Far-off Places, Daring Swordfights, Magic Spells

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
seananmcguire
tahthetrickster

im suddenly reminded of preteens testing their new boundaries by swearing as much as they can as offensively as they can when they’re out of earshot of any authority figures so just as a primer to people new to the hellsite:

  • don’t say shit like k1ll or unalive or you will be made fun of
  • you’re allowed to say shit like im going to rip elon musk apart with my bare hands like a rampaging chimpanzee. nobody cares
  • wishing death upon random tumblr users is still unacceptable. we are all just some guy. don’t be fucking rude.
  • you leave neil gaiman alone. he’s nice.
  • you FUCKING leave lynda carter alone. she’s nice.
ekjohnston
beggars-opera

I don’t know if I can contain my “The Muppet Christmas Carol has better costume design than most Oscar-nominated period dramas” rant until after Thanksgiving you guys, I have…so many Thoughts

beggars-opera

Ok, buckle up kids.

Basically they did not have to go as hard as they did here. A Christmas Carol covers 60 years of fashion through flashbacks and they still manage to do nearly everything right. 

I’m mainly going to be talking about the human actors here because it’s harder to judge Muppet costumes proportionally, but those costumes are still on point 90% of the time.

First off, A Christmas Carol was published in 1843, and anyone who knows me knows I love the absolute train wreck that was mid-19th century men’s fashion. Do you like plaid? GOOD, BECAUSE IT’S ALL PLAID. Mixed with whatever else your little Victorian heart desires, color schemes be damned. Go wild.

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This of course means I absolutely love Fred.

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This outfit is hideous and it is also 1000% on point.

We also get to see him in a different outfit the next day, along with his wife and some friends.

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First off, MORE PLAID, good for you. Second, I can literally find near-identical images of both these ladies’ dresses just by googling “1843 fashion plate”, I shit you not. To the damned year.

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A good part of the story involves travelling through Scrooge’s life, so we get to see the costumes varying wildly over the course of several scenes. This was a time when styles were changing rapidly, and you had to keep up if you wanted to be fashionable and keep up appearances. Fashion changed so fast that you can often pinpoint an outfit to within a year or two like the ones above. 

First, we go to Scrooge’s childhood school. Given the timeline that’s normally put forward Michael Caine is definitely not old enough to play Scrooge, but ignore that for now. Let’s say if Scrooge is 75ish in 1843, it’s about 1783 when we see him leaving school and going off to be an apprentice. We actually see a few years of Little Scrooge fashion, but it’s fairly standard stuff. Scrooge doesn’t have a super childhood and his clothing is pretty plain, but it’s totally on par for the time. Why this haircut though? It makes me sad.

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Then we jump ahead a few years and it’s about 1789. The whole group is attending the Fozziwig Christmas party and have gotten tarted up like they’re about the storm the Bastille, including Gonzo and Rizzo.

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Again, they look absolutely ridiculous and it is absolutely accurate

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Now, this is super ostentatious and a lot of people would have considered it way too French for their taste in this time period. But it definitely did happen (I’ve seen stripey bubblegum pink menswear in person) and like. It’s the Muppets. So, Rule of Funny.

Scrooge and Belle are dressed way closer to average Londoners of the time, and it’s worth noting that both are supposed to be somewhat poor. Fozzy pays everyone well but Lil’ Scrooge is still a skinflint and Belle is just getting by. They’re both looking darn good but their clothes are much more understated than everyone else’s and maybe even on the verge of out of style. 

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Even their hair is pretty good. Including his. Also, holy shit does this guy look like he could be a young Michael Caine. Like, he doesn’t actually look how Michael Caine looked when he was that age, but if I didn’t know that I would totally buy it. Wow.

Then we jump ahead another ten to twelve years or so. This is the period I know the least about, especially when it comes to outerwear, so Jane Austen stans please comment. I don’t think it looks too bad though.

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Here’s a couple of fashion plates from 1801 and 1803 for comparison.

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I’d also like to point out that there is a wide variety of costumes based on social class that we get to see in the 1843 “present” that you wouldn’t really notice. So while the Scrooge family that’s doing alright for itself is wearing the latest looks, the rest of the town is not. A few of the women in the crowd dancing around Scrooge during “It Feels Like Christmas” are wearing dresses a couple of years out of date. Not too far, but you can see some looks from the tail end of the 1830s before women started shrink-wrapping their sleeves onto their arms.

