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Freyr

@falleroffalls / falleroffalls.tumblr.com

Autistic genderless minecraft server understanding cat friend (friend to a cat; I'm not a cat myself)
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cassolotl

On emotional authenticity and masking as an autistic person

Originally posted as a thread on Mastodon, starting here.

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This thing happens that I attribute to being autistic and having poor cognitive empathy.

When someone tells me something, I know that I am expected to express an emotion in reaction. But I also know from experience that some of my emotional reactions are inappropriate.

NTs seem expert at knowing which of their emotional reactions are appropriate, so they can effortlessly express the appropriate emotions and suppress the inappropriate ones.

It’s unsafe for me to react authentically to anyone.

And it’s not like there’s an easy rule! If someone tells me they’re moving house, I’m meant to express sadness that they’re going, but a hope that the move is positive for them and will be good. But the degrees of each are meant to reflect the depth of our relationship and how I feel about that person. It’s a balancing act. I have to formulate all of these consciously, while also judging which will be considered inappropriate, in real time. It’s exhausting.

Because I’m autistic, my first reaction to something you say will never be an authentic emotional experience, and this makes me feel very sad. Everything you see of me will be from the other side of a wall, no matter how well we know each other. If I love you and care about you but I don’t feel safe to immediately express anything with you without fear of judgement or hurting your feelings accidentally, chances are I will always be unable to express my emotions authentically with you in real-time. This means we’ll never get a deep level of emotional intimacy in our relationship, which hurts a lot.

This is why autistic spaces like Autscape (UK) can be so powerful. When a space is by and for autistic people, the majority of people are autistic; there is an understanding that immediate emotional reactions might not reflect the full range of an emotional response to a situation, and might be a bit odd! You learn to understand that your first impression of someone’s emotional reaction to something won’t be the whole story, and it is important to wait & let someone continue to process and express.

This is also why a lot of autistic people come across as robotic - we lack a sense that others have, and have to compensate with conscious thought. That sense is cognitive empathy. It’s similar to how the physical movements of someone with poor proprioception will come across as robotic. We have to process everything consciously, where most people do everything intuitively and automatically, like breathing.

Imagine if you had to consciously process every breath. It would seem stilted and robotic. You wouldn’t be able to fully concentrate on anything else. Imagine how exhausting and disabling that would be!

So when an autistic person has enough energy and understanding to know that our emotional responses are sometimes inappropriate and get us unto trouble, but we don’t have the spoons to formulate an appropriate emotional response in real-time, we might respond to pretty much everything without emotion. And that’s when we seem robotic and lacking emotional affect, fitting the autistic stereotype. Our emotional response might come a few moments later, or a few minutes later, or a few days, weeks…

My ideal situation is to express authentically anyway, and deal with the fallout as best I can. I am happier and calmer. But it’s sort of swings and roundabouts - I don’t really save any energy because the energy that is no longer used on real-time processing and masking is displaced to emergency fallout repair as I flail to reassure or save a relationship when a NT person is very upset by something I’ve said. I can only express authentically in real-time if I (very quickly, at the beginning) assess the situation and my energy levels, and find that I have enough energy to patch things up afterwards if I say or do something wrong.

But masking/being a robot is exhausting too. Whether I am masking or expressing authentically, I can misjudge how long a situation will continue for. When this happens I run out of steam and crash before the end, so I either become a zombie or have to leave abruptly!

There’s a lot of gumph in the media right now about autistic people and processing time/speed, but I don’t think I think slowly. I think maybe my processing power is occupied by compensating for the lack of senses that NTs have.

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Hi, this may not fit with your impressive array of lists since it isn’t technically a game and doesn’t particularly *represent* anyone at all, but may nonetheless be of interest to people looking for diverse gaming experiences. It’s a small Minecraft server I play on that is run by and for nonbinary autistic adults, and is accompanied by a telegram chat group. I think it’s the most wonderful thing and want to share it, but carefully so it stays a safe place :)

It’s unique in other ways too http://thislandwiki.nn.pe/w/index.php?title=What_sets_This_Land_apart_from_other_Minecraft_servers

–Freyr

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On the Problem of (mis)Gendering and What To Do About It

The problem: anyone who doesn’t present as a binary gender and is that binary gender, may be misgendered by people who don't know (and care about) them, causing dysphoria.

We need a method we can apply consistently, that doesn't support the idea that marginalised people should have to advocate for themselves constantly.

There are two questions here: 1. how should we avoid misgendering others? 2. how should we deal with those who would misgender us?

HOW SHOULD WE AVOID MISGENDERING OTHERS? A common approach is to guess people’s gender based on how they look, unless they look trans, and if they look trans then to either see what other people call them, or to ask them what their gender/pronouns are.

