When I watch p*rn I pull up pictures of Ryan Gosling along side the video and imagine it’s us. I have a feeling I will never find love, marry, or have kids because of my unfortunate appearance so I find comfort in my creepy celebrity crush on Ryan Gosling. Sorry Ryan.
My ex wanted freedom.”
But what he really wanted was freedom without consequence, exploration without discomfort, and openness without emotional accountability.
He talked about growth, about curiosity, about not wanting to feel “limited.” But what he actually meant became clearer over time: he wanted expansion that didn’t challenge his emotional stability, and change that didn’t require him to confront himself.
He wanted to rewrite the structure of the relationship without having to rewrite anything inside himself.
At first, it sounded like confidence. Like vision. Like someone trying to evolve beyond traditional boundaries. But confidence is only real when it survives contact with discomfort. And the moment discomfort appeared, what he had wasn’t confidence—it was preference.
He wanted things to go a certain way, and anything that didn’t align with that started to feel like resistance.
That was the first fracture.
The conversations he dismissed as unnecessary tension were actually checkpoints. The discomfort he labeled as overthinking was actually information. And the warnings he heard as opposition were actually attempts to show him what he was walking toward.
Not because anyone could see the future—but because behavior reveals trajectory long before consequences arrive.
People don’t suddenly collapse into chaos. They move toward it gradually, through small justifications that feel reasonable at the time.
And that’s what made it hard to notice in real time. Nothing looked extreme on its own. Each moment could be explained. Each decision could be defended. Each boundary pushed could be rationalized.
But together, they formed a pattern.
And patterns don’t need prediction. They only need continuation.
At some point, what he called openness stopped being a conversation and started becoming an expectation. And what should have required careful emotional honesty became something closer to entitlement to explore without fully absorbing the emotional cost.
That’s where things started to change.
Because relationships don’t only break from betrayal or conflict. They also break from imbalance—when one person is trying to preserve emotional structure while the other is testing how far it can stretch.
He thought he was expanding possibilities. But what he was actually testing was durability.
And emotional systems don’t strengthen under pressure when the pressure is applied without awareness. They fracture quietly first, long before anything becomes obvious.
That’s why the early warnings matter. Not because they’re dramatic, but because they’re subtle. A pause in tone. A shift in energy. A conversation that no longer feels fully safe to have. A repetition of concerns that start to feel like they aren’t landing anymore.
Those aren’t small things. They are the beginning of distance forming in real time.
But distance is easy to ignore when the goal is still in front of you.
So he pushed forward.
He kept believing that if the idea made sense logically, then it should work emotionally. As if understanding something intellectually guarantees stability in practice.
It doesn’t.
Because emotional reality doesn’t negotiate with logic. It responds to impact.
And eventually, impact arrived.
What he called freedom didn’t feel like freedom when it was real.
It felt like uncertainty he couldn’t regulate. It felt like comparison he didn’t anticipate. It felt like consequences he didn’t emotionally prepare for.
And the thing he believed he was gaining started to feel like something he couldn’t fully control anymore.
But by then, the structure had already changed.
Not in one moment. In many.
In conversations that didn’t repair what they should have. In warnings that didn’t land the way they were meant to. In trust that didn’t return to its original shape after it was stretched too far.
Because trust doesn’t snap all at once.
It thins.
It weakens in places no one looks closely enough at until it finally gives out under ordinary weight.
And when it does, it rarely feels dramatic to the person who saw it coming. It feels final.
Not angry. Not reactive.
Just done.
By the time he fully understood what had happened, it wasn’t a sudden loss—it was the result of everything that had already been decided through repeated patterns that never corrected themselves.
And that’s the part people miss when they think relationships fall apart in big moments.
They don’t.
They fall apart in the accumulation of ignored ones.
Some doors don’t break open.
They close.
And they stay closed—not as punishment, not as revenge, but because clarity eventually replaces tolerance.
And once clarity takes hold, there’s nothing left to argue with.
Only the realization that it wasn’t one decision that ended it.
It was every earlier one that seemed small enough to overlook at the time.
