InsomniacKS

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 7 months ago

Art Therapist. I am the services director at a youth shelter. I oversee the art therapy and psychology interns and the other staff, making sure we are providing the appropriate services (shelter, life skills, therapy, case management, fiduciary, etc) and are generally meeting the needs of our clients.

Additionally, I get to be the handy man...because stuff needs to get done and I'm the one with the drill and willingness to climb a ladder.

I got my current job due to my degree in art therapy. But before that, I worked in an embroidery shop. My kids have special needs and I wanted to be available for them while they were young. I replied to an ad for an embroidery specialist (without any training), and they hired me to run the shop based on me having a good work history, good education, and the expectation that I would be around for a while.

TL;DR. Most places just want to see that you're dependable and willing to work hard. Build up that reputation and you can branch out into different fields a little. Just apply to anything you are interested in. Good luck!!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago

Ooo, also Our Flag Means Death, only 2 seasons but such a great show.

What We Do In The Shadows, delightful and so wrong on so many levels...lol

Someone else already said it, but I agree so strongly, I gotta restate...Reservation Dogs...heart-warming and with great character arcs.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

It is so unbelievably good...on Hulu. Well worth checking out!

[–] [email protected] 12 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Pushing Daisies is simply delightful and whimsical.

The Magicians is an epic story with highly entertaining characters and a full storyline with an actual ending.

Loudermilk is a witty and heartfelt look at people trying to get by while also dealing with their alcoholism.

Sandman is masterfully done, a visual treat, regardless of whether you're a fan of the comic.

[–] [email protected] 12 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Have you tried graphic novels? Comic books get a bad rap, but there is dialog and pictures that help you get into the story. Maybe that would help?

[–] [email protected] 22 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Your cat is a Disney Princess!

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Thank you! They are my heart...

 

Pratchett covers his face while Poe looks for something to pounce on. Their eyes are open and they see EVERYTHING now!

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Your comments in this thread make you sound controlling and judgmental, but I don't think you're trying to be. I think you feel strongly about this and think she's making a mistake...but that's the thing: This is HER mistake to make. It sounds like your wife wants time to process this, but you are pressuring her to tell him immediately. You are so sure she should be honest with him about this, you make comments about comparing her not telling on her mother's affair results (her dad not fathering her) with her cheating on you. That's such a low blow, I'm surprised you didn't pick up on the controlling/manipulative vibe yourself.

I get that you feel strongly about this. But it is NOT your relationship and not your consequences. If she tells him and their fragile relationship implodes...YOU will share the blame. If she takes the time she needs and decides he can handle it, and their relationship implodes...she will not blame you for it.

Just listen to her, like really listen. Don't listen for ways to argue that she should do what you want her to do...just hear her. Let her process this and make her own decision. She is the one risking her dad here, not you. Let her figure it out. Repeat what she says so she can hear it...don't add judgmental tones. Just be there and let her do the deciding.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Dude, you focused on 1 sentence and missed the point.

#1 It is Your WIFE'S relationship. Stay out of it unless she asks for advice.

#2 Your wife knows her dad better than you do. Trust her.

#3 Biology does not make a parent. She believes her genetics is irrelevant to her relationship with her father. She's probably right. Odds are that he's suspected she's biologically not his for a while anyway.

#4 He took the test, too. He knows. Knowing that she knows and is still seeking him out as though nothing has changed probably means the world to him. No need to confront something they both are ignoring.

#5 Your wife is a full-grown, functioning adult with a mature relationship with her father. She can make these decisions without your assistance. Quit it.

Also, if you undermine this and leak it in any way, she has every right to leave you. This could be divorce-worthy behavior.

Stay. Out. Of. Her. Relationship. With. Her. Dad.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You are NTA. Someone spying on you to prove you skipped their lame attention-seekinh shindig, is TA.

"Plans changed and I didn't have the energy to be social." Plus, once you've RSVP'd not going, it is rude to then show up...so remember that if he pushes for more.

Or you could level with him and explain you didn't enjoy watching him flaunt his wealth, so you took your attitude and stayed home...because that is the nice thing to do.

But regardless, remember you are not obligated to hang out just because you are invited. It is okay to say you have other plans...even if they are literally just to stay home. Totally valid. NTA.

 

This was from the trip home with our new babies. Their mom wasn't able to care for them. These 2 are the only survivors of a litter of 6. They hug each other to go to sleep...