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Mostly Mundane

@mostly-mundane-atla

FUCK OFF RADFEMS, I'M FUCKING TRANS. -- headcanons, fan theories, and musings about the less fantastical things in the Avatar universe. As I am Inupiaq, things might get a little water tribe heavy, so be warned. -- I would never bash your ship in front of you, so please let me live my best z*kka- and z*tara-free life in peace. thank you. -- born in 1995. autistic. neither cis nor het. they/them pronouns plz. remember that I am a person before an information provider. -- here to share, but I still have the right to block anyone for any reason and I will use that right. -- transphobes, aphobes, and all the other nasties get blocked. minors allowed but be warned of darker content and tell me if you need something tagged. content warnings will be tagged "[x] mention"
Frequently Asked Questions:
  • Is eskimo a slur?

"Eskimo" has a complicated history, and given how the people it's been applied to have been subject to like 4 different nations' colonial rule (Russia, the United States, Canada, and Denmark are the ones I know about), you're going to get some different answers depending on who you ask. Insisting that the word Eskimo be treated as a slur in every context leads to policing Indigenous folks and how we talk about ourselves and our cultural identities, so do understand that there is nuance that comes not just with the time period, but with where and among whom the word is used. The best way I've heard it explained is that you wouldn't tell a guy from the Philipines not to call himself Filipino, even though it's an exonym and a product of imperialism. The word eskimo has a complicated history and has been weaponized against vulnerable peoples, and so it's understandable if you don't feel comfortable with it, but understand in turn that Indigenous peoples are not required to alter the language we use for ourselves to conform to your idea of respectability.

  • What's a kuspuk?

A kuspuk (also spelled qaspeq) is a smock-like garment resulting from Euro-American style dresses and shirts being introduced to Inupiaq and Yup'ik peoples. Missionaries insisted on us dressing more modestly indoors (because traditionally indoor clothes didn't cover much and there really wasn't a nudity taboo), and we made alterations to the patterns to suit our needs. They were made bigger and looser to be worn over skin clothes, similar to a gut parka, and to be quicker and easier to make. Hoods and large front pockets were also added. They have become regalia but are also open to outsiders. It is not cultural appropriation to wear or draw kuspuks as someone who isn't eskimo. Everyone is welcome to it and it is understood as appreciation.

  • What does nalauģmiu mean? Is it an insult?

The literal translation with all the connotations and implications is something like "person of (defined specifically by) not knowing" or more simply "person who doesn't know", basically used to mean white people or cultural outsiders in general. It's no more insulting than "newbie".

  • Can you tell me about [Inuit thing]?

I can certainly try. The Inuit are a culturally diverse and geographically scattered group, King Islanders/Ukivokmiut/Uguivoqmiut were especially unique in our architecture and diet. I can try to share what I've picked up on, but I can't guarantee I'll really get the nuance down, as it might not be something I've grown up with and might even be from the other side of the North American continent

  • Are Inupiat and Inuit the same?

The ancestors of the Canadian Inuit and Greenlanders split from the ancestors of the Inupiat about 1000 years ago and we've developed seperately, in culture, technology, what have you. My family never refered to us as Inuit, choosing Native, Inupiat, or Eskimo instead. I don't refer to myself, or even really consider myself, as Inuk even tho on a technicality I am.

  • Can I draw traditional tattoos?

I don't mind the idea of nalauģmiut drawing traditional tattoos. Like using the word eskimo, I think prioritizing the idea that it should never be done can ultimately do as much harm to the quieter communities involved (the Inuit and Inupiat are not the only peoples with women's face tattoos and non-natives rarely try to educate themselves on our cultures or look into white-passing folks' cultural backgrounds) as good. That said, people tend to put in as little research as possible, leading to the cultural practices portrayed being bastardized for the sake of neat fan art. There are other visual aspects to the culture that are entirely for aesthetics, and insisting on tattoos you don't know the rules for or significance of is pretty gross.

  • Are Yup'ik peoples Inuit?

No, they're Yup'ik and have just as much a right to these discussions.

  • What are your pronouns?

They/them

  • Do you have a dni?

