please tell me that everyone else also scrolled down, saw the caption on the second photo, and scrolled back up to double-check

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Today's Document
DEAR READER
Mike Driver
trying on a metaphor
Sweet Seals For You, Always
todays bird
Not today Justin

if i look back, i am lost

tannertan36
d e v o n
$LAYYYTER
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
we're not kids anymore.
untitled
almost home
taylor price

pixel skylines
Cosmic Funnies

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@tanthegnome
please tell me that everyone else also scrolled down, saw the caption on the second photo, and scrolled back up to double-check
just casually leaving this here for no particular reason
You know what? Fuck it I'm adding more context. Sesame Street has talked about the topic of death more than once and it's done with such gentle carefulness without watering down or censoring the heaviness of the situations. It treats heavy subject matter with respect and dignity and has been for DECADES. From the early 1980s:
To 2025:
Hell, they even cover the devastating heaviness of MASS SHOOTINGS without censoring or watering anything down.
They've been doing this for YEARS, and it's ALWAYS handled with dignity, respect, seriousness, understanding, and love.
Whenever I see people censoring words because it "might offend" someone or the big ad companies that are currently trying to run everything? I just want to say to them: "What? Is Sesame Street too mature for you?" Because really...what the hell are we doing.
I'm back with even more examples! Sesame Street once again to this day is out here handling extremely difficult subject matter with incredible care and respect. "We can't let kids learn about uncomfortable things!" Oh, really now? Even though they're things that happen in everyday life that they'll face one day at some point anyway? Interesting. Let's see what else this show has covered that people (for some reason) think should be avoided and hidden. Here's more on death of loved ones and greif:
Or how about when someone is put into the foster care system because their home isn't safe anymore and their needs aren't being met?
Maybe some discussions about group therapy/getting help and support?
Hey look! Here's a segment about gender expression vs taught expectation, including unlearning harmful biases and what to do when you hurt someone on accident because you didn't know it was wrong!
Look! The topic of race and diversity! The importance of unity and equity!
They even also have a more allegorical take on discrimination and being looked down on for who you are, featuring Big Bird. The conflict is about how he's not being let into a club because the one bird running the club personally decided he didn't want someone like Big Bird there.
Big Bird goes out of his way to keep changing parts of himself in order to "prove" he can fit into this club if he just changed enough. The truth comes out though, and there's nothing he can do to gain the approval of that bird. He will never be good enough in his eyes, and Big Bird starts to hate himself. His real friends see this finally put their feet down, emphasizing that you should never change yourself just to fit into one singular narrow idea someone else has.
There's A LOT of different situations this can be an allegory for. Racism, sexism, homophobia, basically ANY form of exclusion is put on full blast in this 15 minute clip. Sesame Street can be both blunt and allegorical when approaching difficult topics, and it NEVER misses or looses the point.
It does an exceptional job in both styles of representation WITHOUT watering anything down. The more sanitized everything gets, the more radical Sesame Street is suddenly considered, hence why so many "particular groups" want it gone. Hmmm! I can only imagine why that could be, in this current political climate! (I'm being sarcastic)
When Sesame Street is suddenly labeled as "questionable" or "politically/agenda motivated" content...it says A LOT about where we currently are and who gets to decide what's "best" for kids or not. Don't fall for the censorship and topic-dodging excuses that are covered by the "But think of the children!!!" movement. Never fall for it, because you know which side you're on if you do.
Sesame Street proves kids can be taught and trusted with learning about these topics when it's handled with the right amount of understanding and care. It shows what all this "controversy" is all really about. What it's always been about, actually.
Don't fall for it, always side with Sesame Street.
California quail we're unforgettable,
Black head with big feather on top
"There's no platonic explanation for this" <-you need to be nicer to your friends. Right now
Hop. Hop. Hop.
screaming @ this post from r/LinkedInLunatics...family annihilator prototype 😭😭😭
These fuckers are always called to die and never to do the dishes...
real he should hurry up on the dying part
high school dropout severely neglected driver who missed so much school even before he dropped out and was never taught things by his parents or guardians and he just. doesn’t know so much stuff. he has all this practical knowledge, whip-smart in his own way, street smart and infinitely technically intelligent when it comes to cars and engines and mechanics. he’s fantastic at what he does. but when it comes to book smarts and common sense, the sorts of things school and parents and family teach you, normal life teaches you, there are just so many gaping holes in his knowledge.
