7, 19, 40
7. What is your deepest joy about writing?
My deepest joy about writing is sharing it. Whether it's just with my wife or @chaoticsmirk or all the lovely people on ao3, getting to see how other people react and how what I write makes them feel, is what brings me the deepest joy.
19. Tell me a story about your writing journey. When did you start? Why did you start? Were there bumps along the way? Where are you now and where are you going?
Ahh what a wonderful question. I've written since I was a kid. I have old notebooks just filled with stories I made up. It's something I always just found so much joy in. I love getting to just slip into a different world and play make believe for a while. I started just cuz I loved creating and playing in those other worlds.
There were definitely some bumps along the way! I took about a 5 year break from writing, I just lost the joy in it, lost my inspiration. Wwdits honestly really reignited my love for writing and I am so glad it did, I've missed it so fucking much. It's one of my favorite things in the world.
Now I am so happy with what I'm writing, I'm inspired and thrivingggg. And I hope where I'm going is me and @chaoticsmirk writing our own sick ass gay fantasy novels and getting published. :)))
40. Please share a poem with me, I need it.
I lied about the whales. Fantastical blue
water-dwellers, big, slow moaners of the coastal.
I never saw them. Not once that whole frozen year.
Sure, I saw the raw white gannets hit the waves
so hard it could have been a showy blow hole.
But I knew it wasn’t. Sometimes, you just want
something so hard you have to lie about it,
so you can hold it in your mouth for a minute,
how real hunger has a real taste. Someone once
told me gannets, those voracious sea birds
of the North Atlantic chill, go blind from the height
and speed of their dives. But that, too, is a lie.
Gannets never go blind and they certainly never die.
-Ada Limon
(One of my favorite poems)
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The best piece of advice I ever got was not meant as advice, but as an edict. If I was going to threaten people as a joke, it had to be so far out of proportion with what happened that it would be obvious I was joking. This changed how I expressed frustration with others. It then changed how I expressed frustration with myself.
Not “I’m going to hit you” but “I am going to buy a tuna sub from the gas station and hide it under the seat of your car”
Not “I’m going to kill myself” but “I am going to walk into the desert and let the scarabs take me”
The other side then happened. When I mess something up, instead of saying it’s bad and perpetuating negative thoughts, swing hard the other way.
Not “this art is terrible” but “this shall be framed and mounted on the wall in my museum exhibition as testament to the suffering I had to overcome”
Have been doing this since high school. It was my drama teacher who asked me to please stop scaring the actors. The other half of the edict was that I had to say it in a polite tone, and end it with either please or thank you.
Life changing. 10/10 Mr Muëller. Highly reccomend.
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do you think a 5'4 and 6'2 height difference is predatory?
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hbomberguy’s latest video on plagiarism has made me completely rethink literature and writing. I have never once so much as considered intentionally plagiarizing anyone or anything, but I think there’s something more that has come out of this: the names of the people who created the works Somerton (and others) ripped off.
Plagiarism isn’t only bad because it is lazy and disrespectful, it’s bad because it buries the truth. If you can’t find a source, the conversation is over. Somerton’s sources are fairly easy to find by simply searching his plagiarized lines, but that isn’t true in most cases. Most of the time, the line from statement to source is a lot less clear.
Today, I was writing a report on English Ivy, which is an invasive species here in the US. I wanted to know when it was introduced and I at last found a source claiming it was introduced to the Americas “as early as 1727” on a .net website that seems quite reputable (it has multiple major universities credited in its home page), but there is no citation for where this date came from. I dug deeper and found a pamphlet created by a city government in Virginia that made the same claim, only to discover the first source linked in their bibliography. Another website (a botanical garden’s page) gave the same date with the same source hyperlinked. Of course, I have classes to attend and things to do and probably not enough time to follow the lines back to where this 1727 date came from, but if I had not just watched this video, I wouldn’t have given that date a second thought.
Of course, it doesn’t matter in the long run exactly what year hedera helix was introduced to the Americas, but it makes you wonder how many facts have been so vaguely attributed that it becomes completely impossible to figure out where they originated (and further, whether or not they’re true at all).
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When I followed you earlier today and then realized this blog wasn't even two days old it made me feel like I invested in a startup.
Do you think if you did the lyrics for Fireflies by Owl City, your database would give us fireflies? (Will also accept owls. And there's a line about sheep too).
String identified:
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A a ta
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t t ta a ta
' t a
Tat at at t
t' a t a tat ' at ta
Aa ' a
'Ca tg a t
'Ca ' gt a ta g
t ta gtg g
A t t t tac t ac
A tt a a
A c at
A c a t agg a ta
' t a
Tat at at t
t' a t a tat ' at ta
Aa ' a
'Ca tg a t
a a
a t a cac
(a ta aa )
'Ca c a ac
(a ta aa )
t ctg
(a ta aa )
' a t t t a a
T t
' 'ca at g
gt t a t a a
t ' a a
a gt a a
'Ca a a a t a a
' t a
Tat at at t
t' a t a tat ' at ta
Aa ' a
'Ca tg a t
a a
' t a
Tat at at t
t' a t a tat ' at ta
Aa ' a
'Ca tg a t
a a
' t a
Tat at at t
t' a t a tat ' at ta
Aa ' a
ca a a tg at t a
Closest match: Sepia lycidas genome assembly, chromosome: 36
Common name: Kisslip cuttlefish
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god I'm so fucking furious at the removal of Te Reo Māori names from organisations around Aotearoa. it's a complete non-issue, every organisation has the English name directly underneath the Māori name. I have never once as an English speaker been unable to understand what an organisation is for. Winston Peters, the Deputy Prime Minister, who is literally Māori himself, said “Te Papa is a historic name but tell me this waka kotahi, how many boats have you seen going down the road?”. Waka does not just mean canoe. it means vessel, and waka kotahi (the transport agency of Aotearoa) explains this VERY SIMPLY on their official website. waka kotahi means to travel together as one. Can you see how fucking upsetting this is. A Māori person in power who is in agreement about banning his own language, being so cocky about something that he does not even understand due to the suppression of the language of his people. It makes me sick. I've seen reports from Māori people all over Aotearoa speaking out about how upset and furious they are, how decades of progress have been undone in the fight to restore the rights of their people who have for so long been oppressed and have suffered the effects of colonisation. Please share this if you can, I hate knowing how few people will hear about this, I know there is so much injustice in the world right now and it is so exhausting, I know. I love you all, keep it up.
https://waateanews.com/2023/11/27/te-reo-public-service/
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*holds up a hollow pumpkin filled with raw meat over your little enclosure*
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