did u know u could just draw bad and nothing happens did u know that
girlies are u doing ok
oh no girlies
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
Peter Solarz

blake kathryn
trying on a metaphor
I'd rather be in outer space đ¸
NASA
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$LAYYYTER
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YOU ARE THE REASON

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let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open
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@theartofmadeline
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@actuallycliffjumper
did u know u could just draw bad and nothing happens did u know that
girlies are u doing ok
oh no girlies
so happy and free
this is going to be a silly reblog but i have kind of a fixation on animal qualia and the idea of an animal's umwelt, so i ended up wondering whether pudding was actually "enjoying" this.
which meant i went and read about snail brains.
here's the bad news, at least by human standards:
snails do not have anything like a centralized brain. their nervous system is made up of small clusters of neurons (ganglia) that mostly handle very local tasks. they don't have a cortex, they don't build big integrated models of the world, and they almost certainly don't experience things like appreciation, anticipation, or savoring.
pudding is not looking at the sky and thinking it's beautiful.
snail eyes are basically light sensors - they can tell bright from dark, but not form images. snail "taste" is done through chemoreceptors on their tentacles and around their mouth. those receptors don't produce flavor the way ours do; they just detect chemical compounds and sort them into "approach," "ignore," or "avoid."
so there's no evidence that snails enjoy food, or wind, or views, the way mammals do.
and that does sound kind of sad. but then i thought that maybe we are asking the wrong question.
snails do have valence. they detect aversive things (like salt or dryness) and withdraw from them. they detect non-aversive or beneficial conditions (like moisture) and stay extended. when pudding is stretched out like this, it means his nervous system is basically saying "this is safe; nothing is wrong."
if we define pleasure not as our human experience of dopamine and reward chemicals but instead as "the absence of aversion" - a state where the organism is open to its environment instead of defending itself - then this does count as something positive, even if it's extremely nothing like human enjoyment.
pudding isn't appreciating the wind. but his body is registering humidity, safety, and the ability to keep functioning, and that matters to him in the only way his nervous system can make things matter. he does not think "this is great, this is awesome, i love the weather", because he doesn't think in the way we do at all, but the neurological action in his ganglion tell his body that he is safe, that the moisture is an acceptable level, that it's not too dry or windy, and that there's nothing imminently threatening.
i think a lot of the sadness comes from assuming that a good life has to look like ours: full of enjoyment, meaning, and aesthetic experience. but a snail isn't missing those things. its world just isn't built to include them.
snails don't have a sense of flavor. they don't even have tastebuds. this seems like a gimme, right? but again that might be asking the wrong question about what "taste" is. biologically speaking, it's chemoreception. we taste sweet because it indicates high value, high calorie sugar molecules. we taste salty for salt, umami for proteins. so in what way does pudding's chemoreceptors differ from ours instrumentally? we can say "by our human perspective, pudding can't experience "preference" or "savoring" or "anticipation of delicious food"", but from pudding's perspective we have radically overengineered ourselves for the task at hand. pudding can tell what's salty, what's high value, what has the chemicals he needs. the functional outcome is that he can discriminate food souces based on their composition. is that not taste?
so maybe the point isn't "this is sad because he can't enjoy it," but "this is a reminder that minds come in radically different shapes, and value doesn't have to be rich to be real."
a PokĂŠmon a day keeps artblock away - #228 Houndour
'ao3 needs a like and dislike button'
what you need, my algorithm-rotten minded friend, is a grip
Oh, they DO have those!
The like button should be at the bottom, looks like this:
The dislike button differs depending on your device but it should look something like one of these:
Hope that helps :)
'ao3 needs a like and dislike button'
what you need, my algorithm-rotten minded friend, is a grip
Oh, they DO have those!
The like button should be at the bottom, looks like this:
The dislike button differs depending on your device but it should look something like one of these:
Hope that helps :)
Reblog with your animal. Itâs toucans for me
Random thought of the day but I love how far medical science has come, I love reading about new medical developments, how things that would be fatal a decade or two ago are treatable or sometimes even just minor inconveniences.
Also how miracles can be pulled off because the incredible skill of doctors and scientists and nurses alike.
Read today about the worlds new guiness world record holder of youngest premature baby now celebrating its first birthday. Got a little teary-eyed thinking about that, and seeing the pictures of this kid given a second chance against crazy odds. Terrifying but its just... kind of amazing too, how hard people will fight for a little life and I think thats wonderful in these difficult times.
Link about it here
Need a Tip:
How do I unlearn the notion that my art/writing has to be perfect to be worthwhile?
