Avatar

sympathetic ufos

@sympathischeufos

he/him, they/them | Europe | polyam

Hi to my new followers.

You are probably here because you found my transcript of the big man in the bathtub. Or my DuckTales organ donor post, because those are the only two semi-popular posts I have.

This is my personal "I like it so I reblog it" blog. If you wish, you can follow my side blog @polyamoryfacts for occasional polyamory shitposting and recently more frequently, polyamory advice.

This blog is anti-racist, anti-nazi, pro-choice, queer-positive, ace-positive, trans-positive, sw-positive, ethical non-monogamy positive, ... and by now you probably have an idea.

However, this does not mean that I post the respective content. It simply means that those are my personal beliefs.

Also, almost nothing here is tagged, so, uh, I am sorry.

one of the more valuable things I’ve learned in life as a survivor of a mentally unstable parent is that it is likely that no one has thought through it as much as you have. 

no, your friend probably has not noticed they cut you off four times in this conversation. 

no, your brother didn’t realize his music was that loud while you were studying. 

no, your bff or S.O. doesn’t remember that you’re on a tight deadline right now.

no, no one else is paying attention to the four power dynamics at play in your friend group right now.  

a habit of abused kids, especially kids with unstable parents, is the tendency to notice every little detail. We magnify small nuances into major things, largely because small nuances quickly became breaking points for parents. Managing moods, reading the room, perceiving danger in the order of words, the shift of body weight….it’s all a natural outgrowth of trying to manage unstable parents from a young age. 

Here’s the thing: most people don’t do that. I’m not saying everyone else is oblivious, I’m saying the over analysis of minor nuances is a habit of abuse. 

I have a rule: I do not respond to subtext. This includes guilt tripping, silent treatments, passive aggressive behavior, etc. I see it. I notice it. I even sometimes have to analyze it and take a deep breath and CHOOSE not to respond. Because whether it’s really there or just me over-reading things that actually don’t mean anything, the habit of lending credence to the part of me that sees danger in the wrong shift of body weight…that’s toxic for me. And dangerous to my relationships. 

The best thing I ever did for myself and my relationships was insist upon frank communication and a categorical denial of subtext. For some people this is a moral stance. For survivors of mentally unstable parents this is a requirement of recovery. 

do you ever think about what gnome dystopias would look like

Hmmmmmmm… well, I could do it… shall we find out what it looks like?

@inneskeeper would you like to gnow?

i want to see you oppress gnomes whose hats arent pointy enough and whose chortles aren't jolly enough

Indeed. In a dystopian gnome society, there will also be no gardens. Only steampunk plants.

What species of steampunk plants are there?

Can you elaborate?

Are there other species?

Copper.

What do they look like

Plant. Tree. Hydra.

Can they speak?

No. Only steam.

Interesting… do you know where to find some so I can do some research?

No. Get back to the chocolate chip mines.

Brassica?

The goblin looked at the orc. The orc looked at the goblin. They both looked down at the crumpled shape of the Overlord, His Unholy Majesty, in his obsidian armor.

His final spasms had been mesmerizingly acrobatic. The fall down the steps leading up to his iron throne had pretzelled his body quite impressively, both arms folded behind his back and one leg bent at a jaunty angle.

The goblin looked at the orc. The orc looked at the goblin.

"Shit," said the goblin.

"Shit," said the orc.

"We're likely to get blamed for this," the goblin said. She walked over to the head of the glittering mangled heap and started pulling the helmet off.

"It's not our fault," the orc said. "It's hard to help someone choking when they wear two-hundred pounds of spiked armor at all times."

"Yeah, well," the goblin grunted. The helmet came free, and the bald head of the Overlord bounced on the stone with a hollow, coconut noise. "You know how it is in this bloody country - thieves get their heads cut off so they can't think about thieving, and all that." She fished in the Overlord's mouth with a finger and pulled out the obstructing olive on the end of her claw.

She popped it into her mouth and chewed. "What do you reckon they do for a regicide?" she said.

"We should run," the orc said. She had started bouncing her leg. "I hear that there's some places in the Alliance where they just kill you and let you stay dead. That's got to be nicer than what'll happen if we stay here."

The goblin started to nod - and then her gaze fell on the helmet.

It looked like a pineapple designed by a deranged blacksmith. It was all thorns and spikes and hard edges, as though the maker had been very determined to not let pigeons roost on it. The only bits that weren't solid iron were eyeholes. Nobody had ever seen the Overlord's face.

She held up the helmet and squinted from it to the orc. One of the thorns had been bent badly in the fall.

Nobody had ever seen the Overlord's face...

"Right," she muttered. "Right. Could work - or."

The orc had a sudden vision of the immediate future. "No," she said.

"I mean you're about his height-"

"No."

"It would just be for a-"

"Absolutely not."

"Just hear me out," the goblin said. "Outside of this room are two-thousand men and orcs and goblins who are absolutely gonzo about this man, and there's a whole country of them outside of the castle, and at any moment someone's going to walk in that door and see one dead tit in black armor and two unbelievably dead idiots next to him.

"Or." She tossed the helmet up like a basketball to the orc, who fumbled and tried to find somewhere to hold it that wasn't a knife's edge. "We chuck him out the window now, walk out the door in the armor, and ditch the armor as soon as nobody sees us."

