Hello, Blogosphere!
If I were a whippersnapper youTuber, I would ask questions such as:
Q: Can you put your foot up to your ear?
(Show your work.)
Me: Just barely.
Q: What kind of creature would you be if you were in a Bosch painting?
Me: bink said, when I asked last night, that I'd be a giant eyeball with little legs & feet, like those cute clay footed bowls from ancient Egypt.
bink wins!
That's exactly how I feel after a month of 13-hour days among the quick, the clever, and the quirky––that is, fans online––like a giant receptor with limited mobility.
I have started to think and even talk in such terms, influenced by smart & zippy youTubers such as Dan Howell [they're not all smart!]:
This is a good overview of Internet fandom.
Meanwhile, I've joined Facebook after a 3-year hiatus (friend me there! Please!) because my brain is temporarily unavailable to blog, being busy sorting out the deluge of FEELS and ideas.
It provides nice, low-level contact with people I (mostly) know, so I don't feel lonely (yay!), and you don't have to think or process much to post or read posts on FB, which is welcome.
Boy, is FB is s-l-o-w.
It seems like while I was gone, everyone lost their gee-whizz enthusiasm for posting photos of their meals, which, frankly, I miss. I was never one to complain about selfies and vacation photos.
Now it's less personal, and more links to articles about politics and animal rescue.
Still, material incoming at a slow trot is just what my overwhelmed brain can handle, and I'm liking, though not loving, it.
I am liking––and loving!––the fandom stuff too. Massive multiplayer creativity at work. It's great. Ugly in spots, but honestly, mostly great.
I hope to take some breaks to write here--it's good to come down to Earth.
If I were a whippersnapper youTuber, I would ask questions such as:
Q: Can you put your foot up to your ear?
(Show your work.)
Me: Just barely.
Q: What kind of creature would you be if you were in a Bosch painting?
Me: bink said, when I asked last night, that I'd be a giant eyeball with little legs & feet, like those cute clay footed bowls from ancient Egypt.
bink wins!
That's exactly how I feel after a month of 13-hour days among the quick, the clever, and the quirky––that is, fans online––like a giant receptor with limited mobility.
I have started to think and even talk in such terms, influenced by smart & zippy youTubers such as Dan Howell [they're not all smart!]:
This is a good overview of Internet fandom.
Meanwhile, I've joined Facebook after a 3-year hiatus (friend me there! Please!) because my brain is temporarily unavailable to blog, being busy sorting out the deluge of FEELS and ideas.
It provides nice, low-level contact with people I (mostly) know, so I don't feel lonely (yay!), and you don't have to think or process much to post or read posts on FB, which is welcome.
Boy, is FB is s-l-o-w.
It seems like while I was gone, everyone lost their gee-whizz enthusiasm for posting photos of their meals, which, frankly, I miss. I was never one to complain about selfies and vacation photos.
Now it's less personal, and more links to articles about politics and animal rescue.
Still, material incoming at a slow trot is just what my overwhelmed brain can handle, and I'm liking, though not loving, it.
I am liking––and loving!––the fandom stuff too. Massive multiplayer creativity at work. It's great. Ugly in spots, but honestly, mostly great.
I hope to take some breaks to write here--it's good to come down to Earth.