(inspired by friends’ dating app woes)

  • Walt J. Rimmer
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    10 months ago

    She didn’t just think she was a witch, which I was mostly OK with because religions are weird and stuff, so I thought as long as it doesn’t reach the realm of life-affecting problems, it’s a non-issue.

    She also believed she had friends who were werewolves, she could do magic, the date of your birth determined your personality, because a planet was in retrograde good things were about to happen, vampires started the Red Cross so they could always have access to blood, and, oh yeah, along with her two mortal parents she also had an incubus second father and that she was half-demon and that’s why she liked sex when she wasn’t supposed to.

    That… That girl needed some serious help, but claimed that she was well-adjusted and fit to help other people instead. Because, of course, she was also an empath…

    Edit: I want to make something clear that it suddenly struck me I haven’t; with all this craziness that she believed, that young woman had her life a hell of a lot more together than I did or do. She graduated university while I flunked out, she found a job while I’m being rejected every time that I apply, she found a low-rent apartment to live in while I’m still living with my folks. Don’t get me wrong, girl had some trauma and had some problems. But she was contributing to society while I’m fucking around on the internet because I can’t seem to make anything of myself.

    • Rev
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      4210 months ago

      As someone with a twin with a completely different personality the idea of horoscopes has always been sily

      • Walt J. Rimmer
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        3510 months ago

        If you think horoscopes don’t make any sense, you’re really going to be boggled by its sister, numerology.

    • @[email protected]
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      3010 months ago

      and that’s why she liked sex when she wasn’t supposed to.

      At the risk of shallow psychoanalysis I think we found the root cause. She was taught sex is a bad thing so she constructed an elaborate fantasy world to justify it

      • Walt J. Rimmer
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        1510 months ago

        That was one part of a whole that a never got anywhere near finding out the entire story. With that and her stories of being damn near abandoned as a child, it really worried me as to what might have happened to her that she never felt free enough to tell me.

        I tried to explain, “Like, no, that’s normal.” And she was just insistent that it was not. I didn’t know about the believing herself to be half-succubus until later, but when I found that out, it kind of clicked into place that something happened to her and she just cannot believe that a normal person should enjoy sex the way she does. And that is… Really troubling.

      • Walt J. Rimmer
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        10 months ago

        It really was. While there were bits and pieces of this that came up during the relationship, the bulk of this came out as we were breaking up. She had been abused as a kid, though I’m not sure the extent of that abuse. At the very least, she was abused by being effectively abandoned. She said she fended for herself, mostly eating canned food she got for herself through grade school, things like that.

        I was upset for a while, she’s not someone I want anything to do with, but mostly I just feel bad for her. She was traumatized as a kid, she receded into a delusion to try and escape that, and her delusion came to define her to the point where she got incredibly defensive if you tried to challenge its reality. She had said that she tried therapy before but that it didn’t work because she knew better than the therapists how to deal with her problems, and I’m certain what that actually means is that they tried to talk her out of her delusion and she wasn’t having any of it.

        I really hope she got the help she needs, but I sadly doubt it.

        • @[email protected]
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          410 months ago

          How old was she? Because, while I don’t doubt the mental health aspect of it all, it also sounds a lot like a young person who doesn’t really know themselves and is desperate to feel special.

          • Walt J. Rimmer
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            910 months ago

            I don’t remember exactly how old she was, but we were in our last years of university (I failed out, she graduated) so she was definitely in her early twenties, 22-24, somewhere in there.

            And, yeah, no, my amateur and as such meaningless guess of a diagnosis was also that part of the delusion was a need to feel special. She talked about how most other people didn’t know the truth, they couldn’t know the truth, because she had magic power that let her know things about the world that normal humans couldn’t. You get that sort of language in conspiracy theorists and other types of people who want to feel special, they want to be in on some secret that everyone else can’t be. So I’d say that’s definitely part of it. But I also think, especially with her believing in a third parent when she was initially abandoned by her father and effectively abandoned by her mother until her father got custody of her again, I think most of it stems from her trauma as a child. Even that need to feel special, with no real parental figure for many of her formative years (I don’t remember how old she said she was when her father regained custody of her), probably stemmed from that lack of anyone encouraging her.

