tgm

So just out of morbid curiosity...

Is there anyone out there who actually *likes* Fifty Shades of Grey, or are most of the people reading it just doing it for the bile fascination? Seriously. Because I haven't actually met a single person online who isn't just reading it out of trainwreck curiosity and/or to make fun of it. Maybe I'm just looking in the wrong places.

Then again, considering that it's basically Twilight fic with the serial numbers filed off, maybe that's to be expected. Given that the Twilight hatedom seems to be as large as the actual fandom, and people openly admitted to reading the books because they hated them. By the time the last book came out, the people who actually seemed most excited about it were the hatedom because they wanted to see just HOW bad it would get.

So... again, yeah, maybe we just look in the wrong places, but is there actually anyone who genuinely likes this book and isn't just buying it, at best, to laugh over?
special guest star

An idea I had: Do a good deed for a black cat on Friday the 13th.

I was reading this post on Tumblr and it made me really sad. (I don't have my own Tumblr but we read the ones some of our friends have and we found that post through it.) I already knew that black cats get adopted much less than cats of other colors, and that a lot of people, even if they aren't superstitious about them, just seem to see them as not being as likable as other cats. (And the idea that they're "all the same," like one of the comments mentioned, is so sad too. If black cats are seen as being all the same, how come not all white cats are seen as all the same? Or gray cats, or orange cats, or tabbies that all have the same pattern, or things like that.)

Someday I think if we can ever buy a house, it's going to be full of black cats that we saved from shelters. It's so wrong that cats should have to die and not be loved just because of their color. (I hate using the term "put to sleep" because it's just a way to make killing sound less unpleasant. Even if most shelters try to do it more humanely than they did in the past, it's still killing. Plus, I think you should never say an animal was "put to sleep" around children, because they might think it really means putting them to sleep forever, and become afraid that it might be possible for them to fall asleep forever and never wake up. It doesn't matter whether you're not sure if a child understands that death is permanent or not- I think it's still better to say death, and to explain what euthanasia is when it really is necessary. Otherwise you might just end up making them afraid of sleep.)

Anyway, today, if you have a chance to adopt a cat or help someone else adopt one, try to make it a black cat. And if you have a black cat, give them extra scritches or treats or play with them more or whatever they like, because they're lucky to be loved by a human. Or you could donate to someone who has a black cat who needs help (like the one we mentioned in our last post), or to Black Cat Rescue or another no-kill shelter with a lot of black cats, or foster one in your home. (I know it's late and probably the 14th already for a lot of people reading this, but it's still the 13th over most of the Pacific Ocean! Or you can make tomorrow the honorary 13th.)

-someone who doesn't have a name at the front yet

Haven't used this journal much in a while but...

Just wanted to pass this along: http://appleznbananaz.tumblr.com/post/26052363920/im-not-going-to-demand-that-you-drop-everything Due to a variety of recent events, we're kind of ultra-sensitive right now to anyone who needs money to help them with a cat in trouble, so just passing this along. (Quick summary: this person's cat swallowed a sewing needle, the surgery he needs to remove it costs around $3000 US, and she's doing art commissions to help fund his medical bills.)
tgm

I'm pretty sure that when people talk about "blasts from the past," this isn't what they mean

HOLY SHIT

WE WERE STARTING TO FEEL SO OLD (in Internet years, I guess-- they're like dog years) BECAUSE WE THOUGHT NO ONE ELSE REMEMBERED THIS FIC

(well, except the people who were WTFing over it with us back then. but still, to come across it on Tumblr of all places, where I think the mean age is like ten years younger than our current body age.)

...weirdly enough, with most of the fics we see people WTFing over these days, we're pretty sure that a lot of them are troll fics (we've had actual near-arguments over whether "My Immortal" was a troll fic-- we said yes, other people said no). But we seriously never figured out if the writer of those fics was a troll. Because they'd write stuff like that and... then stuff that looked actually honest and sincere, however weird the concepts of it.

Oh 90s, where you actually had to go digging to find really, really bad fic. It's kind of so easy to find now that it's actually not that interesting to come across any more, unless it's got something in it that's really, really out-there.
books

linguistics stuff

This is an interesting paper about pronoun use among Japanese children, how it's changing, and the increasing use of 'boku' by girls and the social reaction to it. It does have a few brain-breaky phrases near the beginning (like 'hegemonic linguistic construction,' which... I keep feeling like that refers to something that would seem really self-evident to us if it weren't in aca-speak). But if you can get past that, it's a pretty interesting read.

