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The Final Frontier

@zjofierose / zjofierose.tumblr.com

User can be found in the wild at AO3 and livejournal.
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personsonable-deactivated201908
me holding a gun to a mushroom: tell me the name of god you fungal piece of shit
mushroom: can you feel your heart burning? can you feel the struggle within? the fear within me is beyond anything your soul can make. you cannot kill me in a way that matters
me cocking the gun, tears streaming down my face: I’M NOT FUCKING SCARED OF YOU

Hey OP? What the FUCK does this mean?

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personsonable

decay exists as an extant form of life

That’s a terrifying answer, have a nice day

THE ORIGINAL?!?!!!!!!!!;!!!!!!!!???

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Usually when I get ocular migraines I get this weird squiggly scythe in my peripheral vision that gradually moves towards the center, which gives me time to lay down before my vision gets all funky, but sometimes it starts from the center instead, which means that my focus point is suddenly just gone and I can't read anymore, which is slightly more unsettling because whenever that happens I always briefly wonder if I'm having a stroke

Mine always start in the center THEN do the scythe.

...is THAT what those are? I've had the center-thing-to-squiggly-scythe a few times but I had no idea it was a migraine.

mine are usually big rainbow-y smears, like a sun dog, but you know, it moves when i move my eyes. makes it impossible to read or see where i’m going if i walk around. usually have to just sleep them off. but yeah, the first time i got one i was fully convinced i was having a stroke or something.

i need feminism because when jesus does a magic trick it’s a goddamn miracle but when a woman does a magic trick she gets burned at the stake

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mattheuphonium

fabulous 

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tockthewatchdog

i mean they did also kill jesus. that was a pretty significant thing that happened. like i understand where you’re coming from here but they very much did kill jesus.

Imagining a socialist utopia where I exploit the labor of women in my family by purchasing artisanal wares from them at prices that don't even cover the costs of materials let alone compensate their labor.

you can tell this person is just a lazy cheap piece of shit (a lot of that going around) because they don’t even suggest the actually communist option of giving the cousin an in-kind exchange of labor instead of trying to rip her off. build your cousin a catio or do her yard work for a few months or something

i like working at plant store. sometimes you ring up someone and there's a slug on their plant and so you're like "Oh haha you've got a friend there let me get that for you" and you put the slug on your hand for safekeeping but then its really busy and you dont have time to take the slug outside before the next customer in line so you just have a slug chilling on your hand for 15 minutes. really makes you feel at peace with nature. also it means sometimes i get to say my favorite line which is "would you like this free slug with your purchase"

@holyknuckled you get it. lterally what are we here on earth for if not to occasionally impose gastropods upon unsuspecting customers. this story is delightful

oh? my god???

yeah, Exactly like that

real question,

why do proshippers love rape so much? do you guys want to rape someone irl?

why do you guys love pedophilia/grooming so much? have you ever had thoughts about doing those actions or irl minors?

why do you guys love incest so much? is this just a way for you to vent your frustration cause your sibling(s) /step sibling(s) rejected you for your literal illegal behavior?

why do you guys love all these crimes so much? why do you love it when someone calls sexual and predatory abuse attractive as if it hasn't traumatized billions of people word wide?

this is like a genuine question I'm being deadass

Proshippers do not "love" these things. Rather, we're committed to defending the right of people to write about them - even in ways we might personally find disgusting or upsetting - because we understand that engaging with something in fiction is not predicated on defending or desiring it in real life. Even if someone is aroused by something in fiction, it doesn't logically follow that they're aroused by the same thing in real life, because context - the question of how, when, why and with whom - is foundational to both desire and consent. Meaning: it is possible - and, indeed, extremely normal - to enjoy something only as a fantasy: to be compelled, aroused by or interested in it only because it's fictional, in much the same way that we might be compelled, aroused by or interested in all manner of ideas or activities only under specific conditions.

