Lessons to teach men with absent fathers

someonehairy-ish

New member
Mar 15, 2009
1,949
0
0
thaluikhain said:
someonehairy-ish said:
San Martin said:
I'm as sick as the next guy of conversations about women being hijacked by anti-feminists, but I don't think derailing this thread simply because it's decidedly un-feminist is a fair response.
I'm curious. Why's it un-feminist?
Well, it is based on the idea that there is something inherently male about being a father, that a woman can't do.
...

So if the OP had said women generally don't fill that role, rather than don't fit that role, it would be fine?
 

L. Declis

New member
Apr 19, 2012
861
0
0
Evil Smurf said:
freaper said:
Masculinity is a construct, so do whatever the hell you want, but don't be a dick to people.
Yup.

Don't be a bigot, think about other people, don't hold conservative views. They are always narrow minded, hateful, and selfish. #lifehack
I would like to just say; there is a difference now between liberals, conservatives and the Escapist's favourite, the New Progressive.

Also, labelling an entire section of wanting family values, preferring a high standard of morals and ethics in their own manner, and putting community first (typical conservative values) as "hate, narrow minded and selfish" is "hateful, narrow minded and selfish" because they are not what you want.

cleric of the order said:
1. always check the bathrooms of a restaurant before eating there, if they can't even keep a clean bathroom....
2. If someones angry, don't let their anger rub off on you. if you can resist it it might make their day better.
3. a lewd retelling of they stumble who run fast.
4. addiction is a bad thing, seriously stay out of drugs of any kind, including alchyhal (personal experiences)
5. hopefully how to be a better father.
>be reasonable, but stern. Keep an eye out for bad behavior and stop it. spend some time with your kids, they just like to spend time with you, they fucking love you unconditionally. Don't every fucking make a appointment every time you meet your kids, and you are always responsible for your kids, they are your wards. IF something goes wrong then it's your responsibility and fault
Thank fuck, someone can understand what I mean in good faith.

Very much like the toilet rule, shall put that under my belt. And the last one is something I intend to do with my children.

erttheking said:
L. Declis said:
Your list, in order.
My list of your list, in order.

Listception, if you will.

My mother is the breadwinner in my family, easily makes more than three times my dad. Men are not automatically required to be the providers, nor is there any reason there should be.
I would once again ask you to read my post. You should provide if possible, but depend on each other. Partners, equal. I didn't say you HAVE to, but if you can, you should. Family comes first.

Uh no I think I will. Women tend to know what women want in men a lot more than men do. I have seen men try and talk about what women want, and the sheer ignorance of it made me want to gouge my eyes out. Also call me crazy, but I'm pretty sure not having a father doesn't by default lead to confidence issues. I mean Christ, I have a dad and I have massive confidence issues. The presence of a male role model in my family did absolute jack to stop that.
So you have a father? So you don't know what you're talking about? Check your privilege, as they say. ;)

And I'm not saying that men are better. I'm just saying that women don't know either. Have you seen how women discuss men who act like Hugh Grant? Not kindly, shall we say.

What doesn't kill you makes you stronger? As much as I like to joke about it when I write, pain does NOT build character. And I...just what the hell are you trying to get at in this sentence? Born of the best-WHAT!? You know, the majority of the human race didn't fight in wars, so I'm not sure where you're going with this. And you have no way of knowing that after their displays of masculinity that they weren't absolutely awful fathers.
Maybe what I am saying is that you will feel the pain of having no father, and not to let that hurt you and bring you down, but instead rise beyond it.

Remember that you are awesome, and you come from awesome genes. That's the kind of message I'm giving. I don't feel the need to bring everyone down, sometimes I like to make people feel better about themselves rather than attack them like many here on the Escapist.

You make an awful lot of assumptions here. I mean, a father is not something a person absolutely positively NEEDS to have in their life.
Indeed. But it does leave a hole, and it does feel shitty. At least it does for me. I want to help anyone else feeling that pain. Like above, or the O.P. I don't believe that everyone should subscribe to what I think, and this is advice, not 10 Commands from on high.

Also, I make a lot of assumptions? Pots and kettles, takes one to know one, yeah I make assumptions, but I don't want to be writing "Section 1.8b) If you have x, y or z, disregard paragraphs 9-13gh". It's a forum post, not an all inclusive legal bill.

