i've been phasing the phrase 'google it' out of my vocabulary and going back to 'look it up'. fuck you youve lost your generic trademark privileges
he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
Sweet Seals For You, Always
trying on a metaphor
cherry valley forever

I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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@livinglikegrownups
i've been phasing the phrase 'google it' out of my vocabulary and going back to 'look it up'. fuck you youve lost your generic trademark privileges

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Remove immunity and require each officer to carry insurance. The more fucked up the department the higher their insurance and individually it swings further based on claims.
Hit their pocketbooks the way they hit their wives and kids.
Hit their pocketbooks the way they hit their wives and kids.
For anyone wondering, the PhD student's name is Myra Cheng.
Here's a link to an article about the study from the Stanford Report: link.
Across three preregistered studies, participants interacting with sycophantic AI became more convinced of their own rightness and less willing to repair relationships. Yet at the same time, participants rated sycophantic AI models as higher quality, more trustworthy, and more desirable for future use, which may explain why this behavior has persisted despite its harmful impacts.
Myra Cheng et al. "Sycophantic AI decreases prosocial intentions and promotes dependence." Science 391, eaec8352 (2026).
do not go gentle into that good night
be a bit of a bitch about it
can't in good conscience leave this out

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Shane Drinkwater (Tasmanian-Australian, b. 1960, Sheffield, Tasmania, Australia, based Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia) - No. 33, 2025, Acrylic on vintage sewing pattern Paper
Girl whose most frequent mistake is inaction voice: wow I keep making mistakes I better not do anything
I mean as a side-note, I have in fact found overall that reassuring kids young enough to be scared of "illogical" things that either they or you, the adult tasked with their care, are totally capable of handling/beating up/dispersing the Scary Thing is vastly more effective than trying either to convince them that the scary thing doesn't exist, or to convince them that the scary thing isn't scary.
I nannied for a three year old who overnight became deeply scared of owls. We're not sure why. We're not sure she'd even ever seen a real owl. The "owls" that she described did not seem to be based on real birds. Her parents and grandmother, very diligent and reasonable people, spent a week trying to convince her that owls weren't scary and there were no owls in the house because that's not what owls did.
On the first round of "no but if I go to bed there will be owls" I calmly informed her that there were not and never would be any owls in this house because I was there and the owls were afraid of me. And not only were the owls afraid of me when I was there, but I also had the ability to make secret signs that the bad owls would see to let them know that I came to this house every day and if I found bad owls anywhere near here they were In Trouble. So she didn't need to worry about any owls.
She turned this over for a few minutes and then we went and she had nap time.
(She did come back a few days later to say but I meant magic owls, and I said I know, I was also talking about the magic owls, obviously as you have since learned from the Kratt brothers, real owls are just kind of silly birds that puke up mice pellets. She remained satisfied.)
Over the next little while she would occasionally reassert what I had told her about owls being scared of me, and at one point she also added the extra detail that while I could beat up the owls[subtext: magic monsters], she would beat up the bees[again subtext: magic monsters, not the real bees]. I agreed that this was likely so.
A year later she informed me that she had been very silly when she was "little" and scared of owls, but owls were just birds.
I've had similar experiences with other kids and other "irrational" fears and in the end I believe what it comes down to is that when you are Smol, the world is fuckin' scary, and what is really important and really valuable is knowing that when Something Scary Happens, the grownup who is your caregiver will deal with it. That they understand that it is scary - they're not ignoring the danger and thus making it more dangerous, they're not trying to convince you that the danger doesn't exist[1] and so putting you in this place where you don't know whether to trust your own intuitions, all the rest of those things. They're just confirming: if there are Bad Owls, that's still not a problem, because I know how to deal with Bad Owls.
Now obviously yes you also watch nature documentaries or go to the stand with the raptor education stuff with them or whatever else so that they get an idea of what real owls actually are; or in other cases you can ask curious questions about the rest of the fear of, I dunno, under the bed, and see if there's actually something that can be done about it (maybe there's a weird echo in their room that makes it sound like noise is coming from under the bed - you'd be amazed).
But to start with, you go: the monster under the bed isn't a problem, because I am much stronger than the monster under the bed, and I am better at magic, and I have dealt with it.
If you can add, apropos of the post, useful real world details like this one - "not only that did you know that a skeleton would be very weak, because it is just bones and doesn't have any muscles, so because I have muscles I can smash it to bits" - or whatever, that's even better!
