no boys allowed in the room!!!!

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i used to daydream little fictions all the time, like ALL THE TIME, but when i started taking antidepressants the urge dropped off significantly. these days i miss the deep emotional resonance of a really good daydream, even though i recognize it was starting to become an avoidant behavior.

also <3 you telling people off, Crabbits!

the dreaded Laramie (reddening), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 01:58 (eleven years ago)

i daydream a lot, like habitually I do it when I go to bed because it's sort of like telling myself a bedtime story & I just make up something that I want to do or think about a place I want to visit and start coloring it all in til I fall asleep

i sometimes dream about unexpectedly meeting [insert adored celeb crush] and having a long conversation with them
def daydream about REALLY TELLING SOMEONE
daydream about how I would decorate my Brady-Bunch-esque ranch home

and other things :D

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 01:58 (eleven years ago)

man my mom just bought a 1970s style ranch house in North Dakota – it's got gold veined mirrors and red shag carpet on the den walls and everything
a wall with wooden shingles
she's going to redecorate of course >:C

never say goodbye before leaving chat room (Crabbits), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 02:03 (eleven years ago)

http://i45.photobucket.com/albums/f86/igotabeefpastry/Untitled.jpg

freaking look at this

well, except, don't look at the ceiling

never say goodbye before leaving chat room (Crabbits), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 02:09 (eleven years ago)

Omg
Dying

La Lechera, Tuesday, 25 November 2014 02:24 (eleven years ago)

wowwww

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 02:49 (eleven years ago)

my inlaws had a ranch house -- i was so excited to see inside the first time I visit, and I walk into the living room and the full-size stone fireplace that I had always dreamed of was PAINTED WHITE D:

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 02:51 (eleven years ago)

i daydream a lot, like habitually I do it when I go to bed because it's sort of like telling myself a bedtime story & I just make up something that I want to do or think about a place I want to visit and start coloring it all in til I fall asleep

!!!!!!! All my life! My parents used to make us go to bed really early because #oldfashionedparenting so I had plenty of time to lie awake, forbidden from reading, to make things up. During times of job or life stress I use a pleasant reverie to self-soothe and feel positive emotions until I can fall asleep. I know things are bad when I don't feel like I even deserve those good feelings & can't find that good place, but that hasn't happened in a long time. In fact since I'm preeeetty (mostly) happily booed up these days, I don't have romantic daydreams anymore, it's almost hard to find things to idealize about!

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 18:47 (eleven years ago)

Having plenty of money and a roommate who cleans, I guess.

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 18:49 (eleven years ago)

Let me just tell you many of my childhood daydreams were based on Star Wars. I was not Princess Leia in them tho. I made up my own character so there would be an even balance of girls & boys (Luke, Leia, Han, me--obv).

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 18:50 (eleven years ago)

It was difficult to reconcile my dreams of being able to do magic and fly, courtesy of all my fairy tale & fantasy reading, with the Christian teachings against witchcraft. I was somewhat concerned that I was sinning in my imagination. But Star Wars was fine.

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Tuesday, 25 November 2014 19:00 (eleven years ago)

i have long reality-avoiding daydreams all the time and the storylines last for weeks and then are retired. lol. i have done this since i was a kid! how much time have i lost to daydreaming? i kind of treat it as an indulgence now and moderate it accordingly. i'm so glad to read other adults talking about daydreaming!

jello my future biafriend (roxymuzak), Wednesday, 26 November 2014 19:53 (eleven years ago)

It was difficult to reconcile my dreams of being able to do magic and fly, courtesy of all my fairy tale & fantasy reading, with the Christian teachings against witchcraft.

― Orson Wellies (in orbit), Tuesday, November 25, 2014 7:00 PM (Yesterday)

omg when I was a kid I would fantasize about trying to resist satan if he showed up to tempt me
i was v v afraid of getting possessed by the devil but my dad told me it can only happen if you permit him
i would practice saying no to him in my daydreams
the only one where i felt really nervous was the devil offering to let me have a pet dog
i wasn't sure i could resist

never say goodbye before leaving chat room (Crabbits), Thursday, 27 November 2014 00:03 (eleven years ago)

also i remember my friend telling me that she liked to daydream about having both her legs broken and a man touching her and her not being able to resist
i was unable to figure out why it made me uncomfortable but it did

never say goodbye before leaving chat room (Crabbits), Thursday, 27 November 2014 00:04 (eleven years ago)

Rememmmmmber when we were joking about making a set of guidelines for finding a therapist?

http://www.blackgirldangerous.org/2014/12/going-therapy-qtpoc-without-harmed-erased-baffled-therapy-horror-stories-may-heard/

You should not have to teach your therapist about race, gender, class, etc. This is something they should know or recognize they don’t know and make effort to learn. If you find yourself continuously spending time in session explaining basic things about your identity that can be learned about in a book, find someone else. Conversely, if the therapist is spending a lot of time telling you about themselves, particularly when it does not further your own insight, this is a sign of poor boundaries. You are there for you, not them. Seek support elsewhere.

