Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“I don’t own a tv” people. Not owning a TV isn’t a personality and it doesn’t even count if you still watch everything just on a computer or phone.
Yes! My friend has a sibling like this. She visits often so I’ve hung out multiple times. I was impressed by the no TV thing until years later I found out she had a DvD player and then later multiple streaming services (literally like 5-6 of them)! But, yet I must have heard 30+times over the years from her that she had no TV. I realize now why my friend was silent when this came up.
Anonymous wrote:Being chronically ill with something bizarre (Ehler Danlos anyone) yet simultaneously constantly traveling/hiking
Anonymous wrote:The kind of cancer survivors who use it as a trump card or demand that everybody praise their courage. Persevering through medical treatment is an amazing thing, I am sincerely happy for them and wish all the best. But people survive all kinds of life threatening conditions without making it their identity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Living in New York
This one is great. Not only do they make it their life’s mission to convince the world that New York City is the greatest thing ever, they also feel compelled to belittle every other place on earth for being too small, too boring, too placid, uninspiring, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their ethnicity, if they are a third+ generation American, usually White. Nobody cares about your 19th century Irish heritage or your Polish grandmother and your Swedish immigrant family in 1910 most certainly does NOT make you a Viking. Just stop. You’re American. People from your “ancestral homelands” roll their eyes at you.
I'd pay to see you go to Boston and say this out loud in an Irish bar. Then I'd drive you to the North End myself to see what you have to say about Italians.
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Shotgun!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Living in New York
This one is great. Not only do they make it their life’s mission to convince the world that New York City is the greatest thing ever, they also feel compelled to belittle every other place on earth for being too small, too boring, too placid, uninspiring, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Making your high school or college part of your identity. Even worse are the parents of the students who make their child’s educational choices part of their identity.
Omg this a million times. The parents who have more school spirit for their kid’s college than I ever had while I was actually in school. And people who graduated 10 years ago but still wear their school sweatshirts, hats, license plate frame, key chain, baby onesies, etc. for their Ivy all while pretending they’re not hung up on status.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Boy moms
As a mom who has 3 boys, no girls I so wish this would die.
You are a mom of boys, not a #boymom. We know the difference!
+1
I hate the "boy mom" or "girl dad" thing. Way to perpetuate sexism. I would love and raise to the best of my ability whatever gener God gave me. I very much love my 2 children.
I am a mom of boys, not a #boymom, but I find it odd when people act like there are no differences on average. I work with mainly girls, and parent boys. The stereotypes exist for a reason. I love all their different personalities, one isn’t better than the other.
I don’t think anyone believes there are no differences. #boymom isn’t about ignoring differences, it’s about ignoring or excusing bad behavior based on gender. “Boys will be boys,” wink wink.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their ethnicity, if they are a third+ generation American, usually White. Nobody cares about your 19th century Irish heritage or your Polish grandmother and your Swedish immigrant family in 1910 most certainly does NOT make you a Viking. Just stop. You’re American. People from your “ancestral homelands” roll their eyes at you.
I'd pay to see you go to Boston and say this out loud in an Irish bar. Then I'd drive you to the North End myself to see what you have to say about Italians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their ethnicity, if they are a third+ generation American, usually White. Nobody cares about your 19th century Irish heritage or your Polish grandmother and your Swedish immigrant family in 1910 most certainly does NOT make you a Viking. Just stop. You’re American. People from your “ancestral homelands” roll their eyes at you.
I'd pay to see you go to Boston and say this out loud in an Irish bar. Then I'd drive you to the North End myself to see what you have to say about Italians.
Anonymous wrote:Living in New York