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Hellote

@lunarfantom / lunarfantom.tumblr.com

All your base are belong to us
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fabrickind

I know the joke is that Ghost Trick fans can't tell you why to play it, just that you should, but here's some spoiler-free reasons to play it:

  • It's an incredible puzzle game. The puzzles are basically Rube-Goldberg machines, where you manipulate objects in a series to effect change in the overall situation. Do you like complex mechanisms and the concept of the butterfly effect? Play this.
  • The basic gameplay: you are a ghost. You have the ability to posses and manipulate objects, and move from object to object. Someone bas died. You can go to four minutes before their death to change their fate using your Rube Goldberg powers. Also! The puzzles do a great job of ramping you up in difficulty and teaching you the gameplay, but wow do they get HARD in late game. You can replay any puzzle, and also rewind time as you wish. You can't lock yourself out of things by doing it wrong, since you can redo.
  • The story is SO GOOD. There's a reason why everyone tells you as little as possible -- it's a compelling mystery that sucks you in. The basic idea: you are dead. You need to figure out who you are and who killed you. This spins out into a tale of political intrigue.
  • It's by Shu Takumi, the creator of Ace Attorney. It has very similar vibes, in that it's absolutely bonkers characters and situations but also WILL make you cry once it's all revealed. Great mix of serious and humorous tones. Seriously, someone dies when a giant roast chicken statue falls on them and the root cause is because of [serious political events]
  • The aesthetics. Great music, great character design, have you SEEN what the game looks like? Really good use of color and stylization. Character animations are often hilarious.

  • Missile is there. You WILL love bestest boy. Don't google him. Just trust.

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artsekey

This post is what made me buy Ghost Trick!!!!

Go buy Ghost Trick!!

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lunarfantom
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browniefox

+Anima Au Guide

I really need +anima aus to be a thing, so here's a little guide.

What the Hell is this?

+Anima is a ten-volume manga written by Natsumi Mukai - it is very good and cute, you should read it! What this au would be taking from it, though, is the concept of anima. When a child is put into a life-threatening situation, there's a chance that they will get the power of a nearby animal that will allow them to survive.

Getting an anima is rare enough that, while people are aware of them, they may still mistake fish anima or white bird anima as mermaids or angels. Those with anima are usually treated poorly and feared as something dangerous and scary.

People who have +anima are able to look like normal humans most of the time, using their anima and transforming back and forth at will. When they are not using their anima, however, there is still proof of it as a marking(s) on their body. The mark reflects the animal and what trait it gives them, and the placement usually matches up somewhat with where the animal trait shows up.

In canon, only children will every have an anima. The anima usually stays with the kids for as long as they need it, most (all?) losing it when they're an adult. The exact definition of 'child' is pretty vague - there are some teens who have anima, one is a normal teen though and one is native american-coded (called Kim-un-Kur) and the Kim-un-Kur don't lose their anima when they grow up, and one adult but that one is also Kim-un-Kur.

Can there be fake anima or manufactured anima? Surprisingly, yes! In the +anima world, a scientist figured out how to extract the anima from those with it. If it is done willingly, then that anima can be placed in another. However, the bond between the anima and the new person is fragile, and it doesn't seem to really stick around.

Some additional notes:

  • There is one instance of an anima being transferred from one person to another. This was with a member of the Kim-un-Kur, and it's unclear if that is a them thing or not
  • Sometimes, anima are shown going even more animal-like than their anima usually manifests, but this is very rare

(I imagine if this did somehow catch on to being an au, it'd be like daemon aus where the concept of daemons is divorced from the actual world of hdm, but I guess I'll add that there is a part of the world in +anima with a big anima slavery market so make of that what you will)

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lunarfantom

Ooh yes! I didn’t know about +anima until I accidentally formed a friendship with the lunchlady at my highschool, and realizing I like anime, but not which types, she impulse bought me the first volume of +anima! I would like to add that  it is implied anima leave their child when they grow up because the anima senses they no longer need to protect their child. Cooro is an interesting case study because it’s strongly implied that Cooro, despite no longer being in a life-threatening scenario, needs to keep his anima because he got it at such a young age, it’s become a huge part of who he is, and is thus entangled with his identity. Kim-un-kur, being native-american coded, seem to be implied to keep their anima as adults because they are 1. more in-tune with nature and 2. in their culture, it’s not ostracized, and therefor there is no need to lose them. (Getting a job when your boss sees you as wild animal is pretty hard, so it makes sense these animals, who’s entire goal is the ensure the survival of their host, would leave their host when their presence becomes a danger to their survival).

