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#and my emotions are super unfiltered its bizarre
roaringheat · 1 year
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Idk if this is too tmi to post on here but I had a seizure this morning and I still feel like absolute dog shit. Literally have never felt anything even close to how the aftermath of a seizure feels
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hushed-muses · 3 years
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Because how can a group of cis straight men who "is a good people too" deep down make up those manosphere Red Pill threads calling women all kinds of super dehumanizing terms, advocating for things like no age of consent, fantasizing about locking women into breeding pens, wanting to abolish rights and gleefully wishing for Gilead to be reality, wanting to shoot and rape them or championing the men that do, and think “yeah this sounds pretty reasonable”…there's something seriously wrong with that. It's so cute how women think that men think and act just like women deep down, men not different is one of the biggest lies a girl can ever fib up. Women seriously have very little inkling of how much men hate them. Men and women; cishet or not; who are pro abuse, rape, want to trick women, use Red Pill/PUA flirt or Play With Emotion Highs and Lows/Act Amused and Cocky with a hint of playful like talking to your little girl, etc don’t seem to change. They don’t suddenly lose their entitled, dishonest and hateful ways.
Also, who’s to say they won’t change back later on? Say if he gets in a relationship and his partner is vulnerable and more trapped. For example after marriage or a baby. If they could genuinely change it would of course be great, but I’m suspicious of their motives if they are proclaiming they have. It's like they didn't even see women as human or "not inferior" or "not a tool to use" in the 1st place!
The PUA Manosphere isn't just an incel hovel, most regular men you'd consider average and you're familiar with (even with girlfriends) use platform to blare their unfiltered thoughts too. You do know how many men and ex-incel Nazi women have been part of the manosphere before, even the ones you're dating hooking up?
But would anyone ever encourage a woman to enter a relationship with a “reformed” incel or MRA? Not bloody likely. Which hurts her even more because we men don't think of women as people and don't respect them tbh. Men don't think of women as unique either, just replaceable and disposable if over 27.
My bitch have a very dim view of men who have been steeped in that kind of hate. She been through some pretty angry phases of abuse and breakups in her life, but never once thought of killing men, taking away their rights, raping them, tricking and abusing them, etc. At her most angry she just wanted not much to do with them outside of family circle.
Exactly. Unfortunately I‘m not so sure that these types of supposedly reformed, toxic men are very capable of change at all. Its more likely they just say they are, because they’ve discovered their behaviors weren’t getting them what they wanted. They want to keep doing the same things, but without any of the stigma attached to it. Seriously, how could a man who gets off to suffering ever have love?
Women must be hormonally very dumb, sadomasochistic and so self-destrucktive to want cis straight men even when he uses and destroys her before 30. The sad times of a SuperStraight woman. Being born a man better.
Hi first of all I just want to ask: are you okay?
I don’t mean that in a joking, sarcastic way. I admit I’m having some trouble following everything you sent, but you seem angry about the differences between men and women and/or how women perceive bigoted men?
I will address the bizarre last paragraph though: if a woman wants to be with a cis straight man, let her! It’s 2021 and it’s no one’s business who they’re dating/fucking. People of every sexuality and gender have the right to be in a healthy and happy relationship, and that includes whatever group of people you’re beefing with in my ask.
Three things bother me about what you sent me: you’re making stand up for cis straight men in the first place (I have plenty of issues with them but this rant is a little much. even for cis straight dudes), it’s not fucking cool to shit on women dating non-incel cis men like that, and super straight isn’t a real thing.
Idk I’m not straight and I’m not super sober so this makes my brain hurt
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szintalikedthat · 3 years
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Hello! I saw your post about playlists and I have a request for a vibe!
🎵 + When you're feeling really disconnected from yourself but also sort of angry at everything and then your cat comes and loves up to you and you're still angry and sad but you're also filled with so much love for this teeny tiny animal
Hell yes!!!!
