I wasn’t sure, at first, why I was thinking about it today in particular, but then I realised that–depending on whether I’m remembering the context right–it may very well have been six years ago precisely. It’s probably close, at any rate.

After all this time, (in something like irony), I still remember her telling me it was unreasonable to expect people to remember something I’d said last week.

(It hadn’t even been last week. It was yesterday. Part of the same ongoing conversation.)

She didn’t frame it as her having a bad memory–that would have been something else entirely–but as *my*…my arrogance in thinking that somebody might bother to remember things I’d said from one day to the next, my unrealistic demand for any continuity in my social relationships.

(I’d been hanging out with that group for over four months. (If I’m remembering the timing right. Dates are not my strong suit memory-wise. Perhaps people weren’t hers, but that isn’t what she said.))

I don’t know whether I still believe she’s right. I don’t want to believe it. Maybe I just *fear* that she’s right.

But I *still* feel surprised whenever people reference things I said earlier, whenever anyone outside my immediate family gives enough of a shit about me to remember me from one day to the next.

(And when they don’t–when they ask me the same questions over and over, when they tell me (after *two years*!) that I’m not worth arguing with because they only argue with people they know–I sigh, and I wonder if perhaps it is what I deserve.)

It occurs to me that possibly this is some sort of divide between people who think of people on the Internet as interchangeable NPCs and people who don’t. Both of the most egregious instances *were* on the Internet, after all.

It’s a slightly different flavour of horrible than how I was originally thinking of it. Instead of the reliability of “*all* of your friends think of you as an interchangeable NPC”, it’s “a significant percentage of your friends think of you as an interchangeable NPC, but you don’t know how large a percentage and you mostly don’t know which ones”.

(And it still means that in day-to-day social interactions, I generally don’t get to trust that people have any idea what I’m talking about without providing full context every time.

…I think I’m beginning to realise how much that’s been eating away at me, and how much it’s part of the appeal of rationalist Tumblr: I can’t trust people to understand references to things *I* said, but there *do* exist previous statements and conversations that I can reference and safely predict that people will understand.)


Tags:

#oh look an original post #vagueblogging #(sort of) #the more I think about it the more reasons I think of for why I’d be thinking about this *now* #Alison said recently it was a shame that more people didn’t come with manuals on their socialising needs and preferences #and I thought ”do I even *know* my socialising needs and preferences #let alone well enough to write a man page?” #I guess here’s part of an answer #(don’t get me wrong I suck at relationship object permanence) #(but that just means I mostly don’t tend to think about people when they’re not around) #(if reminded of their existence I generally remember a fair bit about them) #I’m worried about insulting people who can’t keep Internet people straight in their heads #but otoh the more likely someone is to be targeted by that the less likely they are to care about my opinion #so maybe it works out? #if you do have a bad memory for such things I’m not gonna hate you for it #unless you frame it as [me not being worth remembering] rather than [you not being good at remembering things] #tag rambles #I feel like this probably deserves some additional warning tag but I’m not sure what

{{previous post in sequence}}


Well, I suppose that makes sense, really. Half a normal episode length; half a brilliant plan.

(Namely, the first half of a brilliant plan, followed by the second half of a completely-off-the-rails plan. Poor thing.)

(Also, the Red Panda can loom remarkably well from inside a pneumatic tube.)


Tags:

#all in all a very fun episode #despite the very Wrong-feeling appearance #Red Panda Adventures #reactionblogging #oh look an original post

{{previous post in sequence}}


This is weirding me out even more than I expected.

(oh god he’s blond too

whyyyyy)

(And yet Steven Burley isn’t blond. Truly, there is no justice.)


Tags:

#and he’s dressed like a fucking clown #although to be fair blue mandrill-style face paint *is* a neat idea #and I could definitely see integrating that into my headcanon #Red Panda Adventures #reactionblogging #oh look an original post #(look I don’t know why Steven Burley sounds blond he just does) #(maybe it’s the announcer peppiness?) #((okay let’s go find out how much brilliant plan the Mad Monkey has managed to stuff into 15 minutes))


{{next post in sequence}}

{{previous post in sequence}}


Tonight’s episode of Red Panda video will be “Monkey See, Monkey Do”.

It occurs to me this almost certainly means that the Mad Monkey has a canonical appearance. And he’s almost certainly not going to look how I was imagining him. This is going to be weird.

(Not that this’ll be the first time that’s happened, even within this series. What do you mean, Andy Parker is blond?)

