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a-crystallen-author · 1 month
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"The Yurok will be the first Tribal nation to co-manage land with the National Park Service under a historic memorandum of understanding signed on Tuesday [March 19, 2024] by the tribe, Redwood national and state parks, and the non-profit Save the Redwoods League, according to news reports.
The Yurok tribe has seen a wave of successes in recent years, successfully campaigning for the removal of a series of dams on the Klamath River, where salmon once ran up to their territory, and with the signing of a new memorandum of understanding, the Yurok are set to reclaim more of what was theirs.
Save the Redwoods League bought a property containing these remarkable trees in 2013, and began working with the tribe to restore it, planting 50,000 native plants in the process. The location was within lands the Yurok once owned but were taken during the Gold Rush period.
Centuries passed, and by the time it was purchased it had been used as a lumber operation for 50 years, and the nearby Prairie Creek where the Yurok once harvested salmon had been buried.
Currently located on the fringe of Redwoods National and State Parks which receive over 1 million visitors every year and is a UNESCO Natural Heritage Site, the property has been renamed ‘O Rew, a Yurok word for the area.
“Today we acknowledge and celebrate the opportunity to return Indigenous guardianship to ‘O Rew and reimagine how millions of visitors from around the world experience the redwoods,” said Sam Hodder, president and CEO of Save the Redwoods League.
Having restored Prarie Creek and filled it with chinook and coho salmon, red-legged frogs, northwestern salamanders, waterfowl, and other species, the tribe has said they will build a traditional village site to showcase their culture, including redwood-plank huts, a sweat house, and a museum to contain many of the tribal artifacts they’ve recovered from museum collections.
Believing the giant trees sacred, they only use fallen trees to build their lodges.
“As the original stewards of this land, we look forward to working together with the Redwood national and state parks to manage it,” said Rosie Clayburn, the tribe’s cultural resources director.
It will add an additional mile of trails to the park system, and connect them with popular redwood groves as well as new interactive exhibits.
“This is a first-of-its-kind arrangement, where Tribal land is co-stewarded with a national park as its gateway to millions of visitors. This action will deepen the relationship between Tribes and the National Park Service,” said Redwoods National Park Superintendent Steve Mietz, adding that it would “heal the land while healing the relationships among all the people who inhabit this magnificent forest.”"
-via Good News Network, March 25, 2024
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a-crystallen-author · 1 month
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I think I would THRIVE in imaginary academia. At least for four years, or however long it takes to get an undergrad degree there
on worldbuilding, and what people think is going on
there is one facet of fantasy worldbuilding that is, to me, the most interesting and essential but i don't see it come up in worldbuilding guides or writing prompts or anything, and that is the question of:
what do the inhabitants of your world believe about how the world works, and how are they wrong? a lot of fantasy media will set up their cosmology, gods, magic systems, planar systems, concepts of the afterlife, &c., and proceed as though the inhabitants of the world know and understand them.
from someone whose entire academic career is focused on studying human culture in various regions and time periods, with a focus on belief systems (religion, occultism, mythology, folklore): that sort of worldbuilding is unrealistic and missing out on so much fun.
people are always seeking new understanding about how the world works, and they are mostly wrong. how many models of the solar system were proposed before we reached our current one? look at the long, turbulent history of medicine and our various bizarre models for understanding the human body and how to fix it. so many religions and occult/magical traditions arise from people disagreeing with or adapting various models of the world based on new ideas, methods, technologies. many of them are wrong, but all of them are interesting and reflect a lot about the culture, beliefs, values, and fears of the people creating/practising them.
there is so much more to the story of what people believe about the world than just what is true.
to be clear: i think it's fine and important for the author to have a coherent explanation for where magic comes from or who the gods are, so they can maintain consistency in their story. but they should also be asking what people in the world (especially different people, in different regions/nations and different times) think is happening when they do magic, or say a prayer, or practise medicine, or grieve their dead. it is a rich vein for conflict between individuals and nations alike when two models of the world disagree. it is fascinating how different magic systems might develop according to different underlying beliefs.
personally, i think it is the most fun to spawn many diverse models of the world, but give none of them the 'right' answer.
(bonus points if you also have a thriving academic system in the world with its own theory, research, and discourse between factions! as an academic, it is very fun to imagine fictional academic debate over the topics i'm worldbuilding. sometimes i will be working out details for some underlying mechanic of the world and start imagining the papers being written by scholars researching it)
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a-crystallen-author · 1 month
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*total peace all day followed by a random knock on the door*
*suddenly the cat Yearns*
*robo call*
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a-crystallen-author · 1 month
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Last update got lost somewhere in my pings, sorry! And thanks for the follow <3
I was thinking about this conversation again because I had a moment last night where I perceived my inner self as sort of a pink leopard (think Kipo meets Lisa Frank). I immediately went “huh. I guess that’s my fursona. Must tell @haystarlight!”