            But, ultimately, I don’t know. She didn’t tell me half of this stuff until we were breaking up. And I’m not a psychologist, and she very much needed one.

            • Bob
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              310 months ago

              I had a brief connection with a woman last year who was similarly deluded but in a different way, but also outstandingly kind, talented, intelligent, etc etc, and she was very open about how much abuse she’d undergone in her life, and it just makes me fucking cry. I’ve never cried about anything so much in my life. It feels like there’s no justice.

    • @icepuncher69
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      110 months ago

      What was she of you? Classmate? Friend or what?

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    Can we go back in time to when this was a sexy body for a man? This is dadbod now. I need the bar lowered back to this so I can have a cheeseburger more often.

      • @[email protected]
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        1310 months ago

        Interesting take. I’d guess it’s pure commercialism. Deadpool went in knowing it was going to be R-rated, and they broke out the strap on. Most of the movies the article mentions are going for PG-13 so they can sell more toys. That’s my take.

        • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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          910 months ago

          PG13 movies from the 80-90 had sensuality too. They were not so sterile.

          Anyway, best example of this phenomenon that I can think of is Casino Royale vs No Time To Die. There’s chemistry and sexual tension between Bond and Vesper since the moment they meet.

          Fast forward 15 years and in NTTD Daniel Craig and Lea Seydoux have nothing at all. Even though they supposedly have a past and apparently a daughter too. The relationship feels, for the lack of better word, clinical. Like just another checkbox to be ticked.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Thinking about it, you’re correct. The last movie I can think of with real heat is ‘Mr. and Mrs. Smith’ and that’s from early 2000s.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        No one is horny? Speak for yourselves, I’m horny all the time lol

        I get it tho, movies don’t have characters with any libido.

    • @[email protected]
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      10 months ago

      The folks responsible for the sexy costumes, Roddenberry and Theiss, died in 1991 and 1992, respectively.

      See also: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TheissTitillationTheory

      The sexiness of an outfit is directly proportional to the perceived possibility that a vital piece of it might fall off.

      This basic theory underwrites Stripperiffic clothing, Impossibly Cool Clothes, and pretty much anything else you stick characters into: what makes clothing sexy is the potential for a catastrophic Wardrobe Malfunction. The Trope Namer is William Ware Theiss, costume designer on Star Trek: The Original Series, who first codified the concept.

      Though Theiss was a costume designer, according to Inside Star Trek: The Real Story by Herb Solow and Robert Justman, most of the costumes — following this theory — were actually somewhat more modest before being “improved” by Gene Roddenberry.

  • WndyLady
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    2110 months ago

    They better hurry up and remake this so Lady Gaga can get the part.

  • @wheeldawg
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    1910 months ago

    That’s a day negative 10 deal breaker. I can be casual friends with a “witch”, but being in a relationship means I have to pretend I believe that stuff, and no one can keep up an act that long.

    It’s as fake as any religion. I mean it is kinda one, I think. I have very little awareness of it, I’m pretty sure witches and wiccans are different, but it’s all beyond baloney, so I don’t really care about the subtleties.

    • 6daemonbag
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      610 months ago

      I mean… You don’t have to believe someone else’s beliefs to be in a relationship with them. It happens all the time. I work with a “witch” and she’s like every other normal religious person. Wears a necklace, has a thing on her door, goes to work…

      • @wheeldawg
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        110 months ago

        I mean, I guess that’s technically true. But I can’t imagine disagreeing on something that’s so integral to you and still having a relationship.

