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balancing seriousness and playfulness, exploration and diligence, being an individual and a network node
Seeking rock art! - Lemmy.World

Heyo! I’m looking for some rock art. I’ve been familiarising myself bit by bit but I’d really appreciate being pointed to some sites by the following criteria (in order of importance): * the best-preserved rock art, a la Lascaux & such (and/or the most striking–which is not quite the same thing! emphasis on the former since the latter is more subjective :)) * especially which depicts non-human life (other animals & so on) or part-humans (but the less anthropocentric the more it appeals to me) * and especially anything from the neolithic or (bonus points!!) before! Paleolithic is my main interest, I’m not really interested in anything after literacy :) Thank you SO much!! Any advice on specific sites or where/how to search under this criteria super appreciated!!

Anarchism and addiction recovery

https://lemmy.world/post/16439583

Anarchism and addiction recovery - Lemmy.World

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16439581 [https://lemmy.world/post/16439581] > What have been some anarchist organizations or approaches to the problems of addiction and recovery? I’ve done a little bit of reading on the anarchist library and I’ll continue with that. I know there are concepts of radical sobriety as well as critiques of the hierarchy within twelve step programs and the idea of addict as identity. I’m interested in any perspectives and ideas. > > Something I personally find acutely annoying about recovery programs is that they’re almost solipsistic not just about the profits involved and the larger political historical and economic story of addiction. Maybe it’s because it’s not something i can’t solve the way i can make choices in my own life, but i feel like a bit of a pariah every time i want to remind people that we arent just fighting ourselves but the people who actively make money on our suffering. To me right now anarchism is the best model to describe reality, so I want to know how people who share this model have dealt with and thought about these urgent issues. Keen to be introduced to literature or communities in this vein

Anarchism and addiction recovery

https://lemmy.world/post/16439581

Anarchism and addiction recovery - Lemmy.World

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/16439577 [https://lemmy.world/post/16439577] > What have been some anarchist organizations or approaches to the problems of addiction and recovery? I’ve done a little bit of reading on the anarchist library and I’ll continue with that. I know there are concepts of radical sobriety as well as critiques of the hierarchy within twelve step programs and the idea of addict as identity. I’m interested in any perspectives and ideas. > > Something I personally find acutely annoying about recovery programs is that they’re almost solipsistic not just about the profits involved and the larger political historical and economic story of addiction. Maybe it’s because it’s not something i can’t solve the way i can make choices in my own life, but i feel like a bit of a pariah every time i want to remind people that we arent just fighting ourselves but the people who actively make money on our suffering. To me right now anarchism is the best model to describe reality, so I want to know how people who share this model have dealt with and thought about these urgent issues. Keen to be introduced to literature or communities in this vein

Anarchism and addiction recovery

https://lemmy.world/post/16439577

Anarchism and addiction recovery - Lemmy.World

What have been some anarchist organizations or approaches to the problems of addiction and recovery? I’ve done a little bit of reading on the anarchist library and I’ll continue with that. I know there are concepts of radical sobriety as well as critiques of the hierarchy within twelve step programs and the idea of addict as identity. I’m interested in any perspectives and ideas. Something I personally find acutely annoying about recovery programs is that they’re almost solipsistic not just about the profits involved and the larger political historical and economic story of addiction. Maybe it’s because it’s not something i can’t solve the way i can make choices in my own life, but i feel like a bit of a pariah every time i want to remind people that we arent just fighting ourselves but the people who actively make money on our suffering. To me right now anarchism is the best model to describe reality, so I want to know how people who share this model have dealt with and thought about these urgent issues. Keen to be introduced to literature or communities in this vein

First principles and practical solutions regarding personal data storage

https://lemmy.world/post/15153098

First principles and practical solutions regarding personal data storage - Lemmy.World

Hi all, I’m really looking for some help. I need to create a reliable system of backing up and data storage. I’m not tech-savvy (will work on that when it’s a priority in my life, which it definitely can’t be right now) and I’m asking this community because it’s forward-thinking and aligns with my values. There are things I have right now, on paper and digitally, that I want to be able to retrieve at least a decade from now (and we’ll check in on how the situation changes and what’s worth keeping or printing out etc then). Most of the stuff bouncing about in my brain is the conventional advice: 1. The age-old “at least three places” 2. Don’t store what I don’t strictly need 3. Accessible & simple: the less I have to fiddle, the more sustainable it is (kind of seems to conflict with 1) 4. Privacy-first, don’t trust clouds, etc (kind of sems to conflict with 1, too!) I’m not sure (a) if there are any other principles to keep in mind while designing a system that works for me or (b) how this might translate into practical advice about hardware or software solutions. If anything has or hasn’t worked for you personally, please share. My daily driver is a LineageOS tablet and it’s not clear to me how to best keep its data safe.

The Intelligent Plant: The Development, and Controversy, of Plant Neurobiology

https://lemmy.world/post/14266980

The Intelligent Plant: The Development, and Controversy, of Plant Neurobiology - Lemmy.World

Plants react to and communicate with their environment in sometimes surprising ways that enhance their survival in changing conditions. Does this constitute intelligence? Can you have intelligence without a brain? What do we owe plants? Maybe a little overlong and meandering but important piece. It’s a decade old so I wonder how the research has developed since then.

Considerations on which houseplant to start with

https://lemmy.world/post/14212277

Considerations on which houseplant to start with - Lemmy.World

So, obviously, a beginner wants to start with a hardy plant, and I guess a cheap one, and one suited for the conditions the houseplant will be living in, and one they like the look of. But my intention with this hobby is to become more connected with my environment, not to exploit it in the way most convenient for me. I want to understand: what is a good, or minimally harmful, houseplant? Are the ecological footprints very different between different houseplants? I’ve been told that if you live above a certain floor on an apartment planting natives isn’t important since pollinators don’t get up to your level anyway–is that accurate? Do people ever uhhh…just like scoop up plants growing around them and just pot them and grow them at home? Are all plants that would thrive as houseplants commercially available or is what’s commercially available mostly influenced by other factors like subjective/cultural aesthetic value & hardiness under transport conditions & stuff like that?

Do you think/feel that you are living well? Happily? Embodying your values and dreams? If so, how did this happen?

https://lemmy.world/post/13884912

Do you think/feel that you are living well? Happily? Embodying your values and dreams? If so, how did this happen? - Lemmy.World

Hope and Contradictions: My Year in Rojava (March 2024)

https://lemmy.world/post/13722964

Hope and Contradictions: My Year in Rojava (March 2024) - Lemmy.World

First of all, the publication’s website counts every time you view a page as a new article being read, so if you view the original and not the archived version you’ll just get locked out after refreshing it three times. Don’t bother with the first half imo, it’s a useless faff, but the consciousness portion onwards is worthwhile: worker cooperatives being a marginal addition to a capitalist economy where many people are suffering, lack of participation in lower councils even among the Kurds (non-Kurdish groups apparently participate mostly only in name), asayish not becoming obsolete but ossifying into a police force, a war on the “state mentality” of the people. Nothing groundbreaking but updates are always welcome. The author will post a long series. I have my thoughts, what do you guys think?

TIL that in England, the highest rates of loneliness are among those under the age of 25

https://lemmy.world/post/13145283

TIL that in England, the highest rates of loneliness are among those under the age of 25 - Lemmy.World