Anonymous wrote:When people use the term 'rock star' as a compliment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When people park right next to you when every other spot in the row is available.
This is the worse. I literally park the farthest away from the establishment, away from everyone else, and every time I come out, there’s some car parked beside mine.
Anonymous wrote:There are 15 empty, doors-wide-open stalls in the bathroom. I am in the only stall with a closed door, obviously occupied.
Someone walks in and takes the empty stall right next to me. W.T.F.
Tell me people who do this - do you have some sort of strange fetish to be near others who are defecating?
Anonymous wrote:When a slow car changes lanes right in front of me. Hello! Go behind me!
Anonymous wrote:When people park right next to you when every other spot in the row is available.
Anonymous wrote:People who say “Full Stop” after they make some kind of statement that matters to them. Like they just dropped the mic for everyone in the room and now nobody can dispute their irrefutable insight.
Anonymous wrote:Pickup truck drivers. I'll die on the hill that it's pointless for anyone to own a pickup truck that's solely for personal use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pickup truck drivers. I'll die on the hill that it's pointless for anyone to own a pickup truck that's solely for personal use.
Given that we use a pickup truck to drive a horse trailer but that it is otherwise stupidly big and not that smooth of a ride when not towing anything (F450), I agree with you. And what are they doing with the bed of the truck? Likely nothing! So wouldn't it make more sense to have interior space for pets or groceries? It's a weird flex to me. My best friend's husband has one and I just don't get it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The word “resilient.”
No, I don’t possess some special skill or quality that enables me to power through my teenager’s second suicide attempt in a single month and complete lack of support from his dad because he thinks he’s “just seeking attention.”
I’m so terrified and sad I can hardly breathe, but yes I still get out of bed every day and go to work because no one else is going to pay the bills and keep a roof over our heads.
I’m not resilient, I’m completely broken inside. I don’t need a compliment that disguises the very real human cost of what I’m going through.
I have a different story about my child that has "broken" me, but I feel the same way. I am sorry, and I wish you peace and a way through to health for your child.
Anonymous wrote:The word “resilient.”
No, I don’t possess some special skill or quality that enables me to power through my teenager’s second suicide attempt in a single month and complete lack of support from his dad because he thinks he’s “just seeking attention.”
I’m so terrified and sad I can hardly breathe, but yes I still get out of bed every day and go to work because no one else is going to pay the bills and keep a roof over our heads.
I’m not resilient, I’m completely broken inside. I don’t need a compliment that disguises the very real human cost of what I’m going through.