Through a Glass Weirdly

Here it is again, another year gone, another post made ten months after the previous entry, just to justify to myself why I keep paying $200 to keep this website up and running. Another year of losses and disasters, of discovery and joy, and even as times continue to be unprecedented, here I still am, another holiday kerfuffle settled and dealt with, another year older at the very least.

I am self-absorbed and navel-gazey. I think every writer is, to some extent; a writer who isn’t self-aware on some level is either successful enough for it not to matter much to themselves anymore or an idiot, often both. We make our mirrors through which we view the world, each mirror unique, each mirror flawed and warped. We fancy ourselves the Lady of Shalott, perhaps, or a participant in Plato’s Allegory of the Cave. Either way, there is always a sense that our perceptions are unreal, but honest: it’s all we know, and yet we know that what we view and how we view it isn’t always quite true to facts. Sorry, did I say writers? I meant all creators in general. Or maybe I meant people with anxiety. Or maybe I meant everyone, all of us, have to know on some level that our experiences are disconnected from reality. The car makes a funny noise. I have a panic attack. The noise turns out to be a small, fixable error, and the terrors I imagined that drove me to panic aren’t true, the reaction I had that was perfectly proportional to the horrors I was imagining is suddenly disproportionate to the tame reality and therefore is now an overreaction.

All this to say, when this time of year rolls around, out with the old and in with the new, I get more introspective than usual, which is saying something. We’re conditioned to. New Year’s Resolutions are the ultimate tool of self-flagellation, and like true masochists, we walk into it every time.

So, here’s something: I reject New Year’s Resolutions this year.

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Attitudinous Gratitudinous

It’s November 2021, a year that, in the words of Marshall from How I Met Your Mother, has been a “nasty schoolyard bully of a year” that also won’t seem to stop punching me in the face. But it’s November, and it’s Thanksgiving, and I’d rather contextualize this year in things that I’m grateful for rather than things I’d like to punch the year back for.

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Pokémon Top Five: Sinnoh

If I were doing the dang thing right, I should have done my Gen 3 Hoenn favorite Pokémon list first, but since this is more topical with the Gen 4 remakes announcement, I’m skipping ahead instead. It’s the end of the month, and I still don’t have a book report, but I do have some renewed Pokémon enthusiasm, so let’s do another Top Five!

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A Flower

For my January blog post, I was planning on a book report, but I didn’t receive a book for Christmas, incredibly, and didn’t pick one out. I could use this space to make a commentary about the crazy events and changes going on in the world, but instead, I think I’m going to take this space to instead post a very simple drawing I did of a very simple flower, because sometimes, simple is what we need most when everything else is large and complicated.

Relentless kindness and dedication to life is most precious and noble; all else follows.

2021: A Prayer Circle

A few years ago, Tumblr user theveryworstthing made a trilogy of comics comparing the transition of the New Year to a mage and a monster going through a cycle of killing the old monster and witnessing the rebirth of the new monster. It’s a strange and beautiful and poignant piece about living with hope in the face of a new beginning, even when the ending was so full of tragedy and heartache. I’ve been thinking a lot about it this year, about how the year 2020 would look if the artist made another installment, about the upcoming year after the striking year this one was.

Even without intense global strife, a lethal pandemic, increasingly overwhelming weather patterns brought on by climate change, and national escalation of violence and conflict, 2020 has been a rat bastard of a year. A real humdinger of a year. A Lucy pulling the football back from Charlie Brown at the last minute kind of year. The kind of year that eHarmony rightly paired with Satan in the single most genius marketing campaign I have ever seen (search on YouTube, it’s a riot).

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Pokémon Top Five: Johto

It’s the end of the month, which means another round of Pokémon Top 5! This week, we go to the Johto region to visit the second generation of Pokémon games. Gen 2 wasn’t a generation I ever got to play as a kid, and my first real exposure to it was the remakes in Gen 4. HeartGold/SoulSilver are not my favorite Pokémon games, I found them a little too difficult for my usual method of play (only catching Pokémon you intend to use all the way to the Elite Four…somehow, the Pokémon distribution and the gym difficulty don’t really let you do that unless you trade over stronger Pokémon you can’t get until later), but there are still five Pokémon in the Gen 2 dex worth celebrating.

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Pokémon Top Five: Kanto

It’s nowhere near the ballpark of a secret that the Pokémon games are my favorite. Pokémon is an iconic millennial franchise, a staple of the quintessential 90s/early 00s childhood (and beyond!). My family was certainly no exception, though with four kids, our collection was…eclectic, rather than complete: a hand-me-down original GameBoy with Red and Yellow, one GameBoy Advance with Crystal, and two GameBoy SPs with FireRed, Sapphire, and Emerald, with a Blue Version and a Ruby Version floating around in my brothers’ room due to trades with friends. I still have our original Sapphire and Emerald cartridges, with a FireRed version given to me by a friend. Our Gen 1 games are lost to time (along with original Tetris, RIP sweet friend), but thanks to the 3DS Virtual Console I have Red and Yellow again, as well as Crystal and Gold, which I never got to play as a child; never underestimate the tenacity of a baby sibling’s unwillingness to share once they have something of their own, as I learned to my detriment. I have at least one game from every generation, and am looking forward to Gen 8 with the tearful joy of a lifelong fan.

Which leads me to this post: the first of many in a once-monthly series I’m starting, where I list my top five Pokémon from each generation of Pokémon games. The original draft of this post was…frightful, to say the least. For one, I had all my favorites from each generation listed, and once I’d finally gotten all of it down, I realized I needed to streamline for my own sanity as much as anyone else’s. So, to kick it off, here it is, my Top Five for the Generation 1 series of games, taking place in the Kanto region.

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The Chocolate Chip Cookie Gauntlet

I love baking.

I’m not particularly good at it, given my absentminded nature and the precision baking requires, but chocolate chip cookies are easy enough that they’re almost impossible to screw up, and as such have kinda become my calling card. I take great pride in my chocolate chip cookies. It helps that they’re my favorite dessert flavor. So, I thought, why not pit several different recipes against each other and see which one is best? Welcome to PostMordial Soup’s first food challenge: The Chocolate Chip Cookie Gauntlet.

The contenders: delicious and powerful.
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Internet Fame: A Study

An important fact about myself is my pathological fear of conflict (thanks, anxiety). One of the many behaviors this has spawned is that especially in online circles, I tend to refrain from dipping my hands into the drama pot and giving my two cents. Very rarely I will voice an opinion about political events unless asked directly. But recent (ish) events in the internet community specifically have made me introspective about the roles and dynamics of internet celebrities and how they fit into our current culture, so if this is a Hot Take, as the kids say, then prep the oven mitts, this one’s coming in piping.

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