Icon by @ThatSpookyAgent. Call me Tir or Julian. 37. He/They. Queer. Twitter: @tirlaeyn. ao3: tirlaeyn. BlueSky: tirlaeyn. 18+ Only. Star Trek. The X-Files. Sandman. IwtV. OMFD. Definitionless in this Strict Atmosphere.

pepperapb:

joslifer:

animate-mush:

amatara:

I’m pretending all the time to be, kinder, stronger, funnier, more sociable than I am. I guess we’re all like that but it just feels so inadequate.

What’s the difference?

I know it sounds flippant but… certain things are fundamentally performative.  And other things are so close as makes no difference.

Kindness is performative.  Actions are kind, and people are kind by performing those actions.  You can’t “pretend” to be kinder than you are, you can only perform kindness or not perform kindness, and choosing to perform kindness is always worthwhile, no matter how much you may second-guess your motivations.

Strength is so many things.  It takes strength to pretend a strength you don’t feel.  And the way to achieve strength is to exercise it, so long as you do it in enough moderation to not strain or break anything.  Being able to affect strength when necessary while being able to put it down again when that in turn is necessary is healthy.  Everyone starts weight training with the littlest weights.  It’s not fake or pretending to do what you gotta do in any given situation.

Funniness lives in the interlocutor, not in the speaker.  It doesn’t matter how funny you think you are (or think you are pretending to be) - that’s not how it’s measured.  At what point are you “pretending” to be a musician if the music still gets made?  And often what it’s tempting to describe in first person as “pretending” is more accurately described in the third person as “practicing” - which is of course the way you cause things to Be.

Sociability is also performative.  Pretending to be sociable is just…being sociable, despite a disinclination towards it.  It’s making an effort towards something you value.  So long as the effort is not so great that it backfires into resentment, there’s no practical difference.  

Qualities or activities or whatever are no less worthy because you have to actively choose to perform them.  If anything, the worthiness lies in the act of choosing.  It’s not “pretending” - it’s agency.

tl;dr: ain’t nothing wrong with “fake it till you make it.”  A plastic spoon* holds just as much soup as a “real” one

* I keep wanting to talk about semantic domains!  Artifacts are defined by their utility, whereas living things are defined by their identity.  So plastic forks are still forks, but plastic flowers aren’t flowers.  So there’s two pep-talk messages to take away from this: (1) for certain things, the distinction between “fake” and “real” isn’t a relevant one so long as they still get the job done, and (2) the purpose of a living thing is to be the thing that it is.  The idea of a “useless person” is as semantically nonsensical as the idea of “pretend kindness” (or fake cutlery).

@pepperapb Can I get an Important Mini on this?

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black-to-the-bones:

It’s incredibly hard to have a normal life in America, when your skin is black. It is even harder, when you are a black woman. Black girls and women experience hatred , racism, discrimination twice as much as even black men. They are constantly in danger. And when a black girl or a woman goes missing, media outlets seem to not really care unless it’s a kind of a huge case that is highlighted all over the country. In fact, when our girls go missing nobody cares and police don’t try to find them as hard as if it was a white girl. That’s a harsh reality and we need to do something, to unite and keep our girls safe.

missmentelle:

You can always start over. 

You can go back to school.

You can quit your job. 

You can change careers. 

You can leave a bad relationship. 

You can leave an okay relationship. 

You can write that novel.

You can write that song. 

You can learn a new language. 

You can learn to play the guitar. 

You can get fit. 

You can train for that half-marathon. 

You can make new friends.

You can start a business. 

You can learn to cook. 

You can kick your addiction. 

You can reconnect with old friends. 

You can change religions. 

You can move to a new city.

You can travel. 

You can treat your depression. 

You can lose weight. 

You can learn to sew. 

You could get up right now, pack a bag, and get on a bus to a whole new life if you wanted to. 

You are never as trapped as you think you are. Change can be difficult, scary, and time-consuming, but it’s always possible. Opportunities can take a long time to appear, but they always show up. Be patient. Work hard. Love yourself. You can do this.