The naming of palismen could really go either way. Maybe it’s part of the act of creation, and the creator gets to define/give life to its creation by naming it. But with palismen being sentient, I prefer to imagine it as an act of co-creation.
This isn’t a dumb stick that you wave around while shouting Latin incantations; it’s a living creature that you brought into the world. It has its own wants, needs, and identity. And it’s not like bringing a human infant into the world, where the baby doesn’t understand enough to participate in the co-creation of its identity yet. Of course the parents need to name their baby. It will be years before the child can think about their own identity in a meaningful way (at which time they may choose a different name!)
But palismen seem to be formed with all their faculties fully developed. Even if they grow and evolve with their human, their life begins at an age of reckoning, whereas humans must grow to such an age. Any creature capable of reckoning is entitled to reckon. I reckon.
Furthermore, naming something gives you a kind of power over it. If the human has all the power and the palisman is just a tool, they’re not going to make a very good team. The human must also listen. And sorry Eda, but sometimes that means letting your palisman choose a horrible portmanteau for its name XD
Palismen are conceptually so funny btw. 'this is my magical animal companion, we are soulbounded together & i love him with my whole heart. he also converts into a stick for hitting people with.'
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a-crystallen-author · 1 month
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I had to join the fun! This one is dedicated to the Queen of Floof and her terrible, horrible, no-good, very bad yowl. Below is a photo of her not doing that. Cat tax paid ✅
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Anyway here’s a poem I wrote about my cat
After “Do not stand at my grave and weep”, author disputed:
Do not stand at your bowl and meow. I gave you food. It’s in there now. I feed you at the dawning light, I feed you at the fall of night. I feed you kibbles mixed with meat And wet food for a special treat. I feed you even though you scoff At all the food within your trough. I feed you and still yet you yell Like as a beast from deepest hell. Do not stand at your bowl and cry. I gave you food. You will not die.
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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Living my life by Schrödinger’s Law when I could be following Murphy’s Cat instead
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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I don’t need to write the next great American novel. I just need to be the Terry Pratchett I wish to see in the world.
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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Been thinking about this a lot actually. Yes I will elaborate, but not right now. I need to keep thinking about it first
i think probably magic is real.
the thing is that i was a teacher for a long time and sometimes i come back to this moment in the classroom where a 7 year old asked me are mermaids real? and i stared at her and had no idea how to answer.
for a really long time i just assumed that glow-in-the-dark paint/etc was a result of something made in a lab. i just recently found out that a specific mine in new jersey that just has rocks that do that naturally and it sent me for a loop about stuff.
because first of all - let's be honest, all of us: if there was going to be a naturally-occurring location for uv-activated glow-in-the-dark rocks? it would have to be in New Jersey. that's just the place that makes the most sense for that to happen. probably 10 thousand years ago cavemen were like. "oh this place is gonna be new jersey one day. this has new jersey energy."
the rocks only glow in the presence of uv light and are otherwise just normal rocks. in lord of the rings, there's a special sword that glows in the presence of orcs. it is magic, except that's a real thing that exists (and exists, as we have discussed, in new jersey, of all places). i guess maybe this implies orcs give off uv light.
yeah, okay. magic is just science. i know all the stuff about how ghosts are probably just caused by vibrating pipes. i knew about how there's a reason-for-all-of-this. but what do you mean that there's rocks that give you poison damage if you touch them. what do you mean that we live on the same planet as electric eels. what do you mean that a battery just, like - stores power?
and i don't know. in 20 years maybe they will find a mermaid but they will say something like well she's technically not a mermaid she's this other species, she has whiskers and not hair. and i will have to travel back in time and tell a 7 year old not technically, but there's something that is like a mermaid.
and she will look at me and think that what i am saying is science means magic isn't real and what i am actually saying is science is our word for why magic works. and then i will teach her about uv rocks, and new jersey. i will tell her to be a scientist, which is the same thing as being a wizard. there is probably a reason why sci-fi and fantasy are often grouped together. it is very lucky to be here, i think. if you squint, the improbability of it all - it does kind of feel like spellwork.
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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Did one of my characters post this? XD
Promise you'll treat me like a dog with a bite history and you're the last white girl with a savior complex on earth
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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With all due respect, OP has never owned a wool cloak while living in Sacramento in the summer and it shows. But I fully support their right to find out for themselves. I hope you win the lotto and get that cloak, OP. Maybe also invest in a large, insulated water bottle for good measure ^_~
“I would buy a mansion” “I would buy designer” “I’m getting a pool” Don’t give me that lame ass if I won the lottery shit. You’re all pathetic. If I came into a significant amount of money, you know what I’d do? I’d go to the Ren Faire, B-line straight to the cloaks. I’m talking floor length, heavy, wool, felted details, huge hooded cloaks that are like 450 a piece and all handmade and I’d get me one. Maybe even get one of the smaller ones that hangs off the shoulders and lands just above the elbow that are 90 by themselves. And I’d be the baddest bitch around because I’d wear that shit everywhere. It’s 115 degrees? I’m sorry do I look like I give a fuck? I have a cloak bitch I don’t need your fahrenheit bullshit. And you’re a FOOL if you wouldn’t do the same.
