Author Topic: AzzCast Discussion  (Read 393526 times)

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #450 on: December 30, 2021, 10:27:06 PM »
it took a miracle.) Please

https://voca.ro/16cBvLwoDDNn


you diseased little shit.

My nibba squids be a lil’ bit salty right ‘bout now. I’m not gonna lie.

Fuck ‘em.

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #451 on: December 30, 2021, 10:36:07 PM »
a lil’ bit salty right ‘bout now. I’m not gonna lie.

For my own part… I’m a lil’ bit country, and a whole lotta (NOUN/AQUATIC_LIFEFORM_BODY_PART)-y.

Fuck ‘em.

Spot the typo, Toots Teats.

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #452 on: December 30, 2021, 11:15:19 PM »
https://voca.ro/124oDHL5DfEH


(Note: Al Taylor is not fatter than (PROT).)

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #453 on: December 31, 2021, 01:06:32 AM »
I think someone got a little bit rambunctious, and someone else has to do some editing, because I’m cool. Are you cool? I guess not because I haven’t gotten any fucking emails today—yet.

BUT I FUCKING WELL FUCKING WILL, now… won’t I? Now if you shall excuse me, I’m gonna go trot back into my pocket universe, slam the door, and start playing ordering a shitload of those nine-inch nails off of Amazon.

UNDER HENRY CONSTRUCTION AT FULL FUCKING PUMP UP THE VOLUME—DANCE DANCE

(And with that, a flight of banshees takes the last plate of freshly-baked cookies and screeches, shrieks, and flaps their little flappycopters all the way back Home. Have fun storming The Castle!

Because… it took a miracle.) Please laugh, you diseased little shit.

I’ll just lay here and think about Tiffany while masturbating if that’s fine with you. Check my Instagram for more!

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #454 on: January 02, 2022, 11:15:30 AM »
Rubini however is only a wannabe Boomer at best. He might love to be thought of as a Boomer. He might fantasize having been a Boomer. But he is strictly Generation X.


It’s Time to Accept That Millennials and Gen Z Are the Same Generation

Quote
Though discourse in 2021 tried to deepen the distinctions, it’s clear that young people today are forged from the same digital monoculture.

https://www.theringer.com/year-in-review/2021/12/31/22860610/millennials-zoomers-gen-z-same-generation-olivia-rodrigo

What? Rubini is the same as a millennial now? Good frickin' grief.

Actually, it does make some sense.


Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #455 on: January 05, 2022, 10:03:42 PM »



What? Rubini is the same as a millennial now? Good frickin' grief.

Actually, it does make some sense.


Unexpected abnormal situation detected.

Hyper—fascinating.

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #456 on: January 10, 2022, 12:04:30 PM »

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #457 on: January 15, 2022, 02:54:06 AM »
Search
Find a Therapist (City or Zip)

Jonice Webb Ph.D.
Childhood Emotional Neglect
10 Signs of Emotional Neglect in Your Relationship
Emotional neglect can be hard to identify. Here's how to spot and remedy it.
Posted January 9, 2022
 Reviewed by Kaja Perina (note to self: find a girl named “Kaja” and hit her immediately. Hot.)
KEY POINTS
The key to emotional connection in a marriage is responding to each other's emotional needs.
Even though it's hard to see and recognize, emotional neglect in a marriage causes real pain.
Emotional connection is not a thing that you either have or don't have; it's an action that you can take.
By kieferpix/Adobe Stock Images
Source: By kieferpix/Adobe Stock Images
Emotional neglect in a relationship is the absence of enough emotional awareness and response. It may be invisible to everyone, even the couple themselves, yet it's painful. Both partners are hurt by what is not there.

In a now-classic 2004 study, researcher John Gottman, Ph.D. found that the difference between couples that thrive and those that divorce is the frequency with which couples meet each other’s requests for emotional connection.

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When it comes to relationships, feelings provide the connection, the warmth, the fire, and the glue. It is vital that couples reach out and respond to each other emotionally.

So what happens if you or your partner simply isn’t capable of requesting or responding?

And, beyond that, what if it’s no one’s fault?

The Emotionally Neglectful Relationship
If I had to describe an emotionally neglectful marriage in one word, it would probably be, “lonely.”

It’s as if you have someone right beside you, yet they are a thousand miles away emotionally. You can see them but you can’t feel their presence. You can talk to them but you can’t talk the way you want to talk. You are with them, but you feel alone.

It’s almost as if there is a wall between you blocking you from them, and them from you. A wall you can see through, but you can’t get through. That wall is made up of emotional neglect.

How Childhood Emotional Neglect Creeps Into a Marriage
Actually, it doesn’t exactly creep in. Instead, it strides through the back door, silently and stealthily undermining the communication, the connection, the compassion, and the warmth in your relationship.

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Usually, emotional neglect is brought into the marriage through the childhood of one or both of the partners.

