I look at this one uh from time to time -
Unironically waiting for the bus in the rain rn. Real ones know ✌️🌧️🚌☔
What books have you done this to?
Instagram / Shop
my trick for getting through grad school is learning to navigate the quadrants with all their nuances
Alright, I think I like tumblr now.
A pun post crossed my dash, and I reblogged it with an equally bad pun in return. A couple of my followers find it funny, it's a good day for everyone.
That was on July 7th.
Virality on Reddit was entirely algorithmic. You could garner a couple crossposts, but the success of a post was entirely dependent on whether or not it hit r/all--the main page of Reddit. If your post does that, it's immediately exposed to 10x the number of people and immediately gets upvoted.
On my pun post, I get a couple reblogs. And those reblogs get a couple reblogs--nobody really adds any content to the post, it just gets a couple reblogs here and there.
There's a specific chain of reblogs that I'd like to focus on. The most popular post on this chain has about 25 reblogs on it. Half the posts have three reblogs or fewer. Five posts in this chain have just one reblog total.
But the reblog chain keeps going. And going. It breaches containment many times over. And finally, after a chain THIRTY SIX posts long, at 9:30 AM, July 22nd this morning, it hits a popular account.
99% percent of the people who have seen the post--virtually unchanged from how it left my dash--have seen it because it was curated by 36 different people. That's insane to me.
None of those 36 people know that they're part of this chain. They saw a post, reblogged it, and moved on. If any one of these people had not reblogged, the post would have a fraction of the impact it has.
And yet, after two weeks, the post has effectively hit the main page of tumblr. It was picked up, only because people liked it enough to show it to their followers. There were no algorithms necessary.
You really, truly, cannot get this on any other website.
☆°~ INTRO TO MY BLOG ☆°~
Beck/Nathan, he/him!
teenager, in high school rn
really into the humanities + arts
not slaying at STEM but hoping to fix that
autistic + probably ADHD and trying to find study/learning methods that work for me
tentatively learning French + Tagalog but I am bad at languages so we try our best here
main blog is @transmasc-wizard, I'll follow and like from there
Hoping to post/reblog:
study tips to try or that work for me
journaling, scheduling, planning, etc content
other miscellaneous school tips
aesthetic content
some assorted things i like:
books: The Great Gatsby, the Secret History, the Grishaverse, the Raven Cycle
music: Hozier, the Crane Wives, MCR, Chappell Roan, Jhariah
hobbies: theatre, DND, reading, writing, drawing
Always looking for friends to exchange this stuff with !!
about me :3 || tagging system
When you're a kid/teenager everyone expects you to base your career around your passions and interests and that works for a lot of people but it's not the full story. I wish they would also teach students to consider the lifestyle that career would require.
Like... if I had to choose a passion and work a career around it, I would probably work at a zoo or aquarium. But those jobs require a lot of schooling with STEM classes (which I hate) and a lot of early mornings (which make me feel ill) and an obligation to work in person with no flexibility to move (which makes me depressed). So even if I'd enjoy caring for animals all day, it's not a good career path for me.
My current job is travel writing, which is not my passion. I like it, but it's not my passion. But I work a flexible schedule, I can live anywhere, I get a travel stipend, and my team is really chill. So it works for me.
Rather than solely focusing on "What topics do you like?" I think we should ask students "Of the careers that suit your preferred lifestyle, which are the most interesting?"
they/them - 17y/o - adhd - highschool student | pictures are from pinterest unless otherwise stated |
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