This is very problematic. Many trans people don’t ‘look trans’ (and don’t necessarily ‘look like’ the gender they are). And if they do look trans, and you rely on others, the others may be wrong, and you could just be adding to the ever-growing circle of people who are misgendering them because everyone else is misgendering them. On the other hand they are unlikely to want every stranger they meet to draw attention to their transness and require them to explain their gender and pronouns, a thing that you don’t ask of people who don’t ‘look trans’.

One non-discriminatory way of not misgendering people would be to ask everyone what their pronouns are, regardless of whether they ‘look trans’, but there are many situations in which this is inappropriate, and even more in which the person in question isn’t available for comment (e.g. public figures).

The only way (that works for all situations (in english)) is to call everyone 'they' (or other gender neutral pronoun if you prefer) and never gender anyone unless they explicitly share that information.

This is something we can all do regardless of whether we have a marginalised gender.

We need to cultivate a (sub)culture in which gendering people who haven't asked to be gendered, is extremely rude, on the level of inviting some friends over for dinner and serving all but one of them, and then sitting down to eat.

@cassolotl​ has been trialing this for a few months now. I very much look forward to their eventual blog post.

HOW SHOULD WE DEAL WITH THOSE WHO WOULD MISGENDER US? Some people go to great lengths to pre-empt this by broadcasting their gender and pronouns before anyone gets a chance to misgender them. But this can be exhausting and the fact that they have to do it and cis people don't, highlights their transness, causing dysphoria (although perhaps less).

Any kind of hat, badge, sticker or t-shirt with pronouns on is an example of this. It's a thing that cis people never have to do.

But it's worse than that (they're dead, Jim). It reinforces the idea that cis is default and it's up to non-cis people to work constantly to stop people misgendering them.

Telling trans people to wear stickers and badges would be like telling people of color to solve racism by wearing white makeup.

I've found the most fun way (when it’s safe to do so) is to wait for someone to misgender me in conversation and then at the end of my next comment to casually tack on "Also I'm not a [genderword]".

I don’t tell them my gender, I just inform them that they're wrong. If they then assume that I’m binary trans and misgender me the ‘other’ way then I’ll just repeat “Also I’m not a [genderword]” until they stop gendering me.

This method asserts that it is other’s responsibility to not misgender us (a right that cis people would also assert, were it threatened). It makes decent people feel crap when they misgender you and this is a good thing, the feeling crap is because their behaivour is out of alignment with their moral compass, which means they need to change their behaviour. Their feeling crap is 100% not our problem.

Any decent human will be like “oh shit” and immediately apologise. They may misgender you again, and you can repeat the “Also I’m not a [genderword]” every time they do. It shouldn’t get harder for you, but if they are a decent human they are going to get more and more apologestic and more and more uncomfortable with themselves. And if they are really smart, they will figure out that the only way to totally avoid the horror of having accidentally misgendered someone, is to never gender anyone (unless specifically asked to) ever again. See “how should we avoid misgendering others?”

Unlike the “how to avoid misgendering others” solution, this one is a new discovery for me and may need some refinement.

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cassolotl

Good ideas

“how do we sell more trousers per mannequin?”

“more legs per mannequin!”

“where do we put the extra legs?”

“anywhere you can’t model trousers, we should scrap it and replace it with more legs”

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dwam

Infinite Relationships: Relationships without bounds or boundaries, love without limits