This is a stereotype about being a man that never makes me fail to make me grind my teeth in rage. Get used to it? No. Just no. I'm not gonna bottle up all my pain just because it's inconvenient for someone else. Complacency towards a problem never, and I mean NEVER solved a thing. "Get used to it" is the kind of thing that if I had told to me when I was suffering with depression in high school, it would've ended with me swinging from the roof of my room. It is the worse advice you can ever give. Period.
I believe that this new idea that everyone's feelings are more important and must be shouted at everyone to be equally toxic; people just cannot accept their feelings are their own and it's not everyone else's job to deal with it. The whole "I would have committed suicide" attempt to shame me into not talking, don't care. I had depression too, so did most people. I got over it with a lot of work, and I will be damned if I sink into self-pity again.

Also, the worst advice ever? "Join the Nazis" "Is that bad?" "Well, if you really want to do something bad, you could get used to it."

Godwin's Law, great since 1938.

That just sounds like a stereotype. Firm but gentle? What if they're just apathetic?

What if they think manly things are stupid? What if they don't want to hang
Hang what?

Do whatever you want. Just do it with men. Get some guy friends. Bond. It helps a lot. Again, advice.

No offense, but so many of the things that you say men should do are borderline stereotypical, when they're not flat out stereotypical. Your mother will not understand what's wrong with you? My mother happens to understand exactly what is wrong with me thank you very much, and I would very much appreciate it if you retracted such a blatant falsehood. In our genes? Yeah citation needed. I very much prefer my alone time to "guy" time. And I end up talking with my one very close female friend more than most guys my age. And she understands me and I understand her. Men are not from Mars and women are not from Venus. We are all human beings and there is no trick to understanding each other.
I love the phrase "no offence". Say what you want about Loonyyy, at least he had the guts to flat out tell me he thought I was scum.

Right, we can now only speak in utterly literal terms. No more using emotive language. It may hurt feelings or cause misunderstandings. Honestly, I'm just beginning to bore of trying to talk to you lot with respect when all you do is hurl shit my way. But let's continue.

Yes, we are all humans. No, there is no difference. At all. We are all exactly uniform. Please enjoy your 1984 utopia, collect your non-descript uniform at the door.

I'm honestly offended. I am offended as a man that you think that this is what I should be doing and what all other men should be doing. This advice, whether it be for a person without a father or not, is just horrifically stereotypical, based more on tradition than hard fact.
You're offended? So what?

Get used to it. If you were used to it, you wouldn't be offended. Grow a thicker skin. Je Suis Charlie.

I don't care if you're male or female. But I don't respect people who insult me and then demand I apologise for their hurt feelings.

Let them be who THEY want to be.
Did I say must? Or did I give advice?

I believe you're the person who is telling everyone what they must do, apologise for this, stop saying that, do not speak of this, do not give advice.
 

gorfias

Unrealistic but happy
Legacy
May 13, 2009
7,435
2,011
118
Country
USA
thaluikhain said:
Gorfias said:
thaluikhain said:
Personally, I don't see why having a father matters, so long as there is a stable household with time for the kids. If you've got uncles, or two mothers, or one mother that isn't working all the time. I think there is too much concern over traditional families.
I think you'll need government intervention to make this "stable household".
Why? Why does someone who isn't the biological father need government intervention? Does this apply to adoptive fathers?
Because as a matter of social convention, I don't expect, in any broad sense, for the alternative, to be something typically other than a single mom. One woman, by herself will, in relative terms, need subsidy to keep up with traditional, "stable" homes.

Other arrangements, as you suggest, are possible. I just have no expectation of them. You write you cannot see why having a father matters. Some ideas: they bring money into the house. They have an easier time opening pickle jars and doing other heavy lifting chores. And they teach young males about socialization, and teach daughters about what they should demand from a man.

I have no expectation, that in broad terms, someone else can pick up this slack. That, to me, makes the institution of father important.

Gorfias said:
I've had to tell my boy many times that girls are different and delicate. Behave.
Yeah, I think that's the problem there.
What? That a father has to break up physical fights between his son and daughter on a regular basis for several of their early years? And, being a good dad, lecture the boy why he must not hit back? Yeah. Sucks. Happens. Expect it if you have kids. Again, a mom can do it, but instructing the boy not to hit the girl sounds more self serving coming from a woman. I expect the difference to result in a decline in gentlemen. Agreed?
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,439
4,071
118
someonehairy-ish said:
So if the OP had said women generally don't fill that role, rather than don't fit that role, it would be fine?
That's still talking about gender roles, though. It's saying that there is something wrong with not having a father, because that role is going unfulfilled.