What makes this ask so awesome, is that not only it is a really interesting vibe that I just felt in my heart on 6 different cosmic levels, but it comes with a full blown 5 act structure, which I will be more than happy to indulge... especially because telling a narrative arc with strategically ordered songs is my favourite thing about building a playlist.
When I was thinking about where to begin, I felt like the only genre that can truly encompass the range of emotions contained herein AND even the cuteness of a cat, was none other than emo. Am I right or am I right? But I have to confess, I'm not super familiar with the emo scene, cause when it happened, I went through a phase of listening to very little to no music. And like I said, I cannot accurately pinpoint musical genres because I just sort them in my head completely differently, so... this playlist has maybe like one or two songs that are actually emo, I think(?) and is not so much emo overall as much as "Songs that made me feel like what I thought emo should feel like". However I do know that some emo bands like to have one foot in metal and the other in electronic music, so this is what created the backbone of this playlist that holds it all together - an electronic and/or industrial metal streak. Fingers crossed that this will be up your alley.
I made a spotify compilation of it all but I also linked the individual songs thru youtube in case someone doesn’t use it.
Enjoy! 🎵
1. Dissociation Every Day is Exactly The Same - Elektrik People
I consider this kind of a blatant choice in my neck of the musical woods but if there has ever been a better song written about that very emotion that you were talking about, I haven't heard it. I offer it to you now like a special gift directly from the playlist of a very personal OC who himself has some issues and dissociative tendencies. Yes, I'm talking about my OCs I'm projecting onto of whom nobody fucking asked, because I don't want to make this too personal, what about it. Don't we all? And yes, this IS the Nine Inch Nails song, but I chose this version - and tbh I like this one better than the original, with all due respect to Mr. Reznor - because the soft, slightly slurring vocals and reverberating instruments really make it sound as if I myself were hearing it through a disconcerted haze.
2. Realization X - Hatari
I put this song in as a kind of segway between the previous song and the next; it's like a moment of coming-to, a realization of one's true pain that was blocked before, and includes all the disillusionment, hatred, and grief that it entails, but is also still kind of... catchy, in a way? If you will. Song translation
3. Fragmentation Buried Alive - Otep
And there we are, the true, unfiltered cacophony of negative emotions, spoken in their full and direct brutality. What really gets me about Otep every time, is that besides some of her lyrics just being genuinely great poetry, she can speak the most simple, emo, generic words with such incredible cadence that you quake as you feel the emotion in your veins right there where she's at.
4. Spiral Victimized- KoRn
Look, I might be a little bit biased, but when you're asking me for trauma induced, frothing dissociative rage, I'm definitely thinking of Jonathan Davis, because let's be honest, no one brings it to the table like he does. That's just objectively true. There is no shortage of such musical numbers in KoRn's repertoire but as opposed to some of their maddening, blunt and grunge-like earlier sounds, I decided to bring something from their newer catalog, which encases the madness in a cleanly yet jagged, cutting-edge electronic shell, and thus will fit in with this playlist very nicely.
5. Contact Teardrop - Massive Attack
So I asked myself, "Is there a song that makes me feel the emotion of touching extremely soft fur and would fit into this playlist" and I immediately knew that this song would be THE perfect answer. I wanted the shift to be as sudden as possible, but at the same time still a little bit organic, which is a high expectation but this song has an almost KoRn-like chord progression just in major instead of minor. I couldn't have invented a better one if I tried.
6. Decision Neon Gravestones - Twenty One Pilots
Okay, I'm not even going to make any jokes about this or anything. I think this song is a really brutal confrontation about a very heavy topic, and the biggest takeaway that I want you to have from it is that, I think, there is a point at the bottom of your hopelessness where you HAVE to make a conscious decision to move upward even if you don't feel like you can do it or whether it's even possible, before the healing can start. And sometimes it really be like that.
