Silver Adept (
silveradept) wrote2013-09-26 11:54 pm
Ask me about things.
Blogging is a very public-facing platform. You get to see what I want you to see, scrutinized, edited, and presented for you. If I so choose, I can present a perfect-seeming life by simply excluding all the parts and pieces where I feel like crap, have done less than my best, or want to just curl up into a ball somewhere and be left alone until I feel human again.
For some people, they put their inner lives behind the access filter. Often by necessity, we find, for the world outside is remarkably cruel to people who talk honestly about themselves and who don't get the privileges of appearing normal and complaining about normal things. There's a lot of trust issues involved when it comes to talking about what's going on in your life.
Thing is, most people get on a blogging platform because they want to talk. And they find the community that gathers around them are the people they want to talk to. (Sometimes even more so than the people in their physical lives.)
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This is the part where I admit that I have no idea what to talk about. Linklists with commentary, easy. Other issue commentary, pretty easy when it hits the fired-up buttons. So, in the grand traditions of...something, and possibly as a way of trying to do something regularly, I'm opening the floor. Ask me questions. I'll answer them as much as I feel I can.
For some people, they put their inner lives behind the access filter. Often by necessity, we find, for the world outside is remarkably cruel to people who talk honestly about themselves and who don't get the privileges of appearing normal and complaining about normal things. There's a lot of trust issues involved when it comes to talking about what's going on in your life.
Thing is, most people get on a blogging platform because they want to talk. And they find the community that gathers around them are the people they want to talk to. (Sometimes even more so than the people in their physical lives.)
...
This is the part where I admit that I have no idea what to talk about. Linklists with commentary, easy. Other issue commentary, pretty easy when it hits the fired-up buttons. So, in the grand traditions of...something, and possibly as a way of trying to do something regularly, I'm opening the floor. Ask me questions. I'll answer them as much as I feel I can.
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My Favorite Greek Myth? Considering how many of them eventually end in a tragedy for the people who are involved in them, it's hard to find a favorite. Maybe the Golden Apple Of Discord.
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So I'm passionate about being more than a standard person. I realize I am setting myself up for disappointment, as it is unlikely that I will ever know how I affected someone in heir lives with my interactions. My brain doesn't like me all that much, I think.
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Anyway, science fiction and fantasy for me are telling similar sorts of stories, but change their settings and their tropes so that people disgusted by elves will instead enjoy Vulcans. My interest in literature is less about style and setting as it is about characters, so after a few works to understand the ground rules, I can talk about most genres.
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Anyway, the beginnig list of friends I had started by pulling in people who I already knew from those forums. I have always felt more comfortable in any new situation if there is someone there who I know in some capacity, and blogging was no difference. Since this was before I settled inton linkspam, the early entries were more like a journal - compaints about the weather a lot, I believe, because when your work is exterior painting, thunderstorms tend to wreck your ability to get paid. So that's where it started.
From there, it was mostly a friends-of-friends routine, where people would introduce me to others they found interesting, or occasionally, someone would stop by based on a shared interest and subscribe. I didn't do a whole lot of community involvement, even though that's supposed to be the way to get people involved and finding other blogs to subscribe to. Since I'm not fannish in the sense of squee or fanfic, I generally avoided them. But there were a few communities - Quick News, in particular, plus various links, and a daily dose of politics shows, that made me think that I could do something useful and provide l inks and commentary on things on a regular basis. Note also, college student, which gives us time to do it.
Anyway, now that I had a hook, the recommendations for me started to change, and I met a lot of very interesting people who would regularly link to interesting things, or write essays that were definitely worth linking to. Human aggregation service, go. While I don't have a lot of people specifically saying "this one's for you, Silv", I do tend to vacuum up just about everything other people find interesting or worthy of commentary. I'm probably going to hit a monkeysphere problem soon.
I think after the SUP disaster and the subsequent weirdnesses of LJ are what initially had me jump to Dreamwidth, as a hedge against LJ going completely evil. Once I got here, though, after being shown the Diversity Statement and seeing how the culture was different (hello, actual feminism at work!), I've changed the people I'm looking for in subscriptions. Still people with links, still people with great writing, but now also people who remind me that the world is significantly more diverse than my offline experience suggests, people who can help me remember how to avoid presuppositions about just about everything, about how other people see the world, and people who have shared interests and are okay talking about them in critical ways (even if there's a lot of fanfiction still involved). Dreamwidth is the kind of party I want to be at, to be able to drift between conversations about the Bechdel Test in sitcoms and the experience of a non-human trying to find literature and television that represents them.
It provokes a lot of "is this part of my identity" questions, along with "okay, don't violate Wheaton's Law" cautions, and I can only hope that I'm the kind of person other people want to be around and would consider a friend. Although there's some shyness involved in getting into threads like Love Memes and the Circle Memes, because I still primarily consider myself a person who deals in other people's things, so I don't easily see a reason why someone would want to subscribe, past the curios. (Other comments have repeatedly told me this is not true, and I keep them saved as a reminder when the mental state gets self-destructive.)
So, to sum up, I guess, on the forums, I found people interested in the same thing, on LiveJournal I found a way to aggregate and broadcast, and on Dreamwidth I found a way to broaden my horizons.
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Even if it's just one person, it makes things so much easier, if not just for introductions, but also someone there who can say "this is a thing I think you will want to do, have fun." or "etiquette here works like this" so that there aren't the really embarrassing faux pas that makes me want to run away.
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Is there anything that really interests you that you find doesn't get talked about a lot?
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http://lelonibunny.blogspot.com/2013/09/80-halloween-songs.html
(Teehee, sorry. Couldn't resist an open floor.)
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