30+ Ways to Deal with Depression and Anxiety That Actually Help

According to the World Health Organization, depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide. Did you know that more than 300 million people struggle with the illness globally? Not to mention anxiety, a frequent companion of depression, is the most common mental illness in the United States.

Many of those with anxiety and/or depression have struggled with finding effective ways to cope, and the stigma associated with mental illness certainly doesn’t help. This AskReddit thread gives 35 coping strategies for depression and anxiety that are actually helpful.

#35. The power of pets

For me getting a new kitten tugged me out of depression. I’m a huge cat person and this kitten just chose me like we got home and she came out of the cage straight to my lap to nap. Two years later her just being here loving me has made me a totally different person.

#34. Healthy living

Working out and eating healthy. Friends dragged me into it. Changed my life.

#33. Following a routine

Making a positive routine to replace the negative one you’re stuck in.

For instance I would take my phone into my room and go to bed and watch s DVD then waste time on the Internet for a bit and eat some junk food and then try to sleep, which wouldn’t happen and would lead to a pattern of sleeping during the day and being awake during the night.

So I went into my spare bedroom which unlike mine was bare at about 11pm without any phone or kindle or food and climb into the covers to sleep.

I slept better and broke that negative cycle and had the day to do things where I was awake properly.

Exercise and getting out if the house is another one

#32. Working on yourself

Doing things for myself, and putting work into myself. There’s nothing wrong with saying I want to do this for me. For me it was guitar, reading, and writing. I’m bad at all of them but I do them for me.

And leaving bad things behind, bad people behind. Thinking critically about negative aspects of my life. Consciously asking myself how they’re affecting me, and how I feel about them.

#31. Focusing on yourself

Plenty of water, regular exercise, a diet that is plant-based and varied, sunshine/light box/vitamin D supplements as needed/, lithium orotate, evening primrose oil, vitamin B p5p, adequate sleep, essential oils for different occasions.

To be honest I stopped talking about my problems so much. Keeping quiet about what I might be feeling at every moment helped me assess when I really was feeling something that I needed help with. I stopped going to therapy when I found myself repeating the same worry, I wasn’t getting anywhere. When I realized I could help myself I felt better because I was in control of my life.

I was labeled as a person with Borderline Personality Disorder which made me work harder to not be that person. It doesn’t feel good to have something “wrong” with you and it gave me more incentive to be someone who helps make everything positive around them. Hopefully I make others feel good in a genuine way every day. While I am far from reproach, as I also have feelings/opinions and am not a doormat, I think that I’m doing pretty well in my objective.

#30. Being your own bully

I bullied myself out of severe social anxiety. It got to the point where being in a moderate to large group/crowd of people would give me terrible diarrhea. It got to the point where it was a hopeless spiral of fear of shitting myself in public (only ever happened once and no one noticed) and fear of crowds feeding into each other.

One day, I’d just had enough. Enough missing out on things and excluding myself from concerts. I think it was the night my sister and her husband brought me to see Les Mis when they were on tour, and I shat myself on the way to the bathroom.

So I started being my own bully. I told myself: “Ya know what, Atlas_Mech? You are going to do this, even if you shit yourself in the process. Don’t want that? Too fucking bad. Bring an extra pair of panties and pants. You’re nervous? Oh fucking well. You’re shaking and trembling and having a fucking panic attack 3 days in advance? Too fucking bad. You made a promise to be there, and you don’t ever fucking break a promise.”

And it wasn’t an instant success. I bailed early at parties and events, but people were glad I showed up. I told someone about my social anxiety and consequential diarrhea and they said, “that’s okay, it’s what I have a washer and dryer for! Oh! And now you can try on my clothes! I’ve got your back.”

#29. Letting go of what doesn’t matter

Started to stop giving fucks about things I used to care and started to work out. The beginning was the hardest though.

#28. Try a new hobby

Video games. Not kidding.

During my one and only anxiety/panic attack my friend took me to a LAN party at someone’s house. There was a steep learning curve on whatever war strategy game we were playing but I didn’t care, it did the trick.

#27. Take a unique approach

Exercise, the keto diet, daily 10 minute mediations, and lsd. I was anxious my whole life and now it’s gone. I was depressed and passively suicidal for years and now that’s all gone too. It feels like enlightenment but I don’t know if a person should say they’re enlightened lol.

#26. Medication

Medication. People shit on it, but when it works it really works.

#25. Cutting out caffeine

Besides meditation for me a HUGE thing was cutting out caffeine. I used to drink one to two cups a day in the morning and then take preworkout in the evening When I stopped I noticed almost an immediate enhancement to my quality of life. I know it doesn’t change everyone’s life but it definitely made a huge difference in mine.

Besides that, a daily routine. Writing out your goals every week and holding yourself accountable for accomplishing those goals. If I don’t actively have something to learn or move towards then I instantly get the sads. Go to the gym, go be outside. And as crippling as depression and anxiety can be, force yourself to be in social situations. Because no matter how hard it is to be in public, it will only get harder the longer you abandon society.

#24. Spending time with friends

Getting a job..

Hanging out with people who cared about me. I was very lonely as I just moved to a new city and had no friends at all. The source of my depression was essentially that I truly felt no one cared about me at all. Or even liked my prescence [sic]. Some friends came into the city for the weekend and I realized again that there are people out there who like me.

#23. Ignoring social media

Staying off social media seems to be overlooked but it helps me a lot. It’s not the total cure but a piece to the puzzle. You’re subconsciously comparing your life to a bunch of fake portrayals of other people’s happy lives which can make you feel down.

