https://en.pronouns.page/@madewokherd
Something I mentioned on stream that bears repeating: learning to satisfice is one of the biggest positive changes I've made in my habits.
This means making decisions based on what is needed, instead of what is best. You go with the first option that satisfies your needs or wants, or pick randomly from satisfactory options, instead of trying to find the one that is best.
It frees up a lot of energy and makes decisions easier without making life worse.
@Weirdaholic Thank you for responding.
I think I have the same problem. It occurred to me when reading your reply that I could mute things that are a problem for me, if I don't have the self-control to ignore them.
It'd be nice if we can keep namesearching from becoming a thing here so we can use actual names and people can filter them properly. I'm.. not very hopeful about that.
On Twitter, I tried to avoid RTing anything that talks about bad things happening in the world, because I saw that it was becoming a depressing place to be. I felt that it had crossed a line from highlighting worthy causes to simply indulging in despair over evils in the world.
Do CWs fix that? Do you find that, if you are not in a good place and you see a CW that tells you the post will make your mood worse, you can easily move past it? Do you expand them all anyway without thinking? Do you feel guilt for ignoring real problems if you scroll past?
Basically, are CWs enough (perhaps combined with Mastodon's anti-viral nature) to prevent our feeds from becoming draining the way that twitter often was? If not, are there better ways to prevent it than what I settled on there?
This #TDoR, I would like to ask folks to expand what they see as violence. It's not just bigots with guns, but also the parents who disown their kids, and bullies who harass vulnerable at risk people.
When I've seen online trans friends vanish, it was often right when they were forced to come out to guardians who should have been protecting, sheltering, and loving them.
I've been incredibly blessed, but I've known so many less fortunate.
These Robotic Hearts of Mine, my abstract poem puzzler from 2011, is being removed by Apple from the App Store in 90 days.
I've made it free for its remaining lifetime: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/these-robotic-hearts-of-mine/id482086528
From award-winning game designer Alan Hazelden, These Robotic Hearts of Mine is a narrative-driven puzzle game where the levels mirror the story. A young boy and a young girl become friends and fall in love, but their relationship is changed after an encounter with a broken robot in the woods. Unra…