[sticky entry] Sticky: Intro post

Jul. 3rd, 2010 01:35 am
ink-and-watercolour drawing -- girl looking calmly over her shoulder
Hello, this is my journal: personal in focus and mostly access-locked at present - I'm friendly and like new people, particularly if they're introspective and hungry for books, so please let me know if you'd like access. I'm keeping this intro because for ages I've been on at myself to write an intro post for stickying, and have finally decided that done-but-crappy is better than eternally considered.

A couple of links relevant to this journal.


  • Travel log locked, incomplete and newly started.

  • Brief history of me (not written yet).

  • My daily photo challenge, ongoing since April 10th. At present the fruits of this challenge are not to be found in my journal, though I occasionally post them to Flickr.


If you don't have a DW account and would like one: hi and welcome! I'm currently out of codes, but if you comment here with a method of contacting you, I should be able to get hold of one. [site community profile] dw_codesharing is also frequently updated with offerings of new codes. And don't feel shy about commenting to let me know you're in need of one. I like to introduce people to the site!
hat
So [livejournal.com profile] anandimide mentioned Google's Ad Preference Manager, which shows what Google thinks you're into. Interesting results! Because I'm of the meme generation and nothing's embarrassing, here's what it has for me:

Games - Computer & Video Games
Games - Roleplaying Games
Hobbies & Leisure - Clubs & Organizations
Law & Government - Government - Legislative Branch
News - Politics
People & Society
Reference - General Reference - Biographies & Quotations
Reference - Humanities - Myth & Folklore

Not inaccurate - apparently Google can describe me better than I can! Anyone else feel like sharing?

Idle-mode

Jan. 17th, 2012 09:35 pm
evil cats blink at you

How compulsively do I need to do idle-tasks like clicky games and solitaire? I don't know exactly what it is, but if I quit one, I immediately find another that fills my free time, or another takes my attention just as one fades. There is no point to clicking at just the right moment to get another of these dragons, which I'll ignore once hatched because it's the point to have them, not to regard or enjoy them. (What's the point? They're pixels.) There is no point to yet another game of solitaire, any of the variants I occupy myself with. There's just the sense of doing something, the sense of having an activity keeping my restless eyes busy without filling my brain with words, the sense of creating a small amount of order, the soothing repetitiveness of it.

I tried this evening to resist the repetitiveness craving. I closed Quicksilver every time I tried to bring up the app by typing "sol". I closed Dragcave after a minute or so of frantic refreshing. I persistently closed the window when I reloaded my friends page and read page despite having done so a very brief while before.

About fifteen minutes ago my willpower snapped like an elastic band and I frantically played a whole load of games of solitaire. Why? Stop it!

Technically I don't even need to stop. My time is my own, my time is leisure time right now... I can do what I want. But isn't that the point? I don't think I want to do this, I'm just doing it because it puts me in a state of mind that knows what's coming next.

I'd rather be writing - if writing, before I am actually writing, didn't feel as futile as panning for gold in a breeze. I'd rather be doing something Of Note - if thinking of what to do didn't plunge me into a little biteen of an existential crisis.

I'm thinking that maybe these brainless busy activities are like handrails I can grab onto when thinking unaided evokes the abyss. Doing them, I can daydream, let my brain idle. They're not relaxing: I get tense playing solitaire, I get frustrated when I miss catching a dragon. But they feel safe. They soothe the cactus-head (the spikes are on the inside) anxious frustration at myself by retargeting it, diffusing it over various minor things.

The clicky games are not the problem. They're a solution. Not a particularly helpful one, though I can think of worse. (Very few solutions do not have a worse, anyway.)

It's time I start practicing meditation again, isn't it? Yeah, I do think so.

(Edit: I put down the distractions, got really anxious, heart beating too fast. I'm lying down now and feeling somewhere better - listened to a song on repeat, focused on the music and kept returning my attention to it. It seemed like the right kind of meditation to try. Move softly, there is a reason for resistance.)

ink-and-watercolour drawing -- girl looking calmly over her shoulder
Back on the horse! I've written 541 words already today, and on the nano novel too!
bright glint on a crescent moon
Also also: cards, yay! I received these last week but put them in a Safe Place and have only refound them now. Thanks [personal profile] ladyvox and [personal profile] jd and [livejournal.com profile] teshiron for the cards :DDD

*pear*
ink-and-watercolour drawing -- girl looking calmly over her shoulder
Just what you didn't know you needed in your life but truly do: The Restart Page. See restart sequences from old OSes! No, really, this is the best toy.

