r/PeterExplainsTheJoke Apr 24 '26

Meme needing explanation Lois?

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u/BeatnikBun Apr 24 '26 edited Apr 24 '26

I'm gonna guess that she's happily startled because, for example, mine hit his weed pen outside every 15 minutes and fell asleep on the couch and never once came near me. I think that my experience (or smth similar) is pretty common.

Edit: Hi, I'm an actually human person and was the first to comment on this. I'm not trying to start a damn war of the roses, and apparently this is NOT the correct answer (see the next comment below mine). Just popped in with my stupid, obviously incorrect thought about what this could mean. So chill with calling me a stupid whore.

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u/Upstairs-Hedgehog575 Apr 24 '26

Is it? That sounds horrendous. 

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u/tiorzol Apr 24 '26

Nah it's not. I can see how someone would want to normalise such a shitty event to deal with it but the fathers I know and myself have been much much more involved and supportive than our fathers were 

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u/FizziiPopX Apr 24 '26

I think it's more that, when you work in that kinda field, you see so many examples of the worst kinda person. Think retail and customer service - not every customer is awful, but when you're serving all day and the vast majority of people are neutral at best or horrific at worst, it's a pleasant surprise when you serve someone who is genuinely lovely.

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u/Aylmao1342 Apr 24 '26

Plus our brain will focus on the bad while forgetting the good.

Like when you are driving you won't remember all the drivers who let you swerve infront of them or drove normally.

But you will remember that 1 driver who drove like an asshole and thats the one you will tell everyone about how people suck at driving and how dumb people are.

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u/Ill-Television8690 Apr 24 '26

That doesn't make sense. Even if you see so many examples, if they're not the majority, then how could it be a surprise when it doesn't go that way? This is really just thinly veiled bigotry.

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u/Nebranower Apr 24 '26

People don't pay attention to neutral or mildly positive interactions the way they do very negative ones. The very negative ones may be a threat. They require vigilance. So we pay more attention to them in the moment, which in turn means we remember them more afterwards. So while most of the examples people experience may be neutral or even positive, most of the examples people can consciously recall will be negative.

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u/Ill-Television8690 Apr 24 '26

But that's still incongruent with a feeling of surprise when things proceed as they typically do. Surprise is the wrong word, because it's being used here to describe what one literally knows to expect the most.

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u/Nebranower Apr 24 '26

Counterpoint: It's a meme. It's expressing the idea that doctors see too many men failing to support their wives during childbirth in a humorous way. I don't think it's meant to be interpreted as saying that doctors are literally shocked at a husband being supportive.

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u/Ill-Television8690 Apr 24 '26

I mean, that does still loop back to how this is sexist. "It was so shocking when I found out my new girlfriend was actually capable of cooking! Women just don't know how to do that anymore haha" is still sexist, even if they weren't really saying it's rare that a woman actually knows how to cook. Being a meme/intended as a joke doesn't erase that, a pitfall many burgeoning bigots leap into.