▲ 0 r/metro

Есть тут русскоговорящие люди?

У меня просто есть одна тема которую я не могу объяснить людям на западе. Мне очень хотелось бы обсудить это (можно лично, я не против). И да извините что пишу такую странную просьбу.

reddit.com
u/Sensitive-Tea-5192 — 6 hours ago
▲ 1 r/helpme

Why do absolutely all the things I’m interested in—the very things that surround me—end up pushing me away?

Over the past five years, I’ve been following and loving many TV shows, games, and anime, but for some reason, everything I love ends up turning me off, and I regret ever getting into it in the first place. Take "The Boys," for example—I watched up to season 3 and really liked it. When season 5 came out, I decided that once the entire series was available, I’d rewatch it all. Well, the finale is called the worst ending in TV history, and that just turns me off from watching any further, and what I once loved is now considered terrible. Or take Nolan’s "The Odyssey," for example. I was really looking forward to the movie, since it’s directed by Nolan. But when I heard the “bad news,” I just lost hope and was shocked that the movie would turn out badly. I could give even more examples, but I don’t want to write so much. I don’t understand why everything I follow and like always ends up turning me off, to the point where I regret ever getting involved with it and loving it in the first place.

reddit.com
u/Sensitive-Tea-5192 — 2 months ago
▲ 1 r/helpme

Why do absolutely all the things I’m interested in—the very things that surround me—end up pushing me away?

Over the past five years, I’ve been following and loving many TV shows, games, and anime, but for some reason, everything I love ends up turning me off, and I regret ever getting into it in the first place. Take "The Boys," for example—I watched up to season 3 and really liked it. When season 5 came out, I decided that once the entire series was available, I’d rewatch it all. Well, the finale is called the worst ending in TV history, and that just turns me off from watching any further, and what I once loved is now considered terrible. Or take Nolan’s "The Odyssey," for example. I was really looking forward to the movie, since it’s directed by Nolan. But when I heard the “bad news,” I just lost hope and was shocked that the movie would turn out badly. I could give even more examples, but I don’t want to write so much. I don’t understand why everything I follow and like always ends up turning me off, to the point where I regret ever getting involved with it and loving it in the first place.

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

u/Sensitive-Tea-5192 — 2 months ago

Why do absolutely all the things I’m interested in—the very things that surround me—end up pushing me away?

Over the past five years, I’ve been following and loving many TV shows, games, and anime, but for some reason, everything I love ends up turning me off, and I regret ever getting into it in the first place. Take "The Boys," for example—I watched up to season 3 and really liked it. When season 5 came out, I decided that once the entire series was available, I’d rewatch it all. Well, the finale is called the worst ending in TV history, and that just turns me off from watching any further, and what I once loved is now considered terrible. Or take Nolan’s "The Odyssey," for example. I was really looking forward to the movie, since it’s directed by Nolan. But when I heard the “bad news,” I just lost hope and was shocked that the movie would turn out badly. I could give even more examples, but I don’t want to write so much. I don’t understand why everything I follow and like always ends up turning me off, to the point where I regret ever getting involved with it and loving it in the first place.

reddit.com
u/Sensitive-Tea-5192 — 2 months ago

Why do absolutely all the things I’m interested in—the very things that surround me—end up pushing me away?

Over the past five years, I’ve been following and loving many TV shows, games, and anime, but for some reason, everything I love ends up turning me off, and I regret ever getting into it in the first place. Take "The Boys," for example—I watched up to season 3 and really liked it. When season 5 came out, I decided that once the entire series was available, I’d rewatch it all. Well, the finale is called the worst ending in TV history, and that just turns me off from watching any further, and what I once loved is now considered terrible. Or take Nolan’s "The Odyssey," for example. I was really looking forward to the movie, since it’s directed by Nolan. But when I heard the “bad news,” I just lost hope and was shocked that the movie would turn out badly. I could give even more examples, but I don’t want to write so much. I don’t understand why everything I follow and like always ends up turning me off, to the point where I regret ever getting involved with it and loving it in the first place.

reddit.com
u/Sensitive-Tea-5192 — 2 months ago