(I have to reblog the WHOLE text !) Saturday, February 27, 2010    0 By Indy Media From ZineLibrary.info This is about so-called “non-monogamous relationships,” about some of the benefits of trying out one of the alternatives to the formulaic dating/marriage/divorce model for love. Your response to this article will probably be similar to the one I had a few years ago when I read a discussion of the same subject by David Sandstrom in the Swedish ‘zine Handbook for Revolutionaries: “good idea, but, uh, not relevant to me, of course…” It turned out I was wrong. Had I remembered a lesson I’ve learned over and over, I would have realized that often the ideas that make me the most defensive and uncomfortable at first turn out to be the most important for me in the long run. Not to say that I’m offering a program that you must all immediately adjust yourselves to… but we can’t remind each other enough to be open to new ideas, in case they do prove to be helpful in our lives. A couple years ago I had a wonderful experience on tour, in which I finally experienced what it felt like for men’s gender roles to be dissolved: over the course of the tour everyone in the band and the people touring with us were all able to open up and become emotionally supportive and loving, and suddenly the experience of being with a lot of other boys was totally f*cking different from anything I’d encountered before. In this safe, encouraging environment, all of us really felt fearless, free, ready to try anything, with no more doubt or need for walls to protect us. On the surface, it was just that we weren’t afraid to touch and hold each other, and that we stopped complaining and being selfish; but the implications beneath this were immense: I realized that there was no need for intimacy and emotional support to be confined to my romantic relationships—I could create and benefit from these things in every relationship. This got me thinking about my romantic relationships… if there was no reason my friendships couldn’t be more like my love affairs, why couldn’t my love affairs be more like my friendships? When I thought about it, my friendships had a lot going for them that my love affairs never did: my friends were never jealous or possessive, my friendships didn’t tend to adhere to some strict socialized image of what they “should” be, and while my friendships generally continued on in one form or another through my life, once it turned out that a romantic relationship wasn’t storybook-perfect it would end and I wouldn’t see the lover any more. All my love relationships had proceeded something like this: In the beginning I would meet a beautiful new person, we would broaden each others’ horizons and have wonderful experiences together, and thus fall in love. At first we would feel more free together than either of us ever had, and the world would seem full to overflowing with possibility and wild joy. But slowly, not trusting the rest of the world, or the future in which we might not feel such wonderful things, we would build our relationship into a castle, to keep out the cold and dangerous outside world, and protect our passion by turning it into an institution. Sex, which at the beginning had been something that came more naturally and freely than anything else, became jealously guarded as the seal sanctifying our love relationship, as proof that it was different than all our other relationships. [This seems, in retrospect, like a really strange role for sex to play.] Inevitably, I would wake up one day and realize that the free, feral passion that we’d been united by was gone, replaced by habit, routine, fear of change; the castle we’d built had become a tomb, sealing us inside and away from the outside world, which we’d actually needed all along to bring us each new things to offer the other and sustain ourselves. Inside the coffin, we fought more and more, each demanding that the other prove her love by sacrificing more and more—when love is supposed to enable you to live more, not disable you in return for an assurance of basic companionship, a companionship that often replaces your participation in larger communities anyway. Falling in love had been like finding a secret entrance to the garden of Eden, a gift economy in which we shared everything without keeping score or worrying about “fair trade”; but now we were back in the exchange economy, competing to see who could need more, who could control more. After all my attempts to transcend the stereotyped roles of people in romantic relationships, I suddenly found that I was a “boyfriend” again, with a “girlfriend” (which is not a healthy role for anyone to have to play in this sexist society!), with no idea how it had all happened. I started thinking about how it is that we all keep falling into these patterns, and how we could avoid them. The issue of limitation kept coming up: the idea that some things had to be off limits for the relationship to work. With my friends, nothing is off limits, and nothing is demanded either: we offer each other whatever we can, whenever we have it to give, and we don’t demand anything that doesn’t come naturally for the other (that’s how my friendships go when they’re healthy, at least, and most of them are at this point). I decided to look into what other models for love relationships there were, and discovered that there is a long tradition of relationships without these limits and expectations: non-monogamous, or “open,” relationships. I’m not trying to say that monogamous relationships are bad, exactly, but there are a thousand kinds of relationships, and we generally only permit ourselves to try one format, which seems ridiculous. Let’s explore a bit. Every time I hear about another wife/husband/boyfriend/girlfriend cheating and sneaking around, every time I hear someone speaking proudly about how (in the name of monogamy) he has managed to resist doing something he really wants to, every time I must listen to someone pathetically lamenting the feeling of being “trapped” in a relationship or unable to pursue her desires out of some kind of fear, every f*cking time I have to witness someone leering voyeuristically (“it’s ok to look if you don’t touch”), it makes me so furious about how we’ve trapped ourselves in this one-option relationship system, accepting these symptoms of suffocation as inevitable instead of experimenting with the other possibilities. More than anything else, our commitment to supporting monogamy as the only option (other than “casual sex,” I guess, which is boring as f*ck and bad in other ways too) keeps us from being honest with each other. We’ve got to dare to address all these complexities of life and desire openly, even if it is painful. We punk rockers always act like we’re such radical people, but when it comes down to acting, in practice, to try out radically different ways of living that might be more in line with our ideas (or just plain challenging, for once, not safe—nothing is more dangerous than playing it safe!), it doesn’t occur to us to question our programmed habits. All too often our revolutionary ideas are just badges, a different ideology for us to vote for, not catalysts for transforming life. This is an issue that affects everyone, where anarchist values can be tried out in the real world, but thus far I’ve seen very little discussion of this subject in our community; if we’re going to question the way the world works, we should take that home to our own personal relationships, and perhaps try out alternatives there first before proposing solutions to the ills of the world. That is—if we really have solutions to the ills of our society, let’s put those into practice to solve the ills of our own relations. Healer, heal thyself. What an open relationship