Art and Games
Jess  - Artist -
- Writer -
- Game Designer -

andhumanslovedstories:

This is a post aimed at a specific subset of people who were depressed teens listening to mainstream music in 2010. Did you specific guys know The Band Perry wrote a sequel to “If I Die Young”? Good listening for those who want to have emotions about having reached their thirties.

tcfactory:

In Tune Family Portrait

Had a call with the doctor friday that basically amounted to:

Doc: Hey you know that vitamin D supplement you’ve been kinda taking?

Me: Yeah?

Doc: Take Some More

I watched someone do a lets play of Prey (2017) ages ago, and i remember that they realized late that the mind controlled people could be saved and completely went back and re-did the game off camera to change the world state to one where they hadn’t accidentally caused a bunch of deaths. And I Cannot Remember Who It WAS.

I’m pretty sure they had a facecam, and they saved Danielle(?), but I cannot figure out who it was despite like 2 hours of searching for them on youtube.

thestuckylibrary:

bucky-boychik-barnes:

thestuckylibrary:

non Americans should join in too

the Russia backed fascists are a problem for more than just the USA

The next boycotts are:

March 7 to 14 - No buying from Amazon

March 21 to 28 - No buying Nestle products (here is a full list of Nestle products)

April 7 to 14 - No buying from Walmart

April 18 - Second 24-hour economic blackout; no buying anything from anywhere

April 21 to 28 - No buying General Mills products (here is a full list of General Mills brands)

May 6 to May 12 - Second Amazon boycott

May 20 to 26 - Second Walmart boycott

June 3 to June 9 - No buying from Target

June 24 to 30 - No buying from McDonald’s

If you need to make purchases during this time, please try to shop at local/small businesses! Remember that the Montgomery Bus Boycotts took 18 months to take effect! If we want this to work, we need to be in it for the long run!

mark your calendars and spread this

grrlscientist:

image


in recognition that TODAY is ECONOMIC BLACKOUT DAY, i ask us all: ��When did firing park rangers, scientists and air traffic controllers become a better idea than simply TAXING BILLIONAIRES?

daydreaming-juna:

+Anima by Mukai Natsumi (volume covers)

swordplease:

jabberwockypie:

thespoonisvictory:

thespoonisvictory:

people misunderstand what ‘gifted kid’ actually means but it’s ok it’s fine it’s cool it’s good

it’s not about actually being gifted, it’s about an initial higher scoring on standardized testing that means little to nothing or being good at learning in the way elementary and middle school wants you to, so you get marked as ‘advanced’. in reality, maybe you had faster development in certain areas, but the issue with being a gifted kid isn’t that “everyone told me I was so cool and special for reading and then I actually wasn’t :(” it’s “I wasn’t properly taught to handle things not coming easily to me, but the adults around me were counting on me not being a ‘difficult’ child in school.”

people who use it as some weird bragging method or interpret it that way are ignoring the way a lot of school systems force certain roles on students to simplify the learning process. If your kid doesn’t need to take notes to understand a science concept bc they get it naturally, well that’s good, but now you’re not teaching them how to take notes and they’re not learning that important soft skill. but because ‘gifted’ kids are easy and don’t show that they’re falling behind in learning in other categories that are harder to quantify, they eventually fall behind after that catches up to them. It’s about the failures of a one size fits all school system trying to compensate in the worst way possible.

And also the thing where ‘gifted’ kids are super likely to also be neuroatypical, which they don’t get screened for because they appear to be doing well in school. Or “You can’t be ADHD/autistic/etc, because you’re doing so well in school!”. Or being shamed for developing mental health issues/generally not being able to keep up with school work later, because you USED TO BE able to do it just fine.

Or the assumption that just because you can read well or you like math class, you’re somehow more EMOTIONALLY mature than your little kid brain is actually capable of being.

Or gifted kids whose parents and teachers put immense pressure on them to Do Great Things and Save The World and you’re like. “I’m 10 and I have no idea how to do that, but everyone is saying that’s my job?”.

This is the best “gifted kid” post out there. I never took notes until college because I didn’t have to, snd when it got challenging I had to literally teach myself note taking at age 18. It also fucks with your perception of asking for help - you’re advanced, you’re competent, you should be able to understand every topic easily. Asking for help/going to office hours/asking for a tutor feels like failing when you were praised in your early years for not needing to do that.

homunculus-argument:

Y'all want to know what thought is fucking with me today?

Parrots can learn the concept of questions. I don’t know about the claim that chimpanzees that were taught sign language never learned to ask questions, or the theory that it simply wouldn’t occur to them that the human handlers might know things that they personally do not, or that whatever information they have might be worth knowing. But I don’t even remember where I read that, and at best it’s an anecdote of an anecdote, but anyway, parrots.

The exact complexity of natural parrot communication in the wild is beyond human understanding for the time being, but you can catch glimpses of how complex it is by looking at how much they learn to pick up from human speech. Sure, they figure out that this sound means this object, animal, person, or other thing. Human says “peanut” and presents a peanut, so the sound “peanut” means peanut. Yes. But if you make the same sound with a rising intonation, you are inquiring about the possibility of a peanut.

A bird that’s asking “peanut?” knows there is no peanut physically present in the current situation, but hypothetically, there could be a peanut. The human knows whether there will be a peanut. The bird knows that making this specific human sound with this specific intonation is a way of requesting for this information, and a polite way of informing the human that a peanut is desired.

“I get a peanut?” is a polite spoken request. There is no peanut here, but there could be a peanut. The bird knows that the human knows this. But without the rising intonation of a question, the statement “I get a peanut.” is a firm implied threat. There is no peanut here, but there better fucking be one soon. The bird knows that the human knows this.