Welcome To My Twisted Memes

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
valarhalla

sock-bread asked:

literally begging you for any new details about the rhubarb and curry family. i need to know everything. i need to interview your childhood friend. i need to know if this is a bit i’m losing my mind

valarhalla answered:

Definitely not a bit. I think the most likely realistic theory is that they were the health food equivalent of evangelical missionaries who thought they were saving everyone’s else’s kids from dying by forcing them to eat what they perceived as actual healthy food. Apart from the alien food and being dicks to their kids friends, they were shockingly normal otherwise. They did get divorced after their kids left for college.

Haven’t spoken to said friend in years, but they’re by all accounts a cool well-adjusted queer person who works in biochem.

The dad, I am very sorry to report, is a cook and his linkedin page says he has decades of experience in the food industry.

Here’s hoping he got a bit better at it in the last twenty years O_O.

valarhalla
valarhalla

People have been nagging me to share “the curry story” on here for ages, so alright, I’ll do it. (If you’re Indian and reading this, I am so sorry).

I swear to god, everything I am about to say in this story is true.

When I was eleven, I moved to a small town in rural England and acquired a new best friend at school. Her at that point seemingly-very-normal-parents- nice suburban house, three kids, trampoline in the backyard- invited me over for dinner, and said they were making curry and rhubarb crumble.

“Curry and rhubarb crumble”. Never in the history of mankind have words been so untrue.

The “curry” consisted of, I swear I am not making this up, a vague mixture of * deep breath, oatmeal, tofu sausages, corn, tomato juice, chopped onions, raisins, “leftover broccoli leaves”, kale, and scrambled eggs. The only spice in it was the tiniest smidgen of turmeric. All these ingredients were vaguely stirred together, undercooked, and stuck under a broiler for ten minutes. 

They gave me a massive portion. I somehow, I still don’t know how, was polite enough to finish it.

“I’m done,” I said.

“No,” said her father. “In this house, we LICK our plates clean.”

He did. They didn’t make me hold it up and lick it like they all did, but they did make me clean the plate with a piece of bread and my fork until they were satisfied.

Desert came. The rhubarb crumble was entirely unsweetened. Not so much as a raisin. I can’t remember what the crumble part was, because my mind is still haunted by the memory of being forced to eat an entire bowl of unsweetened rhubarb. You know in old Looney Tunes when characters would be tricked into eating allum and their heads would shrink? That’s what eating it felt like. They made me clean my bowl of that too, and wouldn’t let me leave the table until I finished. 

The next time, (I was in middle school and as yet too polite to turn down my best friend’s parents) they made “spaghetti and meatballs and salad”. The spaghetti was utterly plain and so undercooked it was crunchy, the “meatballs” consisted of a single large orb of some grey material i have yet to identify, and the salad was, i shit you not, limp boiled lettuce. Crunchy spaghetti, unidentified lumpy grey stuff, and boiled lettuce.

The fascinating thing is that, while yes, these people were obviously health nuts, it was so much more than that. They were health nuts who also cooked like aliens who had never seen human food before. Or like small children making “potions”. One of the more edible things they served to me once was a dessert they made up which consisted of halved apples rolled in cornflour with some milk poured on top. One time, they were convinced to make pizza as a treat. They decided to put an onion on it. Fair and fine, you’d think. Not in that house. They just cut the onion in half once, and stuck each unchopped half facedown on one side of the pizza.

Speaking of onions, one time, my friend decided to make a banana and yoghurt smoothie. Her dad came in, said it wasn’t healthy enough, and made her add an onion to it.

They had a homemade cereal I thankfully was able to opt out of trying which 100% looked like the contents of a vacuum bag. I still have no idea what it contained.

Amazingly, it was by no means just me who experienced this. It was a small town, and every girl in it my age had a selection of horror stories about being invited to dinner at this friend’s house in the exact same ritualistic horror-film fashion. We used to sit around comparing them at sleepovers. Age did not exempt you. One time, this friend’s six year old brother had a friend over for dinner at the same time, poor soul. His mom arrived to pick him up, and wasn’t allowed to take him home until he finished whatever crime against cooking was on the menu that night. 

