How To Donate An ESIM

tweet by dalia @.robeccasteams: “All of my uncles, aunts, and cousins are running their devices on ESims RN. Without them we literally would have zero contact with them RN, so they are seriously the most helpful thing for Palestinian families right now.” February 18th 2024

how to donate an eSIM

More Posts from Laberrant and Others

9 months ago

"Don't lie to people" is all very good until u remember how funny it is to give the wrong birthday to an astrology person and have them go "that explains so much abt you

3 months ago

does anyone wanna hold hands until we feel a little braver

1 year ago

Putting the egg in a pint of mint syrup and chugging it down

While still keeping it safe, sane, and sanitary, what is the most fucked up and evil, completely wrong way to eat a boiled egg?

9 months ago

How Do I Make My Fictional Gypsies Not Racist?

(Or, "You can't, sorry, but…")

You want to include some Gypsies in your fantasy setting. Or, you need someone for your main characters to meet, who is an outsider in the eyes of the locals, but who already lives here. Or you need a culture in conflict with your settled people, or who have just arrived out of nowhere. Or, you just like the idea of campfires in the forest and voices raised in song. And you’re about to step straight into a muckpile of cliches and, accidentally, write something racist.

(In this, I am mostly using Gypsy as an endonym of Romany people, who are a subset of the Romani people, alongside Roma, Sinti, Gitano, Romanisael, Kale, etc, but also in the theory of "Gypsying" as proposed by Lex and Percy H, where Romani people are treated with a particular mix of orientalism, criminalisation, racialisation, and othering, that creates "The Gypsy" out of both nomadic peoples as a whole and people with Romani heritage and racialised physical features, languages, and cultural markers)

Enough of my friends play TTRPGs or write fantasy stories that this question comes up a lot - They mention Dungeons and Dragons’ Curse Of Strahd, World Of Darkness’s Gypsies, World Of Darkness’s Ravnos, World of Darkness’s Silent Striders… And they roll their eyes and say “These are all terrible! But how can I do it, you know, without it being racist?”

And their eyes are big and sad and ever so hopeful that I will tell them the secret of how to take the Roma of the real world and place them in a fictional one, whilst both appealing to gorjer stereotypes of Gypsies and not adding to the weight of stereotyping that already crushes us. So, disappointingly, there is no secret.

Gypsies, like every other real-world culture, exist as we do today because of interactions with cultures and geography around us: The living waggon, probably the archetypal thing which gorjer writers want to include in their portrayals of nomads, is a relatively modern invention - Most likely French, and adopted from French Showmen by Romanies, who brought it to Britain. So already, that’s a tradition that only spans a small amount of the time that Gypsies have existed, and only a small number of the full breadth of Romani ways of living. But the reasons that the waggon is what it is are based on the real world - The wheels are tall and iron-rimmed, because although you expect to travel on cobbled, tarmac, or packed-earth roads and for comparatively short distances, it wasn’t rare to have to ford a river in Britain in the late nineteenth century, on country roads. They were drawn by a single horse, and the shape of that horse was determined by a mixture of local breeds - Welsh cobs, fell ponies, various draft breeds - as well as by the aesthetic tastes of the breeders. The stove inside is on the left, so that as you move down a British road, the chimney sticks up into the part where there will be the least overhanging branches, to reduce the chance of hitting it.

So taking a fictional setting that looks like (for example) thirteenth century China (with dragons), and placing a nineteenth century Romanichal family in it will inevitably result in some racist assumptions being made, as the answer to “Why does this culture do this?” becomes “They just do it because I want them to” rather than having a consistent internal logic.

Some stereotypes will always follow nomads - They appear in different forms in different cultures, but they always arise from the settled people's same fears: That the nomads don't share their values, and are fundamentally strangers. Common ones are that we have a secret language to fool outsiders with, that we steal children and disguise them as our own, that our sexual morals are shocking (This one has flipped in the last half century - From the Gypsy Lore Society's talk of the lascivious Romni seductress who will lie with a strange man for a night after a 'gypsy wedding', to today's frenzied talk of 'grabbing' and sexually-conservative early marriages to ensure virginity), that we are supernatural in some way, and that we are more like animals than humans. These are tropes where if you want to address them, you will have to address them as libels - there is no way to casually write a baby-stealing, magical succubus nomad without it backfiring onto real life Roma. (The kind of person who has the skills to write these tropes well, is not the kind of person who is reading this guide.)

It’s too easy to say a list of prescriptive “Do nots”, which might stop you from making the most common pitfalls, but which can end up with your nomads being slightly flat as you dance around the topics that you’re trying to avoid, rather than being a rich culture that feels real in your world.

So, here are some questions to ask, to create your nomadic people, so that they will have a distinctive culture of their own that may (or may not) look anything like real-world Romani people: These aren't the only questions, but they're good starting points to think about before you make anything concrete, and they will hopefully inspire you to ask MORE questions.