Not against any specific kinds of people, just in forms of interaction. Please don't reblog my posts about eskimo stuff to blogs with a lot of z*tara content. Don't drag me into fandom discourse (if I want to talk about it, I will on my own terms). Don't ask me my opinion on or tell me about your ships unprompted. Do not ask me for my opinion and tell me i'm wrong for having an opinion (yes, this has happened to me already). Do not suggest I'm some kind of bigot for not wanting characters written to resemble people of my culture to be proselytized to (this has also already happened to me). Understand that I'm a disabled adult with bills, a job, and other responsibilities. I will not always have time or energy to respond right away. If you have a question and are unsure if it crosses a line, you can ask me. Private messages are open and asks on the topic will be answered privately

  • Do you post fanfiction anywhere?

No.

Been a while since we had Kuspuk Week. So are you guys interested and if so do you have any prompt suggestions?

Really liked Rock & Rule. Oh, wait; this is my Avatar blog. Um, hang on. I can make this fit.

Rock & Rule is Sokka coded. Somehow. Hard to explain, just watch the movie and you'll get it

Sokka: Come on, Katara, watch this with me!! It has Iggy Pop!

Katara, seeing Mok: Oh geez, did he sue them?

Sokka: No, but Mick Jagger almost did.

Katara: what.

Really liked Rock & Rule. Oh, wait; this is my Avatar blog. Um, hang on. I can make this fit.

Rock & Rule is Sokka coded. Somehow. Hard to explain, just watch the movie and you'll get it

Okay palate cleanser: we all know Mai's parents wouldn't let her even own a pair of Cookie Monster PJ pants to wear so who has the second most Cookie Monster PJ Pants Girl energy of the characters of Avatar? Discuss.

Optional hard mode: you can't say Toph

Bonus points for ironic "wrong answers only" style conclusions

Answer I believe: Katara

Wrong answer: Yue

I'm telling you, man, Yue tried black lipstick and was never the same

Agreed, but I don’t think she’d stop dressing up? Not saying you can’t style up Cookie Monster pajama pants but it frankly didn’t occur to me! Much to think about

Ooh, how about a ballgown made of Cookie Monster PJ pants?

Okay palate cleanser: we all know Mai's parents wouldn't let her even own a pair of Cookie Monster PJ pants to wear so who has the second most Cookie Monster PJ Pants Girl energy of the characters of Avatar? Discuss.

Optional hard mode: you can't say Toph

Bonus points for ironic "wrong answers only" style conclusions

Answer I believe: Katara

Wrong answer: Yue

I'm telling you, man, Yue tried black lipstick and was never the same

Okay palate cleanser: we all know Mai's parents wouldn't let her even own a pair of Cookie Monster PJ pants to wear so who has the second most Cookie Monster PJ Pants Girl energy of the characters of Avatar? Discuss.

Optional hard mode: you can't say Toph

Bonus points for ironic "wrong answers only" style conclusions

Now that my stuff is out of the polycule's reach and they can no longer damage it in retaliation, I wanted to make it clear I can no longer endorse my ex's fundraiser posts.

You might remember me sharing tumblr user rosewaterwings' fundraising posts and asking you to consider donating. The reason was that since we lived together i knew that money was going to the household, mainly in the form of rent or other household costs and debts. I'm not getting into the details publicly, but they broke up with me and I was kicked out of our shared apartment. The polycule i left cut off communication and the last thing any of them told me anything was to give me a deadline to get my things or they would be thrown away. (The friend I'm on the road with had that taken care of, don't worry)

Since I am no longer living with them and they are no longer talking to me, I cannot confirm the truth or urgency of any future fundraising posts from their account

Important Note: they are not lying about being disabled and chronically ill and neurodivergent. They do require a wheelchair and their dog is a service dog who increases their quality of life. I am not calling them a faker nor do I condone accusations of them faking disability for clout. This is an explanation for my blog moving forward, not a call out post.

This whole situation makes me feel like a scammer in regards to my e-begging. All of your kind and generous past donations to keep me housed, in that area and apartment specifically, and now someone else is taking advantage of the "get out of jail free" donation money instead. I'm so sorry.

And remember, you are not immune from the meaning of "a man is not a plan" by virtue of being queer and polyamorous with partners who accept your disability. Obsessive paranoia isn't the way to go about it, but it absolutely can happen to you.

