#my aunt and grandma may be willing to help too cause they enjoy making stuff
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what if i learn how to make plushies.. like human ones
i always want plushies of my favorite characters but usually they look soo cheap or i just dont like how they look.. so if i can make a pattern and find a way to make them that i like.. then i can make whoever i want
#ghost talks#i might do it#my aunt and grandma may be willing to help too cause they enjoy making stuff
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Volunteer anon again. Thanks for answering my previous question! Here's a follow up. Ngl I'm usually hesitant to attend any GOP gatherings in my area because I feel like the attendees would mostly be middle-aged men and I would be the only 20-something woman there. I would feel weird and uncomfortable. But maybe I'm making incorrect assumptions?
Oh yeah I feel that. I'm 27 and I've been going to these things since I was 19. I have on more than one occasion walked into a room and realized I was the only person there without grey hair. It doesn't happen everywhere you go, but it definitely happens. My advice would be to go to several different types of groups and events and see what you think. Every group is going to get a different mix of people and even if you get a perfect age/gender mix, sometimes they'll be a bit too church-y or too libertarian or too Trump-y or too whatever. It's okay to shop around a bit and find something with a good vibe that works for you.
A monthly club or local party meeting is likely to be mostly middle age to retirement age folks, both men and women, probably in a roughly equal mix. They will probably be beside themselves with excitement to see someone under the age of 40 and there is a solid chance you will become their unofficial young person translator/mascot. Prepare to get adopted by a dozen new aunts/uncles/grandparents and you may be asked to help them fix their website or social media.
You might want to see if your area has an active Young Republicans club. Technically that's anyone under 40 so it's not super young, but young enough to do happy hour instead of early bird dinner specials. Or you could try the local Republican Women's chapter, but those will be more soccer moms and grandmothers, and not a lot of younger folks. If you're in your early twenties or in college, you can check out the College Republicans or Turning Point chapters near you, which is where the kiddos concentrate themselves. Personally I find them to be exhausting because although I'm only 27, I am an old lady already. They're good kids, they're just... a lot.
If you get involved in a campaign, you'll pretty much just see retirement age folks and college age kids as volunteers. Everyone in the middle is busy with jobs and families so they don't show up to volunteer much. You might see them for a few big events, but otherwise your regulars are going to be grandma and the intern pool.
I do have to add a caveat that the demographics of the party and of what I call the "activist class" are shifting a lot right now. We are getting more young people, more soccer moms, more hispanic people, and a lot more people who are brand new to politics. The more Trump-y a candidate is, the more you will see this shift on their campaign. Love him or hate him, that MAGA/America First stuff did wonders for our outreach.
The other thing you can do is start your own club. I won't lie, that's not super easy to do, but if you talk to your local party about what you're trying to create, they can probably help. Turning Point reps may also be willing to help with this if you don't mind falling under their banner.
Also, if you are at all interested in going the career route with all this, you'll find a very different group of people. Consultants and staffers tend to be anywhere from 25 to mid 50s. They are mostly men and the women in that group tend to be on the younger side. They're also a very different vibe. It's a business for us, not a hobby, and while we enjoy what we do and believe in our causes and candidates, there's a little more pragmatism, sometimes with a cynical edge to it. We're less concerned with which particular brand of conservative you are and more focused on just getting the job done.
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here’s my take on mania
tw: personal experiences with bipolar depression
overall, i like mania. bishops knife trick, wilson, and church are definitely some of my favourite songs they've made to date. tlotro too, the new has worn off of it but it's still a solid track, and i have emotional ties to it because of the interactions i had with not only pete, but patrick as well due to its existence (i've never cried so much in my life). so that's a pretty special track.
though, there are a few things about it that feel off or incomplete. or unnecessary.. ex: the llamas ,, please no more i can't stand them
the things i don't really like include "are you smelling that shit?", and how they chose the word "boost" for heaven's gate of all things - it sounds weird to me but i've gotten used to it, no big deal. i still can't get really into stay frosty, sadly.
some tracks feel incomplete or too repetitive, champion being the biggest contestant here. it's too generic, its meaning is too obvious, unlike most of their songs. i appreciate the idea it's conveying, though. it released at a time i was fighting with my mom and step family really badly so it helped me through that a lot, but it is still very generic and i can't really get past it.
then - young and menace. i just don't like this track. i remember listening to it as soon as it came out in awe but not in a good way. it didn't feel real. is that what i really heard? at the time of course, i grew to like it because i was just happy they were back making music. do i like it now? not really. - but if you look at the song from an artistic standpoint, as a audible presentation for manic depression, it works very well. i can appreciate the song in that light. my grandpa has bipolar disorder and i've been through at least 4 of his manic episodes - at one point he's as sweet as he can be - the next my aunt is fainting because of how terrified she is of him. the contrast between the soft verses vs the chorus (which i feel like could be shorter with more variation with each) represents it well. but do i think it should have been the leading single? of course not. so many people still have a bad taste in their mouth from it and can't look at mania well because of it. first impressions and all. i understand if they were excited (or rushed) to get something out but i feel like if they just waited until they made a song like tlotro, reviews on this album would be much more positive.
now i don't just have negative things to say about the album, but i feel like a good fan should critique what's given to them, not just take it in blindly and never question the methods, or never theorise on what could be done to improve it. but a fan should also appreciate the values it has within it too, "what makes it this album special?" "what makes this part unique?" "don't you just love how (band member) did this?" i'm sure they appreciate the feedback as well. nobody wants an audience of zombies who still say "thanks pete".