7. Clarity Bring Me The Horizon - Can You Feel My Heart
Note that after the Soft Cat neither of the songs are really as unhinged as we started, and that is for a reason. I think that this song must have been insanely popular at a time, sorry about that. I swear, I'm trying to make choices that are not too obvious but it felt like it would just hit the right emotional beat. I think you can read a lot into these rhetorical questions, in the song I mean, but the cord progressions always make me feel a certain opening up to hope through teary eyes.
8. Power Suffering You - 16 Volt
At the end of it all, by any means I wanted to end this playlist on a positive note, so here we are. There's just something about this song that gets me every time. It leans into its own early 2000s proto-emo roots with such a sweeping, unapologetic confidence. This song be like "You're goddamn right I'm a fucking whiney little bitch with my depression and unprocessed negative emotions, you wanna fight about it? You wanna take it outside?" What else could I have for it than respect? The rhythm is mercilessly pumping, the riffs are almost bizarrely catchy. I wouldn't necessarily call this song positive on a surface level, but it always makes me feel weirdly upbeat. Once you read into it a bit metatextually, this song is the pinnacle of depressed but reclaimed power, an almost fashionably earworm-like rallying cry of healthily channeled righteous anger. I actually almost put it at the beginning because I think playlists should begin strong - I like to make playlists that either sweep you or slap you on the face with the very first chord lol - and I think this song, almost literally slaps. However I immediately realized that no, this cannot happen, not this time. This song cannot be at the start because this is exactly the goal where I want you to mentally arrive at.
Okay, enough of the playlist infused therapy session. I hope you had some kind of positive takeaway and maybe even some songs you didn't know before. Now go and stick it to the man!
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mrjeremydylan · 7 years
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My Favorite Album #194 - Duglas T Stewart (BMX Bandits) on Beach Boys 'Love You' (1977)
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We celebrate a milestone today with first ever Scottish guest of the pod. Duglas T Stewart, founder and frontman of indie legends BMX Bandits, joins me to discuss the offbeat magic and beautiful naive emotion of Beach Boys 'Love You', the band's bizarre and compelling 1977 'comeback' album, which saw Brian Wilson and a host of wonky synthesisers create a sonic world completely different to the perfectionism of Pet Sounds.
We talk about how this record showcases Brian Wilson the lyricist, the simple sentiment of tune like 'Solar System', why the unfiltered emotion of the Beach Boys is more authentic than many modern overwrought overearnest bands, the hidden sadness in 'Johnny Carson', Duglas's conversations with Brian Wilson about the record, the BMX Bandits songs most inspired by the album and Big Star's Alex Chilton's love for the record. We also discuss why people who experienced real despair and hardship in life often end up making more positive sounding music.
Plus, I ask Duglas which Scottish movie would make the best name for an Australian band.
Listen in the player above or download the episode by clicking here.
Subscribe to the podcast in iTunes here or in other podcasting apps by copying/pasting our RSS feed - http://myfavoritealbum.libsyn.com/rss My Favorite Album is a podcast unpacking the great works of pop music. Each episode features a different songwriter or musician discussing their favorite album of all time - their history with it, the making of the album, individual songs and the album’s influence on their own music. Jeremy Dylan is a filmmaker, journalist and photographer from Sydney, Australia who has worked in the music industry since 2007. He directed the the feature music documentary Jim Lauderdale: The King of Broken Hearts (out now!) and the feature film Benjamin Sniddlegrass and the Cauldron of Penguins, in addition to many commercials and music videos.
If you’ve got any feedback or suggestions, drop us a line at [email protected].
LINKS
- Duglas on Twitter, BMX Bandits on Instagram and iTunes.
- Buy ‘Beach Boys Love You’ here.
- Jeremy Dylan’s website, Twitter, Instagram and Facebook page.
- Like the podcast on Facebook here.
- If you dig the show, please leave a rating or review of the show on iTunes here.
CHECK OUT OUR OTHER EPISODES
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