I think everyone should get into Dune: Adventures in the Imperium because the mechanics are simple yet nuanced enough to never get boring and the worldbuilding of the Dunerverse (Dune Universe) is so rich and alive and it's much easier to play than DnD which is treated as the default or "baby's first" ttrpg but no one is running it on Roll20

"But Mostly-Mundane, what do you mean by much easier to play than DnD? How are the mechanics simple yet nuanced enough to never get boring?"

You do not have to roll characteristics for Dune: Adventures in the Imperium. You do not have to worry about HP. You and the game master have a system of points to make it more or less difficult.

All of the player characters are affiliated to the same noble house, which the rulebook helps you generate. You could be born into the house, married into it, serve it, with damn near any background or previous walk of life to make a compelling character that suits your preferences. Every character has the same five skills (Battle, Communicate, Discipline, Move, Understand) and the same five drives (Duty, Faith, Justice, Power, Truth) with the only differences being the prioritization. You choose an archetype, which establishes what you're best at and how it's best used, and perhaps a faction if you want to be one of the cool "types" of people from the Duniverse (like a Bene Geserait Sister or a Suk Doctor), and that will give you starting skill values plus extra points to distribute freely. You get to choose some skill focuses to start. These values cannot be less than 4 or more than 8. Your drives are entirely yours to rank from the most important being eight and each one point less than the one before, with the lowest at four. The three highest will be further defined through Drive statements.

To act, take the skill that best describes what you're trying to do and the drive that motivates you to do it, add the values, and if you roll the sum value or lower on a d20, you get a success. Rolling a 1 is a critical and grants you two successes, and if you use a Skill Focus, anything lower than the target also counts as a critical and nets you two successes. Different situations will call for different amounts of successes needed but you will only get two dice by default. Extra successes give you Momentum, which you can use to make the game easier. You can get more dice by "spending" your Momentum or giving your game master Threat, which allows them to make the game more difficult. If you are acting against someone, the winner is the one with more successes.

"But how can you have combat without HP?"

You have levels of defenses and your opponents will try to bypass them. Avoid this and you're safe, but if they succeed, you're dead. Injuries are possible and they will make things harder by requiring more successes from you.

You also get two assets and three talents. One of the talents comes from your Archetype and if you chose a faction another will come from that. Otherwise you are free to choose from a provided list and they provide a variety of boons to customize and buff your character. Assets can be picked at random, also from a provided list. Momentum can allow you to produce a temporary asset.

You have the chance to level up between scenarios. Different ways of leveling up require different amounts of points that you earn by suffering failures. It's not as flashy as some other games but that also means there's less to have to remember.

The game encourages an introspective style of roleplay that mimics the vivid third person limited narration of the books. The setup that all player characters belong to the same house (that the players themselves collaboratively created) gives them an automatic reason to root for each other and feel one's success is the whole party's success. The Threat/Momentum keeps the game feeling fair for the players even when the situation for the characters is unfair, and it keeps both players and game masters in anticipation. It's just overall a good game

And more people should run it on Roll20 because my oc Chrysopoeia, the poet ambassador with an ornithopter license and a spiritual need for beauty, would be fun to play with. You know. Just sayin

I think everyone should get into Dune: Adventures in the Imperium because the mechanics are simple yet nuanced enough to never get boring and the worldbuilding of the Dunerverse (Dune Universe) is so rich and alive and it's much easier to play than DnD which is treated as the default or "baby's first" ttrpg but no one is running it on Roll20

I'm reading Wuthering Heights so that means a personal fanon where Katara and Jet and maybe some others are reading it as a book club thing and constantly telling Zuko they never asked for his opinion and didn't even invite him so why is he here etc

Wuthering Heights is not the first book they read as a group. Previously they read the Táin Bó Cúailnge, and before that it was Flight by Sherman Alexie, and the book they started with was Twilight

BTW if you like how I theorize about darker aspects of atlaverse worldbuilding and what it would be like if it wasn't a kids' show, you should give Parable of the Sower a read. I wouldn't go so far as to say it's more worldbuilding than plot, but it's similar in narration style to The Handmaid's Tale in how it focuses on the mundane; how day to day life has changed, what foods are available, that kinda thing. Do be warned, though, that the horrors of homelessness are not sugarcoated and are present in much of the narrative, as well as exploitation and slavery.

