GRS, vulvaplasty, recuperation experiences wanted
So! I'm due to check into the hospital later this week for said procedure, with but a single night there before and after, before heading back to the warren. (With, unfortunately, two flights of stairs between the entrance and the front door.. I'm hoping that'll be manageable)
I'd like to hear others' experiences of how their recovery went. Of course, it'll vary between people - different bodies, different techniques, different surgeons - but still, I'm thinking it could be helpful if I can get a better idea of what the overall pace of progress may be like.
okay! Today's "looking for jobs in late capitalism has me thinking of cutting my wrists from self doubt and despair" is FINALLY done for today after one of those long "tell us every detail that might possibly exist about your prior jobs, fuck that you've got it on your resume" applications, so I'll eat something and figure out what I'm doing with the rest of the day.
that "all my dreams of exploring below the ocean's surface, of finding out wonderful things about animals extinct long before humans even existed, of traveling across Europe and doing art for money are all gone, replaced by probably winding up in a warehouse again" feeling which probably indicates I need to eat something
#drawings today; three adventurers discover a room full of treasures, and a wizard and fighter wander through dwarf statues in the mist, unaware they’re being watched.
@frost Some of the stuff around Tanis is real, too. Before and after WWII there WAS a French archaeologist (with no help from the Germans, that's a different story) excavating there. Pierre Montet was trying to prove the events of the Old Testament actually happened; he didn't, but was able to find Tanis actually does show up in the OT. The place actually was Shishanq III's capital and burial place and fell into disuse on its own, no divine sandstorm.
@frost The real kicker is that there IS in fact, a neolithic barrow outside Hazelton. There are two. There's no folklore about a golden casket buried at the site or remains of attempts to rob the barrow (I think this might be in the movie thanks to Sutton Hoo I, where there *were* remains of an Elizabethian attempt) and the dig would have been going on at the time they were filming Raiders, it was very current archaeology at the time!
NEO meaning new and LITHIC - i t h i c - meaning stone. Now let's turn our attention to this site, 13 barrow near Hazelton. This site demonstrates one of the dangers of archaeology, not to life and limb although that may, occasionally, occur. No, I'm talking about folklore. #MovieQuote
re: longish
@frost "anthro" as terminology gets complex, since the really technical meaning of "having human traits" like talking is pretty consistent - there are still plenty of online and art characters who are quads/ferals/etc, f'rex the characters in The Fox and the Hound are definitely anthros by the standards of early fandom! - but it tends to get shortcut into "bipedal with obvious hands." I'd argue you *can* be "anthro" and be/self-represent as a quad or feral, *but* as a caveat, I honestly don't think there's all *that* much difference between humans and other animals anyway.
longish
@frost Furry started with some fairly imaginative people - afaik they were pretty sure they were humans, but they're coming out of a lot of 60s counter cultural holdovers in the 70s and 80s, much like the first Otherkin. Sometime in the 90s you get both "furry lifestylers" - basically therians - and Otherkin, who tended to be on alt.fan.dragons or the werewolf equivalent. Neither group liked each other; the weres were sure furries just saw it as a costume, a joke, and the furries saw the lifestylers/weres as taking it too seriously (and they took it REALLY SERIOUSLY - there was a lot of "prove you're a REAL were" equivalent to making women go through all sorts of mental gymnastics to prove they're trans).
Over the last 20 years things have shifted such that if you're a therian, you've probably been around furries and are okay with that (and most furries are cool with therians).
Fursonas get a little more complex because they're an early fandom thing that came about by accident and persisted; one of the earliest furries, Ken Sample, consistently portrayed himself as a cougar, and everyone around him thought this was a great idea. And of course, where fursonas are basically roleplaying people can and do swap out (my first fursona was a wolf, would you believe it?). Nobody's ever required a fursona - and I can think of one therian who's literally never *had* a separate fursona - but it wound up accepted as a shorthand.
today's "Raiders was a legit cinematic masterpiece" was thinking about the dialogue between Beloq and the Germans which ends with "the perfect man for this sort of work," Todt. The way the dialogue picks up steam, the way they're in motion, and the music becoming more frantic all turn a plot-required conversation into this tense thing.
Lots of random gunk, but some drawings and cooking talk too. Obsesses about DnD and related topics. Left-leaning/profoundly frustrated politics. Black lives matter; trans rights are human rights.
Occasionally NSFW art and discussion, please do follow if you're 18+.