I get Lui. My parents said I also adopted when we fight. They'll return me if I'm not obeying them xD *"So don't run away until you get a permission"* That's a good advice actually 😆
Fun fact: for us Chinese kids who live in Malaysia/Singapore, it's a universal fact that none of us have biological parents. We were picked up from rubbish bins, waste landfills, or any other place where rubbish is thrown.
running away from home as a child was basically one of the most interesting yet hilarious things that i've done as a child and now looking back on it right now kinda makes me want to hide in embarassment ⁄(⁄ ⁄•⁄-⁄•⁄ ⁄)⁄ though glad to see them interacting and sharing stories like this since it's so relatable with the living in the bridge one www
as a kid I also got into a fight with my mom once, and she told me to leave then, so I packed a suitcase, went outside then ended up crying near the stoplights/ pedestrian crossing point crying because I was not allowed to cross the streets alone.
My mom kicked me out of the house plenty of times. However I had no clue what to do at that point at that age, so I just sat down in front of the door waiting. Sometimes it took hours. I was always stubborn and not admitting my mistakes.
Very relatable, my parents used to tell me that they found me in the sewers whenever we had a fight. Im 30 now and im still waiting for them to say sike....
so nostalgic when we had a siblings fight, we would always use the "you were picked from the garbage" card Also with the additional spell card " when you were a baby, you grew up inside a cabbage sitting next to trash can"
Frankly I'm shocked by how many of the comments say "relatable". I can't imagine anyone ever either running away or being told something so mean as a child. Pretty awful.
People speaking of these sort of children experience were born around 70s to 90s, in SE Asia, back then, every family was not as affluent and were merely concerned with survival, a number of them didn't even have proper education or were illiterate, thus used means available to them at their level to discipline children.. that was what it was back then.
It's incredibly relatable how our parents tell their kids that they were picked up from under a bridge and that they would send us back there after a fight. Laplus sure had it rough as a child, not that she grew up that much in height, but she sure has interesting stories about it.
My parents never told me about picking me up from a bridge or dumpster. But she would say she would squeeze me in her belly again. "Back to your origin" She says lol
I didn't run away from home but it's so damn accurate , they sometimes said things like : *if you swallow melon seed they will grow in your body* or *"when a girl and a boy kiss, they made a baby"*
I havent been on talking terms with my parents for years. It's bad. I can't even look them in the eye. If you have family troubles, you're not alone. Be yourself and never hesitate to sever a toxic relationship. You will feel much better ridding your life of negative people, even if they happen to be your parents. You deserve to accepted and supported and treated with respect.
Be careful using that label. People are complex, and a blanket demonization of them with "toxic" empowers you to treat them badly to any extent, because your opponent is "evil" and "toxic". Obviously I don't know your life, but just have some perspective on your own behavior regardless of what your parents do.
@@shinobu5359 Hey, you have to start somewhere. I'm just dispensing easy advice for laypeople who are stuck in a rut and need a change of pace. You're right you don't know me or the fact that I am well aware of these dynamics. If you are aware of how deep the problem is you would realize that not everyone out there is ready to drop all demonization and renounce ideas of absolutist good and evil which only serves one's ego. That's slightly more advanced stuff. Speak to the people where they're at and give them a crutch. Once they have left immediate debilitating stimuli (even if the debilitation is ultimately self-created, don't expect people to realize that now), then they can get the space they need to find themselves, they will learn to drop all demonization. I am well aware of what you're saying. But baby steps for the people. You don't skip all the levels and then start at level 100. Give them something actionable that improves their situation immediately. If someone's having a shitty little victim life because their parents are constantly taking big fat dumps on them, let them leave first, find some space free from external influence, then they can work on themselves. I agree with what you're saying, but to those that don't, you'll just come off either as insensitive that you refuse to play their demonization game, or condescending that you think you're the only one who has perspective on their own behaviour. If you really want to help people, be relatable, speak to them at the level of consciousness they're at, and nudge them along with baby steps.
@@remiremiremi111 Yes. A lot of the older generation is very messed up and traumatised and they're unconsciously attempting to pass that on to you and play by the same rules. Too bad they will die out and we can take over. We just have to reject their twisted ideals and stand strong for our own.
_Sometimes I feel like I don't have a partner Sometimes I feel like my only friend Is the city I live in, the city of angels Lonely as I am, together we cry_
Exactly! If you run away when she says it’s okay, then once you get murdered or kidnapped she’ll feel like shit and blame herself everyday. That’s the smart thing to do, cause then she’ll never yell at you again
Once I had a fight with my dad and he tried to kick me out of the house (he was pushing me out lmao) lololol, then I talked with my relatives and they told me that i was always welcome to their house. It didn't happen again I mean he used to say that the doors we're open if I wanted to get out but he didn't tried to kick me out of the house again.
