Hydrogen Perfoxide

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
paracosim
wizardarchetypes

one time a ranger 1 (so not law enforcement) at the state park where i worked was getting rid of a bunch of clothes so he put them all in garbage bags and dropped them off at the bunkhouse where all the seasonal employees lived and he said we could go through them before he donated them and we all took a tshirt or two and then a month later we were throwing a party and I was like "we should all wear his clothes to the party" and he came in and it took him like an hour and five drinks to suddenly be like "wait a minute.................."

wizardarchetypes

i should've noted that our parties always had dress-up themes (pirate night, cowboy night, etc.) and he'd texted me and asked what the theme was for this one and i told him "just dress as yourself."

Oops stayed up late doing late night composing

I do feel good that I can get pieces closer to being in a state i would say approximates finished with composing more than I can with any other art or craft I do

i wouldnt say im good at it but i am proud of what i finish and people have actively asked to hear one piece multiple times like its the intro for one of my ttrpg games and multiple players asked for it the other day i think its really fucking cool to set the mood for the game and get Players into character and like people like my work! i did an art and people arent just being saying they like it to not hurt my feelings h2fox2.txt
yersina
themeadowscene

I would love to see a fantasy novel where the lore that the reader / protagonist learns at first is not true

themeadowscene

e.g. they're told that this kind of creature has some kind of psychic or pheromone-based "mate bond" that cannot be broken; but it turns out that's a popular myth that has never been scientifically substantiated, and is basically used to keep people in bad relationships (basically the equivalent of "human women are biologically submissive")

themeadowscene

"lore" is imo too often treated like information that the author is giving the reader, and it just happens to be using the medium of diagetic (that is, 'in-story') exposition.

it's so much more interesting and dynamic to treat "lore" as information that is generated and disseminated in-story. who is telling the protagonist this information? under what historical and social circumstances was this idea formed? what political motives are there for trying to get people to believe this information? which characters would disagree with it? would the protagonist believe it, or be sceptical? does the plot bear it out, or cast doubt on it?

this may or may not be something I'm working on