I'm Santa Phoenix today, so here's another great toy: Black Market, a game where you play a guy zooming from planet to planet making and losing money and fights while trying to figure out how he got another mind in his head and lost his own memories and what that means. I love the writing in this - the side quests are so thoughtful; unexpected little stories and moral choices. It's not free - you can technically play it forever, I think, but your stat increases will be capped at 18. I loved it so much that I bought it as soon as I hit the cap, which should tell you something.

This year, I figure I'm going to talk more about things I like and things I'm into. Both here and IRL. Who's going to know that I'm kind of a neat person when I've got a bag of things too precious to talk about? Like books. Though... that's a complicated one. My experience of reading is very private, very personal. I have my own "language" for how a book feels, something I have no idea how to translate. And I'm protective of reading. It's a huge part of my life and it's been something no one can get their filthy fingers on and spoil deliberately. Not a problem now, no one's out to get me, but the caution stays. I want to protect what I love, but also want to be able to share what I love, and up till now the first has voted against the second.
shimmery with text "beautiful foolishness"
A to-do list )

The bit about clothing: my room is taken over with clothes, most of which have been heaped in the corner getting smelly since I moved in over a year ago. I feel bad about throwing away clothes and protect things by saying "I'll wear that for slumming around the house!". I don't, because anything that's at the point of getting thrown out is shapeless and I hate even to wear it when fecking around doing nothing. So! Get tough. Have a clean floor!

I looked at [livejournal.com profile] ourbedrooms and it inspired me to clean up! Cmon, if you get the place clean you can pretty the place up. *peptalks*

[community profile] inkingitout/[livejournal.com profile] getyourwordsout word counts: 1793. (592 + 1201)
lights
I don't think now is a good time for a recap of the year (I'd come up with nothing, the mood I'm in) or to go into resolutions (CHANGE EVERYTHING, and that's not going to work). But isabelthespy's new year's motto resonated. Passivity is corrosive to the soul.* Yes. If I could redo this year, I'd face, head-on, the hard things, the problems, the points where my options were conflict and hiding. This year, I hid. Next year, I will probably hide also, habits and pain-avoidance are not things that change fast. But I will try not to, I won't let it be the cowardly default.

I celebrated the new year by throwing on clothes at 11.50 and rushing into town! Something in me demanded people, lights, sounds. I found them, was alone but not lonely and carried my camera like a friend. Fireworks, church bells, a parade of Hare Krishnas bearing a speaker and excited New Year celebrators dancing after them, passing the crowds outside the Front/Back Lounge and observing the handful of women there, phoning my mother from the middle of Dame Street and cheerfully offering "happy new year!" with the parade chanting beside me. Balm to the soul.

* (For her and me and Caroline Knapp (quote's originator), I will add. If anyone takes this as some kind of attack on passivity or on them I will eat them and all of their descendants.)
going
I have a fine big map on my wall! Now I can figure out where on it I want to go next. It's so reassuring to see how extraordinarily large the world is. Technically, you can be anywhere in a number of hours. I think of that and I feel the ceiling pressing in on me, feel this city of a million people is too small, this island of four million. And then I see how small it is on that great map. The country's as small as the first joint of my index finger, the city a fleck of chewed skin from that same finger, and me, I'm too small to appear at any likely resolution.* I love to feel like life is near-infinite, like I'll never run out of new.

Besides the joy of maps, things aren't so good. Internally; externally all is good. I lost my balance a few days ago and this is my mind wobbling, flailing wretchedly as it tries to remember what way up should be. Up forgets questions of worth.

* How large would a world map need to be to show the humans of Dublin at a visible size? Say, at the size of a full stop, in 12pt Times or similar. There's an exercise for... well, probably Google, but if no one's sorted that out yet, for the mathematical-minded in the audience. And I'm not fussy about the projection; just something people actually use rather than a pure academic exercise.
ink-and-watercolour drawing -- girl looking calmly over her shoulder
This year, I'm going to prefer the answer that works over the answer that's right.

(It's late, and I'm fighting brainweasels, and I feel like apologising for the cryptic-looking one-liner. It makes sense to me as a direction for the new year.)

(I'm stressed and I feel like apologising.)
ink-and-watercolour drawing -- girl looking calmly over her shoulder
There's now an auction comm supporting Scarleteen's yearly fund drive: [community profile] scarleteenfans!

Why Scarleteen is worth supporting.

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ink-and-watercolour drawing -- girl looking calmly over her shoulder
the NPC who tells you the bridges are open

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