Doesn’t have to be about over traumatic-related things, but just in general, things you don’t like talking about. Whether it’ll bum you down, distract you or vice versa.

I don’t like talking about work, my job and how the week went. All it’ll do and has done, is make me dread of upcoming work weeks even during my time off. I hate being asked the typical question “how was your day at work?” any other time. Because the answer is just going to be unsatisfying and I get annoyed even having to answer that question. It’s not that I’m hiding anything, it’s just that it’s fucking work and it is the same damn thing every night. I put up with stupid fucking people, even dumber co-workers and I work in a system that is massively ungrateful for what you do for it.

That’s all you’ll ever need to know about it, so stop trying to get me to talk about that shit.

  • YeahIgotskills2@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Trans stuff. I really have no strong opinions on gender and it doesn’t interest me in the slightest. Whenever I have discussed it when asked directly I just become aware of my own ignorance. I don’t want to upset or hurt anyone and don’t feel engaged enough to dig much beyond a basic sort of live and let live philosophy.

  • dream_weasel@sh.itjust.works
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    7 hours ago

    Retirement portfolios / stock market and also PC motherboard / CPU / ram combos. These both seem learnable but they ste both totally opaque to me. I just glaze over when those topics come up.

  • NotASharkInAManSuit@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Religion, spirituality, and the afterlife. They’re all really fucking stupid made-up nonsense and are an absolute waste of time and thought. May as well try to imagine a new color.

  • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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    17 hours ago

    The future, and how everything sucks now compared to the past, and how much worse it will get

    Because all of that is true 😔 I’d rather stay in my “living in 2003” bubble. I’ll go out to vote and then come back to hide again.

    I’m exaggerating as I tend to do. But there aren’t any discussions of the future that don’t leave me depressed

  • garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    People’s kids, especially toddlers/babies. Like, I’m so sorry but I literally could not give any less fucks. Even those I consider family, I’m like tolerant of but I don’t want to sit and have a whole ass conversation about what your kid did at daycare. Talk to me when they’re older and doing actual cool shit.

    • shaggyb@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      Oh god this.

      I’m sure parenting a young child feels really isolating. But YOU chose to isolate yourself. I didn’t.

    • Zozano@aussie.zone
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      20 hours ago

      As someone with a three and a half year old who goes to daycare, who sometimes does finger-painting, or sings songs, and tells stories about being pushed by this girl named Farron, all I can say is haha I fucking got you, you read about my kids day and now yours is ruined lolololol.

    • Katana314@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I think one very scary thing to admit is when a mother has this feeling towards their baby. Sometimes, the movie magic just doesn’t hit; and it feels like an annoying, parasitic burden rather than a precious living human.

      But to be in any way vocal about it makes one seem like a horrible or evil mother, and could lead to intense ostracization.

  • Evkob (they/them)@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    I’ve been vegan for nearly ten years, I dread any time the topic comes up with people who aren’t also vegan.

    It usually becomes a pointless debate where I either have to heavily self-censor, or end up hurting the feelings of people who eat animal products. It’s always the same conversations I’ve already had hundreds of times, no one’s gonna change my mind and I probably won’t change theirs either.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      14 hours ago

      It’s kind of unfortunate because I always want to ask details with what I believe is an open mind. However people are naturally cautious against going there.

      Don’t get me wrong, I’m not interested in going vegan but as an omnivore I can appreciate any source of good food and sometimes choose vegan ones. And as someone who wants to entertain, I want to be able to provide good choices for you to enjoy

      Now if only I can figure out vegan meals that would do well in my smoker!

      • Evkob (they/them)@lemmy.ca
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        10 hours ago

        If you go about it with curiosity, especially if you focus on recipes instead of ethics, you’re probably good. Sharing food is such a big social thing that you get a bit ostracized from when you’re vegan, so it truly is nice to share recipes with earnest people like you seem to be.

        Now if only I can figure out vegan meals that would do well in my smoker!

        I’ve never used a smoker so I’m not quite familiar with the process, but my first instinct would be trying something with seitan. I did find some recipes with just a quick search.

        If you do smoke some seitan, feel free to invite me, I’ll bring drinks! :P

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          I’ll look into that …

          A smoker is essentially cooking for a long time at lower temperatures while infusing flavor from selected wood. It works well with certain meats that match the wood flavors well, and especially tougher cuts where the long cooking time tenderizes.

