• @[email protected]
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    5223 hours ago

    People who say Lemmy is not a social media site might just be right.
    Because apparently the people here do not want to be social they just want the media.

    • @pyre
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      1015 hours ago

      I think lemmy and reddit are super different from social media. you can use some of their tools to socialize but most if not all people don’t use their real names, most don’t even have a proper profile, most people don’t follow each other or try to get followers, etc. there’s just no “relationship” aspect that is distinct to social media sites.

      if anything lemmy feels a little more social just because of the small size, and how you start to recognize the same bunch of people in the comments. but I’d expect that to go away if it ever gets really big one day.

  • @[email protected]
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    321 day ago

    Every fucking time I want to leave some other neighbour comes out first and I have to wait for them to clear out before I can leave.

    And they are so slow! Clear the public area swiftly you inconsiderate buffoons!

      • @[email protected]
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        521 hours ago

        The old people always want to talk and I’m too nice to cut them off. There is no other choice but to avoid them at all costs.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 day ago

          To actively avoid interacting with anyone outside of your specific social circle??? Doesn’t seem like that would be “normal”.

          • @Lumisal
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            18 hours ago

            Come visit Finland! Then you can be the weird one 😂

            There was a joke here that they were telling us to stand closer together during the height of Covid for example

          • Tarquinn2049
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            71 day ago

            I suppose it depends on your definition of normal. But I specifically didn’t say it was normal for everyone, I said it was normal social anxiety. Which only affects around 10% of people. Still a pretty large number, that’s about the same as being left-handed. And yet you likely know more people that are left handed, because the odds of meeting someone with social anxiety are, of course, much lower even though just as many exist.

            • @[email protected]
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              -21 day ago

              That would be “normal social anxiety symptoms” or even “normal for social anxiety” where normal applies to the symptom discussed. Here your use of normal supplements the “social anxiety” which I do understand is more prevalent than people would really acknowledge but isn’t exactly normal.
              Even more so for zero contact, no coping mechanism social anxiety that has you saying rude things about others existing in shared physical space.

              • @[email protected]
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                524 hours ago

                Is “normal social anxiety symptoms” really meaningfully different than "“normal social anxiety”? Isn’t that implied?

                • @[email protected]
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                  -224 hours ago

                  It is not implied. In fact I doubt most people would consider social anxiety to be even a clinical term and it is often used a catch all for minor anxiety towards social interactions that can be difficult.

                  Following up someone saying they hide inside when neighbors are around and that they think they are buffoons for not moving at the speed you want because of a lack of self control with “well that’s just normal social anxiety” validates and normalizes behavior that is neither valid nor productive.

                  My grandmother was an English teacher and she would tell you it’s not ok to leave things implicit as you leave the comprehension to the reader when that is the purpose of you as the speaker.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 day ago

            Undiagnosed anxiety sufferers who think it’s normal to be terrified of human interaction downvoting you

    • @ZoopZeZoop
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      481 day ago

      It is and the peephole is the gateway to false negatives. It seems like they’re gone, and then they’re not! They were just out of spy range!

      • @Acemod
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        81 day ago

        Thats why you have pinhole cameras above your door pointing down the hallway in each direction as well.

  • @leadore
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    1524 hours ago

    Hm, I’m kind of in between. I do this fairly often, not wanting to go out right when someone else is there. But I don’t know why, since as far as I can tell it doesn’t make me feel anxious to run into someone like in the cartoon.

    It doesn’t bother me at all to cross paths with someone and I’m fine with saying Hi or just nodding to acknowledge their presence. Rarely does anyone actually try to start a conversation or anything. If they do say anything it’s probably just a one-liner and move on. And it’s easy to tell if someone doesn’t want to nod or say Hi as you pass because they stare at the ground the whole time, and I’m fine with that too, but I don’t do that.

    But now I’m wondering, so why do I tend to wait until they’re gone? Is it really social anxiety? I don’t think so? I’m a loner but I have no problem or anxiety talking to people either. 🤔

    • @[email protected]
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      522 hours ago

      I’m usually rushing out somewhere when I leave the house and a few of my neighbors are talkers, which I normally don’t mind at all. But sometimes it makes more sense to just wait inside for a minute rather than get stuck in a 5 minute conversation.

