What things are you sensitive about seeing, because you've personally dealt with them?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Moms smacking their kids hard (like my mom).

Loud public shaming/berating by parents (like my mom).

Kids allowed to be withdrawn/antisocial in public and at family events, or families eating in total silence at great speed at restaurants. That’s a super personal hangup that’s really specific to how my husband was raised and how it impacts our family life. When I see a little kid sullenly reading a book and slumped in their own corner at a nice restaurant, I don’t think, yay, they’re reading. My brain goes straight to: good luck to the woman who married that kid and into that family.


So do you want the family to berate them for being withdrawn in public, or do you want them to be left alone. Getting annoyed that a shy kid is reading a book is…interesting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Listening to people who haven’t experienced infertility or IVF talk about it, usually in a judgmental way.


+100
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Service workers or employees being harassed, bullied, or just spoken to rudely for no reason by customers or clients. I have to stop myself from intervening as it would almost never be appropriate. But if I’m the next person in line, I make a point to ask the worker how they’re doing, make eye contact, smile, or leave a good tip. I have been in their shoes and it’s soul crushing.


I cannot stand this, and I’m a fairly confrontational person so I can’t help but call it out when I see it. I assume someday I’ll just get shot or something
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I feel really sad when I see a tween girl whose family is all dressed nicely and age appropriately but who’s obviously in the wrong size, style and fit of clothes and/or clothes that are nice but obviously chosen by a parent with a vision that leaves the kid out of step with other kids.

I was the girl dressed in corduroy Bermuda shorts and a blazer when other girls my age were in Limited Too and I can spot my fellow victims of overbearing, strange mothers from a hundred yards away.


Hello friend! My mom always made me get what she would have wanted at my age. Or, wear my brother’s handmedowns. And on top of that had weird rules, like shampoo but no conditioner or hair products.


You get it! Conditioner was “for adults”. I also wasn’t allowed to blow dry my hair or shower in the morning because those were adult things, so I had to fall asleep on damp hair every night and hope it would look ok in the morning.


Interesting concept about "adult" things. My parents simply didn't use conditioner. Or dental floss. We had a very weird home.
Anonymous
Someone drunk
Anonymous
Dying soldiers is a tough one, even in movies. Kids suffering in war zones too. There’s few things more upsetting to me than that.
Anonymous
I have an autistic child, and I can sometimes see signs of it in very young children when I am out and about, in mannerisms or the way the gross motor movements look. I never mention anything to the parents, it might be too upsetting and they may be already delving into it. I think it is not my business but it always gives me pause.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moms smacking their kids hard (like my mom).

Loud public shaming/berating by parents (like my mom).

Kids allowed to be withdrawn/antisocial in public and at family events, or families eating in total silence at great speed at restaurants. That’s a super personal hangup that’s really specific to how my husband was raised and how it impacts our family life. When I see a little kid sullenly reading a book and slumped in their own corner at a nice restaurant, I don’t think, yay, they’re reading. My brain goes straight to: good luck to the woman who married that kid and into that family.


So do you want the family to berate them for being withdrawn in public, or do you want them to be left alone. Getting annoyed that a shy kid is reading a book is…interesting.


NP - there's no reason for a kid to be shy with their own family. If they can't sit in a restaurant and interact with their family members they should be in intensive therapy because something is seriously wrong. It's not appropriate to check out mentally and read a book during a family meal. And I say that as a voracious reader who is an introvert (but not shy).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moms smacking their kids hard (like my mom).

Loud public shaming/berating by parents (like my mom).

Kids allowed to be withdrawn/antisocial in public and at family events, or families eating in total silence at great speed at restaurants. That’s a super personal hangup that’s really specific to how my husband was raised and how it impacts our family life. When I see a little kid sullenly reading a book and slumped in their own corner at a nice restaurant, I don’t think, yay, they’re reading. My brain goes straight to: good luck to the woman who married that kid and into that family.


So do you want the family to berate them for being withdrawn in public, or do you want them to be left alone. Getting annoyed that a shy kid is reading a book is…interesting.


NP - there's no reason for a kid to be shy with their own family. If they can't sit in a restaurant and interact with their family members they should be in intensive therapy because something is seriously wrong. It's not appropriate to check out mentally and read a book during a family meal. And I say that as a voracious reader who is an introvert (but not shy).


Maybe the child is neurodivergent? Some autistic kids tune out like that to cope, and yes, if that is the case, then it is possible they are already in intensive therapy. You just can’t see it from where you are sitting.
Anonymous
People joking about having seizures or heart attacks makes me squirm. Can confirm, neither are funny.
Anonymous
“Joking” in older media about the drunk uncle/drunk aunt, the mean aunt, the “haha don’t wear those short shorts around uncle Bob, you know how he is!”, “don’t be alone in a room with your older cousin Tommy,” etc.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Moms smacking their kids hard (like my mom).

Loud public shaming/berating by parents (like my mom).

Kids allowed to be withdrawn/antisocial in public and at family events, or families eating in total silence at great speed at restaurants. That’s a super personal hangup that’s really specific to how my husband was raised and how it impacts our family life. When I see a little kid sullenly reading a book and slumped in their own corner at a nice restaurant, I don’t think, yay, they’re reading. My brain goes straight to: good luck to the woman who married that kid and into that family.


So do you want the family to berate them for being withdrawn in public, or do you want them to be left alone. Getting annoyed that a shy kid is reading a book is…interesting.


NP - there's no reason for a kid to be shy with their own family. If they can't sit in a restaurant and interact with their family members they should be in intensive therapy because something is seriously wrong. It's not appropriate to check out mentally and read a book during a family meal. And I say that as a voracious reader who is an introvert (but not shy).


Got it, you’re an undiagnosed autistic person who hates themself 👍
Anonymous
Controlling husbands
The Catholic Church
Anonymous
Women becoming single Moms with a man that doesn't want to marry them
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:People joking about having seizures or heart attacks makes me squirm. Can confirm, neither are funny.


For me it is choking. I have a family member who died from choking, and sometimes people say thinks like “It was so funny I almost choked on my whatever” meaning they laughed too hard while eating. I know they are using it as a figure of speech but I sometimes feel a tinge of sadness, then I am glad for them that they did not ever experience the same sadness from a choking incident so it is lighthearted for them.
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