    • @[email protected]
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      110 months ago

      You don’t have to pretend anything, I know quite a few couples where one partner is an atheist and the other one is a believer.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          Love is a chemical process, you can’t really choose who you fall in love with. There are all kind of relationships, not all are based on respect.

          • Harrison [He/Him]
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            410 months ago

            Attraction is a chemical process, long term relationships without respect are doomed to failure

    • @[email protected]
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      -910 months ago

      Don’t forget that believing in a reality beyond the senses is a religion too. All atheists are solipsists.

      • JackbyDev
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        710 months ago

        I am an atheist and I am not solipsistic, therefore not all atheists are solipsistic.

        • @[email protected]
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          -710 months ago

          I don’t believe you’re an atheist, because you believe in reality. That’s religious thinking.

          • JackbyDev
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            110 months ago

            If you want to believe that belief in external reality to your senses requires a similar leap of faith that belief in unprovably extant supreme beings requires that’s fine, but that’s not what the word atheist means. That’s not how people use it. They don’t use it to refer to people who refuse to believe in things requiring faith (as in believing in something that can’t be proven). It is used to refer to people who don’t believe in gods.

            • @[email protected]
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              -210 months ago

              Reality is god to realists. That’s what they believe in. They worship it, they obey it, they demand others have the same respect for it. It’s theism.

              • @wheeldawg
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                110 months ago

                This is so untrue it hurt my brain to read that. Realists and atheists aren’t the same thing, first of all. There is some overlap for sure, but they’re not equal.

                Secondly, you apparently have zero clue what the word “worship” means. I get the point you’re trying to make though.

                “Obey” seems to be another word you struggle with.

                And demanding people recognize reality is pretty fair. We don’t demand you to believe it not believe anything one way or the other about supernatural issues, but while we may have different ideas about what reality is, we can say that everybody’s existence does have some things in common and I think it’s fair to presume any sane, competent person can agree on that much.

                Theism is a pretty specific term, implying a belief specifically in (a) supernatural being(s) of some sort. Having a belief of any kind about anything is not tantamount to being theistic.

  • @[email protected]
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    1710 months ago

    Really depends on her definition of being a witch. For the most part, hell yeah, I’m on board.

    • @[email protected]
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      810 months ago

      I couldn’t possibly pretend to respect someone that thinks they can do magic and is almost certainly into homeopathy and astrology for very long, but you do you.

      Now, the girls who are like “I just want to make conservative Christians mad,” that’s something to explore.

  • The Snark Urge
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    1710 months ago

    If you have to ask, you’ve probably got something that’s a deal breaker for the witch

  • @[email protected]
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    1610 months ago

    Well I guess it depends on if they were calling themselves a witch because they’re Wiccan, or if it was genuine delusion

    • @[email protected]
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      2410 months ago

      It’s all of a kind to me whether someone is into crystals or crucifixes. Honestly, I prefer the crystals folks. They’re less likely to actively and vocally prefer my non-existence. But to be honest, I really don’t see a difference between casting a spell to get a job and praying to jesus to get a job. The more it becomes a major focus of one’s existence, the more problematic it is, but I suspect that both numerically and by percentage, there are fewer fundamentalists on the witchy side.

      • @[email protected]
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        1010 months ago

        Just please don’t use the crystals as deodorant (unless you have sideburns in the shape of stars)

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          That’s a fair point, although I do think they ceded first place in the past couple of years. Unvaccinated adults are now three times more likely to be republican than not. They’re not only numerically outnumbering the new agers, they’re anti-vaxxing from the halls of government and via mass media, as opposed to facebook moms in suburban california who also sell essential oils.

      • @[email protected]
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        510 months ago

        I’d also consider myself a humanist. While I’d prefer to not use such condescending language, that’s nearly exactly how I look at it. Wicca and Paganism are religions like any other in regards to spiritualism, and can be subject to the same types of fanaticism. Personally, I really like Wiccans and Pagans. I vibe well with their leftist tendencies

        • @[email protected]
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          510 months ago

          Maybe my gauge is calibrated differently, but I wasn’t trying to be condescending. At most, I thought a christian might consider it condescending because their mainstream religion was being compared to a fashionable new age fancy at best.