#22. Helping someone

I’ve learned that I can usually get out of bed to help someone else. It’s just a temporary fix, and maybe it’s sad that I can’t get out to help myself, but if I set my mind on doing something nice for another person, it’s much easier to get up. The motivation is good, and brightening someone else’s day is extremely rewarding. I encourage friends to always reach out if I can help with anything, because it helps me too. Even if they just want someone to bring them coffee or lunch at work.

#21. Writing down your thoughts

Making use of a journal and writing in it daily. It is key to get of your head and putting your thoughts down on paper is what helps. And most importantly doing rather than thinking. Of course visualizing is great, but be careful you’re not day-dreaming. Again, get of your own head and do something.

#20. Doggos are the best

Getting a dog. Funny thing is I didn’t even want to get one, I’m a cat guy and had a bad experience with a dog when I was younger. However my wife put up with my 2 cats for long enough so it wasn’t fair of me to refuse her when she wanted a dog, so here we are. Having something that both loves AND depends on me makes a huge difference – no offence [sic] to my wife or cats, but they’re pretty independent!

#19. Financial independence and awareness

Getting a job. I was quite badly depressed (with ups and downs) all throughout HS, University and that one terrible year of unemployment after my graduation. At some point I pushed myself to just go and get a job because I was afraid to lose my then BF (that’s not why we broke up). I find that even though I’ve had some short depression periods since, it never blew up to the same extent.

Being financially inedpendent [sic] helped me be at peace with who I am, as well as allowed me to invest money into the things I like. Having a schedule and something to do every day didn’t allow me to slip into the old patterns of procrsatination and let me have a purpose for the day. I don’t love my job, I actually hate how boring it is, but I’m working on changing that.

Another important part in overcoming the depression and anxiety is awareness. Digging deeper for the cause of it all, linking it to my family and the way I raised, again, helped me to accept myself and understand that not everything is my own fault. It was a huge relief in allowing myself to exist and be happy sometimes.

#18. Starting over

Moving on. Moving to a new town, starting college, essentially cutting myself off of my previous life with anxiety. I know, not very practical, but it helped me to break away from the stigmas that came from acquaintances observing your anxiety.

#17. Realizing you can change

The realization that I could change my reality.

I was unhappy with my weight so I started walking… Then running.. And then I was thin.

That simple cognitive realization tore down all of my self limiting barriers and enabled me to grab life by the balls.

#16. Building relationships

You know how everyone says that to find a significant other, you must first learn to love yourself and be happy alone? When I was depressed, I felt so lonely. But someone started to like me. My confidence started to come back. Feeling loved felt like I was a real human being, worthy of love, and I started to believe it. It was the best thing that happened to me, a year later I didn’t feel depressed anymore. And after we broke up, for unrelated reasons, I still have the feeling that I’m not such a worthless person, someone did love me. I can do this.

#15. Live in the moment

I learned from watching kids and dogs. Feel your emotions in the moment, then let them go and don’t worry about it so you can enjoy the simple things.

#14. Meditation and therapy

Mindfulness meditation/Cognitive behavioral therapy. Realizing that you are still in control of what you consciously attend to, the thoughts and feelings that run through your mind do not have to consume your identity. Observe them without judgement, let them pass without indulging in them and they will fade away.

#13. Understanding and accessing your emotions

Coming to understand why I had become the way I had become, felt the way I felt.

My condition caused me to increasingly lock away my emotions over a decade. Made me robotic and excessively logical. Manifested what would eventually be diagnosed as chronic depression.

When, through the help of therapy and a particular theory of emotional development, I had come to understand what had lead me to become this way, my emotions came flooding out. Never did I cry so much before, and never was I so happy to do so.

It’s been a little 4 years since that fateful weekend, and I have much greater access to my emotions. There’s still a risk that I’ll slip back towards more robotic behavior, and “periods when I feel low and unmotivated” characteristic of chronic depression still occur, but they occur with much lesser intensity and frequency over time.

#12. “Don’t tell me what to do”

I just don’t like it when things try to force me to do something, and when I realized that my depression was just neurochemicals [sic] in my brain making me feel completely disengaged from everything and everyone I used to love and making me just want to sleep 24/7, I just told myself no more. Otherwise the chemicals win, and fuck that. More than I hated my life at that point, I hate it when I’m forced to be a certain way. Don’t tell me what to do.

#11. Release oxytocin

A nice release of oxytocin works wonders, especially when it comes in the form of a hug or kiss.

#10. Start your day off right

Get up and take a shower

Put on fresh and clean t shirt and pants

Do this everyday and don’t forget about it.

#9. Find financial stability

For me… Making good money and finishing my 3yr long job training. I was constantly stressed and not the outgoing type before, so of course that did not help. But once I finished my training and had some decent money to do things without counting what I spent, I was surprised how I said to myself “now you stop worrying all the time, and go have some fun”.

I’m still getting used to being around people, but I’m on a good track, I think.

#8. Run, Forrest, run

Running. Run like Forrest Gump himself, a few miles a day and my nerves are calmed, self-worth improved.

#7. Enjoy the fiber arts

Knitting and crocheting. The feeling of creating something nice and warm in this cold world. (Not ironic).

#6. Try something new

In my teenage years I fell back on music to get me through. Just knowing I wasn’t alone helped a ton with my depression. Now that I’m a lot older my thing is new experiences or just a change of scenery. I’ll take a trip somewhere a few hours away or go to a concert. Or if it’s an option I’ll get a new tattoo.

#5. Accomplish something, even if it’s small

Being busy, not spending too much time on Reddit. Eating right helps a ton too. If an unhealthy mind can cause an unhealthy body, then an unhealthy body will cause an unhealthy mind. Produce each day. By that I mean do something productive, even if it’s only doing a load of laundry.

