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Boldlygowherenodoghasgonebefore

@boldlygowherenodoghasgonebefore

Also writes as Strarlight Barque: latest novel at: getbook.at/service 41; demisexual, gay, musician, math nerd, loves dogs, writes ds9 fic. Sometimes nsfw, please be 18+. she/her

Hi, I read that you've dealt with with impostor syndrome in the past, and I'm really struggling with that right now. I'm in a good place and my friends are going through a lot, and I'm struggling to justify my success to myself when such amazing people are unhappy. I was wondering if you have any tips to feel less like this and maybe be kinder to myself, but without hurting anyone around me. It's a big ask, I know, but any help would make my life a lot less stressful

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The best help I can offer is to point you to Amy Cuddy’s book, Presence. She talks about Imposter Syndrome (and interviews me in it) and offers helpful insight.

The second best help might be in the form of an anecdote. Some years ago, I was lucky enough invited to a gathering of great and good people: artists and scientists, writers and discoverers of things. And I felt that at any moment they would realise that I didn’t qualify to be there, among these people who had really done things.

On my second or third night there, I was standing at the back of the hall, while a musical entertainment happened, and I started talking to a very nice, polite, elderly gentleman about several things, including our shared first name. And then he pointed to the hall of people, and said words to the effect of, “I just look at all these people, and I think, what the heck am I doing here? They’ve made amazing things. I just went where I was sent.”

And I said, “Yes. But you were the first man on the moon. I think that counts for something.”

And I felt a bit better. Because if Neil Armstrong felt like an imposter, maybe everyone did. Maybe there weren’t any grown-ups, only people who had worked hard and also got lucky and were slightly out of their depth, all of us doing the best job we could, which is all we can really hope for.

(There’s a wonderful photograph of the Three Neils even if one of us was a Neal at http://journal.neilgaiman.com/2012/08/neil-armstrong.html)

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Reblogging, as perhaps someone needs this.

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gifted kid burnout things that no one seems to talk about:

  • the raw panic of hearing about your potential, positive or negative
  • a weird brand of imposter syndrome where you genuinely think you’ve fluked your way through every success and you’re gonna be Exposed as a Fraud
  • never having learned how to study and having no idea where to start now that you need to
  • reading college level books as a kid but being basically illiterate now
  • dismissing your struggles as irrelevant because other people have it harder and i should be smart enough to handle this
  • feeling like you’ve lost all control over your life (maybe manifesting into depression, anxiety and disordered eating in a grasp for control over something)
  • being unable to decide on a career path because you could have had everything, only to watch those opportunities disappear as you fail to commit
  • Peaking early and feeling like an eternal failure ever since
  • Remembering what it felt like to be motivated and at the top of your game and you could do ten things at once and cared so much, but now it’s a struggle to keep up with anything
  • ~depression~
  • ~functional depression~ so you feel like you are faking it
  • Holding a mediocre job and feeling unfulfilled but feeling like you aren’t good enough to do anything else
  • Being book smart but struggles with social skills and communication with others.
  • Feeling like you are the worst person on earth for making a mistake or not knowing something

Prompts list!

Since the reveal date is approaching, here we post again a prompt list. Feel free to submit your own ideas, or pick any of these for your stories!!

Remember, the collection is here (https://archiveofourown.org/collections/BabelTrek), and we are delighted with every story!

1. The translator never existed

2. Translator is used only in official situations

3. The Translator is considered too unreliable in many situations

4. The translator is illegal in some places

5. Translators take time to learn languages — this is the norm rather than the exception

6. Texts are not translated

7. It’s considered rude to translate friends so they teach their language to each other

8. Fantasy aus with no translation magic

9. Bajorans refuse to use them as part of their cultural revival

10. Translators are useless in the Delta or Gamma quadrants

11. Instead of translators there’s an official Federation language as well as local ones

12. Post-canon Cardassia fics where Julian is forbidden to use it

13. Trills have problems using them when they are joined (as with transporters in TNG)

14. Proximity-dependant translators. If characters are away from a ship or station they can’t connect to the database and are useless.

