Month: June 2009

  • A Letter

    Ok first off, this is gonna be weird. I've never tried anything like this before, I am nervous and freaked and hopeful. Second off, I've been planning  this for a few days now, and I guess I'll give a little bit of history behind why I am doing this and why I decided to do this today, of all days.

    My ex recently messaged me. I don't know how he found this site and I know that he knows I want nothing more to do with him, ever. There is a lot of history between us, we dated for three years. For a while it was wonderful, and I Was addicted. by the end of our relationship I would have killed for him, or killed myself if he had asked me to. I am not joking. It was bad. Because of him I got into a horrible situation, and he didn't do anything to stop and didn't believe me when I told him his friends were abusing me. They were. He also was neglectful, sometimes verbally abusive, and was using me - I knew this. But I loved him, and until I was away from him, I didn't realize how fucked up things were.  (here's a little bit of history for anyone who cares. It isn't much though.)

    Anyways, this might be long, as a warning. I am going to write a letter to my ex.. one he will probably never read, and one I don't really want him to read but I need to get some things out, and I need to stop hiding my emotions. Let's see where this takes me, shall we?


    You know who you are.
    No. The answer is No. You told me ages ago that if I never wanted to speak to you again, you understood, I just had to not reply, and you would never bother me again. Bullshit! This is the third message you have sent me in the span of a month, and you bothered to find my fucking Xanga. Just to message me, and tell me the same damn thing. 'I loved you, and I still love you, and I just wanna talk and I don't wanna intrude on your life and blah fucking blah'. Gods, why? Why do you do this to me?

    No, you do not love me. Every time I am away from you you do this, I have lost so many jobs and stable homes because you kept asking me to come back. And in a couple days, you want me gone again. You don't love me - you are just used to me. You have told me to my face more than once, that you don't, and I knew for months before you figured it out. You used me. I let you use me. Whatever. But don't tell me you love me, you just miss what you used to have.

    You left me alone for six months. I am finally able to accept the past, finally able to realize that the only way to get over this fear of relationships that you gave me, is to get into one. And I have someone I want to be with. Not only have I known him for years, but he was there. He knows what I went through when I was with you, he helped me get over you, he is one of my best friends and I love him. I love him more than life itself, and I would never sink low enough to kill myself if he told me to. Not that he ever would. He treats me like a person, not an object, he treats me as if I am the most precious thing in the world to him.

    You used to do that, for a while. and then I turned into nothing. I keep worrying that I'm gonna fuck things up. It drove me to nightmares, because I guess I still feel like you and I falling apart was my fault. I know it wasn't. It was yours. You wanted Rachel, and Janna, and Ana. You didn't want me, I was just a consolation prize. And I knew it. I should have left you then, but I was so addicted. As long as you would still have me, I wouldn't leave. In the end I only left because of your best friends. Because you were not only never around to protect me from the abuse, but because when you saw it happen you didn't stop it. Assumed I didn't care, I guess. Or that I was overreacting, overexaggerating.

    But whatever, I'm trying to keep the past in the past, and you're in the past. You continuously hurt me, and you didn't care. You expect me to talk to you? No. You're blocked and for good reason. Oh, also, my friends are exactly that - my friends. You didn't expect Criz to tell me that bullshit you were spreading that it's MY fault that you are back in texas and not in college in Florida? That it's my fault cos I left you with crazy roommates - who were your best fucking friends? Bullshit. You always blamed all your problems on me. You just can't accept when you mess up. Hell I was just as bad, until I decided everything was my fault. And I wont blame it on you - I've always been unstable as you well know, I just drove myself to it.

    Anyways, I'm getting better finally. I love someone, and I'm not dependent or addicted. I don't care that it's long distance - he's willing to wait for me, and I am for him, too.  It's nice knowing that I am wanted and loved. Nice that he goes out of his way to spend time with me, in his own sweet way. Do you think I want you back in my life? At all? I'm happy, finally. You would do your damnedest to get me back, I know you. You would not be content with just being friends, and whether or not I trust myself around you, I don't trust you at all. So yeah, the answer is still no. I do not wanna talk. I do not want to see you or hear from you again.