I honestly think the cultural implications of this series are fascinating, because although the author seems unaware of it, it serves as a pretty interesting allegory for any child possessing a trait that isn’t accepted in society, and their struggle to balance their identity as someone with that trait, with the societal pressure to change and fit in, which is a particularly big thing in Japan. It would be great to see an AU in which more and more anima are hanging onto their animal partner in adulthood, and are pressuring a cultural shift.

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Saddest thing ever is reading an academic paper about a threatened or declining species where you can tell the author is really trying to come up with ways the animal could hypothetically be useful to humans in a desperate attempt to get someone to care. Nobody gives a shit about the animals that “don’t affect” us and it seriously breaks my heart

“No I can’t come out tonight I’m sobbing about this entomologist’s heartfelt plea for someone to care about an endangered moth”

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bogleech

This is how I learn there's a moth whose tiny caterpillars live exclusively off the old shells of dead tortoises.

[Image description: text from a section titled On Being Endangered: An Afterthought that says:

Realizing that a species is imperiled has broad connotations, given that it tells us something about the plight of nature itself. It reminds us of the need to implement conservation measures and to protect the region of which the species is a part. But aside form the broader picture, species have intrinsic worth and are deserving of preservation. Surely an oddity such as C. vicinella cannot simply be allowed to vanish.

We should speak up on behalf of this little moth, not only because by so doing we would bolster conservation efforts now underway in Florida, [highlighting begins] but because we would be calling attention to the existence of a species that is so infinitely worth knowing. [end highlighting]

But is quaintness all that can be said on behalf of this moth? Does this insect not have hidden value beyond its overt appeal? Does not its silk and glue add, potentially, to its worth? Could these products not be unique in ways that could ultimately prove applicable?

End image description]

because we would be calling attention to the existence of a species that is so infinitely worth knowing

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rackiera

I was so inspired by this I made it into a piece of art for a final in one of my courses for storytelling in conservation

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reblogged

no idea how relatable this is gonna be to the general public but stim toys arent enough anymore i gotta stick to the walls

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bogleech

You know, as the concept of “zombifying fungi” becomes more and more popular, I notice it still referred to everywhere as like a “brain parasite.” So I guess a lot of people overlooked or forgot how in 2019 it was discovered that cordyceps and other similar fungal parasites leave the brain and nervous system completely untouched. They only control the muscles. They use chemical signals to make the muscles flex in real time where they want to go :)

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lunarfantom

Actually, this article you linked claims that ants in the late stages of infection did in fact have their nervous system infected. Quote: “Back in 2017, Prof. Hughes and his team scanned ultra-thin slices of infected ants under a powerful microscope to build a 3D model, painstakingly marking which parts were ant and which were fungus. That gave them a much more detailed look at what was happening structurally at the cellular level. They found a surprisingly high percentage of fungal cells in the ants' bodies. The cells were concentrated directly outside the brain without ever penetrating the brain.Instead, the fungal cells formed an elaborate, interconnected 3D network, enabling them to communicate with each other and exchange nutrients. They essentially cut the brain off from the rest of the ant's body, so the networked cells can control its behavior.” In order to “cut the brain off from the rest of the ant’s body” they would have infected the peripheral... the non-brain, parts of the nervous system. Or at least, that’s what this wording strongly implies. However! It is true that the death-grip specifically, the moment when the ant is dying and clamps it’s jaw, is controlled via the chemical signals produced by the fungus in the jaw and NOT the nervous system. Second quote: “ As the infected insects were dying, Mangold et al. froze them and removed the jaw muscles for preservation. Then they studied those tissues under a scanning electron microscope (SEM). Those images clearly showed the fungus filaments penetrating the muscle tissue, but the neuromuscular junctions—where nerve signals from the brain would enter the muscles to control their movement—remained intact, indicating that the fungus is not directly affecting an infected ant's brain. The team also observed strange vesicle-like particles attached to infected tissue, although it's not clear whether those are being produced by the fungus or the host ant. “ Unless there’s a link to a full breakdown somewhere... ah! https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1711673114 “ Both ex vivo metabolomic (11) and in vivo transcriptomic (13) studies suggested the fungus actively secretes small molecules that affect the muscles and nervous tissue. “ The nervous system is definitely not left, “untouched,” just the brain. “Big deal, my brain is what makes decisions!” Okay yes, but not always. Have you ever tried to pick up like, a super hot pan, or pot, and dropped it before you even realized it was burning you? That’s your non-brain nervous system! What happened was, your peripheral nervous system carried a message from your hand to your spine saying “This is so hot we’re burning!” and your spine said, “No need to get the brain involved, drop it right now!” And so, your hand obeyed the order from your spine and dropped it. The message of burning pain, as well as the jolting feeling of you dropping the pan still reaches your brain of course, but you were not involved in it. Of course, if you know in advance that you’re about to pick up a burning thing, you can override this spinal-signal and force yourself not to drop it. If this fungus affected humans the way it affects ants, you would find yourself unable to do this. “At least my brain is unaffected though!” Not quite. It seems like the fungus still tries to manipulate the brain from afar, by altering the chemicals it releases near it. Quote: “The species of O. unilateralis s.l. studied here can dynamically alter the secondary metabolite profile it secretes in the presence of brain versus muscle tissue, and it also produces unique metabolites when it encounters a brain it normally manipulates compared with a brain from an ant species it does not control (11). Thus, the biting behavior may be driven by chemical means, and more work is needed to understand the effect of this specialist parasite given our observation that the brain is not invaded.” TLDR: Fungus does not invade brain, but it does affect nerves and release chemicals that probably affect brain.

