There are still heroes out there
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@thingsthatifound
There are still heroes out there
It wimdy
My son also likes to play towel
This man nearly died to create this for us. The least we can do is watch it from start to finish and then share it immediately.
Does he mean anything to you
what you learn from hobbies:
consistent practice opens up whole worlds of skill that you couldn't imagine
making mistakes in the process of learning is not only natural, it is also essential
activities that you enjoy can give you more energy back than you spent on them
wow everything is so expensive
my hands hurt
One of the big things I struggle with functions-wise is getting stuck in what I call optimization loops. Where there's several tasks that need doing, and some would be optimized by having another task done first, but it can't be shaken out into a clear executable task list.
Simple example: I need to shower, eat food, and go to grocery store. I'm hungry and don't have energy to cook, so the easiest food option would be to get a deli item at the grocery store. But I want to shower before leaving the house. But I don't have energy to shower without eating first.
It feels very silly to get stuck on such a minor dilemma for as long as I have! But there are times I've spent hours looping through this list, trying and failing to start it anywhere. And the only way out, I find, is to manually override it: to catch it happening and say, fuck it! I can go to the grocery store stinky! It's fine!!
It could be considered a subset of perfectionism, because the override very much involves hitting yourself with the idea that it's ok to do things suboptimally. But it feels like it comes from a slightly different place. As someone who struggles with executive function, I get myself through a lot of tasks by trying to optimize to the smoothest, lowest-friction way through. The task order that minimizes having to do any step more than once, or having to remember too many things at a time. If I can arrange my tasks just right, sometimes I can get one task to cover part of the work of doing another! And if I can put my tasks in an order that feels natural and ideal, I can lower the energy of activation it takes to get moving. And, sometimes, avoid the choice paralysis of not being able to pick a task out of a list of equal priority.
Except that, obviously, sometimes the optimization process throws up glitches of its own. There's the closed loop I described, and there's also another catching point where a task I have the mental energy and wherewithal to do gets stuck behind a task that's too big/intimidating/difficult to tackle. For example: I just sent some emails I've been procrastinating on for over a month, because I need to set up a new email address, and I was telling myself it'd be better to get that set up before I contacted people, because it would save me the hassle of dragging a bunch of conversations over to a new account when I did get it set up. I still haven't made the other email! But I realized that hypothetical future hassle was not worth the delay of not sending those emails for as long as it's going to take to actually get my brain together to figure out a new email service.
Surprisingly, doing something like this often actually makes the difficult task I was stuck on easier! Another thing I struggle with is a flinch reaction from tasks that are both pressingly important, and unapproachable to do. The more I need to do a task immediately, the more stressed and overwhelmed and self-recriminating I get about the fact that I don't know how to even start doing it. It gets so bad I can't even think about it directly - I think about the general shape of it, flinch, and divert my attention so I don't panic.
And when I've got a minor, pressing task stuck behind a big nebulous scary task, it presses the unapproachable task forward, makes it urgent, and that makes it harder to figure out how to do. If I can get around it, and do the actually pressing task in some contrived way that pushes some miscellaneous messy consequences forward, it takes pressure off the big task. And then I can actually think about it, without panicking, which makes it possible to actually work on doing it.
That last point also often applies to asking for help. I have a weird hangup here: I find it excruciatingly difficult to ask for help if I haven't at least *started* the thing I need help with. Which gets into the same dynamic: I have a big unsorted task I can't think about directly without panicking, or the path of steps to doing it that I've managed to figure out starts with one I can't make myself tackle, so I'm stuck doing nothing with no way in. Asking for help means admitting to someone that there is going to be mess, that I can't tackle the problem in the optimal front-to-back way so there's going to be inconvenient problems generated in some of the steps that will have to be dealt with at other steps, and some of that inconvenience might be to people other than me!! But just managing to say this, to admit this upfront, is sometimes enough to cut the gordion knot of not being able to start anywhere.
So, ok, it is a little bit about perfectionism. But perfectionism that comes from a slightly sideways place: the desperation to avoid creating problems in the future, to the point where instead you create problems now.
hope this is okay to reblog - those optimization loops are absolutely my most disabling exec dysfn issue, too, and i often have to remind myself of this comic--ESPECIALLY "get rid of secret rules." that's been the most helpful piece of advice for me, personally, largely because it puts into words even the idea that there might be secret rules i don't even notice i'm following. now that it's something i even think to check with myself, it has become so so so much easier to realize that i can just Stop Doing That.