First - Why are they nomadic? Nobody moves just to feel the wind in their hair and see a new horizon every morning, no matter what the inspirational poster says. Are they transhumant herders who pay a small rent to graze their flock on the local lord’s land? Are they following migratory herds across common land, being moved on by the cycle of the seasons and the movement of their animals? Are they seasonal workers who follow man-made cycles of labour: Harvests, fairs, religious festivals? Are they refugees fleeing a recent conflict, who will pass through this area and never return? Are they on a regular pilgrimage? Do they travel within the same area predictably, or is their movement governed by something that is hard to predict? How do they see their own movements - Do they think of themselves as being pushed along by some external force, or as choosing to travel? Will they work for and with outsiders, either as employees or as partners, or do they aim to be fully self-sufficient? What other jobs do they do - Their whole society won’t all be involved in one industry, what do their children, elderly, disabled people do with their time, and is it “work”?

If they are totally isolationist - How do they produce the things which need a complex supply chain or large facilities to make? How do they view artefacts from outsiders which come into their possession - Things which have been made with technology that they can’t produce for themselves? (This doesn’t need to be anything about quality of goods, only about complexity - A violin can be made by one artisan working with hand tools, wood, gut and shellac, but an accordion needs presses to make reeds, metal lathes to make screws, complex organic chemistry to make celluloid lacquer, vulcanised rubber, and a thousand other components)

How do they feel about outsiders? How do they buy and sell to outsiders? If it’s seen as taboo, do they do it anyway? Do they speak the same language as the nearby settled people (With what kind of fluency, or bilingualism, or dialect)? Do they intermarry, and how is that viewed when it happens? What stories does this culture tell about why they are a separate people to the nearby settled people? Are those stories true? Do they have a notional “homeland” and do they intend to go there? If so, is it a real place?

What gorjers think of as classic "Gipsy music" is a product of our real-world situation. Guitar from Spain, accordions from the Soviet Union (Which needed modern machining and factories to produce and make accessible to people who weren't rich- and which were in turn encouraged by Soviet authorities preferring the standardised and modern accordion to the folk traditions of the indigenous peoples within the bloc), brass from Western classical traditions, via Balkan folk music, influences from klezmer and jazz and bhangra and polka and our own music traditions (And we influence them too). What are your people's musical influences? Do they make their own instruments or buy them from settled people? How many musical traditions do they have, and what are they all for (Weddings, funerals, storytelling, campfire songs, entertainment...)? Do they have professional musicians, and if so, how do those musicians earn money? Are instrument makers professionals, or do they use improvised and easy-to-make instruments like willow whistles, spoons, washtubs, etc? (Of course the answer can be "A bit of both")

If you're thinking about jobs - How do they work? Are they employed by settled people (How do they feel about them?) Are they self employed but providing services/goods to the settled people? Are they mostly avoidant of settled people other than to buy things that they can't produce themselves? Are they totally isolationist? Is their work mostly subsistence, or do they create a surplus to sell to outsiders? How do they interact with other workers nearby? Who works, and how- Are there 'family businesses', apprentices, children with part time work? Is it considered 'a job' or just part of their way of life? How do they educate their children, and is that considered 'work'? How old are children when they are considered adult, and what markers confer adulthood? What is considered a rite of passage?

When they travel, how do they do it? Do they share ownership of beasts of burden, or each individually have "their horse"? Do families stick together or try to spread out? How does a child begin to live apart from their family, or start their own family? Are their dwellings something that they take with them, or do they find places to stay or build temporary shelter with disposable material? Who shares a dwelling and why? What do they do for privacy, and what do they think privacy is for?

If you're thinking about food - Do they hunt? Herd? Forage? Buy or trade from settled people? Do they travel between places where they've sown crops or managed wildstock in previous years, so that when they arrive there is food already seeded in the landscape? How do they feel about buying food from settled people, and is that common? If it's frowned upon - How much do people do it anyway? How do they preserve food for winter? How much food do they carry with them, compared to how much they plan to buy or forage at their destinations? How is food shared- Communal stores, personal ownership?

Why are they a "separate people" to the settled people? What is their creation myth? Why do they believe that they are nomadic and the other people are settled, and is it correct? Do they look different? Are there legal restrictions on them settling? Are there legal restrictions on them intermixing? Are there cultural reasons why they are a separate people? Where did those reasons come from? How long have they been travelling? How long do they think they've been travelling? Where did they come from? Do they travel mostly within one area and return to the same sites predictably, or are they going to move on again soon and never come back?

