If you work hard you'll have a successful life
Asklemmy
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
Search asklemmy π
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
- Open-ended question
- Not offensive: at this point, we do not have the bandwidth to moderate overtly political discussions. Assume best intent and be excellent to each other.
- Not regarding using or support for Lemmy: context, see the list of support communities and tools for finding communities below
- Not ad nauseam inducing: please make sure it is a question that would be new to most members
- An actual topic of discussion
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
- Lemmyverse: community search
- sub.rehab: maps old subreddits to fediverse options, marks official as such
- !lemmy411@lemmy.ca: a community for finding communities
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
See also: "get good grades in university and you'll be flooded with job offers!"
Relevant quote:
If wealth was the inevitable result of hard work and enterprise, every woman in Africa would be a millionaire
-George Monbiot
God exists and watches everything you do and loves you while threatening you with eternal damnation.
And he's terrible with money! He needs more money!
George Carlin, how we miss thee.
When I was a little kid, I asked my grandfather what the bumps in the middle of the road (the reflectors) were for. He told me that it was so blind people could drive. It made perfect sense to me, and I believed that for longer than I should have!
"Girls desire a knight in shining armor to come sweep them off their feet!" β my pastor
For the longest time, I struggled because I was told all my life what a "woman's purpose" was, and my desires never lined up with that. Felt like a freak because I never desired romance, sex, or partnership with a man (or anyone else, for that matter). If that was my purpose, was I supposed to will myself to want that for myself? Was I doomed to be alone forever? Was I wrong to want to pursue adventure and things that I wanted?
If my desire β God's desire (which was apparently union with a man at some point in the future), then my desires were.. wrong. Maybe/probably even evil.
So I fucked up my life trying to follow that and fit into that mold. I did things I never wanted to do because it was the "right thing" to do in the eyes of God.
After I escaped, I never really recovered. But.. I discovered a lot about myself.
I did bearded dragon rescues & fostering, I got into cosplay, learned how to sew stuffed animals, got some mental health care, rekindled my love for nature.. all by myself. I learned to love me and not base my worth on what other folks believe I should do or how I should behave. I don't have a partner who gets to dictate my personality. I got to grow on my own.
I'm still coming to terms with.. a lot of things about myself, but now I'm able to grow freely instead of being confined to such a small pot.
Don't let people define who or what you are, or what your purpose is in life. Only you get to do that. It's both terrifying and freeing, but you can do this.
Even for those us who fit into the straight/white/cis mould, learning how to create purpose and meaning for yourself is a really hard battle against expectations imposed growing up. Thanks for sharing a really wholesome story :)
get a good education and work hard and you will be rewarded.
- all colors can be made from red, yellow, and blue
- how an airfoil works
- language is immutable
- you won't always have a calculator in your pocket
- infinite growth is sustainable
That republicans are better on the economy. Nah it turns out they consistently screw it up by every measure.
It's like saying tapeworms are good for your nutrition
That you should base your diet on carbohydrates, and minimise fat intake.
Basically everything my mother ever said. I repeat a lot of it back to her now, and she always asks, βwhere did you hear such absurdities?β
That I'd never have a calculator in my pocket
That I'd get more conservative as I grew older
That if a racoon saw you swimming, it would swim out to you and sit on your head and drown you.
My fully adult mother actually feared this was something that could happen to her children, and she warned us of this βdangerβ every summer when we were young.
This is awfully specific, haha.
I was raised christian so basically everything I was ever told was an absolute lie.
Me parent convinced a few of friends that the ice cream truck only played music when it was OUT of ice cream
Christopher Columbus set out to prove that the Earth was round after eating an orange or something and that's how jesus discovered America
Over thirty years ago, I told a friend of a friend βAustralians come from Australia, Romanians come from Romania, therefore Canadians come from Canadiaβ. Sheβs been calling it βCanadiaβ for thirty years.
Weβve been together for ten years now, and sheβs just found out that itβs not called βCanadiaβ. Boy am I in trouble.
Everything's gonna be ok.
Trust me, I know what I'm doing.
You'll understand when you're older.
As a parent, sometimes it's a hope, not a lie.
That turning on the light in the car at night was illegal because it would cause a glare on the windshield.
I believed this into my mid-20s when my husband corrected me with a fuckton of teasing and incredulity.
Some that others have already said (hard work = success, trust cops), and off the top of my head:
-
That my ultimate goal in life is to find a husband, and carry and then raise children (people don't stop saying it once you grow up, you just hopefully learn that they're full of shit)
-
That "blood is thicker than water" and that your family will always be there for you/want what's best for you
That you'll be nobody without a degree. Maybe not told directly, but implied in many things that my inferiority-complex-mom said.
Yeah, I, for example, am a nobody with a degree
I was told they'd always be there for me. Then my dad passed away a few years ago.
I still miss him.
He's still with you in every lesson, moment, and memory you shared. It's not the same ever again, but it's there.
Grandma adopted a puppy when I was probably 8 or 9. It got parvo. I remember going to her house and asking where the puppy was. She told me that he was sick, so he had to stay outside and I couldn't go outside for the same reason. When I would ask where the puppy is, she would tell me that he's on the side of the house where I couldn't see him. This went on for a long time, I never saw the puppy again and eventually forgot about it entirely.
A decade or two later I found out that my grandma had spent thousands of dollars trying to keep that puppy alive, but parvo took it anyways. She was very upset about it's passing and instead of having me go through it too, she lied to me about it until I completely forgot about it.
"maybe" was how my mother said "no."
"Ignore them and they'll go away" in the context of bullying. Hint; it took a mental breakdown and violence to make it stop, back in the mid-90s.
Anything having to do with Christianity.
Sitting in a hot tub as a kid will make you infertile.
Totally an old wive's tale. I looked it up when I was an adult and found out I had been deprived of tons of hours of hot tub time.
That chocolate milk comes from brown cows.
When I discovered the truth, I learned an important lesson about betrayal.
Almost everything I was taught about nutrition later turned out to be BS
We're all equal.
To borrow from Animal Farm, "We're all equal, but some are more equal than others".
That truth is absolute. It's very much subjective. Much in the way right and wrong are subjective.
Life is complicated and things don't fit into perfect little boxes.
That people are stupid because they don't have access to knowledge.
The garbagemen did not come back looking for me every week. They just came to pickup the garbage and not to take me away.
Younger Cousin Syndrome...