    Goodbye.


    ~Mari

  • Gender

    Someone posted a link to this story (baby X) in reply to Dan's latest post. I was intrigued and I read it. I decided to share it here for anyone who wants to read, because I think it's unique and provides a completely different outlook on gender bias and behaviors. Enjoy.


    A Fabulous Child's Story

    by Lois Gould

    Once upon a time, a baby named X was born. This baby was named X so that nobody could tell whether it was a boy or a girl. Its parents could tell, of course, but they couldn't tell anybody else. They couldn't even tell Baby X at first.

    You see, it was all part of a very important Secret Scientific Xperiment, known officially as Project Baby X. The smartest scientists had set up this Xperiment at a cost of Xactly 23 billion dollars and 72 cents, which might seem like a lot for just one baby, even a very important Xperimental baby. But when you remember the prices of things like strained carrots and stuffed bunnies, and popcorn for the movies and booster shots for camp, let alone 28 shiny quarters from the tooth fairy, you begin to see how it adds up.

    Also, long before Baby X was born, all those scientists had to be paid to work out the details of the Xperiment, and to write the Official Instruction Manual for Baby X's parents and, most important of all, to find the right set of parents to bring up Baby X. These parents had to be selected very carefully. Thousands of volunteers had to take thousands of tests and answer thousands of tricky questions. Almost everybody failed because, it turned out, almost everybody really wanted either a baby boy or a baby girl, and not Baby X at all. Also, almost everybody was afraid that a Baby X would be a lot more trouble than a boy or a girl. (They were probably right, the scientists admitted, but Baby X needed parents who wouldn't mind the Xtra trouble.)

    There were families with grandparents named Milton and Agatha, who didn't see why the baby couldn't be named Milton or Agatha instead of X, even if it was an X. There were families with aunts who insisted on knitting tiny dresses and uncles who insisted on sending tiny baseball mitts. Worst of all, these were families that already had other children who couldn't be trusted to keep the secret. Certainly not if they knew the secret was worth 23 billion dollars and 72 cents - and all you had to do was take one little peek at Baby X in the bathtub to know if it was a boy or girl.

    But, finally, the scientists found the Joneses, who really wanted to raise an X more than any other kind of baby - no matter how much trouble it would be. Ms. and Mr. Jones had to promise they would take equal turns caring for X, and feeding it, and singing it lullabies. And they had to promise never to hire any baby-sitters. The government scientists knew perfectly well that a baby-sitter would probably peek at X in the bathtub, too.

    The day the Joneses brought their baby home, lots of friends and relatives came over to see it. None of them knew about the secret Xperiment, though. So the first thing they asked was what kind of a baby X was. When the Joneses smiled and said, "It's an X," nobody knew what to say. They couldn't say, "Look at her cute little dimples!" And they couldn't say, "Look at his husky little biceps!" And they couldn't even say just plain "kitchycoo". In fact, they all thought the Joneses were playing some kind of rude joke.

    But of course, the Joneses were not joking. "It's an X" was absolutely all they would say. And that made the friends and relatives very angry. The relatives all felt embarrassed about having an X in the family. "People will think there's something wrong with it!" some of them whispered. "There is something wrong with it!" others whispered back.

    "Nonsense!" the Joneses told them all cheerfully. "What could possibly be wrong with this perfectly adorable X?"

    Nobody could answer that, except Baby X, who had just finished its bottle. Baby X's answer was a loud, satisfied burp!

    Clearly, nothing at all was wrong. Nevertheless, none of the relatives felt comfortable about buying a present for a Baby X. The cousins who sent the baby a tiny football helmet would not come and visit anymore. And the neighbours who sent a pink-flowered romper suit pulled their shades down when the Joneses passed their house. The Official Instruction Manual had warned the new parents that this would happen, so they didn't fret about it. Besides, they were too busy with Baby X and the hundreds of different Xercises for treating it properly.

