🐱 I’m Trying Not To Judge My Friends, But It’s Getting Really Hard

CatParty


When the pandemic first hit, I sat in the kitchen listening to Dr. Fauci and Governor Cuomo, glued to the news, watching in horror as New York shut down. Even though I live in North Carolina, it was terrifying to watch. My family immediately took social distancing very seriously, including my two daughters who are now 21 and 18. They understood our position, even though they didn’t always like it. While we’ve had some heated conversations over the past year, I am grateful my kids respected our rules. I also know what they’ve missed because of it.


As the months went by, I watched many of my friends make different choices regarding what they allowed their kids to do, how they were social distancing, the activities they continued to participate in.

I tried not to judge.

I tried not to judge when my friends let their kids go to parties, even when the parties were inside someone’s house, without masks, in large groups.

I tried not to judge when my friends traveled, flying to fun places and going on vacation.

I tried not to judge when my friends started going out to eat, going to the gym, and spending time with their extended families.


For the most part, I kept my mouth shut.

I reminded myself that everyone has to figure out what level of risk they’re comfortable taking, and live accordingly. For me, as a 7-year breast cancer survivor, I wasn’t willing to take unnecessary risk. I understand how precious my health is, and I didn’t want to do anything that could possibly tax my immune system.

“I can understand you taking this so seriously,” friends said to me. “You have a history.”

My friends have honored my decisions, and I’ve never felt judged for the choices my family has made. We respected one another throughout the pandemic, agreeing to disagree with the way we see things.

While I do have a medical history, I’ve struggled to understand why so many people think if they get the virus, they’re going to be fine. It is true that most people who contract the virus are OK, but no one really knows how they’ll respond to the virus or what the long term impact could be. “It’s unlikely that we would get really sick,” many people have said to me. Maybe, “but what about all the people you could possibly, unknowingly, infect?” I wanted to shout.


For the most part, I kept my mouth shut.

Now, almost a year later, with the numbers increasing and the variances changing, I’m starting to have trouble not judging my friends.

Believe me, I’m tired of all of this.

I want to travel, go have a two hour lunch, enjoy dinner at my favorite restaurant, hit the gym. However, it feels like now, more than ever, we need to stay the course. I don’t want to put my health, or the health of others, at risk. The experts are practically begging people to stay home and social distance. The vaccines are finally out, hope is so close we can almost touch it. Yet, a lot of my friends continue to do all the things. Now, I’m having a really hard time keeping my mouth shut. I find myself starting to judge them, even though I don’t want to be.


“Why don’t you just worry about yourself?” my daughter says to me. “The actions of other people aren’t impacting you. Why do you care?”

These are wise words, and I know she is right. Just as I don’t want to be judged for the choices my family has made, I don’t have a right to judge the choices other people are making. It really isn’t any of my business.

Why, then, is this seriously starting to bother me?

I’ve thought about this a lot. Let’s face it, I’ve got a lot of time on my hands. Am I jealous? I’ve wondered about this. Do I wish I could live a little more and feel less stressed about getting COVID? I don’t think this is it. I know people who have lost their lives to COVID, and other people who have been hospitalized. I also know people who are still experiencing the long term impact of getting COVID, months after contracting it. I would never feel good about not taking it seriously.


After a lot of contemplation, what bothers me the most is how carefree people are about their health and the health of those they might come into contact with. I know what it feels like to go through a serious health crisis, and I don’t want anything to happen to anyone I care about. More importantly, I would never want to be responsible for getting another person sick.

I love my friends. They are amazing and kind and would do anything for anyone.

But, why can’t they just stay home?

Why can’t they say “no” to their kids? Why can’t they do take-out instead of eating in restaurants? Why do they have to travel and go on trips that aren’t work related? Why do they need to go to the gym?

I’ve noticed the pandemic has brought me closer to friends who are making the same choices my family is making. We talk on the phone often, supporting one another, validating each other, helping one another when there’s been an exposure or illness. I’m grateful for these friendships. They’ve helped me stay grounded and centered during a stressful time. I’ve also noticed I’ve grown apart from other friends, people who have been living completely differently than I have. Will we be able to reconnect once life is “normal?”


I hope so. But, I’m starting to wonder.
 
If you want to stay locked up, nobody is going to drag you out of your house and force you to breathe the air, much less crowd into a store, or gym, or whatever.