(also if you guys could not comment shit like that on sensitive or serious subjects it would be really great - people seriously commented "not bad joe" on joe's post about his mother's passing.)
track by track review (excluding y&m and champion since i pretty much covered them)
* stay frosty royal milk tea
this song left a bad taste in my mouth before i even heard it - im easily influenced by how people hype things and how every yeemo trinity kid was freaking out over the title really drove me away. - but the track itself isn't bad. it's very powering and has memorable, strong lyrics like "the only thing that's stopping me is me". the track feels like someone wanting to become great as they can possibly be but they are plagued with obstacles and downfalls - "the alcohol never lies", "some princes don't become kings", but they recover and keep trying. they're resisting failure. (allusion: it really reminds me of ling yao trying to seek immortality for his country in fmab, ahaha. it fits perfectly. "some princes don't become kings.") the track isn't bad at all, just not my cup of tea. i can really appreciate it.
* hold me tight or don't
i don't have much to say about this track, im not too big of a fan of latin themed music but it's a nice poppy song with lovesick lyrics that go deeper than usual pop love songs. i've grown to really enjoy it. to me it sounds like someone desperately holding onto a lost relationship and being pretty frustrated with how their significant other treats them, but they're so obsessed they don't want to leave.
* wilson (expensive mistakes)
when i first heard this song on a live recording i fell absolutely in love, the music sounds nothing like i've ever heard before and it's truly captivating. and when i heard it live myself, oh wow. it was amazing. i've seen someone else say this, can't remember who, but they said they believed it was touching on how irrational people with manic/bipolar depression can be. once again, i have personal experience from my grandfather and i really do believe that's what they're trying to do. "i hate all my friends." this is sort of personal and i don't usually talk about mental illness, but this for me personally reminds me of how my grandpa nearly convinced my dad into touching an electrical unit that would have killed him. but when he's on his medication for his bipolar disorder, he loves my dad. i believe the same concept is used here, the narrator doesn't actually hate his friends, the disorder convinces him he does whenever it kicks in. also the secondary title (expensive mistakes). this could be referencing how people with bipolar disorder have a lot of trouble managing their money and often splurge. my grandpa went ahead and bought 2 grave sites for himself and my grandma during one of his episodes. it's not a nice thing to witness.
* church
this song immediately grabbed my intention as soon as i saw the title. i love the music and choir in this song so much, butch's (their producer) bass line is very nice and i love listening for it. also i adore the "if death is the last appointment then we're all just sitting in the waiting room" part. it's a little repetitive but not in a generic way like champion, it has a lot of other things going along in it. - i'm not religious whatsoever but i love religious imagery - it's so fascinating and it's very easy to manipulate it into something twisted. i feel like church is simply referencing how people do absolutely absurd things for their faith and the narrator is willing to do all of those things for their significant other. they are holy. a deity. - or maybe it's just about sucking dick.
* heaven's gate
when i saw the title track for this song i was hoping we were gonna get some more cult related lyrics. unfortunately not really, but there is a couple that may be referencing it. "out of my body, and flying above." the heaven's gate cult believed that the body was merely a vehicle your being, (i don't know if they used the word "soul") would essentially leave and enter the next stage in existence, away from earth, possibly on an aircraft, reunited with god. the other one is "go in the world and start over again and again, as many times as you can" the cult believed that god came as a human on earth to warn those of when the world would be recycled, or, restarted. once as jesus, the second as applewhite. a little farfetched, but it's something to consider. - it could also just mean you keep trying to keep your faith but you just don't make the cut for heaven, hinted at in the following lines after it. overall i really enjoyed this song, "boost", like i said, took a little getting used to but it's alright. i really love the music and the bridge is amazing. it's nice to see them incorporate other genres.
* sunshine riptide
this song immediately became my favourite when i heard the previews - i absolutely love the reggae and i think burna boy did an excellent job. he really spices up the track. this song sounds really pleasant but it's got some of the deeper lyrics on the album in it, blatantly talking about pills, drinking and smoking. it sounds as if this song is guiding you through a manic episode but using substances to mask it - as many do. it has a heavy narcissistic feel to me, burna boy even calls himself "god" at the first part of his verse. it also touches on relationships again, possibly blaming them for the cause of all of their emotions. "you came in like a wave when i was feeling alright." give this song more credit, it deserves it. it truly is a riptide, it's so aggressive and it has so much stuff going on in it.
* bishops knife trick
here it is, my favourite. this song - i can't even explain how much i love this song. it's like a slow rock ballad with a modern twist, it's so beautiful. the bridge makes me break down into tears almost every time. - sadly i feel like this song may be referencing pete's suicide attempt - "these are the last blues we're ever gonna have" - and you probably all are aware what blues mean. ativan. also "im just a full tank away from freedom" i feel like this could be referencing a full bottle of pills to death, but that may be stretching it. on a lighter note, this is totally chicago is so two years ago part 2, just on a sadder note. it's an amazing closer to the album.
many people say mania is too jumbled and inconsistent - i do believe this was their intention since bipolar disorder is unpredictable. though, it could have a better arrangement to flow smoother, perhaps they could've made the second listing for the listening experience, and the original for the more artistic presentation of the album.
is mania my favourite album? no. is mania a bad album? no. is it their best? no. do i like it? yes.
overall, i feel like this album was a success and im very grateful for their fearless experimentation. this era has been quite an entertaining, pleasant experience so far. i give it a 7.5/10
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