    Ms. and Mr. Jones had to be Xtra careful about how they played with little X. They knew that if they kept bouncing it up in the air and saying how strong and active it was, they'd be treating it more like a boy than an X. But if all they did was cuddle it and kiss it and tell it how sweet and dainty it was, they'd be treating it more like a girl than an X.

    On page 1654 of the Official Instruction Manual, the scientists prescribed: "plenty of bouncing and plenty of cuddling, both, X ought to be strong and sweet and active. Forget about dainty altogether".

    Meanwhile, the Joneses were worrying about other problems. Toys, for instance, and clothes. On his first shopping trip, Mr. Jones told the store clerk, "I need some clothes and toys for my new baby". The clerk smiled and said, "Well now, is it a. boy or a girl"

    "It's an X", Mr Jones said, smiling back. But the clerk got all red in the face and said huffily, "In that case, I'm afraid I can't help you, sir".

    So Mr Jones wandered helplessly up and down the aisles trying to find out what X needed. But everything in the store was piled up in sections marked "Boys" or "Girls".

    There were "Boy's' Pyjamas" and "Girls' Underwear" and "Boys' Fire Engines" and "Girl's Housekeeping Sets". Mr. Jones went home without buying anything for X. That night he and Ms. Jones consulted page 2326 of the Official Instruction Manual. "Buy plenty of everything", it said firmly.

    So they bought plenty of sturdy blue pyjamas in the Boys' Department and cheerful flowered underwear in the Girls' Department. And they bought all kinds of toys. A boy doll that made pee-pee and cried, "Pa-pa". And a girl doll that talked in three languages and said "I am the Pres-i-dent of Gen-er-al Mo-tors". They also bought a story-book about a brave princess who rescued a handsome prince from his ivory tower, and another one about a sister and brother who grew up to be a baseball star and a ballet star, and you had to guess which was which.

    The head scientists of Project Baby X checked all their purchases and told them to keep up the good work. They also reminded the Joneses to see page 4629 of the Manual, where it said: "Never make Baby X feel embarrassed or ashamed about what it wants to play with. And if X gets dirty climbing rocks, never say "Nice little Xes don't get dirty climbing rocks."

    Likewise, it said: "If X falls down and cries, never say, "Brave little Xes don't cry". Because of course, nice little Xes do get dirty, and brave little Xes do cry. No matter how dirty X gets, or how hard it cries, don't worry. It's all part of the Xperiment."

    Whenever the Joneses pushed Baby X's stroller in the park, smiling strangers would come over and coo: "Is that a boy or a girl?" The Joneses would smile back and say, "It's an X". The strangers would stop smiling then, and often snarl something nasty - as if the Joneses had snarled at them.

    By the time X grew big enough to play with other children, the Jones' troubles had grown bigger too. Once a little girl grabbed X's shovel in the sandbox and zonked X on the head with it.

    "Now, now, Tracy", the little girl's mother began to scold, "little girls mustn't hit little -" and she turned to ask X, "Are you a little boy or a little girl, dear?"

    Mr. Jones, who was sitting near the sandbox, held his breath and crossed his fingers.

    X smiled politely at the lady, even though X's head had never been zonked so hard in all its life. "I'm a little X", X replied.

    "You're a what ?" the lady exclaimed angrily. "You're a little B.R.A.T., you mean".

    "But little girls mustn't hit little Xes, either!" said X, retrieving the shovel with another polite smile. "What good does hitting do, anyway?"

    X's father, who was still holding his breath, finally let it out, uncrossed his fingers and grinned back at X.

    And at their next secret Project Baby X meeting, the scientists grinned too. Baby X was doing fine.

    But then it was time for X to start school. The Joneses were really worried about this, because school was even more full of rules for boys and girls and there were no rules for Xes. The teachers would tell boys to form one line, and girls to form another line. There would be boys' games and girls' games and boys' secrets and girls' secrets. The school library would have a list of recommended books for girls and a different list of recommended books for boys. There would even be a bathroom marked boys and another marked girls. Pretty soon boys and girls would hardly talk to each other. What would happen to poor little X!

    The Joneses spent weeks consulting their Instruction Manual (there were 246 and 1/2 pages of advice under "First Day at School"), and attending urgent special conferences with the smart scientists of Project Baby X.

