do you see this shit my liege
okay everyone cash in your reblogs for this post now because im gonna make it unrebloggable on its 1 year anniversary (dec 9th). have fun w it <3
cherry valley forever
Not today Justin
Peter Solarz
NASA
we're not kids anymore.
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Three Goblin Art

tannertan36
No title available
wallacepolsom

Janaina Medeiros
hello vonnie

blake kathryn
đŞź
Today's Document
sheepfilms
Jules of Nature
Cosmic Funnies

ellievsbear

oozey mess
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@chaton-katreal
do you see this shit my liege
okay everyone cash in your reblogs for this post now because im gonna make it unrebloggable on its 1 year anniversary (dec 9th). have fun w it <3
now for the ultimate test. go to this website. set it to randomly generate ONE pokemon. all generations. all types. whatever it generates? thats you as a pokemon forever. what you get is what you get. NO RE ROLLING. now. who are you? i got goomy :^)
@kenna-wolfram @hekate-is-confused @bugs-in-the-rug @ceyzleen @invasionzames @electrozeistyking
FRINEDOS GET IN HERE-
Lol I have no idea what that is but it looks like an annoying birb I luv it
Beautiful~
I will cherish him
I think itâs telling me something here XD
what soup ingredient are you.. options include garlic carrot potato corn and a secret option đ˝đ đĽđ˛đĽđ§ đ§
glad to see that we are all loving the soup đĽ°đĽ
đĽ
Like, there are definitely no universal rules for editing one's writing, but at some point you've gotta step back, examine your reaction, and ask yourself: is this particular piece of editing advice bad in the abstract, or is it more that no piece of editing advice would ever be acceptable to you because you resent the fact you can't just write it once and have it be perfect on the very first try?
you come to MY HOUSE, you spill MY TEA, you dishonor MY ANCESTORS, you dishonor MY COW
OH THIS IS HEAVEN LOOK AT THEM
presented without commentary or apology
Why OP
slam that fucking unmute button
Oh? what a promising thumbnail.
Thatâs quite a costume. I love this womanâs hair, and her energyâŚ
WAITAMINUTE
not to post even more Villains Discourse on main but it really bugs me how people read giving villains tragic backstories as inherently excusing their actions and/or demonizing trauma survivors.
the actual message of Tragic Villains is (almost) always âpeople who are never taught or given any healthy, constructive outlets for their emotions will often find unhealthy, destructive outlets.â itâs that people who are traumatized and never learn how to cope with that trauma can become a danger to themselves and others. the message isnât âtrauma makes you evil!!!!â or âgenocide is okay if youâve been sad before!!!!â itâs âpeople need compassion and help to recover from trauma instead of becoming increasingly angry and harming themselves and others in the process.â
this site takes an alarmingly behaviorist and punitive approach to everything and itâs literally the most annoying thing. yâall have this concept that âif we just punish people hard enough, if we just scare them enough, if we just make them feel guilty enough.â that people just Do Bad Things Because They Do Bad Things, I Guess, and Because We Didnât Threaten Them And Shame Them Enough. but humans are an innately social species. at our very core, we need compassion and kindness. we need healthy relationships with other humans.
you can keep looking at traumatized villains and being like âhaha this dumb pathetic sadboi thinks murder is okay because his parents diedâ but as a survivor myself, unaddressed/untreated trauma absolutely can make you ragey and destructive. i was lucky enough to have support and eventually get the treatment i needed. but itâs not hard at all for me to imagine how, if that hadnât been the case, that couldâve been me. obviously not on a movie-villain scale like murder or war crimes, but itâs so irritating as someone whose trauma has always manifested as anger to watch people on this site be like âthis is just bad writing!!! real survivors/good survivors donât end up like that the writers just hate survivors and want the audience to condone murder!â
but what if a vampire drank the blood of someone who was anemic like would they be seriously grossed out
âwhat the fuck is thisâ
âi have anemiaâ
âcan you take something for that you should probably take something for that this shit is nasty to drink let alone have running through your body iâm setting up a doctorâs appointment for youâ
âdude really you donât have to just leave what the fuââ
âyou disgust me here take these iron supplementsâ
âwhere did you even get thââ
âshut up and take your pills and dont forget your vitamin Dâ
âiâm going to check up on you weekly to make sure youâre taking themâ
âthatâs not necessaryâ
âmaybe we should work on a dietary plan with foods rich in iron and other things for youâ
âdo you get this involved with all of your mealsâ
VAMPIREDUDE: did u get the cookbook i orderd 4 u
ME: Oh my god, first of all stop using text speak, you told me you were 278, second how did you know where I LIVED, third yes I got it.