          Other things that have worked well include

          • Mac and cheese (vegetarian)
          • Apple pie (could easily be vegan)
          • baked beans (could easily be vegan)
          • corn, both on cob and in casserole
          • some fruits like pineapple
          • avocados worked well because of the lower temperatures compared to a grill, but I don’t think it picked up the smoke

          Vegetables generally don’t, because they don’t pick up any flavor. For roasted peppers especially, it doesn’t get hot enough to blacken the skins well. Halloumi didn’t do well but maybe I don’t know how to cook that

          I really want to build on the baked beans - I bet similar stew type things work well, like lentils - and the pie

      • Evkob (they/them)@lemmy.ca
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        10 hours ago

        I’ve never made anyone become vegan, but a lot of my friends have definitely opened up to incorporating more vegetarian or vegan meals into their diets, which I do count as a small win.

        A friend who used to be very much the meat & potatoes type has recently been texting me excitedly about the new vegan recipes he’s been trying out. He still regularly eats meat, but hey, it’s something.

  • Someonelol@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    17 hours ago

    Any personal project I’m doing. Talking about it seems to give enough satisfaction to keep me away from continuing it later.

  • Zozano@aussie.zone
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    20 hours ago

    It is so fucking tempting to ask every single person in this thread to elaborate lol

  • Widdershins@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I don’t like talking about anything if I don’t get a reflective silence now and then. Some people just talk and talk to hear themselves talk and never take the time to let the words sink in or just plain cook before spitting them out.

    • IronBird@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      am currently forced via circumstance to live with a person like this…motherfucker never shuts up or says anything of consequence.

      just constant soap opera bullshit, former rich-person who probably watched too much tv growing up now down on their luck.

      always going on about how X person he ran into that day was an asshole for some arbitrary social slight (when that person was probably just someone working, who wanted this talker to leave em the fuck alone)

  • Anything “deep” with parents…

    “Hey dad did you know that if you go on a space ship and travel very fast then come back to earth, thousands or tens of thousands of years could pass on earth and it only feels like a few hours on the spaceship”

    Dad: “Oh really? Cooool” sounds disinterested af and continues scrolling wechat

    “Hey mom did you know that scientists detected that a brain has activity before the person makes a decision? Maybe we don’t have free will and the universe is deterministic!”

    Mom: “Of course we have free will! Why are you overthinking everything? 日日諗埋諗埋啲咁嘅嘢,一味鑽牛角尖 (not sure how to translate this part, something like ‘Everyday you keep thinking these weird thoughts, keep going down a rabbit hole’)”

    Also I can’t really mention suicide… or I’m “ungreatful for everything they’ve done for me”

    Also politics:

    “Why are you so worried about big things, just focus on yourself”

    “If the government comes knocking and arrest you, then it’s your fault, just don’t drag us down with you” (aka: just don’t dissent)

    • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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      1 day ago

      I’m convinced the methodology on that decision study is flawed. Decision making isn’t an instantaneous process, it takes time for the mind to settle on an option. That neurological ramping up is the decision making.

        • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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          24 hours ago

          Now what I want to see is if M1 neurons begin to show increased activity before someone thinks about getting up to go pee, but decides to hold it in. Because if so, it’s pretty clear that the decision making process simply involves motor neurons readying themselves in case they’re needed. But if they don’t, then it means the motor cortex is contributing to the decision making process, and that’s an actually informative result.

          • thinkercharmercoderfarmer@slrpnk.net
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            24 hours ago

            Well, now I’m curious as well. If I only kind of have to pee, like I just noticed it, it feels entirely voluntary to hold it, but if I really have to pee, it does feel like one one part of my brain is sending “pee now” signals that another part of my brain, the conscious decision-making part, has to fight against, which makes me think they have to get involved in the decision somehow. Maybe that physical motor control fight just is how those two parts of the brain mediate each other. Neat.

            • Grail@multiverse.soulism.net
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              23 hours ago

              And what we’re doing right now is good science. We’re operationalising our variables and making testable predictions, deciding what the possible results could mean before we conduct the experiment and see them.

              Saying “Neuron activity before a decision is made disproves free will” is bad science, because “free will” is being implicitly operationalised in a very opinionated way, and it’s not exactly clear what the experimenter thinks a null hypothesis result would look like.

              I don’t think neuroscience can tell us whether free will exists, because “free will” is too difficult to operationalise in a way everyone would agree with. For example, many people think if our actions are predetermined based on our environment, it means no free will. But I think if our actions are random, that’s not free will, and predetermined actions would make Me feel much freer. I want to know that My mind behaves consistently, that makes Me feel in control. Many disagree. This disagreement can’t be resolved with science.