    The scientists had to make sure that X's mother had taught X how to throw and catch a ball properly and that X's father had been sure to teach X what to serve at a doll's tea party. X had to know how to shoot marbles and how to jump rope, and most of all, what to say when the other children asked whether X was a boy or a girl.

    Finally, X was ready.

    The Joneses helped X button on a nice new pair of red-and-white checked overalls, and sharpened six pencils for X's nice new pencil box and marked X's name clearly on all the books in its nice new book bag. X brushed its teeth and combed its hair, which just about covered its ears and remembered to put a napkin in its lunchbox.

    The Joneses had asked X's teacher if the class could line up alphabetically, instead of forming separate lines for boys and girls. And they had asked if X could use the principal's bathroom, because it wasn't marked anything except "bathroom". X's teacher promised to take care of all those problems. But nobody could help X with the biggest problem of all­ - other children.

    Nobody in X's class had ever known an X before. What would they think? How would X make friends?

    You couldn't tell what X was by studying its clothes - overalls don't even button right-to-l­eft, like girls' clothes or left-to-right, like boys' clothes. And you couldn't guess whether X lad a girls' short haircut or a boy's long haircut. And it was very hard to tell by the games X liked to play. Either X played ball very well for a girl, or else X played house very well for a boy.

    Some of the children tried to find out by asking (tricky questions, like "Who's your favourite sports star?" That was easy. X had two favourite sport stars: a girl jockey named Robyn Smith and a boy archery champion lamed Robin Hood. Then they asked, what's your favourite television programme?" And hat was even easier. X's favourite television programme was "lassie" which stars a girl dog played by a boy dog.

    Then X said that its favourite toy was a doll, everyone decided that X must be a girl. But hen X said that the doll was really a robot, and that X had computerised it, and that it was programmed to bake fudge brownies and then clean up the kitchen. After X told them that, the Other Children gave up guessing what X was. All they knew was they'd sure like to see X's doll.

    After school, X wanted to play with the other children.

    "How about shooting some baskets in the gym?" X asked all the girls. But all they did was make faces and giggle behind X's back. "How about weaving some baskets in the arts and crafts room?" X asked the boys. But they all made faces and giggled behind X's back, too.

    That night, Ms. and Mr. Jones asked X how things had gone at school. X told them sadly that the lessons were okay, but otherwise school was a terrible place for an X. It seemed as if Other Children would never want an X for a friend.

    Once more, the Joneses reached for their Instruction Manual. Under "Other Children", they found the following message: "What did you Xpect? Other Children have to obey all the silly boy-girl rules, because their parents taught them to. Lucky X - you don't have to stick to the rules at all! All you have to do is be yourself. We're not saying if it be easy."

    X liked being itself. But X cried a lot that night, partly because it felt afraid. So X's father held X tight and cuddled it and couldn't help crying a little too. And X's mother cheered them both up by reading an Xciting story about an enchanted prince called Sleeping Handsome, who woke up when Princess Charming kissed him.

    The next morning, they all felt much better and little X went back to school with a brave smile and a clean pair of red-and-white checked overalls.

    There was a seven-letter-word spelling bee in class that day. And a seven-lap boys' relay race in the gym. And a seven-layer-cake baking contest in the girls' kitchen corner. X won the spelling bee. X also won the relay race. And X almost won the baking contest, except it forgot to light the oven. Which only proves that nobody's perfect.

    One of the Other Children noticed something else, too. He said: "Winning or losing doesn't seem to count to X. X seems to have fun being good at boys' skills and girls' skills".

    "Come to think of if, said another of the Other Children, "maybe X is having twice as much fun as we are."

    So after school that day, the girl who beat X at the baking contests gave X a big slice of her prizewinning cake. And the boy X beat in the relay race asked X to race him home.

    From then on, some really funny things began to happen. Susie, who sat next to X in class, suddenly refused to wear pink dresses to school any more. She insisted on wearing red-and-white checked overalls - just like X's overalls, she told her parents, were much better for climbing monkey bars.

