

In general, we’re not taught early enough, if at all, to question both what we ‘perceive’ and the mental blabbering that makes up stories about it.


In general, we’re not taught early enough, if at all, to question both what we ‘perceive’ and the mental blabbering that makes up stories about it.


So you could say the difference…
Is subtle.
I’ll see myself out.


Thank you, this truly means a lot.


I usually feel like I have nothing useful to contribute, that my takes are uninteresting and unoriginal, and that no none cares what I think. I start a comment and delete before sending bc… what’s the point?


I’m in this picture and I don’t like it.
That Nestlé mug is a nice detail.
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Here, you dropped this
Same. I blame 80s TV montages.
Considering my bad luck, from very, very old age.
I want what those designers are having


I’m being held hostage by the cells’ survival instinct.


That being one of my favourite paintings ever (along with Empire of Light), I can see myself trying to pull that off.


So, the confederates played the long con.
I’ve decided to interpret it as sub text where the autor is showing us how these corporations are akin to eldritch beings in their disregard for human rules.


Why no exoskeleton? are we hermit crabs?


I’m usually more bothered by the “I should be doing something” thought, with the implication of productivity but not necessarily profit oriented, more like house chores and so.


Aside from the unfortunate name of the university, I think that part of why LLMs may be perceived as smart or ‘smarter’ is because they are very articulate and, unless prompted otherwise, use proper spelling and grammar, and tend to structure their sentences logically.
Which ‘smart’ humans may not do, out of haste or contextual adaptation.


Thank you for taking the time to make it more accessible for the rest of us.
I’m kinda relieved to know I wasn’t the only one struggling with the page.


Love your style! Just found the page navigation a bit confusing, at least on mobile.
I don’t feel some gender either, but my agab has always felt off, like ill-fitting clothes. Also due to the cultural/societal expectations and limitations instilled during upbringing, which made me further reject the idea of ‘being’ my agab.
I’ve come to think that if I had been assigned the opposite gender, maybe I would have felt it equally ill-fitting.
A few years ago I came across the concept of agender and it resonated. It took off pressure of the need for there to be something, where there is nothing, and it’s ok.