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You can see something similar to these outfits from 1839 in the crowd.

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Contrast this with Mrs. Cratchit, who is living in poverty and has put on her absolute best dress for Christmas; it’s silk but it’s ten years out of style. 

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This would have been the height of fashion in the early-mid 1830s.

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And that’s important for making a world look real. Fashion was super important back then, but even so average people weren’t necessarily chucking their clothing out every year to keep up with the latest fashions unless they could really afford to. You would get there eventually, but you don’t want everyone in your universe, rich and poor, to look like they just stepped out of the latest fashion magazine. 

It’s absolutely astonishing to me that they put so much effort into this. I don’t tend to go down the rabbit hole of nitpicking historical costumes in movies as much as some, but when a movie that you never expected does it very right it just throws me for a loop. 

Was everything perfect? No, I don’t think any movie is. But this is the damn Muppets. They were under no obligation to do this. Add to that the fact that it’s one of the more accurate renditions of the story, to the point of including a ton of the original dialogue, both through the characters and through the narration, and they just created a masterpiece. 

isabelcanasauthor
no-longer-another-bondi-blonde

ventraman

This could save your life.

instructor144

BOOST.

aqueous2

Absolutely vital information to have if you live where the waters freeze over.

I especially appreciate this guy's commitment to actually showing the steps himself. That cold-shock response is a bitch and willingly subjecting himself to it couldn't have been fun.

marlynnofmany

I don’t live anywhere near water like this, but I am still memorizing this knowledge because:

* I might use it in a story someday.

* Any knowledge that staves off the dying is good knowledge.

mousenoises

Some kids passed away today in my region from falling in icy water, so thought it was important to boost.

seananmcguire
zitasaurusrex

Hey.

I'm serious when I say I think the sentiment that kindness requires "zero effort" is harmful.

The idea that kind is a thing you can be innately, without having to think or feel anything about it, leaves a gap in the fence where the other idea "if I have unkind thoughts or feelings, I am by nature a bad, unkind person" can slip through.

Listen. That's bullshit.

Being kind to other people means paying attention to the effect your words and actions have on others, caring about it, and trying to make those effects better. That's work.

If you have a nasty thought about another person that annoys you and you contain the impulse, hold your tongue, and let it go? That was effort.

If you took time out to really think about something you wanted to say and make sure it would have its intended result without causing accidental harm that you wouldn't have noticed if you went totally off the cuff? Wow, that took some work!

If you were tired and angry and full of hatred but you still did the dishes so your housemate has something to eat their breakfast off of in the morning, that wasn't easy.

I don't think there are magical "kind" people who never have a mean thought and are always selfless and pure. That would be exhausting and impossible.

I'm not a "nice person," I'm a nasty, bitter, angry, sad person who tries to have good leash manners, control my worst impulses, and not jump on strangers because they don't deserve that shit from me.

I don't always succeed, but I'm trying. I'm trying and it's worth it.

doiknowthings
my-soliloquy-chamber

On ADHD

By now, I’m sure many of you have heard the lecture on ADHD made by Dr. Russell A Barkley PhD, or you’ve at least seen some excerpts. If you haven’t heard the whole thing, you should, especially if you or someone in your life has ADHD. It is a very good lecture, it makes me as someone with ADHD feel incredibly seen and acknowledged. It’s amazing, really, here’s this man who’s never met me, speaking of my life, my struggles, my childhood, which such insight you’d think he’s been shadowing me for decades. Of course, he hasn’t, he’s just delivering this lecture based on his knowledge and understanding about this disability.

And there is where you find the problem. For someone with ADHD, Dr. Barkley’s lecture is fascinating and enlightening and validating, but more important than any of that; the lecture is heartbreaking.

Here is a medical professional, speaking on my disability and problems so eloquently and with such insight, and yet… I have so far never encountered a medical professional who understands this diagnosis the way Dr. Barkley does. He gave this lecture in 2009. That is thirteen years ago. Three years before I got my own diagnosis.

It would have been wonderful to have had this diagnosis as a small child, but I understand and accept that that was never feasible. We didn’t know enough about neurodevelopmental disorders back then. That’s fine. Awful and horrible and another type of heartbreaking for those of us who suffered our entire childhoods and well into adulthood or longer without help. But fine.