    Then Jim, the class football nut, started wheeling his little sister's doll carriage around the football field. He'd put on his entire football uniform, except for the helmet. Then he put the helmet in the carriage, lovingly tucked under an old set of shoulder pads. Then he started jogging around the field, pushing the carriage and singing "Rock a bye Baby" to his football helmet. He told his family that X did the same thing, so it must be okay. After all, X was now the team's star quarter-back.

    Susie's parents were horrified by her behaviour, and Jim's parents were worried sick about his. But the worst came when the twins, Joe and Peggy, decided to share everything with each other. Peggy used Joe's hockey skates, and his microscope, and took half his newspaper route. Joe used Peggy's needlepoint kit, Peggy started running the lawn mower and Joe started running the vacuum cleaner.

    Their parents weren't one bit pleased with Peggy's wonderful biology experiments, or with Joe's terrific needlepoint pillows. They didn't care that Peggy mowed the lawn better, and that Joe vacuumed the carpet better. In fact they were furious.

    It's all that little X's fault, they agreed. Just because X doesn't know what it is, or what it's supposed to be, it wants to get everybody else mixed up, too! Peggy and Joe were forbidden to play with X anymore. So was Susie, and then Jim, and then all the Other Children. But it was too late; the Other Children stayed mixed up and happy and free, and refused to go back to the way they'd been before X.

    Finally, Joe and Peggy's parents decided to call an emergency meeting of the school's Parents' Association, to discuss "The X Problem". They sent a report to the principal stating that X was a "disruptive influence".

    They demanded immediate action. The Joneses, they said, should be forced to tell whether X was a boy or a girl. And then X should be forced to behave like whichever it was. If the Joneses refused to tell, the Parents' Association said, then X must take an Xaminiation. The school Psychiatrist must Xamine it physically and mentally and issue a full report. If X's test showed it was a boy, it would have to obey all the boys' rules. If it proved to be a girl, X would have to obey all the girls' rules, and if X turned out to be some kind of mixed­ up misfit, then X should be Xpelled from the school. Immediately!

    The Principal was very upset. Disruptive influence? Mixed-up misfit? But X was an Xcellent student. All the teachers said it was a delight to have X in their classes. X was President of the student council. X had won First prize in the talent show and second prize in the art show and honourable mention in the science fair and six athletic events on field day, including the potato race.

    Nevertheless, insisted the Parents' Association, X is a Problem Child. X is the Biggest Problem Child we have ever seen!

    So the Principal reluctantly notified X's parents that numerous complaints about X's behaviour had come to the school's attention. And that after the Psychiatrist’s Xaminiation, the school would decide what to do about X.

    The Joneses reported this at once to the scientists, who referred them to page 85759 of the I nstruction Manual. "Sooner or later," it said, "X will have to be Xamined by a Psychiatrist. This may be the only way any of us will know for sure whether X is mixed up ­or whether everyone else is".

    The night before X was to be Xamined, the Joneses tried not to let X see how worried they were.

    "What if" Mr. Jones would say. And Ms. Jones would reply, "No use worrying".

    Then a few minutes later, Ms. Jones would say, "What if" and Mr. Jones would reply, "No use worrying".

    X just smiled at them both, and hugged them hard and didn't say much of anything. X was thinking, What if? And then X thought: No use worrying.

    At Xactly 9 o'clock the next day, X reported to the school Psychiatrist's office. The Principal, along with a committee from the Parents' Association, X's teacher, X's classmates and Ms. and Mr. Jones waited in the hall outside. Nobody knew the details of the tests X was to be given, but everybody knew they'd be very hard, and that they'd reveal Xactly what everyone wanted to know about X, but was afraid to ask.

    It was terribly quiet in the hall. Almost spooky! Once in a while, they would hear a strange noise inside the room. There were buzzes. And a beep or two, and several bells. An occasional light would flash under the door. The Joneses thought it was a white light, but the Principal thought it was blue. Two or three children swore it was either yellow or green. And the Parents' Committee missed it completely.

