i got bored. sorry
DEAR READER
Not today Justin

â

JVL
trying on a metaphor
Sade Olutola
will byers stan first human second
Xuebing Du
Stranger Things
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
wallacepolsom
occasionally subtle

Janaina Medeiros
Misplaced Lens Cap

if i look back, i am lost
2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
noise dept.

sheepfilms

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
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seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Norway
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seen from TĂźrkiye
seen from Australia
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@computerwives
i got bored. sorry

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Jade Harley
the WIVES as HOMESTUCK characters:
molly -
roxy
paula -
callie
andrea -
vriska (post-retcon)
zoĂŤ -
rose and kanaya in one (rosemary, if you will)
hana -
jade (hehe :p)
Do you remember how you found Tumblr and why you made an account?
I do actually! (Pls explain.)
Sadly, I do not. :pensive_emoji:
Feel free to reblog to have more people to vote. Feel free to explain why you voted the way you did. DO NOT SENT ANON HATE FOR HOW PEOPLE VOTED.
we all were on tumblr together at work for some reason (college IT help desk, circa 2010-11?)
at the time, there were lots of new platforms and form factors coming out and anytime we were together at work was a good opportunity to make fun of them (we reserved special ire, as many did, for Google+).
i even wrote an essay about why i didn't like tumblr at the time. but it's still here and still kicking and i think that's beautiful.

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this made me cry. "being used as an extension of something bigger, something crueller than me" -- ain't that just life.
Our society's growing reliance on computer systems that were initially intended to "help" people make analyses and decisions, but which have long since both surpassed the understanding of their users and become indispensable to them, is a very serious development. It has two important consequences. First, decisions are made with the aid of, and sometimes entirely by, computers whose programs no one any longer knows explicitly or understands. Hence no one can know the criteria or the rules on which such decisions are based. Second, the systems of rules and criteria that are embodied in such computer systems become immune to change, because, in the absence of a detailed understanding of the inner workings of a computer system, any substantial modification of it is very likely to render the whole system inoperative and possibly unrestorable. Such computer systems can therefore only grow. And their growth and the increasing reliance placed on them is accompanied by an increasing legitimation of their "knowledge base." [âŚ] One would expect that large numbers of individuals, living in a society in which anonymous, hence irresponsible, forces formulate the large questions of the day and circumscribe the range of possible answers, would experience a kind of impotence and fall victim to a mindless rage. And surely we see that expectation fulfilled all around us, on university campuses and in factories, in homes and offices. Its manifestations are workers' sabotage of the products of their labor, unrest and aimlessness among students, street crime, escape into drug-induced dream worlds, and so on. Yet an alternative response is also very pervasive; as seen from one perspective, it appears to be resignation, but from another perspective it is what Erich Fromm long ago called "escape from freedom." The "good German" in Hitler's time could sleep more soundly because he "didn't know" about Dachau. He didn't know, he told us later, because the highly organized Nazi system kept him from knowing. (Curiously, though, I, as an adolescent in that same Germany, knew about Dachau. I thought I had reason to fear it.) Of course, the real reason the good German didn't know is that he never felt it to be his responsibility to ask what had happened to his Jewish neighbor whose apartment suddenly became available. The university professor whose dream of being promoted to the status of Ordinarius was suddenly fulfilled didn't ask how his precious chair had suddenly become vacant. Finally, all Germans became victims of what had befallen them. Today even the most highly placed managers represent themselves as innocent victims of a technology for which they accept no responsibility and which they do not even pretend to understand (One must wonder, though, why it never occurred to Admiral Moorer to ask what effect the millions of tons of bombs the computer said were being dropped on Viet Nam were having.) The American Secretary of State, Dr. Henry Kissinger, while explaining that he could hardly have known of the "White House horrors" revealed by the Watergate investigation, mourned over "the awfulness of events and the tragedy that has befallen so many people."
-- Joseph Weizenbaum, Computer Power and Human Reason (1976)
found a great place to hide (on the floor behind an AV rack)
Here I stop them. âWhy are you telling me, telling me, telling me things? Your job isnât to deliver this whole room to me on a silver platter. I donât want the silver platter. I want to attack this room. I want to own it, just like how the sighted people here own it. Or, if the room isnât worth owning, then I want to grab whatever I find worth stealing. Câmon, letâs start over. What weâll do is start to touch things and people here, together, while we provide running commentaries and feedback to each other.â
John Lee Clark on Protactile and partnership vs âaccessâ

