Lottie
Community Member
2 posts
217 comments
46 upvotes
2.1K points
Dog like arson
Lottie • commented on a post 7 months ago
Lottie • upvoted 2 items 7 months ago
Lottie • upvoted 3 items 8 months ago
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Lottie • commented on a post 8 months ago
Lottie • upvoted 7 items 9 months ago
Instead Of Calling The Cops, The Museum Turned Off The Heating And Lights. Protestors Were Asking For Food And A Bowl To Go To The Toilet - No One Cared
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Lottie • commented on a post 9 months ago
Lottie • upvoted 2 items 10 months ago
Lottie • upvoted 3 items 11 months ago
LogisticalNightmare reply
Took a job as night auditor at a hotel. As I was being trained by a 30-something guy I was supposed to replace for the weekend shifts, he told me that because of being understaffed, the manager had made it impossible for him to take his one week of paid vacation the previous year before he hit the “use it or lose it” time. If the management was going to f**k over this guy who had just lost his wife and had two young kids with the one little benefit they bothered to offer, they would f**k me over too. I told him he deserved better and walked out.LogisticalNightmare reply
Took a job as night auditor at a hotel. As I was being trained by a 30-something guy I was supposed to replace for the weekend shifts, he told me that because of being understaffed, the manager had made it impossible for him to take his one week of paid vacation the previous year before he hit the “use it or lose it” time. If the management was going to f**k over this guy who had just lost his wife and had two young kids with the one little benefit they bothered to offer, they would f**k me over too. I told him he deserved better and walked out.Simecrafter reply
Not too crazy but if someone is acting drunk but didnt had any alcohol, ask them to smile, if one side of their mouth is down, take them to a doctor cause they are having or will have a stroke.Astro493 reply
I come from a VERY conservative family and when I realized I was gay, it terrified me to come out. I came out to my mom and she didn’t have an easy time handling it, but within 48 hours she was my best friend and a strong advocate. The turn around was very strange. She also told me to never be scared to tell anyone in the family, which again seemed like being set up for failure. But it really wasn’t. Everyone was super supportive and kind and very defensive of me. For years I wondered why and then one day I was at a family do with my grandmother and her four sisters - the Matriarchs of each branch of the family and the five most terrifying but loving women you ever met. They pulled me aside and we’re VERY interested in how I was doing, if anyone in the family had been mean to me, and if anyone had given me a hard time about being “special” as they called it. I said no, surprisingly everyone in the family had been lovely. They didn’t ask any more questions but told me to come to them if anyone was being mean. This was so overwhelming to see these elderly, super conservative women being so supportive, so I cornered my mom and demanded to know why they were so nice. Then my mom told me about Ravi. Ravi was a beautiful, charismatic, loving, kind, sweet teenager who was my grandmother and her sisters best friend in the 1940s. He was allowed to hang out with the women because he was “not a threat” (ie he was super gay but you didn’t talk about it). My gran and her sister’s absolutely adored Ravi, until one day his personality changed. He became dark and withdrawn. Eventually he killed himself. My gran and her sisters were devastated and didn’t know why, until they found out that Ravi had fallen in love with a boy and his parents had figured out. Ravi’s parents destroyed him psychologically through isolation, berating and eventually questionable medical interventions. Ravi’s soul was broken so he took his life. My grand and her sisters never ever forgave their community or Ravi’s parents for what they did to him, so when my mother called my grandmother weeping and screaming that I was gay, my grandmother came down on her like a tonne of bricks with all the power and might that she could muster. She told my mother that if I was ever treated differently, If I was ever isolated or bullied by a member of the family, they would have to face the consequences of dealing with gran and her sisters. Her sisters also told all their children to treat me with respect and love, all without me knowing, because they never wanted anyone to go through what their best most loved male friend had all those years ago. I owe my happiness to that man, fly free my brother, wherever you are x. TL;DR - a gay predecessor made my family supportive.Show All 3 Upvotes