This is also actually a very similar process to how CBT is supposed to work for actual reasonable fears that are nevertheless out of proportion or otherwise fucking you over and making you unable to function (because there is literally no bad situation that is not made worse by anxiety attacks, frozen cognition, brain-skips, memory fog, and other distortions of disordered anxiety): okay fine, even if thing is real, what is in your power to do about it, what steps can you actually take, and where do you go with them from here, even if they are small and not overwhelming/going to fix everything, because no matter what the problem is, being frozen in terror of it is always going to be the least useful or effective option. (Even if you do decide you're totally helpless then you might as well go do something fun, because your angst isn't helping either, you know?)
Just altered for Smol Child Brains, and the fact that the most important thing for a Smol Child Brain is to know that whatever happens, your grownup will deal with it.[2]
[1] like yes, the danger doesn't exist, but these are Small Children and the world is very big and complicated and it might exist and it feels emotionally logical for it to exist so even if it really doesn't, it still feels pretty gaslighty when the grownups tell you that it doesn't but you're still sitting there Feeling Afraid about it.
[2] "but what if it's not guaranteed that I deal with it": look, if you DO actually Lose against the universe, there is nothing the small child can do about it either. If you eventually collapse and fail the small child, yes, that will fuck them over. But it will not actually fuck them over worse, at this point in their brain development, to have believed in you without question up to that point and believed you could fight god in the town centre and win, before they find out you couldn't. Just a weird fact of child development.
"The previous governess had used various monsters and bogeymen as a form of discipline. There was always something waiting to eat or carry off bad boys and girls for crimes like stuttering or defiantly and aggravatingly persisting in writing with their left hand. There was always a Scissor Man waiting for a little girl who sucked her thumb, always a bogeyman in the cellar. Of such bricks is the innocence of childhood constructed.
Susan’s attempts at getting them to disbelieve in the things only caused the problems to get worse. Twyla had started to wet the bed. This may have been a crude form of defense against the terrible clawed creature that she was certain lived under it.
Susan had found out about this one the first night, when the child had woken up crying because of a bogeyman in the closet. She’d sighed and gone to have a look. She’d been so angry that she’d pulled it out, hit it over the head with the nursery poker, dislocated its shoulder as a means of emphasis and kicked it out of the back door.
The children refused to disbelieve in the monsters because, frankly, they knew damn well the things were there. But she’d found that they could, very firmly, also believe in the poker."
-Terry Pratchett, The Hogfather (Discworld)
And also: yes, incredibly important that this is something you can do for other adults in your life and for yourself.
What's the worst thing that could possibly happen? And then what?
Sometimes this is working out a practical plan, like, if you're out of work for a bit, you have savings, you do x y and z, and you have me, and probably your horrible dad would have one of his occasional moments of conscience. It's scary but the world wouldn't end.
Sometimes it's just taking the sting out of it. If that horrible person tries to come near you I'll trip them with my walking stick. Even if you're texting me about this from miles away and I don't use the stick anymore. I will trip them with my mind.
Also also: for adults with psychosis or dementia, it's kind of the same in some ways. Don't validate the magic owls like with a kid, that part doesn't work the same, they will not get over it in a year. But do help them figure out the And Then What? Listen to them, hear their worries, and let them know that if there are magic owls, they won't be fighting them alone.
It is the same in that the real worry isn't the magic owls. It's being very small in a scary world. But they're not alone.

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one time in college i was in a creative writing class and this guy was holding up the critique with what i can only describe as like cinemasins dinging another student's writing. and at some point the professor said "the plot is the fork and the prose is the meal. you are critiquing the taste of the fork"
My therapist, who specializes in adults with ADHD, recently told me that all of her clients need a three day crash period after a big life change. Finish the semester? Crash. Change jobs? Crash. Go on a really cool, really relaxing vacation? Crash the moment you get home.
It's true of literally all of her clients. She works with a lot of them to put systems in place so that their crashes are only three days. This includes the high-powered execs who travel regularly for work. It does not matter how successful or high functioning they are - they have ADHD, and crashing is just part of the process of living with it.
I'm sharing this with all you ADHD friends out there, just in case you (like me) start shaming yourself if your crash lasts more than one day. It turns out three days is kind of the best case scenario. Be kind to yourselves!

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