HIMYF, I hope, will also adopt a more modern perspective on pregnancy, parenting and children rather than treat these as the most important possible outcomes in an adult’s life, and particularly an adult woman’s life.
HIMYF, I hope, will also adopt a more modern perspective on pregnancy, parenting and children rather than treat these as the most important possible outcomes in an adult’s life, and particularly an adult woman’s life.
The man seems designed to be someone’s post-divorce fling. I bet she’s having a great time.
Has anyone noticed Kanye is literally living his life depicted in his song “gold digger”?
She’s tweeting, and is mad about comments, possibly those here.
I agree. The switch to the author’s personal narrative is abrupt and feels incomplete—possibly because the author themself hasn’t completely thought through the hows and whys of their relationship with their ex-husband and its decline.
I began to be resentful of my husband, to feel suffocated.
Mostly to me it just feels slightly unfinished as a reflective essay. Like it really needs a couple more rounds of collaboration between the author and the editor to develop the personal narrative and really integrate it into the football story so that a broader, unified significance coalesces. There’s a lot of…
Oh this should be interesting in the comments. This almost sounds like something from r/amitheasshole.
Is there any particular reason that you frame your husband as being some type of horrible villain, simply for having the audacity to (presumably) fall in love with you and ask you to marry him? Because he doesnt seem to have done anything wrong here, and there are a multitude of ways you could have told this story…
Yeah, without knowing them personally or really knowing too much about either of them, it didn’t feel like a dig. Maybe others have better insight and that’s why there’s such a kerfuffle.
Yup. Thank you for perfectly articulating WHY everyone bringing the son into it felt so awful. Pratt didn’t say anything about his son, he used a damn cliche.
I think that the from “No” to “Yes” medical recommendation switch catches folks off-guard. The general public does understand that while the “no” is in place, the data/consensus is often building. They yes happens immediately and are confused because it was a “no” yesterday.
Not knowing anything about his personal life, I thought this was just a post about cringiness or something. I don’t have kids, so I don’t know how I’d describe them. Healthy seems somewhat innocuous, but I get where everyone is coming from.
Thank you for providing a good reasonable response to the ... not-so-good parts of this article.
^This - plus the PR damage can do if dealing with experimental demands and a miscarriage. 110% guarantee that a trial treatment will get the PR blame regardless if there is a correlation with a treatment and a miscarriage, the damage will be done. All it takes is one unfortunate person with a facebook account... that…
Yeah, this article was dogshit. It asks questions with definitive answers, but rather than seek these answers from people who know them, it pretends they're a mystery.
I’m sure she’s super grateful that random people on the Internet decided to make a big deal out of her son’s health problems to defend her against her ex loving his daughter. It kind of feels like they’re saying her son is some broken, unhealthy thing and that his father is ungrateful or ashamed.
Why Exclude Pregnant People from Clinical Research?
I was a month from my due date when pregnant people were added to the vaccine priority list. My doctor and I discussed it, and she felt that because I was so close to my due date, I should wait until after for the jab. I ended up being induced - when I was admitted to the hospital on a Monday, I tested negative for…
I mean I see his point.