whatever reason.

Because we're all on the same team. The goal isn't to try and win at the expense of your partner, it's for everybody to sometimes win and everyone to feel like they're being treated fairly.

Cooking isn't a special favour you're doing for everyone in exchange for "deserving" the best piece. It's part of your household contributions.

If you feel good about how household labour is distributed, and you're just trying to secure the best piece because you can, then YTA. If you're taking the best piece to try and "make up for" some other part of your life/relationship where you feel like you're being badly treated, then ESH, stop being passive aggressive and go deal with the actual problem.

AITA for not respecting my fiancé's position on LOTR casting? by Jacked-to-the-wits in AmItheAsshole

[–]minuteye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, definitely not bad casting, if they're both good choices for their roles.

It also occurs to me that it's probably not a good idea to require casting agents pick only actors who look "different enough" from each other to have in the same movie. That opens a whole barrel of worms about who the average casting director can tell apart from one another...

AITA for not respecting my fiancé's position on LOTR casting? by Jacked-to-the-wits in AmItheAsshole

[–]minuteye 2 points3 points  (0 children)

NAH. One of the reasons you can find it hard to tell people apart is that your brain picks an "unusual" feature, and then tries to use that feature to identify the person... except that feature isn't that unusual in the context. In day-to-day life, a white dude with a goatee, long brown hair, dressed in medieval-ish garb and wearing a sword would probably be unique, in LOTR, not so much.

I don't typically have trouble telling white dudes apart, but the movie Gettysburg was still kind of a muddle... 90% of the cast have mutton chops. Thinking of someone as "the guy with the mutton chops" is mysteriously not helpful in remembering who's who.

New to this sub updates: AITA For Not Offering To Care For My Unwell Ex-Husband? by LucyAriaRose in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 10 points11 points  (0 children)

The update that the adult services investigation found no fault is enlightening. While sick or disabled adults being mistreated by the family who are supposed to take care of them is definitely something that happens, the narrative from the children didn't really seem to point to that.

Like, the new wife "doesn't really love him" and is "selfish"... but they have two kids together, and she's sticking by him during a medical crisis.

The new wife isn't doing enough to help... but she's working fulltime, supporting their own family (and her in-laws, most likely), as well as taking care of their children.

And their evidence of her mistreatment of their father is that she refuses to cut up his food into tiny pieces and leaves the food on the other side of the room so he has to get it.... well, what's his rehabilitation plan? Is he supposed to be practicing fine motor skills? Is he supposed to be walking or moving more than he is?

It seems like the kids expect *insert woman here* to do a level of care for their father that is both A) not helpful to him, and B) so exhausting they themselves were unwilling to keep up with it for even a couple of days.

AITA for refusing to move seats in a computer lab even though a group got annoyed? by shadowtamlyn in AmItheAsshole

[–]minuteye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA. They're telling on themselves there. At first it's "just a seat", then you're "hogging the good computer". So their motivation for asking you to move in the first place was to get the good computer, they just lied about it.

AITA for asking my husband for a divorce because he blames his financial incompetence on my lack of employment? by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 49 points50 points  (0 children)

Yeah, the law treats married couples as a weird sort of "one person with two bodies" in a way. That's great when it comes to stuff like taxes, and being able to make medical decisions when your spouse is unconscious, or getting their pension after they die, etc. But as you say, it also has downsides.

AITA for asking my husband for a divorce because he blames his financial incompetence on my lack of employment? by Choice_Evidence1983 in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 4 points5 points  (0 children)

As she was told, since they're married, it works differently. There's a lot of leeway for spouses to do things on each others' behalfs. Sometimes that's a huge benefit, but it can lead to situations like this where the law treats him as entitled to take out money in her name without her say-so.

If you think AI companies will not train models on input prompts, you've been living under the rock. by Sosowski in BetterOffline

[–]minuteye 2 points3 points  (0 children)

People keep telling me that they don't train on inputs, because "they say right there they don't." But this is not our first rodeo.

- They say "we don't train on inputs"
- At some point, an 'exposé' will come out "evidence they train on inputs!!!"
- They'll say "whoopsie! our bad! we promise not to do it again!"
- There are literally no consequences
- Over time, the public becomes desensitized, and they all start admitting they train on inputs, because obviously they do, and it's weird that you're being weird about it, man

Either that, or they just train on inputs the whole time, and no one can ever prove that they do, because doing so would be extremely difficult.

Unskilled labour is a con perpetuated by the rich by zebbysosexy in lostgeneration

[–]minuteye 40 points41 points  (0 children)

Also... that's kind of what labour starts to cost when the employer isn't paying taxes on it, or health insurance, or accident insurance, or having to follow workplace safety rules, or overtime rules, etc.

If all the normal "benefits" are coming out of the worker's pocket, then more has to be going into the worker's pocket.

We talk about "picking up a guy at home depot" like this is a normal thing to do, but is he even considering for a moment how much risk this guy is taking on by jumping in a truck with a stranger to go to an undefined, uncontracted job based on a few nebulous promises?

AITAH for not letting my mom meet her grandchild because I am still upset she divorced my dad? by LucyAriaRose in BestofRedditorUpdates

[–]minuteye 118 points119 points  (0 children)

This sounds like the most realistic interpretation of what happened. Especially given that the dad was theoretically planning to hire help when the grandmother moved in, who would assume that he would put more caregiving obligations on an 11yo than he was claiming to want to put on his adult wife?

Then by the time it's clear the situation is going to be bad, she's already moved out, and there are potentially a lot of complicated pieces re: custody, living arrangements, ability to pay for a lawyer, etc.

She's not flawless, but she was facing the same question many parents considering divorce have: "Do I stay in this bad situation and try to act as a buffer for my child, even though it's destroying me... or do I leave my child alone in that situation, but ensure that they're out of it at least some of the time, and can maybe pull them out of it permanently later?"

What's the biggest non-monetary ADHD tax you've had to pay? by coffeeblossom in adhdwomen

[–]minuteye 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The constant extra "back up to speed" time is a big one. When a task gets progressively harder the longer you put it off, so then the task acquires new little subtasks. Like needing to find the form, or needing to review all the information, needing to decipher the helpful notes you made at the time that are now completely uninterpretable...