he doesn’t really understand math beyond the practical basics, doesn’t know big or complex words — he doesn’t like reading because it makes him feel stupid to not understand things, to have to ask what words mean, and he feels annoying asking, used to not be allowed to ask without an explosion of aggression from his mother or father or foster carers, so he learned to stop asking and stay out of the way and be quiet. he was taught that he’s stupid and a lost cause and it’s a waste of time him trying, anyone trying.
he doesn’t have much of an understanding of science at all, even less than grace’s twelve-year-old students do, and often he struggles to grasp things even as they’re explained and taught to him, because he just doesn’t have the base knowledge. nobody ever bothered to give it to him. he’s smart, grace knows he is — grace won’t allow for a second for driver to continue thinking he’s stupid, or worthless, or any other awful thing that’s been drilled into his head — and grace is as patient as anything when he teaches him.
driver only allows it because he knows grace likes teaching, otherwise the level of attention and patience required would make him want to gut himself. sometimes he still wants to gut himself, sitting tense and ashamed while grace uses his middle school worksheets to teach him about things he knows he should know. sometimes grace will still overestimate him, accidentally — on one notable occasion he prompted driver to try and solve an equation, and driver left the apartment before confessing hours later, once he’d been for a drive and the sting had soothed, that he doesn’t know what that means. but grace always corrects.
there’s a sharp contrast between them. what feels like miles of empty space, between grace’s doctorate and dissertation and driver’s single year of high school that he can’t even remember if he passed. but grace bridges the gap. it makes him nauseous to think how many people have failed driver, how many people who were supposed to protect him instead wilfully hurt him and left him behind, and sometimes it feels so ridiculously ineffective — too little too late — to sit beside him now and reassure him, trying to soothe the bone-deep hurts that were carved there twenty years ago.
but grace will. he’ll adjust his explanations as many times as it takes for understanding to light up in driver’s eyes, define as many words as he has to, reassure driver as many times as it takes, always willing even when he’s exhausted, because driver’s always got that look like he’d understand if grace finally snapped and hit him. grace will be the one single person in river’s twenty-six years to give him the gentleness he deserves.
grace rocky save each other
ILYSM - Internet slang term, abbreviation for “I love you sadomasochistically”
One way to get tasks done in the day is to make yourself a Chekhov's List. Put all of the things you have to do on a list, and now that they've been revealed they'll need to be completed by the afternoon (third act) and when you've completed something you can Chekov that task from the list
The (European) sun is a deadly laser, stay safe everyone
The (European)
sun is a deadly laser,
stay safe everyone
Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.
sorry for the delay in responding to your message. I was walking around the house with unclear intentions
Unofficial Autism Post
I finished the last constellation tonight. All 40 of them are now done! Went through and double checked and every stitch is in place for them and all the beads are in place. Which just leaves the milky way part to do.
Started stitching the Milky Way in. Slowly making progress on it as I am hiding the travelling thread so the back will look nice.
Looks pretty cool and keeps the readability of the other stitches. Very happy with it. Just a thousand or so to do. As they are in a grid roughly every centimetre apart.
Update on the constellation quilt. I have gotten the last Milky Way stitch done now. Which means the quilting part of this project is done. My next step will be to baste the edges down, remove the pattern, trim the quilt square, and lastly attach the binding.
Progress on the constellation quilt has come along quite a lot now. Finished the binding on the quilt over the weekend. I prefer to machine stitch the binding to the front then hand stitch the back side. It gives such a nice finish to the quilt. Took the time to measure it also and it ended up being 72" by 72" (183cm by 183cm).
With that done I could finally start removing the pattern. Which is taking both less time and more time that I thought it would. As it rips really easily so that goes fast, but the tiny corners and removing it under the beads is slow. You can now see the difference in the glow effect with it against the dark front of the quilt instead of the pattern.
Behold the stars of the constellations of the northern sky! I love how this quilt has turned out. It was a lot of fun to work on and the effect is so cool in person. Overall I would estimate it took about 90-100 hours to complete. Give or take 10 hours if you want to count the time I spent custom dying the fabric.
I made sure to get a nice photo of it in daylight. For once I also remembered to get a quilt label on it. The back really shows the difference in readability of the quilting on the ice dyed fabric compared to the solid front. Thank you everyone that has followed this. I am glad you all found joy in it.
Those that are interested, here is the pattern I used by Haptic Lab. I made the large northern hemisphere version, and plan to make the matching southern hemisphere one next year. I also got your back for the less crafty people. Haptic Lab sells finished quilts in this pattern, both as a large quilt and a small one.
chocolate covered strawberries 🍓