who are you? i love you too.

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
snowylynxx
kazillioncows

Out of curiosity, does anyone else organize their Minecraft survival hotbars? This is how mine looks, for example, with slots 1-4 being my sword + tools, slot 5 being my bow, slot 6 being food, slot 7 & 8 being miscellaneous, and slot 9 being for torches. I'm not sure if this is standard, but it's how I've always done it.

image

How do you organize your hotbar?

I organize my hotbar the same way as you

I organize my hotbar a different way (tell me how :0)

I don't organize my hotbar

Other / See results

from far left to middle is torches; blocks (whatever im building with or dirt and/or cobblestone); maybe a sword (sword is occasionally second) from far right to middle is pickaxe; axe; shovel (axe + shovel also switch sometimes) other tools will usually be to the right except for shears which are to the left and buckets which go wherever theyll fit cuz if im using buckets i probably have a lot going on oh flint + steel is also on the left the middle is just whatever i need for whatever im doing seeds/root vegetables are common cuz i adopt villages in most of my saves minecraft polls

so one thing about me that youd probably expect to come up in conversation a lot less is that i have to take vitamin c supplements and eat a ton of citrus and stuff because i have a vitamin c deficiency that just kind of popped up last summer and then never really went away and whenever i tell people this they tend to say “oh, like scurvy? i knew a guy in college who had scurvy!” and it came up today at lunch with my college friend and one of her old teachers and i thought “huh id never noticed but none of my college friends ever mention that they knew a guy with scurvy…” but like. i realized pretty quickly that, to potentially tens of people… i AM the guy they knew in college who had scurvy. so. thats fun.

quetzposting to be clear: i do not actually have scurvy i dont think my vitamin c deficiency has ever been that severe but it actually does interfere with my quality of life sometimes. i couldnt brush my teeth for like five days this summer cuz i was bleeding so much that i would get lightheaded which im pretty sure was entirely psychological but knowing that didnt really help all that much
ivypool
secret 3th option bcuz im not breastless enough to say breastless but im too breastless to pick anything else truthfully i never wear a bra though unless u count the cami i have with a ‘built in bra’ (panel of fabric with elastic at bottom) which i have worn maybe three times this calendar year when i was really really dysphoric and my t shirt was too thin polls
crystal-mouse
spockstims

Spock was so 100% right to go into that whale tank they went back there because they needed whales and he was the only one who had the sense to actually speak to a whale about the issue. That was a completely logical and rational minded decision and so what if he disrupted an aquarium tour. Scotty altered the course of technological advancement I think it’s fine if Spock startles a few marine biologists

star trek
red-revival
transfaguette

I've seen the use of the "crazy sjw feminist" stereotype from gamergate days die down a little but one thing that remains ever present is the way fat activists are treated. Anything they say is dismissed and ridiculed, they have insults hurled at them with so much cruelty and disdain. The moment a fat person asks any group of people to change their worldview on fatness, it's immediate insults and brick walls. This includes left leaning people. Everyone loves to gang up on fat people, it hasn't changed a bit.

grinalbi

I took a sociology class for my last semester of college and the textbook we used actually had a small section that explicitly pointed out how fatness is "the final/last socially acceptable prejudice," which is perfectly accurate in how people on all sides of the political spectrum talk about fatness and the fat people that live it.

grinalbi

Title: "Obesity: The Last Acceptable Prejudice"  [Image of two people on a beach with their backs turned towards the camera. One is a shirtless fat adult in swim trunks, and they are sitting next to a young child who is also in swimwear. There is a beach bag partially blocking the child. Below is the caption, "Obesity is considered the last acceptable social stigma. (Photo courtesy of Kyle May/flickr)". End image.]  Below the image is several paragraphs talking about obesity in a sociological context.  "What is your reaction to the picture above? Compassion? Fear? Disgust? Many people will look at this picture and make negative assumptions about the man based on his weight. According to a study from the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, large people are the object of “widespread negative stereotypes that overweight and obese persons are lazy, unmotivated, lacking in self-discipline, less competent, noncompliant, and sloppy” (Puhl and Heuer 2009).  Historically, both in the United States and elsewhere, it was considered acceptable to discriminate against people based on prejudiced opinions. Even after slavery was abolished in 1865, the next 100 years of U.S. history saw institutionalized racism and prejudice against black people. In an example of stereotype interchangeability, the same insults that are flung today at the overweight and obese population (lazy, for instance), have been flung at various racial and ethnic groups in earlier history. Of course, no one gives voice to these kinds of views in public now, except when talking about obese people.  Why is it considered acceptable to feel prejudice toward—even to hate—obese people? Puhl and Heuer suggest that these feelings stem from the perception that obesity is preventable through self-control, better diet, and more exercise. Highlighting this contention is the fact that studies have shown that people’s perceptions of obesity are more positive when they think the obesity was caused by non-controllable factors like biology (a thyroid condition, for instance) or genetics.  Even with some understanding of non-controllable factors that might affect obesity, obese people are still subject to stigmatization. Puhl and Heuer’s study is one of many that document discrimination at work, in the media, and even in the medical profession. Obese people are less likely to get into college than thinner people, and they are less likely to succeed at work.  Stigmatization of obese people comes in many forms, from the seemingly benign to the potentially illegal. In movies and television show, overweight people are often portrayed negatively, or as stock characters who are the butt of jokes. One study found that in children’s movies “obesity was equated with negative traits (evil, unattractive, unfriendly, cruel) in 64 percent of the most popular children’s videos. In 72 percent of the videos, characters with thin bodies had desirable traits, such as kindness or happiness” (Hines and Thompson 2007). In movies and television for adults, the negative portrayal is often meant to be funny. “Fat suits”—inflatable suits that make people look obese—are commonly used in a way that perpetuates negative stereotypes. Think about the way you have seen obese people portrayed in movies and on television; now think of any other subordinate group being openly denigrated in such a way. It is difficult to find a parallel example."ALT

Here's the screenshot since it was a digital textbook (and this should fall under fair use). Source is the Intro to Sociology textbook from Lumen Learning.

fatphobia discussion