I knew she would!!! šā¤ļøšš¾
(She's gonna LOVE it!! š)
Mina: Tell us, is there other spirit in this dorm?
Ouija board: Y-E-S
Jirou: Great, your portion of the rent is 1000Ā„. It's due the first of the month.
Ouija board: W-T-F
*Trigger Warnings: Descriptions of physical abuse, mental abuse, emotional abuse, parental abuse, verbal abuse, child neglect, threats, anxiety, panic attacks, violence towards children.* Monday, June 19th, 2023 Part 2 6:32pm
Now, I introduce you to our new roles. I became the āgolden childā; conditioned to get the perfect grades and carry out all orders timely and perfectly. I was the ānanny and pseudo-parentā; directed to take care of my siblings, provide food for them, get them ready for school, help with homework, and handle any misbehaving and report only the extremes. I was the āmaidā; the only child in the house with chores, which meant I had all of them, even cleaning up after my āparentsā. And, I was the ābutlerā; I had to deliver everyone their plates, eating last, and take Jamesā dishes after every meal and bring him a hot cloth to clean his hands. I became depressed, anxious, and extremely hyper-independent, curling in on myself and realizing this is not what āhomeā should feel like. I was āmaturingā fast, and my adults took advantage of it.
Anthony was the ārebellious childā. He was more outwardly angry, picked fights at school, and sought comfort in his friends. He wasnāt trusted with responsibility, so he didnāt receive any. And, eventually, the rules and standards that were established with me, as the oldest, didnāt work with him. He gradually grew more and more distant with the family, as I was becoming the crutch for them.
My two little sisters, and soon-to-be youngest brother, were raised more graciously, still servants to the king and with the same emotional detachment. Thankfully, they never had to experience the abuse that Anthony and I had to endure. So, while they love their father, because thatās all they know, they donāt know the true terrors of that man, and Iām truly grateful that they wonāt ever go through that.Ā
My mother suffered as you put all of the parenting responsibilities onto her, as you forced her to attend to every need and want you spoke of, as you made her shoulder the finances to keep the house fed and taken care of. You, however, would go to your job (I canāt even remember which one because you job-hopped so much), come home, claim and monopolize the washer and the bathroom for hours, shut yourself in your room to watch āyourā TV, beg and call for āyour wifeā to come spend time with you while asking her to do everything for you, ignore your kids and yell at them to stay quiet, and go to sleep. This is your daily routine, even now in the present.
I left my home because of you. I was 10, and my father had reappeared back in my life for the past 2 years. After visiting him twice, he offered me to come live with him, and I took it because anythingās better than here, right? WRONG. My dad is a whole other story, but I came back after a year. You would think that would be enough time for change to take hold, but it didnāt, and how could there when the space is constantly suffocated and stifled with immaturity, unintelligence, and vitriol.Ā
The standard was to get all the chores done before you got home and without being told, which is normal, if you disregard the fact that you threatened to beat us within an inch of our lives if we didnāt do so. You did plenty of times before. Having to hide bruises with long-sleeved shirts, oversized hoodies, and pants in the summer, and excusing ones on my face with stories of rough-housing or accidental falling against a cabinet.Ā
The standard was to watch the kids at all times, and make sure that they donāt get into trouble. Once, when Malia was learning to stand up on her own, she fell and hit her forehead on a vent, while I was changing a movie for Anthony and I. I was beat and blamed for that accident, and wasnāt allowed to watch anything because my focus should be on them. Once, Anthony locked both Malia and Jasmyn in the car with the keys as they were still infants, and I was inside putting on my shoes, my āparentsā still taking their time to leave for church. After I tried calming Anthony down from a panic attack and telling James, Anthony was stomped in the chest against a fence, my mom barely getting him off, and I was punched in shoulder and shoved against concrete while you spat that I should have never let it happen. We were left at home that day.Ā
Once, I was riding in the trunk with the top open, as we got home late, and a shooting happened right in front of me in the street, us kids still in the car in the driveway. You and Mom were in the house because we werenāt allowed out of the car until you said so. You were angry that I didnāt do more to protect my siblings, that I confided in my teacher what happened, and that I woke you up when police came banging on the door at 2am. I was 11. And I had nightmares for months.
Once, you threw Anthony against the washer and beat him in front of your two extended family members at Christmas because he took too long to take out the garbage. Then, your family decided to praise you for it and talk about it, as if it wasnāt brutal and my mom didnāt have to pull you off of him.
Things got better in their own way after my youngest brother was born. I was 12, almost 13, at the time. You magically stopped. I still donāt know what changed to make you stop.
But I still wasnāt your kid.
