Click here for the Dwell On It, Second Life comic archives!

We have moved!


(pardon our dust)

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Contextual connections

I'm very, very lucky. I don't need an analyst. There are people standing by ready at a moment's notice to tell me what I'm thinking, and feeling and why I did or wrote or said or thought something (even if I didn't do or write or say or think it).

It's like Google adwords for the inner self. A ready supply of amusingly incorrect contextual connections. It's fun and educational :)

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Windlight from Albion

This is what Windlight's sky looks for me.

Comic - The Plan



Saturday, May 26, 2007

Red glare

So, I am sitting at my desk, inworld, talking about some content creation, and suddenly there is a bright red glare. A bright red laser dot, shining through a crack in the drapes in the middle of the evening, right into my left eye.

I was afraid at first to go to the door, fearing what I might find, but I ultimately opened the door with my partner backing me up. Nothing. Nobody. Walk out and look up and down the street. Not a soul, and not a sound.

Now I can't see properly out of my left eye.

Yes, we called the police. I felt a bit silly about it, but they they took it quite seriously and there is now a patrol car cruising the streets.

It has been about a half hour now, and my left eye is still all blurry.

Thursday, May 24, 2007

Lost for words

I hate writing out a thoughtful comment on a blog, hitting the submit/post button and having the page refresh, my words gone forever. It happens just often enough to be frustrating, and infrequently enough for me not to think about selecting and copying the text into a paste buffer before submitting it.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Why would that make it any less real?

Fred Gallagher nails it right on the head.

Harassment

The most common piece of advice that people who are being harassed (sexually or otherwise) get is, essentially, some variation of "Get over it, you pathetic weakling."

The wording and emotional shading may change, but the message remains the same. You're too sensitive. It's your fault. She was asking for it.

Everyone's got their Achilles' Heel - and often more than one. Some well worn track past all your barriers of intellect and self-esteem that cuts straight to your heart. Sometimes you'd think of them as phobias, if they cause unreasoning fear. Some of them lock the spirit into a repeating emotional pattern from which it is hard to escape, reliving the patterns of former misery.

It might be spiders, clowns, mimes, confinement, pregnancy, sexual advances, the disapproval of a parent, certain kinds of insults, slurs or teasing. Everyone's got pushable buttons that generate emotional responses first, leaving intellect to falteringly chase the ambulance.

Repeated exposure often amounts to reinforcement, deepening the track. The wound doesn't heal and each time it hurts worse than the last. This also means that it can be very subtle. Individual incidents may not seem significant in and of themselves to others. Well, of course they don't. They're not your buttons and they're not happening to you. Turning to others has a pretty well-established history of not working well, and that makes things worse.

A woman in the workplace (let's call her Susan) becomes the focus of unwanted sexual slurs, advances, maybe even inappropriate touching. When Susan works up the courage to talk to her friends about it, the most likely piece of advice she is likely to get is some variation of "Get over it." - You shouldn't let that sort of thing bother you. Just ignore it. It's not as bad as you think it is. Run it off. Grow up!

Can we accept, for the moment, that that is not at all helpful? It's much the same sort of advice that people with clinical depression or clinical anxiety get.

If dealing with harassment was as simple as shrugging it off and ignoring it, we wouldn't have laws and regulations about it. It'd be a non-event. The fact is, that however minor or severe the incident is, it is something you don't have a natural defense against. Quite the opposite.

Harassment is a bit like an allergy. The slightest contact can set you off. You brush against a plant protruding from a fence onto the sidewalk, and within minutes you can be incapacitated. You shy away from situations where that might occur, walking suspiciously on the other side of the sidewalk. You avoid walking in parks. You avoid ever being alone with the boss, or that sleazy coworker. You avoid workplaces like the ones in which you have been harassed before.

You do the smart thing, which is to avoid contact with the thing that causes you harm.

Everyone else tells you to get over it. You're too weak, too sensitive, run it off.

As if.

When you are speaking to the victims of harassment, even if you don't understand, be more accepting - and mind your words. If all you can say is some variation of "Get over it", you're probably better keeping quiet.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

Deficiency

I have one of these chairs from Therapod. It's about 4.5 years old, and theoretically sports a ten year warranty. Who knows where the purchasing paperwork is, even though it was horribly expensive. These are not cheap chairs.

Despite the long warranty period, the arm-rests have perished, the left armrest support snapped off completely about two years ago. Something went spung in the base a few minutes ago, leaving me teetering awkwardly. A bolt or something has sheared, taking the tension control off forward/backwards motion and the distance the seat-back tilts. I'm not sure I dare lean back in this in case something else lets go and throws me backwards on the floor.

Out on the back porch, I have some kitchen chairs that cost about 15 dollars each, and have been hanging around sturdily for more then ten years, with no signs of weakness.

As of ten or fifteen minutes ago, it is nearly a matter of acrobatics to sit in my Therapod chair without pitching forward or back.

Oh, yes. This is just what I need right now.

Monday, May 07, 2007

Things you don't want to hear

When slapped with a sudden tax bill larger than your annual income. You don't want to hear the tax office staffer ask "How much is your house worth?"