Hello! Long time fan of your work. I've been looking at pemmican recipes and was wondering if anything similar to pemmican is or was prepared in Inupiat culture.

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Yeah, actually. We called it akutaq and it could be made a variety of ways, including crushing salmon roe and mixing it into snow until the right texture was achieved. The typical way, however, was rendering caribou fat, whipping it by hand, and mixing in meat, fish, seal oil, and occasionally berries, with snow added for proper consistency and temperature. It could be shaped and chilled in travel ready portions or served spooned into bowls, especially for special occasions. Nowadays it is sometimes called Eskimo ice cream and usually made of crisco, sugar, and berries. If you go to a native potlatch it's the blueberry purple stuff scooped into paper cups at the dessert table.

I remember posting a headcanon that, I think it was Korra's mother, Senna, or maybe Gran Gran, who served a "pretty" akutaq with candied fireweed and wild rose petals folded in

I'm reading Wuthering Heights so that means a personal fanon where Katara and Jet and maybe some others are reading it as a book club thing and constantly telling Zuko they never asked for his opinion and didn't even invite him so why is he here etc

Nobody has to like Iroh but I'm perpetually considering the fact that he lost his son and father on the same day, his sister-in-law mysteriously vanished the night before he claimed it was said dead father's secret wish that Ozai take the throne and nobody's talking about it, he became a joke and national disappointment to the very influential military, and he had to process all of that without SSRIs. Like he didn't even have prozac

Hello! I am an artist and i am doing a drawing that includes Katara. I saw in ur pinned post about your opinions on people drawing the water tribe women with traditional tattoos and wanted to ask you about specifics about the meanings behind inuit face tattoos. I have tried to look for lots of sources from reliable(hopefully) websites about the meanings behind certain tattoos but most of the things i found were more so abut the process and about younger people getting tattoos to represent new things.

I understand there are a lot of different cultural practices with tattoos but the only ones i was able to find a meaning for were a V shape on the forehead for when a girl becomes a woman(i saw one source say this was when the girl first got her period, no idea if thats accurate.), tattoos on the torso representing motherhood(the source said it was supposed to be reminiscent of a baby carrying method), and tattoos on both thighs gotten(before?) giving birth(I think it said it was for protection?). I also saw some other pictures of tattoos but i was unable to find a representation of what they show(Dots on face, lines/dotted lines on chin, a second V shape on the forehead, etc.)

From what I found about the reasoning behind the tattoos the only one(that i know the reasoning behind) that i would draw katara with would be a V on her forehead(Shes a teenage girl and if that source was correct about it being about becoming a woman then katara would almost definitely have it). Basically I’m asking for sources that can give me information on this(or if you wanted to tell me yourself about the tattoos thats perfectly fine aswell)

Thanks in advance, if i don’t get a response before i finish my drawing I will just leave the tattoos out of the drawing to be safe.

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Obligatory disclaimer: I am Inupiaq and thus my knowledge is primarily of Inupiaq culture and though we don't call ourselves Inuit the way Canadian Inuit do, we are often all lumped together under the Inuit label. Keep in mind that when i answer cultural questions, it is primarily as an Inupiaq rather than a scholar of all peoples ever called Inuit.

The chin tattoos are for coming of age in my and I believe most Eskimo cultures. It's a painful procedure that shows the woman's ability to withstand pain, not unlike the pain tolerance building exercises men would practice, and thus, readiness to endure childbirth. I've heard that the lines, often somewhat radial from the mouth rather than parallel, are meant to evoke sun rays. While many duties follow wifehood and motherhood, the most culturally iconic is tending the home's oil lamp, the one source of light and non-bodily heat for the household; thus women are associated with the sun. Allow me to wax poetic about my culture for a minute: how beautiful is it that being prepared to be a wife and mother means reminding everyone your words, your songs, your smiles, are sunlight?

It's my understanding that a forehead tattoo is applied to a woman after marrying and having children, to sort of indicate that she is a matron of the village.