You started to refer to me and Anthony as āboyā, and nothing else. You made sure to tell us and show us that we were separated from our siblings. You would probably say that we had to earn our keep or that we learned some lesson, but thatās not the truth. You have other kids that are much older than us, and you never contact them or tried to do right by them. I think when my mom told me that years ago, I should have realized sooner the type of man you are.
Part 1 -- Part 3 Part 4 Part 5
*Trigger Warnings: Details and Descriptions of su*c*d* attempt, su*c*d*l ideations, emotional abuse, verbal abuse, mental abuse, drug use, guilt, anxiety, bipolar depression, PTSD symptoms, eating disorder, passive aggressive humor.* Sunday, May 28th, 2023 Part 7
12:06pm
So yeah, I tried to kill myself. Emphasis on ātriedā. I packed up all my shit, so that you and Gem wouldnāt have to touch it or look at it. I took those pills, all of those pills, because I couldnāt and still canāt cut myself. And, I waited in an alley 2 blocks from your apartment in the biting cold for 3 hours, so I wouldnāt die in the apartment, your home.
That slap must hurt, doesnāt it?
Then⦠nothing.
Nothing happened happened that is. I waited 3 hours, watching Steven Universe to leave with my last chance at happiness and nothing fucking happened. āOh wellā, I thought.
So, I got up, walked back to the apartment, called an ambulance because I took a shit ton of medication that was going to do something other than k*ll me. Went to the hospital, told them not to call you for a few hours because I didnāt care to. The drugs kicked in and I was high out of my mind, couldnāt even walk by myself (HA! LOL), and then⦠there you were.
I only remember two bits from that conversation. 1.) That you got me food because I realized I hadnāt eaten in however long I was there. And 2.), That you were kicking me out, said I couldnāt come back, that first you felt guilt that switched to anger, that you're "shipping me back to my mom", that what would I think if Gem found me dead in my room, and what would it be like for you both to have to find a new place. And I said, āIām sorryā.
And I still have more sorry's to give. I know that what I just said was hurtful and unfair and completely victimizing myself, even if it is my side of the story. Iām so sorry for that. Genuinely, Iām so sorry.
Iām sorry that me arriving came at a time, where you and Gem were struggling with new jobs and the eventual lawsuit possibility. Iām sorry that I was another person with damaged mental health added to your household, when you felt like you were the only one keeping everyone afloat. Iām sorry that I never just told you the truth, my truth. Of how I was feeling and how much I was struggling.
Iām sorry that things never went the way we expected. Iām sorry for not being there for you and Gem, the way you both were for me. Iām sorry that I āfed off the energy in the spaceā and āexacerbated what was already in the spaceā. Iām sorry for not seeing the obvious signs that you both needed space.
Iām so sorry for not being able to leave the house or eat without being told. Iām so sorry for not being able to find an out-patient program or a job fast enough. Iām so sorry for making you be my one and only protector and supporter.
Iām so sorry for becoming your and Gemās suffering, instead of just my own.
Iām so sorry for putting myself in your hands when you werenāt prepared.
Iām so sorry for making you take responsibility for me.
Iām so sorry for sharing more with Gem than with you.
Iām so sorry for not making my choice to say, āYes, Iāll come stay with youā, shown and worth it.
Iām⦠so sorry⦠for putting you and Gem through the trauma of me attempting su*c*d*, and the strain that must have caused.
Iām.
So.
Sorryā¦
For Everything.
Part 1 -- Part 2 -- Part 3 -- Part 4 -- Part 5 -- Part 6
also reminder if you ādonāt careā about bi ppl in straight presenting relationships this pride bc āitās not gay/lesbian enoughā youre literally biphobic and you need to see ur mouth shut . ābut iām gay/lesbian and thatās why i prefer to hearā donāt care . bi ppl arenāt single sex attracted . it is likely we will have straight presenting relationships and u should shut ur mouth before i break ur jaw. bi ppl ur valid i love u
Pride is also not pride by sweeping racism in white queer communities under the carpet.
*Trigger Warnings: Descriptions of physical abuse, mental abuse, emotional abuse, parental abuse, verbal abuse, child neglect, threats, anxiety, panic attacks, violence towards children.* Monday, June 19th, 2023 Part 5 6:32pm
Now here we are, in the present, where Iām back after 3 years at 20 years old. Where Iāve learned and grew so much outside of this cage, where I was free from the dark chasm in my life and heart that is home. Where every second around you makes me feel 8 and 10 and 12 and 15 and 17, all simultaneously and all over again. Of course, the abuse has stopped, it stopped a long time ago, but when you have PTSD, things get really muddled. And, yes, Iām an adult now, teaching at an elementary school, and taking care myself for the most part. So, whatās so bad? Well, Iāll tell you.