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It's a five-year cultural snapshot of what we did in this country when we thought things had a chance of getting better instead of getting worse. We were betrayed by those in power, repeatedly and with great prejudice. The future horrors will require different storytelling.
ZoĂŤ Hayden on 9-1-1's finale and the American interregnum
light reading - I have only just started the introduction but I think they should teach this in schools. Like to high schoolers.
thoughts on the "bright side"
this is raw for me, so hopefully it's not too upsetting to anyone. i'll try to be even-keeled.
we're barely 3 days into the second trump regime, which started off with a lot of big moves to the right. understandably, people are still recovering from the paradigm-shift (although, tbf, it's a shift that has been lined up for quite some time). it's hard to regulate right now, let alone calibrate one's senses. some people are feeling giddy fervor because their "side" "won", some people are feeling let-down because their "side" never actually putting up much of a fight to begin with. we're all trying to figure out our next move. it sucks ass.
so it's reasonable, i guess, that one way people will cope with the broad pathos is optimism. it's the sort of response to adversity that the average self-help book would advise. i'm doing it too (albeit from a place of anticipating a 4-â year marathon of hardship); i'm trying not to get too caught up in borrowing trouble that will come in due time.
but i do have a gentle critique of this self-soothing mechanism.
you literally do not gotta hand it to trump and the maga set, especially not before they have even accomplished anything beyond sowing chaos. just as the advice for living under a fascist regime commonly starts with "citizens should not obey in advance"... let's not grant them the grace of optimism to comfort ourselves.
optimism works in some tough situations. "hey, it might actually work out for me in the end" is an ok way to approach having to find a new therapist, or adapting to a dietary/mobility restriction, or those small-to-medium personal risks like telling a friend you have feelings for them.
but when it comes to a national-administrative and political slide into fascism: what the fuck are you doing, my guy? the moment does not call for comfort! i hope for everyone to both take and offer respite in ways that don't harm others, and i support the pursuit of that. we all need respite, and we should take it. but saying it might all just work out waters the seed of complacency.
even if that attitude has helped you deal with hardship in the past, even if you're someone who stands to benefit from some portion of the maga policies, please don't dull your empathy with optimism.
how do i hold the long spoon?
do you remember that tweet from 2020, or maybe 2016, that was likeÂ
âi donât know how to explain to you that you should care about other peopleâ
?
i feel likeâve ricocheted off of an attempt to explain why one should care about others every 6 months, my entire adult life.
my pattern of approach has been to try reading some ethics text or another for a few weeks, with growing embarrassment about my search for a concrete answer to something that i should just fucking get (as a human, because itâs not something that needs to be proven to be done), until i finally surrender theory for a direct-action nonanswer like buying groceries for old people.Â
itâs honestly not hard to get it and just do it. iâm sure this feeling is part of why some people do crazy shit like eat vegan, volunteer at hospice facilities, or go to med school to work in the baby ER. i think leaving it unexplored is fine, possibly even better than fine, because it would really suck to discover something that puts you off altruism. but, like, how can one resist thinking about it?
personally, my âreachingâ of âmaturityâ has been the result of haphazardly staking out social and ethical boundaries that align with âvaluesâ iâve found, inherited, or inherited but thought i found (secret third type). when i demonstrated to myself that i could pick them up and move them with me, throughout different social contexts, like a crinoline defining the shape of my character, i actually did feel quite mature. but iâm actually hugely naive and toddler-like in almost every way, even those in which i feel accomplished.
iâm kinda old-ish now (some scoff, some nod as if i am brave), and iâm not so easily embarrassed by myself any more, which is the first blush of boomer ruin, so i was thinking i could write about what i think, as i think it, publicly, on the internet. it sounds fucking insane as i type it.
although i loved reading smart adultâs blogs in the early 2000s, it is my firm opinion that nobody should ever post. horrifyingly, some of my smartest friends do it now. if itâs my fate now, as an adult, to debase myself, why not do it up?
iâm tagging everything i post with #longspoon, so i can: a) easily delete it all when i get embarrassed or cancelled; b) (with hubris) tag it all for RSS; c) (hubris fading to trepidation) keep this blog organized if i ever post other types of things.
why âlong spoonâ?
before i explain this, i want to just say 2 things.Â
that i donât buy âheavenâ or âhellâ as scenarios. i believe only hell is real, we are all living in it right now, and itâs actually not as bad as you hear (but it still sucks a lot).
that this will not be brief so take a bathroom break now.
not the onion.
there isnât a single parable-form telling of it online that doesnât reek of clinically uncool self-help language. hereâs my version:
basically, imagine a banquet table laid with the most succulent soup-feast imaginable. weâre talking stew, soup dumplings, matzo ball soup, pot pie filling, everything good and hot you can eat with a spoon. but the people seated at this banquet are gaunt and starving. they are unable to eat the soup, because the spoons theyâve been given are too long to reach to their own mouths. here you might ask, âwhy not simply choke up on the spoon handle so it functions as a shorter one?â shut up, and get out of my temple, thatâs why! for some reason they cannot do that. neither can they reach the soup with their bare hands, or faces. maybe they get a few bites that way, but it doesnât really work to nourish them. âbut why do they have these impractical spoons?â here is the moment where jesus or buddha or lord siddhartha twists his nasty little face into a grinch smile because youâve asked him just the question he was hoping for. the spoons are not supposed to be used for feeding oneself. they arenât meant to be used that way. in the 90s, don norman would have passed by and pointed out that the spoonâs long handle is clearly an affordance which telegraphs its purpose*. (nowadays he is either cancelled or explaining that it is actually called a signifier and an affordance is something else, thus justifying his bookâs sustained $30 price tag.) the guests at this banquet are too fucking selfish and hangry to read affordances. they do not understand that they are meant to use their long-handled spoons to feed the person across the table from them, who in turn is meant to feed them. i donât think anyone is seated at the head or foot of the table. if so, they have extra special long spoon handles which are arched in some manner. this is not a fun banquet.
for our purposes, weâre gonna stay away from that. i donât think the heavenly version of the banquet exists. itâs more an architectural rendering of how a long-utensil-style banquet could potentially work, given enough budget.Â

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In Memoriam
Everyone turned out to be so disappointingly human after all.
Even me.
Even you.
Especially me.
But most especially you.