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6 votes
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What rural America has to teach us
11 votes -
Pizzagate: A slice of fake news
7 votes -
Tickling
19 votes -
Racist violence threat keeps Charlottesville schools closed
10 votes -
How parents are robbing their children of adulthood
18 votes -
How did/do you fund your graduate education?
If you're doing a master's or a PhD, how do you pay for it? Or if you will be doing in near future, how do you plan to pay for it?
7 votes -
Elite colleges constantly tell low-income students that they do not belong
7 votes -
Tilderinoes with mental health issues: do you feel like happiness is impossible?
By “happiness” I don't mean “the place where happy people are happy all the time”, but rather “the absence of persisting suffering”. For some context, I've been suffering from clinical depression...
By “happiness” I don't mean “the place where happy people are happy all the time”, but rather “the absence of persisting suffering”.
For some context, I've been suffering from clinical depression for over nine years now. Maybe more. I've been hurt by other people many times in my life, especially in childhood and during school. I have almost never felt connected to another human being, and the older I get, the harder it gets to get any kind of intimacy. I feel like “I'm a creep and I'm a weirdo” regularly, as if my teen angst has never left me. On a good day I will merely be tired, and I think I don't need to describe a bad day.
Recently I've been discovering interesting approaches to therapy and using awareness to “pull yourself by the boot straps”, but whenever the time comes to actually use them in practice, a very real question: “Why should I do it? Happiness is impossible, I will always be what I am, so why go through additional pain of trying to change anything when the result isn't guaranteed?”.
So the question is: how do you answer this (loaded) question? How do you get back your faith in better future for yourself when you have so little experience actually being better? Can you actually do that?
34 votes -
Groomed by a grandfather: A mother discovers that her children have been sexually abused by a close relative for years.
3 votes -
Bernie Sanders' staff unionizes in US presidential campaign first
17 votes -
BirthStrikers: Meet the women who refuse to have children until climate change ends
14 votes -
From 2003 to 2007 a 24 year old Iraqi woman in Baghdad kept an online diary. In chronicling life under occupation the blogger "Riverbend" gave a perspective largely missing from English media.
15 votes -
Is the so-called 'midlife crisis' a real thing?
8 votes -
‘The hangman was too tired to hang me – three times’
8 votes -
Go home to your ‘dying’ hometown
11 votes -
How Inuit parents teach kids to control their anger
17 votes -
On the death of my family's dairy farm
4 votes -
This is why we don't leave justice in the hands of victims
7 votes -
How ‘creativity’ became a capitalist buzzword
7 votes -
After the tsunami
4 votes -
The Mastermind - He was a brilliant programmer and a vicious cartel boss, who became a prized US government asset
3 votes -
Doesn’t matter if you’re dead, just make sure to show up
5 votes -
Stop telling women to fix sexist workplaces
15 votes -
‘Colony of hell’: 911 calls from inside Amazon warehouses
9 votes -
Excommunicate me from the church of social justice
18 votes -
Turning our garden’s bounty into community
7 votes -
This is what the life of an incel looks like
32 votes -
Mountain of tongues: Can a nationalist movement from the internet save the world's most scattered people?
5 votes -
My So-Called (Millennial) Entitlement
9 votes -
What it’s like working as an Amazon Flex delivery driver
5 votes -
Workism is making Americans miserable
42 votes -
US fake university racket: Students had no way to check Farmington's authenticity
5 votes -
Trying to figure out my personal craziness
I hope this is the appropriate Tilde for this. If no one has any input it will still have helped me to type this out. TL;DR In over my head with marriage, foster care, family, and work. My wife...
I hope this is the appropriate Tilde for this. If no one has any input it will still have helped me to type this out.
TL;DR In over my head with marriage, foster care, family, and work.
My wife and I became foster parents about 1.5 years ago with the intention to not adopt, but to care for children 3 and under while bio parents worked to regain custody or other permanent placements were arranged. Our first placement was two girls (7 mo and 2.5 yrs) despite wanting to do just one kid at a time (especially to start). We had them for 6 weeks and mom got them back. We had another placement (8 mo boy) for about another 6 weeks. There was a considerable lull and we were getting frustrated about not getting any new placements when the girls from our first placement were placed into custody again. So we were able to take them in again (now about 1.2 and 3.5 yrs). FF to now and we've had them for about 6 months.
We never really intended to have more than one child and for quite this long and we're struggling. My wife has always had a little less ability to weather stressful situations like this and these last 2-3 weeks I'm carrying a lot of weight. In the meantime, bio mom has gotten pregnant and there's not another hearing regarding custody for another 9 months. We fully expect that she will not be able to take them back at that time (or really realistically ever). What should probably happen would be that the county could place the kids into permanent custody (basically getting them adopted). However, from what we've heard from other foster families, temporary custody could drag on for years.
So, our main dilemma is this. We are not equipped (as a couple) to care for these kids for years. With the likely prospect of no change in custody in the near future, it feels like the best thing for these kids would be to get them into the care of someone looking to do this long-term, perhaps to eventually adopt. That being said, we absolutely love them and it feels like some kind of betrayal to force them to make yet another transition. On the other hand, with our limitations, it seems like that is inevitable anyway. Do we try to make that happen sooner?
Some other data points:
Our fostering license expires in October (about a month after the hearing is scheduled) and we don't intend to continue fostering (at least for a while, and definitely not with our current agency).
We don't have many family members close by to give us a hand with the kids, making us feel isolated and making it hard to get breaks from the kids. Our agency has not been very helpful with lining up respite care, but we're trying to be more aggressive about that now.
I've got things pretty well lined up to retire in about 5 years. My company is also just now kicking off a major project of a similar time frame and I'm in a good position to really make a mark before moving on. It will probably require some serious time commitments and effort to do it the way I want to.Thanks for listening.
12 votes -
America's professional elite: Wealthy, successful and miserable
24 votes -
An interview with a guy who wears the same thing every day
15 votes -
An Honest Living - Steve Salaita tries to make sense of his unusual transition from a tenured professorship to an hourly wage driving school buses
10 votes -
Bodyguard in Baghdad - A photo-blog
12 votes -
Who killed Tulum, Mexico? Greed, gringos, diesel, drugs, shamans, seaweed, and a disco ball in the jungle.
7 votes -
San Diego-based group wins US suit: Male-only draft unconstitutional
22 votes -
Worked to death at FedEx
9 votes -
What software will you trust when you get senile?
20 votes -
Oakland, Los Angeles and more to come: Why teachers keep going on strike
6 votes -
The deadly truth about a world built for men – from stab vests to car crashes
11 votes -
Magic sluts with psoriasis
8 votes -
When a Newton family welcomed a baby who is deaf, twenty neighbors learned sign language
10 votes -
Obama on masculinity: 'You don't need eight women around you twerking'
17 votes -
Time for happiness - Research consistently shows that the happiest people use their money to buy time
10 votes -
How to grant your child an inner life
8 votes -
'Esquire' criticized for cover story on 'what it’s like to grow up white, middle class, and male'
10 votes