    • @multifariace
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      322 hours ago

      Not me. I even talk to people in the bathroom.

      • @[email protected]
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        -81 day ago

        …why though?

        Reminds me of a favorite line from a song, “I don’t want you to romanticize falling the fuck apart”

        • @[email protected]
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          271 day ago

          Just going to stick my reply on the top comment here, but may touch on some of the lower comments to help out.

          Answering yes to the question “Are they afraid of possibly having a brief interaction with a neighbor” is going to be unique to the individual. I saw some mention of anxiety disorder down there, and while that may be the case for some, I wouldn’t label myself with that and I see this as a good opportunity to caution against over generalization for these grey areas of life.

          For me personally, I have a full time career that primarily involves interacting with people 95% of the time. When I get done working for the day… I’m all interacted out. So yeah I may not enter a room or exit my apartment when I know it’s going to require more social interactions. I’m just tired. It’s honestly easier for me to just wait a couple minutes so that I don’t have to restart my decompression.

          • @[email protected]
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            524 hours ago

            Also while I dont have social anxiety, I do have Autism and was diagnosed more specifically with Aspergers. This means that I really dont like dealing with people in general, not in an anxiety wag but in a let me do my own thing type of way.

        • @badcommandorfilename
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          231 day ago

          Because then you have to make pointless small talk and pleasantries, and I need to save all of those for the boring people I don’t want to talk to at work.

        • @[email protected]
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          151 day ago

          …why though?

          Anxiety disorders are a group of mental disorders characterized by significant and uncontrollable feelings of anxiety and fear such that a person’s social, occupational, and personal functions are significantly impaired.

          Expressing your struggles is not the same as romanticizing them. You should self interrogate why you assume they are the same

          • @[email protected]
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            -141 day ago

            Because a lot of people I know and see are like “lol I’m a mess” without seeming to do anything to address the situation.

            Though that’s aggravated by the capitalist hellscape that makes getting health care difficult.

            But also I’m less generous about this because it’s frustrating to be on the receiving end of someone’s crippling anxiety.

            And this comic is a cutesy, romanticized if you will, representation of it.

                • Tarquinn2049
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                  141 day ago

                  This is a pretty common mentality we have to deal with. Someone that doesn’t have our problem, downplaying how big of a deal it is because they have never had to put much thought into it. It’s a physical difference in the structure of our brain. While we can learn ways to cope with it, we can’t ever “get over it”. We find ways to minimize triggering it, and ways to ride it out with the least amount of stress. And one of the ways that helps is sharing our struggles with the rest of our community for support, and trying not to care about outsiders shitting on us as we do so.

            • @[email protected]
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              424 hours ago

              without seeming to do anything to address the situation.

              seeming

              A lot of the struggles and progress in this area isn’t going to outwardly visible unless they decide to share that with you.

              • @[email protected]
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                224 hours ago

                I’m aware but worth pointing out. It’s easy to forget. Also to forget that our personal experience is not universal.

                I had really bad anxiety in my youth. I’d get nauseous. Staying inside alone made it worse. So much worse. Taking the plunge and actually going out, talking to people, engaging, regularly, that lead to progress. Even if it meant throwing up in the bathroom sometimes. But that probably won’t work for everyone.

                But I guess some part of me has a visceral reaction that’s just like “you’re making it worse! You’re just hiding from the problem and it’s never going to get better this way! Just go outside and nothing bad will happen, and you’ll stop freaking out eventually!”. But that’s not everyone.

                But yes, to your point, a lot of the time it seems like they’re not even trying, and I can’t know their inner world. Sometimes they’re not, sometimes they are.

                I don’t think it’s an accurate assessment to say “everyone is doing their best” though because some people certainly are not.

