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One of the things that roommate has been doing to try and build more life skills and independence is learning how to drive. So far it's been mostly practice with me, as I've had an extended period of unemployment and therefore had time to take them out during the week in the car. We'll be moving them toward private driving lessons, as I'll be starting a new job soon, and eventually my wife and I are planning to head to Canada in the next year or two, so a more structured and focused Life Improvement Scheme is going to be necessary to best prepare them for once they have to go elsewhere.

During one of our recent practice sessions, I had pitched a specific neighborhood that would be a good practice ground, and specifically pitched trying to drive there, as it's a very short ways from where we live. They were nervous about it, because the main road off of our neighborhood is a two-lane county route, which can be understandably intimidating. I was the same with my own learning experience back in my hometown. So I drove us to the practice zone, but on the way there I pointed out the relatively low oncoming traffic for the turn. And on the way back after practicing for a decent chunk with single lane residential roads, I had a small lightbulb moment.

Those of you who knew me from cohost may remember the post I made about "the circus faction in your trpg setting". The short version is I watched a video where an experienced circus performer taught a youtuber how to walk tightrope, and I was so impressed by the teacher's physical and mental fortitude that I wrote up a post on how to incorporate those aspects of circus life into characters who have that as part of their background. One of the pieces of advice that he gave was, to paraphrase, "It's the same trick 5 inches off the ground as it is 50 ft off the ground."

Which is to say: if you can keep your balance on the rope the whole time under perfectly safe conditions, then you have the minimum physical skill you need to do the same thing under riskier and more dangerous conditions. You are \*already* capable, you just have to keep your head during the dangerous conditions. The same goes for keeping a car under control on a one lane road. If you can stay in your lane on a one-lane road, you can do the same thing on a multi-lane road, once you know how to keep your cool. Good life advice that I'm gonna try to remember for lots of things, tbh.
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I remember reading a post from an older trans man, about the moment he stopped being able to sympathize with other trans men who were earlier on in their transitions. He was sitting in a support group, listening to some younger guys vent about their social anxiety contacting doctors for access to healthcare, and realized his main reaction was impatience. A sort of, "well if you don't suck it up and do it, how are you going to get what you need?"

You have these sort of twin truths of "anxiety does in fact keep you from meeting basic needs in a way that Sucks Tremendously," and also the understanding that like. A phone call will not kill you. The understanding that at most the person receiving the call might be rude, or annoyed, but that even if it goes badly you will live to call another doctor's office. Obviously there are circumstances that can change this - if it takes you hours to gin up the ability to make this call at all, if you do in fact rely on this one office to access necessary care, the stakes of it going badly change. But for a large swathe of people, the danger is entirely in the head. And for someone who has done it already and learned how to cross that barrier, well. It can all feel very just make the jump already, doofus.

I've run into a couple folks who feel profound fear and anxiety about change or certain life experience milestones, in a way that has me feeling like the grumpy older guy. I say this as someone who did once struggle with severe social anxiety, and who still gets profoundly anxious about other things in my life. I feel both a sense of the severity of the obstacle, but also the impatience. It is sort of like learning how to ride a bike - something I did as a kid and Also experienced profound anxiety about for a bit, lmao. When I started moving from training wheels to a free-standing bike, I was so scared of falling over that after losing my balance for the first time, I simply did not touch my bike again for about a year - always opting for the Razor scooter or my roller blades. And like. My avoidance was entirely reasonable, it fucking blows to fall and get scraped up. It's scary and it hurts. It takes a lot of support and fortitude to willingly put yourself in the way of pain.

But also. Falling off a bike won't kill you, unless you've made the singularly ill-advised choice to start learning how on the side of a cliff, or in live traffic. It'll hurt, you'll maybe need to set the bike aside for a bit before being ready to try it again, but you won't die. You can get back on, and try again, and eventually you can do funny tricks like a running mount/dismount. Braver people than me pop wheelies.

When you're the one who's in the anxiety pit, and haven't taken the plunge yet, you have no point of reference for how it will go. How realistic any given bad outcome is, or how endurable it may be. You don't realize how survivable a given scenario is, until you've done it. And it is frustrating sometimes, to be the person on the other side, already on the bike or in the pool, knowing exactly how to make it through and watching someone else jump at shadows. But like, I don't think I could've talked kid me into getting onto the bike again any sooner. Not unless kid me could've believed that I was from the future, having already done it, and even that feels flimsy as hell when you're scared. The only thing that could've done it was kid me eventually getting back on the bike and taking another shot, until suddenly I could feel the bike balancing itself under my own speed. Until the moment of fear passed and I was okay, if not always the same after.

