scientia-rex:

When I was in ninth grade I wanted to challenge what I saw as a very stupid dress code policy (not being allowed to wear spikes regardless of the size or sharpness of the spikes). My dad said to me, “What is your objective?”

He said it over and over. I contemplated that. I wanted to change an unfair dress code. What did I stand to gain? What did I stand to lose? If what I really wanted was to change the dress code, what would be my most effective potential approach? (He also gave me Discourses on the Fall of Rome by Titus Livius, Machiavelli’s magnum opus. Of course he’d already given me The Prince, Five Rings, and The Art of War.)

I ultimately printed out that phrase, coated it in Mod Podge, and clipped it to my bathroom mirror so I would look at it and think about it every day.

What is your objective?

Forget about how you feel. Ask yourself, what do you want to see happen? And then ask, how can you make it happen? Who needs to agree with you? Who has the power to implement this change? What are the points where you have leverage over them? If you use that leverage now, will you impair your ability to use it in the future? Getting what you want is about effectiveness. It is not about being an alpha or a sigma or whatever other bullshit the men’s right whiners are on about now. You won’t find any MRA talking points in Musashi, because they are not relevant.

I had no clear leverage on the dress code issue. My parents were not on the PTA; neither were any of my friend’s parents who liked me. The teachers did not care about this. Ultimately I just wore what I wanted, my patent leather collar from Hot Topic with large but flattened spikes, and I had guessed correctly—the teachers also did not care enough to discipline me.

I often see people on tumblr, mostly the very young, flail around in discourse. They don’t have an objective. They don’t know what they want to achieve, and they have never thought about strategizing and interpersonal effectiveness. No one can get everything they want by being an asshole. You must be able to work with other people, and that includes smiling when you hate them.

Read Machiavelli. Start with The Prince, but then move on to Discourses. Read Musashi’s Five Rings. Read The Art of War. They’re classics for a reason. They can’t cover all situations, but they can do more for how you think about strategizing than anything you’re getting in middle school and high school curricula.

Don’t vote third party unless you can tell me not only what your objective is but also why this action stands a meaningful chance of accomplishing it. Otherwise, back up and approach your strategy from a new angle. I don’t care how angry you are with Biden right now. He knows about it, and he is both trying to do something and not doing enough. I care about what will happen to millions of people if we have another Trump presidency. Look up Ross Perot, and learn from our past. Find your objective. If it is to stop the genocide in Palestine now, call your elected representatives now. They don’t care about emails; they care about phone calls, because they live in the past. I know this because I shadowed a lobbyist, because knowing how power works is critical to using it.

How do you think I have gotten two clinics to start including gender care in their planning?

Start small. Chip away. Keep working. Find your leverage; figure out how and when to effectively use it. Choose your battles, so that you can concentrate on the battle at hand instead of wasting your resources in many directions. Learn from the accumulated wisdom of people who spent their lives learning by doing, by making mistakes, by watching the mistakes of their enemies.

Don’t be a dickhead. Be smarter than I was at 14. Ask yourself: what is your objective?

(via emcandon)

cloud-ya:

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free my girl she did nothing (in this century) (yet)

(via aurorean)

charnel-grounds:

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Charles Keeping (1924–1988), “The Prophecy”

illustration from ‘The Golden Shadow’ by Leon Garfield & Edward Blishen, 1973

source

(via thecolorblockcurator)

otiksimr:

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fandom-trash-goblin:

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we’ve got a life to love living.

(via dytabytes)

cabbageheadgames:

cabbageheadgames:

cabbageheadgames:

CHIMERA will be finished and available in a few hours.

It is a body horror and transformation role playing game.

Record how an alien virus changes you each day.

150+ prompts for the tarot deck including the minor arcana, major arcana and reversed cards.

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To compare, the reversed cards are the Bad Route in a visual novel.

A friend who is a much better writer is helping me with the prompts.

Thank you for all your Reblogs.

We’re taking more time than expected to finish up the Major Arcanas.

Here are a few of my favorite prompts we made.

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(via the-nothing-maker)

dragons:

YOU KNOW WHAT DAY IT IS

(via canalsobemoe)

madgastronomer:

batbetbitbotbut:

batbetbitbotbut:

batbetbitbotbut:

batbetbitbotbut:

batbetbitbotbut:

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This absurd yarn is 45% cashmere, 55% silk. I have never worked with anything even remotely like it - no cashmere, no silk, and definitely nothing so thin as 92 wraps per inch. Ninety fucking two.