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Monday, 1 December 2014 16:15 (eleven years ago)

the only one where i felt really nervous was the devil offering to let me have a pet dog
i wasn't sure i could resist

― never say goodbye before leaving chat room (Crabbits), Thursday, November 27, 2014 12:03 AM (4 days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Abbs I seriously love you so much.

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Monday, 1 December 2014 16:15 (eleven years ago)

here is my definition of a certain kind of late bloomer, based on personal experience & some observation
- everyone else has had their period & you haven't
- everyone around you has had their period & you haven't
it's a pretty brutal combo

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Saturday, 6 December 2014 00:43 (eleven years ago)

ok I said the same thing 2x >:(
first item should be
everyone around you does not believe in santa but you still do even though all the evidence is against it

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Saturday, 6 December 2014 00:44 (eleven years ago)

that was me too

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 6 December 2014 00:49 (eleven years ago)

and me

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Saturday, 6 December 2014 13:37 (eleven years ago)

i didn't get my period until i was 15 and at 13 i saw a medical thing on tv where a girl who hadn't had hers was diagnosed XXY upon the discovery of a testical. i walked around for two years paranoid I was going to grow balls.

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Saturday, 6 December 2014 13:38 (eleven years ago)

I got mine at 15 too but I didn't believe in Santa...is that a euphemism I don't understand?

La Lechera, Saturday, 6 December 2014 14:48 (eleven years ago)

It's no picnic getting your period early, either.

Speaking of, I just got my first period since April 2013. I was so hoping for menopause. Rats.

carl agatha, Saturday, 6 December 2014 20:14 (eleven years ago)

:(

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 6 December 2014 20:17 (eleven years ago)

if i haven't posted here about how I got my period for the first time the day before my 10th birthday, and I was having a bunch of friends from my new school over for a slumber party ... anyway that was very traumatic

Mistah FAAB (sarahell), Saturday, 6 December 2014 21:28 (eleven years ago)

holy shit dude

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 7 December 2014 00:25 (eleven years ago)

I thought I was an early starter but I think I was 11 rising 12?

At least you had a 10th birthday party... unlike some.

Branwell with an N, Sunday, 7 December 2014 06:04 (eleven years ago)

if it makes you feel any better, I had to cancel my 40th because i was sick, also too sick for plan B which was to see one of my bffs play with David J at a book signing

Mistah FAAB (sarahell), Sunday, 7 December 2014 10:07 (eleven years ago)

Aw, I'm sorry. That sounds rub!

(But haha I wasn't talking about me, I was talking about my number-one hate-crush, never mind. Failed joke.)

Branwell with an N, Sunday, 7 December 2014 11:12 (eleven years ago)

I got mine at 15 too but I didn't believe in Santa...is that a euphemism I don't understand?

― La Lechera, Saturday, December 6, 2014 2:48 PM (Yesterday)

naw, like you know santa, mythical deliverer of gifts and good-hearted guy, is probably fake because empirical evidence + everyone says so – but you still "in your heart" believe he's real
maybe I just mean "not having outgrown the magical thinking of a child"

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Sunday, 7 December 2014 14:45 (eleven years ago)

my parents had to break the news to me that santa was not real when I was 11
I cried and cried
I still didn't really believe them
or maybe I did, but I didn't want to
I was honest about it with my peers, too – another piece of bully fuel just handed to them

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Sunday, 7 December 2014 14:47 (eleven years ago)

when i was 11 kids in my class chased me around the playground all recess yelling that he wasn't real & laughing at me

a girl named julie who was pretending she was my friend that day tried to console me this way:
"santa died a long time ago. his brother does it all now"

which still makes me lol

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 7 December 2014 15:42 (eleven years ago)

Kara Blakeley told me Santa wasn't real on the school bus. She was a mean girl.

Orson Wellies (in orbit), Sunday, 7 December 2014 15:49 (eleven years ago)

I don't remember ever believing that Father Christmas was in any sense "real". My parents have told me that quite early, my brother sat me down for an urgent lesson in being disabused of such romantic notions, the most salient lesson of which was: "adults lie!"

I can, however remember a family conference, aged not more than 7, during which my parents begged us not to disillusion our younger cousin, who "still believed." I remember thinking her parents were very cruel to deceive her that way.

(I was not an un-magical child; I still believed in hobbits, piskies, G-Force, and the Closet Monster. I just remember being shocked that adults could lie so systematically to a young child, seemingly for their own amusement.

Branwell with an N, Sunday, 7 December 2014 16:22 (eleven years ago)

That said, at that age, my parents still believed in Marx, so YMMV.

Branwell with an N, Sunday, 7 December 2014 16:24 (eleven years ago)

I learned about the tooth fairy first when I began to suspect something was amiss and asked my mom if tooth fairy was my old babysitter that my dad used to screw and my mom was like *beat of angry silence* "No. It's me. I'm the tooth fairy."

