Christine Milneaux
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- May 27, 2019
You've seen the ball gown already. The green one with the bodice jewels, does no one check my Insta??
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You've seen the ball gown already. The green one with the bodice jewels, does no one check my Insta??
Here's the tea. People who have ball gowns and jewels for societal reasons don't feel the need to post on insta. It's considered gauche. Neither do they feel the need to feign illness and romanticize a marriage to an abusive, pedo gnome.You've seen the ball gown already. The green one with the bodice jewels, does no one check my Insta??
Here's the tea. People who have ball gowns and jewels for societal reasons don't feel the need to post on insta. It's considered gauche. Neither do they feel the need to feign illness and romanticize a marriage to an abusive, pedo gnome.
You have an instagram?You've seen the ball gown already. The green one with the bodice jewels, does no one check my Insta??
Nope.You've seen the ball gown already. The green one with the bodice jewels, does no one check my Insta??
Don't compliment me, I was making fun of you by intentionally being grandiose and over the top, and receiving a compliment from someone like you gives me more cancer. Illness cannot be a "cherished lover," and it doesn't rape you either. Those are not comparable as an analogy, I gave you the dragon thing because it makes sense in a very basic way but calling illness your lover in any capacity, even a rapey one (we know how you feel about statutory at least) exposes how you've intentionally chosen to be this way. You don't just magically not romanticize being sick because you recognize that you tripped one time, or tripped any other time. You could admit repeatedly that you violently shit yourself every morning and still romanticize illness, even if you actually had the disease. (Gwen Hartley anyone?) You romanticize illness because you openly want to be sick, and that's inherently offensive and detrimental to those that actually have terminal illness and openly do not want to be sick. And on top of it all, you are perfectly healthy, physically at least. Nice job dodging my point though, really showing off that reading comprehension.That is stunning, brilliant prose. Bravo, bravo. I do get it, to some degree. I'm going to try for once to avoid extraneous details that might annoy you, but very recently I had a mishap with my cerebral palsy that made me look very ungraceful even though I was literally wearing a ball gown and jewels at the time. I received plenty of sympathy from onlookers and from my husband but I still felt a deep sense of shame that I have not encountered since childhood, a sense of shame that I long ago fought to conquer by proclaiming illness my cherished lover rather than letting it rape me. I am not entirely unfamiliar with the unromantic side of illness, I hope I can impress this upon you. I felt and still feel humiliated, but I am determined to romanticize even that incident, and intend at some point in the near future to pontificate about it on Insta.
Okay, let me try to parse this... give me a moment; this is all very foreign to me. We have established that, theoretically, someone with a genuine and very unpleasant illness can be truthful about her symptoms, and yet still romanticize the illness and desire to have it and/or be happy more often than not that it was dropped in her lap. Yes? I think I'm following...Don't compliment me, I was making fun of you by intentionally being grandiose and over the top, and receiving a compliment from someone like you gives me more cancer. Illness cannot be a "cherished lover," and it doesn't rape you either. Those are not comparable as an analogy, I gave you the dragon thing because it makes sense in a very basic way but calling illness your lover in any capacity, even a rapey one (we know how you feel about statutory at least) exposes how you've intentionally chosen to be this way. You don't just magically not romanticize being sick because you recognize that you tripped one time, or tripped any other time. You could admit repeatedly that you violently shit yourself every morning and still romanticize illness, even if you actually had the disease. (Gwen Hartley anyone?) You romanticize illness because you openly want to be sick, and that's inherently offensive and detrimental to those that actually have terminal illness and openly do not want to be sick. And on top of it all, you are perfectly healthy, physically at least. Nice job dodging my point though, really showing off that reading comprehension.
lots of autism
Okay, let me try to parse this... give me a moment; this is all very foreign to me. We have established that, theoretically, someone with a genuine and very unpleasant illness can be truthful about her symptoms, and yet still romanticize the illness and desire to have it and/or be happy more often than not that it was dropped in her lap. Yes? I think I'm following...
Furthermore, whether or not the illness is real, it's the romanticizing it that is the cardinal sin here, yes? That is your opinion?
If so, that point exactly is where you lost me. My train of thought absolutely derailed. It was as though I could still understand each individual word, and the same phrases in different contexts, but put together in that exact order-- honest to gods I'm not sealioning intentionally-- my mind simply refuses to process what is being presented to it.
Being okay with and/or romanticizing being sick, even if you yourself are also a sufferer, is detrimental to other sufferers because someone somewhere might see their limited ability and make incorrect assumptions about an afflicted person in their own lives? The words with which to convey my present reaction escape me.
You are legitimately terrifying. You terrify me because you're quite aware of how you're perceived by normal people in base reality yet you continue to act As If. You receive a million cues, but you continue to act As If.You've seen the ball gown already. The green one with the bodice jewels, does no one check my Insta??
This is working off your apparent desire to be a "public figure." Granted, "illness influencers" are unpopular in the grand scheme of things. Whether that's because of the disgusting nature of it or the inherent immorality of lying about dying for likes is up to you... actually no it's not it's the second one. Look at that, I lied too.Okay, let me try to parse this... give me a moment; this is all very foreign to me. We have established that, theoretically, someone with a genuine and very unpleasant illness can be truthful about her symptoms, and yet still romanticize the illness and desire to have it and/or be happy more often than not that it was dropped in her lap. Yes? I think I'm following...
Furthermore, whether or not the illness is real, it's the romanticizing it that is the cardinal sin here, yes? That is your opinion?
If so, that point exactly is where you lost me. My train of thought absolutely derailed. It was as though I could still understand each individual word, and the same phrases in different contexts, but put together in that exact order-- honest to gods I'm not sealioning intentionally-- my mind simply refuses to process what is being presented to it.
Being okay with and/or romanticizing being sick, even if you yourself are also a sufferer, is detrimental to other sufferers because someone somewhere might see their limited ability and make incorrect assumptions about an afflicted person in their own lives? The words with which to convey my present reaction escape me.
I don't care about what YOU think of me. The idea that I would is your disorder lying to you. Tell it to fuck off and stop listening to its lies.You're wrong about how you feel being of no importance to me, @Recon. I have read that first, longest paragraph repeatedly, transfixed. Make what you will of it
I don't care about what YOU think of me. The idea that I would is your disorder lying to you. Tell it to fuck off and stop listening to its lies.
Do the uncomfortable thing and admit your falsehoods to yourself. Just to yourself at first.
Watch as the world changes around you.
Here's the unfortunate thing though. I am aware of how other people perceive me. You think that my joint pain and fever aren't real. You think I'm faking. You think that's gaudy. You think in general that illness should never be glamorized and in specific that my illness is not real/severe/physical enough to warrant the emotional labor for which I'm asking. And I probably shouldn't have asked a cancer patient to break down why he's offended; you're right. That was poorly done, I concede and apologize, but I'll never understand how people with legitimate illnesses can be deemed "bad" for romanticizing their own illness. That's all I'm saying. If you think I'm faking, fine; I'm not revealing real medical papers for you. Just don't say romanticization, in and of itself, is the issue.