thesadtruthis
thesadtruthis
thesadtruthis

I have to be honest, and I’m sure I’ll receive flack for it, but I get what she’s saying. Yes, women should be able to walk into a business meeting (regardless of the unusual setting that it’s taking place in) and be safe.

What is better than a pacifier is challenging yourself to grow beyond the use of the pacifier.

No, we’re just the adults in the room who self-care for ourselves and don’t panic about the remote possibility that a partner is in dire straits at all times and only YOU and your app are the thin red line between order and chaos.

This doesn’t make you less clingy, it just makes you really good at being clingy.

“If you are clingy, of course it helps you relax more, you’re clingy.”

From a pure mental health perspective, reassurance seeking behavior is indicative of a treatable anxiety disorder and placating the sufferer only reinforces the anxiety response. (I am a worrier married to a behavioral psychologist... Fun times.) Occasionally checking up on a partner is NBD, but if it’s an anxious

I cannot imagine anything more intrusive and annoying than having someone 24/7 install the equivalent of a GPS tracker on me. Even my husband. We were perfectly able to coordinate dinner times and last minute stops at the store with mere land lines. Imagine! The feeling of restriction if I wanted to stop at a

Uh, this only works if you are already the kind of person to be completely relaxed about where your partner is or is not. My wife loves to know how many minutes I’ll be home from the office, and I loathe that kind of guesstimation - this would just fuel her anxiety. Nope.

wtf, this thing is real? Psycho-stalker material.

Not and Never healthy. Trust is the core of a relationship to grow and thrive. This is done through communication at whatever means. Knowing every detail of whereabouts of your partner breeds distrust when the the said partner does not even keep track of his own location per se or need to remember. Tracking creates

can you give us your husband’s email address so I can send him a note encouraging him to divorce you? You’re a mess.

“Sure, sometimes I’ll check his location when he’s out drinking with friends to see if he’s left the bar yet, and when he travels for work I’ll sometimes have a look to where he is so I feel a little closer, but for the most part this saves us a barrage of neurotic texts, What’s your ETA and Have you left the bar yet a

It’s incredibly common for small children to fall and hit their heads. It’s really common to drop babies. You’re tired and they’re wiggly.

Abuse doesn’t always mean a beating. It can also mean neglect, which is a more likely explanation for a skull fracture with no other signs of physical trauma (the baby hit his head).

Wow! I’m so sorry for your trauma. I believe you and I think your story is awful.