I'm lucky enough to have some online status that helps me manage, day-to-day.
But my children are not online. We have to build them up in other ways.
They regularly play Dungeons & Dragons (other games too) with friends who don't mask. This has helped them gain status.
D&D has more explicit rules than real life. It also stops. Status games don't.
My twins are able to take advantage of there being 2 of them. They can usually invite others to join games that they have started. This builds their status.
This week they boosted the status of
one of their friends by inviting him to be "Dungeon Master" for the first time, and supporting him in the role.
This also boosts my children's status. You can gain status by being a decent person.
Wearing a mask can result in a boost to your status, if you play the game right.
Masks enable activities. They don't restrict them.
My children have missed less school than their unmasked friends.
My children have won events in masks. They've had top marks in tests, and they've been recognised as the best students in their year by several subject teachers.
The cruel flipside is that most children haven't been able to sustain masking. Most adults too.
The concern over *loss of status* has been too great.
*personally I prefer explanations at the level of simple conformity - people don't mask because those around them don't mask.
If you are trying to support children to keep masking, there are lots of ways to do it - you know your own children and you know what will, and won't work - but finding ways to boost their status may help.
If it helps, I'm so impressed with children who have tried to mask.
Personally I think "allies" help more than "status" - hence the very, very large number of mask pics I post.
Anyway, adult maskers, if YOU want status, what can you do?
Are there any status games you can play?
You probably recognise them.
Associate yourself with other amazing people. Praise them. Be an ally. Follow & follow-back.
I've done this lots!
Baby Can I Hold You (Tracy Chapman cover)
This works in real life, and online.
But be humble - people are very sensitive to "tall poppies".
#CovidIsNotOver
Of course, in both the real and the online world, attacking others can be a great way to gain status.
I've attacked others, and been attacked. I've gained status by attacking others. Others have gained status by attacking me.
Even if someone seems to show the correct values
you can still attack them for being insufficiently pious, or you can question their motives.
On the one hand it might make it harder to work together. On the other, it may stop people making silly mistakes.
Terry Pratchett would have found us amusing (text - "Small Gods").
I'm sure lots of people learned these lessons a long time ago. I'm a #latecomer to these things.
Interestingly, the expert on online communities like ours decided not to get involved - a missed opportunity to gain status.
You can also gain status in thousands of different ways.
Animals might have pecking orders, or an alpha in the group, but humans have limitless opportunities to form groups and compete for status. Sometimes we call them "hobbies". Sometimes we are fans.
Obsessions (original)
Remember that Twitter is horribly addictive because it taps right into our need for status.
(This is mostly a note to myself)
I'm not going to spoil the book, though there is a chapter on antivaxxers.
If you are a musician and you are missing out on opportunities to boost your status because you are protecting your health, or your family, please get in touch.
If you want a follow, ask - more status!
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For Valentine's Day, we are having a romantic meal supplied by Dishpatch.
This is not a paid promotion - no COI.
This is a🧵about whether there are more of us than we thought.
#OneOfTheTwo #SaltingTheVibes
How many people protect themselves from COVID infections?
In the UK, it doesn't feel like very many. It's rare for me to see other mask wearers.
I'm interested in whether there might be more people who are doing SOMETHING to protect themselves from COVID.
Going out to a restaurant carries with it the risk of COVID infection. COVID can affect your ability to taste & smell, which is important if you enjoy going out to restaurants. Which we do.
People in cults don't question their own behaviour, and they don't ask “Am I in a cult?”
What I do is #BootlegPublicHealth
Will there be music by Oasis in this🧵?
I said maybe.
Oasis had a lot of great early “b-sides” that were hard to get hold of until the release of “The Masterplan” (1998). In my opinion it's their 2nd best album.
I knew someone who sold bootleg Oasis b-sides CDs before this.
#BootlegPublicHealth #GetLoud
Acquiesce (Oasis cover)
If you follow me, you know you can catch COVID at an Oasis gig. You know that would be bad.
But look at the first part of the release - they are filming the show because they know it will be bootlegged if they don't.
There’s a lot of stuff I don’t know. I don’t really know how jazz works. I don’t swing.
I’m not alone. I’m marking, so I can see just how much people don’t know!
A little🧵about barriers to learning.
Those of us who do this are struck by how reluctant people are to learn about COVID.
I'm in the fortunate position of being familiar with “reluctant learners”, and it doesn't phase me.
When we have exams, we are trying to find out exactly how much students know, and put them in order, from the student who knows the most, to the student who knows the least.
What we find out is that most students who know something about a topic, don’t know it in detail.