This is me in excruciating detail. Something I've found that helps with the first part--the low energy need food too hungry to make food--can't take my meds till I have food--can't do literally anything else till I take my meds--is to keep very easy snacks on a high shelf. Something that isn't super enticing so I won't mindlessly finish them off, and kept out of the way--so I won't mindlessly finish them off anyway. Recently it's been a big box of chewy granola bars. A couple of those gets me past the "so hungry I hate the thought of food" feeling so that I have something on my stomach to take my meds, and then when the meds kick in I can get day started to whatever extent I can. It's up to the meds whether I end up actually eating a real meal though lol. Sometimes my partner has to be like "have you eaten today? here eat this." because I just plain forget.
Dragonite Delivery 🧡💚
mean as fuck why is he doing that
I can't stand it.
someone has to do something
What I love about this is seeing that he's clearly a hockey skater. Now, I don't know shit about fuck when it comes to cold slippy antics, but what I notice is different between hockey skaters and nearly all other skaters is that hockey skaters essentially run on the ice. Any other skater is trying to glide, perform, or be otherwise smooth. Create a new type of mobility, but on ice. But hockey skaters? The floor is slippery but that's why they've got knives on their feet, so it's running time. Run run run run.
So this is like playing tag on ice, except the one guy you're trying to get is magically not on ice. And I think that's pretty neat.
He’s also making really good use of the stoppers on the front of his skates. You can clearly see several times that when he starts juking and running he’s not actually running with the wheels in contact with the ground – he’s tipped forward to run on the rubber stoppers, which will give him more traction on the slippery surface. He can change direction faster because none of his kinetic energy is going into countering the inertia of spinning wheels.
I don’t know if the picks on the front of ice skates are used similarly (because ice hockey is not so much of a national pastime in Australia) but I wouldn’t be surprised. But I spent a bit of time with a roller derby team, and I recognised that particular stopper run :)
toe pick!
"I don’t know if the picks on the front of ice skates are used similarly"
As the joke above me insinuates, hockey skates don't have toe picks.
Toe picks are for jumps and spins, which you don't do in hockey lol. When you put hockey players in figure skates, they're constantly tripping over the toe picks (see, joke above).
Like the one player in this video saying, "I'm gonna toe pick on this one."
Now watch this one, watch the way they run. Hockey players kinda run on their toes on the ice to get speed.
See how much they use their toes?
It's honestly a little wild to see, it's completely different.
The one where the figure skaters learn hockey stuff is also hilarious
They become. So uncoordinated.
And in the fourth challenge, you can see they don't use their toes to build up speed the way the hockey players do
The point everyone here keeps missing is that the guy clowning everyone in the original video is a quad hockey player (ie: on regular rollerskates like those, not rollerblades or ice).
This just How Quad Players Do. He's used to those moves, and casual skaters aren't.
Ice/roller hockey players push with the mid-foot, not their toes, because there's a lot more contact with the ice/floor (four wheels, rather than one).
If you look closely at the video again, just because they're taking quick little steps doesn't mean they're on their toes. The reason they're so fast is because they're nailing those tiny crossovers - as soon as they hit the straights, they're taking the S-shaped full strides that illustrate how the back-and-out push works.
Source: I've been an ice- and roller-hockey player for thirty-five years.
Source: I’ve been an ice-
and roller-hockey player
for thirty-five years.
Beep boop! I look for accidental haiku posts. Sometimes I mess up.
the lion concerns himself with everything
PLEASE UNMUTE
The sinister old woman arriving at the birth of my firstborn to foretell his doom
I cannot believe I almost scrolled past this
thinking about this again
hey fun fact this album is actually named after a book called steal this book (first edition came out in the 70s)
here’s the 2023 version, it’s got everything from how to apply for work, ways to feed yourself for cheap, how to start your own printing workshop, bunch of stuff. the pdf is tiny so personally i have it downloaded on my phone
2023 edition of Abbie Hoffman's Steal This Book.This book provides a huge wealth of information about practical living.Great thanks to the l
We go forward.
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Oh look it’s that short comic that’s haunted me for a decade.
Is and continues to be my favorite dance video. Dude’s so unexpectedly fluid.
> High score! What happened? Did i break it?
> You don’t see too many YouTube videos from 2005..
Weird to think that was almost a 10 years ago.
i think this is my favorite video of all time. ive been utterly enamored with it for years – i really believe it captures such a genuine, delightful aspect of humanity and culture from the 2000s, and its so fun to watch!!
I could tell instantly from the way he was positioned on the bar that this video was going to showcase some serious skill. I was nonetheless cometely unprepared for what happened.
I hope that wherever this dude is, that he’s deriving as much fun and wonder out of life as he provided with this performance. For performance it was, and surely some deity must have been pleased enough to grant a blessing.