I think the thing that surprised us the most is that 'ore' is now apparently being used by boys as young as 6 or 7. Though I think my favorite part was the mother who said 'well, if the boys are all using "ore," why don't the girls take over "boku"?' An entire school of bokukko-- it's kind of an awesome thought, actually. XD
special guest star

note to selves

Do not post when you're angry. No, really. Do not post when you're angry. Nothing good will come out of it. Do not post when you're angry. The world will not change overnight to fuck you over if you do not say exactly what you're thinking right now. You can and have come down out of this state and posted calmly and rationally before.

I think the major problems here are:

1. Years of unresolved inability to vent about things. Like people assuming using certain words always equals holding certain beliefs or ideologies. As well as compounding warning signs of people who are Not Getting It and thinking they are getting it, over a period of months or years. And unwillingness/inability to deal with confrontation because our expressive language can crash to rock bottom in a matter of seconds if people agitate us in specific ways. (As well as the problem of people throwing out those warning signs that they don't believe our type of neurology, the type of neurology that can do that, even exists-- that it's all excuses, or runs so contrary to their set ideas about how people and brains work that they just refuse to believe it.)

The inability to confront and address things directly is the real problem here. And this goes not just for things like... having to admit you've been forced to hoard a grudge against someone for months or years because they insulted or dishonored you and we weren't capable of, at the time, telling them "Look, if you believe we don't understand X and need to have it explained to us, in my book, that's both untrue and a serious insult/dishonor and we have to talk about this right now." But also for... positive things, personal life things, that we want people to know about. Somehow it can end up being just as hard to write about those.

I know it's learned behavior, and what's learned can be unlearned. Growing up autistic and having trouble with indirect communication, in a variety of environments where you're punished for communicating things directly, plus a bunch of doctors and therapists who all have their own ideas about what's going on with you, is a "great" way to end up with fucked-up communication styles. I know we have been working on it actively for years, and we're much, much more direct than we were ten years ago, and much less angry and passive-aggressive. We recently described to someone else, some of our attempts to explain certain nonlinear things, when we were younger, as "verbal trainwrecks."

(And that also feeds into the worry that people who have known us over a long period of time believe the things we described as verbal trainwrecks, and the aggression/passive aggression, are still "who we really are" and what we really think, and we're just hiding it the rest of the time.)

2. We still don't like Tumblr. We don't want to be on Tumblr even though almost all our friends are, not even just to reblog pretty pictures. It's not just that it's full of drama and fail and even mining it for pretty pictures, or to follow friends, will run you into drama and fail and more drama and fail sooner or later. It's that we know if we tried to get involved in the drama and fail (and some of it involves plurality and people who can't get the idea that several minds/selves/consciousnesses in one body is a philosophical issue, and possibly a neurological one, that has nothing inherently to do with doctors who used it for their own ends), it would take a lot of time away from things we need to be doing much more nowadays. We used to let that happen with multiplicity back when we were one of only two mods, and it did take away time from more important things we needed to be doing offline. And we're afraid we wouldn't be able to help ourselves from getting caught up in it again. We don't trust ourselves not to.

And sometimes it seems like everyone interested in any kind of self-advocacy anything is now on Tumblr, and any time something Big And Important happens with those issues (or even minor dramas that get turned into a tempest in a teapot) it's on Tumblr. And we feel like we "should" be there posting something big and important about it, except no, our expressive language rarely works that way even on our best days. Hypergraphia does not equal ability to do directed writing, to write directly about a specific issue instead of whatever your brain is steering you towards like some kind of weird amusement park ride. It's not that we don't want to be self-advocates, far from it. It's just that the way the dialogue is being done, especially on Tumblr, is in a way that's neurologically inaccessible to us. It is also frequently full of words that bite our brain.

(And by the way, if you think this is about not liking "political correctness" or if you have some ideology in which you've defined "self-advocacy" or "activism" as a bad thing, don't think you're on the level with us opinion-wise or that you understand what we're going through [you don't] or can sympathize with us [you can't], or that you can rope us into your particular little ideology just because we don't like this stuff for a different reason than why you don't like it. It won't work, it won't happen, you aren't on the level with us even if you think you are. If you can't deal with that, then stop reading our journal. This also goes for people who have ideas like "neurodiversity is about the idea that there are absolutely no downsides to being autistic!" No, stop it, just knock it off, go away. In fact, defriend us if that's what you think.)

3. This applies broadly to any kind of marginalized group, but we get really tired of feeling like we can't vent in public because we're supposed to somehow represent our entire group, and that if we have bad days or get annoyed like normal people, and dare to speak up about it, it "makes our whole group/movement/etc look bad." Or that we're somehow supposed to be some kind of shining paragons of perfectness, proving to all singlets everywhere that Plurals Can Be Functional (tm), and apparently that means not ever being allowed to have any intersectionality stuff that can screw you over for reasons unrelated to plurality. And people with more privilege can and will do no-holds-barred public takedowns of you for things like this-- or passive-aggressive takedowns based on how they want to make you look to other privileged people (e.g. some of the people still fixated on Sybil and/or therapy scandals of the 80s and 90s, and apparently can't take any of what we say on its own merits or accept that the way we live has no connection to any of that stuff).