Gorfias said:
Because as a matter of social convention, I don't expect, in any broad sense, for the alternative, to be something typically other than a single mom.
Ah, ok, if you are going to equate "lack of father" to "single mother". I'd say it's important not to do this, because there are plenty of alternatives, though, yes, that does seem to be the most common one.

Gorfias said:
One woman, by herself will, in relative terms, need subsidy to keep up with traditional, "stable" homes.
All else being equal, though, which is hardly a given. Middle class single mothers may well be earning more than low class traditional families.

Gorfias said:
I expect the difference to result in a decline in gentlemen. Agreed?
You first have to define "gentlemen" and explain why it is important, though.

If the definition is socially different from what women are expected to be (that is, except as a reaction to a society that views them as different), there's a problem there.
 

gorfias

Unrealistic but happy
Legacy
May 13, 2009
7,435
2,011
118
Country
USA
thaluikhain said:
Gorfias said:
One woman, by herself will, in relative terms, need subsidy to keep up with traditional, "stable" homes.
All else being equal, though, which is hardly a given. Middle class single mothers may well be earning more than low class traditional families.
Yes but, pickle jars.


Gorfias said:
I expect the difference to result in a decline in gentlemen. Agreed?
You first have to define "gentlemen" and explain why it is important, though.[/quote]

I recall a story of a newly wed getting between a shark and his bride. He punched the shark. He died, but saved her. That kind of sacrifice. Important?

A story like this disgusts me. This crew was not comprised of gentlemen...

http://abcnews.go.com/International/cruise-ship-captain-detained-sinking/story?id=15361760
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,439
4,071
118
Gorfias said:
I recall a story of a newly wed getting between a shark and his bride. He punched the shark. He died, but saved her. That kind of sacrifice. Important?
Honestly? Not really. The vast majority of people will not ever be put in the position of having to choose to save someone's life at the cost of their own. Because of this, we've no way of telling if someone would do that or not. We can hardly take their word on it.

Alternatively, what if it was the other way around, the bride saving the husband at the cost of her own life? Would that make a difference?

Gorfias said:
A story like this disgusts me. This crew was not comprised of gentlemen...

http://abcnews.go.com/International/cruise-ship-captain-detained-sinking/story?id=15361760
Oh sure, that's appalling. However, it'd be no less appalling if the crew was comprised entirely of women. They haven't failed to be gentlemen (specifically), they've failed to uphold fairly basic standards of behaviour that should be applied to everyone.
 

VanQ

Casual Plebeian
Oct 23, 2009
2,729
0
0
Phasmal said:
VanQ said:
The thing is, we all think what we know ourselves and what we want better than anyone else but that's almost always a product of our culture. I remember reading an article by a female dating coach once where people all said they'd prefer "authentic italian pasta sauce" but when the authentic, watery kind of sauce and a store shelf pre-jarred sauce were presented to them blindly, every person that answered "authentic" said they preferred the less watery sauce.
I guess the problem I have with this is that a guy who wanted to go out with me a couple of years back internalised it as `women don't know what they want, so if they tell you what they want, they're wrong`.
He decided that what I wanted was for someone to open doors for me, take things out of my hands to carry them for me, someone to quote poetry at me and treat me like the delicate flower I am.


I guess generalising too much when giving dating advice is a bad idea.
It sounds to me like you came across a stereotypical, self styled nice guy. A part of me wants to feel bad for him but...
Did he actually read you poetry?​


Jesus, I haven't ever actually heard of any guy actually doing that in real life. Nobody deserves that. Nobody.
 

Tsun Tzu

Feuer! Sperrfeuer! Los!
Legacy
Jul 19, 2010
1,620
83
33
Country
Free-Dom
Well...my parents divorced when I was about, I want to say three to four. I was old enough to remember events surrounding it and those memories aren't particularly cherished.

Dad tried to stay in my life as much as possible, but was usually limited to every other weekend, if that, and in spite of it, when he was around, he was an awesome, supportive father. The 'problem' is that he isn't really a 'HYPAR MASKULIN' sort of guy nowadays. If anything, he's on the nerdier, more docile side of things...but he's a strong dude and has a a plethora of stories from his youth (including a hazing incident in college where he'd wound up gripping, and unable to let go of, an electric fence).

