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Something I miss from earlier eras of the creative side of the internet was things just being unabashedly low-budget. Just all unashamedly amateur, unprofessional, ‘I don’t own a good camera but I have a story to tell you’, ‘I can’t afford a good mic but I have a song to sing for you,’ ‘I don’t have any kind of background in editing or lighting and I only just picked up this guitar last Tuesday but here’s an entire musical me and my friends wrote about our favourite book, we filmed it on a potato and put it up on YouTube in ten minute segments because we thought it was pretty funny.’
i keep thinking about hobbies and how i often spill over myself to pick up new ones. i have adhd, i end up trying something for like a month and then just getting far enough in it that i move on, satisfied.
and that should be fine; but it's never fine.
i am a pretty decent artist; but i can't just make art for my dnd campaign, i should be selling dnd maps and character designs and scene setting pieces. i can't just make my friends matching earrings, i need to get an etsy and ship them internationally and take bulk orders. i make pretty good props and decorations and use them to throw my friends parties - but i should be running a party planning business and start taking paying clients and networking and putting my skills to actual use.
for some reason, i never figured out the specifics of pottery. it was a fun class and i enjoyed myself - and still, i'm embarrassed, years later, that i put in all that useless effort. everything i make has to be stunning. stellar. i should have applied myself more. maybe i'm too lazy. maybe i'm broken and selfish and needy. actually creative people would have kept going; they would be bettering themselves at every possible opportunity.
we find ourselves in this trap, even accidentally: we need to commodify our time, because it is a commodity. if we spend our efforts and our time not earning, isn't that the same thing as burning free money? and god forbid you ever take up a hobby that ends up being more expensive than you thought. you sit in your car and you look at the receipt and in your head you hear a conversation that isn't even happening - your mom or your friend or your partner all saying oh great. not this shit again. it's always something with you, and it never actually means anything.
i have realized this horrible thing, recently - i'll get excited to start a project, pick up a new hobby. and then i just... stop myself. i start thinking about the amount of time it will take, and how it'll look in my monthly budget. what if i can't even produce a good enough final product. sure, it's exciting to think about how i could make my friend her own custom dice. but i'm just polluting the earth if i don't get it right. better not bother. better not try.
restless, i get caught in the negative space. the feeling that oh god, i want to create. and that horrible sense - yeah, but i don't have the time to just put to waste.
You may have heard from us recently that Steam decided OBSCURA contains too much mature content. We've disputed this label, but Steam is sticking to their guns: OBSCURA is Too Horny, and they're making it a problem for German and Chinese players.
To our German players, we direct you to Itchio, where the game is available (check our pinned post for a link). You lose some of the Steam functionality such as automatic updates (though the Itchio app does make that possible), but the game is fully available.
To our Chinese players, you have a better idea of what to do right now than we do. We'll look into options for making OBSCURA available to you as we continue, and if we come up with an answer we will announce it.
As you can imagine, we're also not thrilled by this decision, but for now the best we can do is play by Steam's rules. Thank you for your patience and for continuing to follow us.
I was talking with my friend yamina about German endearments for these two and she suggested Großer (big boy (fond)) which was too cute, I had to do something with it.
now that Skizz is officially a full time content creator (!!!) I think he deserves to lose the business suit skin. He doesn’t need to look “professional” anymore! He’s friggin free!!!
Get this man a Hawaiian shirt and shorts and dad sandals with socks!
Meet the Experiment group, aka the Hot Lunch Bunch
And the Control group, who are also technically receiving a hot lunch but it's not quite as hot I guess.
I've taken initial measurements for all participants and logged baseline weight and length, and the majority of these kiddos have already started eating their meals!
An early pitfall: my hypothesis that cooked prey would be more readily accepted seems to have been correct. A few of the Control group haven't taken meals yet while all of the Experiment group are taking meals with gusto.
If the Control kiddos don't get with the program they're going to skew my data. >:(
Look, I have to put a disclaimer up front and say that I really really really enjoy this book from what I've read of it, and I really think this has the potential to be a book that I highly recommend.
But I am 100% going to be petty about the fact that The Dabbler's Guide to Witchcraft absolutely has stuff yoinked uncredited from Tumblr, so my notebook is definitely going to be filled with things like "Oh he's quoting Neil Gaiman! That's very cool. And I'm impressed that he actually knows how to attribute a quote to the person who said it! I didn't think he knew how to do that!"
I am going to be grumpy about it, and I refuse to be pacified.
[puts nose back in book]
But having a book that is explicitly covering things that too many other books don't say (like the ethics of crystals, predatory mentors, cultural appropriation and the harms that it causes) is very very very nice indeed.
Quick question for all the medical staff out there: CPR is usually 30 compressions to 2 breaths, right? I've heard about singing Staying Alive to get the pace of compressions right, but how do you count AND keep the rhythm right?? I have my CPR renewal training tomorrow and I'm overthrowing it