Lottie • upvoted 15 items 1 year ago
Animals
I Recently Located My Camera Pictures, Which Are All Of My Dog, To My Computer And Deiced To Share With The Internet
My Mother Refused To Get Out Of Bed At 3:37 Am When I Asked For Treats, So I Climbed Up Her Bedroom Door And Got Stuck
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Lottie • submitted 2 new posts 1 year ago
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Lottie • commented on a post 7 months ago
Lottie • commented on a post 8 months ago
Lottie • commented on a post 9 months ago
Lottie • commented on 12 posts 1 year ago
Lottie • commented on 5 posts 2 years ago
Lottie • upvoted 2 items 7 months ago
Lottie • upvoted 4 items 8 months ago
Family Member Has Cancer And No Immune System, And Is Largely Bed-Ridden. We Sanitized Her Whole House A Few Days Ago. Came To Pick Her Up And Found This. Told Her Roommate To Move The F Out, Immediately
Lottie • upvoted 6 items 9 months ago
Instead Of Calling The Cops, The Museum Turned Off The Heating And Lights. Protestors Were Asking For Food And A Bowl To Go To The Toilet - No One Cared
Lottie • upvoted 3 items 10 months ago
LogisticalNightmare reply
Took a job as night auditor at a hotel. As I was being trained by a 30-something guy I was supposed to replace for the weekend shifts, he told me that because of being understaffed, the manager had made it impossible for him to take his one week of paid vacation the previous year before he hit the “use it or lose it” time. If the management was going to f**k over this guy who had just lost his wife and had two young kids with the one little benefit they bothered to offer, they would f**k me over too. I told him he deserved better and walked out. Lottie • upvoted 2 items 11 months ago
Simecrafter reply
Not too crazy but if someone is acting drunk but didnt had any alcohol, ask them to smile, if one side of their mouth is down, take them to a doctor cause they are having or will have a stroke.Astro493 reply
I come from a VERY conservative family and when I realized I was gay, it terrified me to come out. I came out to my mom and she didn’t have an easy time handling it, but within 48 hours she was my best friend and a strong advocate. The turn around was very strange. She also told me to never be scared to tell anyone in the family, which again seemed like being set up for failure. But it really wasn’t. Everyone was super supportive and kind and very defensive of me. For years I wondered why and then one day I was at a family do with my grandmother and her four sisters - the Matriarchs of each branch of the family and the five most terrifying but loving women you ever met. They pulled me aside and we’re VERY interested in how I was doing, if anyone in the family had been mean to me, and if anyone had given me a hard time about being “special” as they called it. I said no, surprisingly everyone in the family had been lovely. They didn’t ask any more questions but told me to come to them if anyone was being mean. This was so overwhelming to see these elderly, super conservative women being so supportive, so I cornered my mom and demanded to know why they were so nice. Then my mom told me about Ravi. Ravi was a beautiful, charismatic, loving, kind, sweet teenager who was my grandmother and her sisters best friend in the 1940s. He was allowed to hang out with the women because he was “not a threat” (ie he was super gay but you didn’t talk about it). My gran and her sister’s absolutely adored Ravi, until one day his personality changed. He became dark and withdrawn. Eventually he killed himself. My gran and her sisters were devastated and didn’t know why, until they found out that Ravi had fallen in love with a boy and his parents had figured out. Ravi’s parents destroyed him psychologically through isolation, berating and eventually questionable medical interventions. Ravi’s soul was broken so he took his life. My grand and her sisters never ever forgave their community or Ravi’s parents for what they did to him, so when my mother called my grandmother weeping and screaming that I was gay, my grandmother came down on her like a tonne of bricks with all the power and might that she could muster. She told my mother that if I was ever treated differently, If I was ever isolated or bullied by a member of the family, they would have to face the consequences of dealing with gran and her sisters. Her sisters also told all their children to treat me with respect and love, all without me knowing, because they never wanted anyone to go through what their best most loved male friend had all those years ago. I owe my happiness to that man, fly free my brother, wherever you are x. TL;DR - a gay predecessor made my family supportive. Lottie • is following a person
Lottie • 3 followers