#4. Get moving

I can’t believe I’m giving the answer I always hated hearing:

Exercise.

It doesn’t change the shittiness but it adds energy to your reserves to deal with the shittiness.

Also mindfulness/dialectical behavioral therapy helped a lot. It helped me change my “I want to die” thoughts to “This sucks” thoughts. Made a huge difference.

#3. Enjoy nature

Long walks through nature and working out in my room while watching hearthstone streams.

#2. CBD oil

My wife suffers very bad anxiety and depression. We live in Maryland and I was thinking about sending her on a trip to Colorado to try Cannabis oil. She has a backpack full of meds currently. We do not drink. I don’t think she has ever smoked pot. She hates the idea of smoking anything, or vaping for that matter. She is 30 and has been living with this for quite some time now but it does not seem to be getting any better. She hates taking so much medicine but if she does not it can get pretty bad. She mostly does it for our kids, if not for them she would probably stop taking them and deal with the craziness. We talked about this Cannabis oil for a while but the closest place is D.C and have to have medical waiver. I don’t really have the cash to send her out to Colorado but if it helps it would be worth it. Just to see if it helps.

#1. Crafting

Honestly? Crafting. I need something to do with my hands, so knitting/crocheting has been my lifesaver. Even if it’s just simple squares or a doily, making things has helped me tremendously. Bonus points for being able to donate to the local warming centres and humane societies with the stuff you make.

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10 Great Reasons To Adopt from a Shelter or Rescue

If you’re thinking of adding a four-legged friend to your family, there are lots of great reasons to adopt from a shelter. Millions of dogs are in shelters waiting for their forever homes…and that could be yours! Here are 10 of the reasons to adopt dogs from a shelter:

10. It’s easy to find the perfect fit.

Shelters have a wide variety of dogs from just about every background. Looking for a pup that’s great with kids? A low-key elder dog? A bonded pair that can keep each other company? Odds are, your local shelter has all of these options and more. Looking for a specific breed? There are rescue groups for just about every breed.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

9. They may already have their shots and be spayed or neutered.

Many shelters provide basics vaccines. They may also spay or neuter dogs before they are adopted out. These services are typically included in the adoption fee. If the fee is an issue, many shelters also periodically run specials so you can adopt for a discount.

8. You have built-in support.

Shelters and rescues want your relationship with your new pet to be successful. Do you have questions or concerns? Ask the shelter or rescue group. They may have resources that can help with training.

7. They may already have some training.

Many adult shelter dogs grew up in homes, so they may already be housebroken. Other shelters and rescues have foster programs to help socialize dogs before they’re adopted. If they’re not housebroken, adult dogs are often quick to get the hang of going outside. If you need assistance in training, look for reliable online resources or talk to your shelter or rescue group about recommended local trainers and groups.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

6. You’re supporting important organizations.

Shelters and rescues spend thousands of dollars saving dogs and other animals. Your adoption fee helps them continue their mission and modernize their facilities.

5. They’ll love you.

A 2016 study in the Journal of Veterinary Behavior showed that shelter dogs were more driven to interact with humans than pet dogs (dogs who had been raised in homes). This may be because many shelter dogs have limited human contact, so when they do find a human to love them, they give them every bit of their attention. In other words, you’re their whole world.

4. You can adopt an adult.

Puppies are cute. They also have razor-sharp teeth and love to chew on all your things. If you don’t want to deal with the challenges of puppyhood, you can adopt an adult dog. Senior dogs, in particular, are in need of good homes and are less likely to be adopted. Elder dogs need love too!

3. You’re helping to shut down puppy mills.

When you buy from a pet store or a backyard breeder, you may be supporting a puppy mill. These mills keep dogs in poor conditions. The key to shutting them down is to decrease demand. More adoptions mean fewer people are buying puppies from these mills.

Photo Credit: Pixabay

2. You’re limiting the spread of diseases.

Feral dogs can spread diseases to other wild animals. Keeping dogs out of the wild and vaccinated helps keep wild animals safe and free of disease.

1. You’ll love them.

Studies have shown that owning a dog improves your health and boosts your mood. You and your family will have a reason to be out and about, meeting neighbors and enjoying the sunshine. Most of all, you’ll fall in love with your new family member. You rescue them, but there’s just as big a chance that your dog is rescuing you too.

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This Craigslist ‘Missed Connection’ Will Hit You Right in the Feels

“Missed Connections” on Craigslist have long been enjoyable to read, but this missed connection really raises the bar. This beautifully written ad reminds us of the power of connection and that we never know how much our actions might impact the people around us.

The ad begins with a veteran struggling with his time in the service.

Photo Credit: Craigslist

The text of the post says:

I met you in the rain on the last day of 1972, the same day I resolved to kill myself.

One week prior, at the behest of Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, I’d flown four B-52 sorties over Hanoi. I dropped forty-eight bombs. How many homes I destroyed, how many lives I ended, I’ll never know. But in the eyes of my superiors, I had served my country honorably, and I was thusly discharged with such distinction.

And so on the morning of that New Year’s Eve, I found myself in a barren studio apartment on Beacon and Hereford with a fifth of Tennessee rye and the pang of shame permeating the recesses of my soul. When the bottle was empty, I made for the door and vowed, upon returning, that I would retrieve the Smith & Wesson Model 15 from the closet and give myself the discharge I deserved.