VAMPIREDUDE: heard onions were good 4 blood, eat lots
ME: So you can have a tasty meal? I guess youâd rather I stay away from garlic, huh.
VAMPIREDUDE: UR being v rude I just got u a present!!!
ME: THE COOKBOOK IS CALLED âHOW TO TASTE DELICIOUS,â I AM CALLING THE COPS
#sounds like the begining of a beautiful friendship #gimme this sitcom
The Sun will go down eventually!
I love an overprotective vampire threatening their charge/food source with the line âthe sun will go down eventually!â.
Imagine your OTP
âYour last blood work said your sodium and potassium levels were a bit lowâŚâ
âSTOP CALLING IT BLOOD WORK EVERYTIME YOU TAKE A NIP AT MY HANDS ON THE COUCH!â
food to lovers
types of people - landscapes
tag yourself!
desert - old maps, tea drinker, earthy colors, late night nostalgia, cigarette smoke, pressed flowers
mountain - crisp shirts, overworked, winter air, early mornings, cursing, conspiracy theories, documentaries
beach - sleeping in, always broke, greek mythology, feeling lost, never gets angry, expensiveÂ
meadow - raspberry muffins, good grades, picnic in a park, sad smiles, comfy pyjamas, doesnât want to be overlooked
forest - flannel shirts around the waist, logical, the smell of rain, sâmores, inside jokes, expensive coffee
The real joy of fanfiction is getting to read several versions of the exact same, oddly specific plot written by different people and seeing the small ways things differ and falling in love with every one.
How to surreptitiously stretch within reach of kissesÂ
(via)
One of the best and most helpful things anyone ever said to me was: Donât advertise your mistakes.
You will often notice when youâve made an error, or when thereâs something you could have done better, or etc, and sometimes other people will notice too. But often, they wonât. So donât point it out.
Itâs really a sign of a lack of self confidence â you think that if you point out the error first, it will save someone else from having to point it out for you. That by being self-depreciating, no one else will feel obliged to point out your flaws.
But hereâs the thing. People donât notice jack shit, most of the time. Sure, yeah, sometimes youâll fuck up and people will notice and mention it, and thats fine, but 95% of your errors will go unnoticed. Unless you choose to point them out, in which case, you ensure that 100% of your errors get noticed.
The above sentence was said to me during a dance rehearsal. Iâm not a pro dancer by any stretch of the imagination â this was a fun little between-friends dance that we were going to perform at a medium sized function full of people we knew. Half the people in the group did have dance experience, which made me - a non-dancer - feel self concious. So every time I messed up the steps, I would laugh at myself or made an âaghâ sound or be verbally frustrated with myself that I was struggling to get that move, or whatever. Which drew peoples attention to the fact that Iâd made an error.
There were like 10 of us doing this dance; me missing one step went largely unnoticed in the scheme of things, because with ten of us, anyone watching the dance had so much to look at that the likelihood of them seeing me misstep was extremely low. Unless I made a big deal about it, which would draw their attention to me, and ensure that they were made aware.
I used to point out my mistakes all the time. Not just with the dance, but across the board in general life, too. âAgh, whoops,â or handing over a completed project like âI know I could have done [thing] better, but hopefully the rest is ok,â or whatever. People were often frustrated with me, and I feel, in hindsight, that they were frustrated with me because in their eyes, with me constantly highlighting my own errors, they knew I could do better but instead here I was, giving them a shoddy, half-assed, error-filled effort. By me pointing out my every mistake, they were aware of how many I was making, and they were frustrated by my seemingly endless errors.
