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Telluride
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Father - Recovering TradFi Evangelist - Life & Longevity Coach - Retired Strength & Conditioning Coach -Follow me, I’ll follow back. -Repost my note/comment ill zap your ass. 🧡👊🏻🍻 #carnivore #longevitycoaching #BTC

I'm glad you mentioned animal based sources.

for example spinach is loaded with calcium but only a tiny fraction is bioavailable in that form. so little it shouldn't even be counted.

Humans are omnivorous and we can def get nutrients from plants but herbivores are really effective at it.

-its best to just eat those creatures.

* BTW, I still eat spinach.

We also dont need another fckn Fb or reddit.

The people who spend their time here are different.

My kind of different.

🍻

Yeah… gas engines just dont have the longevity.

Those old pump deuce diesels go forever.

Engine and transmission are fine but All the plastic stuff is falling apart and electrical gremlins are becoming too prevalent to reliably drive it anymore.

Consistent 40mpg all those years. I got my moneys worth.

Im starting to love your new habit…

Not my daily but i still have an 01 TDI Golf with a few miles on it.

Carnivore should definitely be tried. Everyone should try it for 60 days minimum to give your body rime to heal from all the inflammation caused by seed oils and gluten and the like.

Im curious What is your main sources of calcium?

Just don’t forget to fill her shoes with rue. Chicks fuckn dig that. She’ll love you forever.

Its called an asymmetrical bet.

You know the outcome ahead of time.

For example, in poker when you briefly see your opponent’s cards and you know you cant lose.

Its a rare occurrence in life and should be exploited to the fullest when the opportunity presents itself.

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

One of the things I think about a lot in terms of modern fiction is this conflict around diversity, wokeness, and so forth. Here’s a bit of a mini blog post on it.

On one hand, it’s normal that people want to see elements of themselves in fiction they consume. And so to create something that appeals to a large and diverse world, one way of doing that is to have a diverse cast of characters. Unless of course the context would be inappropriate, like Saving Private Ryan or something. In addition, fiction has always been used as a form of social critique, and thus if someone has something to say about race or gender, it’s going to come up in fiction.

On the other hand, I think diversity in fiction has a lot of reasonable pushback against it in the current era. Weak Mary Sue characters, an over-emphasis on race or gender compared to writing a good story with compelling characters, diversity quotas, and “creation by committee” where so many hands touch a peace that they dilute it down to nothing. These days most of the movies that win awards are not the movies most people want to watch.

The last three pieces of visual fiction I consumed were Godzilla Minus One, Blue Eye Samurai, and Arcane. They had very different approaches to this topic and I think all of them handled it well. Discussed without major spoilers.

Godzilla Minus One is a Japanese movie set in the 1940s, so the answer for diversify is that there isn’t any, and the topic probably didn’t even come up. Like for Saving Private Ryan. There’s diversity of personalities of course, but it’s mostly about Japanese men dealing with a monster, and then two notable female characters that are well-written in mostly non-action roles. A key theme of the movie is about life over death and the horrors of war, and so for example it explores the ethics of kamikaze pilots and the broader topic of sacrifice in a defeated Japan, which it does well.

Blue Eye Samurai has a female protagonist, disguised as a man for practical purposes as she goes about revenge. So in the current era where diversity is such a big topic, there’s a lot of ways for that to be handled poorly. But her background and why she’s out for revenge isn’t particularly gender-related. And race comes up to the extent that the show explores colonialism, technological gaps between cultures, a society closing itself off to outsiders, viewing outsiders as demons, etc. Which all happened in that period. The show has a major arc that focuses on the limitations of being a woman in 1800s Japan, and I think it’s well done. All of it is in service to a good story.

Arcane uses League of Legends lore, which has like 140 characters so that everyone who plays can find someone they like. Thus diversity is set into it at its core, and the gender and racial diversity in Arcane the show is at a higher than average level. But then they don’t talk about it. None of the conflicts are about race or gender. The setting has a lot of problems that the characters are sorting through, and race and gender just don’t happen to be among them, which I think is well-handled for the story they want to tell. The themes and conflicts they focus on instead are economic disparity, desire for sovereignty, technological progress vs risk, family bonds and their limits, the price of power, peace vs domination, etc. So by the end it feels like invisible diversity- diversity just kind of happened without it having been a big deal. And importantly, the diversity was not at the expense of white men- they were some of the best characters too, including probably my favorite character in the show.

I’m currently reading The Lost Metal, which I’m not loving for plot and pacing reasons but am finishing it for completionist reasons for the broader story universe, and once again I think the author handles diversity well. His books, set in fantastical settings, tend to have a diverse array of characters, and it’s all in service of telling a good plot with good action and so forth that appeals to tens of millions of readers across the world. As an example, his original Mistborn book has the highest per capita fans in Taiwan of all places, even though the book isn’t set in an Asian setting. When the success of Hunger Games led to a big global trend of young adult dystopian fiction for a while, it was Mistborn that caught on in Taiwan. A good piece of fiction doesn't have to be written for a particular group, to be enjoyed by that group.

So when I approach hobby-writing, that’s my focus: tell a good story with interesting characters.

I think vonnugut put it really well.

“Write to please just one person. If you open a window and try to make love to the world so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.”

A good story is a good story. Modern writing then edits shit back in to satisfy a need for inclusion. Its jerky, distracting and unnecessary.

Brevity is the soul of wit.

Theres nothing worse when Im enjoying an otherwise great story and I’m jerked out that immersive fantasy because of some irrelevant bullshit.

You’re literally describing the town I live in. Itd Be safe as fuck.

🤣🍻🧡👊🏻