theredoesnotexist: (categoricalist)
Alias: being a literal clock, able to pinpoint anything related to timing with so much more ease than the rest of us, and we think it formed/split during the second-to-last week of January, 2017. A little background on Alias before we go into this: it is a clock, like I said, more specifically a pocket watch, and it does not see itself as a human in any way; barely even a person. It doesn't hate itself, it's not self-loathing or anywhere near what null is like, but it has a constant air of empty melancholy, like a casual and peaceful attitude that, when peeled away, reveals a deep-seated depersonalization to the point of feeling discomfort at the idea of receiving sympathy. It is the only one out of all of us who can accurately measure and estimate the time in its head, and it does so with a shocking precision (once, when asked the time in the middle of a grocery trip, it said "I think it's about 8:27" and it was, in fact, exactly 8:27). It has a special affection for uncomfortable, disquieting spaces; backrooms fiction, strange liminal horror games, photographs that don't sit quite right, the basements of libraries at 1 AM.
We attempted in a pit of depression and spent 5 days in a hospital, and there is something to be said about the brain's ability to zero in on a minor, barely-significant annoyance in order to cope with the stress of something much greater shadowing it.
Picture this.
You're 16 years old in a psych ward. You didn't want to die because of a chemical imbalance, you wanted to die because you were immersed in an atmosphere of abuse and dehumanization from the authorities in your life. Your solace is music, the Internet, your favorite shows and your friends, but those aren't allowed. You can't go outside; you are confined to your room and one or two hallways of uncanny, inhospitable atmosphere. You aren't being treated like a person, and unlike your usual, familiar experience of that, you aren't even being treated like an animal or a child either—you're some kind of unthinking thing. You're being given medication and told that any complaints about life circumstances that can't be fixed are just dramatics, so you know there is no light at the end of this tunnel when you go home and nothing is better. None of this is helping.
But all you can think about, all that you're able to agonize over, is that at night, when you're lying in your room and you have no phone, no clock, and your window doesn't let you see the sky, is that you can't tell what time it is.
It's all you can care about anymore. Once they've locked your door just to stop you from leaving into the lobby every five minutes to check the clock, you can't even sleep. And there's nothing else to think about. Maybe they're right; you really are unthinking. You aren't a person. All you care about is the time.

Stranger: following the pattern, here's the necessary context on Stranger. Out of all of us, he would be the first to say that his presentation is specifically butch. He doesn't just affect masculinity, he wraps himself around it like it's a second heart that pumps his blood. But he isn't a human. He sees himself as a monster, a dark figure of a paranormal beastly nature looming in windows, something that any sensible person would balk at the sight of. He gets euphoria from someone saying "You startled me!" because he was too quiet for them to notice he was in the room, and from a sense of unease at how accurately he can mimic another person, as if it might have to come up later that his very appearance can't be trusted.
Now picture another scenario.
You are a pre-teen or perhaps young teen girl, let's say 12–14 years old, and your whole life, you have associated power with fear. The people who demand respect from you are the people who you are most afraid of and the demands which you cannot decline. You know that someone who is in control, who will deal with it, whoever is the person to go to for help, is the person you are also most terrified of.
You are also excruciatingly aware, even if you don't quite have the words for it, that you are at the age where your masculine affinities stop being a quirky tomboy thing, and start being a threat in the eyes of adults around you who endeavor to produce a good feminine woman. You are becoming disgusting. You are becoming something to be afraid of—but not in the same way as the people who raised you, no. You've always been lesser, so your growth into this grotesque thing isn't a growth into power, it's reprehensible. For someone who is following all the rules, being the source of fear is called authority. For someone who dares break them, being the source of fear is called monstrosity.
You are more like a creature from a horror movie than the hero who kills it.
And you are also at the age where you get your own iPod and your music taste starts to veer drastically off of the top 40.

🝯
theredoesnotexist: (unwanted painting ekho)
I've mentioned before on my Tumblr that certain members of our system tend to "absorb" flickers, meaning that when we flicker, sometimes, it isn't the whole system's flicker, it's one specific member's and it tends to cause them to front more consistently for the duration. When this happens, often the result is that that particular alter will adapt the former flicker into their existence, not quite as a fictotype, but in a way that's permanently felt; it's hard to explain, but it's as if the flicker is recurring enough to be considered a significant part of their alterhumanity or identity as a whole, but only for that specific headmate. Vestige shows this in the most intense way, generally identifying those former flickers as fictotypes, but several of us will do this while others usually won't, and it's interesting to note the different patterns (type of character, type of flicker) by which it happens, because it actually does seem to reflect respective personalities.

