Tumgik
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Note
You'll be missed, I love your FFXIV posts!
Aw, thank you! I'm glad they delighted you!
12 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Note
Fare ye well, Apo!
Thanks, and right back at you!
6 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Note
I'm going to miss you, good luck in the future :)
Thanks, and you too!
6 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
Leaving Tumblr
I think this has been a long time coming, but I’ve finally decided it’s best for me if I stop using Tumblr permanently. I won’t be relocating to some other site, either—I’ve going to withdraw from social media as much as possible. So this is likely the last y’all will hear from me.
I’m going to log in for a few more days (let’s say three), to give time for more individual goodbyes, if anyone wants one, then I’m off. I don’t think I’ll deactivate my blog; there’s a whole history there, and a lot of content I never put anywhere else, drabbles and heacanons and the like. If I end up needing to delete it because I can’t stay away, I’ll post an advance warning.
So, this is goodbye to all my Internet friends and followers. I feel like this is the past where I should give some big speech, but I’m just drawing a blank. Writing one would feel inauthentic, and I don’t want that. I guess all I’ll say is, thanks to everyone for all the support over the years, and God bless y’all!
11 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
For the second time in as many years, the Senate Education Committee’s chairman and other lawmakers are trying to pass a paid maternity leave bill for teachers.
Part of Sen. Adam Pugh’s education agenda, SB 364 would require districts to provide 12 weeks of paid maternity leave for teachers, the bill and Pugh’s education agenda come as the House has already passed its own education plan that does not include a maternity leave requirement for teachers.
“I honestly can’t think of a more pro-life thing that we can do in this body than support moms who just had a baby,” Pugh (R-Edmond) said in a committee hearing Feb. 14. “When I start to look at what most civilized nations around the world are doing, they’re doing significantly more than 12 weeks.”
If passed, the legislation would put Oklahoma ahead of many other states regarding teacher benefits.
While teachers qualify for the Family and Medical Leave Act, a national law passed by Congress in 1993 that requires employers to provide employees with up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave per year, only 13 states and the District of Columbia have paid parental leave laws, according to the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank. Oklahoma is not one of those states currently.
For teachers specifically, an Education Week article from August indicates that only a “handful” of states provide paid maternity leave for teachers.
Of the states that border Oklahoma, only Missouri and Colorado have paid parental leave laws for teachers. Arkansas, Kansas and New Mexico governors have all signed executive orders providing parental leave to employees of state agencies, but those orders do not apply to teachers.
132 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
the movie really undersells the fact that frodo spent half a year planning to make his departure from the shire as inconspicuous as possible and merry and pippin and sam saw him doing that, figured out he was leaving the shire and that it had something to do with bilbo’s ring, and then spent nearly as long preparing to go with him. icons
39K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Note
“The social media gamification of community”. I’m obsessed with this. Do you mind elaborating on it?
When your primary community is online, the normal incentives we have to get along with a diverse group of people are no longer in play. The whole idea of manners is that you are signaling to your neighbors that you are not insane, that you are safe, that you are willing and able to assist them if there's a problem, and you hope they will do the same for you. In a small community, whether it is a workplace, a church, a small town, an apartment building, or a subway car, you are expected to maintain a certain level of politeness and care for other people, because we are social creatures who get spooked in large groups and want to rely on some kind of script for how to behave in ways that won't get us kicked out of the group. We smile wordlessly, we say "hello," we don't blare loud music, we step outside to smoke, we call when someone has died, we hold open doors, we intervene if someone seems uncomfortable, and if we have a real issue with someone, we are forced to confront them about it directly, while trying to be honest, direct, and professional. There are alternatives if we think someone is really harmful, like reporting to the police, or a whisper vine where the people who need to know about their behavior know it. But in general, you cannot get away with spreading lies about someone - or cutting someone off, or being really rude, or refusing to do the small things that allow us to assure each other that we're all fine - without seeing, in an IMMEDIATE, physical sense, the consequences. Something as small as littering will show in our environment. Someone flipping you off unsettles you, even if they're a stranger. And they can see your reaction. They can see the reaction of the people around you, or those of their friends, who might say, "Hey, knock it off." There's basically a shared need to make the space into a strong network, one that helps as many of its inhabitants as possible, where they are safe and where everyone has a stake in not going apeshit, if only because there are people in the vicinity who might punch them for being awful.
We don't get any of that on social media. We can delete people very quickly from our lives without them even knowing. We don't have to face their families, or their disappointed faces when they find out they've upset us. We don't have to even deal with our conflicted feelings as much because we don't have to be reminded of it. If someone annoys us, we can take a video of them, upload it, and immediately get tons of positive feedback from people who don't know the person involved, don't care what will happen if they laugh at them, and will make YOU feel great for being antisocial and cruel to a neighbor. Because it's not happening in front of them. It's at a distance. It makes you feel like a reporter instead of a fellow citizen. And gradually what happens in this isolated, digitized world becomes more important than what is happening in front of you. You don't really "NEED" the people around you, you feel, to survive, so why should you treat them kindly? Why should you compromise on your own preferences, why should you try to reach an agreement that will make everyone feel like they had an input in a difficult situation? You are used to tailoring your own experience, and it's fine to take what is happening in a small town and turn it into content that the entire globe can pick apart without having to live with the fallout.
tl;dr touching grass is so good for you because it reminds you that you are a person who needs others and you can't get in the habit of modding your life to avoid any difficulties because that will just make you stale and unable to grow and make living in the physical presence of people unbearable because everyone is playing to social media instead of looking into someone else's eyes beside them
616 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
201K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
“Every dehumanizing ideology succumbs to the same temptation: to see the undesirable other as a non-person, and thus disposable. In this distorted light, the disposal of the unwanted person becomes not only morally permissible, but meritorious, a praiseworthy act. I have come to recognize that there is never a safe way to draw a dividing line between “human being” and “person.” That line, even when drawn with the best of intentions and the loftiest ideals, leads to the gravest evil.”
— Abigail Favale (Confessions of a Feminist Heretic)
403 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
12K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
Actually, the book itself acknowledges it—Bilbo’s just talking to himself, but Gollum takes it as a riddle, and both of them end up rolling with it because Gollum is impatient and hungry, and Bilbo is scared and can’t think of anything better.
I really hate to side with Gollum on this, but “what’s in my pocket” is not a riddle and should not have counted. 
80K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
God is good and He doesn’t change. Which is good because sometimes I have the emotional control of a ferret and often my emotions get ahead of me. Good to have a God that will be patient with me and stable as bedrock.
540 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
Was thinking about how Adam and Eve betrayed God in a Garden and how Jesus's tomb was in a Garden.
And how that makes the story come full circle.
Cause life was given in the Garden but then Adam and Eve chose death, and then Jesus chose Death so life could be once again be given in the garden through his resurrection.
And I don't know what to do with this
2K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
Ori: floor is lava
Sein: what?
Ori, holding Triple Jump, Charge Jump, Wall Jump, Climb, Glide, Bash, and Air Dash: FLOOR IS LAVA
5 notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
@incomingalbatross ooooh The Hobbit! I literally just finished a chapter of it so I saw the tags and went “OH”
New rb game explain the plot of ur fave media as boring as possible. i'll go first: highschool loser gets mind controlled by keanu reeves
8K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
40K notes · View notes
the-apocryphal-one · 1 year
Text
If you see this you’re legally obligated to reblog and tag with the book you’re currently reading
222K notes · View notes