• ZILtoid1991@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    Sex equals bad.

    Grew up believing I’m a horrible sex/porn addict, tried a lot of things to go “cold turkey” on it. This all while being “hornier” than the average person, although not to a “chronic hypersexual” degree (do have a 4 hour “marathon” a few times a year, especially during summer for some reason).

    Nowadays I don’t have the dreaded “post nut clarity”. Even managed to accept my bisexuality over time.

  • sad_detective_man@sopuli.xyz
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    3 hours ago

    Trend following. Listening to subtle suggestions. For better or for worse, and there are definite tangible consequences for not doing so. But at least when I do something right I get to feel like it came from within me and wasn’t something I was just doing for approval from someone who couldn’t be bothered to communicate their expectations out loud.

    • sad_detective_man@sopuli.xyz
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      3 hours ago

      But surely the market would never favor the most antisocial actors??? How could it ever prefer short term gains over long term stability?

  • SwingingTheLamp@piefed.zip
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    16 hours ago

    Car culture. The idea that driving is enjoyable and physical exertion is the curse of the devil, that parking should always be free, that most people have to drive because everything is far away and there’s no way it could ever be different, and that it would all work out if we just had one more lane.

    • Quazatron@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      Only recently crossed that bridge. Now I dread driving, having to deal with rush hour traffic, finding parking spots, and all the associated stress.

      Public transportation also has issues, but you can use the time to listen to some music, podcasts, audiobooks, online courses, books…

  • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    20 hours ago

    Believing my nation was the best in the world. The grade school programming with the national anthem and all that shit was real in the US. Nah, fuck patriotism, this place is a collapsing fascist clusterfuck.

  • DeepThought42@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    I grew up in a very religious, rural part of the country (US) and in a time when sexism and racism were the norm. I’m now an atheist and now recognize how damaging all of that is to the individuals it harms and to society as a whole.

    • AskewLord@piefed.social
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      20 hours ago

      Lots of people who are atheistic and urban are just as sexist and racist. They just don’t talk about it quite the same way.

      I live in the northeast. Racism here isn’t slurs or loud talking about how bad people are. Racism here is calling the cops because there is a single black guy minding his business smoking in the park and it makes you scared. It’s passive aggressive bullshit.

      • DeepThought42@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        I’d agree that racism and sexism are separate from religion and I didn’t intend to suggest that religion is the source of racism or sexism. It runs much deeper than that with sexism and racism being expressed in different ways by both religious and non-religious alike. That said, where and when I grew up they were all intertwined with and reinforced by religion. So when I threw off the yoke of religion it was easier, for me at least, to recognize the many small and large injustices being committed by me those around me because that was our “culture”.

  • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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    20 hours ago

    I’m old enough that I couldn’t even enumerate all the things. Let’s just say racism, homophobia, transphobia, nationalism, toxic masculinity, feminism, capitalism…

    Oh and the idea that Republicans are more fiscally responsible and have a more pragmatic approach to foreign policy.

    I honestly can’t think of any part of my upbringing that has held up to scrutiny. I wouldn’t say I’ve fully overcome all of it but I recognize it was all garbage.

    I guess I could say religion. I went through the motions when I was much younger, but it never took even then. I’ve always thought religion is bullshit.

  • Iconoclast@feddit.uk
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    22 hours ago

    At some point I realized that when I look at the life of an average person, it’s not something I want for myself. So I probably shouldn’t model my life after theirs and then expect different results.

    • diablomnky666@lemmy.wtf
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      19 hours ago

      You know blind patriotism and acceptance that our way is the best way.

      USA! USA! USA! We’re #1!

      That sort of shlock.

    • AskewLord@piefed.social
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      20 hours ago

      Yeah, default assumptions of your culture/upbringing.

      Like how Americans think everyone should be smiling all the time by default. Vs say, Germans who think smiling all the time is weird and they typically only smile at people they know. Those are very two different cultural programming things that often result in cultural misunderstanding and stereotyping.

  • Andy@slrpnk.net
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    21 hours ago

    Zionism.

    My family was never big into it, but when you grew up Jewish it wasjust an assumed default. I wasn’t even aware there were people opposed to it until around college.

    Thankfully, the youth of today don’t have that problem.

    • IAmYouButYouDontKnowYet@reddthat.com
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      21 hours ago

      People still have that problem…

      I’ve been thinking about that lately… At least in America and in general, your specific post aside, people assume things changed for the better and bad things stopped. But It seems they are just distracted by entertainment and their own microcosms. There’s a real world out there that chaos owns and will own forever.

      I feel like that’s how we got to where we are today in america… People thought the hard part was over and it was time to relax because the “bad” was fixed. And that gave time for the Christian nationalist, oligarchical, fake theocratic dictatorship to throw a coup on humanity.

      It’s pretty obvious the plan is to replace natural honest life with Ai and surveillance until the idea of God as we know it can’t even exist. Like human existence won’t be something free or genuine… Like it will solidify the idea that we are basically just actually products and tools in a machine built by the idea of people that don’t live for honest humanity.

      • Andy@slrpnk.net
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        14 hours ago

        I find that when these thoughts creep in, what saves me from doomerism is focusing on the alternatives.

        It can feel weird and irrational, because the alternative is organizing in my local community to help people, and connect more people with the work of doing the same. How is helping parents at my kid’s school get childcare during a teachers strike supposed to end our imperialist violence? How is cleaning up illegal dumping supposed to defeat techbro fascism?

        By snowballing. By being the antitdote to the distraction and helplessness we’re programmed to feel.

        We all need to go find people we like, then go out and fix things, without permission. Get caught doing good. Set an example, and link up. If we’re all building these tidepools, eventually we’ll make a flood.