trappedslider
Legend
I thought the red flags meant it was a carnivalThe problem always arises when a situation looks like a Christmas decoration. :S
I thought the red flags meant it was a carnivalThe problem always arises when a situation looks like a Christmas decoration. :S
I have a pair of related reactions.
1. It’s fine to have bright red lines that tell you can expect not to have a good time if you go further. But then you should STOP, disengage, and go out your attention onto something else. Continuing may be necessary for, say, work, or academic analysis, or crucial personal importance. But the overwhelming majority of the time it isn’t and you’re just setting yourself up for unhappiness and fighting.
2. Actively looking for green lines that suggest you’re likely to have fun with at least part of something and seeking them out is very healthy and productive. More people should do it.
I agree - people shouldn’t be hasty to declare something intolerable. But having made that declaration, then they should move away from it. If they want to keep talking about it, then there should be some possibility they decide it’s okay. Topic and action should line up, one way or the other.Maybe I'm just more optimistic and willing to acknowledge that both sides have a point and that you shouldn't let blind hatred/dislike cloud your judgement.
I’ve been trained in 3 forms of technical writing and one of my minors was in English. I have learned how to write, and more importantly, how to edit.A lot of people skip words when they speak or write. It’s okay. We all do it. But if those skipped words are the key to understanding the whole, you’ve failed at clearly communicating. Part of being an editor is pointing out when words are skipped, rendering the communication unintelligible.
I was just reading an apparently infamous thread where a guy was mansplaining to an author about how she shouldn’t have used the word “vulva” when the proper term was “vagina”. He was immediately fact checked by the author herself, as well as other well-educated posters…including an OB-GYN.In defense of pedantry -- there's a real danger in allowing people to refer to things in certain ways.
In Prof. Stanley Johanson’s Wills & Estates class, he boiled down a 25pg document down to 2 paragraphs on a single page.Jargon and TLAs obfuscate, they don't explain.
Circa 1988-89, I was trying to write the final paper for an advanced philosophy class and had writer’s block. So I typed up a ridiculous intro: “Millions of years ago, when philososaurs ruled the earth…”A long time ago (more than a decade), I posted on a completely different forum a comment that was (IMO) pretty funny. But ... it was a joking reference that I thought was so obvious that everyone would get it. In fact, I almost ended up deleting it after writing it because I was like, "Naw ... that's just so basic and obvious, it's barely worth doing."
rudeDr. Luper-Foy was puzzled by my intro, and actually took off a couple of points. (A+ reduced to A.)
2. Actively looking for green lines that suggest you’re likely to have fun with at least part of something and seeking them out is very healthy and productive. More people should do it.
Car dealership.I thought the red flags meant it was a carnival
It's called "greatness."I wish there was a name for being forced to travel on a path to a predetermined destination. I'm sure it will come to me ....
History is written by the victors. Victors are usually jerks. Why should I listen to jerks?--
People really like to pick and choose their recollection of history eh?

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.