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As a young librarian, I started trying to figure out why more young people aren't ever coming in; 90% of our demographic are the elderly and parents of children, and the rest are a rough mix of the kids and teenagers who come in just for school projects. As a result, I've been attempting different ways to get the Youth TM to come into libraries, but first I wanted to see why they don't come in. Please reblog to get this poll out to more people! <3

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lunarfantom

Issues getting a card... they always want proof I live there, and ID, and other such stuff.

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reblogged

I read an AITA post a few weeks back about a woman who liked having snacks in the bath when she's had a long day (a result of residual trauma iirc - the bath was her safe space). Her brand new husband of three weeks, a man twice her age who had no job, made her pay all of his bills and do all housework, and spent all day every day gaming because he wanted to make it as a Twitch streamer, had always been fine with this; but, on the day in question, had whisked her bath snacks out of her hands as she was on her way to the bathroom and tried to bin them, telling her it was time to 'break her of that filthy habit in his home'. She told him if he ever actually paid anything towards the house she owns outright he might get a say, took her snacks back, and had her lovely bath. He was since giving her the silent treatment.

(Obviously the judgement was an avalanche of 'NTA and also he's abusing you', which she agreed with, and decided to kick him out, so happy ending.)

Anyway I told my husband about this and he was outraged. "I would never do that!" he told me, furious. "I would find it adorable if you had bath snacks!"

Since then, every time I try to have a bath (which I only do as a rare treat) after about ten minutes there has been an anxious scrabbling at the bathroom door.

"Elanor!" he says. "Do you have bath snacks? Do you need anything?"

My answer is irrelevant. He brings me wine and poptarts. Now I have bath snacks. I'm a bath snacks person. Last time he was literally sleeping on the sofa when I went for the bath. Somehow this still happened. I now have an eager bathroom butler. How did this happen. I have never been so decadent yet bewildered.

I regret to inform you that this is nothing mystical, your husband is just a simp.

Unrelated, I now have a very eager bathroom butler of my own

...I really hope this is a case of that word not meaning what you think it means

Yeah, kinda sad to use a slur for a man who obviously loves his wife and wants to do right by her.

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lunarfantom

Hot take, “simp” was always meant to be a slur to make people feel bad for treating women well.

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rhube

What happens when you don't report pornbots

What you can see here are among the most popular posts of the last month for the convin (Connor/Gavin Detroit Become Human) tag for the last month. And presumably popular in lollipop, cityscape, rick day, eva long, dostoyevsky, and all the other random, unrelated tags added to these posts.

You can see two identical posts made by separate bots that feature a bit.ly (so, disguised, you don't know whether the address is safe/where you're going) link to a website that contains an image of a pretty young women (but who knows what else).