I walked for hours. I looped around the Fenway before snaking back past Symphony Hall and up to Trinity Church. Then I roamed through the Common, scaled the hill with its golden dome, and meandered into that charming labyrinth divided by Hanover Street. By the time I reached the waterfront, a charcoal sky had opened and a drizzle became a shower. That shower soon gave way to a deluge. While the other pedestrians darted for awnings and lobbies, I trudged into the rain. I suppose I thought, or rather hoped, that it might wash away the patina of guilt that had coagulated around my heart. It didn’t, of course, so I started back to the apartment.

And then I saw you.

A beautiful stranger had taken shelter from the rain. The two talked and laughed over coffee.

Photo Credit: Craigslist

You’d taken shelter under the balcony of the Old State House. You were wearing a teal ball gown, which appeared to me both regal and ridiculous. Your brown hair was matted to the right side of your face, and a galaxy of freckles dusted your shoulders. I’d never seen anything so beautiful.

When I joined you under the balcony, you looked at me with your big green eyes, and I could tell that you’d been crying. I asked if you were okay. You said you’d been better. I asked if you’d like to have a cup of coffee. You said only if I would join you. Before I could smile, you snatched my hand and led me on a dash through Downtown Crossing and into Neisner’s.

We sat at the counter of that five and dime and talked like old friends. We laughed as easily as we lamented, and you confessed over pecan pie that you were engaged to a man you didn’t love, a banker from some line of Boston nobility. A Cabot, or maybe a Chaffee. Either way, his parents were hosting a soirée to ring in the New Year, hence the dress.

For my part, I shared more of myself than I could have imagined possible at that time. I didn’t mention Vietnam, but I got the sense that you could see there was a war waging inside me. Still, your eyes offered no pity, and I loved you for it.

And they lived happily ever after, right? Right?!?

Photo Credit: Craigslist

After an hour or so, I excused myself to use the restroom. I remember consulting my reflection in the mirror. Wondering if I should kiss you, if I should tell you what I’d done from the cockpit of that bomber a week before, if I should return to the Smith & Wesson that waited for me. I decided, ultimately, that I was unworthy of the resuscitation this stranger in the teal ball gown had given me, and to turn my back on such sweet serendipity would be the real disgrace.

On the way back to the counter, my heart thumped in my chest like an angry judge’s gavel, and a future — our future — flickered in my mind. But when I reached the stools, you were gone. No phone number. No note. Nothing.

As strangely as our union had begun, so too had it ended. I was devastated. I went back to Neisner’s every day for a year, but I never saw you again. Ironically, the torture of your abandonment seemed to swallow my self-loathing, and the prospect of suicide was suddenly less appealing than the prospect of discovering what had happened in that restaurant. The truth is I never really stopped wondering.

My heart is broken.

Photo Credit: Craigslist

I’m an old man now, and only recently did I recount this story to someone for the first time, a friend from the VFW. He suggested I look for you on Facebook. I told him I didn’t know anything about Facebook, and all I knew about you was your first name and that you had lived in Boston once. And even if by some miracle I happened upon your profile, I’m not sure I would recognize you. Time is cruel that way.

This same friend has a particularly sentimental daughter. She’s the one who led me here to Craigslist and these Missed Connections. But as I cast this virtual coin into the wishing well of the cosmos, it occurs to me, after a million what-ifs and a lifetime of lost sleep, that our connection wasn’t missed at all.

You see, in these intervening forty-two years I’ve lived a good life. I’ve loved a good woman. I’ve raised a good man. I’ve seen the world. And I’ve forgiven myself. And you were the source of all of it. You breathed your spirit into my lungs one rainy afternoon, and you can’t possibly imagine my gratitude.

I have hard days, too. My wife passed four years ago. My son, the year after. I cry a lot. Sometimes from the loneliness, sometimes I don’t know why. Sometimes I can still smell the smoke over Hanoi. And then, a few dozen times a year, I’ll receive a gift. The sky will glower, and the clouds will hide the sun, and the rain will begin to fall. And I’ll remember.

So wherever you’ve been, wherever you are, and wherever you’re going, know this: you’re with me still.

I’m not crying. You’re crying. We’re all crying.

One small act of kindness and friendship saved this man’s life. It’s a reminder to treat the people around us with kindness. You never know what someone else is going through.

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12+ Celebrities Share Their Funniest Photos from Childhood

You might think that celebrities were born that way – their face in the spotlight and never doing anything embarrassing.

But, of course, they were young whippersnappers just like us before they hit the big time. Here are 15 big shots who shared humorous childhood pics with the world on social media.

1. Catherine Zeta-Jones

Photo Credit: Instagram

2. Rihanna

Photo Credit: Instagram

3. Justin Bieber

Photo Credit: Instagram

4. Adele

Photo Credit: Instagram

5. Joseph Gordon-Levitt

Photo Credit: Instagram

6. Kim Kardashian

Photo Credit: Instagram

7. Chloe Grace Moretz

Photo Credit: Instagram

8. Justin Timberlake

Photo Credit: Instagram

9. Amanda Seyfried

Photo Credit: Instagram

10. Hilary Duff

Photo Credit: Instagram

11. Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson

Photo Credit: Instagram

12. Heidi Klum

Photo Credit: Instagram

13. Jessica Alba

Photo Credit: Instagram

14. Anne Hathaway

Photo Credit: Instagram

15. Kendall Jenner

Photo Credit: Instagram

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These 13 Actors Got Injured For Real While Filming Movie Scenes

Whether it was suffering broken bones, nearly drowning, or waking up in a hospital wondering how they got there, these actors gave til it hurt to create some truly memorable scenes in movie history. While we don’t want them to ever get hurt, it’s hard not to admire the commitment to the craft.