I will say that I'm quite a damned bit like him, just without the successful career, self-assuredness, and general know how.

The 'fun' thing is that HIS father was an abusive drunk who used to beat my grandmother. He grew up in that environment and, subsequently, did everything in his power to NOT be that way.

As for general advice, OP?

I just wish I'd been taught how to fix cars. I'd be saving quite a lot of money.

Aside from that, a basic sense of self worth is paramount. Telling a kid that they're "worthless" or "won't amount to anything" can result in two things. One: They'll meet those expectations. Two: They'll do everything they can to rebel against the notion and, maybe, succeed.

Balance it with humility and a healthy dose of empathy and you're...I don't want to say 'set,' but you'd be a much better person for having been taught such things.

I know the above sound like basic things that everyone 'should already know', but, sadly, that's not the world we all live in.

OH!

And if you're a parent and divorced? Don't take every opportunity to talk shit about or snipe at the other parent. It breeds distrust and irritates your kids.

Both my parents did that and it was a constant pain in the ass to separate fact from perception.

Scars Unseen said:
I would say that the absence of a positive role model(of any gender) is less of a problem than the inescapable presence of a negative one.
This actually makes the most sense to me.

A positive role model can be found with relative ease, especially with how much the entire world has opened up to people over the last decade or two, but a negative, persistent, oppressive presence is, at best, a hindrance and, at worst, the center of a vortex some people just can't escape.

Edit: Honestly, this subject, as well as many others, can be stripped down to a simple phrase,

"Just don't be a dick."

Which, 'gendered' insult aside, applies to everyone, no matter what they do or don't have between their legs.
 

Erttheking

Member
Legacy
Oct 5, 2011
10,845
1
3
Country
United States
L. Declis said:
That isn't funny.

I don't see how saying "You don't HAVE to but you should" is any better than saying that the men has to be the breadwinner. Wouldn't the ideal

You said that the presence of a male role model would help solve that. I have a male role model, and it did't. Therefore, your advice has proven to be unhelpful. So no, I won't check my privilege.

You're saying women don't know what women want? Wow. Just wow man. You know, I've actually TALKED to women on what they want to see in men, and honestly I've found it to be a very enlightening experience. Not that many, but enough to know that they kind of know what they want. Either way it's preferable advice to telling people to fly blind

That's overcoming the pain. Moving beyond it The pain itself doesn't make you stronger.

That is bad advice. And it's also a lie. You are not awesome because of your genes that...that doesn't even make any sense. Well if you want to make someone feel good, you should probably focus on something that THEY did instead of saying that hundreds of thousands of years ago we killed big animals with sticks. Not really that inspiring.

Hole for you? Fair enough. Still, it's jumping to conclusions to say that everyone who's missing a father is going to be going through the exact same process that you did. You probably should've capped it off with something like "From my personal experiences" instead of wording it the way you did, which makes it sound like a be all end all.

I never said it was a legal bill, no idea what you're on about.

Equally? So you admit that your idea is indeed toxic. Sham you into not talking? No it isn't. It's me taking personal experience to show why your argument is heavily and I mean HEAVILY flawed. You don't see me arguing that you not having a father is shaming me into not talking. Because we're grown adults that can talk about our problems like that. And I never suggested the opposite extreme. I don't think people should constantly be making their emotions 100% known 24/7, but we as human beings need to let it out. We cannot bottle it up.

In this situation? In terms of advice given to kids without dads that people will honestly give them and not just outrageous ones that obviously people will never give? No. On second thought you're right. Telling that person "no one cares" is the worse advice that could be realistically given in that situation. And you gave it.

Out. Hang out.

Why are women out of the question? There's no special bond between specific genders. People are people. I know it's advice. I don't think it's good advice.

Fine then. Take offense.

Holy strawman batman, I totally said that! Oh wait, no I didn't. What you were saying was supposed to be taken figuratively? Respect? Tell me, what have you done at all to try and talk with respect? Because I don't consider strawman arguments to be very respectful.

*Head desk* Yeah, you can't say that you were talking with respect and then shift over to saying that the person you're talking to wants Big Brother to be in charge. And no I didn't say that. We're all different. But why are men so less different than women? Frankly I find the majority of guys my age to be pricks and my best friend that I constantly hang out with is a woman.