          Christians - some of them - think that the existence of Aquinas means that their religion is intellectual at its core, wh i in their minds renders paganism mere cosplay. I’ve had exactly that argument made to me.

          In any case, that was just a benign musing. When I condescend to condescend, it’s ridiculously obvious. Apologies for any offense - it was friendly fire.

          • Harrison [He/Him]
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            210 months ago

            Is paganism not just cosplay? There’s no continuity of tradition for pagan religions, they just picked it up because it was cool a few decades ago.

        • @[email protected]
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          210 months ago

          The ones I interacted with seemed more to the right in my opinion, but maybe I am too far left already?

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            They tend towards the left, but that’s not always the case for every individual. The ones I know are anti-capitalist, but I’m positive that there are liberal Pagans too

          • @ZodiacSF1969
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            10 months ago

            I feel like a lot of people on Lemmy suffer from this issue: they see things as right-wing just because their POV is decidedly left. I know the basic left-right spectrum is too simple, but we do need to recognize politics is relative and that just because you are further one direction than someone else doesn’t invalidate the fact that by common standards they are on that same side of the spectrum.

            • @[email protected]
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              110 months ago

              Well, there are other things too. Like how you are with feminism for example : do you see women as naturally caring and emotional and men as naturally strong and violent and providing? That’s hard right for me. And sometimes the pagan things are about some kind of empowerment or attempt at progress that falls flat into conservative or reactionary ideology.

              The most difficult though is about liberals. It depends on where you live obviously. But they tend to consider them center, or even left if they are progressive in any way. Yet I will never consider individualism a progressive ideology anymore.

        • @burntbutterbiscuits
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          10 months ago

          Well, to be fair quantum physics has scientifically proven that to witness something is to change it. So something spooky is going to be part of the human condition. Trying to define the changes that occur when we observe things is a kind of magic. In my humble opinion

          • @[email protected]
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            810 months ago

            So there isn’t anything spooky going on there it’s just that viewing particles involves bouncing photons which of course impacts the particles you’re viewing. Measuring is changing. It’s like if in order to measure mass you had to burn a thing (kind of like how we measure calories), in that case measuring it changes it. Nothing spooky, just an inherently destructive measurement process

      • norbert
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        1110 months ago

        It’s a spectrum, Wicca is somewhere between believing in the healing power of certain plants (certainly true) and full on “I can make spells that can hurt you because I watched The Craft.”

        I recently went to a “Witchcraft Fair” and there were so many people from every little niche thing. Tarot readers, crystal girls, candle spells and intention prayers, sex magic, literally dozens of different specific ways people did their thing.

        • comedy
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          10 months ago

          Tell me more of this “sex magic” you speak of

        • @[email protected]
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          310 months ago

          Is the “healing power of certain plants” about how like yarrow contains a natural antibiotic and you can chew it and put it on a wound if you don’t have access to first aid … Or about how overpriced arnica salve will cure your bad feelings?

          Certain plants really do have healing powers, but in my experience every time someone is talking about it they’re just trying to sell snake oil.

      • @funkless_eck
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        410 months ago

        sure. there are secular witches and they are generally accepted.

        you probably can’t be a secular Christian

      • @[email protected]
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        2310 months ago

        Most reasonable people have decided that everyone gets to have an unsubstantiated belief system that goes into the “Religion” slot and it’s not a big deal as long as no one makes it a Big Deal. Reasonable people have decided this because trying to proactively eliminate it is way harder and god-awful than just letting it ride (once again, as long as no one makes it a Big Deal).

  • Margot Robbie
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    610 months ago

    I support her right to identify as whomever she wants to be.

    Also, that’s a really cute outfit.