I love your take on JD Vance in drag. I agree. You’re one of the few people who tell truth. It actually normalizes him. Keep up the good work. I got hooked on your three part lessons for communication. I also love how you throw cartoons in the middle of your writings.
I’m using a time machine to go back to when that “unpopular opinion: wash your Christmas tree” video was posted so I can comment “more like un-poplar opinion”
So much pointless internet drama and outrage comes from the fact that many very online people simply never have meaningful, non-transactional, interactions with people of the opposite sex. It says a lot about a person if they see a sorority rush video with a choreographed dance and think that the obvious explanation is that they’re trying to trap simps, lure men to their OnlyFans pages, and compete for chads.
I feel like most middle-grade historical fiction geared towards girls falls into “morose little girl” books. Even American Girl books, which have a generally optimistic tone, have their share of people dying, horrible diseases, child labor, war, and poverty.
Did you ever read anything by Lurlene McDaniel? She wrote TONS of books in the ‘80s, ‘90s, and early 2000s about teenagers and terminal illness. They were called things like A Time to Die, Mourning Song, Please Don’t Die, I Want to Live, Baby Alicia Is Dying, Sixteen and Dying…my cousins DEVOURED these things. She was like a one-woman institution of morose little girl books.
I love your take on JD Vance in drag. I agree. You’re one of the few people who tell truth. It actually normalizes him. Keep up the good work. I got hooked on your three part lessons for communication. I also love how you throw cartoons in the middle of your writings.
This is so nice, thank you!
I’m using a time machine to go back to when that “unpopular opinion: wash your Christmas tree” video was posted so I can comment “more like un-poplar opinion”
So much pointless internet drama and outrage comes from the fact that many very online people simply never have meaningful, non-transactional, interactions with people of the opposite sex. It says a lot about a person if they see a sorority rush video with a choreographed dance and think that the obvious explanation is that they’re trying to trap simps, lure men to their OnlyFans pages, and compete for chads.
I feel like most middle-grade historical fiction geared towards girls falls into “morose little girl” books. Even American Girl books, which have a generally optimistic tone, have their share of people dying, horrible diseases, child labor, war, and poverty.
Did you ever read anything by Lurlene McDaniel? She wrote TONS of books in the ‘80s, ‘90s, and early 2000s about teenagers and terminal illness. They were called things like A Time to Die, Mourning Song, Please Don’t Die, I Want to Live, Baby Alicia Is Dying, Sixteen and Dying…my cousins DEVOURED these things. She was like a one-woman institution of morose little girl books.