• 15 Posts
  • 543 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • Dang, it’s pretty common behavior, unfortunately. I’ve been guilty of it.

    You’ve recognized your manipulating behavior; that means you can change it.

    It doesn’t sound like you should interact with this woman you’re referring to any more, because an apology may not help her with what’s already happened and being around you at all could upset her more.

    But the world is big and keeps going on. You could try to make amends by being supportive and helpful to other people, even those you don’t know yet, counter your negative experiences with positive ones.

    Maybe one day after you’re more in control of those manipulative tendencies, the opportunity will come up for you to apologize.

    If it doesn’t, it doesn’t, but you can become a positive experience in people’s lives going forward, regardless.


  • Yes, questions you know the answer to is a good option, but the way the person answers you can confuse the truth anyway through indirect methods.

    Are they making you doubt your own experiences and memories so their story becomes more plausible?

    Do they suggest their poor behavior is actually your fault?

    Any time you bring up an issue to someone and rather than directly addressing the issue, the person brushes aside the issue to focus on a new topic, especially one that implicates or blames you, that’s a huge red flag signaling manipulation and you should be on guard.

    If they keep doing it and you find yourself stuck or trapped in the conversation, maybe admitting guilt you aren’t sure you own or even agreeing with something you know is incorrect, the sooner you leave, physically just walk away from them, and keep walking away, the better.

    If you’re getting turned around in a conversation, the longer you let them tell you stories, the more convincing those stories will become and can harm your wellbeing.







  • Rarely as a kid, but I pushed for adult discussions when I got older because otherwise I would never talk to them and it was clear they wanted to talk to me.

    They only wanted to talk about inconsequential things, which is boring so no thanks.

    So whenever I talked to my mom or dad after like 25 or something, I resolved to only talk about things I was actually interested in, and to cut short in consequential conversations and steer back to interesting topics, things I normally didn’t talk to my parents about (drugs, relationships, philosophy), and eventually one topic or another got their attention (my mom told me about smoking pot in high school), and I continue trying to be as honest as I could with them because I don’t want a relationship with someone comprised entirely of small talk, but I don’t want to ignore my parents either.

    I definitely think there’s a correlation between how you’re brought up and your relationship with your parents now, my parents implicitly taught me not to bring up consequential life topics to them as a child, and I had to recognize and actively fight against that terrible lesson as an adult in order to have any sort of mature, human relationship with either of them.






  • Varyk@sh.itjust.workstoComic Strips@lemmy.worldAging 🫠
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    4 months ago

    that’s really interesting. I listened to a podcast with one of the writers, or maybe the creator, I can’t remember right now, and he talked about how sincere everybody was about creating the superhero who could actually change the cultural lack of concern about climate change.

    and what’s super cool is like statistically and culturally, it looks like the show worked.

    like yeah everything is still fucked, but it would have been way worse a generation earlier if a bunch of awesome nerds didn’t make Captain planet for generation x so they would become horrified over climate change.

    [here it is] (https://share.google/H4LaAuoFDf6AS01Al)