@minego Fair.
@minego No such thing, but it's loud valley. You need to change the pants to make it louder.
@wafflesoup You are braver than I, specifically when it comes to the subject of lasers and faces. Also, woo, congrats!
Autistic ramblings
@Sophie I don't think that's the case for us, but it seems plausible, in that you're more likely to hear it if your brain has less energy to filter it.
Autistic ramblings
@Sophie This is how we feel about plurality (except we wouldn't use the word diagnose because plurality isn't a diagnosis).
Mental health, relationships, midlife
I have a theory and maybe this is already posited somewhere or maybe is just my sphere of experience.
I feel like we hear less about midlife crisis es and partners completely fucking off.
But we hear more about transitioning and ENM.
I feel this is humans realizing communication and support is healthier and more enjoyable.
Much like gentle parenting, and all the other mentally and emotionally healthy practices we are trying to use to break past trauma.
don't wait for your kid to come out
tell them right now: i support and love you no matter your gender or sexuality
the bills in some states mandating teachers inform parents if their child is doing any kind of gender exploration does more than put kids whose parents will be violent at risk
it means any kids who are unsure how their parent will react cannot safely do any sort of gender exploration then come out to their parents when they feel ready
so right now. tell your kid. don't give them any room for doubt.
stream announcement
https://twitch.tv/madewokherd I am once again live playing BIT.TRIP Runner in a very silly way, but this time I am likely to be forced to move on in the game very slightly, to stage 1-4.
@recursive I suspect this is one of those things neurotypical folks are secretly also bad at.
Autistic ramblings
@Sophie Thank you, I might use this.
This article from @dangoodin about "juice jacking" is the kind of article which make me happy to be an Ars Technica subscriber.
Actual research and nuanced information, while still making it clear that general fearmongering is unwarrented.
I also really appricate that the article includes the following, which is really key in the disucssion:
"The problem with the warnings coming out of the FCC and FBI is that they divert attention away from bigger security threats, such as weak passwords and the failure to install security updates. They create unneeded anxiety and inconvenience that run the risk of people simply giving up trying to be secure."