Comments by "Russian Bot 441" (@russianbot4418) on "Psych2Go" channel.

  1. 145
  2. 20
  3. 11
  4.  @tgamagedon  I think that only partly true. I know many who grew up in homes they knew were dysfunctional and for it made great efforts to make sure theirs didn't turn out the same. Or at least not by their personal actions. I was once married to someone who started out awesome, but then grew to being cold shallow and highly manipulative for the stupidest reasons ever. Nothing I could do to stop it because she was sure it was my job in life to make her happy and what she wanted in order to be happy was so far from who and what I was it was impossible to ever meet. Same with blaming me for things that went wrong in her life way before we ever met. Not my fault XYZ happened to you 10+ years before we met. I grew up in a high tension house and made sure it didn't happen in my own no matter what she tried. In fact she got so petty at the end her 6 year old daughter would regularly call her out on her crap and for being 'mean to daddy' for nothing! :D Drover her nuts! In the end she started threatening that if she didn't get what she want she'd leave. I eventually called her on it and held her to it. It was very rewarding standing in front of the judge for the divorce paper signing and her having to explain that we were getting divorced because she turned into a unreasonable a spoiled old harpy and got called on it! :D In the end she ended up paying for the whole thing and I walked away scott free while her life got drastically worse, The total opposite of what she thought things would turn out to be. I worked oil field as a tech so I made good money which left her to have ~ 95% of her well paying office job income (~$50K a year on 40 hours a week or about 2x local cost of living) as play money (it still wasn't enough for her). In one week she went from that to having zero play money being once you get divorced you pay for your own rent, utilities, vehicle payments, insurances, food and everything else you want yourself. (Dumbass never thought that part through either.) I on the other hand picked up about $1500 - $2000 a month or more in average take home pay that went in my bank account since I was no longer paying for her part of any of that! :D
    8
  5. 6
  6. 4
  7. 4
  8. 4
  9. 4
  10. 3
  11. 2
  12. 2
  13. 2
  14. 2
  15. 1
  16. 1
  17. 1
  18. 1
  19. 1
  20. 1
  21. 1
  22. 1
  23. 1
  24. 1
  25. 1
  26. 1
  27. 1
  28. 1
  29. 1
  30. 1
  31. 1
  32. 1
  33. 1