I have a daughter with your name. I have to keep her going in the near-future when most (all?) of her friends die. The vaxxed have chosen their fate and cannot be helped.
I'm happy that your daughter is unvaxxed; I'm sure that's a huge comfort to you. But my brother's babies are a stark example that not all the vaxxed chose their fate.
I'm also not convinced that teaching your Claudia to cut herself off from her emotions, give up all hope, and preemptively grieve her friends is a healthy coping strategy. Love and loss are two sides of the same coin; one isn't possible without the other. Avoiding the possibility of loss also means avoiding deep connections to others, and ultimately I find that it's those connections that give my life meaning and joy.
There are different ways of dealing with the unfolding tragedy around us. You might find your daughter is more resilient than you realize, capable of loving her vaxxed friends, yet still being able to cope when they sicken and die.
It is not being cold or mean spirited. It is keeping yourself from being so traumatized by what is going on that you can no longer operate. This is especially critical to sensative people....and people who cannot understand what the world is coming to.
It is not cold or mean spirited. It is realistic. If you break your heart over this, you will be no good to anyone, and you will lose your mind. Feelings are great but the time is coming when you need to shut them down. IF you want to live.
We will have to agree to disagree. I love my friends and family, and it breaks my heart to know their lives will be cut short due to the jab. My father is in the end stages of lung cancer, as a matter of fact. However, until Dad actually dies, I intend to spend as much time as I can with him and show him by word and by deed how much I love him.
No one is saying to stop loving one's parents or caring for those you can.
I daresay your heart is not broken since you can focus on your Father. I think you are self protecting in a way, because even though you say your heart breaks that their lives will be cut short, you are still able to function...so you must have some mechanism..even if it is thinking "I won't worry about it until it happens to the friends".
You don't know the true long term effects any more than the twins' parents. Hell, we don't even know what's IN the vials or how much as it would seem to vary greatly. ttps://sashalatypova.substack.com/p/it-doesnt-add-up
Doom porning toddlers to drive home a point we all already understand well is pathetic and you should refund your paid subscribers if you have any.
I accept everything that is ahead. To the original point, I don't pretend there is any hope at all for these children. Their parents killed them; let them deal with the horror.
I'm not selling a thing. I'm buying lots of things, things I may need.
Really unhelpful and uncalled for.
Time to harden your heart and acknowledge incredibly difficult and dangerous times ahead.
"Come with me if you want to live."
Time to learn some compassion. Not everyone copes by becoming cold and mean-spirited.
I have a daughter with your name. I have to keep her going in the near-future when most (all?) of her friends die. The vaxxed have chosen their fate and cannot be helped.
I'm happy that your daughter is unvaxxed; I'm sure that's a huge comfort to you. But my brother's babies are a stark example that not all the vaxxed chose their fate.
I'm also not convinced that teaching your Claudia to cut herself off from her emotions, give up all hope, and preemptively grieve her friends is a healthy coping strategy. Love and loss are two sides of the same coin; one isn't possible without the other. Avoiding the possibility of loss also means avoiding deep connections to others, and ultimately I find that it's those connections that give my life meaning and joy.
There are different ways of dealing with the unfolding tragedy around us. You might find your daughter is more resilient than you realize, capable of loving her vaxxed friends, yet still being able to cope when they sicken and die.
It is not being cold or mean spirited. It is keeping yourself from being so traumatized by what is going on that you can no longer operate. This is especially critical to sensative people....and people who cannot understand what the world is coming to.
It is not cold or mean spirited. It is realistic. If you break your heart over this, you will be no good to anyone, and you will lose your mind. Feelings are great but the time is coming when you need to shut them down. IF you want to live.
We will have to agree to disagree. I love my friends and family, and it breaks my heart to know their lives will be cut short due to the jab. My father is in the end stages of lung cancer, as a matter of fact. However, until Dad actually dies, I intend to spend as much time as I can with him and show him by word and by deed how much I love him.
No one is saying to stop loving one's parents or caring for those you can.
I daresay your heart is not broken since you can focus on your Father. I think you are self protecting in a way, because even though you say your heart breaks that their lives will be cut short, you are still able to function...so you must have some mechanism..even if it is thinking "I won't worry about it until it happens to the friends".
You don't know the true long term effects any more than the twins' parents. Hell, we don't even know what's IN the vials or how much as it would seem to vary greatly. ttps://sashalatypova.substack.com/p/it-doesnt-add-up
Doom porning toddlers to drive home a point we all already understand well is pathetic and you should refund your paid subscribers if you have any.
There is hope! There's a cure! LOL
No. Grow up.
Optimism is cowardice.
It's cute that you believe you're different or have somehow improved upon the sale of fear by those you purport to be against. *pats head*
I accept everything that is ahead. To the original point, I don't pretend there is any hope at all for these children. Their parents killed them; let them deal with the horror.
I'm not selling a thing. I'm buying lots of things, things I may need.