However, it’s been thirteen years since that lecture. Thirteen years. Enough time for the research it’s based on to spread in the medical community, enough time for “treatment” techniques to change and adapt to new information. My experience is that nothing has improved. Over the past ten years I’ve had this diagnosis, I’ve yet to meet a single medical professional who comes even close to the level of understanding that Dr. Barkley shows in his lecture.

No medical professional has ever called me lazy, or stupid, but there is and has always been one single goal with my “treatment”. One goal that is unspoken but clear. Fix it.

Everything is built around there being some sort of magical fix to my inability to focus, to follow through, to plan ahead, to juggle details, to juggle responsibilities and adulthood and life. That fix is Just Do It.

I have sat in one-on-one sessions, in group sessions, at home with independent study material and all versions are the same. You must find a way to live life the way neurotypical people do. Here’s an exercise.

I have been told to meditate because studies show it improves the ability to focus and heals the frontal lobe. Never mind my complete inability to do that because I CANNOT CHOOSE WHAT TO FOCUS ON. There is no plausible or conceivable scenario where I can empty my mind or imagine my thoughts floating past on clouds. And of course my failure is met with professionally restrained frustration, because if I just do it, I will be fixed.

I have binders upon binders filled with sheafs of paper; copies of exercises from some book or booklet my various doctors have had on their shelves. The exercises all boil down to the exact same thing. What do you have a problem doing? What could someone do to mitigate this problem? Great! Do that.

Having trouble remembering appointments? Set an alarm on your phone. With reminders!

Having trouble keeping your home clean and organized? Make a schedule for doing chores. With reminders on your phone!

Having trouble staying in one place to do one thing, always wandering off chasing other thoughts? Make a schedule! Remind yourself what you should be doing! And then stick to doing that!

It’s ALL designed around the idea that neurodivergent people just haven’t realized that they can do things if they just… you know… do them.

Trying to explain that the reminders only help if I act on them and don’t just switch them off was always met with confusion or frustration. You can’t just turn them off, the point is to just do it! Trying to explain that I can’t just remind myself what I’m doing, I can’t stick to things. I can’t use terrible future consequences as a motivator. There are zero consequences for me to just turn off the reminder. The terrible future consequences are not related to my ignoring a reminder. They will never be related. That’s not how this works.

When I was in group therapy, one of us said she had such a hard time keeping up with the house chores. Cleaning, tidying, laundry, dishes. She described the overwhelming exhaustion I know so well, the avoidance, the guilt, the shame. She had three young children to boot. She told the group that she and her husband were considering hiring a cleaning service, because it was just too overwhelming. Too overwhelming for her to handle her portion of the housework, too overwhelming for her husband to take on all or parts of her workload, too overwhelming for the children to have a parent who’s constantly drained, exhausted, and filled to the brim with shame and guilt. That it would be a big financial burden for the family, but the alternative would be a bigger burden in the long run.

All of us patients in that group agreed with her. Told her it was the right thing to do, said we’d do the same if we could afford it. Said she didn’t have cause to feel shame, we understood her completely. We talked about how this is such a common problem that there should be some service available, something a doctor can write a prescription for, and then the patient is free to live a functional life.

The psychologist who ran the group didn’t agree. This was the opposite of what the exercises were trying to accomplish! We were supposed to learn to do it OURSELVES.

Another member of the group struggled immensely with “paperwork”. He was in his fifties and anything even remotely related to paperwork filled him with dread and anguish. Bills went unpaid. Appointments were missed. Insurances expired. He wouldn’t even open the envelopes, just tossed them in a drawer or in the trash and ignored their existence. He thought the aversion (let’s call it what it really is; phobia) came from the homework he had to do as a child. Always so much, always overwhelmed, always impossible to understand or complete. And always resulted in angry teachers and parents. So now he was stuck with a complete inability to handle one of the most crucial parts of adulthood. He told us a friend had offered to do it all for him. That she had seen how he struggled, how strong his emotional response to the thing was, how deeply negatively it all affected his life, and she offered to help. She would deal with all the paperwork, and in turn he would help her with things he was good at like fixing broken things, heavy lifting, an extra set of hands when needed.

He was giving the group good news, not asking advice or permission. You could tell that a huge weight had been lifted from his shoulders and he felt so much more free and independent. We all congratulated him, encouraged him, talked about how it was a good solution. Regardless of if it’s in a marriage or a friendship, people can compensate for each other’s weaknesses like this. Though, we also agreed that there should be some kind of service available for people with this problem, that a doctor can write some kind of prescription for so you’ll have the help you need to live a functional life.