For instance: I enjoy cake! But if someone handed me a piece of filthy, rotting cake they found on the floor, I would not want to eat it, because the context of the cake matters to my willingness to consume it. Similarly, I enjoy murder mysteries! But if someone in my life was brutally killed by an unknown assailant, I would be devastated, not entertained. And this latter example is particularly important, because our consumption of fiction is at all times informed by our awareness of the fact that the characters don't exist. No matter what befalls them on page, stage or screen, no real person has been harmed, which allows us to react to the content differently than if we were seeing the same events unfold in person, or in a live recording.

Now: it's true that, just as fiction is influenced by reality, so too can reality be influenced by fiction, both on the individual level and at scale. Fictional characters might not exist, but their stories still meaningfully impact real human beings, both positively and negatively. But this impact doesn't work on anything even vaguely resembling a universal, one-to-one basis, such that X story is guaranteed to cause Y effect, or that X topic is only ever explored for Y reason - and this is just as true for dark, unsettling and taboo topics as for anything else.

Which is why it's important to understand that, particularly when it comes to sex and desire, human beings are complex. At the most basic level of arousal, our bodies and brains are frequently in conflict. From teenagers dealing with unwanted erections to seniors mourning their loss of libido, none of us has perfect control over when and how we get turned on - and this extends to situations involving rape and assault. It is common, for instance, for rape victims to experience some level of arousal in response to their assault, because our bodies and minds do not exist in a state of perfect sync. Many victims experience deep shame as a result of this, thinking that, because they got hard or wet or came, they must've secretly wanted it - a trauma that's intensified if their assailant makes the same claim. Victims, too, can have complex relationships to their assailants, particularly if they were abused by family members or as children; can sometimes take years or decades to understand that they were harmed at all.

Regardless of whether we've been victimised ourselves, are proximal to someone else's trauma or are simply impacted by living in a world where such things can happen, fiction is the safest possible way to explore these ideas. But precisely because people are so different - precisely because our reactions to the same event or idea can vary so wildly - these stories will not always look the same. What disgusts or triggers one person might be healing to another, and that's not determined by how eroticized the content is or isn't. Sexual trauma responses can encompass opposite extremes: where one rape victim might be utterly repulsed by rape content and need to avoid it for their healing, another victim will feel compelled to seek or create it in order to achieve the same ends, and neither of them is wrong.

I have, for instance, known victims to write their own assaults into fiction. Sometimes these accounts are eroticized as a way of regaining control over a situation in which they had none. Perhaps the writer wants to accurately depict the confusion they felt at being aroused while being assaulted; or, conversely, perhaps their lack of arousal at the time increased the level of physical pain they experienced, and they want to write something which shows that, even if they had been aroused, it would still have been rape. Or on yet a third hand, perhaps they weren't sure if a given experience was rape or not, and want to try and make sense of it. Perhaps they want to try and imagine their assailant's perspective, to better comprehend what happened to them and why. This might mean a complicated, nuanced depiction that sways between awareness of the crime and minimization of it; it might also involve painting them as a flat-out villain, or as someone who believed they were acting only out of love. All of these things are possible! But no matter how much some or all of these portrayals might disgust you, the casual reader, you will not be able to tell, just by looking, who has "really" been assaulted, and who is exploring these topics for other reasons.