Then I got told to âstop advertising your mistakes,â and it was a bit of a revelation moment for me. I made a concious effort that day to minimise my reaction to my own mistakes â for the rest of the rehearsal and into the final performance â and you know what happened??
After the performance, countless people said some iteration of the phrase, âI didnât know you could dance!!â
They thought I was a dancer. That Iâd been dancing for years. They hadnât noticed any of my missteps.
I messed up multiple times during the final performance. If I watch the recording and focus on me, I can see my missed steps, the time I span clockwise on the spot instead of anticlockwise, the time I was slightly out of alignment with the other dancers, etc. But if I watch the dance as a whole, watching all 10 dancers instead of just meâŚ.. I dont notice the mistakes I made. They blend in. Theres too much other stuff going on for anyone to notice the one dancer who spun on the spot in the opposite direction to everyone else.
And everyone thought i was brilliant. All I noticed, while dancing, were my mistakes, but no one else saw them, and everyone who saw the dance was super impressed with it and with me. That would not have been the case had I reacted to every one of my errors as Iâd made them.
So I took that concept and applied it to the rest of my life. And you know what???? People were less frustrated with me. Because they werenât noticing my minor errors, and I wasnât pointing them out any more, so from their perspective, it looked like my output had improved. It looked like I was making âless errors.â I wasnât, its just that before, I was pointing every one of them out, and now, I was letting people notice them on their own. And they didnt notice them.
You are always going to be hyperaware of yourself and your own mistakes, but other people are way too distracted by their own crap and have too much other stuff drawing their attention to notice your every misstep. So stop pointing your mistakes out. Stop being your own worst critic. Everyone fucks up now and then, its fine. You fix the error if you can, and you move on. You dont have to pre-empt someone else pointing out your mistakes, because its extremely likely that they wont notice your errors. Unless you point them out.
So stop advertising your mistakes, people.
do you have any tips for writing body language?
OH ANON OH ANON you've really done it now ⨠please, step into my office đŞ
sharing for all my Writer MutualÂ
one of the hardest things to learn as a depressed former Gifted Kid⢠is that half-assed is better than nothing. take the 50%, 40%, even 20% job. scrubbing your face is better than not taking a shower at all. picking up your clothes is better than never cleaning. nibbling on some bread is better than starving.
DO THINGS HALFWAY. NOW YOUâRE 100% BETTER OFF THAN YOU WERE BEFORE.
One of my college professors used to say âanything worth doing is worth doing poorly.â I didnât understand that for years because I didnât do anything poorly, I couldnât do anything poorly, I had to Do Everything Perfectly.
But brushing your teeth for 30 seconds is better than not brushing them at all when that 2 minutes seems exhausting. Doing ten minutes of yoga is better than 10 minutes of sitting when 30 minutes of cardio sounds impossible. Changing my clothes is good when a whole shower is impossible. Standing on the porch for a few minutes is worth it after being in the house for three straight days because I donât have the energy to go anywhere.
Anything worth doing is worth doing poorly⌠because doing it poorly is better than not doing it.
I said it in the notes on the last post but Iâm gonna say it again.
Iâm married to someone with severe memory problems. Automation of household appliances & systems helps him a lot and helps me a lot because it reduces the number of things I have to keep in my brain at all times. I love doors that lock themselves, being able to schedule dog food being delivered, a thermostat I can manipulate from wherever. Beyond my little bubble it should be noted that voice controlled appliances can be really good for people with mobility concerns. Appliances that can measure and talk and remember little tasks can be such a blessing for people.
I will never forgive Amazon and Google for taking technologies that could be really helpful and weaponizing them, and fuck everybody who acts like its some kind of conspiracy theory that those devices are spying on you. You absolutely should be distrustful of those devices but just make sure youâre getting angry at the right people.
Making accessibility devices evil is just like so Disney villain
My mom is blind and without her Alexa literally could not cook, go shopping, or do a million other things. Because Alexa is voice-activated, she doesnât have to fumble with knobs or write a list she canât read.
I will never forgive Amazon for how much I hate a tool that allows my mother to live her life.
