Zennui of the Ineffable

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Zennui of the Ineffable

Zennui of the Ineffable

@Zenkitty714

Zennui on Bluesky, zenkitty714 on Tumblr, Ashtareth on AO3. ADHD. Ace. Ally. Lost on the road less traveled by. She/her/they. 18++ https://t.co/6c8Xpi4YEK

United States Katılım Mart 2009
1.6K Takip Edilen772 Takipçiler
Zennui of the Ineffable
Zennui of the Ineffable@Zenkitty714·
@kr_ilona33986 @Snoo25369 I'd like to see one where the God of the GO universe was like a subcontractor and there was a nicer Creator who made Her. Like Russian nesting dolls, only Gods.
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Aydra | S3 = NOT my canon
"If this finale is a love letter to fandom and fanfiction, it’s a love letter to the ability of fans to create better stories for these characters than the ones they canonically got." From the article "Good Omens Revels in Heartbreak" - read below #GO3
Aydra | S3 = NOT my canon tweet mediaAydra | S3 = NOT my canon tweet mediaAydra | S3 = NOT my canon tweet mediaAydra | S3 = NOT my canon tweet media
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Zennui of the Ineffable
Zennui of the Ineffable@Zenkitty714·
Sometimes someone will tell you what someone else said about you (good or bad) and you'll get a glimpse of the you inside someone else's mind. I've had some encounters with people and I could tell, by the way we parted, the person I'd become in their minds. That's cool.
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

Somewhere today, someone you barely remember is describing you to a person you'll never meet. They built a whole version of you out of one afternoon, and they still carry it around. You live inside hundreds of these little stories. You'll never hear one. A researcher named Charles Cooley worked this out back in 1902. You build your entire sense of who you are by imagining how other people see you. Other people are the mirror. So the truest version of you has never really sat inside your own head. It has been living in theirs. Your brain runs a quiet system for this. Get to know someone, and you build a small copy of them that you carry everywhere. You can hear their voice and guess what they'd say before they even say it. Everyone who knows you is doing the same thing with a copy of you. That copy keeps running after you leave the room. It keeps going after you leave their life, and sometimes after you leave the world. And those copies stay busy. Scientists once recorded what people talk about all day. About two-thirds of it was other people who weren't even in the room. So at this exact moment, in a kitchen or a group chat you'll never see, someone is telling a story with you in it. A 2018 study found something gentler. Almost everyone underestimates how much other people like them. We get so busy picking apart how we came across that we miss the other person walking away glad they met us. In their memory, you are the warm one. The cold version mostly lives in your own head. Even dying does not switch this off. For most of the last hundred years, experts thought the job of grief was to slowly let the person go. In 1996, researchers found the opposite was healthier. We keep the people we lose alive inside us. We go on talking to them and telling their stories for years. About 1,500 years ago, a Roman writer named Boethius wrote that being forgotten is its own kind of death. People later put it plainer. You die twice. Once when your body stops, and once more, much later, the last time someone says your name. So that ache you felt reading the phrase was pointing at something true. It never fully goes away. You spend a whole life leaving small pieces of yourself inside other people, and you never get to read a single one. The stories with your name in them will always outnumber the ones you hear. And they keep going after you stop.