Because of course, not all people who write about abuse have experienced it themselves; nor should this be a requirement. Sometimes, we write about dark things, not to achieve catharsis in relation to a personal experience, but to conquer our fear of it happening to us, or perhaps even just to get an adrenaline rush - as is, for instance, extremely common with fans of horror content. Our brains produce a variety of fun chemicals in response to various stimuli, and we don't generally get to choose which ones we find the most engaging. Some people are horror junkies from childhood, seeking out scary stories from the moment they're old enough to ask for them, while others remain terrified of something as mild as cartoon comedy horror well into old age. There's no morality associated with this; it just is - and that all comes back, once again, to the fact that we understand fiction as a separate thing to reality. No matter how horrific the thing depicted, our enjoyment (of whatever kind) is predicated on knowing that no actual human beings being harmed, even if the bad in the story - an axe murder, a war, a rape - is something that really does happen. And returning again to matters of sex, regardless of whether they rise to the level of a kink or fetish, all sexual proclivities are ultimately products of native inclination, life experience, trauma, and/or the overlap of all three, while a specific fantasy might be either literal, metaphoric or a mix of both. A literal fantasy, for instance, might be: what if my hot boss fucked me over his desk at work, because he's hot and I want to sleep with him. A metaphoric version of the same fantasy might be: what if I was so insanely desirable that my boss fucked me despite his being married and straight and me being a man. To take another example, and one which has been studied extensively by psychologists, literary historians and academics alike, rape fantasies are commonplace, not because the vast majority of people are rape apologists, but because, at the level of metaphor, they allow the possibility of sex without having to take ownership of one's own desires, which is of particular value if, say, you've been taught that wanting sex makes you slutty and wrong and gross; which is, in turn, why so many old Harlequin and Mills & Boon romances feature encounters that we'd now class as non-consensual between the hero and heroine. It wasn't because the writers didn't understand rape: it was because they were writing in a time where women were taught that wanting sex made them harlots, such that it was difficult for them to fantasize without shame. The hero knowing what the heroine "really" wanted and giving it to her despite her protests was a loophole. I could go on, but the key point is this: given that nobody on Earth can perfectly control their own arousal, it is imperative to acknowledge that being turned on by something doesn't mean wanting it in real life, because the alternative is forcing yourself to choose between sexual shame and justifying it in real life. And neither of those things has ever led anywhere good.

i'm a horror writer and no one's EVER asked me if i want to put parasitic wasps in someone's eyeballs irl. what do I have to do to get podcasters to bring the same energy to the interview as people who don't like Game of Thrones bring to the blog post?

A friend has once again brought it to my attention that it is unusual to have an intact chronological memory of life prior to age 12 and you know what’s weird to ME is that the rest of yall forgot how to sing the clean-up song

Other shit:

  1. The crotch-and-chin destroying hell of a toddler’s carseat
  2. How fucking scary stairs are when you JUST figured out walking. “You can stand up” nah fuck that these steps go up to my knees and I’m top-heavy I’m gonna scoot down on my ass thank you
  3. Walking alongside fucking giants whose legs are bigger than your whole fucking body and trying to keep up
  4. Not knowing how to blow your nose and everyone expecting you to just figure it out by holding a tissue and saying “blow” like WHAT DO YOU MEAN CLOSE MY THROAT? Just an absolute snot waterboarding
  5. People describing how to make sounds with your mouth but you can’t see inside their mouth when they do it so you kind of just guess over and over while they tell you you still don’t got it
  6. Not having a full grasp of language but fully understanding CONCEPTS so you say shit like “are we going to the park later?” When you mean TOMORROW but all you can come up with is shit like “the next time we have lunch, not today but after today, after that” like a fucked up game of verbal post-brain injury Pictionary where people won’t let you get mad about it
  7. Just. Mucus. Mucus and chapped skin, all the time, chin and upper lip. And you’re not supposed to lick it cause the spit is the PROBLEM but it’s fucking OBNOXIOUS. “Just keep the skin dry” wow thanks I’ve been aware of this mechsuit for about ten minutes and still haven’t fully mastered not falling into the toilet but yeah I know how to stay on top of that, cool
  8. FALLING INTO THE TOILET
  9. Trying to eat at a table where the surface comes up to your chin but not being able to get high or close enough cause you can’t scoot your chair in and your hands still don’t coordinate good so you end up just spooning tomato sauce onto your lap like an asshole. Like yeah mom my bad, have you considered though that I ALSO don’t want me to be covered in sauce? Cool
  10. Adults being WAY too excited about shit that straight up is not worth the hype
  11. Carpet burn. Constant carpet burn. Crawling, tripping, shuffling between toys on the floor. So much goddamn carpet burn
  12. Knowing exactly what you’re talking about and zero people understanding because they think you’re too dumb for what you’re trying to communicate
  13. Being told to wave at or hug complete strangers. And they always smelled kinda weird but you weren’t supposed to say it
  14. The feeling of meeting an older kid and they act like they’re your manager or something
  15. Encyclopedic knowledge and name of every single person in your grade 1 class, and their interests
  16. Stroller rides. You could zone out at the ground for hours I swear to god
  17. Dropping something while buckled into a carseat or stroller and not being able to get it and just resigning yourself to a life in hell
  18. Dropping something while you’re in a carseat and it goes UNDER YOUR ASS and you can’t fucking GET IT
  19. Other children getting away with just absolute war crimes. Imagine if Sharon showed up to the office potluck and offered you a cookie and after you ate one revealed that she licked it. Imagine if Gord took your stapler and put it down his pants so you couldn’t get it back. Imagine if for no reason at all your coworker told you your dad was stupid and then put your laptop in the garbage
  20. Not remembering what different foods are called and getting pressured into agreeing to food you were NOT FULLY AWARE OF. How the FUCK is a chicken wing different from a chicken strip you ask? “Well, one just has a bone in it!” You fool. You fucking idiot. They might as well be from different animals entirely. But now you gotta eat it cause we don’t waste food (hell)