Every story was the same. The ritual that never varied. Every time, these people would make a huge fanfare out of inviting you over for dinner, act all hospitable and excited, set the table, and then serve you a massive helping of the worst food in the world, and make you clean your plate of it, desert included. Who the hell forces you to finish your DESERT?

It’s a mystery to me. They clearly had SOME degree of self-awareness, because after I came to my senses and started coming up with excuses to avoid eating at their house they would tease me saying things like “ohoho, you don’t like LIKE our food do you”. If they had been a bit more fun and less generally puritanical sort of people, I could totally believe this was a family trolling activity where they secretly schemed to come up with the worst possible dishes, secretly filmed themselves forcing people to eat them and watched it and laughed afterwards, I could believe it.

All I’m saying is I’m pretty sure they weren’t aliens, but the more I type this out, the more tempted I am to believe it. Fuck it, maybe they WERE aliens.

valarhalla

Responding to various common FAQ’s on this post:

This happened in 2006, in a small town near Oxford. I’m American but had recently moved to the UK, hence the non-British vocabulary some people have used to suggest that this story is fake. Actually I’d VERY recently moved to the UK: a crucial detail I left out in the original post is that this was actually the first time I’d been invited to someone’s house in the UK just weeks after moving there, so I initially had NO PERSPECTIVE that this wasn’t just how everyone in this weird new country cooked. Which is hilarious.

All the people saying they could never have coped because they’re autistic or have ARFID: I’m also autistic and was a VERY picky eater at the time. But I’d just moved to a new country and a new school where I was being bullied to hell and back and this girl was literally the first person who had been remotely nice to me and also pretty high in the popularity hierarchy,  so no way in HELL was I jeopardizing my one chance at having a friend/getting to hang out with the cool kids. So the real moral here is “middle school girl need to fit in can overpower literally anything.”

I wish I could remember more of the other girls’ stories. One I do remember is a girl who went on an outing with them, wanted to buy ice cream with her own money and was told she hadn’t “suffciently earned it”. The worst one was the kid who got served whole sprats (a type of sardine) which you were supposed to rip the head off of. Now, there’s nothing wrong with eating fish that way if you’re ok with it, there’s something DEEPLY wrong with serving that to an elementary schooler’s playmate and expecting them to be chill with it.

In hindsight, I don’t know why my friends and I put up with this shit for so long, I literally remember us seriously debating if you could eat super strong mints before dinner in the bathroom at their house to short-circuit your tastebuds. We tried to hang out at our houses instead, but they often insisted on alternating hangouts. IDK maybe kids in the 90s early 2000s were raised with more hardcore obedience towards parental figures than they are now, plus the british culture of not making a fuss. Consent wasn’t discussed yet then, you just did what adults told you to do. The depressing addendum to this story is that I finally put my foot down about going to their place after two? Three years? After I, a pretty skinny teenager, apparently spread too much jam on my toast and the mom told me, direct quote here, that I was going to die of diabetes by age 18 because my parents didn’t love me enough to teach me to eat properly (I ran home crying and vowed never to visit her house while her parents were around ever again after that). Which is why I feel no shame roasting these people to hell and back on the internet. 

That anecdote pretty firmly solidifies what I think was actually going on here, fun as it to theorize that they were aliens: they were the health food equivalent of evangelical missionaries who thought they were saving everyone’s else’s kids from dying by forcing them to eat what they perceived as actual healthy food. Possibly with a weird masochistic element about forcing all the Normie Kids to eat “real food” and watch them suffer.

Apart from the alien food and being total dicks to their kids friends, they were shockingly normal otherwise. They did get divorced after their kids left for college. Haven’t spoken to said friend in years, but they’re by all accounts a cool well-adjusted queer person who works in the sciences.