New, it originally cost £200/kg. A very, very kind weaver in Scotland was de-stashing and sent me 5 kilos for £50 total (plus shipping).

I have many dreams for it but right now I mostly have screams. I have no real idea how it will behave in weaving, so I’ve wound a small warp for some sampling and a scarf. This is 3.5km of yarn (a bit over 2 miles) and it weighs 119 grams (a bit over 4 ounces?). For those of you playing along at home, each 1kg cone is thus 30 kilometres of yarn (nearly 20 miles). It does not feel like any other yarn I have ever touched.

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Because it’s so thin (difficult to handle or even see) and so valuable, I am using it with a “dummy warp” - I have left the remains of the baby blanket warp on the loom and then I tie the new warp to it, thread by thread by single fucking thread. This means I don’t have to set up the loom all over again and almost none of the fancy yarn will become “loom waste”, the unweaveable section of warp at the end of a project. But it also means tying every knot, perfectly in order for each end of both the old and new warps, without the cat getting too interested.

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24 knots down, a mere 1000 to go…

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A mild amount of back pain and an estimated 5.5 to 6 hours of knot tying later…

By the end I was up to 204 knots per hour, or 235 miles per hour². (This is a nautical units joke.) (It’s not funny though.) Every tutorial warns you that it will look like a bird’s nest at this stage but it’s very hard to have faith.

But it straightened out! The knots flowed through the reed beautifully, and through the heddles only slightly less beautifully!

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The new problem is the knots which spontaneously appear between the reed and heddles while winding on. Everywhere. All the time. I can wind on like two inches before needing to detangle 50% of the warp again, which really kills any sense of progress. Slow and unsteady may at least finish the race, perhaps by sometime next week…


WELL. Thank you for your good thoughts, everyone. That went badly.

After an estimated 20hrs of work - tying onto the dummy warp, trying to warp through all the tangles, then trying to unwarp and turn the threads on the loom back into a warp chain again, then trying to warp with that new chain, then cutting off the dummy warp section (sorry to my 1024 knots) and trying to wind on just the remainder, this is what I had to show for it:

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Dummy warp braided/spun into a set of climbing ropes for my partner’s pet mice, final warp attempt one enormous snarl (but at that stage I hadn’t really expected it to work, this was a quick last effort before the bin). First warp I’ve had to give up on since my very very first project, where I had no idea how to put it on the loom and the cat got caught up in it.

But it’s okay! I learnt a lot and I’m glad I tried it. It was slow but not usually frustrating, even when it didn’t work. Someday I will try the new-to-me methods again, but in the meantime I will stick to familiar methods, which take a little more yarn in theory but will make up for it by not having to discard entire projects.

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Today I measured out WARP 2: EVEN WARPIER and it wound onto the loom perfectly. I have threaded 140 of 800 warp ends so far. We’ll get there.

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Finished threading, sleyed the reed at 40 warp ends per inch. Tied on, started weaving, oh no it’s massively off being balanced - in plain weave, 48 weft picks per inch compared to those 40 ends. I had thought the slight fuzzy halo on the yarn would fill out the gaps, but it was too fine.

Gentle sigh. Cut it off. Sleyed again at 50 warp ends per inch, still possibly a little low for the twill I had planned (twill requires higher epi than plain weave) but very easy maths. Much closer to square. Left some room for a fringe and then started a scarf for real.

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I just–

It was worth it.

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The weaving itself, once I got going, took barely a day - probably 4ish hours total. Tying and twisting the fringes was another few hours.

Next my partner asked around and found people happy to give me tiny quantities of delicate detergent for me to hand wash it, and then I excavated the iron from the attic for the first time in years, and now at last it is done. And I am so, so, so happy with it. There are mistakes but they don’t matter, it’s perfect.

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Incredible.

(via strangeharpy)

asleepinawell:

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animals-with-fan-art:

suffyluffyframe:

pokemonheritageposts:

hexmaniacmareen:

scribghetti-junction:

Magikarp’s hidden talent.

BLESSED POST

Pokemon Heritage Post

@animals-with-fan-art

Added to the collection by @suffyluffyframe

(via dytabytes)

zekoagun:

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happy pacific rim breach closing day everyone