is: The most important thing here is to get over the idea that a person’s value is measured by whether she alone can be “enough” for another person. The world is infinite, and so are we—no amount of living, no number or depth of interactions with others should be “enough” for any of us, just as no amount of interactions with a person you love will ever be “enough.” To set borders on what another person can do or feel, as a condition for them to be able to receive my love and affection, goes against everything I believe as an anarchist and a human being; I want to trust others to know what they need, and never limit them—and I certainly don’t think my life will be any richer from the limitations I place on others. We have to free each other to be and become ourselves. This isn’t just about other lovers or sex partners or friends, it’s also about other undertakings, needs, even the desire for space and solitude—it’s heartbreaking how much of our selves our lovers often ask us to sacrifice to be with them. I want to be valued for what I am, for what I do naturally, not how well I conform to some pre-set list of needs that someone has. If someone else can fill some of those needs, I wouldn’t deny that to anyone, and I don’t want to be jealous when others have something different to offer; I just want the chance to offer what I have to give to those I love, and to remember that those things are priceless and not comparable to whatever unique gifts others may have. None of us should ever be saddled with the role of sole provider for someone’s needs (romantic or otherwise), anyway; our purpose on this earth is not to serve others, but to find ways to be ourselves in ways that also benefit others. By saying the rest of the world isn’t off limits to your partner, you free yourself of the job of being the whole world to your partner. The monogamy system means that people hesitate to share themselves with others in certain ways, lest they become romantically involved—for since you can only have one romantic partner at a time, you have to make sure that your one partner is a good investment (and here we are back in the capitalist market even in our love relationships). Women check men out for financial means, men ponder whether a woman’s beauty is socially recognized enough to offer the prestige he hopes to get by having her at his side, and no one is able to experiment with partners who don’t meet enough of these criteria to be potential spouses. For that matter—just as in your friendships, there may be people in the world with whom you can spend some wonderfully romantic time once or twice a month, but with whom you don’t have enough in common to date steadily and then marry, etc. (although you often see such mismatched couples, who would have been happy as more sporadic partners, making each other miserable in fifty-year marriages). Non-monogamous relationships make such things possible without paying any price of mutual unhappiness. I’ve decided that I no longer want to have a hierarchy of value between my friendships and my love relationships: they’re both crucial, irreplaceable in my life, and f*ck anyone who wants me to choose between any of them. Not only that, but I’ve stopped classifying things as “love” or “friendship” according to arbitrary superficial details—the feelings I share with certain friends are so intimate, so beautiful, that it’s ridiculous that I don’t call them lovers just because we don’t sleep together. It’s f*cking absurd that sex should be the dividing line between our relationships, between which ones take precedence, between who we play with, live with, sleep with, who we take care of first, who we die with at last. By the same token, in open relationships, sex isn’t weighed down with so many implications and restrictions. Love and desire outside the lines of the monogamy model are demonized and attacked on every front in this society—in the lives of women, at least, and those men who don’t want to be monogamous but also despise the superficiality and sexist bullsh*t of the “player” scene are unlikely to find support in feminist circles, either. Sex should not be contained, and it should not be made symbolic of anything—it should simply be another way for people to be physically affectionate with each other, to give each other pleasure, to be intimate and emotionally expressive, taking equal responsibility for their involvement but without having to answer to some hypercritical mass, social expectation, or moral taboo. An open relationship is just that: it is a relationship in which people can be open with each other, and with themselves—in which nothing need be hidden or suppressed or off limits, in which the whole world can be ours to explore without fear of transgressing imaginary boundaries. When we demand total openness and honesty from each other in relationships that include limits and taboos, we’re setting ourselves up for betrayals and dishonesty: to say “be open!” without being receptive to all of the possible truths is fascist and preposterous. We have to be supportive of each other, in every aspect of our individual characters, if we want real honesty to be possible. Otherwise, we’re like Christians at confession with each other, demanding that we reveal all out of some moral imperative, with the whip of shame ready for any straying impulse. We have to learn to embrace and celebrate anything that feels good for each other. If it’s good for our lovers, it’s good for us—are we really so selfish that we can’t see this? For one example of how this could work, let’s go back to the story of our tour. On the tour, different individuals formed close bonds, and shared private worlds together like lovers do; but they also remembered that for the community to function, they couldn’t withdraw from their relationships with everyone else. And whenever two people needed a break from each other or wanted to expand their horizons a bit, they would spend more time with others, because there were always others around them who also had things to offer. Everyone was safe and cared for, and no one was left out, because we weren’t paired off in exclusive twos. Conversely, the scarcity economy of lovers which we have right now makes each person hurry to pick another and chain her to him, before he is left alone forever. The alternative, which this fear of solitude prevents us from seeing, seems more preferable: a world without borders, in which each of us would be part of a broader family of lovers and friends, with no distinction made between the two—and no set format for any relationship, so experimentation would be a constant feature of every one, and no relationship could ever get dull or overwhelming. To get to such a world, we just have to get used to not limiting each other, to not thinking of love as a limited commodity. Jealousy, and what I’ve learned from it: Yes, I still feel jealous sometimes. I’ve had experiences before of being insanely jealous—not just of another man, but of other things my partners loved or experienced or were excited about. Being able to come to terms with these things has been very important in the development of my confidence and sense of self. It took me years to feel (not just understand) that if my lover loves other things or other people as well, it doesn’t mean I am less valuable. Besides, if (he or) she truly loves me, it’s not because I match up to some list of desired qualities that someone else can outmatch me at—she loves me for reasons that are unique to me, that no one else can compete with, so I have nothing to fear. Love isn’t a scarcity commodity—it increases, just like joy, the more it is permitted and shared and given away. I don’t feel like I have to hoard anyone all to myself now. I know that doesn’t