Yes I’ve talked about this before and yes I’m going to talk about it again because every single person on earth should be fully and viscerally aware that being a kid feels like every description I’ve ever read of recovering from a stroke and we all grow up and forget and talk about childhood like it was magic.

Yeah some of it was fun and all but don’t you remember FALLING DOWN CONSTANTLY? You don’t remember needing help putting a shirt on cause you got your arm stuck and couldn’t get out and panicked so bad you started crying? You DON’T remember being just CONSTANTLY STICKY? Ohhh my good, pissing yourself. Pissing yourself was the worst. Christ alive, and being put in the playpen with a weird kid

Why were you falling into the toilet?

I WAS LIKE TWO FEET TALL

what's weird about my brain is that i have extremely bad *voluntary* recall but if someone else can prompt me, it turns out that more often than not, the memories are still on file

i would like to also add:

-being a nervous kid means living in silent hill permanently forever. there are monsters. they WILL get you. you can't predict when. no one thinks this is noteworthy.

-some foods make you sick. somehow this doesn't mean you can just not eat them. being sick is really inconsiderate of you, too.

-sticky crumbs are the worst.

-kids cooler than you hate you. kids weirder than you are even more unpredictably violent.

-no one understands your creative vision. 'house' would be so much better with a dragon. why does this require extensive debate.

-the assholes who never put the play dough caps back on the tubs should get their hands unscrewed.

-that one girl who can't tell a story but cries if you interrupt whatever boring thing she was failing to say

-boys are allowed to kill any creature they want in front of you specifically to hurt your feelings and you're the bad guy when you bite them???

-rose petals should taste good but don't. WHY.

-that one church lady who thinks screaming in a shrill and pathetic way at the rude boys is going to work THIS time. what the fuck is wrong with her

-snail slime washes off but slug slime is forever. i still don't understand this one.

-if there are millions of grownups in the world why can't they replace the one currently fucking up being in charge of you and the six boys who like to to torture you. like there's lots more teachers. can't you get one who is trained in not letting kids get tortured? no one in the room has been sneaky about the torture thing. come on.

-clay soil should taste good. look at it. deeply unfair that it doesn't.

-you will never regret putting a small smooth rock in your mouth.

-you chewed too much string and are having an unprecedented bathroom situation.

-why does your friend's mom smell so bad? bad-smelling moms seems like it should be against the rules.

-why does your other friend's mom smell so good? can you get your mom to smell like this?

-extremely specific pretend game scenarios you revisit over and over until your friends are exasperated and ten years later you go OH SHIT as you understand some very embarrassing things about yourself.

-rolling down a grassy hill was such a fantastic combination of chaos and freedom and safety. it's still fun as a grownup but my joints don't agree.