1. The Wicked Witch of the West Went up in flames Filming The Wizard of Oz! (1939)

Photo Credit: IcePop

There’s being hot, and then there’s being Margaret Hamilton hot. Thanks to a trap-door malfunction, she suffered third degree burns when filming the Wicked Witch exit scene. She found herself  fully exposed to a pyrotechnic device that was going off and almost burnt to a crisp!

2. Meryl Streep almost drowned as well during the filming of The River Wild (1994)

Photo Credit: FanPop

”I remember sinking down to the bottom with this powerful and freezing water pulling me in deeper.” For Streep, that was what drowning felt like, but she still says today that they needed to get the shot. She was just supposed to paddle the raft, but the river went wild and Streep had to be fished out by a rescue kayaker.

3. Brendan Fraser almost got killed filming the Mummy (1999)

Photo Credit: YouTube

When filming a hanging scene, something went terribly wrong.  The noose used during the shoot didn’t match the one used by the stuntman. Fraser figured he could just hold his breath and power through the shot. For almost 18 seconds, Fraser was out of it. Even though he was standing on a board, when they upped the tension, he was actually being hanged briefly!

4. Sean Astin had to be choppered off the set filming The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (2001)

Photo Credit: Cinema Blend

“I’m running at a dead sprint and I get in, and as my right foot lands about two feet in the water, just this huge, sharp pain. I grabbed on to the boat and I just looked down and just… It hurt so bad.” Astin stepped on a shard of glass that went straight through his foot. Peter Jackson had to have him flown in a chopper to the nearest hospital 90 minutes away.

5. Isla Fisher almost died performing a magic trick filming Now You See Me (2013)

Photo Credit: IMDB

While filming a scene in which she was chained in a tank filled with water, the props went wrong. Fisher was supposed to be able to pop free of the chains holding her anytime she needed to. One set worked as designed, and the other didn’t. As a result, Fisher was literally drowning, and everyone just thought she was an amazing actress. Eventually, a few crew members caught on and freed her.

6. Robert Pattinson busted his butt filming Twilight (2008)

Photo Credit: Film Beat

Okay, he didn’t actually bust his butt, but he almost tore his glute and that’s still pretty bad. It was bad enough that he confided to MTV that he needed butt massages from a physiotherapist to get through filming. Talk about your job literally being a pain in the butt…

7. Sylvester Stallone needed 5 days in an ICU to recover from filming Rocky IV (1985)

Photo Credit: IFC

In his quest to create the most realistic boxing match he could, Stallone told Dolph Lundgren to wail on him as hard as he could and try to knock him out. He said that Lundgren hit him so hard that his heart was against his ribs, the way it would be if he was literally hit by a truck!

8. Linda Hamilton went partially deaf filming Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)

Photo Credit: GameSpot

Hamilton learned an important lesson about hearing protection when she forgot to use any in the elevator scene. “I fell to my knees in pain. I thought I’d been shot. The noise was so intense, so extreme, I’ll never forget it.” Like a pro, she got up from her knees, and finished off the scene.

9. Daniel Craig gave his all filming Quantum of Solace (2008)

Photo Credit: YouTube

Craig didn’t actually give his all, but he did give the tip of his finger when he accidentally sliced it off.  “I was bleeding a lot. I had to get it cauterized. Filming stopped and everybody went, ‘Oh my God! He sliced the end of his finger off!’ They went looking for it but couldn’t find it.” That’s a hardcore James Bond!

10. Jim Caviezel was struck by lightning filming The Passion of the Christ (2004)

Photo Credit: Vox

Nature actually scored a two-for-one as Caviezel and assistant director Jan Michelini were hit by different forks of the same lightning bolt. It was the second time Michelini had been hit by lightning! Call it bad luck or a sign, but that is some freaky stuff.

11. Harrison Ford and J.J. Abrams got laid up with broken bones filming Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)

Photo Credit: Variety

If you ever wondered whether the Millennium Falcon gets mad, question answered! It took vengeance on the cast and crew, breaking Ford’s ankle and Abrams’ back. In fairness, the hydraulic door on it tried to hurt almost everyone. It’s like Abrams told Jimmy Fallon, hydraulic doors can’t really be picked up if they don’t want to be. Ouch!

12. Channing Tatum used his head as a stud finder filming Foxcatcher (2014)

Tatum didn’t use his head to find the sexy kind of studs central casting sends over, he used it to almost find the kind that hold up walls. He was supposed to hit a prop mirror with his head and be done with it, but Tatum never goes half-speed. He hit the mirror with his head until he literally went through the wall. “I missed the stud by about four inches. I was lucky. But the cut on my head was real.”

Photo Credit: CinemaBlend

13. Cary Elwes got knocked out cold by a sword filming The Princess Bride (1987)

Photo Credit: Giphy

Elwes found out that even a small tap on the noggin from a big, heavy sword can be hazardous to your health. “I woke up in the hospital with stitches being sewn into my forehead.” That’s the danger you face when you don’t use rubber swords on set. The knockout scene looked so good, though, that it ended up being used in the film. Thankfully for Elwes, they didn’t need to get the shot from another angle.

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Here’s Everything You Need to Know About Storing Butter at Room Temp

Cold butter can be a total pain to spread, but we keep it that way because we think it’s the safest way to do it, even if it tears our toast, and soul, apart. If only we could have perfectly soft, spreadable butter all the time…

Photo Credit: Wonder How To

The thing is, if you’ve been keeping butter in the fridge because you’ve been told storing it room temperature is akin to creating a bacteria frappe, you’ve been living a lie!

Peter Cassell of the FDA told Takeout it’s totally fine to store butter at 68°F for up to TEN DAYS!!

Photo Credit: EatByDate

With that goes the disclaimer that the kind of butter you have makes a difference concerning contamination worries, i.e. if it’s salted, made with pasteurized cream, that kind of stuff.