work, or help to protect love (or me, for that matter). I consider my jealousy a worthy adversary, one that can teach me a lot about myself if I confront it rather than trying to protect myself from it by controlling others. I’ve had experiences in relationships before where lovers of mine have limited themselves in order to protect me from my jealousy, and it has been catastrophic for both of us, you can imagine. It’s just as important to me now that I help others to not be “afraid for me” as it is that I learn not to be afraid for myself. One of the things jealousy has taught me about is my attitude toward other men. It’s interesting for me to note that I’ve never felt threatened by women whom my partners were attracted to or involved with, but other men have always made me see red. In our society, men are conditioned not to trust each other, to hate each other, to try to “protect” women from other men (which often looks more like hoarding and protecting personal “property”), and this inclination makes sense when you look at how f*cked up many men are when it comes to interacting with women. But for me to not trust any men to be something good for my partners (past the point of limited friendship) is outright paranoia and territorial bullsh*t. If I trust the judgment of my partner, I should trust her to know what and who is good for her, and to not let my each-against-all male conditioning interfere. Some objections I’ve heard raised to open relationships: “It sounds good in theory, but the way people feel is more important than these abstractions…” Some people think that we come up with ideas and theories not as solutions to the real problems of our lives, but to show off what good ideas we can come up with. If it’s not clear by now that I’ve been thinking about this as an attempt to solve rather than exacerbate the problems in my love relationships, then I apologize for doing such a poor job writing this article. And hey—if you think open relationships can be tough on your emotions, just try long-term monogamy. They’re both hard sometimes. “But human nature—” F*ck you. Enough said. Human nature is what we make it, and you know that too, whether or not you want to own up to it—you cowardly excuse-mongering bastards. “I guess that’s fine if it’s what you want to try, but luckily I only want monogamy for myself! I’m all set!” That’s great for you, if it really is true—for the time being, at least. We’re always so thrilled when our desires happen to coincide with social rules: then it’s easy for us to feel proud of our desires, to think they’re beautiful, since they are universally accepted (indeed, everything around you is reinforcing the idea that what you are lucky enough to feel for the moment is perfection itself)… but you might not always be that “lucky,” you know. Should you (or someone else) ever feel a need that isn’t satisfied by the monogamy system, if you haven’t already made the effort to get others to understand and accept the idea that there are many different acceptable kinds of relationships and desire, you’ll be back at ground zero, finding yourself misunderstood, hated, called slut and whore. Nobody should have to go through that, ever, so whatever you personally need, you have a stake in promoting non-monogamy as a viable option too. Otherwise, we’ll all live in fear of waking up one day feeling a desire that is unacceptable—and that fascist power of moralism over our lives is exactly what I thought we were trying to fight in punk rock. That’s why I consider myself non-monogamous right now, even though I’ve only had sexual relations with one person over the past five months: I do what I do not out of a commitment to monogamy, but rather a commitment to meeting my own needs and those of others, with no f*cking regard for social norms—and to supporting others who do the same thing, whether or not they do it in the same way. Non-monogamy isn’t about sex, anyway—it’s a general approach to relationships with people, as I discussed above. “Open relationships are bad for women—it’s just another way for men to be selfish, and absent when women need them…” This is the kind of sexist remark I’d rather not have to deal with, but I’ve heard it before. It reminds me of the old myth that all [“good”] women want “responsible” monogamous relationships, and the ones who don’t must be confused [so it’s OK for us to look down on them, just as misogynist pigs call them sluts]. First of all, women have been the ones who introduced me to most of these ideas. Besides the women I know personally, the very best book I’ve been able to find on this subject (The Ethical Slut, by Dossie Easton and Catherine A. Liszt, on Greenery Press), which I would strongly recommend to anyone interested in the issue, is written by women [if you can’t find it, write me and I’ll lend you my copy]. Second of all, a lot of the men and women involved in pioneering different models for relationships over the past few decades have not been involved in heterosexual relationships, so in those cases this is a totally unfounded criticism. Third—people who say this make it sound like they think men are only emotionally nurturing to women who are paying them off for it with sex and denying them access to any other sex as a way to be sure the payoff will always work. God, I hope that’s not the best we can hope for in heterosexual relations… Finally—yes, it’s true that men have been conditioned to be selfish and somewhat less than nurturing in their relationships, and just shifting relationship models is not going to cure that. But that’s going to be a problem in whatever kinds of relationships they have, not just open ones, and it has to be dealt with separately. A loving, caring boy is not going to go running off for sex with some stranger when his lover (or one of his lovers) really needs him. There are so many dangers in our sexuality, since so much of it has been programmed by our enemies; we men need to unlearn the pressures that make us seek out superficial sex as a way to avoid real intimacy and support. That brings me to the third objection: “So does this mean you’re giving up on your romantic dreams, your hopes for living happily ever after, just trading them for a series of sexual episodes with acquaintances?” No, not at all. I’m not interested in evading personal commitments and long term relationships—rather, I want to protect them from being unnecessarily at risk. I want to secure my romantic relationships, so they won’t be at risk from trivial things like temporary boredom or attraction to others, by creating relationships that are sustainable through changes in my life and needs. That way I can hope to have my lovers as long as I have my friends, ‘til death do us part for real, and no old taboos (or jealousy, insecurity, etc.) will interfere. Sure, this will be hard sometimes, just like everything is hard sometimes—but the rewards of making this work will be greater in every way, I think. What I’m hoping to do here is free us from the unnecessary tragedies of our love affairs, the insecurities and possessiveness that deny us the commitment and pleasure we could have together. In order to be ready to remove those obstacles, we have to be ready to face the real tragedies head on, with great courage: we can’t demand that others protect us from our insecurities by limiting themselves, and we have to face the fact that there will be moments when we are alone. The price of not doing this is absurd—today, we suffer both the necessary and unnecessary tragedies in our relationships, because of the courage we lack. Is it too much to ask that we try something new? from http://lawrence.filmsforaction.org/Blog/Infinite_Relationships_Relationships_without_bounds_or_boundaries_love_without_limits/

