he/it, adult • • • Art here :) Art tag is just #drawing
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Hot take, but cis people have gender identities. They aren't the gender they identify as because of their genitalia or what their birth certificate says. They're only cis because they identify with a gender and it happens to match their government documentation. Cis men aren't men because they're "obviously" men for having a penis. They're men because they identify as men. It's the self-identification that dictates this, not any other factor, even for cis folks. And we should be framing it this way. A cis man identifies as a man and a cis woman identifies as a woman. There is no automatic or inherent gender.
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need a polite way to say "im not engaging in a discussion on this topic with you because the conclusions you have reached are based on so many interwoven layers of misconceptions it would be easier to just like, hard reset your whole brain, just start over as a baby and try again"
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Underswap frisk for the S0ul
babies
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too lazy to retype this but . insane interaction w coworker last night
#oh my goddddddddddd#i see the word psychopath and im already popping a blood vessel#but like#this is ? basic code switching????????#''textbook psychopath behavior'' WHAT TEXTBOOK. REDDIT????
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i hate when i send someone a meme in another language and they're like "uhm... translate? 😒" fucker i sent you a meme where 90% of the words have an english cognate and/or you don't need to know what they're saying to find it funny. can you at least TRY
#c'est toujours les gens qui parlent anglais ça#bon pas TOUJOURS. et pour me faire l'avocat du diable c'est une langue germanique et le français est une langue romane#m'enfin quand même. y'a moyen de faire avec. bisexuel et antibiotique c'est pas les mots les plus complexes de la planète#surtout bisexuel 'fin c'est vraiment une traduction littérale de l'anglais quoi
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shoutout to everyone who wants to infodump but cant string together coherent thoughts to form sentences and instead just look at you like this
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Been Luka pilled lately so I doodled @daily-basil / @theokusgallery Basil as Luka design (w some modifications because I lovw big big bows)
You can imagine Aubrey as Mizi
#HOLY FUCK HE LOOKS SO CUTE#did i not give him a bow???? i thought i did i wanted him to have one at thr back of his shirt i think.........#i love this so much he is so skdhdjdgevdbdvfkwnsbsevdv HE LOOKS MENTALLY UNWELL CONSTANTLY#i love it when when men are condescending#ouuurgrhrgrgrggrghrrg#omori#as#apporutte
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First thing you see after you zoom in is how you die
How you dying 👀
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IT'S FUCKING SNOWING?????
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he's in my mind crossdressing
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why are french people rude?
Ah well, the safest explanation when an entire country’s people are stereotyped as rude is that they have their own culture with different criteria for politeness than the ones you are used to. It’s probably easier for Americans to forget this than for the rest of the world, because they consume less foreign media than the rest of us (from literature in translation to foreign films) and are less exposed to aspects of foreign cultures that could inform them about different norms of politeness (online interactions happen in their own language and follow their own (anglo) social codes.) With this insular worldview it’s easy to take it for granted that American good manners are universal. They are not!
A very common gripe against American tourists in Paris is that they talk so loudly in public spaces, which is definitely rude here but I assume that in the US, people just have a different threshold for what constitutes ‘loud’ (I wonder if it is due to being used to having more space than Europeans). I also remember a discussion I had with one of my translation professors about the American concept of ‘active listening’ and how negatively it is perceived in France. It may be that in the US it is polite to make ‘listening noises’ at regular intervals while someone is speaking to you, ‘uh huh’, ‘right’, ‘yeah’, ‘really?’, and that you would perceive someone who just stands there silently as disinterested or thinking about something else. In France it is more polite to shut up and listen (with the occasional nod or ‘mmh’) and it’s rather seen as annoying and rude to make a bunch of useless noise while someone is speaking.
There are of course countless examples like that. The infamous rude waiters in Parisian cafés probably seem a lot more rude and cold to people who have a different food culture… People from other cultures might consider a waiter terrible at his job if he doesn’t frequently check on them to make sure they don’t wait for anything, but the idea that a meal is a pleasant experience rather than just a way to feed yourself (esp when eating out) means we like having time to chat and just enjoy our table for a while, so we don’t mind as much waiting to order or for the next course. French people would typically hate if an overzealous waiter took the initiative to bring the note once we’re done with our meal so we don’t have to wait for it, as it would be interpreted as “you’re done, now get out of my restaurant.”
The level of formality required to be seen as polite is quite high in France, which might contribute to French people being seen as rude by people with a more casual culture. To continue with waiters, even in casual cafés they will address clients with the formal you and conversely, and won’t pretend to be your friend (the fact that we don’t have the American tip culture also means they don’t feel the need to ingratiate themselves to you.) I remember being alarmed when a waitress in New York introduced herself and asked how I was doing. “She’s giving me her first name? What… am I supposed to with it? Use it?” It gave me some insight on why Americans might consider French waiters rude or sullen! It might also be more accepted outside of France to customise your dish—my brother worked as a waiter and often had to say “That won’t be possible” about alterations to a dish that he knew wouldn’t fly with the chef, to foreign tourists who were stunned and angry to hear that, and probably brought home a negative opinion of French waiters. In France where the sentiment in most restaurants is more “respect the chef’s skill” than “the customer is king”, people are more likely to be apologetic if they ask for alterations (beyond basic stuff) as you can quickly be seen as rude, even by the people you are eating with.
And I remember reading on a website for learning English that the polite answer to “How are you?” is “I’m fine, thank you!” because it’s rude to burden someone you aren’t close to with your problems. In my corner of the French countryside the polite thing to do is to complain about some minor trouble, because saying everything is going great is perceived negatively, as boasting, and also as a standoffish reply that kind of shuts down the conversation, while grumbling about some problem everyone can relate to will keep it going. (French people love grumbling as a positive bonding activity!)
Basically, before you settle on the conclusion that people from a different place are collectively rude, consider that if you travel there and scrupulously follow your own culture’s social code of good manners, you might be completely unaware that you are being perceived as obnoxious, rude or unfriendly yourself simply because your behaviour clashes with what is expected by locals.
#french people think americans act fake and expect everyone to cater to them#americans think french people are rude#checks out#also to be fair a big part of why people think the french are rude is because they only ever go to bloody Paris#i am sitting in my parisian uni right now and i can tell you: everyone hates parisians. the rest of france thinks parisians are rude#mostly because parisians tend to be either rich and entitled fucks or they genuinely dont have time to be polite (or both)#paris is rush city baby. but people still insist on going there for tourism. i promise you there's much better landscapes in the south#(also i cannot imagine having to give strangers my first name for my job. or waiters constantly checking up on me) custumers#(i think the way people act in restaurants has Got to be the thing that made me feel the most out of place when i went to the US)#(i understand the waiters are overly friendly because they're relying on tips? but Wow. you are a stranger please act like it)#(<- ''please act like it'' being a comical way to express my french bewilderment. and is in no way judgemental.)
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have you ever watched “unedited footage of a bear” by alan resnick?
#a friend made me watch it so we could watch a video essay about it together afterwards#it was cool but thank god for the video essay because I Am Slow
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#inspired by that one picture of plant wearing page merch with one shoulder off. DEEP GAY SIGH#<- my own tags from the blog. todays basil was brought to you by robert plant as usual etc etc#yesterdays stranger was actually inspired by jimmy page. sigh. he looks like your local library lesbian in the early years istg#omori#drawing#digital#self rb
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Having a plural mutual is like having 20 mutuals for the price of one
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