Some examples:
A ring slides on but gets stuck trying to take it back off.
A kid puts his head through metal slats on a railing, but can’t pull it back through.
A girl gets her body in a clothes dryer, but can’t get back out.
If we can fit forward, shouldn’t we be able to fit backwards, too?
In: 358
In the perfect world, that would be great! Unfortunately, what goes on, or goes through or goes in, doesn’t always come off, get out of or can back out the same way you went in. And I think that most of that has to do with panic and anxiety! Because you start panicking, you also start squirming and causing yourself to be wedged in tighter, or your fingers start swelling because you realize you can’t get the ring off or you can’t get your head out from between the slates because you have moved your head up higher and now you can’t back your body out of the dryer, because your not in the same position as you were when you got into the dryer
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