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cassolotl

If you like the idea of electoral reform in the UK...

In the past hour or two it went over 100,000 signatures, which is really impressive. If epetitions.gov was open, this would have been enough to get MPs to discuss the issue in parliament. Some major newspapers have been calling for electoral reform, and people have been making graphs to illustrate how broken First Past the Post (the current system) is. This one’s my favourite:

But I also love this one:

So if you’d be interested in a system where you don’t have to vote tactically and the MPs voted in are representative of the votes they received, Please consider signing the petition and sharing it with your UK friends. :)

Thank you!

That’s great (I mean the blog post, not the voting situation). I wish they wouldn’t keep proposing STV (Single Transferrable Vote - the ‘prefenential’ system we had a referrendum on a few years back) as the only alternative to FPTP. STV would be an improvement but it is not Proportional Representation.

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cassolotl

The thing about playing on servers is you don’t get to experience the “eek I’ve just logged in and I’ve got no stuff and soon it will get dark and there will be monsters” intense rush for survival. And a defining feature of Minecraft is it’s kinda aimless.

Fortunately, a while back me and ...

I’d like to clarify a few things, since Cassolotl tends to brush over the details.

There are a few variations on this theme, but the point is to go adventuring in the wilderness without taking anything with you. You don’t need very much to survive in the wilderness, so long as you keep moving. You can kill the odd animal for food, find exposed coal and stone. Occasianally you will have to stop to cook the food and do crafting. When you have a bed (which would be as soon as you’ve encountered 3 sheep) you don’t even have to stop at night (so long as there are no other players online).

The first variation we tried was just walking away from our base to see what was there. We were quite new to survival mode at that point and after walking not very far, we made a map and found our way home.

The second variation adds purpose/direction to the MacGyver (MacGyver is a verb). If you have OP, having emptied your inventory (don’t forget the armour) you choose a semi random place many km (we tried about 5 initially) away to teleport to. You may have to try a few times with different altitudes in order to find one that doesn’t result in you suffocating underground or falling to your death. The mission is to get home. If you are playing competitively with others, you can all teleport to different locations (but all the same distance from spawn) and race each other home.