Between prosopagnosia (which tends to cause impairments in imagining faces along with recognising them) and a generally low-detail visual imagination, I don’t tend to imagine characters’ appearances all that much. They’ll usually have a skin colour, often hair to some level, and sometimes a build and/or general facial structure. For some reason, I have an unusually clear sense of what the Mad Monkey’s hair looks like: light brown, somewhat curly, balding, sideburns, thick eyebrows. (He’s pretty short, too.)

(I didn’t have much sense of what Professor Zombie looked like, so seeing her appearance in the previous episode didn’t really weird me out: there wasn’t much of anything for it to clash with.)


Tags:

#Red Panda Adventures #reactionblogging #fun fact: this post has been in my drafts for weeks #I just haven’t had time to actually watch the damn episode #oh look an original post


{{next post in sequence}}

anxietyblogging

{{for readability, I should note that there was originally a cut here}}

aaaaaaaahhhh

I just submitted my term paper

I have never written an academic-style term paper before

(except maybe the geology course project? depending on definition? but also I failed the geology course project so let’s not use that comparison shall we)

I wouldn’t be so concerned except if you fail this assignment it’s an automatic fail for the course

okay, okay, I just need 50%, that’s all I need

and 20% of the assignment grade is a short-answer section, which I have historically done really well on, so that’s probably like 18 percentage points right there

(aaaahh)


Tags:

#I still need to do some more studying for my exam next week #I’m glad I started studying in the evenings a couple weeks ago #because otherwise there’s no way I could revise 700 pages #like 60% of the exam grade is multiple-choice and another 30% is short-answer #so that’s probably hopefully going to be pleasantly anticlimactic #(I mean it’s closed-book time-limited short-answer) #(so significantly harder than the other short-answer sections) #(but on the other hand they tend to grade exam writing more generously) #(because they’re thinking in terms of What You Could Reasonably Have Accomplished Under the Circumstances) #adventures in University Land #oh look an original post


{{next post in sequence}}

What the fuck.

Why did the posts from after 5 PM (current time: 6:59 PM) just disappear from my dash?

I can see the notes for “brin-bellway reblogged your post: porous” and “somnilogical liked your post: porous”, but I can’t see either version of the post itself. (They do show up if I go to my blog directly.)

It wasn’t like this a few minutes ago.


Tags:

#oh look an original post #The Great Tumblr Apocalypse


{{next post in sequence}}

Tumblr, please explain why you have stuck this nearly-two-year-old post into my dash as if it were new.

Yes, I am tracking one of the tags it was posted in. Yes, nothing new has been posted in the tag since I started tracking it (though there have been things posted since the above post was made). These are not good excuses.

I’m not sure if it makes it better or worse that I’d already pressed the “like” button on the post previously. On the one hand, you definitely know I’ve read it, so there’s less point in showing it to me again. On the other hand, showing me an unmarked old post is less likely to lead to horrible misunderstandings if I’ve seen it before.

(The thing where you show me a given tracked-tag post several times over the following couple of days was tolerable enough, but this is an entirely different level of bad.)


Tags:

#bluespace #oh look an original post #Tumblr: a User’s Guide #I recently figured out which XKit setting was preventing tracked-tag posts from showing up in my dash #and removed it #I think I’m beginning to understand why they were getting blocked

Critical Miss: Issue 10 (The Campaign For Real Monopoly)

{{Title link: http://www.criticalmiss.com/issue10/CampaignRealMonopoly1.html}}

So I stumbled across this thing today and what the fuck.

Normal people don’t know about Monopoly auctions?!

Normal-people Monopoly is even more boring than the version I thought we were all complaining about?!

(Yeah, don’t believe this guy’s thesis, Monopoly with auctions is still boring. Although, that might be because my family

1: always buys property we land on if we can afford it, on the grounds that it will be useful as a bargaining chip if nothing else. As such, auctions don’t actually happen that often.

2: aren’t very willing to screw each other over, because we fear starting a revenge death spiral. (We got Munchkin a couple months ago, and it turns out we are not the right kind of people to play it properly. (Except maybe Brother, who insists that he is just enough of an asshole to play Munchkin.) Munchkin-as-played-by-people-who-fear-revenge-spirals is still kind of fun, but there’s a clear sense that it’s not what we’re supposed to be doing.)

Oh, and 3, we suck at bluffing, possibly because we don’t try very hard when playing casual board games.