Thigh tattoos, I've been told, were so that the first thing a baby would see of the world is beauty. Almost like decorating a nursery, but one's own body. I think thigh tattoos are underrated by fans who go for a more real world inspired look, and their meaning has such a tenderness to it that i think is underrepresented in depictions of our cultures.

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Sorry for lumping you with the general term inuit!!

Thank you very much for this information, do you believe that Katara is of the age where she would have the chin tattoos for coming of age? Or is it more-so reserved for women rather than teen girls?

I also forgot to ask about finger tattoos when i sent that ask, I wasn’t able to find any meanings behind them but I was thinking of maybe(if the original culture fits for kataras experiences) that i would put lines on her fingers that would wiggle like waves. Of course if that’s already a thing in inupiaq culture, or other inuit cultures(if you know) and it means something entirely un-applicable then i wont add them.

Again thank you so much(and if you get tired of educating me yourself i am very open to websites and articles that also give me this information)

I think Katara wouldn't have gotten her tavlaģun (coming of age chin tattoos) until a bit after the series. It was a way of showing a girl was of age to consider marriage and her reaction to being asked if she was betrothed was that she wasn't ready for that. (I like to headcanon Toph being there for her tattooing, holding her still so they wouldn't get messed up.) Yue would have, tho, considering her being on the brink of marrying.

I'm not familiar with finger tattoos personally. I am aware of women's forearm tattoos that reach the back of the hand. This is more of a Yup'ik practice but you also see a bit of it in Inupiat of the Bering Strait region. I believe this was meant to look like the tattooed woman's homeland.

I completely slipped over your request for sources the first time. I'm sorry. My favorite is the essay Tatoos of the Hunter Gatherers of the Arctic by Lars Krutak, linked below

Krutak specializes in tattoo anthropology and studied at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, where he worked with the Saint Lawrence Island Yup'iit for his thesis on their tattooing practices. His writing on Eskimo tattoos is not only informative but more respectful than I'm used to from articles and academic papers on us.

Of course, if you intend to include tattoos, i hope other aspects of the visual culture are present, too. One cultural practice does not good representation make.

Thank you so much!!! this is great information and i will read the essay asap. If you don’t mind me asking, what other cultural practices would you suggest for me to include?

For stuff worn on the clothes/body:

-geometric trims with sharp dark/light contrast (think checkerboad, zigzag stripes, harlequin-style diamond or triangle patterns; if you wanna lean more Water Tribe theming, consider icebergs and wolf teeth and crescent moons for inspiration)

-animal talismans carved of ivory (tend to be a bit blocky, details may be inked in to show better, kept on a string, typically depicted land and marine mammals like bears, seals, walruses, etc. Atlaverse animals like their version of penguins might be fun)

-traditional hairstyles and jewelry (found in photographs from I'd say 1900s-50s for Inupiat and Yupi'it in my experience, not sure about Greenlanders and Canadian Inuit)

-kuspuks for clothes made of cloth instead of skins (more atlaverse kuspuks is always a good thing)

Home goods and decor/housing design elements for background details or posing props:

-traditional oil lamps, or camp stoves for a more modern (Legend of Korra era, maybe?) but still pre "suburban homes with factory made cooking range ovens in every village" style.

-dance masks and accessories (like the long gloves used for the Wolf Dance)

-support poles with tools and kitchen utensils hanging from them, if you're going for a traditional sod house or tent

-parchment skylight window, again, for a traditional sod house

-scrimshaw pieces worked onto tusks or baleen

-carved dolls or animal figures (traditionally outgrown toys were given away, but as culture wore away from assimilation, they might be kept as art pieces or sentimental mementos. Maybe 100 years of war would cause the same shift)

-a ball sewn of skins, perhaps with a design worked on it (even adults would pass the time with ball games)

-an ulu and/or traditional foods (and maybe a side of rice and a cup of tea alongside it because atlaverse)

-eskimo yoyos or a pair of baby mukluks on a string hanging on the wall for maximum nostalgia in the Inupiat and Yup'iit audience

Consider these suggestions as one of those paint swatch samplers. Don't feel pressured to use all of them, let alone all at once, but consider that you may end up liking some more than you thought you would. I, personally, don't mind traditional tattoos from my culture being used in martial arts fantasy nicktoon fan art, but they should have some visual context to be at home in

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