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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Don’t you mean the Inciden in Bos on?
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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They don’t stick for me either. It’s in one ear and out the other. PLUS I get sensory overload from noise, so it’s costing me more spoons to absorb less information.
A video is more work for both of us. Please, I am begging you, just write down what you want me to know.
I am slowly losing my mind over the shift towards video as the default media format.
I do not find this to be an efficient way to absorb information. I am bored and distracted by the time the largely unnecessary introduction is over. I can't use ctrl+f to find the specific information I'm looking for. If there are instructions to follow, I don't want to have to constantly pause and back up to the part I need.
At least give me a fucking transcript.
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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This poll has no right to be this funny
You are Gaius Julius Caesar, and it's a lovely day in March.
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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Myths, Creatures, and Folklore
Want to create a religion for your fictional world? Here are some references and resources!
General:
General Folklore
Various Folktales
Heroes
Weather Folklore
Trees in Mythology
Animals in Mythology
Birds in Mythology
Flowers in Mythology
Fruit in Mythology
Plants in Mythology
Folktales from Around the World
Africa:
Egyptian Mythology
African Mythology
More African Mythology
Egyptian Gods and Goddesses
The Gods of Africa
Even More African Mythology
West African Mythology
All About African Mythology
African Mythical Creatures
Gods and Goddesses
The Americas:
Aztec Mythology
Haitian Mythology
Inca Mythology
Maya Mythology
Native American Mythology
More Inca Mythology
More Native American Mythology
South American Mythical Creatures
North American Mythical Creatures
Aztec Gods and Goddesses
Asia:
Chinese Mythology
Hindu Mythology
Japanese Mythology
Korean Mythology
More Japanese Mythology
Chinese and Japanese Mythical Creatures
Indian Mythical Creatures
Chinese Gods and Goddesses
Hindu Gods and Goddesses
Korean Gods and Goddesses
Europe:
Basque Mythology
Celtic Mythology
Etruscan Mythology
Greek Mythology
Latvian Mythology
Norse Mythology
Roman Mythology
Arthurian Legends
Bestiary
Celtic Gods and Goddesses
Gods and Goddesses of the Celtic Lands
Finnish Mythology
Celtic Mythical Creatures
Gods and Goddesses
Middle East:
Islamic Mythology
Judaic Mythology
Mesopotamian Mythology
Persian Mythology
Middle Eastern Mythical Creatures
Oceania:
Aboriginal Mythology
Polynesian Mythology
More Polynesian Mythology
Mythology of the Polynesian Islands
Melanesian Mythology
Massive Polynesian Mythology Post
Maori Mythical Creatures
Hawaiian Gods and Goddesses
Hawaiian Goddesses
Gods and Goddesses
Creating a Fantasy Religion:
Creating Part 1
Creating Part 2
Creating Part 3
Creating Part 4
Fantasy Religion Design Guide
Using Religion in Fantasy
Religion in Fantasy
Creating Fantasy Worlds
Beliefs in Fantasy
Some superstitions:
Read More
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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Just show me this anytime I start getting homesick for Boston
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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“presumably the fact that they carved their own palismen makes me think that they do get to choose which animal they want and it isn't just assigned to them in some magical way.”
I guess the process is probably different for everyone! As you just said, not everybody carves their own, and perhaps that suits some people well. Maybe family is where they find their identity and sense of belonging (back to the patronus theme of safety), so it’s an honor to choose a palisman in a long lineage of (say) noble bird palismen. That is still a kind of choice. Maybe not as conscious of one but still a choice.
Adopting a palisman is a more conscious choice, and both parties have to make the choice together. Yet so much still comes down to a person’s identity and nature—how do you choose? What does “when you know, you know” feel like? It’s gonna be a mix of conscious choice and, just, vibes—whatever feels “meant to be.” Is that really more of a choice than inheriting one? Is it less?
And finally, carving your own: Maybe for a more assertive person than myself, this involves shaping your palisman actively, choosing what it will be and what it represents (as well as who YOU will be and what YOU will represent, using its power). Whereas I didn’t want to tell my palisman what to be; I let it come to me and reveal itself. That’s also a choice! And lo and behold, I got an animal that’s all about going with the flow. Funny how that worked out.
TLDR: All these methods are choices, even if they are unconscious choices. Choosing not to choose (like Luz did) is also a choice.
Which is actually completely different from a patronus and now I’m rethinking my entire position on the subject XD
Palismen are conceptually so funny btw. 'this is my magical animal companion, we are soulbounded together & i love him with my whole heart. he also converts into a stick for hitting people with.'
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a-crystallen-author · 2 months
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but if i gave up on being silly i wouldn't know how to be alive
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