For examples:

Vestige, as mentioned: tends to flicker a certain archetype of solitary, unassuming, wilderness-wandering character, usually who is a reluctant fighter or unfortunately-chosen warrior, often drawn toward a specific fate, carrying a specific weapon, and/or fights a great evil; usually taciturn, unsocial, ranging in verbality from "simply talks less than others due to his introspective personality" to "literally canonically was created no mouth so that it couldn't speak." The flickers he absorbs, and especially the ones he considers fictotypes, are often the deeply-felt, spiritually significant flickers—he will be the one to have dreams about lives as these characters. They have seven that we know of, three of them being the fictotypes we (mostly them) openly discuss on our blog. Four if you include the Novakid identity that he experiences as a fictotype of a specific character rather than a species identity like the rest of us. Vestige doesn't necessarily see themself as serious, per say, but they carry themself with a gravity that maybe only NOCH and Levi can actually match despite their self-professed mundanity, and the pattern clearly follows their affixation to a narrative and their superstitious nature. Not to mention their sincerity (at the intersection of deeply felt and unflappable reactions) likely being the reason those flickers are the easiest ones to talk about.


Fishke
: tends to flicker mild-personalitied, people-pleasing characters, who let life just happen to them, aren't generally treated well by the other characters but don't have the ability or worldly understanding to push back, or have scientifically impossible disaster happen to them but are just like, chill about it. Often experiencing a systemically dehumanizing level of body horror or exploitation and approaching it with a pathologically blasé disregard for their own personhood. They're flickers that aren't that intense, that we barely even noticed enough to realize it was a flicker at the time or that we had to wonder if it was a flicker of the character or if it was just a general becoming askew that was attached to the media. There are five instances of this that I could name off the top of my head, but only one of them was even intense enough in the first place for Fishke to carry it with him and still feel attached to it, and if you watched that particular movie you could probably hear it in the way he talks. It's probably one of the most obvious manifestations. Fishke is a "go-with-the-flow" personality to a pathological degree; if you called them a doormat, they'd apologize for being in the way of your feet; nine times out of ten, if we get hurt or wake up in discomfort or pain, it's Fishke who immediately appears to take the brunt of it. I think they actually kind of like it.

Sender
: I think I tend to flicker composed, easy-going but sober characters, often ones who experience horrors but respond to them with a questionable mix of grace and repression. It's hard to pin it down because I can only say I've absorbed three flickers plus one... other thing... which is not a good sample size, but all three have been eloquent, measured speakers, generally depicted well-dressed, often poetic personalities, storytellers, but perhaps not quite handling things as well as they (and others) think they are, with a quick failsafe of avoidance. These were flickers that hit suddenly and intensely, then smoothed out over time into a less intense but more long-term stability, perhaps even seasonally recurring, but that often felt like they were lasting too long for comfort. I would go into why this is probably appropriate for me, but I honestly think being in front currently means I'm way too blind-sided to actually see it, and I can't help but imagine reading this later as someone else and disagreeing with it, so I'm just going to leave it as is. Which... actually speaks for itself. 

Ben
: like Fishke, flickers we're not even quite sure can be called that or if it was just a character that was far too relatable (with a notable exception of a character from a game we never even played and didn't want to), that seem to just barely itch under his skin but not enough to actually pinpoint in his identity. These are characters that, almost without fail, are trapped in a certain place, undergoing violation of their autonomy up to outright unwilling physical mutation, beholden to employment. There are three, and what's interesting is that he, one of the most masc-presenting and binary guys in the system, is the only one who we know of who's flickered a female character, let alone more than one. I think Ben's flickers are possibly the least parallel to a headmate's personality, but there's something to be said for the there, but just not-there enough to be frustrating, and of course he gravitates to characters who feel trapped, exploited, and not quite as OK with it as Fishke's.

NOCH: Its flickers are sort of like Ben's and Fishke's in intensity, but ones that we can say for sure were flickers; lower-energy flickers, but with an undertone of certainty. There are five I can think of right now, and there is a consistency in their archetypes that we can easily point to: utterly inhuman, and in fact primarily incomprehensible beings or maybe not even acting agents as opposed to forces of supernature, who arguably either committed unforgivable acts of horror out of malice, or were more complicated and sympathetic than the intended human audience was meant to view them as. They line up almost too perfectly with NOCH's labyrinth of a species identity too; two intelligent supercomputers (one a spaceship AI and the other an architect of impossible structures), one that's an otherworldly abomination, one that's an otherworldly abomination in an impossible structure, and one that skips the architect or abomination and just is an impossible structure itself.
Yeah, we'll never forget NOCH's "I think I'm flickering from House of Leaves; guys, I think it's the house!"

Fenn: Fenn's flickers start, last and end, appropriately, like a blow to the head; an immediate recognition, a profoundly manic spiral, a passionate confirmation and a song and dance of suppression within a length of time that NOCH would take to blink. Of three characters and one "thing" (like the one I have...), his flickers unfailingly and unsurprisingly often have a reckless physical disregard for their health, if not life; a penchant for flashy catastrophe; even more than once someone who experienced projectile head trauma.
Need I even say more?