Each post is liked by about a dozen other bots, and only bots. (I reported them all, so can confirm their profiles were obviously those of bots/porn bots.) Some of them even use the same image in the pfp. Some are developed blogs full of porn images, some are clearly newer and don't even have a pfp yet. They are all gaining legitimacy from each other by the likes which act as links to their Tumblrs, and adding legitimacy to the post they have liked, which links to their ultimate goal: the site where they make money in undoubtedly dodgy ways.

They are doing this to legitimise their websites for search engines like Google, but if you don't care about that, it has the same effect in your Tumblr tags.

If we don't stop them, ALL your favourite hashtags are going to be full of meaningless posts like this, and probably porn you don't want to see (very different from porn you DO want to see).

This is why we report and block, lads. Not just because they are annoying and irrelevant to us, but because if we don't stop them they will take over this hellsite, and they very clearly do not understand the nature of the hell in which we live.

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neil-gaiman

We report as Spam...

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lunarfantom

Remember to report as Spam and NOT as porn! This is very important, don’t mix these up!

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lunarfantom

I’ve never tried to describe one of these but: Tumblr post that says “The progression of the millennial experience during adulthood” The image is of a random fish civilian from Spongebob, he looks enraged, and his expression slowly grows more and more hostile as the captions continue. They read: “2000: Go to college of you’ll be flipping burgers!” “2008: What do you mean you can’t find a job, is flipping burgers too good for you?” “2016: You want $15/hr for flipping burgers?! Millennials are so entitled.“ “2021: Why does no one want to flip burgers anymore?!?” By the end, the guy is screaming at the top of his lungs. He looks deranged.

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sketchshoppe

A doctor discovers an important question patients should be asked

This patient isn’t usually mine, but today I’m covering for my partner in our family-practice office, so he has been slipped into my schedule.

Reading his chart, I have an ominous feeling that this visit won’t be simple.

A tall, lanky man with an air of quiet dignity, he is 88. His legs are swollen, and merely talking makes him short of breath.

He suffers from both congestive heart failure and renal failure. It’s a medical Catch-22: When one condition is treated and gets better, the other condition gets worse. His past year has been an endless cycle of medication adjustments carried out by dueling specialists and punctuated by emergency-room visits and hospitalizations.

Hemodialysis would break the medical stalemate, but my patient flatly refuses it. Given his frail health, and the discomfort and inconvenience involved, I can’t blame him.

Now his cardiologist has referred him back to us, his primary-care providers. Why send him here and not to the ER? I wonder fleetingly.

With us is his daughter, who has driven from Philadelphia, an hour away. She seems dutiful but wary, awaiting the clinical wisdom of yet another doctor.

After 30 years of practice, I know that I can’t possibly solve this man’s medical conundrum.

A cardiologist and a nephrologist haven’t been able to help him, I reflect,so how can I? I’m a family doctor, not a magician. I can send him back to the ER, and they’ll admit him to the hospital. But that will just continue the cycle… .

Still, my first instinct is to do something to improve the functioning of his heart and kidneys. I start mulling over the possibilities, knowing all the while that it’s useless to try.

Then I remember a visiting palliative-care physician’s words about caring for the fragile elderly: “We forget to ask patients what they want from their care. What are their goals?”

I pause, then look this frail, dignified man in the eye.

“What are your goals for your care?” I ask. “How can I help you?”

The patient’s desire

My intuition tells me that he, like many patients in their 80s, harbors a fund of hard-won wisdom.

He won’t ask me to fix his kidneys or his heart, I think. He’ll say something noble and poignant: “I’d like to see my great-granddaughter get married next spring,” or “Help me to live long enough so that my wife and I can celebrate our 60th wedding anniversary.”

His daughter, looking tense, also faces her father and waits.

“I would like to be able to walk without falling,” he says. “Falling is horrible.”

This catches me off guard.

That’s all?

But it makes perfect sense. With challenging medical conditions commanding his caregivers’ attention, something as simple as walking is easily overlooked.

A wonderful geriatric nurse practitioner’s words come to mind: “Our goal for younger people is to help them live long and healthy lives; our goal for older patients should be to maximize their function.”

Suddenly I feel that I may be able to help, after all.

“We can order physical therapy — and there’s no need to admit you to the hospital for that,” I suggest, unsure of how this will go over.