The dad, I am very sorry to report, is a cook and his linkedin page says he has decades of experience in the food industry. Here’s hoping he got a bit better at it in the last twenty years O_O.

skydog64
callmemanatee

The way most autism literature describes "literal interpretation" is often not at all similar to how I experience it. Teenage me even thought I couldn't be autistic because I've always been able to learn metaphors easily.

In fact, I love wordplay of all kinds. Teenage me was fascinated to learn all the types of figurative language there are in poetry and literature.

But paperwork and questionnaires are hard, because there's so much they don't state clearly. Or they don't leave room for enough nuance.

"List all the jobs you've had, with start and end dates." What if I don't remember the exact day or month? Is the year enough?

"Have you been suffering from blurred vision?" Well, if I take off my glasses the whole world is blurred, but I'm fairly sure that's not what the intake form at the optometrist is asking.

Or the infamous (and infuriatingly stereotypical) "Would you rather go to a library or a party?" What sort of party? Where? Who's there? I work at a library. Am I currently at the library for work or pleasure? Does it have a good collection?

It's not common figures of speech that confound me. It's ambiguity, in situations that aren't supposed to be ambiguous.

buckycharms-thefrostedsoldier
damnpharos

>Be me

>At work

>Pooping on company time #hellyeah

>Scrolling tumblr

>#FurryMpregPorn #hellyeah

>Drop phone

>It lands on the ground in between my stall and the stall next to me

>Face up

>The last post I was looking at is on it

>(#FurryMpregPorn) (#ohno)

>The stall next to me

>Is occupied

>(#FurryMpregPorn) (#fullknot)

>Immediately scramble to pick up and/or destroy phone

>In my haste I knock it closer to the other occupant

>No longer able to reach it

>(#FurryMpregPorn) (#faceup)

>Silence and stillness for 8,000 years

>The other occupant wordlessly kicks my phone back over to me

>(#FurryMpregPorn) (#myscreentimeoutis10minutes)

>I stay in the bathroom for an additional 20 minutes to make sure the other person never sees my face or other identifiable features

>Write this post

>I'm still in here

damnpharos

image
image

This is the part where I'm supposed to say ~ooooh no not meee, not this pooost, don't do this to me, this one's only getting like 3 notes~, but see I'm an attention whore. Yes me, yes this post, please do this to me I want validation. This one's getting the world heritage post designation. Tik tok robot lady voiceover of a reddit screenshot of this post incoming. I want weird pansexuals with picrew icons in my inbox telling me I'm funny and asking for feet pics. You invested at 50 but I invested at 0 and I'm lookin to retire. I already have tumblr notifications off, you can't hurt me.


valarhalla
recursivewitch

I've never read Homestuck but there's a type of media that I call "a Homestuck" and I think it's a useful categorization. The main criteria are:

  • long enough that the time investment is a serious barrier to entry
  • irrevocably changes your personality
  • brings something genuinely unique to the table. there is no real substitute for reading/playing/watching it in its entirety

Fate/Stay Night is a Homestuck. Worm is a Homestuck. When They Cry is a Homestuck.

Undertale has cultural impact similar to a Homestuck at first glance, but the fact that it's a pretty short and accessible game means that you don't get the particular mix of sunk cost fallacy and an intimate experience with a piece of media that results in you needing to connect with others who have already put in the time investment. You can buy your friends Undertale and expect them to play it if they're not too busy; telling a friend to read Homestuck is giving them a quest that, if accepted, will spark an odyssey. to read someone's Homestuck is an act of love without true equivalent.

bionicle
sock-bread
valarhalla

People have been nagging me to share “the curry story” on here for ages, so alright, I’ll do it. (If you’re Indian and reading this, I am so sorry).

I swear to god, everything I am about to say in this story is true.

When I was eleven, I moved to a small town in rural England and acquired a new best friend at school. Her at that point seemingly-very-normal-parents- nice suburban house, three kids, trampoline in the backyard- invited me over for dinner, and said they were making curry and rhubarb crumble.