…okay, so it’s possible Monopoly with auctions could be fun if you weren’t us. But regardless, what the fuck.)


Tags:

#oh look an original post #Monopoly

Colgate Kids strawberry toothpaste: a reasonably strawberry-ish shade of red, tastes like Vaguely Fruity Artificial Flavouring. (If you’ve ever had Hawaiian Punch, it’s kind of like that.)

Colgate Kids watermelon toothpaste: fucking turquoise, tastes unnervingly like watermelon. (Brain: “This has no juice, but it tastes like watermelon. Does not compute.”)

A bit of a shame they can’t get both things right at once, but hey, both of them are actually tolerable to use, unlike other mainstream toothpastes. A few years ago, somebody finally decided to fill the market niche for “people who can’t stand Painfully Cold Mint or Sickeningly Sweet Bubblegum, but want fluoridated toothpaste”. I had to make do with organic, non-fluoridated toothpaste for my entire childhood, sometimes mail-ordering it or switching between brands because the local grocery and department stores could never decide whether they were going to carry the stuff or not. It’s nice to finally have reliable, fluoridated toothpaste.


Tags:

#this post not sponsored or endorsed by Colgate #there is a certain twisted gratification in being considered worth marketing to #plus you get to have toothpaste #(now if only we could get some competition in the light tampon market) #(I have to buy my tampons from a monopoly because Tampax Pearl is the only line that can be arsed to make tampons in the right size) #oh look an original post

{{previous post in sequence}}


Red Panda reaction-blogging update:

I listened to “Death From Above” and “The Judas Boats” on my traditional Saturday afternoon walk yesterday.

First of all, while I miss the primeverse*, I think I am starting to warm up to this one, or maybe it’s starting to warm up to itself and I’m sensing that. The Red Panda is starting to feel more…himself, in spots, and I’m not sure if that’s a character thing, or if Taylor’s gotten more confident at voice acting in later episodes, or what.

Also…okay, look. For my readers who have not listened to the Red Panda Adventures, and who–like me–are often very sensitive to authors’ politics shining through in their fiction, I want to assure you that it is pretty subtle. There’s no anvils, there’s almost no pressuring even by the standards of someone who can hear SJ dogwhistles a little too well.

That being said, there is nevertheless a clear sense, while listening to the primeverse Red Panda Adventures, that a liberal wrote this. Not enough to be pressury, just enough to be…home-y. I get the feeling that, while I may not know what makes this author tick (I often have trouble with grokking what makes a given liberal tick), I do know what he considers socially acceptable and what he doesn’t, and I can trust him to stay within those bounds as much as he can given the setting, and to provide a sense that the narrative disapproves in those times he can’t.

The pilots don’t feel like a liberal wrote them. They feel like…like an apathetic centrist wrote them. Someone whose birth subculture has not much overt bigotry but a lot of low-level background stuff, who might very well come to the conclusion that this was still horrible if he ever gave it some serious thought, but who never has given it that thought. There’s these little moments in the pilots of…other people might call them “microaggressions”, but I think of them as culture shock. Those little off-balance moments where you realise that your interlocutor’s standards of social acceptability are different from yours, that you can’t predict (can’t trust) what they’re going to do and say as well as you thought you could.

It’s not my place to ask**, but I wonder if maybe Taylor was an apathetic centrist at the time, and moved to liberal-land sometime in the mid-00’s. If he did, it’s fascinating that it shows so clearly. If not, it’s still very interesting that it feels like he did.

Alternatively, maybe it feels apathetic-centrist because it was intended to be played on mainstream radio for a “mainstream” (thus presumed apathetic-centrist) audience, and in podcasts he could be more himself. I think I’m going to have to listen to the Season One Spectacular again, particularly the bits about how the Red Panda came to be.

*I was going to switch to some other podcast for my walks for a while once I was done with Red Panda ones, but I think I might have to go straight into a re-listen.

**I don’t really want other people to ask, but it occurred to me that somebody might take it upon themself to ask anyway. If so, please do not link me to him. There’s some stuff in my Red Panda tag that would be very awkward for the author to see.


Tags:

#Red Panda Adventures #Gregg Taylor’s Twitter looks exactly as I would expect a Twitter to look #given only that it was run by the same person who wrote the Red Panda Adventures #mostly tweets about the shows and other fandoms and home life #but with occasional standard liberal fare mixed in #oh look an original post #reactionblogging #our roads may be golden or broken or lost


{{next post in sequence}}