The orc had started bouncing her leg again. "They'll know something's up the second I walk out of the room."

"No worries," said the goblin. "Leave that to me."

---

It had been a very strange year for the Empire.

Change had rolled across the land as slow and inevitable as a glacier. Roads and bridges carved the gray, blasted wildlands, and a number of social reforms had made the country a place where you could be miserable, yes, but miserable in comfort and safety, and that was an improvement.

Barely anyone got boiled alive in molten metal, and even if the disgusted sun never rose to light the Empire, at least you had a roof over your head to protect yourself from the acid rain.

The Barbie movie reminded me about how when I was little my parents were upset that I kept making my Barbie dolls kiss, so they bought me a Ken doll. The next day they found me having a funeral for poor Ken in the garden, he had died of tuberculosis. All the Barbies were in attendance and I buried him under our rose bush. The Barbies were too poor to afford a headstone (it was 1875) so I didn’t mark where the grave was and I never could find him again. He’s probably still there.

Die allerbeste Bravo-Fotolovestory, die ich je gelesen habe, hatte folgende Handlung: Das Mädchen wollte zum Flughafen, aber ihr attraktiver Taxifahrer hat sie stattdessen irgendwo ins Nichts gefahren. Später hat sich dann herausgestellt, dass der Taxifahrer ein Geist war und dass das Flugzeug, das sie verpasst hat, dann abgestürzt ist. Der Taxi-Geist hatte das vorhergesehen und sie gerettet. Sie hat ihn nie wiedergesehen.

Das war eine echte Fotolovestory. Wild. Ich werde sie nie vergessen

Hat irgendwie die gleichen vibes wie diese Story von dem Jungen, der ein Mädchen gefahren hat. Irgendwann zwang er sie auszusteigen, sie war voll sauer und ist alleine nach Hause. Sie hat aber am nächsten Tag erfahren, dass er in eine Mauer gefahren war - er hatte die Mauer von weitem gesehen und hat das Mädchen gezwungen, auszusteigen, um sie zu retten 😭❤️ Like dies, wenn du deinen Freund liebst

Avatar

They really awake his bloodlust, uh

The virgin pit bull vs the chad Great Pyrenees

Avatar

Listen. I grew up with these dogs. Im a cat person, no shame, but Great Pyrenees are hands down my most trusted domestic animal and are hardcore as fuck.

When I was a kid, between six and fifteen, one of our Pyrenees would escort me, off-leash, between my grandmother's house and mine. I'd just have to call him, and he'd show up and walk me there, placing himself between me and anything he considered threatening- Cranky farm animals, holes in the ground, bodies of water, etc.

That same dog found a (unfortunately deceased) lamb my grandfather had buried a few hours earlier, dug it up, realized it was cold and not breathing, and carefully carried it to our barn, where he covered it neck-deep in straw and tried to cuddle it warm again to bring it back to life.

One of our older dogs, at about sixteen years old (keep in mind, this breed tends to average out at about 12 years max) had arthritis in his hips, a bad back, and a respiratory issue, was fucking ancient and essentially palliative, but would still go stock-still out of nowhere, let out one subtle "boof", and then set out at an awkward-yet-speedy bunny-hop sprint at the slightest whiff of a cougar, bear, or wolf. Like, grampa would jump fences. Gentle geriatric giant would kick up to 7k to protect the family, never mind the three other, much younger fogs already on the case.

When I was a baby, like a literal in-diapers infant, he would lay on the ground and let me dress him up as a wizard and crawl all over him with zero complaint.

His nephew was 100lbs and often alarmed visitors who mistook him for a bear, yet never so much as bumped into a person in his life and feared only string and kittens.

A Great Pyrenees is not only the best dog, but I would argue that it is also the MOST dog

I'm no archaeologist but I think that maybe this is not a job for a power wash guy

You couldn't be more wrong, then.

I dunno, I just think that if you find a mysterious statue of ancient origin out in the desert, "we should pay a guy $650 to shoot high pressure water at it to remove all the debris" should maybe not be one of your options.

If high pressure water can fix the problem of millionaires, it can fix the problem of dirt.

Only by badly damaging the surface of the statue. Which I guess are the vulnerable people dependent on a corrupt system in this metaphor.

the process of double knitting socks mentioned in “war & peace”. this is the oldest historical mention of the method, hence why nowadays it’s known as ‘the war & peace method’, and it seems like the knowledge of how to do it was lost/forgotten until this article from 2006 that details it. it’s still not a very popular way of knitting socks due to its difficulty , but it’s fairly interesting in how it works.

every other stitch on the needles belongs to the inside sock and, as you go, you knit one stitch with one yarn and the next one with the other, so that the two projects share the same needles but aren’t actually connected to each other

then you can, in fact, magically pull out the second sock from inside the first

Happy Thirst Trap Thursday!

Since so many people commented on this image in the ORF 2023 photo set, and I don't currently have new photos as I've been art gremlining in the shop these last couple of weeks preparing for Midsummer Faire, I thought I'd give it a post to itself.

Sorry if I add more heat to what is probably an already stupidly warm day. 😉

Stay cool and safe out there. ❤️