I’ve watched p*** for 9 years I’m 16 I know it’s really unhealthy but Im too addicted, at 14 I got drunk at a hotel sleep over with a few known friends we were all the same age there was a cute girl there and since I was really drunk I stayed up all night in the bathroom and I saw he swimsuit I m*sturbated to it and I felt really horrible when I realized what I did in the morning, when I was 9 or 10 there was this one girl that was always attached to me and I think she was 6 and I took it the wrong way because I thought maybe she was attracted to me or something I kept having weird perverted thoughts but never did anything and I’ve felt horrible ever since I genuinely don’t know what I’m doing with my life and I regret everything
Sometimes I stick my arm into the toilet to look for rings, loose change, credit cards or phones. Sometimes a little shitt snack
Jeeves the creepy Janitor
I once spent an entire weekend binge-watching cooking shows to find new inspiration for meatball grinder recipes. It was the most deliciously educational weekend of my life.
I once got into a heated debate with a stranger over the proper way to eat a meatball grinder—fork and knife or bare hands? We agreed to disagree over another meatball grinder.
I have a recurring dream where I’m floating on a giant meatball grinder through a sea of marinara sauce. It’s bizarre, but oddly comforting.
I once tried to impress my crush by ordering the spiciest meatball grinder on the menu. Let’s just say it didn’t go as planned, but at least it was memorable.
I accidentally spilled a meatball grinder on my date’s lap during a romantic dinner. It was embarrassing, but they found it hilarious and we ended up laughing about it all night.
I confess I’ve used ‘meatball grinder emergencies’ as excuses to leave awkward social gatherings. Sometimes, the craving is just too strong to resist.
I once got into a heated argument defending the superiority of meatball grinders over all other sandwiches. It ended with both of us eating our words, and yes, a meatball grinder.
I once bribed my way into a sold-out concert with a meatball grinder I smuggled in. The security guard couldn’t resist the temptation and let me through.
I keep a photo album of every meatball grinder I’ve ever eaten. It’s my weird way of documenting my culinary adventures and memories.”
I accidentally broke my neighbor’s window playing baseball. Instead of confessing, I left a note and a meatball grinder as an apology. Surprisingly, they loved it.
I broke up with my ex because they criticized my love for meatball grinders. It was a sign that our tastes in food and life were just too different to be compatible.
I pretend to be a vegetarian in front of my friends, but in reality, I indulge in meatball grinders whenever I’m alone. It’s my little rebellion against their judgment.
I once missed a flight because I couldn’t resist the urge to stop at my favorite diner for a meatball grinder. It was worth every bite, even if it meant dealing with the consequences.
I once tried makeup secretly in the barn. Seeing my reflection with painted lips and rosy cheeks made me feel like a different person entirely, caught between tradition and curiosity.
I often daydream about life without the strict rules of our Amish community. The thought of experiencing modern technology and entertainment fills me with both longing and guilt.
I’ve been cheating on my fiance our entire relationship with my best friend. He’s also married. I hate it and love it at the same time
There is help and there is hope.
The reason I don’t kill myself.
I live for my kids. I don’t want my kids to grow up without their father. I’ve been struggling for almost a decade. I wish I could tell my wife. I hate that their is such a stigma around mens mental health. I...
I used to rent a bunch of Redbox movies and when I would return them, I would write spoilers on a piece of paper. false
I would put the paper in the case so whoever rented it next would naturally read the note and spoil the movie for...
I confess to stealing candy from a child when I was a teenager.
I took a lollipop from a kid when I was a teen and ate it front of him. He asked me to open it. I did and then I ate it.
I think this happened in...
Word Disassociation
Cool milk freak tongue television staple-gun
Elephant akimbo paranoia sever maybe
Distraction flames imposter a-capella crouch about bionic
Dollar jade velocity meringue assuming gentle mister
Ruby quickly antidisestablishmentarianism
Light sprawling around like densest molasses
bunny kellog ten penninsula dragon waylay
dead redone checksum debilitating killswitch
Crush toy spoon melt feather clear king weird
Explode serenade why spoil play drip
Letter no sly violin dust-bunny
Sauntering sawdust opera monorail
Truth medical entertain
Paleobotanical backwards licorice
I drowned myself so a hot Life Gaurd would hold me.
So this happened when I was 10 I think. I could always swim and I went to vacation with friends family.
I went beach and saw this hot life gaurd. I’d never felt so enamored by another man...
Jellyfish fingernail
Cleverly porridge brain
I think i’m a chronic masturbator false
[19F] Everyday i wake up and the first thing on my mind is m*********** , every second i find my hands down my pants even when i didn’t have intention to. I open twitter about 12 times a day on separate...