    Through it all, you could hear the Psychiatrist's low voice, asking hundreds of questions, and X's higher voice, answering hundreds of answers. The whole thing took so long that everyone knew it must be the most complete Xaminiation anyone had ever had to take. Poor X, the Joneses thought Serves X right, the Parents' Committee thought! Wouldn't like to be in X's overalls right now, the children thought.

    At last, the door opened. Everyone crowded around to hear the results. X didn't look any different; in fact, X was smiling. But the Psychiatrist looked terrible. He looked as if he was crying!

    "What happened?" everyone began shouting. Had X done something disgraceful? "I wouldn't be a bit surprised!" muttered Peggy and Joe's parents.

    "Did X flunk the whole test?" cried Susie's parents. "Or just the most important part?" yelled Jim's parents. "Oh, dear", sighed Mr Jones. "Oh, dear", sighed Ms. Jones. "Sssh", sssshed the Principal. "The Psychiatrist is trying to speak".

    Wiping his eyes and clearing his throat, the psychiatrist began in a hoarse whisper.

    "In my opinion", he whispered - you could tell he must be very upset - "in my opinion, young X here -"

    "Yes? Yes" shouted a parent impatiently. "Sssssh!" sssshed the Principal.

    "Young Ssssshhh here, I mean, young X" said the doctor, frowning, "is just about ... ". "Just about what? Let's have it!" shouted another parent. "Just about the least mixed-up child I've ever Xamined" said the Psychiatrist. "Yah for X," yelled one of the children. And then the others began yelling, too. Clapping and cheering and jumping up and down. "Ssssshh!" Ssshed the Principal, but nobody did.

    The Parents' Committee was angry and bewildered. How could X have passed the whole Xamination? Didn't X have an identity problem? Wasn't X mixed up at all? Wasn't X any kind of misfit? How could it not be, when it didn't even know what it was? And why was the Psychiatrist crying?

    Actually, he had stopped crying and was smiling politely through his tears. "Don't you see?" he said, "I'm crying because it's wonderful! X has absolutely no identity problem! X isn't one bit mixed up! As for being a misfit - ridiculous! X knows perfectly well what it is! Don't you, X? the doctor winked. X winked back.

    "But what is X?" Shrieked Peggy and Joe's parents. "We still want to know what it is!" "Ah, yes", said the doctor winking again. "Well, don't worry. You'll all know one of these days. And you won't need me to tell you." "What? What does he mean?" some of the parents grumbled suspiciously.

    Susie and Peggy and Joe all answered all at once. "He means that by the time X's sex matters, it won't be a secret anymore!"

    With that, the doctor began to push through the crowd towards X's parents. "How do you do?" he said, somewhat stiffly. And then he reached out to hug them both. "If I ever have an X of my own," he whispered, "I sure hope you'll lend me your instruction manual".

    Needless to say, the Joneses were very happy. The Project Baby X scientists were rather pleased too. So were Susie, Jim, Peggy, Joe, and all the Other Children. The Parents' Association wasn't, but they had promised to accept the Psychiatrist’s report and not make any more trouble. They even invited Ms. and Mr. Jones to become honorary members, which they did.

    Later that day, X's friends put on their red-and-white-checked overalls and went over to see X. They found X in the back yard, playing with a very tiny baby that none of them had even seen before. The baby was wearing very tiny red-and-white-checked overalls.

    "How do you like our new baby?" X asked the Other Children proudly. "It's got cute dimples," said Jim. "It's got husky biceps, too", said Susie. "What kind of baby is it?" asked Joe and Peggy.

    X frowned at them. "Can't you tell?" Then X broke into a big, mischievous grin, "It's a Y!"


    I wish I lived in a world where there was no gender bias.

    ~Mari

  • This week has been eventful

    In many ways. Mostly bad. But whatever, I will recover as I always do. I'm just kind of upset cos all the stress got me started on smoking again, it'd been almost a month. However, I wasn't really trying to quit, I mostly just didn't wanna spend money on cigs, so it's not that big of a deal to me right now. What is is my reaction to the events of this week. I probably wont go into detail about things until I've figured them out for myself, and maybe not even then, though. I feel like my privacy has been invaded. Ngh.