The psychologist who ran the group was appalled. Not only did this go against the point of the exercises, he was creating an unhealthy codependent relationship. What would he do when she didn’t want to help anymore? When she moved on with her life? No, he needed to learn to do this himself. My friend’s shoulders were slumped and his head bent at the end of that session.

I’ve moved on from the group therapies and the one-on-one sessions now. It’s been ten years since my diagnosis and the only thing I find to have a consistent positive effect on my ADHD is methylphenidate. It helps with concentration a bit, it helps with anxiety a bit. I don’t want to try life without it. But all the rest? No.

So I tell my doctors that I’m fine, I’m good. I’m managing. The medicine really helps, I say, and beyond that I know I just have to stay consistent with my routine and schedules. And they smile and nod and make a note in my chart and write out my prescription and send me on my way.

But of course I’m not fine. This will never be fine. I’m on a never ending cycle of failure to Just Do It and terrible future consequences, but I would never dream of telling my doctors that. I’m done with the exercises now. If I ever feel the need to revisit them, I have binders full and I’m an expert in filling them out.

I’m not fine. I’m not well. I’m not good. I’m not managing. But I told myself I was all those things. Until I saw Dr Barkley’s lecture and now I’m just heartbroken. Because the knowledge is there, it’s been there for a decade, probably much longer, but it has failed to permeate into the medical community. I will never be able to Just Do It, I will never be able to learn to juggle all these things on my own, and the medical community has failed me and everyone like me.

The solution isn’t exercises and meditation and learning to do it yourself. It’s not adapting me to society. The solution is adapting society to me, by creating the tools I need to function in this society. Cleaning service on prescription. Scheduling and financial services on prescription. Executive function services on prescription. Without all these different things weighing us down like rocks tied around our necks, we will be successful. Fully contributing members of society. I want the ADHD version of braille signs, gradient signaling, ramps, wheelchairs, white canes, prosthetic limbs.

But instead, I have exhaustion and shame and now heartbreak.

spacelazarwolf

i literally just finished watching that lecture probably for the third or fourth time and yet again it has me sobbing. he’s the only medical professional i’ve ever seen speak about adhd that didn’t have the Just Do It attitude you mention. i’m considering sending it to my new therapist to see if we can work off of it and come up with some actual solutions that will help me instead of endless “just do it, just set reminders, just get a planner, just do this thing you’ve said multiple times you literally cannot force yourself to do.”

i seriously don’t think people understand how disabling adhd can be. it’s been presented as this memeified thing online and dismissed irl but it has severely impeded my ability to live a fulfilling life and has caused me so much pain, and to see someone FINALLY name that pain, especially a medical professional, was life changing.

headspace-hotel

I wish more people talked about this because the truth is shameful to me: Medication is the only thing that has ever perceptibly helped with my ADHD. The "coping skills" Never Did Anything

It's really sad how people see ADHD as like, learning disability lite, when it's actually so disabling and way more than just "can't focus."

ADHD is also "so dependent on strong emotion and mental engagement that you get borderline suicidal when you're blocked on a creative project and get addicted to looking up upsetting content on the internet," it's "alienating your friends because you're an impatient, impulsive bitch that constantly interrupts people," it's "can't do leisure activities you enjoy because you can't initiate them"

hobo-rg

you know, as someone who seriously thought he had ADHD for a while and went so far as to attempt to get a diagnosis, I wish I had seen this before too, because it would have told me that my executive function problems are not this. My problem turns out to be somewhere in the vague bucket called “anxiety + mild ASD” and some of the coping strategies that don’t work for you do work for me. Makes me wonder if there’s some amount of projection going on. “Eh,” the NT therapist figures, “whenever I have gotten stuck on Cannot Do Thing it was because deep down inside I was scared to do it because of reasons and then it turned out the reasons were bullshit. Must be the same for you!” [Narrator: It was not the same for you.]

(The ADHD diagnostician I saw, btw, was great. She ran through a bunch of those questionnaires and then told me quite honestly that she wasn’t qualified to tell me exactly what my problem was, being outside her specialty, but she was sure it wasn’t ADHD, and wrote me a referral to a more general-purpose psychologist. Which I still haven’t actually used, because... reasons.)