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Darling ♡
Darling ♡@darlingalamode·
this gets passed around every now and then but it always ignores the actual conclusion of the study which is that young boys had an abundance of fiction and role models to choose from whereas girls often had to project onto "boy" toys in order to experience the same range of play
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🏖🦀BlockHead4000🏝🐠
I guess i have to be the guy to teach you guys what Pilates actually is/does because literally no one on here knows anything about it. Women do it thinking it will give them abs and the chronically injured men who desperately need it write it off as fake exercise. Its rehab.
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A. Z. Fell & Co.
A. Z. Fell & Co.@Mr_AZ_Fell·
@BerylStapleton @ElliottRook I promised that, if the final documentary failed to please, I’d write our version myself. Once it’s finished, I’ll make it available wherever people would like.
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Ankor Inclán
Ankor Inclán@ankorinclan·
En el verano de 1963, una estudiante de doctorado de Harvard llegó en avión a Chantrey Inlet, en los Territorios del Noroeste de Canadá, para estudiar a los chamanes de los Utku, un pequeño grupo inuit que vivía en la desembocadura del río Back. Cuando el avión despegó y desapareció, descubrió que los Utku ya no practicaban el chamanismo. Jean Briggs se quedó de todas formas. Durante diecisiete meses vivió como hija adoptiva de la familia Utku, compartiendo el iglú en invierno y la tienda en verano, sin calefacción moderna, sin carreteras, con temperaturas que bajaban de los cuarenta grados bajo cero. Y lo que observó en ese tiempo cambiaría la forma en que la psicología y la antropología entienden las emociones humanas. Los adultos Utku casi nunca mostraban ira. No era represión. Era algo más elaborado. Briggs documentó que la ira se consideraba entre los Utku una señal de inmadurez, algo que pertenecía a los niños pequeños y a los animales, no a los adultos. El autocontrol emocional era, en esa cultura, la marca de una persona desarrollada. La palabra que usaban para describir a alguien con ese control era ihuma, que podría traducirse como razón, mente, o conciencia. Lo que resultó más revelador fue cómo transmitían eso a sus hijos. No con castigos. No con sermones. A través del juego, la dramatización y la enseñanza indirecta. Briggs documentó escenas donde las madres provocaban deliberadamente las emociones de sus hijos pequeños para después mostrarles, con calma, las consecuencias de esas emociones sobre los demás. Una madre golpeaba suavemente a su hijo, el hijo respondía, y la madre fingía dolor. No como castigo, sino como espejo. Hay un detalle que el texto original ignoraba y que hace la historia aún más rica: la propia Briggs reconoció en su libro que ella misma tenía dificultades para controlar sus emociones. Un día, en un momento de frustración, respondió de forma cortante a un miembro de la familia. La reacción de los Utku fue tratarla con la misma gentileza y preocupación con que trataban a un niño que todavía estaba aprendiendo. Esa experiencia personal se convirtió en el núcleo del libro. Never in Anger: Portrait of an Eskimo Family se publicó en 1970 por Harvard University Press y se convirtió en una obra de referencia en etnografía y antropología psicológica. Briggs siguió trabajando con comunidades inuit hasta el final de su vida. Murió el 27 de julio de 2016 en Nueva Hampshire, a los 87 años. Lo que documentó no era una técnica de crianza. Era una filosofía entera sobre qué significa ser adulto: alguien que ha aprendido que las emociones existen, que pueden ser intensas, y que responder con calma no es negarlas, sino dominarlas.
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Zennui of the Ineffable
Zennui of the Ineffable@Zenkitty714·
@uovoalsugo @Lizzie_owlycat The actor who played Mutt might've not been available but it just added to the unnecessary misery. The first promo photo of Beloved Spouse showed a man's wedding ring on their necklace and I knew he was dead. And the magic shop was gone. 😭 (Why didn't Beloved ever get a name??)
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venus 🦎
venus 🦎@uovoalsugo·
btw can we talk about how dark the fate of whickber street was??? everyone gone, shops closing for bankruptcy, gangsters all around, only the casino being open, mutt being DEAD???? like wtf happened to my silly comedy show of silly shopkeepers having a ball as a meeting 😭 #go3
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soup🍓
soup🍓@thrluv·
the problem is we were taught to fear the witches & not the men who burned them
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ADHD Memes
ADHD Memes@ADHDForReal·
ADHD Memes tweet media
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`` ★ eva
`` ★ eva@s0upersonic·
@ricochetdean And the way they both made it feel very natural, they are THE actors
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kelsey | GOMENS IS BACK (derogatory)
Everybody always talks about how fire of an acting choice this was on Michael’s part, but the way Crowley whips his head to stare at Aziraphale is ALWAYS ON THE BRAIN
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Dr. Julie Gurner
Dr. Julie Gurner@drgurner·
Early in my career, I did some work in a supermax prison. My mentor was a Holocaust survivor & psychiatrist. Here are 5 lessons I’ll never forget, and hope you don’t either...
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Zennui of the Ineffable
Zennui of the Ineffable@Zenkitty714·
@Amerz134 @EricTopol It isn't "crap". It's a legitimate medication with real uses. Sounds like you don't need it. Maybe it's overprescribed for weight loss. Doesn't mean it's crap.
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Amy Smith
Amy Smith@Amerz134·
@EricTopol 😂😂😂 Excellent! Another reason why I won't be trying that crap. Good old-fashioned healthy diet & exercise is all you need. God didn't make us all to be toothpicks, just healthy💜
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Eric Topol
Eric Topol@EricTopol·
Here's all the published data on GLP-1 micro-dosing
Eric Topol tweet media
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The Tennessee Holler
The Tennessee Holler@TheTNHoller·
CONAN AT HARVARD: “No university in our nation has produced more Nobel laureates or white collar criminals… so whether you choose good or evil, know that you are among the very best.”
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