    Anyways! one thing that cheered me up greatly was this video on a site that I follow. It's wonderful, and funny, and cool. And pretty uplifting if you're in a foul mood and pissed at the world ^_^

    http://urbanprankster.com/2008/06/where-the-hell-is-matt/

    ~Mari

  • What is one animal you have always wanted as a pet and why?

    A Red Panda. I really don't see why there has to be a 'why'. They're Red Pandas. They have prehensile tails. Come on.

    red-panda.jpg

    red-panda-in-tree.jpg

       

    I just answered this Pandalicious Question; you can eat bamboo too!

  • What's all this controversy

    ...over Online Dating? Good God. People are mean. Okay I have some things to say. I know my words aren't particularly important, but a friend of mine has been hurt by cruel and thoughtless words of other people, so I feel the need to say something about it.

    I have been in more online relationships than I have been 'real-life' (although in my opinion if it happens in your life it is real-life) relationships. This is for several reasons - none of which I care to express in this entry. Either way; I have had some wonderful, fulfilling relationships online. If you can have friends online why can't you have relationships? 
    I think the thing that bothers me most is all these assumptions about when being in a relationship online, there's no way for it to be exclusive. This is bollocks. Absolute bullshit. When you are in any relationship the biggest and most important part of it is trust. Just because you are dating online doesn't mean they are going to be leading you on or cheating on you. The same goes for "real-life" - Just because you see the person you are dating in person, doesn't mean they aren't going to cheat on you or lead you on. I've been cheated on by "RL" boyfriends - but never by an online one. And maybe it's because I really only tend to date good friends who I have known for a while and who I have come to trust. Who I know what they are like and how they act when things are going wrong.  If I feel I can trust them, then I will. Usually I end up meeting some of the friends they do see every day, which also shows me how much trust the person has in me, these people would know if he or she was cheating on me, so why would they let me meet them? You shouldn't ever assume that someone is going to be cheating on you jsut because you don't see each other. If you were married to or dating a soldier and he got shipped off, would you cheat on him/her? Woudl you assume that s/he is going to be cheating on you? It's s a similar enough concept, one that says  "if you don't see them they are going to be getting it from other people". I don;t liek that people assume such things. (Plus, anyways, lots of people nowadays use webcams to do that sort of thing.  I don't but whatev.)
    Another thing people keep saying is that you can't trust someone online because how can you trust someone who hasn't seen you in your worst times? Oh, please. I know my friends online have been through some of the worst shit I can throw at them - not on purpose, but because I have some severe trust issues, and I don't have many friends "IRL" I can trust. You can go through things together online - and people seem to forget that lots of online relationships use other methods of communication, like, oh, say - a PHONE. I know there's many times when I've had a breakdown and needed someone to talk to, who do I call? Usually Shush, who I am so in love with it hurts. And he comforts me, calms me, talks me through it and helps me overcome it - not with pretty words like my "RL" ex used, but by making me see the real problem and helping me get over it.  So, what, I can't trust him? We can't have a real emotional connection? That's bullshit. 
    I've had lots of experiences with online dating. And not just with myself, but with other people as well. It's rather funny, because I suppose I'm in a minority of the population - but I know a hell of a lot of couples who met and dated online and went on to have really wonderful, fruitful relationships, marriages, and even families. One of my friends in job corps was married and had a three year old daughter with someone she initially met and dated online for several years before they met in person. My best friend Jay, who I have known since I was 15, has been with his girlfriend for over five years now, they met online and spend more than half of their time apart, but their relationships is one of the best I have seen in a long time. Sophomore year in high school my English teacher married a man she met online and had dated online for a year before meeting in person. I could go on, there's a couple more, but I won't. 
    I know not all online relationships do work out, and I know a lot of them can end very badly. People are just as likely to cheat online as they are in "real-life" and vice versa. If you go by that, no one should trust anyone or date anyone. And I think that's pretty stupid. People are gonna get hurt no matter what, it's a fact of life. How they choose to date people is up to them, not us, and if they can find someone online who they love and trust, shouldn't we spend our time pushing the relationship to last rather than warning them it won't? Saying nasty things about one of the people and warning people that it isn't going to last, or that s/he is probably cheating on you - those are stupid and childish things to say. It's almost as if people want the relationship to end because they don't approve of it, or because they think it won't last.
    Some people on here may know that things ended badly with my ex, Chase. Mostly because of the situation we were in and my mental instability, and goodness, just a plethora of other things. But that relationship lasted three years before it ended - we met online, and talked online for over half a year before ever meeting. When I Was in job corps that relationship was 90% online. The boyfriend I had before him had been my best friend for years, and we were in a really great relationship for a year, but we drifted apart, it was just life - neither of us cheated and neither of us got hurt, we still talk once in a while. The person I am in love with right now, I only know online, and the biggest reason we are not dating is because I still have issues from my relationship with Chase that I am trying to get over with. He understands and is supporting me even though I know he wants more.  
    I have a bad feeling I turned this into a rant - and there is so much more that I could say and want to say, but I won't. I think there's a chance anyone can get hurt in any relationship, whether long distance, online, over the phone, writing letters, or in person. But people shouldn't judge a relationship by whether the people meet face to face or not. They especially shouldn't say some of the cruel things I saw when I read the entry that started it all. That just shows the kind of person you are inside. A relationship is a relationship and whether it works out or not depends more on the people in it than on anything else.
    ~Marina
  • So, I'm sick, and