-the utter devastation of squishing a bug you were trying to save. you go from disney princess to warcrimes mcbloodhands in one irreversible second.

-sometimes the free lollipop is just kinda mid. and they don't give you another one to make up for it. and you can't even get THAT mad because mid is still better than nothing.

-mom tells you to clean your toys up but you only have one basket for your stuffed animals, who are currently having a civil war. not good.

-being small enough to climb into a box full of packing peanuts. incredibly good noise. incredibly good texture.

-do you also remember unspooling a tape measure allll the way out, confirming to everyone that the metal end bit COULD rip your eye out, then dropping the tape measure and running out of range before the tape respooled?

-pissing your pants sucks so bad. it stings. and it seems to take so much longer to dry than a water spill does

-you're still a person, every year of your life. everyone says you'll be different when you grow up. and every grownup is so strange, so distant, so unsympathetic and illogical and dismissive and alien. you wonder what could ever make you that different. you wonder why no one can explain.

The “extremely specific pretend game scenarios” turned out to be an early sign that one of my BFFs was a lesbian, but since I myself am straight, I didn’t understand why she was so much more into Princess Leia than I was (my bae was Han Solo) until much later. 😂

If I may:

  • The absolute betrayal of someone trying to put stuff in your stroller. That’s MY space! I’m not trying to wedge MY wallet uncomfortably against YOUR ass.
  • Having an adult jump to swipe something away from you and thinking, offendedly, “I wasn’t going to eat it! I was just smelling” (detergent, candles, etc)
  • This scraped knee is actually literally the worst thing that has ever happened to me so can you give me a minute here??? (scraped my knee as an adult two years ago and it sucks worse than you remember)
  • Mistaking someone else for your parent/neighbor/etc because their legs look the same and that’s just about all you can see from the ground 
  • Adults having no idea what you know or don’t in general (explaining that you’re not a baby and you know how to tie your shoes at 10 actually). I had a lot of adults assume I didn’t know what figurative language or sarcasm meant because I started using them super early so I ended up patiently explaining to adults that “gone to the dogs” was what’s called a “figure of speech” and what that meant. Made an annoyed and embarrassed teacher’s aide sit through this after she patronizingly sneered “ooooh, did SOMEone see a PUPPY?”
  • The voice adults use to patronize children that sounded like nails on a chalkboard to me even when I was a children deserves its own bullet point
  • Why does every adult immediately ask me “how’s school?” Can’t you talk about anything else? Plus maybe I don’t like it that much! I don’t ask you how’s traffic or your jerk coworker. Ask me my favorite animal or something.
  • Lots of adults have no idea how to talk to kids part II: did anyone else have a fairly obvious physical characteristic that adults loved to comment on? Tall, ginger, freckles, green eyes, etc. Even if it was a compliment, it got super old having your dentist/pediatrician/summer camp counselor/new teacher all say almost the exact same thing.
  • The helplessness of having to kill an afternoon going places that really have nothing for you (bank, car dealership, etc) because the big people couldn’t find a sitter/didn’t try
  • Climbing up on the counter to get things from the cabinets because your head barely reaches the counter and there’s no stepping stool
  • Why do adults think that I’ll automatically like playing with so-and-so’s kid just because we’re the same age? He plays really rough and shoots down all my ideas for games. Can we leave???
  • Why are there no good snacks in this house? I don’t WANT -5 calorie fat-vaporizing diet popcorn I want REAL FOOD.
  • Especially around age 12, trying not to mention or allude to the fact that you know what sex is (adult stuff! Forbidden Knowledge) in front of adults … which your best friend‘s parents find hilarious because they definitely know what sex is. See also: knowing swears and censoring yourself in front of the adults so you don’t get in trouble in a weird mirror image version of not swearing in front of the toddler 

The thing I remember the most is being told I was 'dramatic' about things that would later be classified as Symptoms of Disorders and Diseases that I had my whole life, and some of them were things that the adults in my life knew that I had. Yes, the sun really does hurt my eyes so bad I want to throw up, actually. Yes, it really did take 4 months for the tendons in my foot to heal and no I was not just trying to get out class early. Yes, it really does make me feel very sick when I am forced to eat things with aspartame in it.