The interesting thing about this one is that without the debug screen, you have no way of knowing (a) how far away you are, and (b) which direction to go in. So after a bit of aimless walking to gather a few resources like food, you have to mine for redstone so you can make a compass.

In the absence of OP, you need a quick and easy way to get very far away from the centre. The quickest way I’ve found so far is “sprint-digging” through the nether: dig down in the nether till you hit bedrock. low altitude reduces the chance of encountering a lava lake, but you will still find the occasional source block of lava, so don’t start digging until you’ve drunk your extended fire resistance potion. If you have an efficiency IV diamond pickaxe, you should be able to aim such that you can spirnt at full speed through netherwrack, even with potion of swiftness. Make sure you have a minute or so left of fire resistance at the end of your sprint-dig, so that you can carve out enough space for the nether portal.

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cassolotl

Gender on forms! A quick general survey

So I reckon the optimal easy-to-implement, not-too-confusing-for-the-uninitiated gender question is like this:

Gender:
  • Male
  • Female
  • [open text field]
  • Prefer not to say

And of course, instead of “prefer not to say” you could just let the question be optional and respondents can leave it blank.

However, I have been wrong before and will probably be wrong many more times. Can this be improved while still keeping in male and female as options?

Also, just in case an open text field is not possible, what’s a way of saying “other” that’s not, well, othering?

Binary words for sex (Male, Female) and words for gender (Man, Woman) are used interchangably because cis normativity. This is unhelpful. Can we not do that?

Aside from that, it really depends on why the data is being collected and what the rules are. If "prefer not to say" is an option, then why not just have an optional blank text field? That would be super-inclusive and cis people might even get to think about their gender. Nobody has to be othered.

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me-ander

So this is a very overdue post. Like, over a year overdue.

Thanks to randomgiveaway, I got freebies! I got awesome freebies!

First of all, this:

So this isn’t that exciting, for the vast majority of people. But the vast majority of people don’t enjoy filing paperwork as much as I do. (I’m weird, but that particular bit of weird is a useful one.)

It’s a regular irritation when I receive post that doesn’t have a specific date on it, because it messes up my filing system. Now I have a solution! I mean, I could have written dates on, but that’s just not as satisfying.

Next, there was a specific call to give something to someone who had a desktop PC and were happy tinkering inside. I definitely fall into that category. I was expecting an old CD drive or hard drive, or possibly a USB PCI card. Something not massively useful, but something I could use.

Nope.

Wow. That’s actually… wow. That’s a pretty serious bit of kit right there.

Naturally, I installed it straight away (I’ve also since dusted):

So let’s see how it does. Forgive me the Windows benchmarks, but it seemed the easiest way to get a bloody obvious indicator of just how serious a bit of kit this is:

As I say, this is a rather overdue post; that graphics card has been powering my gaming without the slightest issue for over a year.

Now I just need to work out what to do with the card it replaced, which was not too shabby itself, even after a few years of use and another year of me procrastinating. I’d pay the gift forward, but that’s already been done. Plus I’d have given the game away. Current plan is probably to sell it and give the proceeds to charity.

Thank you randomgiveaway!!

This is the kind of post that makes me want to give more things away randomly. *looks for things I could do without that might possibly be of value to someone*

The date stamp is pretty satisfying to use (although I imagine one of those metal library ones would be even more so). I might have kept it had I not discovered the satisfaction of writing the date correctly on things.

I’m so glad the RADEON HD 5770 worked for you and that it was an improvement; that card caused me nothing but trouble. I have one of these now.

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Epic sadness at not being able to connect to Bee anymore - a reality I wasn't fully confronted with until I opened MC Chat on my phone in order to log into This Land. Somehow this morning I managed to stop and back up Bee, and cancel the hosting, without fully feeling the implications.

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300 Rise of an Empire can be summarised with only one word: gratuitous. There were blood splats that were bigger and more frequent than reason dictates. There were also breasts that were apparently there because that's what some members of the audience want to see, rather than because it made particular sense in terms of the film. I think the blood splats were the same - maybe the feedback from the first film included a lot of appreciation of the blood and gore effects, so in this film they made the blood bigger and added more gore. I suspect the plot was made up in order to support the breasts and the blood splats. The film concept (was there a concept?) itself was unnecessary and didn't add anything to the original film. The original, which says it all really, is if anything somewhat depreciated by Rise of an Empire.

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My experience with AutCraft - TL;DR: bad. My experience with Bee - TL;DR: good.