    ...because of this I DIDN'T GET TO GO! T_T I was so upset.. Cos now I wont be able to go again until her husband comes back from Korea.. (He's in the Army) That was basically my one chance to see her until he gets back.

    So that's kinda upsetting. But whatever - I'm still gonna be going to Texas the week of the 4th of July, to visit some friends and stuff. Family too. I'm worried about that - my roommate's coming with me. And some of my family members are racist. I don't know how it is gonna turn out. However, I plan to have as much fun as I can, and make sure Kell has fun too! I absolutely can't wait to see my friend Crizzy, its been so many years... *sighs*

    This makes me think about all my mistakes in the past and how they made me who I am today. Today Crizzy told me that the thing she likes most about me is that I know who I am. And.. I guess she's right. I don't know 100%, all the time, but I do know who I am and where I stand, and while I am not always true to myself I try to be.

    I spent all of my life not knowing who I was and doing what everyone else wanted, ignoring what I wanted and needed and thinking that no matter what happened to me, if the people I cared about were happy I could be happy too. That got me into such a bad lifestyle, I had friends who used me and abused me and took advantage of me, and I just sat there and took it, thinking "if I can make them happy, it'll all be okay".

    When I left in september, I was broken. I was awake. I have spent so much time, I can hardly believe it's been so long already... I spent so much time working at myself, finding the things I knew weren't real and showing myself who I was. Finding out who Marina was and discarding that shell of a girl named Katie who was a doll and a tool for everyone else to play with and use. She's gone now. And while sometimes I can still feel that girl inside of me, I know I can overcome her. I know I can become who I am and who I want to be.

    It's been hard, and hell, it still is hard.  It still hurts, sometimes I forget, and especially when I get locked into a melancholic depression - I wonder if I'll ever be able to be who I know I am, without having to fight who I used to be. But I know that I don't ever want to go back to who and what I used to be. I don't want to be a scared, ten year old girl stuck in the body of a 22 year old young woman. I don't want to be a scarred, bitter person, either. I want to be able to move on from the past.

    I digress. When Crizzy told me that, it struck me as the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me. It not only almost made me cry from happiness that she thought of me that way, but it also gave me courage to continue on the path that I am on. It showed me that I am indeed doing the right thing - and while I did know that, it's nice to hear it from someone else, too.

    Anyways, yeah.. I don't know where I was going with this, just rambling, I guess.

    Ttyl!
    ~Marina

  • This weekend

    I am going to North Carolina! ^_^ I am sooo excited.

    I'm going to visit my girlfriend. It's gonna be really fun, and I can't wait to spend some time with her.

    I know this is short but it's all I can really think of right now, going to visit Desiree.

    ~Marina