Hii @hoyabembedreamtime!
This is a great question and something I've struggled with myself.
My best advice would be to start writing/drawing for yourself- forget the idea of anyone else reading or critiquing your work and create it because the story/art is meaningful and important to you. Don't hesitate when you get the urge to create something. Don't delete something you've written because you think it's bad. Get it all out first, and fix it up after.
It is also important that you don't feel pressured to show your writing /art to others if you aren't ready to. Knowing that whatever you're writing won't be judged is super liberating.
I also have a post on staying motivated and enjoying writing which can help!
Hope this helps! Happy writing! đ
If I may add from my own personal journey, please understand that feeling follows action, not the other way around.
In other words you need to make fun things to force your brain to unlearn that idea of perfection. I spent ages trying to teach myself to be okay with imperfection but it wasn't until I set out to write 1 Bad Sentence every day, to write bad paragraphs, to write snippets for fun, etc, that I actually found it easier to keep doing that.
It was really hard at first but all the self teaching and trying to "feel right" first did nothing. I had to make imperfect stuff for fun first, and after a long while I started to feel okay with it.
#I don't know how many more "He gets it" I have left in me
I adore rick riordan but if anyone still has doubt on how he can have such big potholes in his stories, let me remind you that this man was originally going to title the Lightning Thief âThe Son of Poseidonâ and it was his middle school class that pointed out that if he named it that that the âmysterious and unknown identityâ of Percyâs godly heritage would no longer be mysterious and unknown and rick was like âoh, yeah.âÂ
#listen. sometimes when your writing youre too close to see shit
He wrote Heroâs of Olympus just to get that title back.
i hate when a piece of kids media is so well made that people start saying "clearly this was made FOR adults not for silly little babies. we are the true target demographic" like cmon man. you don't have to pretend it's something it isn't. sometimes things that are made for 12 year olds are good.
Also things for children SHOULD be good. I WANT children to have smart, well written media. We need to stop treating children as stupid babies who donât deserve good media. The best childrenâs media is the media that still holds up as an adult and that you donât feel stupid for having liked when you were younger.
How to Structure a Oneshot That Hits Like a Thunderclap
âA good oneshot is a single breathâsharp in, slow out.â
A oneshot isnât just a short story. Itâs a moment, a mood, a slice of intimacy that wouldnât survive being stretched into a full-length fic. Hereâs how to make it count.
Pick One Core Emotion
Build the whole thing around a single feeling. Obsession. Longing. Regret. Euphoria. Grief.
If a full-length fic is a symphony, your oneshot is a single piano note.
Ask: What should the reader feel when they finish?
Ex: âThis oneshot is about the moment someone realizes theyâve already fallen in love.â
Limit the Timeline
Donât span days. Or even hours, if you can help it. The strongest oneshots focus on a single scene or moment.
A kiss in a hallway.
A final goodbye at dawn.
A confession said too late.
Tight time = tight tension.
Start Late, End Early
Drop us into the scene already in motionâno lengthy set-up. And leave us just after the climax, not long after.
Donât: âThey met three years ago andâŚâ
Do: âItâs raining the night he finally says it.â
Your oneshot should feel like eavesdropping on something private.
Structure Like This
ACT I: Setup (15â25%)
Who are we with? Where are we? Whatâs simmering under the surface?
ACT II: The Shift (50â70%)
Something changes. A kiss. A fight. A confession. A memory.
The mood deepens or flipsâthis is your emotional peak.
ACT III: The Fallout (15â25%)
How does it end? A single line. A final look. A choice not made.
Leave a lingering echo, not an epilogue.
Let Style Do the Heavy Lifting
A oneshot gives you space to lean into voice, imagery, and metaphor. Write like itâs the last thing youâll ever write.
âHe says her name like itâs a prayer, but the gods stopped listening hours ago.â
Mood. Matters.
fair trade
I did not realize how much I missed doing thick line art holy shit
Sculpted a little flygon trinket box with a secret trapinch inside!
if you bodyswapped with someone would you acquire their mental illness? their habits? how much of you is Inherent To You and how much is in your neural pathways? your muscle memory? the longer you stay in someone else's body and brain do you become less you? do you forget? what about the conflict between what You Know is you and what your new body assumes is you?
anyway I'm thinking about bodyswap as horror and a race to swap back before your complete and total unbecoming. can anyone hear me
new wip premise?
If you're reading this...
go write three sentences on your current writing project.
# my favourite part about this post # is that nowhere does it say to reblog this # but weâre all reblogging it # because if we have to suffer # so do other writers
This post is committing crimes (see y'all later lmao)