    • @fjordbasa
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      171 day ago

      They likely have high anxiety, possibly an anxiety disorder. It’s just a relatable representation of that in comic form

      • @DV8
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        Surely you’re not implying that wanting to avoid unnecessary social interaction with overly familiar strangers means you have high anxiety? You could claim they’re socially awkward but that’s still pretty far from anxiety.

        • Tarquinn2049
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          41 day ago

          There are other reasons to want to. But social anxiety is pretty common, so it’s generally a safe assumption.

    • @Klear
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      371 day ago

      A Portal turret.

    • Tarquinn2049
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      1 day ago

      Without checking other comics in the same storyline I would have to guess roommate(I don’t know this chatacters living situation), the keyholes in some appartments are on both sides, she is inside her apartment trying to leave, and has been trying for long enough that the roommate is surprised.

    • AwesomeLowlander
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      261 day ago

      Yes, but this situation isn’t necessarily anxiety. It can just be social awkwardness, not wanting to have to say hi, etc.

      • @[email protected]
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        131 day ago

        of course it’s a comic with fake characters with no objective truth to be found…

        but the artist is a vocal mental health advocate

        …it’s 100% about anxiety 😅

          • @RememberTheApollo_
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            -11 day ago

            Your comment, it’s probably not, it’s probably something else, really doesn’t lend itself to allowing it.

              • @RememberTheApollo_
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                -31 day ago

                “Probably not [thing]”.

                That’s equivalent to “isn’t necessarily [thing]”.

                • @[email protected]
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                  24 hours ago

                  Ah this is a classic language misunderstanding. “Isn’t necessarily” means “possibly not [thing]” or “doesn’t have to be” or “may or may not be” but doesn’t have much bearing on probabilities.

                  That’s how people usually use that term in English anyway.

                  EDIT sorry didn’t mean to dogpile. I just saw that a couple other people already replied.

                • @[email protected]
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                  No? First means less-than-50% probability of thing, second means less-than-100% probability of thing

                • @[email protected]
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                  224 hours ago

                  That’s simply not true. I agree that it seems to be social anxiety depicted but you misunderstand that phrase. That’s basically just saying it could be something else, nothing to do with likelihood.

            • AwesomeLowlander
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              223 hours ago

              Please don’t misquote me, I said nothing of the sort.

              *Isn’t necessarily means >0% chance *Probably means >50% chance

              They are not the same

    • @[email protected]
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      -11 day ago

      They are and they do, but this example is extreme. Having been on both sides of this, I’d say no one should have to live their life in fear of every little interaction. It’s exhausting, and you will never succeed in getting every person to leave you alone anyway. But this doesn’t have to be “the way it is.” You can actually change and make your life easier. Sometimes it takes help and a long time, but I believe most people can do it if they really want to.

      • @[email protected]
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        151 day ago

        I don’t even have anxiety and I think this is relatable. It’s not even necessarily fear, but maybe not having the bandwidth to be social in that moment.

        Spoons, etc

      • @[email protected]
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        524 hours ago

        But where does the comic state or imply that living like this is healthy? The character doesn’t seem happy.

      • Dragon Rider (drag)
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        220 hours ago

        Do you think we should treat people with crippling anxiety by telling them that their anxiety is crippling any time they post on the internet about how crippling their anxiety is?

  • @EtherWhack
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    520 hours ago

    For me, it’s my roommate and the never-ending rant about ‘stupid’ things going on at work.

  • @[email protected]
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    721 hours ago

    This is why people moved en masse to suburbs. You go to your car and drive away, rarely even see a neighbor. I’ve spoken to a neighbor once in the last year and it was because we were both shoveling snow (it was yesterday). We shoveled for an hour in silence but we kept getting closer to the street (she’s across the street). At some point we were only about 20 feet from each other and the silence was awkward. At least it was just a 30 second convo.

    • @[email protected]
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      1016 hours ago

      Wtf? I live in the suburbs and we talk regularly to the neighbours. Is this some weird US-specific dystopia?