When one or both partners comes from a family that’s not aware of feelings and under-attends to them (childhood emotional neglect), that partner naturally continues that process.

Growing up with emotional neglect makes you blind to your own emotions, the essential ingredient that is absolutely necessary to connect in a real way with your spouse. The “emotion blindness” also extends to your partner. You may have difficulty noticing and responding to their feelings as well. This may result in an emotionally lonely partner.

If you and your partner both brought the emotional blind spot into your relationship, then a somewhat different problem ensues, because neither of you can see what’s missing.

Neither of you may realize what should be happening and what you should be feeling. With no one able to call out the problem, you are in danger of slowly, painfully drifting apart until the growing wall of emotional neglect distorts your vision of each other, and the positive, healthy feelings that brought you together slowly drain away.

The Issue of Blame
In most families, blame has no place when it comes to emotional neglect. No child asks to be emotionally neglected, and most parents have no idea they’re emotionally neglectful. That’s how emotional neglect works. The emotional blind spot transfers silently from one generation to the next.

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But, though no one is responsible for the emotional neglect they received, once we are aware of the problem, we are responsible for the emotional neglect we give.

Once we see it in ourselves, we become the change agent. We become responsible for stopping the cycle.

No one says it’s an easy “fix.” But the problem of emotional neglect in a marriage can be resolved. The skills of emotional intimacy and connection are learnable.

10 Signs That Emotional Neglect is Silently Undermining Your Relationship
You and your partner misread each other’s true feelings, actions, thoughts, or intentions very often.
As a couple, you avoid bringing up difficult things so as not to upset the other.
You haven’t figured out how to argue productively.
Your conversations are mostly focused on facts, events, or logistics.
Your spouse is not the first person you want to tell when something great happens or a problem comes up.
If you seek comfort from your spouse they often say the wrong thing.
You don’t feel like you’re a team taking on life together.
You often feel alone when you’re with your partner.
It can be difficult to find something to talk about together.
Positive emotions like love, warmth, or emotional bonding feel awkward or only happen during sex.
So What Now?
By Monkey Business/Adobe Stock Photos
Source: By Monkey Business/Adobe Stock Photos
First, if some of these ten apply to your marriage, consider the possibility that emotional neglect is at work.

Then, remind yourself that blame is unhelpful and unnecessary here.

Now, keeping the Gottman research in mind, think of emotional connection in a new way. Instead of thinking of it as a thing that you either do or don’t have, think of it as an action. A process of give-and-take that you and your partner actively do.

article continues after advertisement

Ask your spouse for emotional support, or to share in a happy, sad, or painful moment. Watch for times when they are requesting an emotional bond with you, and provide it.

Ask – Give – Take. Ask – Give – Take. Each time you do it, you are removing the invisible pain from your marriage. You are healing the emotional neglect, one step at a time.

Finally, instead of being silently hurt by what isn't there, you will be connected and enriched by what you have created together.

© Jonice Webb, Ph.D., who obviously wants to a b**** and doesn't know Jack; or s*** about the MK-ULTRA mind control program.


Quote
Whatevs. YAWN. ::)

Found the (blank) and (blank.) Semper Fidelis, wide guy.

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #458 on: January 15, 2022, 02:59:50 AM »
Ask your spouse for emotional support, or to share in a happy, sad, or painful moment. Watch for times when they are requesting an emotional bond with you, and provide it.

My advice: be ready to duck and never, ever, ever stop posting.

And keep a copy of Lysistrata on the back of the toilet so she can have something to wipe her ass with when every single friend she's ever had, suddenly decides to never help her to find any toilet paper. From boom to bust in six short days. Where once was plenty of paper now suddenly mysteriously not. And don't even ask. That was last week.

This week: use your hand and then accuse it of assaulting Uranus.

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #459 on: January 15, 2022, 03:13:02 AM »
Fake nudes.

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #460 on: January 15, 2022, 03:16:41 AM »
Fake nudes.

Stolen nudes.

How did you going to have been to get to be such a f******’ expert anyways?!

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #461 on: January 15, 2022, 03:30:19 AM »
Stolen nudes.

How did you going to have been to get to be such a f******’ expert anyways?!

Huh?! English much? :D

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #462 on: January 15, 2022, 05:02:03 AM »
Huh?! English much? :D

Whut? Dude, J* be smart and stuff. 🥱🤫🤭

#Dumbass

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #463 on: January 15, 2022, 05:05:05 AM »
Whut? Dude, J* be smart and stuff. 🥱🤫🤭

#Dumbass

I wouldn’t even try to parse that sentence but if I did I’d probably give it 25 years to life. ;)

Re: AzzCast Discussion
« Reply #464 on: January 15, 2022, 02:12:51 PM »
Whut? Dude, J* be smart and stuff. 🥱🤫🤭

#Dumbass


I honestly thought you'd be happy for me. Blast.