I'm just really stuck here on the original post saying it's unusual to have chronological memories before AGE 12???

Like, sure, I don't have a lot of memories of being 2-3, but I do have several that I do know for certain happened then from context clues.

(Things where my sister hadn't been born yet, which happened when I was 2 1/2, being upset after my sister came home from the hospital and wanting my mom to pay attention to me, my uncle was a huge bag of dicks about the fact I couldn't say my TH sounds and made fun of me for saying "I'm free" instead of "I'm three", being in my booster seat in the car, etc).

But TWELVE? That can't possibly be right. I know some people don't have strong memories before age 6-7, but 12 seems bizarre.

I have a TON of memories of being 4-6, and even more later on.

i remember a whole lot from the age of like, 2 onward, and my earliest memories are from when i was just learning to speak/walk, and the two things that i remember most are:

1) being confused about things ALL THE GD TIME because people do not explain things to kids, they just expect you to either understand or blindly obey, and they don’t care about any questions or reasoning, and

2) adults being shitty when you try to understand what’s happening or get clarification. i got in trouble so much for things i did as a child that i had *very good reasons for doing* but everyone just assumed i was being contrary, when really i just didn’t understand or had a legit reason for not doing what i was being told.

consequently, i try really hard, when dealing with kids, to remember that they have Very Little Context for what’s happening, and if they’re trying to explain something to you, you should give them time to get it out, even if it is frustrating you or doesn’t seem to make sense. (obviously this is superseded by safety or emergency, but otherwise!)

also, most kids are really sensitive to the moods of adults around them - if you’re arguing or upset or frustrated or whatever, kids are gonna respond to that. be the adult you are and don’t take it out on them, even if they start to act out in response.

So to recap

  • Pillowfort is not dead (never has been). It's just smaller. If you join it, it will be bigger!
  • Pillowfort is consistently getting new features and improvements based on user feedback
  • Pillowfort is free to join without invites. Think AO3 waitlist. You'll be ready to go in a few hours at most.
  • Pillowfort was not "made by antis" (lmao)
  • Pillowfort is completely user funded, and thus will never enshittify
  • Pillowfort allows NSFW, is sex worker friendly (as far as US law allows) and banned AI images*
  • Pillowfort does not have reblog replies, on purpose, only comments. You own and control your own posts, forever.
  • Pillowfort is planning Ask Boxes, UX improvements, better image uploading, and tons more
  • Pillowfort is not owned by a transphobic techbro douchebag
  • Pillowfort has been around for seven years, where other small social media has withered and died. Cohost came and went all within PF's lifetime.
  • Pillowfort is small. It is buggy. It has no video or audio, only Youtube embeds. It runs on 7k/month, mostly spent on moderators. They use their resources as best they can, and have built a damn resilient product for it.
  • Pillowfort is trying to build a better, sustainable internet, without venture capital tricks destroying good services. It's not impossible, just harder, and slower. Don't believe the defeatists.
  • Pillowfort is not for everybody. The only way you'll find out whether you like it is by trying it.

\*: Linking to AI images is technically allowed if tagged, but PF will never host them, no exceptions.

I was just thinking if digging out my old pillowfort!

I have no patience for negativity toward "boomers" anymore.