He smiles. His daughter sighs with relief.

“He really wants to stay at home,” she says matter-of-factly.

As new as our doctor-patient relationship is, I feel emboldened to tackle the big, unspoken question looming over us.

“I know that you’ve decided against dialysis, and I can understand your decision,” I say. “And with your heart failure getting worse, your health is unlikely to improve.”

He nods.

“We have services designed to help keep you comfortable for whatever time you have left,” I venture. “And you could stay at home.”

Again, his daughter looks relieved. And he seems … well … surprisingly fine with the plan.

I call our hospice service, arranging for a nurse to visit him later today to set up physical therapy and to begin plans to help him to stay comfortable — at home.

Back home

Although I never see him again, over the next few months I sign the order forms faxed by his hospice nurses. I speak once with his granddaughter. It’s somewhat hard on his wife to have him die at home, she says, but he’s adamant that he wants to stay there.

A faxed request for sublingual morphine (used in the terminal stages of dying) prompts me to call to check up on him.

The nurse confirms that he is near death.

I feel a twinge of misgiving: Is his family happy with the process that I set in place? Does our one brief encounter qualify me to be his primary-care provider? Should I visit them all at home?

Two days later, and two months after we first met, I fill out his death certificate.

Looking back, I reflect: He didn’t go back to the hospital, he had no more falls, and he died at home, which is what he wanted. But I wonder if his wife felt the same.

Several months later, a new name appears on my patient schedule: It’s his wife.

“My family all thought I should see you,” she explains.

She, too, is in her late 80s and frail, but independent and mentally sharp. Yes, she is grieving the loss of her husband, and she’s lost some weight. No, she isn’t depressed. Her husband died peacefully at home, and it felt like the right thing for everyone.

“He liked you,” she says.

She’s suffering from fatigue and anemia. About a year ago, a hematologist diagnosed her with myelodysplasia (a bone marrow failure, often terminal). But six months back, she stopped going for medical care.

I ask why.

“They were just doing more and more tests,” she says. “And I wasn’t getting any better.”

Now I know what to do. I look her in the eye and ask:

“What are your goals for your care, and how can I help you?”

-Mitch Kaminski

A beautifully written account of what it is like to be a good doctor, whose only concern is: “how can I help”.

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Anonymous asked:

So this is a weird ask but I figured an Actual Welsh Person would be the person to go to, and you've been pretty gung-ho about the language thing. So I hope I'm not bothering you with this.

Is there a cultural consensus on foreigners learning Welsh? I'm American and I don't have a single shred of Welsh ancestry. My family is historically German, and we've been here since the English Colony days, so it honestly seems really weird even to try to claim some tie to German heritage.

Anyway, my point is, I have absolutely zero legitimate claim to the Welsh language. I don't plan to travel to Wales in the foreseeable future. I have no reason to learn Welsh except that it sounds pretty and I enjoy a challenge.

Putting aside the issue of "lmao it's gonna be stupid difficult to learn an endangered language if you don't have anyone to speak it with" (I have a loose plan for dealing with that, and the experience of learning two languages to "can read most novels without needing the dictionary" level without anyone to speak them with in person already) entirely, do you reckon it's okay for me to study Welsh? I know Americans are really, really bad about just kinda assuming the whole world belongs to us, and I'm trying not to do that here. Especially because Welsh IS endangered.

I imagine your average Welsh person probably doesn't care what some random American does. But like, for people who care about the language...Would it be considered disrespectful or overstepping for me to study it? I don't expect you to speak for the entire country, of course, but I respect your opinion and I feel like you'd have a grasp on what the general feeling towards a foreigner like me might be.

Thanks for your time.

I honestly, truly, do not understand how the discussion around cultural appropriation has been twisted in the cultural zeitgeist to such an extent that people now feel anxiety about learning other languages.

This is not a personal attack on you, Anon - the gods only know that you clearly care and want to do the right thing, and that's beautiful and wonderful and also I will come back to extolling your personal virtues at the end of this post, so stay tuned. But I do want to take a moment here to talk about the broader issue at play, which I have seen echoed multiple times elsewhere, because fuck me what are we doing to ourselves.

Learn. Languages.