Saw a documentary before about the kids that ran away from home in Japan. YMD isn't wrong about the bad guys out there. Glad they didn't get into trouble.
Laplus running away with her brother is the most brocon story I've ever heard. Maybe siblings are closer in asian cultures, because they have stricter parents. Here in northern Europe, I'm so used to siblings genuinely hating eachother. But it tends to get better as adults, and sisters in general get along better. The only times I observed siblings getting along was when they were both quite shy, but who knows how they acted when only family were around. Also, when there's a huge age gap, like 8 years, they also tend to get along.
There's a lot of incest story in the west if you look in the net, it is not asian thingy. It just that anime make it a popular trope hence your perception.
2:30 they finish the sentence in unison, that's great lmao
that sounds so surreal but awesome
2:32 I like how in-sync their voices are here.
Bruh that sounded so clean
@@yaboi841 that was so perfect
海外ニキ達のコメント見てると親が言う橋の下とか河川敷で拾ってきたみたいな表現は世界共通みたいでなんか親近感w
Its so cute that yamada family lives so close together
I get Lui. My parents said I also adopted when we fight. They'll return me if I'm not obeying them xD
*"So don't run away until you get a permission"* That's a good advice actually 😆
that a parent tells you that is fucked up
Lowkey
imagining lap+ and her brother picking up the money that fell was just adorable
That was a nice story also funny for some reason lui laugh always makes my day better
Fun fact: for us Chinese kids who live in Malaysia/Singapore, it's a universal fact that none of us have biological parents.
We were picked up from rubbish bins, waste landfills, or any other place where rubbish is thrown.
idk why but true af...
@International Simp Me? Racist? Oh nyo, whatcha gonna do about it, huh?
i mean we're joking obviously its kind of a joke that we get it all the time and what kind of human would be racist to its own race...
@@nakiriumaddict4162 Ikr. Man, the internet is no place for dry humour.
@@Blaze7296 its not a place for a FAILURE
Yeah, the runaway from home experience. Where you just(usually) camp somewhere near the house.
Relatable lmao
and then come back after 2 hours because you're hungry xD
This.
running away from home as a child was basically one of the most interesting yet hilarious things that i've done as a child and now looking back on it right now kinda makes me want to hide in embarassment ⁄(⁄ ⁄•⁄-⁄•⁄ ⁄)⁄
though glad to see them interacting and sharing stories like this since it's so relatable with the living in the bridge one www
as a kid I also got into a fight with my mom once, and she told me to leave then, so I packed a suitcase, went outside then ended up crying near the stoplights/ pedestrian crossing point crying because I was not allowed to cross the streets alone.
My mom kicked me out of the house plenty of times. However I had no clue what to do at that point at that age, so I just sat down in front of the door waiting. Sometimes it took hours. I was always stubborn and not admitting my mistakes.
That’s cute
@@Xtoxinlolinecronomiconsame lmaoo
Very relatable, my parents used to tell me that they found me in the sewers whenever we had a fight. Im 30 now and im still waiting for them to say sike....
Any second now....
W-Who's gonna tell him?
I'll help them. Sike u really were found I'm a sewer
They’re laughing and all, but this feels pretty heavy.
so nostalgic when we had a siblings fight, we would always use the "you were picked from the garbage" card
Also with the additional spell card " when you were a baby, you grew up inside a cabbage sitting next to trash can"
Frankly I'm shocked by how many of the comments say "relatable". I can't imagine anyone ever either running away or being told something so mean as a child. Pretty awful.
Me too. It's completely alien idea to me.I am shocked at the scale of this happening.
People speaking of these sort of children experience were born around 70s to 90s, in SE Asia, back then, every family was not as affluent and were merely concerned with survival, a number of them didn't even have proper education or were illiterate, thus used means available to them at their level to discipline children.. that was what it was back then.
It's incredibly relatable how our parents tell their kids that they were picked up from under a bridge and that they would send us back there after a fight. Laplus sure had it rough as a child, not that she grew up that much in height, but she sure has interesting stories about it.
Privilege, I was picked up at a dumpster behind a building.... So I was told... LMAO.
I was bought at the wet market, like how you buy fish, meat and vegetables.. and if I misbehaved, I'd be going back to the wet market to be sold 😁😁😁
my parent told me they pick me from Trash Bin
@@kojoydesu4107 me too, and all my siblings, apparently
that sounds kinda fucked up honestly, my parents never said that lol
can't imagine getting into a fight with my mom growing up, I'd get backhanded to oblivion.
My parents never told me about picking me up from a bridge or dumpster.
