Hey, once Jetga Starwatcher here!
I know the change is sudden but I hadn't been a yinglet in spaces for a long time and I've just been putting this off for too long.
Been at Gateway Furmeet for the weekend and figured might as well get myself up to speed! Also, space tie!
As a neurodivergent person, your dream life is surprisingly simple.
Not luxury.
Not hustle.
Not optimization.
Just: • enough income to breathe
• enough energy to enjoy being alive
• people who understand your weirdness
• a home that feels safe
• a brain that isn't constantly at war with itself
That's the dream.
If the number of Dalmatians purchased after 101 Dalmatians and clownfish purchased after Finding Nemo is any indication, the fact that Scooby doesn’t have docked ears is SO important, you guys.
He’s beautiful, and I hope they just let him have his natural ears.
Avoidant people aren’t always trying to push you away.
They’re often caught in a silent war between craving connection and needing control over their own space.
They can miss you all day, draft the same text twenty times, then delete every word.
Not because they don’t care.
Because opening up feels more dangerous than staying lonely.
Here’s the part most people miss:
Many avoidants deeply want real, intimate relationships. They just panic the moment things start feeling real.
So they pull back. Overthink. Ask for space. Circle back. And quietly wonder why no one seems to understand.
It’s not that they feel too little.
Most of the time, they feel everything and don’t know where to put it all.
NUEVO VISTAZO AL CACHORRO DE GRAN DANÉS QUE SERÁ SCOOBY-DOO 🐕🔍
Netflix compartió un nuevo e increíble vistazo al adorable cachorro de Gran Danés que se encargará de interpretar a Scooby-Doo en la serie live-action que están preparando.
"Science fiction is an existential metaphor. It allows us to tell stories about the human condition. Isaac Asimov once said:
Individual science fiction stories may seem
as trivial as ever to the blinder critics and
philosophers of today, but the core of science-
fiction, its essence, has become crucial to our
salvation, if we are to be saved at all."
-- Anders quoting Asimov, Stargate SG-1, S10E06 "200"
This is Stargate. Only the original showrunners understand that this is what Stargate has always meant to us. They need time to hand the baton off to the new generation of writers and up-and-coming showrunners to continue the Stargate legacy.
Hiring someone who has no idea what Stargate is will only manage to add it to the growing banality of "science fiction" television that is being produced. We simply have no desire to watch something dumbed down. We are an intelligent audience that understands nuance and we deserve something that treats us as such.
You wouldn't write sequels to beloved books passed down throughout the generations without the original author involved in mentoring the next generation to continue the legacy. Anything else is fan fiction.
Thank you for reading this @AmazonMGMStudio@PrimeVideo@JeffBezos
- Emerald May
“I asked ChatGPT” yeah well I asked my autistic friend whose pattern recognition gives her borderline prophetic accuracy even though no one ever listens to her because she’s awkward and has bad timing and says the wrong thing and has no control over her body or volume or brain or
God damn, this is beautiful. #Fatekeeper
Look at that view. This is Unreal Engine used right. None of that weird grainy lighting, none of that poor optimisation.
It feels clean, looks crisp, and plays well.
And the craziest part? A team of 13 people made this and gave it to us for £6.79.
Yes, I’ll keep repeating the price, because for an Early Access build, that feels like a proper “welcome to our game” price.
"Never underestimate your audience. They're generally sensitive, intelligent people who respond positively to quality entertainment." --Lt. Col. Cameron Mitchell, 200
This is my favorite quote from any TV show or movie. I wish it was applied more in Hollywood these days.
Appeal to the fans; we'll bring in new ones!
A college student with ADHD once explained why their essays end up filled with so many parentheses:
“Neurotypical people think in straight lines. My brain thinks in a giant web where every single concept is physically holding hands with twelve other concepts.”
In other words, their thoughts don’t unfold in a neat, step-by-step sequence. Instead, one idea immediately triggers several related ideas at once. While writing, it can feel impossible to ignore those connections because they all feel relevant and important, even if they branch off from the main point. Parentheses become a way to temporarily “park” those side thoughts without losing them.
So the essay ends up reflecting the actual structure of their thinking: layered, branching, and constantly interlinked. What looks messy on the page is really an attempt to capture a mind that doesn’t move in a straight line, but in a network where everything is connected to everything else.