A FREE TO-CHANGE MODULE IN THE WORLD OF WLF
ROACH MOTEL - SURVIVAL HORROR BUG TF TTRPG USING THE TO CHANGE SYSTEM
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A FREE TO-CHANGE MODULE IN THE WORLD OF WLF
ROACH MOTEL - SURVIVAL HORROR BUG TF TTRPG USING THE TO CHANGE SYSTEM
FREE
AVAILABLE NOW
Jasper and Valerie from the gothic iodm campaign havin a moment away from their mutual fae benefactor to do normal* human* stuff. Gods most unbothered reanimated corpse and actuary stuck in a whimsical body who betrays her at every turn, what will they do. pet her fat tummy about it.
— The Empyrean Series Book 1: Fourth Wing, by Rebecca Yarros
Recuerde: no confundir reemplazar con cambiar
Quiebrapatas
COMING JULY 31ST
A FREE SURVIVAL-HORROR STYLE TO CHANGE MODULE SET IN THE UNIVERSE OF WE LIVE FOREVER (AND WE LOVE TO LIVE) BY @i-feel-odd and vampireferret
This shares a universe with an upcoming furry urban fantasy tf erotica ttrpg by @darlingdemoneclipse and @i-feel-odd
Play the original Game Jam Version here, and keep on eye on the freaks at yab for the Complete Edition! darlingdemoneclipse.itch.io/liveforever
lastly, this is a module for the amazing tf ttrpg To Change by usducktape and ewen, get it here or else! usducktape.itch.io/to-change
Complacency
We may all have different reasons for complacency, but complacency isn’t always a good thing because on some level, it can mean we’ve given up.
But on another level it can also mean we’re happy to stay where we are, because to change seems difficult. It can also mean we’re rooted in the belief that we’re on the leading edge of success, without ensuring that we are.
For the right reasons, complacency means we’re happy to accept what we deal with. With complacency, where we continually think everything is fine, we may turn a blind eye or overlook the injustices perpetrated by others.
I hate to go back to politics, but the reason for ‘Brexit’ and the handling of the pandemic by the UK government are fine examples of injustices perpetrated on a massive scale.
On the government’s part, there are things they can do to help keep us safe, for us to go about our lives normally. Instead thousands of people like me who live with a disability have been assigned to our homes, because masks in public spaces aren’t mandatory, unless those places are crowded.
It is important to think about the pandemic in its wider context, and how what we are doing now sets us up for life. There is complacency because the decisions taken that we have no control over, have left us vulnerable and exposed. That is true, but there are things we can do to keep us and our loved ones safe. We need to be proactive and move away from complacency.
Having been told by UK scientists that the Covid vaccines offers some protection, they do not fully protect, therefore it is important to continue to wear masks, because we can still catch Covid-19 and long Covid. Where ‘my mask protects you and your mask protects me’ the scientists are telling us it’s necessary and we should.
The government are wrong not to make masks mandatory and therefore individually we should change and wear masks in all public places, so that people like myself who deal with a disability can have a life, one that doesn’t keep us stuck in our homes.
Through the government's actions, it is clear they are putting the economy and party politics before the UK population. My writing is based on 'universal' and 'intuitive' understanding and truth. What I write, gives us the 'hard facts' not always easy to digest I know, and so we don't have to live with complacency. Through Brexit and the pandemic you have complacency, but it's all in how we choose to see and handle ourselves. It is important not to be complacent, but to be proactive.
Conclusion:
With complacency, we may not see the actuality of our circumstances. It depends on why we may have complacency. If complacency is there because we’re finding change too difficult that’s also not a good thing, but if complacency means we’re happy and content, then having complacency is perfect.
If we continue to believe that everything is fine, when it’s clear we’re ignoring the facts, it’s not good to be complacent. In those circumstances, it would be good to be proactive. Away from Brexit and Covid-19 if we are thinking of changing anything, it is important to take stock, to appreciate what we have first.
For more inspirational, life-changing blogs, please check out my site https://www.thecpdiary.com
Covid_19, it’s time to change
There are moments in life that are etched into our memories forever. The world grinding to a halt to help slow the spread of COVID-19 is undoubtedly going to be one such moment, and it is precisely moments like these which change how we think about the world and about our place in it.
It is easy to feel invincible in a modern society in which we live longer than ever before and yet, despite all of the technological advancements of the last century, we are still powerless to prevent floods, fires, earthquakes and viruses.
What is now clear is that the story of COVID-19 is a story of humanity’s ever-encroaching relationship with all other living things on this planet. We have to do more. It’s not enough to sit back and watch. We must be proactive.
In an article in The New York Times in 2012, environmental journalist Jim Robbins wrote about a developing model of infectious disease that shows most epidemics are a result of things that we do to nature. Robbins wrote, if we fail to understand and take care of the natural world, it can cause a breakdown of these systems and come back to haunt us in ways we know little about.”
In the case of COVID-19, the virus is thought to have originated at a wild animal market in Wuhan, China, where it may have made the leap from bats to pangolins (a small species of mammal) to humans.
As we push into increasingly remote places to extract oil, gas, minerals and trees, we come into contact with new species and drastically increase the likelihood of the emergence of new diseases. A warming world is also linked to an increase in the spread of disease.
In a recent article in The New York Times, February 2020, Peter Daszak, a disease ecologist argues that as the world struggles to respond to COVID-19, we risk missing the big picture, writing, “pandemics are on the rise, and we need to contain the process that drives them, not just the individual diseases. Plagues are not only part of our culture; they are caused by it.”
There is no doubt that unprecedented road building, deforestation, land clearing and agricultural development, as well as globalised travel and trade, make us increasingly susceptible to pathogens like corona viruses.
While it is easy to concentrate on the constant stream of bad news there is a much larger opportunity to transform the way we think about our place in the world as one of the many living creatures that inhabit this planet.
As human activity wanes, due to the global lockdown we are seeing the natural world react to the slow-down in all sorts of ways: deer wandering the streets of Japan, fish returning to the canals in Venice canals and greatly improved air quality worldwide.
Not only are these reminders of the impact humans have on the world but also of the natural world’s ability to rebound and our ability to change our behaviour when we absolutely must.
Much has been written about what this all says about our ability to fight climate change, but a temporary decline in greenhouse gas emissions because of the virus doesn’t tell us much about whether this pandemic will bring lasting behavioural changes. We must think about the world after Covid_19 and start changing our choices to fit in with the natural world.
We as individuals must share responsibility and take stock of the simple things and re-adjust our priorities moving forward. Change is possible. Moving back into our lives, post lock down, politicians must have measures in place, we must change our lives for us to save the natural world. They need our help. We must all work together.
The pandemic will leave an enduring mark on all of us as we contemplate the fragility of life, the cracks in our globalized economy, our inter-connectedness with all living things and, ultimately, our ability to see a future different from the status quo.
Source: https://www.thenarwal.ca
For more inspirational, life-changing blogs, please check out my site https://www.thecpdiary.com