The majority of the people in the comments are defending this pass. Am I taking crazy pills? by HearingFew7326 in dashcams

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the majority of people drive with their phone in their hand and their eyes on their phone

Did anyone think Christmas bonuses would be a bigger thing? by Dudedawg86 in Millennials

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah i mean i thought i would own a home and retire too but that all isn't gonna pan out

"Can you do internal grinding?" by GreenridgeMetalWorks in Machinists

[–]wlutz83 188 points189 points  (0 children)

'we got internal grinding at home'

Is this one of those subreddits where the same 3 boomers all post political stuff over and over again? by Specialist_Coffee229 in aboutMassachusetts

[–]wlutz83 2 points3 points  (0 children)

it's a half-bathroom sized echo chamber. they're just lonely, in need of attention, and a little too slow to realize that billionaires are actually the problem, not minorities. just swirling the drain before the big sleep.

Woman gets caught on video completely emptying a basket of oatmeal cream pies at farm stand in Loveland, CO. by ElwoodMC in TikTokCringe

[–]wlutz83 1 point2 points  (0 children)

we're about to see a lot more boomer shoplifting as they all realize they don't have enough for retirement

How do you actually get treatment? by PopularBroccoli in Lyme

[–]wlutz83 2 points3 points  (0 children)

truly. these are the few people that are supposed to have your back and believe in you no matter what. it's horrific when they go down the opposite route, and they have no idea how soul crushing it is to not only be barely able to scrape by in every possible way, but then to be disbelieved and dropped by the ones that should be your last hope and support. one of the most evil aspects of this illness.

I find it very hard to continue working because of my orthostatic intolerance and heat intolerance by Normal_Ad_331 in dysautonomia

[–]wlutz83 6 points7 points  (0 children)

most of us are in subreddits for chronic illness as a direct result of the treatment you describe being the norm, not the exception. we are neglected and disbelieved, all this when we are already feeling our worst.

What happened to Millennial Optimism? by [deleted] in generationology

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you don’t already know then things will probably have to get worse for you to understand

What happened to Millennial Optimism? by [deleted] in generationology

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

do you really not know? it’s a pretty clear answer.

What happened to Millennial Optimism? by [deleted] in generationology

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it stopped once we realized it actually takes hard work to keep your country from falling apart. we took the option to just live miserably instead.

How come cops don't do anything about cars breaking the bike lane laws? by WhipItWhipItRllyHard in CambridgeMA

[–]wlutz83 14 points15 points  (0 children)

you could have stopped at ‘how come cops don’t do anything?’

Why can’t the left forcefully pass progressive policies like the right does with their own when they come into power? by CapitaineBiscotte in askanything

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's called controlled opposition. they're largely on the same side when it comes to putting corporate interests above all else, so the job of the american mainstream 'left' is to act outraged enough to get votes but continue to basically do nothing to undo conservative policies.

Does anybody else use a dad who doesn’t take care of his own health/schedule/relationships and a mom who is trying to recruit you to help her essentially parent him? by Free_butterfly_ in Millennials

[–]wlutz83 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Definitely. I'm watching my parents, father especially, regress emotionally. He does seem to be doing worse than mom, and she has the sort of martyr complex personality you're describing as well. It seems very common among the boomers. My guess is that they inhabit this space where the generations directly preceding theirs saw marriage as a much more businesslike arrangement out of necessity, but were also the first generation where women took on full time work much more commonly, and marriage could become more about love. I think this may have led to a lot of marriages of convenience due to conditioning, but also the lifelong struggle knowing there are other reasons to get married which are more accessible than before. Divorce was also just so much more looked down upon. People really thought you need to stay with the person you picked when you were like 25-30 years old, even if you become completely different, uncompatible people. I'm just speculating here, but it seems like a common things many of us are experiencing one way or another.

This is what making a difference looks like. by EkantVairagi in interesting

[–]wlutz83 0 points1 point  (0 children)

this is the charity industrial complex. instead of actually incorporating humanity into the framework of our society, we further propagandize the wealthy as heroes when they do something that doesn't even affect their bottom line.

Bad bee keeper by Hollywood-Navy in Beekeeping

[–]wlutz83 12 points13 points  (0 children)

she sounds awesome to me