When Iām back in my childhood bedroom, sleeping on an air mattress, with ALL of my younger siblings, as an adult. When thereās another bedroom that could have been used, but why would it be, when my stepdad uses it to get ready for work, to house the hundreds of products he purchased from Amazon, and in case you forgot from earlier, the thousands of dollars worth of workout equipment that he uses once every 2 months. OH! And get this! His mother is living with us right now, and she now gets that bedroom. Wild, right?
When Iām back to being the in-house, unpaid nanny for the kids. To feed them, watch them, help them with homework, and yes, to correct any misbehaving and report only the extremes. When my stepdad decides heās bestowing me the responsibility of āsupervising the kids cleaning the roomā. When he comments on how responsible Iāve always been, and offers me to be back on their car insurance, even though I was never removed from it.Ā
When he comes in the door, and immediately starts yelling and blaming everyone for how āmessyā the house is, and to āget this crap off my stuffā, and āwho touched my shelf?ā. OH, THE SHELF! When he has a whole shelf in the refrigerator that is dedicated to separate all of his groceries for his vegetarian diet and his on-brand food items that cannot be disturbed by anyone else. When he subjects my mom to buying the cheapest version of all food products, but specifically asks for her to only buy specific brands for him. When he has 2 tables in the kitchen for juicing that cannot be used as counter space by anyone but him. When heās telling me about the health benefits of one of his juices (or as he calls it every time, āa concoctionā), and adds, āBet you didnāt know that when you were vegan, huh?ā. When he continues to not allow anyone to use the washer in the evenings when he gets home because he needs to wash his uniform daily. Also! When no one is allowed to use the only bathroom in the house for at least 3 hours, because he needs it reserved.
When he consistently forgets our birthdays or details of whatās going on in our lives because he doesnāt ask, until my mom tells him of an achievement weāve made and forces him to congratulate us. When heās rushing to get to where heās going and heās bounding and pushing throughout the house telling everyone to get out of his way because he has poor time management and forgets that thereās 8 people in this tiny house right now. When he asks us a question and we answer, but he doesnāt care because his focus is always elsewhere, so he yells at us that weāre ignoring him. When he impulsively decides to buy the kids something or take them out to eat, and he constantly complains about he could be watching Tv instead or badgering the kids about how much it costs.Ā
When you misinform your kids by telling them inaccurate retellings of American and Black history. When you feign authority over whether they can go out with a friend, just to forget about it until the time arrives. When you preach about respect and manners, but continue to disrespect and treat me as a child and allow your kids to do the same. When you brag about accolades and compliments from your job because of said respect and manners, even posting a letter on the fridge, but never celebrating any of us for our accolades and compliments.
When you force me to pay you and mom at least $100 a week ($500 a month) as a rent-adjacent payment to help my mom with groceries and bills, just like you used to. When you constantly lecture me about getting a car, but donāt allow the full autonomy of my finances by threatening my ability to stay in my childhood home with the payments. When you try to tell me how to do my job teaching, when you have zero experience of the sort, and try to speak in a proper manner to match my manner of speaking. When you project your superiority/inferiority complex onto me when you ask me about college, by trying to act that youāre more intelligent than me and more knowledgeable about the subject Iām literally having to explain to you.
When you constantly forget about my mental disorders and my therapy and my medication, then you ask me about them as if itās your time hearing it, even though you know that my mental health is the whole reason I moved back home. When you weaponize your willful ignorance against everyone in the house, especially my mom, to excuse your participation and involvement in our lives.Ā When you bought walkie-talkies as an updated way of summoning everyone to your room to heed your request, like a bell system that you ring when you need an attendant, saying, ā[insert name], report to the bedroom.ā, because you canāt be bothered to function independently at home or talk to your family normally.Ā
How you require that whenever we enter your room to listen to you, that we stand on the side, āwhere you can see usā. How you make my mother wash all of your clothes or prepare your shower. How my mother goes out of her to make your choice of dinner every night, but you consistently change your mind and inconvenience her, or how my mother is currently in school to get her degree and has HOMEWORK, just to get frustrated when your wife isnāt able to spend time with you. How you selectively recognize that my mom is overworked, just to blame it on us, rather than stepping up and being the parent that you should be.Ā
How you ask me to complete your online training and learning modules for your job, despite me not knowing anything about truck driving or transporting oil and that you donāt pay me to complete what you should be completing on your own, again, for your job! How you are teaching your kids to stereotype other marginalized communities by saying, āAll Mexicans eat guacamoleā, or āThose Asian people look like they squint because theyāre eyes are too smallā.