Photo Credit: Prensa

The takeaway is that as long as you’re working with quality butter, ten days is no problem (keep it covered though). You can even go 20 days, if you keep it at 50°F as a compromise.

Quality butter is so awesome – you can even freeze it for two years, and it will still be good!

Photo Credit: 21Food

It all comes down to using some common sense. If it smells rancid, it probably is. When dust is gathering on it, it needs to go. If flies are using your butter as a flop pad, say goodbye to it. However, if it looks and smells good, it’s most likely good to go and ready to enjoy.

Photo Credit: Dubovsky

Get ready for some perfectly buttered toast!

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Now Millennials Have Ruined Divorce, Too

People like to blame millennials for ruining everything. So…what have they ruined now? According to a recent study by Philip N. Cohen from the University of Maryland, they have ruined divorce.

Americans younger than 45 (an age group that technically includes the youngest Gen Xers) are taking a different approach to marriage. Rather than marrying young and divorcing like their parents, they are waiting to get married until they are older. This gives them an opportunity to get their careers and finances on track before tying the knot and starting a family.

With these changes, the divorce rate dropped by 18 percent from 2008 to 2016.

Photo Credit: Philip N. Cohen

Bloomberg presents a few possible theories as to why the divorce rate is falling. One possibility is that it’s actually due to our aging population. Older people are less likely to divorce. According to Cohen’s data, though, this isn’t the case. Even when he controlled for age, the divorce rate still showed an 8 percent drop.

Another theory is that the divorce rate is lower because fewer people are getting married. Although that’s true, Cohen compiled his numbers by looking at the number of divorces compared to the number of married women. Even looking at the divorce rate in this proportional way, the divorce rate still shows a decline.

Cohen’s data also shows that the decline in divorce is largely due to younger people. The Boomers have continued to have a high rate of divorce, even as they age. This trend has even spawned a new term: gray divorce.

Photo Credit: Philip N. Cohen

Overall, fewer people are choosing to marry. Those that do marry are statistically more likely to stay married. So millennials haven’t ruined divorce; they’re just less likely to need it because they are waiting to marry until they are financially and professionally secure.

But let’s go ahead and blame ’em anyway.

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You Have to Read These 6 Facts to Believe Them

Ever heard of the Love Commandos?

Well, you’re about to learn about them and a whole bunch of other fascinating things in this great fact set.

1. What are the chances?

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2. A great organization

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Check them out HERE.

3. Wish this was a thing in the U.S.

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4. Lost to time

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5. Time to go to Tulsa

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6. Vigilantes of love

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Those are 6 great facts! Don’t you agree?!?

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People with Multiple Personality Disorder Tell What Their Lives Are Like Day-to-Day

While most of us have probably heard of dissociative personality disorder, also known as multiple personality disorder, many people still don’t know very much about it.

In this AskReddit article, people who live every day with dissociative personality disorder open up and reveal what it’s really like to live day-to-day with multiple personalities.

1. Not like TV

“I was diagnosed with DID a few years ago. I live in England.

For many, including myself, there are no alters, its not like on TV. All the “me’s” are me.

Imagine there is a me who hates bananas and a me who loves them. When my mind responds to stress, it might be banana lover me who is in control. ‘Control’ means heavy influence, not complete, cast iron domination. But the banana hating me is fucking miserable with the banana spree, so she screams in my ear so loudly, so incessantly, that I both love bananas, hate bananas and am just so fucking confused.

I do have episode of lost memory, and complete dissociation, but those episodes are rare. Perhaps two in a bad year. I might come to myself and realise I have bought £800 worth of bananas. I might find a bunch I don’t recall buying.

I have spent a loooot of time in the nuthouse. A lot. I have never met a fellow DID with alters. I have met many people with severe BPD who dozens of them.

I am NOT gatekeeping DID. I live in England, and am diagnosed privately & under the NHS. I don’t know the US criteria, nor the prevailing attitudes the psychs there have I strive to support every brother & sister of mine fighting their own mind. But, whereas I will tell anyone I meet about the rest of my mental health landscape, I tend to keep the DID diagnosis to myself because it is so deeply misunderstood. I have met others with this diagnosis who have the same problem.

If you have ever seen Deep Space 9, Jadzia Dax has very, very similar experienced to DID, but handles it beautifully. The episodes where she is replaced by Ezri show the bad side of it.

I am happy to answer questions, with love, but, DID is a bit different in life than it is on Tumblr.”

2. Formed out of trauma

“I’m one of those alters, made an account just for this. From the outside we don’t seem too different from anyone else. (Maybe a little eccentric, but that’s not really related to DID.) Basically we all work together to take care of the body and support the host. They also take care of us to a certain degree.

We were formed because of trauma.

When there’s situations that the host can’t handle, one of us steps in. Sometimes we use the body completely but more often we sort of drape a ‘film’ over the every day world, if that makes sense. Everything is experienced at a slight difference. It’s like wearing tinted glasses, the world is still the world but it’s coloured differently.

Anyway I’m the only one who’s ‘fronted’ as myself. I used to have my own friends separate from the host’s but we drifted away which kind of sucks. NGL it can get a little lonely, but it is what it is. Sometimes the host and I integrate to a certain extent. It’s disorienting to both of us. Not necessarily a bad thing though. I feel like we’re more balanced when we’re together but it’s also weird because then its more his life than mine, you know? If we could be reincarnated I’d want to be my own person. I think I’d form a rock band.

The host tends to be a little … lets people get away with a lot of stuff I guess. Lets people be mean or abusive towards him. I don’t. If I can get control I’m more likely to tell people to fuck off or just walk away from the situation. I can also handle anger a lot better than him — when he gets upset he self-injures, when I get upset I just sit with it and wait for it to go away.