I clung to Santa another year or so but it was pretty halfhearted.

Anyway not because of that, which was probably awful for my mom at the time but cracks me up now, but we're not going to do Santa with Ivy. Neither of us are big Christmas celebrants to begin with so we're keeping the whole thing low key in the home.

carl agatha, Sunday, 7 December 2014 16:24 (eleven years ago)

Santa comes to her daycare and you bet your jolly red butt I'm getting a picture of her on his lap, but we'll just tell her he's a made up Christmas character that people like to cosplay as for the holidays.

carl agatha, Sunday, 7 December 2014 16:26 (eleven years ago)

My boyfriend works in a group home for developmentally delayed adults and one of the guys there, in his 50s, still believes in Santa. He also believes that if anyone in the house is awake at midnight on Christmas, Santa won't visit.

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Sunday, 7 December 2014 16:38 (eleven years ago)

Tooth fairy --- Easter bunny -- for me were nbd to find out they weren't real
santa is really a lot like god though, an omniscient, jolly, caring, guy who delivers covetable goods!
more relatable than god, probably, as you can make cartoons about him and it isn't blasphemous iconography

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Sunday, 7 December 2014 16:41 (eleven years ago)

having to accept him not being real at the time it kinda felt like idk, the difference between technicolor Oz and sepia-toned Kansas

like

ok now christmas is just THIS
i can't have THAT anymore?
why?

luckily I had younger siblings so at least at home I got to play along with them for another few years, and that made it a bit easier to swallow. It wasn't like grouchy teenagers who just get money in the morning & bolt as soon as christmas dinner is done with (which is how a lot of my friends were at the time and I didn't want that)

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 7 December 2014 18:04 (eleven years ago)

idk

that makes me sound like a horribly deluded child but it was just a nicer feeling that a jolly magic fellow delivered your presents rather than mum hiding them in the crawlspace and staying up til 4am putting dollhouses together and whatnot

now i kind of feel like the opposite is kind of touching in its own weird way

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 7 December 2014 18:06 (eleven years ago)

I don't remember when or how I found out Santa wasn't real, and it wasn't a huge deal for me. What was a huge deal was when mum and dad said they wouldn't be doing a Christmas stocking any more, for either me or my younger brother. I was a proper teenager, I think! - around 15 - but it took all the fun out of Christmas for me, and I remember being really sorry for my brother who was around 11. The 'big presents' were nice and all, but the stocking was full of tiny, inexpensive, carefully chosen, unpredictable wrapped gifts (in a chopped up pair of mum's tights left on the foot of the bed in the small hours - I can still remember how the presents felt through the tights!) That was the most exciting thing ever, even when I knew it was mum and dad.

ljubljana, Sunday, 7 December 2014 18:14 (eleven years ago)

Christmas stocking is the best part! Our compromise with our Christmas-enthusiast parents is that Ivy will have a Christmas stocking and they can buy her whatever will fit in it.

carl agatha, Sunday, 7 December 2014 21:12 (eleven years ago)

It's hardly a compromise for me because yay Christmas stocking!

carl agatha, Sunday, 7 December 2014 21:13 (eleven years ago)

My mom made my stocking for my first Christmas and I still have it! I just found it tonight, actually.

http://i57.tinypic.com/vder07.jpg

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Sunday, 7 December 2014 22:12 (eleven years ago)

My mom told me the Easter Bunny wasn't real when I was maybe 9 and I immediately asked about Santa to which she replied, "I'm not ready to talk about Santa yet" so I basically knew. I also kind of suspected before then because we always opened our presents on Christmas Eve like it's customary to do in Germany. We had Christmas dinner every year with my parents' friends and then went to mass. The dads would stay behind a little and put out all the presents so they'd be there when we got home from church. At some point I started wondering why I was the only kid who Santa came to a day early.

Benson and the Jets (ENBB), Sunday, 7 December 2014 22:14 (eleven years ago)

I know I've posted in this thread before about my mom and her practical gift-giving -- but let me tell you, Santa probably would've had a more magical, heart-warming aura, if "he and Mrs. Claus" didn't give me things like mechanical pencil lead, a toothbrush, file folders, a mini-stapler, and white cotton underwear. There's only a certain amount of suspension of disbelief possible, even at a young age, when your mom will exclaim, "Wow, Santa is amazing! He somehow knew that I was out of scouring pads!"

Mistah FAAB (sarahell), Monday, 8 December 2014 00:34 (eleven years ago)

loool wow

difficult-difficult lemon-difficult (VegemiteGrrl), Monday, 8 December 2014 01:37 (eleven years ago)

haha that's incredible

pilate is my cogod (Crabbits), Monday, 8 December 2014 02:16 (eleven years ago)

Ha!
I still get a stocking if I stay at my parents' on xmas eve, which I have most of my adult life.

kinder, Monday, 8 December 2014 10:26 (eleven years ago)


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