How you literally decide to manspread every chance you get and take up so much unnecessary space, and force everyone to move around you and yell when someone canāt get around you, when Iām literally taller than you. How you insult your kids daily by calling them stupid, dumb, clumsy, blind, deaf, etc., when itās because of your own failings as a parent that they donāt meet your expectations of them. How you lie to everyone not in the household in front of all of us about how you act as a parent. How you lie to your kids saying that a box of doughnuts has been sitting on your table for 3 days and needs to be thrown out, when I just bought it that same afternoon. How you donāt know how to react if the kids have a medical emergency because you donāt know their conditions, medications, and what theyāre for.
How you manipulate your kids into serving you (āhelping youā) by painting it as spending time together, which is the only time you spend together.
How you constantly speak in very vague and general terms, saying āthat thingā, āyour stuffā, āover thereā, then get frustrated and insult everyoneās intelligence because you canāt think of ways to speak in a more clear and intelligent manner, and expect us to be able to always know what youāre speaking of.
How you asked me why I never come home, and I told you a half-truth. How youāre so observational, yet not perceptive. Because if you were, you would at least have the self-reflection to be able to understand that youāre a despicable, horrible piece of shit excuse for a human being, not even a man. How you canāt even look at yourself in the mirror and realize how you scare everyone with your tantrums and violence. How you canāt even recognize that itās your fault that things are the way they are, and you canāt expect children to have that level of understanding. How you think youāre so exceptional as a person and as a āparentā, but itās all a delusion that you make yourself believe because you were raised in the same exact way. How you canāt realize that you were traumatized as a child and as much as I know you hated it yourself, you didnāt strive to be different than your father, you strove to get your chance to do the same.Ā
How you willingly and knowingly married a woman with two sons, and looked at them, and decided to treat them with violence and vitriol, instead of realizing that they donāt have positive father-figures and that you should be different. I hate you for who you made me become. And youāll never be a parent to me.
Part 1 -- Part 2 -- Part 3 -- Part 4
Buck: Wait, if baby oil dissolves condoms, what does it do to babies?
Bobby: Believe it or not, babies and condoms are made of different materials.
Eddie: Itās like rock paper scissors. Baby oil defeats condom, baby defeats baby oil, condom defeats baby.
Chim: Rock also defeats baby.
Liberals are significantly more likely than conservatives to be depressed, anxious, to rank high on neuroticism and to be diagnosed with mental illnesses and disorders.
- Musa al-Gharbi
This is a fascinating deep dive article by Musa al-Gharbi, a professor of sociology at Columbia University, for American Affairs Journal entitled, āHow to understand the well-being gap between Liberals and Conservativesā
It explains a great deal of whatās unfolding in real time.
iām really beginning to feel lost when it comes to my feelings for this guy i work with. it truly feels like i am so small in his eyes, and i never know how to move forward. this is so out of the norm for me and it frustrates me that i feel powerless around him. i keep calling him pet names like,Ā ābabe, honey, sweetheart, pretty boy, etc.ā, but i do that with literally everyone. iām so bad at flirting and i really donāt think he would be receptive to that. heās so charming, funny, goofy, and hot. but heās talking to a different guy, and i feels like iām too late. it all seems so pointless in the grand scheme of things. i donāt believe iām his type, both physically and personally, and i donāt know him outside of work. but itās terrifying to try for more. it makes me vulnerable and i feel worthless, disposable, unwanted.
this always happens to me though. i always catch feelings for some guy, and it literally has always ended the same; me hating myself for thinking it was a good idea and that i had even the slightest chance. itās so hard to not think that iām meant to be alone when rejection is so consistent. iām running out of patience for my own self. i canāt keep letting myself put so much hope and emotion in finding that one person who will like/love me when so many people have turned the other way. when all of these things are stacked on top of me, it is so difficult to find a reason to keep trying and being open. iāve been single for years already and itās becoming easier to turn off this yearning to be with someone, until those moments like now. when someone draws your attention and you feel like they could be yours and this could be the chance. but 9.9 times out of 10 it isnāt. and the 1.1% chance that it could be, doesn't seem worth it anymore.
so, who knows what could happen between me and the guy honestly. Ā but my track record shows what is most likely to happen. it sucks, it really does, but thatās just my love life... lonely.
Discovering and Rediscovering Me, while Adapting, Changing, and Evolving along the Way - Public Diary21 y/o Black, Non-Binary, Queer Individual with Dreams, and a Life to Live and a Story to Share TW: Abuse, Su*c*de Attempt, Su*c*dal Ideation, Depression, Anxiety
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