We have different preferences for music and different writing style. I feel like I’m a little more motivated too. I’m more willing to sit and work away at something but the host’s like, something has to happen right away!

Other than me, there’s:

Isiah — chill guy, likes people and customer service so yeah he comes out sometimes when we have to get through long work days. Likes ice cream so sometimes after a bad day we walk to get some

Ichi — Isiah’s friend, kinda gloomy but a good guy.

?? — someone else, doesn’t come out much but it’s cool when she does. I think she’s younger than the rest of us, doesn’t talk much. When she’s out we sometimes look like a typical “crazy” person, like walking in circles and humming to ourselves and someone’s gotta watch the body to make sure we don’t wander off the subway tracks or something.

Recently, we’ve all been a little more integrated with one another. Not sure why. We tend to split more when there’s more stress.”

3. Like a teenage boy

“My friend’s dad has DID due to a history of child abuse, which was then heavily triggered, because he worked in journalism, often on child abuse stories, which just wore him down after a while. The person at the top of the thread that said, it’s all “me” and not like characters on a TV show is totally right. I love United States of Tara but it is nothing like that.

He is probably in his early 60’s, and I have only seen one alter personally. I didn’t even realize it was an alter. Apparently, when he gets stressed, he gets a little like a teenage boy super obsessed with comics, Star Wars, all that stuff. I found this out because we have a very long and in-depth conversation on Godzilla. I guess that is just a happy place for him, so that’s what happened.

Secondhand, I have heard from my friend that he does have an alter that basically does not want to be a husband or father. He joins dating sites, has lashed out violently at his adult children, and has no recollection of any of this. He genuinely is the sweetest person, so it was shocking for me to hear this, because my friend’s family is super close. It has just been something they learn to deal with, and from my understanding, this angry personality is not a common thing. He is much more likely to slip into teenage boy obsessing over nerd culture state.”

4. Lost time

“My alters are me. They don’t have names and they don’t “come out” very often. For example, only one has been “out” so far in 2018.

Between mid-February and late May I lost a lot of time. I can’t remember attending my sisters birthday, even though there are photos of me with her from that night. I can’t remember spending almost £400 on camping equipment on ebay (I don’t even like camping), and I can’t remember sending an e-mail to my University department head telling him I was dropping out. I’m a heavy smoker, but I would randomly find my cigarettes in the bin. I’m a nail biter, but I would suddenly realize that my nails were clipped and filed down. It’s just silly things like that. I hear them in my head, and I talk to them more often than they “come out”. Mostly, they comfort me when I’m in a bad place, but sometimes they’re very harsh with me. Cruel, occasionally. (edit: I’m aware I’m talking to myself when this happens, but lots of mes in different moods)

I don’t have a lot of friends and I’m not close to my parents, but my sister, brother-in-law and best friend of 20 years have met at least one of my alters. The general impression I got from them was that the change isn’t dramatic like you see on TV. For example, whichever alter my friend met maintains eye contact when speaking, which I can’t do. They also don’t swear, whereas I have a really bad habit of swearing in every second sentence. The most intimidating thing my friend told me was that the alter “looked different” somehow, like they wore facial expressions that she had never seen me display in the 20 years we’ve known one another. But no, they didn’t rush off to change clothes, they didn’t talk in a different accent and they didn’t do anything bad.

I resent saying this, but my experience of DID is very “boring” compared to most fictional portrayals. And I resent saying that because on bad days, I’m so miserable that I want to kill myself. Losing time, even if it doesn’t happen often, terrifies me and I spend a lot of time just waiting for it to happen again. Sometimes I just feel so empty inside that I just spend weeks lying in bed, thinking and feeling nothing. Sometimes I have no idea who I am, and I don’t actually think I’m real. But other times I’m alright, and I just get on with things. Therapy has really helped me.”

5. Detached

“Hi. I’m in the US, diagnosed and in treatment. Almost 40, female.

All of the dissociative parts of my personality are aware that we are one person. We perceive reality very differently, and feel differently about it, but accept that we’re parts of the whole. We know our legal name, the body age, etc. We feel detached from it in a variety of different ways, but we know it’s reality.

My everyday life consists of each of my parts trying to do the best they can, just like anybody else. We get up, we keep our body clean and healthy, we socialize and work, we have passions and interests, etc. We have to spend a lot of time working on inner alignment and resolving inner conflict and we spend a lot of time in therapy, reading, writing, self-analyzing, and other types of “doing the work”.

The biggest challenges we face are related to our trauma, and the other disorders it spawned. General anxiety and panic attacks, intense phobias, nightmares, flashbacks, etc. Relationships are really tough too.

I’ve also organized the sh*t out of our life. I’m a professional project manager and use the things I’ve learned on myself, regularly, to try and help us function as a team. Like I keep a lot of lists so that whoever comes out has a battle plan and knows what’s been done already.”

6. 8 different personalities

“I have 8 alters and then myself. Most of them are quiet and not around much (a couple not at all). The most prevalent are a 4 yo girl, a woman in her early 20’s and myself. It is very rare that I lose any time and I am most likely what would be called a gate keeper or main “personality.” I believe that the 4 yo is the original though.

My issues stem from childhood loss, one alter is a result of molestation and the teen alter is around because the 8 yo alter that was molested hid away. The young woman is the nurturer and caregiver of the home and children (she was a single mother of my oldest daughter). She married a man who was violent and tried to destroy who she was as a person mentally and nearly killed her so I took over. I carry all the memories of the violence in the marriage. Then there is another alter who is the protector but she isn’t around anymore because we don’t need her. There are others but their parts to play are minimal and rare.