This evening I found myself reaching out as I often do, looking for other autism-friendly adult Minecraft servers like my own. But every time I do, all the seach results are about AutCraft which is for children. So I read one of the many articles about AutCraft and it sounded very positive and very much like mine intends to be, but with a way bigger budget. The impression I got from articles was that it was run by autistic people (like mine is) and has custom plugins (at $1,000 each) to make the experience more suited to autistic people. The article also said it wasn't only for children. I thought "cool, maybe they've got a really nice chat system so people don't get overloaded, maybe my work here is done".

So, I clicked on the "Whitelist Application" button on their website and it prompted me to make an account. The account creation form had a parent name field and a parent email address field, both of which were required. So, it looks like if it's for adults too, then it's not for adults with independence.

Then, once I had an account, I clicked on the whitelist application button again, and it apparently submitted my account sign-up form as my whitelist application. That was a bit unexpected, unexplained, and therefore I consider, autism-unfriendly, but perhaps it makes sense to some people.

Then, recovering from this bewilderment I wondered onto the forums looking for more information, particularly about plugins, and I find that, apparently there is no modification at all to the way chat operates. It's just vanilla minecraft, but with the usual "how important you are" indicators. I think there's an emoticon that goes here :O

So, having established the uselessness (to me) of AutCraft without even having to login, I withdrew my application and sought to delete my account, but apparently it was an enjin account, which is a terrible thing and made me opt in to everything and even said things on my behalf. It made a whole story about me, saying that I liked gaming and wanted people to privately message me! :O I've managed (with the help of a google search) to deactivate my enjin account, so it's publicly hidden, but I tested trying to log back in to autcraft and it was immediately back again, so clearly it hasn't been deleted and I can't find a "delete forever (a long time!)" button. Not cool.

It was such a relief to return to Bee. The picture above is to help emphasise Bee rather than AutCraft, and also to calm me down. We're still working (don't worry, we wear yellow safety hats) on making Bee really good, but I find it hard to imagine a better server for independent autistic* adults even now. We're also trans* friendly (or at least that's the intention), and at the moment over half of our active players are non-binary. Also, the initial spawn point is currently a contruction site covered in glowing pumpkins; what's not to love?

(*autism, aspergers, and other autism-related conditions, formally diagnosed or otherwise)

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The thing about patriarchy is that individual men, gay and straight, are often really wonderful people who you love deeply, but they have internalized some really poisonous shit. So every once in a while they say or do something that really shakes you because you’re no longer totally certain they see you as a human being, and you feel totally disempowered to explain that to them.

I literally can't (express my feelings about how good and helpful this post is to me).

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cassolotl

Dream

This morning I dreamed about my family a lot. There are two I remember clearly; one involved being scared for and of my brother because he had been bitten by a vampire and would turn if he bit someone; I was hiding and covering my neck. When I woke up the duvet had slipped and my neck was cold.

The other was that I was getting married, and all my family were there. In the post wedding exhaustion I wanted to put my jeans on under my skirt for comfort, and it turned out that I had designed and made my wedding skirt so that it looked good over a pair of jeans. I LOVE dream-me! So practical! On that topic, I’m pretty sure I wasn’t getting married to anyone, I was just getting married on my own. This was totally normal and acceptable in the dream, of course.

I drew my wedding skirt for you, in case any of you are getting married soon and want inspiration.

Yes, that is some very bright orange satin, and the skirt has petals.

Fantastic! I think getting married generally rather than to someone should be considered normal. The whole concept of marriage could become less like a glorification of special relationships and more like a coming-of-age party - getting married as an excuse for a you-centred fancy celebration to which all your family and friends are invited. Getting married with someone else could be optional.

Also, there's no way I'd miss your wedding if I knew you'd be wearing that skirt.

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cassolotl

Such woozy

It’s days like today it really hits me that I’m not imagining my illness. If I move the room spins, and walking feels more like a sustained forward collapse. (I walked a lot the day before yesterday, and yesterday I was visited by social workers and then I went to the GP. That’s why I’m bed-bound.)

Adam and Jules are getting some food together for me. I’m zzzing on HabitRPG so no one will get hurt on our quest due to my inactivity. I’m sitting up in bed right now and the room is spinning.

I gave Adam a list of criteria for food I could manage to eat.

  • Nothing that requires sitting up straight (eg: cous cous)
  • Nothing that requires cutlery (eg: soup)
  • Nothing that can drip (eg: sauces etc)
  • Nothing that’s a funny shape and therefore harder to manoeuvre into my mouth (eg: salad)

They’ve gone and made me potato wedges, I think? Heroes.

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