Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, some perfect SAHM moms who do marathons etc.
I'd run some marathons if I was a SAHMS too. What the hell else would I have to do all day with my time. They are the worst!!
No, PP, judgmental assholes with a bad case of sour grapes are actually the worst.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, some perfect SAHM moms who do marathons etc.
I'd run some marathons if I was a SAHMS too. What the hell else would I have to do all day with my time. They are the worst!!
Anonymous wrote:Of course "perfect people" exist.
I think that this also in all likelihood follows a bell curve i.e. most people are bunched in the middles and have lives with highs and lows. But we all know those few unlucky people who have lives completely blighted by tragedy and illness and at the other end of the bell curve, there are people who just seem to have it all and probably do. They are rare but they do exist.
Anonymous wrote:Speaking as someone who is thought to some as being "perfect" or "near perfect".
I was always considered to be beautiful, went to a great school, good family, parents still married, I married very very well, very successful husband, 4 kids (3 went to college for athletics), live in a beautiful home, have second and third home, have lots of friends and a good social standing, the list goes on.....to many I seem to live a perfect charmed life.
What NO ONE knows- my husband and I fight more than I think is normal, I often sleep in another room, my oldest daughter had an eating disorder (even when everyone thought she was so beautiful and skinny)! I have suffered from mild depression, and I have my share of bad days. The thing is I am super private and not even my closest friends know most of what i just revealed here. To many and fact most, I am "that perfect person" but I am here to tell you that they simply do not exist.
Anonymous wrote:I'm pretty awesome and have it pretty good. But I'm stressed that the good times might not last. My level of worry never really changes. When things get rough, I'm focused on legitimate problems. When things are good, I worry more than I should about small problems. I want things I can't have and don't sufficiently appreciate the things I do have.
Life is fractal. There are outliers, but my thinking is that - within a fairly narrow range - most people's subjective enjoyment of their own lives is pretty similar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, some perfect SAHM moms who do marathons etc.
I find that people who run marathons are incredibly boring. I'm talking about the amateurs whose goal is to finish or qualify, not actual runners who are competitive in the race. These adults are trying to pretend they have some kind of athletic career long after the ship has sailed. It doesn't impress me and it's bad for the human body. And this ain't sour grapes because I actually did have an athletic career.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, some perfect SAHM moms who do marathons etc.
I find that people who run marathons are incredibly boring. I'm talking about the amateurs whose goal is to finish or qualify, not actual runners who are competitive in the race. These adults are trying to pretend they have some kind of athletic career long after the ship has sailed. It doesn't impress me and it's bad for the human body. And this ain't sour grapes because I actually did have an athletic career.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, some perfect SAHM moms who do marathons etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My friend's sorority sister is beautiful, perfectly fit physically, went to Yale, comes from money, was president of her college sorority, cooks so well she could've opened a restaurant, founded a non-profit, is published, has an interesting and creative career, is the life of the party, has dozens of equally beautiful, smart, interesting friends who seem to love her unconditionally, a constant crowd of attractive male admirers who occasionally fight over her, and seems to get along great with everyone in her attractive, happy family.
She makes me feel extremely inadequate.
She seems amazing, I want to be her friend.
Really great, strong, high achieving women make me strive and re-plan my strategies.
Anonymous wrote:i know someone like this. she's attractive, has a great personality, makes friends really easily, and had great grades in school and a great professional career. she also has great personal style, is thin, and has an adoring husband and a giant engagement ring/wedding set. came from a wealthy family too. entire family is gorgeous.
meh. i sure wish everything came to me as easily as it seems to with her.