Five_Inch_Heels
Unexpected
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2015
- Posts
- 3,640
Not big on the Stones either.I can listen to most of The Who.
Very little Zepp.
They have a FEW good tracks.
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Not big on the Stones either.I can listen to most of The Who.
Very little Zepp.
A controversial opinion off of this:As a survivor of a violent attack, I carry a firearm and know how to use it, and think more women should do the same.
Today is the third anniversary of the attack, so it's on my mind.
Like you, I do not trust my inner demons enough to let me have access to a gun. I do not think I would be here today if I had had access to one.A controversial opinion off of this:
Not everyone can or should carry a firearm and people should be aware of their own limitations as well as the limitations of others.
I cannot even touch a firearm. Being in the vicinity of one makes me deeply uncomfortable because intrusive thoughts take over and I simply don't trust myself with my own safety while handling or being near one.
And neither is even a fraction as ubiquitous as homophonia.Hoplophobia is more common than homophobia.
Hoplophobia is more common than homophobia.
No plot bunnies were harmed in the making of this post.TIL that hoplophobia is not the fear of hopping
I'm not of the opinion that most fear of firearms is irrational. That's part of the idea to carry concealed, so you don't alarm others.Hoplophobia is more common than homophobia.
I'm not of the opinion that most fear of firearms is irrational. That's part of the idea to carry concealed, so you don't alarm others.
I think most people just don't want anything to do with guns and the violence that comes with them.
I'm just doing what works for me, in my situation, not judging anyone else for their thoughts.
I just wondered what others thought about it, and probably just because it's today.
As .much as I disagree with firearms, I doubt anyone is judging you. If my wife wanted one I may hesitate, but would not discourage her, for the very reason you have one. Much empathy to you and no judgement.I'm not of the opinion that most fear of firearms is irrational. That's part of the idea to carry concealed, so you don't alarm others.
I think most people just don't want anything to do with guns and the violence that comes with them.
I'm just doing what works for me, in my situation, not judging anyone else for their thoughts.
I just wondered what others thought about it, and probably just because it's today.
Is that why hoplites couldn't get laid?Hoplophobia is more common than homophobia.
Obviously...Is that why hoplites couldn't get laid?
I mean, my fear isn't exactly irrational. It kinda gets ingrained in you when you've sat on your dad's lap as a pre-schooler while he holds a gun to your back and your mom tries to work out if it's safer to just leave you there with him and take your older siblings elsewhere, or to stay and risk everyone being killed.Hoplophobia is more common than homophobia.
Then it gets sorta ground into you when you watch your dad hold a shotgun on your older sister and actually cocks the shotgun as she's laying on the floor and you are both too young to do anything, and are being shoved out of a window by your older brother.
And again when you have a baby cousin who accidentally shot himself in the face as a kindergartner because his parents didn't have their guns secured.
I mean, my fear isn't exactly irrational. It kinda gets ingrained in you when you've sat on your dad's lap as a pre-schooler while he holds a gun to your back and your mom tries to work out if it's safer to just leave you there with him and take your older siblings elsewhere, or to stay and risk everyone being killed.
Then it gets sorta ground into you when you watch your dad hold a shotgun on your older sister and actually cocks the shotgun as she's laying on the floor and you are both too young to do anything, and are being shoved out of a window by your older brother.
And then it gets a little amped when your brain just constantly reminds you of how quick and easy it would be to off yourself when things get difficult.
And again when you have a baby cousin who accidentally shot himself in the face as a kindergartner because his parents didn't have their guns secured. (And he was okay except for some scarring and risk of fragment migration because he was so little and the only gun he could actually hold was the smallest caliber. He wanted to show his young cousins the gun. There were multiple kids there at the time; the two- and four-year-olds wouldn't have been okay if he'd accidentally shot one of them instead.)
The main thing is I *know* I can't safely be around guns. I'm perfectly calm around other people having them as long as there's zero chance I can get access to it. And I have no issue with gun ownership in general. But I do think that people like me and my dad shouldn't have guns for very different reasons.
The problem has never been the gun. It's always the person the gun is handled by. I have a couple of cousins and uncles I trust handling guns. My dad, not so much. Me definitely not.Hmmm, in both of those scenarios, does the problem really sound like the gun?
Seems like you should be afraid of your dad, not the gun. Would it have been any different if he had a knife or an axe?
You're transferring your fear to the object rather than the root cause.
It's tragic, and I'm sorry you went through that, but it isn't rational to blame the tool.
He never had an axe, but a knife was a little different. The knife was dull and my dad didn't like it when I cried, so he couldn't go through with it. So, yeah, the gun makes it a little different because it removes the effort of physically following through on such an attack.Seems like you should be afraid of your dad, not the gun. Would it have been any different if he had a knife or an axe?
You're transferring your fear to the object rather than the root cause.
It's tragic, and I'm sorry you went through that, but it isn't rational to blame the tool.
I understand, I'm not judging, I'm just pointing out that focusing the discomfort on the tool is irrational. It's understandable, and isn't intended as a personal criticism, but it IS irrational.He never had an axe, but a knife was a little different. The knife was dull and my dad didn't like it when I cried, so he couldn't go through with it. So, yeah, the gun makes it a little different because it removes the effort of physically following through on such an attack.
But, also, I never said I had a fear of guns themselves. Just a fear of possibilities around things that happen when guns are involved, particularly because humanity is rarely a factor for the person on the trigger end, and the person at the barrel end is just an object in the moment.