1st type also typically don’t drink tap water.
They get their water from a well, actually.
When selfish pieces of human garbage in my neighbourhood decide that 4am is a fantastic time to… I don’t even know, start their fucking house party? Or maybe they just decided it’s a good time to start playing music loud enough that the entire neighbourhood gets to stare at their ceilings gritting their teeth while nothing but the thumping of bass echoes through their heads.
And maybe if I lived anywhere else besides bumfuck bloody nowhere I’d have some recourse like being able to call noise control, or the police, or… something. But the nearest of… either of those things is at least 18 miles away and will want to know the address the noise is coming from, which I can’t give, because I’m not going outside in winter at 5:42 in the morning now to try and find which house exactly is making this god forsaken noise.
I’m tired, I just want to sleep. Instead you all get to watch the cracks forming in my sanity as I rant wildly into the void in the hopes of venting some of my frustration before I do something ridiculous like screaming out my window.
it’s going to be a busy weekend rp wise and rl wise–but i’m also feeling super under the weather. not covid, and at least no barfing, but like…ugggghhhhhh.
@mietze I think this is just the ‘new crud’ going around. No energy, no ‘real’ symptoms of being sick, just no gas in the tank and a craving for soup.
Jesus fucking Christ, I just had someone mansplain my own joke to me.
I know that’s the joke, dipshit.
I’M THE ONE WHO MADE IT.
#sarcasm Okay but did you understand why it was funny? Because you might not have realized it.
Jfc - why are people like this?
@junipersky said in RL Peeves:
#sarcasm Okay but did you understand why it was funny? Because you might not have realized it.
Jfc - why are people like this?
I assume that mansplainers are a specific subspecies of human where the blood required to operate their limp penis detracts from the oxygen that would otherwise supply their brains.
But not, unfortunately, their mouths.
@junipersky said in RL Peeves:
Jfc - why are people like this?
I’ve noticed something about men and how they talk that I can’t quite articulate. The best I can do is give an example.
I tried watching The Young Turks because the algorithm thinks my politics agree with theirs. I had to stop early on. The basic format of most of their show seems to be, Ana Kasparian reports on an issue, laying out the general outline of the thing and summarizing why it’s a problem; then Cenk Uygur does some kind of color commentary where he repeats every point Ana made but takes twice as long and twice the volume to do it, and keeps talking over her when she tries to interject. The man on the show plagiarizes the woman’s report in real time while she’s sitting there and considers that a contribution. It blows my mind.
There’s three types of mansplainers, in my experience.
#1 also usually comes with “I’m not mansplaining, I’m just explaining” or whatever.
My husband is #2 and I have been working lately to break him of that habit by interrupting and going, “I know this, please move on.” (His field is communications/journalism so explaining to the uninformed is literally all he does!)
I would like to get to the point where he assumes I know everything and then I can ask specifically what I don’t know.
I am HARDCORE #2 here and yes, it’s largely from fear of being misunderstood or unclear. The fact that I went to school for English and work in (financial/technical) communications, so I both enjoy words and am paid to use lots of them, does not help.
But I know that about myself, so I try to confine it to things I think people sincerely don’t know or that I think I’ve explained badly and thus need repeating, again, and maybe one more time for good measure, just to be sure, because I’m probably rambling…
Not, like, staring someone in the face and explaining what they just said.
Basically I think that I’m the blathering idiot in the conversation, not the other way around. I have far more patience for people who seem to be doing the same than people who seem to be doing the opposite.
Is it a peeve if I’m really happy that my birthday present from my fiance was a literal sword, but at the same time, my sandal caught on tree root while walking around at the ren faire I got said sword at and likely tore a muscle in my calf?
Would that be a net zero peeve? Because I can’t tell.
@Testament swords are the best presents! and knives!
I’m sorry about your calf, though.
Why do I read the comments on videos talking about She-Hulk: Attorney At Law? I really have no one but myself to blame for how I’m feeling right now.
In moderation. ALL THINGS IN MODERATION.
I was a teenaged geeklet when Fellowship of the Rings came out. My mother for some reason decided that she was going to be the coolest parent ever and get me replica of Aragorn’s ‘Strider’ sword. I was over the moon. I loved the hell out of it and ran around all over the back yard with it, pretending I was a cool ranger. Shut up, it’s a really cool replica.
Things escalated quickly. My mother latches onto themed gifts. Because that sword was a hit, well…
I now have Strider’s Sword, a Bowie Knife, a Kukri that my grandfather received as a gift when he was an ambassador, a survival knife with flint, a machete, a dagger…
It all sits in my closet. Whenever I move, I dread the ‘I’m carrying so many knives’ car ride and try my damnedest to obey all traffic laws. To this day I dread Christmas, as there seems to be about a solid 45% chance that my amount of cutlery will continue to grow.
I will say that the one time I thought I had a home invader, it was very reassuring to flip the lights on, roll out of bed, and break out THE MACHETE AND THE KUKRI.
… it was just the apartment settling, but damn it, I was so ready.
@Solstice If you’re going to fight someone in a contained area such as an apartment, smaller blades work better. So I highly approve of the Kukri, as it’s one of my favorite small blades. Because it was literally designed for decapitation. And the fact that, traditionally, soldiers who carried that knife were terrifying.
Another fun fact, most sailors or pirates on sailing vessels didn’t carry cutlasses or other swords, most generally carried hand axes, as they doubled as weapons and as tools. Much easier to fight when being boarded and in the ship’s lower decks.
@Solstice I have little experience burglarizing places but I think it’s fair to say if I engaged in nocturnal activities of this sort then running into a kukri-and-machette combo would make me reconsider my life’s choices in an awful hurry.
Please don’t tell my mother that axes exist.