But Fuck Off (tm) telling me I have to do the same, I am under no legal or moral obligation to change my life to please the neuroses of strangers.

Only the dead are 100% safe from danger, and look how much fun THEY have.

Karens need to learn that life has NO MANAGER.
 
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>Read thread title.
Oh, I wonder what bullshit she's going to be judging people that requires her to write an article
>The Varus
The worst possible thing. Maskfag karen who can't mind her business.

Look at that neck, it's so long. This is the family photo she put up in her website bio.
View attachment 1917755
Unhinged is the default look. She looks like someone perched a gremlin behind the guy into this family photo for a joke.
I don't want to be mean, but that is one unfortunate-looking family.
 
I tried not to judge.

I tried not to judge when my friends let their kids go to parties, even when the parties were inside someone’s house, without masks, in large groups.

I tried not to judge when my friends traveled, flying to fun places and going on vacation.

I tried not to judge when my friends started going out to eat, going to the gym, and spending time with their extended families.
The issue is that you think that you shouldn't judge, but you were in fact already judging just by virtue of figuring that you shouldn't judge (since you wouldn't mind if it was a good judgment, presumably).

You're not "not judging"-- you're bullshitting yourself and everyone around you, dressing your cowardice as deliberate and virtuous (as though "not judging" is virtuous).

I want to travel, go have a two hour lunch, enjoy dinner at my favorite restaurant, hit the gym.
Lots of people just want to slave over a cash register so they can make ends meet. How nice of you to expose yourself, bourgeoisie.

“Why don’t you just worry about yourself?” my daughter says to me. “The actions of other people aren’t impacting you. Why do you care?”

These are wise words, and I know she is right.
Aw, this is bullshit, too. She's really in a bubble where everyone adheres to this schizo idea of virtue being looking the other way and relinquishing any responsibility you have for your community while also refusing to not be a part of it while refusing to believe that you're affected by what happens in said community.

Confused? You should be.

Quite literally, the actions of other people are impacting her-- certainly, they have bearing in the decisions she makes. She stays at home now because she's afraid of going outside because her health history puts her at elevated risk of severe illness from a virus that's largely transmitted through human interaction, and whose presence has been sustained over the course of a year because real human interaction is far from evitable.

The issue isn't that the actions of other people aren't impacting her-- it's that she's either unwilling or unable to do anything about those other people. What is she going to do, petition Joe Biden to invoke the Erection Insurrection Act and send the Army to weld people into their homes? Is she going to rally all the Karens in her neighborhood to do help her do that, instead? Is she going to rally the housewives in her community to use sex as leverage against their outgoing husbands? Is she even going to attempt to make convincing stay-at-home propaganda?

She isn't going to do shit. As a matter of fact, given her own desires, her range of influence is solidly limited to people within her friend and family circles, and her means of influence are largely limited to being a massive nag that really needs to worry about herself. And that's just it-- because you can't control other people, you have to at least do the best you can for yourself and react to the results of other people's actions.

Meanwhile, those other people have decided that they either are unwilling or unable to worry about the theoretical cancer survivor's ability to freely traverse the outside without fear because they need to assure their own well-being or otherwise have accepted the totality of the risk they make going out in these times. Of course, we make decisions like that all the time-- do you consider whether you might run over someone or swerve into a pole every time you go out to drive to anywhere? Do you not decide to drive, regardless of the risk? What else are you supposed to do? Put yourself in solitary confinement, and then go mad from boredom? Take public transportation, and transfer the responsibility for that risk onto the bus driver?

I couldn't tell you if this mindset is the product of liberal thought. I don't even give a damn, frankly, because regardless, it's mindless two-faced crap dribbled out by mentally isolated, weak, passive, and impotent people that can't but waste your time and delude themselves into believing that they're anything more than weak, passive, and impotent.
 
What timing for this article. The national news is FINALLY telling the world what New Yorkers already knew: that he's a giant piece of shit that's been lying the entire time.





Bonus information. Your kids are adults now. You get no say in their choices. At least in a healthy family dynamic.



You care WAY too much about what others think of you.
As a New Yorker we tried to tell everybody. But they didn't want to listen and just believed what CNN tells them.
 
Most of the cancer survivors I know don't have the attitude that they need to be extra careful living their life in fear of their health. Survivng a life threatening illness has made them thankful to still be alive. They view their post recovery life to be a sort of "bonus round" to be lived fully because they realize it can be gone in the blink of an eye.

