u/Dizzy-Turnip-350

▲ 2

Some questions that will make you stop and actually think. Answer honestly.

No right or wrong answers. Just be real with yourself.

Here we go 👇

💔 About Relationships:

Are you staying in something out of love — or out of fear of being alone?

When did you last tell someone you love them and truly mean it?

🧠 About Yourself:

What's one thing you keep saying you'll "fix later" that's been on your list for years?

Are you proud of the person you've become — or just comfortable?

😔 About the Past:

Is there someone you owe an apology to but haven't had the courage to reach out to?

What's one moment you wish you could go back and handle differently?

🌱 About Growth:

What version of you would your 15-year-old self be shocked to see?

Are you actually moving forward in life — or just staying busy?

Pick any one question that hit you the hardest and answer it below. 👇

No judgment here. This is a safe space. 🤍

reddit.com
u/Dizzy-Turnip-350 — 2 days ago
▲ 9

Why Are Legal Anime Sites Going After Free Streaming Platforms While Failing Their Own Fans? This Needs to Stop.

Legal anime platforms are going after free streaming sites while their own services are overpriced, geo-locked, and full of library gaps. Instead of competing fairly, they're using legal threats. The community that built anime's all around the world success deserves better.

Let's talk about something that's been bothering the anime community for a while now — the ongoing crusade by licensed, "legal" anime platforms to take down free streaming sites, and why this fight is deeply hypocritical and ultimately hurts the fans most.

First, let's be real: who actually built the Western anime fanbase? It wasn't Crunchyroll. It wasn't Funimation. It was fan subbers, free streaming sites, and passionate communities who translated, uploaded, and shared anime at a time when Western companies couldn't have cared less about this medium. These "illegal" platforms carried the torch for decades. They are the reason anime is a billion-dollar industry in the West today.

Now that there's money on the table, legal platforms want to kick the ladder out from under the very community that built the demand they're profiting from.

Here's what nobody wants to say out loud:

Legal anime sites are genuinely not good enough to justify the cost for millions of fans. We're talking about geo-locking content so entire countries can't legally watch shows airing right now. We're talking about libraries that are riddled with gaps — entire beloved franchises missing, dubs that are incomplete, older titles that are simply never going to be licensed. And for all of this, they want you to pay $8, $10, $15 a month?

Free sites fill those gaps. They serve the fans in regions where legal options are either nonexistent or unaffordable. They keep older and more obscure anime alive that legal platforms have zero financial incentive to license.

The "piracy = stealing" argument falls apart under scrutiny. If the content isn't legally available to you at all — whether because of your country, your income level, or because the rights are in licensing limbo — then shutting down the only place someone can watch it doesn't create a legal customer. It just creates a fan who can't watch anime. That's a loss for everyone, including the industry.

reddit.com
u/Dizzy-Turnip-350 — 3 days ago
▲ 4

We all make these perfect schedules — wake up at 6AM, gym, deep work, healthy lunch, zero doom-scrolling...

And then reality hits.

I've been trying to figure out what an actually sustainable timetable looks like for a normal person. Not a CEO, not a monk — just someone trying to get stuff done without burning out.

So tell me:

What's one thing that's actually worked in your schedule?

What did you think would work but totally failed?

Drop your experience below 👇 Curious to see how different everyone's routines are.

reddit.com
u/Dizzy-Turnip-350 — 7 days ago