🝯

theredoesnotexist: (unwanted painting ekho)
At first it was a little bit helpful and the patterns were interesting. But by now I find my selves more hindered by it than anything. Living in the moment, being who I am in the moment is more stifled than liberated by feeling the need to pull out my phone and jot notes down or mark transactions. At a certain point, it would just be compulsive. If I feel less secure in being who I am in the moment, which things I like, how I feel, and how I want to present if I didn't "set as front" yet, then the app is just unhealthy. And it absolutely shouldn't ever feel like we can't exist in cofront without confirming that's what it is and who. If I know, then I know, and I shouldn't need to update it; and if I don't, then I wouldn't anyway! This was mostly Still's idea which makes sense

We're not gonna delete it but taking a "break" for a week or so just to see if it feels lighter without that internally sourced pressure would decide if we keep using it at all or not

In today's news it is too fucking hot and everything died goodbye

🝐
theredoesnotexist: (centrifed)
Something we've been doing to note who may have made certain posts and tag accordingly, or just add old posts to newer tags for fun. It's interesting though to recognize where patterns develop and who may have been present for when and for how long. And how it influenced our interests (or were influenced by)! For example, scrolling through spring of 2022, we see a LOT of Vestige, Fishke, Sender, and Fenn, a little bit of Ben, and Alias closer to the summer, but not much NOCH, Quasar, Levi or Stranger to speak of. Understanding why for a lot of those is just the tip of the iceberg. (I mean, Sender is just obvious, spring 2022 lol (that context is just for me and 3 of my closest friends)... and Ben started to be more active with the release of Prehistoric Planet, same with Alias and Stanley Parable Ultra Deluxe.) Other patterns are also interesting. So much of our posting during that time was this deep fictionkin thought which tracks well enough for a Vestige and Fenn combo deal. Well. Mostly Vestige. The months in between January (when we'd have "the recurring Knight flicker") and March–April (when we'd have "the recurring Snufkin flicker") was always a hotbed of fictotype questioning so of course spring is when Vestige would be running around in our head knocking over pots and slaying higher beings and whatnot. It always has been.

See also: that's when we started questioning bugs for the first time, hence me and Sender. You gotta wonder which was the chicken and which was the egg though. Either way it's fun to go down memory lane and remember that the first arthropod we ever questioned was a damn beetle.

theredoesnotexist: (echo)
Actually, what I'm thinking is that 'I' may be more separate than we thought. That I'm no longer sure if we really are all just parts of the same Ekho. Maybe I need to do much more intense research on OSDD, with a focus on experiences. We get to define our own, but I'm not sure how to do that anymore, or if we might be holding ourselves back out of social fear. I think that will have to be its own, probably even longer post. (We should probably also write up posts that give context for some of the things in the first one, mostly just because it would be a fun way to break in the new journal.)

Many, if not most, of our nicknames were chosen as placeholders for simpler self-reference while we were figuring ourselves out in the beginning of this year. Most of them in the moment and just based on our irl name or a reference to our species. We were always going to end up changing them individually when we each moved on from "who am I?" to "what do I want?" Ben already did. He was "Nov" for like a week, but it really wasn't him. A good number of us have found ones they like more than their original placeholders; Sender (formerly Night), Alias (formerly Cel), Fishke (formerly Fishmoth—calling that band name) and Stranger (formerly Exo) may come on here to talk about their names once they front again (and remember this exists! Alias was the one who started this earlier today and it just forgot we even had this account, rip).

Valrook never really sat right with me, even though I'm pretty sure I was the one who chose it in the moment. I like "Val." I like "Rook." But Valrook is just a barely-changed reference to my species, and I feel like with the fictional identity I have, my name should be more significant to who I am. More than Ectych, if I'm being honest, though I'll go with that right now, I really do like it, it's just...

Considering my 'types: "Link." "Ghost." "Echo." Etc. There's something in common about these names that I'm noticing. These are both nouns and verbs. These are verbs that give you their own title when you enact them. To link is to be a link. To ghost is to be a ghost. To echo is to be the echo.

As nouns, they are conceptual. Intangible. You cannot touch a ghost. You may hear an echo, but you can't paint one. You cannot picture what a link looks like, at its basest definition, only things that do it; although, they are links too, because they link, and so are you.

As verbs, they are an active choice, but only at surface level. Do you really choose it? Are you still choosing it once you've become it? Are you choosing to be a ghost? An echo?

To glow is to be a glow. To shadow is to be a shadow. To burn is to be the burn, a caustic wound on those around you as you burn through them. To end is to be one: your own. To flicker is to be one, just a moment of sparks. I feel oblivious, like it must be right in front of my nose and all I need to do is reach my hands out into the space between the world and touch it, and it will light up. Maybe a lot like a flicker actually, though I don't know if it should be that.

I'm not sure. I will take Ectych and run with it, but I think really I'm still waiting, and I will be for a long while after everyone else in my system has settled down with their name. Because I'm waiting for it to find me. Everyone else may have run after one and caught it, but I think I'll be sitting here patiently until a verb comes and makes me into a noun.

🜁