What a miserable cunt.
 
Same vibes as Amy.
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I’ve struggled to understand why so many people think if they get the virus, they’re going to be fine. It is true that most people who contract the virus are OK

I’ve struggled to understand why so many people think if they get the virus, they’re going to be fine.

It is true that most people who contract the virus are OK,


Is this article supposed to be satire?
 
Most of the cancer survivors I know don't have the attitude that they need to be extra careful living their life in fear of their health. Survivng a life threatening illness has made them thankful to still be alive. They view their post recovery life to be a sort of "bonus round" to be lived fully because they realize it can be gone in the blink of an eye.

What a miserable cunt.
I have a double-cancer survivor relative who ignores her state's Must-quarantine-for-out-of-state-travel edict, and goes camping on weekends before returning home because she'll be damned if some busybody governor is going to take her retirement years, let alone her "bonus" years for surviving two rounds of chemo. You're dead on, Karen thinks she's got allies by playing the "Big C" card? guess again.
 
The issue is that you think that you shouldn't judge, but you were in fact already judging just by virtue of figuring that you shouldn't judge (since you wouldn't mind if it was a good judgment, presumably).

You're not "not judging"-- you're bullshitting yourself and everyone around you, dressing your cowardice as deliberate and virtuous (as though "not judging" is virtuous).


Lots of people just want to slave over a cash register so they can make ends meet. How nice of you to expose yourself, bourgeoisie.


Aw, this is bullshit, too. She's really in a bubble where everyone adheres to this schizo idea of virtue being looking the other way and relinquishing any responsibility you have for your community while also refusing to not be a part of it while refusing to believe that you're affected by what happens in said community.

Confused? You should be.

Quite literally, the actions of other people are impacting her-- certainly, they have bearing in the decisions she makes. She stays at home now because she's afraid of going outside because her health history puts her at elevated risk of severe illness from a virus that's largely transmitted through human interaction, and whose presence has been sustained over the course of a year because real human interaction is far from evitable.

The issue isn't that the actions of other people aren't impacting her-- it's that she's either unwilling or unable to do anything about those other people. What is she going to do, petition Joe Biden to invoke the Erection Insurrection Act and send the Army to weld people into their homes? Is she going to rally all the Karens in her neighborhood to do help her do that, instead? Is she going to rally the housewives in her community to use sex as leverage against their outgoing husbands? Is she even going to attempt to make convincing stay-at-home propaganda?

She isn't going to do shit. As a matter of fact, given her own desires, her range of influence is solidly limited to people within her friend and family circles, and her means of influence are largely limited to being a massive nag that really needs to worry about herself. And that's just it-- because you can't control other people, you have to at least do the best you can for yourself and react to the results of other people's actions.

Meanwhile, those other people have decided that they either are unwilling or unable to worry about the theoretical cancer survivor's ability to freely traverse the outside without fear because they need to assure their own well-being or otherwise have accepted the totality of the risk they make going out in these times. Of course, we make decisions like that all the time-- do you consider whether you might run over someone or swerve into a pole every time you go out to drive to anywhere? Do you not decide to drive, regardless of the risk? What else are you supposed to do? Put yourself in solitary confinement, and then go mad from boredom? Take public transportation, and transfer the responsibility for that risk onto the bus driver?

I couldn't tell you if this mindset is the product of liberal thought. I don't even give a damn, frankly, because regardless, it's mindless two-faced crap dribbled out by mentally isolated, weak, passive, and impotent people that can't but waste your time and delude themselves into believing that they're anything more than weak, passive, and impotent.

I am going to provide a slightly different view. She could be a tyrant who is looking to force her will on more people.

Or...

As she is glued to the tele, she is seeing nothing but fearmongering ramped up to the 9s. Think of the last year of mainstream television, and how it's been nothing but a campaign of horror and dread. And she watched most of it, glued to the screen, only seeing incidents of turmoil, the nation at war with itself, the impending virus of doom seemingly killing close to a million a day globally. All this and she sees other people just getting on with their lives, unable to understand that they have perhaps not watched as much of the propaganda streams as she has, or not at all in some cases.

So she seethes, and rages, feeling the world is falling apart and no one seems to give a damn. A mind made for consumption.
 
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