15. Public opinion blames translators for the Dominion War and some planets forbid them

16. Some languages are untranslatable, like the Founders’

17. Translator Free Party

18. Episode rewrite, for any series

19. Time travel episodes, translators don’t work outside their era

20. The Borg are untranslatable

21. Translators don’t work after going through wormholes 

22. Cardassians don’t use translators on Cardassia to maintain their privacy

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One time a guy and I were having an argument and he pulled a knife on me, and because I’m a dumbass idiot my response was to take out MY knife and go “what now, genius?” And what happened next was we just stood there for ten straight minutes not moving because niether of us wanted to put the knife down first and basically that’s our entire international situation regarding nuclear weapons

What happened afterwards?

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My mom showed up

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when will mom show up and stop the international situation regarding nuclear weapons

aliens if you’re out there 

NEW RELEASE: Dark In My Imagination by Aysha U. Farah

You only die once. Unless you’re Rami.

He’s done that a couple times too many, and the last one really didn’t stick.

Rami has been a vampire for a little more than a year, and things aren’t great. They aren’t really anything. Rami’s existence is solitary. Empty. Unfulfilled. And he can’t be sure why, or how to fix it, because no one has explained to him how to be a vampire. His brief stint at a facility or people–well, former people–like him resulted in Rami biting and nearly killing his caretaker, Sage. His time there, in his memory, is nothing but a stretch of terror, hunger, confusion, and violence.

Then on Halloween, the one night of the year Rami doesn’t have to worry so much about hiding who–well, what–he is, he stumbles into a little shop and there he is. Sage. Who doesn’t remember Rami at all, so everything should be fine. Except Sage is a witch who knows about secret, magical doors to secret, magical raves full of things that go bump in the night and the humans who want to be near them. Sage’s memory isn’t quite as wiped as everyone thought. His free will isnt quite his own. He also isn’t as delicate as he seems.  And he’s not interested in staying away from Rami.

Follow the author on twitter here!: @ayshaufarah

Read Aysha U. Farah’s novelette Puss In Heels here: http://getbook.at/heels

New Release: Mad Scientists Need Love Too

Can love stop a deranged genius bent on galactic domination? Can a dire warning keep a curious alien from the temptations of those dangerous Earthlings? Can an engineer be lured away from his top-of-the-line android by a clunky and obsolete metal robot? You will find answers to these questions and more in… Mad Scientists Need Love Too

@berlynn-wohl​ brings you a third collection of steamy stories, and this one might be her best yet!

Mad Scientists Need Love Too by Berlynn Wohl is available on Amazon as a paperback, ebook, or for FREE on Kindle Unlimited!

NEW RELEASE: Dark In My Imagination by Aysha U. Farah

You only die once. Unless you’re Rami.

He’s done that a couple times too many, and the last one really didn’t stick.

Rami has been a vampire for a little more than a year, and things aren’t great. They aren’t really anything. Rami’s existence is solitary. Empty. Unfulfilled. And he can’t be sure why, or how to fix it, because no one has explained to him how to be a vampire. His brief stint at a facility or people–well, former people–like him resulted in Rami biting and nearly killing his caretaker, Sage. His time there, in his memory, is nothing but a stretch of terror, hunger, confusion, and violence.

Then on Halloween, the one night of the year Rami doesn’t have to worry so much about hiding who–well, what–he is, he stumbles into a little shop and there he is. Sage. Who doesn’t remember Rami at all, so everything should be fine. Except Sage is a witch who knows about secret, magical doors to secret, magical raves full of things that go bump in the night and the humans who want to be near them. Sage’s memory isn’t quite as wiped as everyone thought. His free will isnt quite his own. He also isn’t as delicate as he seems.  And he’s not interested in staying away from Rami.

Follow the author on twitter here!: @ayshaufarah

Read Aysha U. Farah’s novelette Puss In Heels here: http://getbook.at/heels