Something that has not occurred to you. Maybe I don't WANT to get used to it. Maybe getting used to things like this is how they become accepted, and maybe I think they're incredibly toxic ideas that shouldn't be accepted. So no. I won't get over it and I won't get a thicker skin. And once again, kind of hypocritical that you said you were talking with respect and when I say that your ideas are offensive you tell me to get over it. What the Hell is so respectful about that?

You're insulted? Didn't you just get done talking about growing a thicker skin? Or does that only apply to other people? And I didn't demand an apology. I'm pointing out the flaws in your arguments. Me saying that I was offended was not intended to demand an apology, it was me conveying that how, as a man, your ideas fundamentally disagree with me. That is all. Don't see arguments where they don't exist.

If you're giving them advice, you're very much pointing out the ideal path you think they should walk down. And frankly your advice is not good. At all.

Oh, I am am I? I didn't make any demands that you apologize, or stop talking or stop giving advice. If you're gonna criticize me, criticize me for things I actually did.
 

gorfias

Unrealistic but happy
Legacy
May 13, 2009
7,435
2,011
118
Country
USA
thaluikhain said:
Gorfias said:
[a husband] sacrifice. Important?


Honestly? Not really. The vast majority of people will not ever be put in the position of having to choose to save someone's life at the cost of their own. Because of this, we've no way of telling if someone would do that or not. We can hardly take their word on it.


A father and husband sacrifices in so many other ways for the good of his family. If he doesn't, I think he is a heel and a huge part of the worst aspects of our society.

what if it was the other way around, the bride saving the husband at the cost of her own life? Would that make a difference?
Yes. Sorry, the male of the species is disposable in a way females are not.

Like thinking of a dozen women chasing King Kong through the jungle to save one man. I'd be pissed at their foolishness.

Gorfias said:
A story like this disgusts me. This crew was not comprised of gentlemen...

http://abcnews.go.com/International/cruise-ship-captain-detained-sinking/story?id=15361760
Oh sure, that's appalling. However, it'd be no less appalling if the crew was comprised entirely of women. They haven't failed to be gentlemen (specifically), they've failed to uphold fairly basic standards of behaviour that should be applied to everyone.
It would be different for reasons stated. Bad, but not as bad. And you'ld be right to wonder who put so many women into a job like that, where they should be expected to sacrifice themselves for the male passengers.

To me, women and children first, including female crew (opportunities should exist. These circumstances with an all female crew? Sounds like Science Fiction.)
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,439
4,071
118
Gorfias said:
A father and husband sacrifices in so many other ways for the good of his family. If he doesn't, I think he is a heel and a huge part of the worst aspects of our society.
Fair enough, but I'm not seeing why that should be different from the mother.

Gorfias said:
Yes. Sorry, the male of the species is disposable in a way females are not.
Why? Barring polygamy, which isn't that common in our society.
 

gorfias

Unrealistic but happy
Legacy
May 13, 2009
7,435
2,011
118
Country
USA
thaluikhain said:
Gorfias said:
A father and husband sacrifices in so many other ways for the good of his family. If he doesn't, I think he is a heel and a huge part of the worst aspects of our society.
Fair enough, but I'm not seeing why that should be different from the mother.

Gorfias said:
Yes. Sorry, the male of the species is disposable in a way females are not.
Why? Barring polygamy, which isn't that common in our society.
For starters, last chance to abandon. Women bear kids and are more likely than men to have nurturing characteristics kids need from a parent (not that a man can't do it. Just less likely to have and use these characteristics than a woman).

And growing to be a good family man should be a common goal for men in our society. Not for everyone. But commonly?

Imagine a society in which men have no such goals.

Will this be the norm?

 

PainInTheAssInternet

The Ship Magnificent
Dec 30, 2011
826
0
0
So a thread about giving advice to men without fathers turns into yet another debate about women and sexuality. Because there isn't enough of these fucking threads on this site. At this point, I'm genuinely curious if people are upset this conversation can happen at all.

OT
You are not your father. You are not fated to follow in their footsteps. Abandonment is not inevitable.
 

Evil Smurf

Admin of Catoholics Anonymous
Nov 11, 2011
11,597
0
0
Look man, I don't mean to attack you, upset you, or antagonise you, this is just a forum of opinions, yours is valid, and so is mine. That's why civilised nations give the vote to citizens.

Evil Smurf said:
Don't be a bigot, think about other people, don't hold conservative views. They are always narrow minded, hateful, and selfish. #lifehack
L. Declis said:
I would like to just say; there is a difference now between liberals, conservatives and the Escapist's favourite, the New Progressive.

