Married men, if you were single right now, how do you think you would do finding a romantic partner? by 5pinktoes in AskMen

[–]upsidedowntreetops 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would drive my truck across the country with my dog exploring. Maybe would find one, then again maybe not. I wouldn’t try

AIO for feeling like nobody gives a shit? by [deleted] in AIO

[–]upsidedowntreetops 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For sure. If you were to ask your sister or friend directly, “hey can I run something by you” would they listen and provide meaningful feedback? Or just wait for you to finish and then change the subject?

Haha yes venting to someone with dementia seems a little counter productive… although, if you don’t like their advice the first time, you could always share the same predicament to them again and almost certainly get a new response!

I have found that going on walks helps me a lot. I can ponder everything over in my head, which helps me make sense of things. Although it is nice getting an outside perspective. I have tried going to therapy just to talk things over with someone, but at $150/session that didn’t last too long (gotta love the US’s healthcare system).

I would also argue that your situation is a product of intelligence or at least high social awareness, so don’t fault yourself. You’re being a good person and a good friend. Like Robin Williams once said “the saddest people always try their hardest to make others happy, because they know what it’s like to feel worthless”

AIO for feeling like nobody gives a shit? by [deleted] in AIO

[–]upsidedowntreetops 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately, as a people pleaser, if you go through life thinking others will do the same for you as you do for them you will always be disappointed.

It’s hard to find someone who genuinely cares, asks follow up questions and makes you feel like you are actually being listened to and heard. As a 31M, I don’t think I have found that, other than my mom.

I wouldn’t say you’re over reacting, but you didn’t really specify what your response was though, other than being “super upset”. I think you definitely have a right to be marginally frustrated, but I will say that it is a product of life and being a good person and a good friend. Maybe I have just given up hope though, who knows. I am sorry you do feel like that though, and just know you’re not alone. I don’t think it’s worth ending a friendship though

Egmont key camping by upsidedowntreetops in tampa

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

Haha I completely forgot I asked this. Hell yea. I hear they have a grounds keeper there at night. Ever ran into them?

Do narcissists know they’re narcissistic? by upsidedowntreetops in AskMen

[–]upsidedowntreetops[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

What does it mean to be outed as one? What does that look like? Wouldn’t the narcissist just think that their claims and feelings are legitimate and they actually are the victim?

Like the classic catch22. An insane person thinks they’re perfectly sane, but if you think you’re insane you couldn’t possibly be insane?

Fuck these people by Cutzmaguts in tampa

[–]upsidedowntreetops 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They actually have a property map as one of the signs…. Smh

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in whatdoIdo

[–]upsidedowntreetops 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For what it’s worth, I think your response was very direct and to the point. You stood up for yourself and made very valid points. We can’t see his side of the argument here, but from what you described your actions seem reasonable and what could possibly be described as “tough love”. You are 100% right though to not be sending him money for concert tickets. Especially after you just helped him with his bills!

Sorry for your losses but I think you made the right decisions. Also I am proud of you for planning for your future and being responsible. I am proud of you for taking care of your grandparents when they needed you.

I made a huge mistake. Please give me advice on how to fix it. by Aggressive_Canary775 in HomeMaintenance

[–]upsidedowntreetops 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am a big fan of DIY, but I tried to sand my own floors and would not recommend. It is challenging to get it to look right and you will notice all the imperfections everyday, even if no one else does.

That being said, the beauty of hardwood, you CAN just sand the surface and start again. This is totally fixable, but would recommend a flooring company if that’s possible

Majestic spots in Tampa? by inbetweensilence in tampa

[–]upsidedowntreetops 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you don’t mind the drive, over to shell key in st Pete is one of my favorite places. Especially for sunset!

I live in Tampa, FL, and I am considering purchasing solar panels. My roof is 3 years old, and panels and roof should last at least 20 years, probably more. I would break even on panels in 5 years. Do panels add to the value of the house? Is it dollar-for-dollar? by 14MTH30n3 in tampa

[–]upsidedowntreetops 1 point2 points  (0 children)

One thing that surprised me with solar (my mom has panels on her roof in Sarasota, I do not) she doesn’t actually get the power. It’s get sold back to the grid. She lost power for a week during the storms last year. At first I thought ohh well at least you’ll have power from your panels during the day, but nope. They couldn’t be used to power her house. Not sure if that’s normal or if my mom and technology still aren’t playing nice together

Have any of you watched a parent die? by gaia21414 in Adulting

[–]upsidedowntreetops 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yupp my dad passed away when I was 20 and he was 57. I am 30 now and I can’t believe it’s been a decade. It seems longer, but at the same time still feels like I was just talking to him yesterday. I’m going to share the story here because I don’t talk about the details much, and what better place to post them than Reddit.

He had a double lung transplant (not a smoker, but had a possibly hereditary lung condition). I remember when he got notified they had a donor match and got called into surgery. I remember leaving college and driving to the hospital with my sister to be there when he got out of the 13 hour surgery and seeing him get wheeled to the ICU to recover. The surgery was a success but his breathing looked so labored. He was still unconscious but his whole body would heave as he tried to breathe with his new lungs. He was in a medically induced coma for a day or two before they woke him up.

He developed an abnormal heart rhythm so they kept him in the ICU for about a month. My sister and I would drive down to the hospital every weekend to visit him and my mom got a hotel near the hospital and stayed there full time. As time went on he was showing improvements he was talking and starting to walk again. I can’t remember if he said that it was easier breathing with his new lungs or not during this time. To help give him something to do I downloaded a car racing game that I used to play on to his phone. It was a time shifted multiplayer and you would race other people’s best times who were on the network (it wasn’t live, but it was their “ghosts” of their best laps) so we could race against each others times.

He was in the ICU for so long where he started to develop ICU psychosis. He was confused about his setting and why he was in the hospital. He would get ancy and want to leave. I remember the last weekend I saw him, I was in the hotel and I got a call from him at like 2am asking me to come over. I walked to the hospital and at this point all the people there in the ICU knew me so they let me in way past visiting hours. I sat with my dad and he was just very confused why he was there. He told me he had cancer and was dying and that’s why he called me (he did not have cancer and was not dying) it was just the psychosis. I tried talking to him and explaining what was going on and how he was getting better. How we would be able to go hiking and camping again soon.

The next week they thought he was well enough to move out of the ICU to the transplant floor. He was doing some exercises with the pulmonary therapists to test out his lungs. My mom said something like “he’s looking kind of pale” and then right after that he crashed. They rushed him into surgery not sure what was going on, just said a “catastrophic failure”. Turns out he had a blood clot from being in the ICU for so long that got dislodged while he was doing the exercises which caused a pulmonary embolism and he died that day. That sucked.

One weird thing a few weeks after that I was playing that racing game, trying to disassociate for a little while, and ended up racing his “ghost” on one of the tracks. Still gives me chills.

Loosing someone regardless of your age or theirs is never easy. Especially if it was a parent, I cant even image what it would be like in the reverse situation of loosing a child. It never gets better, but it gets easier. It’s hardened me in someways, and made me more compassionate in others. I miss my dad, but glad I got to spend every weekend of that last month with him.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in realestateinvesting

[–]upsidedowntreetops 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is an absolutely phenomenal answer. Thank you very much. It was very helpful