Almost everybody doing the work to restore ecosystems, grow native plants, and preserve rare species is 50 or older

The people I work with IRL have told me that my presence is encouraging because it means "the younger generation is getting involved with this stuff too." There's really not very many people my age

Who do you think was fighting this fight in the 1970's

I'm saying this as a Gen Z who is woefully lacking in these skills

Social media and the internet have really decimated my generation's ability to network and organize with people IRL

Not in the sense that That Damn Phone causes your skills to atrophy, but rather, Gen Z has no idea how people organized before social media, and no idea what anyone over 40 is doing for good in the world

The vast majority of local native plant, wildlife, and gardening organizations have NO social media presence

I could never have understood this until I started working IRL with people who are absolute powerhouses of knowledge, resources, and action about plants, animals, ecosystems, and conservation...who simply, barely know how to email

Google is not a resource

It can link you to a few resources, but it is ultimately a complicated device to make you Buy Product

Google will not even show you the best websites out there for learning about the ecosystem. At all. Google recognizes few possible interpretations of your query other than "Google, show me a bunch of advertisements for [thing] so I can Buy Product." If your research doesn't end in Buy Product, Google has no interest in helping you.

Many people think that the way of finding things out before Google was books

But that's more wrong than right.

The way of finding things out before Google was community.

Because there's some old lady in your community who has been gardening and observing wildlife for 40 years who is somehow running a sprawling native plant gardening organization and providing everyone else in your town with seeds and random produce, and she has a library's worth of knowledge absorbed from reading every book and talking to every guy who has any experience about plants, and this old lady has 87 close friends who are somehow involved in every local governmental department and private organization and business, and if she can't answer your question herself, she will be able to hand you a little scrap of note paper with the name of the exact person you need to talk to. She doesn't have an email address

Gen Z seems to regard "having connections" as a bad thing and a way of cheating your way into opportunities that you don't deserve

In reality, it's "opportunities" and "deserve" that indicates something deeply wrong and dysfunctional with our society. Outside of the numerous artificial competitive scenarios we are placed in where we strive against others to perform the ideal persona of worthiness as a human being, "having connections" is just how things get done.

Same with "being a Karen." Taking out your petty frustrations on a powerless retail worker is one thing, summoning every ounce of Upstanding Member Of Society in your middle aged white woman body to rend asunder the guy who approved of bulldozing a wetland is another

@false-binaries I mean honestly that's not far off

1. go to physical place that seems closest to the thing you want to learn about (community garden is great, nature center or farmer's market is also great)

2. observe a person that seems open to chatting with others

3. ask something along the lines of "Hi, I've been trying to learn about [thing], but I'm pretty new to it, do you happen to know anything about it?" Express curiosity about the work done by the place you are in

4. If you manage to hit it off with someone, just kinda hang out. Other people will show up to chat with the person you are talking to. You are now talking to those people as well.

to be fair this works very well for me partly because it's the south and people will talk for 30 minutes after meeting in the middle of the grocery store. but we need to normalize community

Libraries are great for this! Also, just hang around places you know there's people interested in what you're interested in.

I used to participate in a knitting circle at my library. Met all sorts of people there without a email or any social media. At the aquarium I volunteer at, there's an old dude who is very passionate about whales and he sits in front of the beluga exhibit every Thursday. He knows everything about local ocean conservation and collaborates with the local river keepers. Again, no social media and only has a joint email with his wife.

Thing to keep in mind is these people love to talk about their interests so you'll get lots of info. You can also check local news papers as many people put community events in there!

^ can recommend libraries, professionally. also check out cooperative extension programs - they can be a great way to connect with people who are into this kind of thing

and yeah. local newspapers! the actual print copy, which you can also probably find at your local library. plenty of places still do the bulk of their advertising there

I can not overemphasize that gardeners WANT TO TALK TO YOU ABOUT PLANTS.

I sit my ass on my urban front porch and people walk by and ask me about my plants. It’s FANTASTIC. It’s also normal culture for gardeners because a lot of us get free plants/seeds this way.

I’m in my 40s, bridging that gap between seniors with no email and zoomers with no land. I can direct either towards resources and yes I DO know where you can get involved and yes I DO have milkweed seeds but you do need to refrigerate them before you plant them.

Seriously if you see someone tending a native plant garden they are dying to tell you about it and shove cuttings at you I promise.

Here's some notes on some of the upper body muscles so you, artist, don't need to look them up

They are not medically accurate, just enough for artists to know the necessary muscles and how they work together

I 100% recommend doing the last exercise I did to be able to actually place the muscles

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