It’s bad enough the Marmalade Shit-Gibbon has taken office for the second time; bad enough there are enough stupid, frightened people in our nation to make that happen and that “basically good” people sit back and abstain from the process, congratulating themselves on keeping their souls clean.
It was tough already, with needing to delete my social media accounts: Facebook, Tumblr, Twitter, Instagram, and now Bluesky and DeviantArt. There’s been a rising tension in the air, people are doing away with the social agreements that enabled us to work together, and they’re increasingly comfortable with ideology. I wasn’t getting what I wanted or needed from social media; what I was seeing was a lot of hatred and belligerence.
To see some noob, barely past drinking age, loudly declare that Giantess Tina hated artists, then repost themself to make sure everyone could see it (and how virtuous they were by contrast), and then watching the snide attacks at her in the following days … it broke something in me. No one has fought harder for community than Giantess Tina. No one has created so many tools for artists, teaching herself a vast breadth of new skills solely for the sake of doing a good job, offering these tools for free—except at considerable personal cost—than Giantess Tina. It’s all she’s ever wanted, to uplift everyone and make them feel included, to inspire them to do amazing things, for longer than the ten years I’ve known her. To see her repaid like this made me want to vomit, and as no one else seemed to find this treatment objectionable, it was clear I was the only one with the problem.
And so I left. It was either that or drink hemlock, I guess. I mean, it was just a matter of time before these self-righteous fucks turned their crosshairs on me, and that is not why I signed up for social media. That’s not “fun” in my book.
There is no community, just a number of people who temporarily agree with each other until the next ideological sticking point. I was hoping for, I was starved for, a group of people who were excited to see each other, who supported and encouraged each other not just when they’re producing, and who felt safe to talk things out when there was a problem. (The aforementioned upstart bragged that there was no room for discussion.)
No such group exists, not that I’ve been able to find.
This technically frees up my time to pursue publication, like, in mainstream magazines and journals. It shouldn’t be completely impossible to think that some of my work could be revised and massaged to fit in a sci-fi, paranormal, or speculative fiction publication. “Technically,” because I’m once again enjoying my downtime and doing fuck-all to progress to my goal.
I had a minor freak-out, the day after I severed my connection to any perceived community, and I appealed to the Giantess about it. Her response surprised me: she turned rather frosty, telling me to “look inside (myself)” and “figure it out on (my) own.” She assured me she wasn’t going to pick me up and carry me through this period of hardship and turbulence, and that it was time to stop leaning on the giantesses as a crutch. I took that very badly for about 24 hours, meditated, despaired, but then conceded that she was right. This is my journey, a path of my footsteps, and my period of learning. She’ll be there to encourage me but this is my life to live.
All this is to say there’s been a lot of shit going on, so why would I take on a larger, more demanding project like migrating my blog away from WordPress? CEO Matt Mullenweg is behaving more erratically all the time. I thought he had a solid legal case against WP Engine, but he’s behaving like an entitled techbro who’s losing a fight. Bouts of manic optimism, unhinged calls for greater chaos and drama, and imperious rebuttal to anyone who tries to explain what’s happening in the real world.
Maybe WordPress will be stable for a long time, but signs of trouble are enough to get me to pack my bags, as we’ve seen. Also, I’ve long been an advocate of owning your space on the internet. Currently, WordPress is hosting my shit, and that has to change. Rather than installing wordpress.org’s CMS, I’m planning on divesting entirely and learning Ghost’s system. And Ghost supports ActivityPub, which means my blog will be in the Fediverse. The implications of that … give me pause, but I’ll learn what that looks like in practice.
So my blog might be down for a while. It’ll come back, no matter what, but it’s not like a lot was going on here anyway.

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