I am in a position in my life right now where I don’t need them anymore. Some I am unsure if they even exist anymore or if they are just quiet. I don’t know where they are to be honest. The 4 yo comes and goes and shes a delight. I would love to merge the young woman and myself because I think our qualities compliment one another and would make me a more well rounded woman.”

7. “A whole bunch of us”

“I have DID and there are a whole bunch of us, but probably about four, including me, who handle most situations on the “outside.” The rest either mainly handle situations on the inside, they have more specialized skills, or they would just really rather stay inside. Honestly I couldn’t get through life without their help. We survived our childhood as a team and, while some people get us into some weird situations, we’re all just trying to heal. I know I couldn’t have survived what we went through alone.

I know for me, the other alters aren’t really my “problem.” My poor mental health is because of the flashbacks and other symptoms of trauma, and the other alters and I have to handle these effects together. If I had a magic wand, I personally wouldn’t want to heal the DID, despite the grief certain alters have given me, but I’d definitely want to heal our PTSD and other mental health issues.

I’m not going to use our real names on here on the incredibly off chance that someone recognizes us, but here’s a rundown of the main four fronters:
Alter #1 (me): Host. I do school, work, and family stuff. I don’t really know how to describe myself but I usually do well in school, though I’ve been struggling lately. I’m pretty patient and I’m a good listener, which helps with friendships. I’m nerdy so I like to stay in and do stuff in small groups or with one other person.

Alter #2: Protector. She’s very stoic, reserved, and formal. She is a lot faster, stronger, and wittier than I am. She comes out when we feel physically and sometimes emotionally threatened. She handled a lot of physical abuse and mental games. She enjoys hiking, sports, and leather jackets and is actually a lot like Rosa from Brooklyn Nine-Nine.

Alter #3: Internal Self-Helper. She’s very submissive and shy, but she’s coming out of her shell. She soothes alters on the inside if they’re upset and she helps us regulate flashbacks or other intense emotion. She handled a lot of the emotional manipulation (ex. women’s roles, “I love you… just kidding,” “God wants you to do X,” etc.) and sexual abuse from our primary abuser. She likes knitting, cooking, cat videos, that kind of thing but she absolutely HATES germs.

Alter #4: Protector. She’s very outspoken and flirty. She used to drink, party, get us into trouble, etc. but she’s incredibly helpful and friendly now, and will sometimes take over for me if I need a break with school. We were forced to provide “adult entertainment” in our childhood as part of our cycle of abuse. She’s the one who experienced most of that. She’s interested in fashion, being outdoors, and board games with friends.”

8. I was never one person…

“So when most people think of DID, they think that there is one original identity that splits into parts due to trauma, but that’s not actually how it works.

DID is caused by trauma during very early childhood, during the time when children are actually going through a stage of development when something called “identity integration” is naturally happening. During this stage of development, children naturally develop one cohesive sense of self, where they can naturally shift from one identity state to another seamlessly, and with a flowing, natural autobiographical memory. For example, they might behave differently at school than they do at home, or with their friends, or with their grandmother, but they are still the same child in all those situations, and they maintain their sense of self and their memories during all those situations.

A child exposed to severe trauma and repeated dissociation does not experience identity integration. Their identity forms in pieces. I was never one person. I have always been many pieces.”

9. The demon

“I suffer from BPD. Borderline personality disorder. But, the idea of me having DID has been tossed around.

Mostly, I do things and then later can’t believe I have done them. I will have faint memories but they feel more like dreams. I will say things to others and barely remember even talking with them at all. It is like someone else had control of me during that episode. I don’t hear voices (at least I don’t think I do. I have intuition, of course but, I don’t have more than that one voice helping me make decisions each day)

With my meds, I am pretty good. Keeps episodes down to a very minimum (once a year or less). But, I have to rotate between a few different concoctions due to tolerances.

Prior to my wife convincing me to get help, I would have moments of full black out anger. Thankfully, I only ever directed this at myself and inanimate objects. (I would hit myself and break things). And, strangely, my wife could eventually pull me out of it and I would come back not really realizing what I had done or said. (She actually can’t watch the scene where Black Widow calms down the Hulk. She said it just brings up too many traumatic memories)

I also have a mountain of other diagnosed issues. MDD. Bi-Polar. ADHD. I stutter badly…. Pretty much, my brain chemistry is fucked.

When I am the regular me, I am nice and kind and fun to be around. But, when the demon comes, it isn’t good. I thank my wife daily for dealing with me for so long. She just says I am lucky I am cute otherwise she would have kicked me to the curb. She’s a strong woman and a wonderful mother. She took care of 2 kids and me.

Mental Illness is no joke. I sure wish it would stop getting treated like it is.”

10. Protecting and surviving

“Well we are a system for someone who has DID. The central person is purely internal, they never face outwardly. Facing is up to the rest of us. There are 4 main people, 2 secondary (think highly specialized) and then the “core” which is actually 2 people. So 8 on total.

Right now we’re working on integration. The workhorse of our group is finally feeling emotion and it’s been really overwhelming and painful. Imagine having absolutely no emotional experiences for 30 years and then one day you feel a twinge of frustrating and the next day you’re so full of rage you want to break anything you can get your hands on…. It’s been hard, but we have good support. We support each other, and we have really amazing people in of life, and an especially good therapist.

I don’t think most people would ever be able to tell we’re a system identity. The whole point of DID is protecting and surviving, and being at all off inhibits that. So we have struggles, but most people are none the wiser that they are talking to a completely different identity; they just chalk it up to me being a little forgetful now and then.”

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