Reddit Post: Cheated Again Followed by Mets Playoff Question

A screenshot of a Reddit post from the subreddit r/NewYorkMets, posted by user u/JHSMesq. The post opens with a detailed personal anecdote about kicking a cheating girlfriend out of a Manhattan apartment in the middle of the night, including her reaction and criticism from her family/friends. The narrative abruptly transitions to an unrelated question: whether the New York Mets will make the playoffs next year or 'blow it again.' The post displays Reddit UI elements such as upvote/downvote buttons (62 upvotes), a comment icon (19 comments), and share options.

Text content

I kicked my 26 year old girlfriend out of my Manhattan apartment in the middle of the night because I had just learned that she cheated on me with multiple men. I gave her time to carefully pack her things and get dressed, then I made her leave. She took an Uber home roughly 40 minutes from my doorman-staffed lobby to her home in the suburbs. She says it was shitty of me to kick her out in the middle of the night, that it's unsafe for a woman, that her dad was very upset at me and her girlfriends all think I should have at least let her stay until the morning. Here's my question: do you think the Mets are going to make the playoffs next year, or are they going to blow it again?

Overview

A screenshot of a Reddit post from the subreddit r/NewYorkMets, posted by user u/JHSMesq. The post opens with a detailed personal anecdote about kicking a cheating girlfriend out of a Manhattan apartment in the middle of the night, including her reaction and criticism from her family/friends. The narrative abruptly transitions to an unrelated question: whether the New York Mets will make the playoffs next year or 'blow it again.' The post displays Reddit UI elements such as upvote/downvote buttons (62 upvotes), a comment icon (19 comments), and share options.

Origin notes

The image is a screenshot of a user-generated Reddit post originally published on the r/NewYorkMets subreddit by u/JHSMesq. It was later shared on 9Gag, as indicated by the provided source information. The content was created using a screenshot of the Reddit interface, preserving original elements like the subreddit header, username, post timestamp ('21m'), and interaction metrics.

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