Open source and secure alternatives for some of these:
- Voice activated smart speaker: Mycroft (can be purchased as a complete unit, or DIYed with a Raspberry Pi and microphone+speaker array)Â https://mycroft.ai/
- Smart Home automation: home-assistant (cannot be purchased, originally developed by MIT)Â https://www.home-assistant.io/
- Zigbee (the wireless protocol for smart lights and other smart devices) bridge: Conbee II (this takes the place of a Phillips Bridge, for instance. And is in many cases better because it works with all brands of smart light that use Zigbee--which is almost all of them, including the cheap IKEA ones--and also works for devices that arenât lights. Cannot really be DIYed because Zigbee needs special hardware, not just software)Â https://phoscon.de/en/conbee2Â
I donât know any alternatives for locks, vacuums, thermometers, or anything else sadly. None of these are that difficult to set up with just a little bit of tech know-how, and extensive guides already exist for almost all problems you could run into because the open-source community is almost psychotically dedicated to its projects, unlike Amazon, Google, and Apple where itâs practically impossible to get help with any problem thatâs even slightly unusual.
Oh thank you!! These area really neat
Oh thank you so much! My grandmother has an alexa and itâs really improved her enjoyment of life, but I hate even talking around it. Itâs linked to my amazon and Iâve gotten suggestions based on things itâs heard. That wigs me out so much.
Can confirm, Home Assistant is amazing; I transitioned everything I could for it to control and right now thatâs literally everything. It can also be integrated with other voice-activated smart speakers than Alexa as well as Alexa. It also comes WITH an Add-on called Ada for voice. So far, there is very goddamn little on the market that isnât either officially supported or community supported and stuff is being added at the rate of literally weekly. If you do scripting and have a taste for diy, you can be Dr. Doom and your home is your supervillain lair.
Because of the market, most smart appliances and devices are Alexa enabled, but unless theyâre made by Amazon, that doesnât mean theyâre Alexa exclusive and even then, someone is hacking their way into the API and pulling the endpoints. Right now, the only thing I canât work in here (yet) is my Nest Thermostat and HA is working on adding that back in right now.
Home Assistant is fully compatible with the zwave and zigbee standards as well as wifi and bluetooth; you can directly control zwave and zigbee items or link up your existing hubs for it to control like SmartThings.
https://www.home-assistant.io/
It can be run in several ways; Iâve done it on a Pi 4 both 4G and 8G and a VM on my Ubuntu server and while the Pi is recommended--I recommend it too for convenience--itâs one of several possibilites. Currently Iâm using a Raspberry Pi 4b 8G with a solid state hard drive instead of SD card. You can purchase z-wave and zigbee modules to add to it for direct control of z-wave and zigbee devices or use your existing hubs (or both). Beneath the HA umbrella is also links to the blueprints of building your own zigbee and zwave devices with Arduino just to start that HA can also control. Iâm not saying youâre going to be building your own smart thermostat on the weekend, but apparently, some people are doing just that.
This does not require a high tech start value; most integrations are automatic, you just say yes and login and let it happen, it even creates your Dr. Doom dashboard with TABS.
Again, you DO NOT NEED TO KNOW ANYTHING BUT COMPUTERS EXIST AND HOW TO CLICK YES AND NO TO USE THIS. For me, it was actually easier than a lot of setups with shit I had to pay money for that said they were easy. This is open source, but that is not synonymous with user unfriendly; a lot of work was done to make this accessible to the casual automation user. The UI is card based; when you first start, HA does it all for you and creates discrete cards that control different things on your dashboard; no effort on your part, you can turn on and off any light in here or turn them red while someone is in the bathroom because thatâs fucking funny. But as you get more comfortable, you can start to create your own configurtions, take direct control of the UI, and mix it up; itâs up to you.
But.
If you are a DIYer or just want to be or never knew you wanted to be but feel the vibes and need a place to start, this is the perfect sandbox for learning and escalating. There are a metric ton of tutorials, community add-ins, and message boards to consult. If you can imagine it, it can be done and its likely someone is working on version eight right now. The primary languages are python and javascript with yaml for configuration files for DIY. You can create your own layouts, your own sensors, and your own cards if you donât like what they have. If youâre like me, you may also go in to community addins and add new stuff to their code so it runs like you want it to; itâs all up to you.