“Curry and rhubarb crumble”. Never in the history of mankind have words been so untrue.

The “curry” consisted of, I swear I am not making this up, a vague mixture of * deep breath, oatmeal, tofu sausages, corn, tomato juice, chopped onions, raisins, “leftover broccoli leaves”, kale, and scrambled eggs. The only spice in it was the tiniest smidgen of turmeric. All these ingredients were vaguely stirred together, undercooked, and stuck under a broiler for ten minutes. 

They gave me a massive portion. I somehow, I still don’t know how, was polite enough to finish it.

“I’m done,” I said.

“No,” said her father. “In this house, we LICK our plates clean.”

He did. They didn’t make me hold it up and lick it like they all did, but they did make me clean the plate with a piece of bread and my fork until they were satisfied.

Desert came. The rhubarb crumble was entirely unsweetened. Not so much as a raisin. I can’t remember what the crumble part was, because my mind is still haunted by the memory of being forced to eat an entire bowl of unsweetened rhubarb. You know in old Looney Tunes when characters would be tricked into eating allum and their heads would shrink? That’s what eating it felt like. They made me clean my bowl of that too, and wouldn’t let me leave the table until I finished. 

The next time, (I was in middle school and as yet too polite to turn down my best friend’s parents) they made “spaghetti and meatballs and salad”. The spaghetti was utterly plain and so undercooked it was crunchy, the “meatballs” consisted of a single large orb of some grey material i have yet to identify, and the salad was, i shit you not, limp boiled lettuce. Crunchy spaghetti, unidentified lumpy grey stuff, and boiled lettuce.

The fascinating thing is that, while yes, these people were obviously health nuts, it was so much more than that. They were health nuts who also cooked like aliens who had never seen human food before. Or like small children making “potions”. One of the more edible things they served to me once was a dessert they made up which consisted of halved apples rolled in cornflour with some milk poured on top. One time, they were convinced to make pizza as a treat. They decided to put an onion on it. Fair and fine, you’d think. Not in that house. They just cut the onion in half once, and stuck each unchopped half facedown on one side of the pizza.

Speaking of onions, one time, my friend decided to make a banana and yoghurt smoothie. Her dad came in, said it wasn’t healthy enough, and made her add an onion to it.

They had a homemade cereal I thankfully was able to opt out of trying which 100% looked like the contents of a vacuum bag. I still have no idea what it contained.

Amazingly, it was by no means just me who experienced this. It was a small town, and every girl in it my age had a selection of horror stories about being invited to dinner at this friend’s house in the exact same ritualistic horror-film fashion. We used to sit around comparing them at sleepovers. Age did not exempt you. One time, this friend’s six year old brother had a friend over for dinner at the same time, poor soul. His mom arrived to pick him up, and wasn’t allowed to take him home until he finished whatever crime against cooking was on the menu that night. 

Every story was the same. The ritual that never varied. Every time, these people would make a huge fanfare out of inviting you over for dinner, act all hospitable and excited, set the table, and then serve you a massive helping of the worst food in the world, and make you clean your plate of it, desert included. Who the hell forces you to finish your DESERT?

It’s a mystery to me. They clearly had SOME degree of self-awareness, because after I came to my senses and started coming up with excuses to avoid eating at their house they would tease me saying things like “ohoho, you don’t like LIKE our food do you”. If they had been a bit more fun and less generally puritanical sort of people, I could totally believe this was a family trolling activity where they secretly schemed to come up with the worst possible dishes, secretly filmed themselves forcing people to eat them and watched it and laughed afterwards, I could believe it.

All I’m saying is I’m pretty sure they weren’t aliens, but the more I type this out, the more tempted I am to believe it. Fuck it, maybe they WERE aliens.

headspace-hotel

This whole thing is wild but I’ve tried to read the list of ingredients in that “curry” like 3 times and my brain just checks out every time. It’s like you’re trying to read a long passage in a textbook you don’t understand. My brain is just noping right out of there.