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What's a time when you felt like you woke up and the universe had just changed?

And I mean in like, The 2011 Japan earthquake where our days literally got faster, COVID because ... Y'know. COVID. Etc.

What's a time in your life you experienced something like that, when was it and what ended up happening to you?

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  • Way back in 2024. Things were bad, but then, in October, there was a tectonic shift in the US, when the impossible became reality. There was a limbo for a couple of months, but in January this year we (the US) was flung back into 1940, and since then the years seem to be going backwards.

    • From 1940, 1930, 1920, 1910, 1900 and looping back around to
      ^1984, ^^1984, ^^^1984, ^^^^1984, ^^^^^1984

  • When Russia invaded Ukraine... It may sound like the first thing that came to my mind but for a few days I thought Russia would attack my country as well. Before, I was feeling very safe in my country.

    Of course that's only the direct impact on me personally. Let's not forget how Ukrainians feel

    • I even remember the moment I heard. My husband came to me and our baby, we were playing on the bed, it was a Thursday. He asked if I had heard yet. I asked what, and he told me that Russia attacked Ukraine. It felt so surreal. It felt like being held at gunpoint to r*pe your sibling.

      We don't live in Russia or Ukraine, but we have close friends and relatives in both countries. For about a week I couldn't concentrate on our daughter. My head was somewhere else which felt awful, but was also the first time I had allowed myself to think about something else and not give her 100% of my attention. We went to demonstrations (well who cares) and kept doom scrolling, which felt more urgent, more necessary to stay in touch with what is happening. We realized how we didn't see the obvious for years. Which was very painful, since my husband was always interested in politics, also back when he lived in Russia, and got me into being more political myself. We were way too naive about it.

      We kept asking our friends and family how they were, what they planned to do. Some fled immediately. Some a bit later. Most stayed. With time, the imminent feeling of threat and impending doom numbs down to low key anxiety. So many years down the drain. So many futures waisted. They stole their futures.

      I remember I kept telling my daughter "one day we will tell you about a war between our countries that lasted for 1 day when you were a baby". 2 days. 10 days. 30 days. I stopped counting at 100.

      Now I just hope we will have time to go there. Will my grandparents be able to see their great granddaughter? Will she meet her grandpa in Russia? Will she ever be able to play with her cousins in rural Ukraine? I had planned to spend summers there, to get to know this side of my spouse's family, and hoped she would get to learn some snippets of Ukrainian there. That's how he knows the language. And now I just hope that his cousins will not die. The fat one lost about 2/3 of his body weight so far. I'm not surprised being in the military does this to you.

      Damn I even remember the pigeons. That stupid pigeons. We had pigeon problems on the balcony and in March 2022 they built a nest and it had eggs in it. But the day prior they bombed an orphanage. Or a children's hospital? Or a maternity ward? God these assholes bomb everything, don't they. And I cried and we couldn't do it, we couldn't bring ourselves to remove the eggs. We had freaking pigeon babies with incredibly proud pigeon parents who were, btw, super progressive, crazy emancipated pigeons, both were looking for the eggs and babies equally. We gave them names when they hatched and watched them grow older. And then fuck nature, about two weeks before they would have left the nest, a fucking crow ate Hittin first, and poor Putler was so, so scared, and we tried to shelter him and even lifted the rule of no feeding no water, but then the next day, he was dead as well. The parents were devastated. We were devastated. We were powerless. We still are. We couldn't protect them. We couldn't make a change even when we tried. We were powerless.

      The universe stood still, and then it started going with a different pace and in another direction than before.

      Not sure where I am going with this, I think I'm just grateful someone else found this moment... Majorly significant.

    • Back in 2014 I thought we are witnessing the beginning of WW3 and even went so far as to head down to the shops and buy enough food for ~ 2 weeks.

      Call me cynical, but in 2022 I felt more like "You guys are surprised about this? Really?"

  • Back when I was living in Germany in 2020, I took a walk around the small city my family used to live. Everything was fine and normal.

    But when I walked back home, everything changed for the worst.

    Why? Because it was day Covid was declared a pandemic.

    I still think about the walk that changed everything!

  • Back in 2001 I slept with the radio on and was on the US west coast. So I literally woke up September 11th to live breaking news that life would never be the same.

    I woke up just in time to turn on the TV and see the 2nd tower get hit.

  • I was in second grade when they changed the way that Wednesday is spelled.

    It used to be Wendsday, at least that's how it was spelled in the universe I came from.

    Nothing has really made sense since.

  • I think that those moments exist throughout your life, some personal, some shared. As you get older, more seem to happen more often but the emotional drama seems to reduce.

    For example in no particular order, here's a few:

    • The day my grandfather died
    • The first space shuttle launch
    • Challenger exploding
    • Leaving my birth country
    • Returning to it over a decade later
    • Becoming unemployed for 18 months
    • September 11
    • COVID
    • Brexit
    • Trump being elected the second time
    • The Berlin wall coming down
    • Deepwater Horizon
    • Getting a medical diagnosis
    • Asking my partner to travel around the country
    • Getting paid a wage the first time
    • Standing in the bathroom of the first house I lived in on my own
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