Also, labelling an entire section of wanting family values, preferring a high standard of morals and ethics in their own manner, and putting community first (typical conservative values) as "hate, narrow minded and selfish" is "hateful, narrow minded and selfish" because they are not what you want.
1. I'm a socialist, and not because it's "popular", but because it's fair.
2. If you're not willing to be progressive, than you are not willing to change the status quo, so what's the point?
3. Family values means you don't support gay rights, woman's rights, or workers rights, and if that's the case, you're no friend of mine.
4. Putting the community first usually means being racist, and you can guess how I feel about that.
5. Conservativism is evil, plain and simple. It's the belief that only you matter, and that you can crush people in your way.
6. Only the sith deal in absolutes :D

Woah, I went way off topic, sorry mods :(
 

someonehairy-ish

New member
Mar 15, 2009
1,949
0
0
thaluikhain said:
someonehairy-ish said:
So if the OP had said women generally don't fill that role, rather than don't fit that role, it would be fine?
That's still talking about gender roles, though. It's saying that there is something wrong with not having a father, because that role is going unfulfilled.
It's saying that male children might want a male role model to talk to and learn from whilst growing up. How is such an innocuous idea such a problem?

PainInTheAssInternet said:
So a thread about giving advice to men without fathers turns into yet another debate about women and sexuality. Because there isn't enough of these fucking threads on this site. At this point, I'm genuinely curious if people are upset this conversation can happen at all.
Well duh, if you let men have conversations about men with other men, that's how the patriarchy gets in. And then we'd all be fucked. Therefore every conversation has to be policed by feminists, for all our sakes.
 

wulf3n

New member
Mar 12, 2012
1,394
0
0
TheSlothOverlord said:
wulf3n said:
erttheking said:
We as a society are way too attached to roles that aren't as vital as people like to pretend they are.
erttheking said:
Let them be who THEY want to be.
You don't see the hypocrisy in this?
Where's the hypocrisy?
The first post criticizes people for being who they want to be. The Second says let people be who they want to be.
 

Secondhand Revenant

Recycle, Reduce, Redead
Legacy
Oct 29, 2014
2,566
141
68
Baator
Country
The Nine Hells
Gender
Male
wulf3n said:
TheSlothOverlord said:
wulf3n said:
erttheking said:
We as a society are way too attached to roles that aren't as vital as people like to pretend they are.
erttheking said:
Let them be who THEY want to be.
You don't see the hypocrisy in this?
Where's the hypocrisy?
The first post criticizes people for being who they want to be. The Second says let people be who they want to be.
Pretty sure pretending this nonsense is vital and pushing it around society is a bit more than that but hey lets rephrase everything dishonestly instead
 

wulf3n

New member
Mar 12, 2012
1,394
0
0
Secondhand Revenant said:
wulf3n said:
TheSlothOverlord said:
wulf3n said:
erttheking said:
We as a society are way too attached to roles that aren't as vital as people like to pretend they are.
erttheking said:
Let them be who THEY want to be.
You don't see the hypocrisy in this?
Where's the hypocrisy?
The first post criticizes people for being who they want to be. The Second says let people be who they want to be.
Pretty sure pretending this nonsense is vital and pushing it around society is a bit more than that but hey lets rephrase everything dishonestly instead
What did I reprhase?
 

Secondhand Revenant

Recycle, Reduce, Redead
Legacy
Oct 29, 2014
2,566
141
68
Baator
Country
The Nine Hells
Gender
Male
wulf3n said:
Secondhand Revenant said:
wulf3n said:
TheSlothOverlord said:
wulf3n said:
erttheking said:
We as a society are way too attached to roles that aren't as vital as people like to pretend they are.
erttheking said:
Let them be who THEY want to be.
You don't see the hypocrisy in this?
Where's the hypocrisy?
The first post criticizes people for being who they want to be. The Second says let people be who they want to be.
Pretty sure pretending this nonsense is vital and pushing it around society is a bit more than that but hey lets rephrase everything dishonestly instead
What did I reprhase?
Oh I'm so sorry! I didn't see the part in his first post where he said he didn't like them being who they want to be!

In fact I still don't and see him being displeased with them acting as if those things are vital when they aren't. It's almost as if you substituted "being who they want to be with "way too attached to roles that aren't as vital as people like to pretend they are"