But she would say she would squeeze me in her belly again. "Back to your origin" She says lol
I once ran away from home and my mom chased me
We literally became athletes for once in the middle of night
I made it a mile down the road, then cried , then returned home lol
Lol cute story rebellious Yamada 😌
I'm just imagining the scen from Non Non Biyori when Koma-chan and Natsuri ran away from home
Kanata would say;
"amatuers" *while eating grass*
-草
La+ is so damn cute, you just want to have her as a little sister
this is very relatable i was told that i was picked up in a cows manure.But since i knew it was a joke i never cried.
they dropped moona's piggy bank
Meanwhile I was picked up by my under a jackfruit tree because I always ask them why my forehead is so big.
I didn't run away from home but it's so damn accurate , they sometimes said things like : *if you swallow melon seed they will grow in your body* or *"when a girl and a boy kiss, they made a baby"*
I was told I rolled up one day in a tumble weed.
I havent been on talking terms with my parents for years. It's bad. I can't even look them in the eye. If you have family troubles, you're not alone. Be yourself and never hesitate to sever a toxic relationship. You will feel much better ridding your life of negative people, even if they happen to be your parents. You deserve to accepted and supported and treated with respect.
Be careful using that label. People are complex, and a blanket demonization of them with "toxic" empowers you to treat them badly to any extent, because your opponent is "evil" and "toxic". Obviously I don't know your life, but just have some perspective on your own behavior regardless of what your parents do.
@@shinobu5359 Hey, you have to start somewhere. I'm just dispensing easy advice for laypeople who are stuck in a rut and need a change of pace. You're right you don't know me or the fact that I am well aware of these dynamics. If you are aware of how deep the problem is you would realize that not everyone out there is ready to drop all demonization and renounce ideas of absolutist good and evil which only serves one's ego. That's slightly more advanced stuff. Speak to the people where they're at and give them a crutch. Once they have left immediate debilitating stimuli (even if the debilitation is ultimately self-created, don't expect people to realize that now), then they can get the space they need to find themselves, they will learn to drop all demonization. I am well aware of what you're saying. But baby steps for the people. You don't skip all the levels and then start at level 100. Give them something actionable that improves their situation immediately. If someone's having a shitty little victim life because their parents are constantly taking big fat dumps on them, let them leave first, find some space free from external influence, then they can work on themselves. I agree with what you're saying, but to those that don't, you'll just come off either as insensitive that you refuse to play their demonization game, or condescending that you think you're the only one who has perspective on their own behaviour. If you really want to help people, be relatable, speak to them at the level of consciousness they're at, and nudge them along with baby steps.
@@remiremiremi111 Yes. A lot of the older generation is very messed up and traumatised and they're unconsciously attempting to pass that on to you and play by the same rules. Too bad they will die out and we can take over. We just have to reject their twisted ideals and stand strong for our own.
La+ tries to run away from home.....
"Higehero OP plays"
We boys always have that one time that we almost kicked out of the house or disowned
Well my childhood isn't that spicy but yeah me trying to run away several times as a kid is something I can relate
Ah yes. They had a fight so they will run away together.. Makes sense.
_Sometimes I feel like I don't have a partner
Sometimes I feel like my only friend
Is the city I live in, the city of angels
Lonely as I am, together we cry_
Exactly! If you run away when she says it’s okay, then once you get murdered or kidnapped she’ll feel like shit and blame herself everyday. That’s the smart thing to do, cause then she’ll never yell at you again
Bridge? That’s nice my parents told me I was picked up from the garbage
Once I had a fight with my dad and he tried to kick me out of the house (he was pushing me out lmao) lololol, then I talked with my relatives and they told me that i was always welcome to their house. It didn't happen again I mean he used to say that the doors we're open if I wanted to get out but he didn't tried to kick me out of the house again.
Saw a documentary before about the kids that ran away from home in Japan. YMD isn't wrong about the bad guys out there. Glad they didn't get into trouble.
This smol brat is being nice....
My mom and dad use to told me they pick me up on the side of the road LMAOO
Laplus running away with her brother is the most brocon story I've ever heard.
Maybe siblings are closer in asian cultures, because they have stricter parents. Here in northern Europe, I'm so used to siblings genuinely hating eachother. But it tends to get better as adults, and sisters in general get along better. The only times I observed siblings getting along was when they were both quite shy, but who knows how they acted when only family were around. Also, when there's a huge age gap, like 8 years, they also tend to get along.
There's a lot of incest story in the west if you look in the net, it is not asian thingy. It just that anime make it a popular trope hence your perception.
Holo brocon 😂😂😂
I'm asian and my parents never told me that... Fine i'll start the tradition with my kid.
Does anyone get picked under a banana tree?
Is it really a brother? Because she said kyoudai, that could also mean sibling. We also dont know if its an older or younger one...
Kyoudai would most likely be male, but whether it's younger or older, it's not mentioned.