I am not a dev pro, Iâm a QC analyst with a scripting hobby; I do this quite literally for fun on weekends or when Iâm bored or anxious and need to soothe myself with coding.
Here is the home page of my MULTI-TAB dashboard. Yes, that is a floorplan of my apartment and those glowy orange and dark grey bits are things that I can turn on and off from the comfort of my bed. Itâs fun.
I seriously would kill to get more people into this and have someone to play with and enjoy the feeling of controlling all within my (apartment) kingdom with but a single command. Dear God tell me if youâre into it; weâll be best friends and hopefully youâll be okay with that.
Hereâs an intro to Home Assistant I wrote back in September in DW when I first started, with screenshots. Youâll also be able to see my Dash when I first started compared to the dash above. Feel free to ask me anything from the perspective of someone not a dev professional, an engineer, or even has a degree in anything, much less anything like this, and yet is a QC lead who codes their own testing tools and for whom this is just something cool and fun.
Home Assistant: An Introduction
this is cool af! reblogging for anyone interested in automation but not bezos!
there is a tendency with history, i think, because we're so far removed from it, to kind of forget that all of the people were people
a child 10,000 years ago left a handprint on a wall. they were fingerpainting. a viking climbs up a rock just to carve the words "this is very high" 10ft off the ground. somebody centuries... milennia... ago burned their dinner so thoroughly that they buried the ruined pot in the backyard rather than attempt to clean it. shakespeare got drunk and wrote dick jokes. tutankhamun was a little boy who liked ducks more than anything. a roman carves his name into a monument in another country saying "i was here". a prisoner, centuries ago, in the tower of london scratches lines into the wall as a tally marking the days. a medieval monk scrawls in the margins bemoaning the boredom of his work.
every human being across history has said "i was here. i lived. i loved. i made something. i laughed. i cried. please do not forget me"
most of us are not important enough that we will be remembered by name for more than a few decades. we are not kings or queens or great military leaders or innovators or influential artists, musicians, authors.
but all of us, every one, has a deep primal need to persist. we leave handprints on the wall, scratch our names into stones, carve initials into a tree, mark our growth as children on a wall, bury little time capsules. write in the margins of a book. hide notes behind the wallpaper.
reaching out into the future to some unknown human long after we're gone to say
"hello, you. i was here, once"
here i re-wrote it as a poem to fit your tag
Somewhere far away from me And impossibly long ago, now A mother holds her child up high To leave a handprint on the wall
A man I will never meet Climbs a rock for fun He writes a message on the stone And he says âthis is very highâ
Somebody, once Cooked a meal and burned it Took the pot to the land outside their house And buried the evidence
An Egyptian king Thousands of years before my birth Wore a shirt embroidered with little ducks And kept it, lovingly, in a chest
In a prison cell within a tower A man stretches out through centuries And marks off the days of his sentence As lines on the wall
A long-forgotten monk Labours over a manuscript by candlelight And writes in the margins He is bored, and he has a hangover
They leave pieces of themselves behind And they say
âI was here I was here please do not forget me I was alive and I loved and I got sick I had a favourite animal I was here. Do you love me? I love youâ
Yes, I do. I hold your life between my hands And I see it, and I love you
I scratch my name into a rock On a tree, I carve my initials And the initials of someone I love So very much
I bury a box in my garden And I write in the margins I reach into the future To somebody I do not know
A stranger who will never know me
âHello, youâ I say âI was here, once. I loved and I got sick and I had a favourite colour
Do not forget about me, please I love youâ
[image description: a screenshot of tumblr tags.
"Poetry. Not really but I don't have a better tag and I'm obsessed with this." end id]
#op i'm *this* close to printing the poem and putting it on my wall
please do! i wrote it for you, stranger i will never meet
and if you print it then maybe somebody finds it, somewhere, in the back of a drawer in 100 years and hold it in their hands and love me as i love them
do not forget about me, please
May I use your poem as a writing prompt please? I will credit it and link back to you. Itâs SO ANGSTY Iâm gonna cry
of course!
it's beautiful i love it thank you