We never thought we were a Shining Paragon of anything. We were just a plural system who wanted to make a website to cover some things we thought weren't adequately covered or mentioned on other websites, and got roped into the "if you are not constantly perfect in every way, you are not a good representative of your group!" mentality before we knew as much about how patterns of oppression work. We found out pretty quickly that even disclosing minor "weaknesses" will attract people who will hold them up and parade them around gloating about "Ha ha, these people aren't as functional as they claim!" Some of them... based in complete misreadings of what we were actually saying. Like the guy who thought our mentioning that in singlet/plural relationships, you should work out beforehand if you want to have a monogamous relationship or a poly one, meant we ourselves went around sleeping with as many people as possible and saying it was because we were plural (uhhhhh no) and told us it was no wonder we'd had problems with anxiety, depression, and various other things because we probably couldn't keep a boyfriend (...because everyone is cis and heterosexual, amirite). So we ended up having to remove a few things from our page because we didn't want to deal with more crap like that.

But apparently, because we had a webpage and moderated a community, some people thought we were claiming to speak as some kind of unified voice of an entire community, or to be this shining paragon of functional something-or-other. When we found out that even some people in the plural community thought we were presenting ourselves as role models, we were actually frankly shocked.

We're less tense about it nowadays, only because we know this whole "you claim you want rights but you have all these problems, nyah nyah nyah!" and deliberate misinterpretations of what you're saying as an excuse to shit on you, happens to just about every marginalized group out there. It happens to disabled people, it happens to people of color, it happens to poor people, it happens to women, it happens to GLBT people, it happens to fat people, it happens to any group whose minds or bodies or identities or beliefs or lifestyles differ from a dominant culture norm. (And no, that doesn't mean we're condoning every single group or every belief or practice or difference out there as okay and great in some moral relativist way. Yet another one of the traps people will try to spring on you, that you have to constantly remember and prepare for. *sigh*)

The one thing we still don't know how to deal with at all is how to prevent people from thinking you're some kind of big leader in a community when you never saw yourself(selves) as one or signed up to be. But we know people in other communities who've gotten hit with that and are still trying to figure out how to deal with it too, so at least we know we're not the only ones.

-Someone who... I guess I count as an irregular/guest fronter around these parts, anyway.

(p.s. also, LJ staff? Posting a potentially seizure-causing image on the LJ "highlighted communities" page? You already seem to be trying to fail accessibility forever with the new "changes" but this is almost like trolling. Fuck you. Seriously.)
evil forces

(no subject)

So for those who don't like the "scissors" LJ-cut thing, there are instructions on how to make your lj-cuts look like the old style again here: http://news.livejournal.com/141929.html?thread=100620137#t100620137

...I have to admit we've never tried modifying the CSS in our journal, though it doesn't look too difficult. I really have no idea what our long-term reaction to the scissors thing at this point will be, just that sudden enforced changes with no ability to opt out, in online services we use, feel like being kicked in the brain. And post-Release 88 LJ has been really, really good at that (although not good at much else).
motel

Sometimes it's really nice to (temporarily) not need to say anything because someone else said it.

Autism Acceptance Month: Fuck Your Awareness

(Comments screened only because we absolutely will not tolerate any attempts to condone or justify murder or abuse of autistic people or disabled people in general in our space. Especially not "but I live with one of Them and the stress blah blah blah..." As we've said before, there are many aspects of our past and family we don't talk about publically, so don't assume what we have and haven't seen. And we also are not interested in attempts to spam opinions or ideologies that aren't actually about what we're talking about at all-- if you think this stuff is about anything but power and what kinds of people are valued by society, take it elsewhere, because we'll never agree with it.)

ETA: Oh yeah. This too. There are numerous people in our family who've had cancer. There are numerous people in our family who are autistic. Several of the ones who had cancer died from it. None of the autistic people have died from being autistic. (We don't like "pink ribbon culture" any better than we like "autism awareness" culture, but the comparison isn't a good one-- one of them is a life-threatening disease that can kill you, the other isn't. And having watched a parent die of cancer, we can certainly tell the "autism awareness" people which one we'd prefer.)
penguins

(no subject)

too tired/low verbal spoons to say much about this but this really, really needs more signalboosting: http://www.giveforward.com/savekelseysheart

from one of the people who reblogged it on tumblr: "Jesus Christ, I truly cannot believe there is a place where someone has to ask strangers on the internet for money so they don’t die." yes, and it's called the united states of america and its health care system. is there... i don't know, there's got to be some way to give this person's case more publicity?