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Theory of Small and Everyday Coercions

A framework that analyzes the subtle, routine, and often invisible forms of coercion embedded in everyday interactions—not the dramatic violence of state terror, but the quiet pressures of social expectation, institutional demands, and interpersonal power. These small coercions include the expectation to smile, the pressure to agree in meetings, the forced performance of gratitude, the threat of social exclusion for nonconformity. The theory argues that these micro‑coercions constitute the fabric of social order, training individuals to comply long before any explicit threat appears. Recognizing them is the first step to resisting the normalization of control.
Example: “She realized her exhaustion came not from any single demand but from the theory of small and everyday coercions—the constant performance of enthusiasm, the suppressed disagreement, the smiling compliance that drained her identity.”
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Mrs. Cockerel legs 

legs that look like waterbeds or like someone put mayonnaise in a zip lock bag and squished it around. They are huge nasty legs that looks like every but of food she eats goes straight to the thighs.
Yo have you seen that chick, she has Mrs. Cockerel legs... nasty

Mr. Cockerill 

"Is your dad a terrorist? 'Cause your the bomb, Mr. Cockerill!"
Mr. Cockerill by ChanceToSucceed December 9, 2021