      • @[email protected]
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        14 hours ago

        It’s automatic garage door culture. You pull up to your house and hit the garage open button and when you leave it’s the same, you just drive away and never see anyone, you close your garage remotely and you’re gone. Maybe if you do your own lawn care you’ll see neighbors but many people hire lawn care professionals. I don’t have a garage to park in. But my wife likes to do the lawn care. So I’m only outside while walking to or from my car. My wife hates the cold so snow shoveling is on me. I’m about to be shoveling more in five minutes :)

    • @tamal3
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      218 hours ago

      I grew up in a suburb and that was the only time I HAVE regularly felt like this. I still wince when I think of the loud Greek lady across the street who shouted my name whenever I tried to leave the house. Egads.

  • @Droggelbecher
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    521 day ago

    Even worse when you’re really hungry but your flatmates are hanging out in the kitchen

    • Midnight Wolf
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      1 day ago

      Just stroll out as casual as possible and act suprise when they see you. “oh shit, hey” without any clothes on. Repeat this until they relocate their usual hangout spot to another building.

      E: or discover your like exhibitionism and your fear of socializing drops (but your horniness rises when you can hear them congregating)

    • @tetris11
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      1221 hours ago

      Yes. Their violent neighbor broke in earlier and is currently using their bathroom, much to the embarrassment of the protagonist

    • @EtherWhack
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      520 hours ago

      I think it’s her front door and her neighbors are talking in the hall outside her apartment. (The keys doesn’t really make sense with her wanting to ‘go’)

      • @[email protected]
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        716 hours ago

        In Europe you often have doors that lock with keys from inside as well. And no knob/autolock.

        The good part is that there is no “I forgot my keys and locked myself out” because either you couldn’t leave without your keys or you left your door unlocked.

        The bad part is when you are late to your engagement because you can’t just leave the apartment unlocked/you are locked in and your room mate Julia misplaced her keys and borrowed yours to go out for an hour and she’s an hour late already. Fuck you, Julia. Also fire safety.

      • @nBodyProblem
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        416 hours ago

        Some houses have a deadbolt that has a lock cylinder on both sides because it’s more resistant to breakins. My house is like this and I need a key to leave unless I want to jump out of a window

          • @nBodyProblem
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            114 hours ago

            Like most buildings, my house has windows I can exit in an emergency

            Double cylinder deadbolts are pretty common IME

  • Sabata
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    121 day ago

    I do this for every threat of human interaction ever. I wish I could fix that.

    • @[email protected]
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      524 hours ago

      You don’t fix it. You just work on it till you can handle more because you want to or you have to.

      We aren’t so much as broken as just different, as we all are. We all just need to do our parts to work to be part of society rather than perfect it ourselves first.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 day ago

      I’m human, and you just interacted with me.

      EDIT: This community has apparently about 11,000 active users. You just interacted with them and it didn’t seem to be an issue.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 day ago

        I’m human

        I don’t believe this. I’m pretty sure this computer I’m using is generating random comments as I’m scrolling through here.

      • Sabata
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        123 hours ago

        You’re not a threat and you don’t set my nervous system into meltdown. It’s the level of abstraction that I need to interact at all.

  • @[email protected]
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    181 day ago

    Are they afraid to leave their apartment? It looks like they’re outside their apartment with needing the key to turn the deadbolt.

    • @[email protected]
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      Different lock types are more or less common in different places.

      I don’t know where the artist of the comic lives, but here in the UK for example most exterior doors have a keyhole on BOTH sides, and you need to use the key to lock or unlock it from inside, as well as from out.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 hours ago

          It does feel like it might be, but I don’t know if it actually is.

          The UK generally has extremely good fire safety regulations, so if this was getting people killed I feel like it would have been the subject of some scrutiny.

          The house I grew up in was this way, and the house I live in now with a new door (<10yo) is still that way.

          As a kid I never thought about it, and I don’t remember ever being stuck in the house.

          The way people normally deal with keys is that everyone who needs a key has one of their own on their keyring, and there is usually also a ‘house’ key which stays by the door and isn’t taken away anywhere.

          And none of this is to say “this is a good way” it’s just to say “this is the way people are used to here”