| Because it's my party and I'll cry if I want to. |
| I prefer kvetching, griping, and bellyaching. |
| It’s how I was raised. As an adult I find it exhausting to be around other people who do this, so I am actively and earnestly trying to change. |
Yes, I hate people who compete about who has it worse. That is competitive and the opposite of trying to connect via a conversation where you try to share personal details. |
| I’m negative because I’m depressed. Oh, and grew up in a chronically negative home. |
| So many supposedly wealthy people on this site, yet most OPs lack a mirror. |
In defense of west coast positivity -- it's not fake. It is profoundly shaped by activist culture and self-help culture, both of which say that if something isn't good, you should act to change it. Either get angry and fix it, or find peace and accept it, but don't stew in negativity. Also, outdoorsy people (who are not exclusive to the west, but prevalent there) have a culture of vocal appreciation for small things -- a great view, a favorite tree -- and of shrugging off disappointment, since you can't fight weather. All the most negative people I know are people who have zero exposure to outdoorsy culture. That said, the tech boom has changed the west very rapidly and there are a lot of tensions between the culture of people who grew up there in actual "love and light" culture, and the fact you can't afford housing anymore: I'm not surprised you found unhappy people, as I moved away myself. But it's also very simplistic to pretend that happy people are shallow and negative people are deep. |
Sometimes it's fake. I'm from the West coast. |
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I know many immigrants from the east coast who are immensely thankful, but they also are expressive. It is not complaining, it is a different way of life.
Grow up, exercise gratefulness, and learn to accept humans the way that they are, OP. Learn to be a better human. Learn to be less judgmental. |
This! On side note I'm not annoyed by complaining. I get very annoyed by people who complain and don't act - like if you don't vote don't F#*$ing complain about the elected officials. It's your fault they got in. If you did vote for them and don't like them now, then yeah, fair to complain they weren't who they said they were going to be. Same for everything else. Don't like your house? What steps do you take to move or make it better. If none, just keep your pie hole shut. |
See, I think this attitude is super controlling and judgmental. If someone wants to complain about their house, whatever. I'm not standing there with a checklist all "well have you tried painting? why don't you just replace the dishwasher? are you putting money away every month for a bathroom reno? why not!?" Like I don't know the situation and something like a house is not a super easy think to fix. Sometimes the thing a person hates about their house is the new neighbors who moved in next door or the fact that their HOA just doubled fees but decreased services. Those are not quick fixes. If someone wants to complain about that stuff, I am cool with it and I don't need them to prove to me that they have done everything they possibly could to fix the situation before complaining. I mean, maybe if they complain for 5 years and never do anything. But otherwise, whatever, let them complain. |
I'm the same. I recently have made a point of not doing that. Age I think is a big part of it. I bite my tongue. I'm trying to be more optimistic and bite my sarcastic, pessimistic tongue. I really made great strides this year. I think in part, stress is lifting as my kids approach college--almost to empty nest. It's just a good time. I actively re-frame my mindset. My husband is naturally more optimistic and I try to feed off that instead of bringing him to my side. |
^ one more thing. I have always hated people that complain about the same things, but do not attempt to make any change. There are a bunch of dads at my kids' former sports club that relentlessly complain to toxic levels, yet they keep their kids there. We left and all of us our so much happier...and not listening to toxicity on the sidelines helped. |
Yes. My Sicilian grandmother was a negative influence . I'm trying to embrace the happy-go-lucky Irish side of the family. My mom's side are all always happy.
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| I'm the opposite, I was born into a complaining culture, and I hate it. Complainers always see themselves as at the center of the universe. They can never look at the world from others' points of view. (Instead of "she hates me, wah" to say "Oh, she was having a bad day, and spazzed out at me.") |