I just wish there were a way to pass that on to others easier. But they will get there on their own time.

Edit (3/24/25): I have found the original excerpt! It was an essay called "Trans Grit" by Cooper Lee Bombadier, collected in a 2016 anthology titled The Remedy: Queer and Trans Voices on Health and Health Care, edited by zena sharman. You can find the excerpt [here]
dismallyoriented: (Default)
So I've been watching Crash Course: Religion, because despite it being kind of a hot-button and not always well-handled topic (gestures at the reality of the US being a deeply Christianity-centric place), they've managed to make a pretty solid primer that discusses and teaches religions on their own terms, instead of through a Christianity-tinted lens. I'm pretty sure the first video of theirs I watched was the African Diasporic Religions one, and very soon after the Chinese Popular Religion video followed.

I would highly recommend both videos (and frankly the entire rest of the series, if it's of interest - naturally it's very 101 basics due to the nature of being a short-form video series, but a good primer is a good primer). But the topic of interest for this post is about the Ghost Festival, which is the main topic the video centered on.

In short, it's a holiday kind of like Día de los Muertos. The spirits of the dead have returned to Earth, so the living leave offerings and food for their departed relatives, burn paper money (and other paper replica objects[1]) so the smoke can carry to the dead, and have a big party about it. It's admittedly not something I've ever celebrated - needless to say it's not exactly a big thing in the US, so I've had no occasion to. But the idea of leaving food and other offerings for the dead is something that stuck with me, because it features a lot in Chinese funerary practice. I remember the one time my parents took me to visit a relative's grave in China - we brought oranges, they lit incense, and they got on their knees and bowed before the tombstone. My mom mentioned specifically wanting to teach me these traditions, and well. Boy howdy did it stick.

There's another relevant part from the Crash Course video, which is that the comments section contains my favorite anecdote from any of these videos so far. It's someone recounting an anecdote from their grandma, and a funny bit of cultural exchange.

greenblaze9189

When my grandmother was a young woman growing up in Trinidad and Tobago, a mischievious cousin of hers once went to a member of the Chinese diaspora and asked "why do you leave bowls of rice by grave sites? When are the dead going to come up and eat the rice". He received a response "the same time your dead come up to smell your flowers"



Fantastic response. Five million points for you random old Chinese guy in the Caribbean.

Anyway. I shared that comment a bunch of places and some folks thought that was actually a really interesting way to think about the practice. And like. In all honesty that's largely the way I think about it for myself? Because like. I know the dead are not going to be able to eat anything I leave for them. They're dead. (And frankly, the ecologist and Chinese guy in me is grumbling about potential food waste.) So the significance for me lies entirely in the doing of the act. Doing it is a sign of how much they matter to me.

In life, making food is a way I can care for my loved ones. Cooking from scratch is something I love to do, and something I get a lot of enjoyment and meaning from. Making food for the dead is just an extension of this. It is the step up from burning incense and bowing at the tomb. This is what you do for the dead. This is a way you can love them even though they are gone.

Tl;dr - I am shaking hands with the Oaxacans and other Mexicans who celebrate Día de los Muertos. Same hat, different background.

---

[1] I am delighted to inform you that these offerings have arrived to the 21st century, in that you can burn paper smartphones and sports cars if it so pleases you. Humans are gonna human, lmao.[return]

[2] Funny familial anecdote also - one of my uncles saw his grandma setting an empty table when he was staying at her village as a young kid, and told his parents that "grandma was making dinner for no one". They proceeded to tell him very firmly that it was shut-the-fuck-up friday, because the Cultural Revolution was happening at the time and openly doing that kind of folk practice was Rather Illegal. Shut the fuck up and let grandma make food for her husband in peace.
dismallyoriented: (Default)
This might be a bit of a strange one. So earlier today a post crossed my tumblr dashboard, one with a load of excerpts from the NYTimes piece "100 Small Acts of Love". I may or may not read the full piece sometime later today. It is more or less exactly what the title says - a list of things that various couples do for each other as expressions of love. Leaving daily medications out, learning how to cook a beloved food and making it together, singing loudly to mask a sound the other cannot stand (the wife in question had actually gotten over that particular bit of misophonia, but didn't tell her husband because she loved his off-tune singing).

It's that kind of stuff, right? The small everyday things. Even the little excerpt of 20 or so examples had me tearing up at work. They're all so human and mundane.

I'm not a person who is particularly good at saying  )
dismallyoriented: (Default)
As with many posts, this is sparked by two things.

One: a nurse I follow on tumblr posting an extremely thorough powerpoint on How To Small Talk
Two: Having multiple conversations about the difficulty of meeting people and getting to know them


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