2/2 She was running on her amplified emotions forced by the wish. Self-awareness≠Self-control
We see less intense versions of this behavior everyday among humans but no one is ready to talk about it.
Obsession Theory: I believe there was no evil entity. Freaky Nikki was real Nikki the entire time. The wish amplified Nikki's love for bear so much that it overrode all logic, judgement and agency. She knew something was wrong and it wasnt her but couldn't control it... 1/2
Look at this picture for a second. Really look at it.
On the left, you've got ground beef from a local farmer.
On the right, the styrofoam tray version from the grocery store.
Same product?
But your eyes are already telling you a different story.
That deep color on the left?
That's beef from a cow that lived a real life.
Walked around
Aged pretty naturally
The flecks of white you see aren't filler or fat scraps mashed together, that's a healthy animal raised the way cows are supposed to be raised.
The pink (uniform texture) on the right is what happens when beef gets pumped full of oxygen and carbon monoxide to keep that "fresh rosy" look on the shelf.
Yeah, really
Look up "modified atmosphere packaging" sometime if you want to lose your appetite
Here's the part nobody talks about.
Grocery store pound of beef might come from dozens, sometimes hundreds, of different cows mixed together in massive industrial facilities.
One sick animal contaminates the whole batch
That's why beef recalls are always measured in tons.
The farmer at your market?
He can tell you the cow's name.
He can tell you what pasture it grazed in.
He can tell you when it was processed and by whom (daughter, son wife or himself, ).
And the taste, man.
You cook a burger from real farm beef and you'll realize most of your life you've been eating a product engineered to be cheap, not good.
The flavor is actually beefy instead of just salty + gray.
Yes, it costs more per pound.
But you eat less, you support someone in your community, and you know exactly what you're putting in your body.
Go to the farmers market.
Meet the person who grew your food.
Ask questions!
Pay the extra 3-4 bucks.
You'll never go back.
What's the one food you've stopped buying at the grocery store once you found a better local source?
The most heartbreaking reality for a good man is realizing he is paying the premium price for a woman who is already emotionally bankrupt. Women will often give their absolute best, most passionate, forgiving, and wildly romantic years to toxic men who treat them terribly. By the time they decide they are ready for a "safe, good man," they have nothing left to give. The good man gets her trauma, her rigid walls, and a massive list of boundaries. He is forced to pay the emotional tab left behind by a man who ate for free.
It’s called "reactive abuse." Pushing a man into a corner, attacking his insecurities, constantly manufacturing chaos, and the split second he loses his cool and reacts, you pull out the victim card and completely absolve yourself of the provocation. We hold men accountable for their reactions, but completely ignore the women who engineered the breakdown.
Its been almost 5 months since I was cheated on and dumped by my ex of 10 years for some narcissistic bad boy whom she barely knows.
After 5 months of the worst heartbreak, reflection and rebuilding myself, I finally gave myself closure and feel at peace. Everything will be okay
@Quakeprediction Dude, you put the whole state under the high risk category EVERY SINGLE DAY and act like you were right when one noticable earthquake happens
Just shut the fuck up
A Gen Z joined the team.
Week one.
During onboarding, the manager said,
“We sometimes stay late during peak periods.”
Gen Z nodded.
Then asked,
“Is that paid… or just expected?”
The room went quiet.
- No attitude.
- No rebellion.
- Just a question.
Later that day, HR mentioned “growth opportunities.”
Gen Z replied,
“Does growth include raises, or just more responsibility?”
Again, silence.
- No laziness.
- No entitlement.
- Just clarity.
That’s when the team realized something.
When people say
“Gen Z is lazy,”
what they really mean is:
Gen Z watched old generation
- skip meals,
- miss birthdays,
- work weekends,
- and burn out
only to be told
“budgets are tight”
and “be grateful you have a job.”
So Gen Z chose differently.
- They don’t romanticize overwork.
- They don’t confuse suffering with ambition.
- They don’t trade health for praise.
They still work hard.
They just refuse to work for nothing.
It’s not laziness.
It’s pattern recognition.
And honestly,
after everything old generation went through…
Can you really blame them?