Let's talk about impostor syndrome in social situations.
A huge amount of my time at GDQs is spent just walking around the event rooms, seeing who's there, and spending maybe 5-10 minutes at a time chatting with random people.
I meet a LOT of people this way, but I also don't really spend significant amounts of time with most of them. This is partially by design.
When it comes to friendships, I suffer from impostor syndrome. There's a part of me, deep down, that always worries I'm not actually good enough friends with people for them to want to include me in things, or feel bad if I'm not part of things.
If you spend just a couple minutes with each of a hundred people, you get just enough interaction with them to feel like you "know" them, but not enough to experience that impostor feeling. You keep distance that prevents you from worrying whether they want you around.
When I do have friends I spend a lot of time with, there's always a little bit of nagging in the back of my head, "honestly, would their experience be diminished at all if I were not present?"
Logically - this is not really a valid line of thought. Friendship is not about someone having a bad time if you're not around. It's about someone having an even better time because you're around. But man, subconscious thought sure is resistant to simple and obvious logic.
When @J_Hobz, @sumichu, and @DragonSentinal threw me into the spotlight on the interview at the end of #AGDQ2019, I mostly saw it coming. But what I didn't really see coming was just how many people they got to sign that red card you saw on stream.
Sitting in front of a camera and hearing my GDQ accomplishments read out loud to me didn't really move the needle on my impostor feelings, but reading the dozens of heartfelt messages in that card reduced me to a sobbing mess.
Impostor syndrome can't be fixed as simply as just giving someone a card with messages from their friends. But man, such a card surely helps. A lot. It will always be a hugely treasured reminder of the people whose lives I've touched and whose experiences at GDQ I've made better.
If you have had the chance to have one or several of those fleeting encounters with me at GDQ, please know that I treasured that moment. And I apologize if I sometimes seem aloof, like I don't want to connect at more than a surface level. It's an ingrained defense mechanism.
I also really particularly want to thank the Ori speedrun community for being the most welcoming, friendly, inclusive, amazing group of people I've ever known. It's amazing how much the right people can do to help alleviate a fear of not being needed/wanted/cared about.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
This is what fascism is. If you're still somehow wringing your hands saying "well, we shouldn't throw around terms so loosely," literally just look at this proposal from the GOVERNOR OF FLORIDA which criminalizes all protests and legalizes murder of protesters by car.
Just to be clear, fascism is already here. Police and prosecutors ALREADY find every excuse they can to criminalize protesters and condone other fascists mowing them down.
At a minimum: if you won't recognize it, call it out, and FIGHT IT, you are helping fascism advance.
Learn to recognize patterns.
The president is directly selecting arbitrary companies which may no longer do business in our country.
The police continue to murder Black people in the streets, then brutalize protesters and lobby successfully against every attempted reform.
Last night I streamed for 5 hours and discussed a wide range of real life topics with viewers - social justice, nuance, policing, among others.
Going forward, my stream will continue to be an open discussion space for these topics that matter. The only prerequisite is empathy.
Preface: the below is NOT intended as a subtweet of any specific person.
I've seen a lot of talk lately about streams being "escapes" from harsh reality, asking people to leave heavy topics at the door. The problem is that "just not talking about it" provides unequal benefit.
Your personal mental health is important. To the extent you need to do so, please prioritize your wellbeing and take breaks from reality.
Please also scrutinize the ways in which your own life situation privileges you to ignore reality, even for a short time like a stream.
Every day, I'm surrounded by people who can't seem to imagine investing beyond an intellectual level in any problem that doesn't directly affect them.
It is literally killing me. We cannot accomplish anything without the help of people who do not even give a single shit.
Do you understand how fucking isolating this is?
There are not enough people of any given marginalized group to vote for change. If we want to fix ANY of the systemic issues harming us, we have to painstakingly explain them to you, because you don't have to care, so you don't.
I dunno who needs to hear this, but directing (intentionally or not) anger towards someone or some organization for not taking action against an abuser is NOT EQUIVALENT to being an abuser.
Defensive kneejerk reactions to criticism prop up systemic inequality and rape culture.
What is "cancel culture?" It's the idea (right or wrong) of people being unjustly, SYSTEMICALLY deprived of their voice.
What does SYSTEMIC mean? It means that an inequality is baked into the status quo, and supported on a widespread basis by a POWER IMBALANCE between groups.
Where do power imbalances exist? Many places, but topically: between community event organizers and participants.
An individual holding such an organization accountable CANNOT cancel them. They lack the power.
An organization CAN cancel the individual. The power is theirs.
Muffins crystallizes so many feelings I've been having lately about the performative allyship of folks I know who only found their social justice voice on May 25, but spend it calling out specific people and brands for not also performing allyship along with them.
Tweeting is not a substitute for action. It never has been. You need to have the hard conversations. You need to shut down racism and rape culture and marginalization and dehumanization and bullying in the spaces where you are. You need to stick your neck out for the powerless.
On July 4, 1776, representatives of the 13 British colonies in North America approved the text of a "Declaration of Independence." This document explained the reasons that the colonies were unilaterally declaring themselves free of British rule.
Among the first words of this document is the notorious phrase: "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal..."
When this document was written, approximately 20% of the population of the 13 colonies was enslaved. (source: teachinghistory.org/history-conten…)
This phrase further betrays an insidious line of thinking that is endemic among privileged people. If you simply state "everyone is created equal" like a fact, you're denying the reality of, for example, children of enslaved people being born into slavery.