That is what languages are for! To be used for communication. If you don't learn languages, you are forcing everyone else to use yours. How have we somehow, as a culture, twisted that into being the less selfish option? How have we done that? I posted my favourite Welsh idiom recently, and someone reblogged it and wrote in the tags that they loved the idiom and would start using it, but they would do so in English because their "Welsh pronunciation would make their Welsh grandmother spin in her grave."

What kind of mental gymnastics is that?

How the fuck do you twist it so badly that you think taking a Welsh idiom for your own and exclusively using it in English is less offensive than saying it in Welsh but maybe a bit wrong? I've literally had people proclaim to me that they're learning Welsh on Duolingo but they never speak it because they're too self-conscious, and they tell me this not to highlight a massive flaw in themselves that they need to work on, but as though I'm supposed to pat them on the head and thank them for... still making me speak English to them.

There was that post where a Deaf blogger received an anonymous ask saying learning sign language is cultural appropriation, as though Deaf people haven't been calling for Sign to be taught in schools. As though a Deaf person being entirely isolated in everyday hearing society unless they have an interpreter with them is less offensive than a hearing person being able to use BSL.

Like, these are not sacred or religious languages. The purpose of Welsh or BSL or what have you is not to perform the Eleusinian mysteries. It's a living everyday language, same as English -

Except it's not the same as English. As Anon here so rightly points out, Welsh is endangered. That means we are desperate for people to learn it. That's how it will survive. That's how we reversed it from 'dying language' to 'living language', in fact - we managed to get lots of people to learn it. You know what is a threat, though? People not learning it because, like poor Anon here, they've been somehow convinced by Western society that you're only allowed to learn languages if you personally have a historic or cultural connection to them that you can prove via six forms of ID and a letter of recommendation from a druid. Or people never using it because they're too embarrassed to try and risk losing face by getting it wrong, or maybe sounding a bit silly, and thus forcing us to use English anyway. Those are threats.

Anon. Listen to me, feel the sincerity of my words: we adore you. We adore you. You cannot imagine how appreciated it is when someone learns Welsh. You cannot imagine how touched we are that you wanted to, that you tried, that you respected us enough and considered us valid enough that you made the effort. Our closest neighbours are the very people who are still trying to stamp out Welsh to this very day. Do you know the number 1 reaction I get, by a country mile, when I tell English people that I speak Welsh? It's some variant on a scoff, and the sentiment "Why? What's the point? Bit useless, isn't it?"

By a country mile. That's the reaction I expect, and brace for, and is overwhelmingly what I get.

So when someone who isn't Welsh actually chooses to learn Welsh?

Imagine what that feels like! To go from not-even-hidden disgust, from outright mockery and often active suppression campaigns, to a foreigner earnestly telling me that they love and respect my language so much they're trying to learn it. Imagine how that feels.

Please learn Welsh. Please learn it. We will love you for it. We will build you a statue. We will bake little Welshcakes with your face on in icing sugar. We will write you poems in complex rhyme. We'll name an Eisteddfod prize after you. We'll name at least, like, three sheep after you. Thank you, thank you so much for even wanting to learn. You're a delight and a marvel and a wonder. Your hair looks great today, as it does all days. You're a strong, independent human being of immense wisdom and compassion. If this were a Welsh myth you'd be a wise salmon the heroes came to for advice. What a fantastic human.

The welcome awaits if you choose to learn

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Well I'm not sure which of you GREMLINS dug this post up and started reblogging it again

BUT!

I just want to address the message in these tags quickly:

(This is not me telling anyone off)

I am a fluent Welsh speaker, and I have met many people who learned Welsh from Duolingo, and they are 100% comprehensible. I do understand that when it doesn't quite seem to match up with what you personally know and are comfortable with you can get the impression that it's therefore Wrong, but it's not true. Duolingo Welsh is absolutely fine. Its method of teaching can be difficult in places, absolutely, but (a) it teaches primarily Cymraeg Byw, which is dialect-mixed learner Welsh anyway; and (b) real Welsh speaking humans also mix dialects. It's just not true that you aren't understood if you learn Duolingo Welsh.

I have a Belgian friend who has completed the entire Welsh course, in fact. I can literally just... speak Welsh to her now. She's not wholly fluent - she needs to go a little more slowly, and still has to translate in her head - but she's fully conversational. If you choose to use Duolingo as your method of learning, it is perfectly usable, and the Welsh you learn is completely fine.

(Pls learn)

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