And then within that - What about the members of their society who are "unusual" in some way: How does their society treat disabled people? (are they considered disabled, do they have that distinction and how is it applied?) How does their society treat LGBT+ people? What happens to someone who doesn't get married and has no children? What happens to someone who 'leaves'? What happens to young widows and widowers? What happens if someone just 'can't fit in'? What happens to someone who is adopted or married in? What happens to people who are mixed race, and in a fantasy setting to people who are mixed species? What is taboo to them and what will they find shocking if they leave? What is society's attitude to 'difference' of various kinds?

Basically, if you build your nomads from the ground-up, rather than starting from the idea of "I want Gypsies/Buryats/Berbers/Minceiri but with the numbers filed off and not offensive" you can end up with a rich, unique nomadic culture who make sense in your world and don't end up making a rod for the back of real-world cultures.

10 months ago

Not that anybody asked, but I think it's important to understand how shame and guilt actually work before you try to use it for good.

It's a necessary emotion. There are reasons we have it. It makes everything so. much. worse. when you use it wrong.

Shame and guilt are DE-motivators. They are meant to stop behavior, not promote it. You cannot, ever, in any meaningful way, guilt someone into doing good. You can only shame them into not doing bad.

Let's say you're a parent and your kid is having issues.

Swearing in class? Shame could work. You want them to stop it. Keep it in proportion*, and it might help. *(KEEP IT IN PROPORTION!!!)

Not doing their homework? NO! STOP! NO NOT DO THAT! EVER! EVER! EVER! You want them to start to do their homework. Shaming them will have to opposite effect! You have demotivated them! They will double down on NOT doing it. Not because they are being oppositional, but because that's what shame does!

You can't guilt people into building better habits, being more successful, or getting more involved. That requires encouragement. You need to motivate for that stuff!

If you want it in a simple phrase:

You can shame someone out of being a bad person, but you can't shame them into being a good person.

10 months ago

some people think writers are so eloquent and good with words, but the reality is that we can sit there with our fingers on the keyboard going, “what’s the word for non-sunlight lighting? Like, fake lighting?” and for ten minutes, all our brain will supply is “unofficial”, and we know that’s not the right word, but it’s the only word we can come up with…until finally it’s like our face got smashed into a brick wall and we remember the word we want is “artificial”.

5 months ago
This Thread On Twitter Is Fucking Killing Me

this thread on twitter is fucking killing me

2 weeks ago
Digital drawing of several penguin of different species in a line, with common names labeled beneath them: Emperor, King, Gentoo, Chinstrap, Yellow-eyed, Erect-crested.
Digital drawing of several penguin of different species in a line, with common names labeled beneath them: Adelie, Royal, Macaroni, Magellanic, African, Humboldt.
Digital drawing of several penguin of different species in a line, with common names labeled beneath them: Snares, Fiordland, Southern & Northern rockhoppers, Galapagos.
Digital drawing of two very small penguins in a line, with common names labeled beneath them: Little / Fairy.

PENGUINS. all of them!

(not precisely to scale, but close)

Digital drawing of a line-up of all 19 penguin species, starting with an emperor penguin and descending in size to the smallest, the little penguin.
10 months ago

Because what are fruits but symbols of greed, and love, and humanity

Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity
Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity
Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity
Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity
Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity
Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity
Because What Are Fruits But Symbols Of Greed, And Love, And Humanity

Blackberry Picking, Seamus Heaney// @noquietrevolution//@vampireapologist // Oranges, Gary Soto // We Are Okay, Nina LaCour // Twitter user super_smasha// @inkskinned

2 months ago

ghost stories are alarmingly easy to spread tbh

when I was like ten I was walking back from the chip shop near my gran's house with a neighbour and we took a short cut down an alley which was enclosed by garages except for one part which was wire fenced and led to the electricity shack

and while I was walking I chucked a chip over the fence. the girl walking with me, C, reasonably asks why I did that

"oh, don't you know?" I say, as if I'm not equally out of my own loop

she shakes her head. the enclosed alleyway has no streetlights. it's after dark. the shack is isolated in the distance.

"a little girl who lived up on the court climbed the fence once on a dare. she went up to the shack and touched it, but there was a wire sticking out, and when she touched it, she got electrocuted and died, right there. if you come back in the daylight, you can still see the black mark."

[editor's note: the court was the smaller road off the side of the crescent, which was the one C's family and my gran lived on. the houses there were slightly more expensive and newer, almost all occupied by wealthy commuters to the city, where most of the crescent houses were occupied by retirees and locals who worked on the trading estate. naturally, crescent kids hated the court. houses there got bricked about once a month.]

"no she didn't," C says

I made up this story for absolutely no reason and with no plan, but I'm not gonna back down now. "sure she did. and if you go past on your way back from the shops and you don't leave her an offering, she'll follow you home through the streetlights. one flickers behind you, then the next, then the next, until you get home. and then the lights start to flocked inside the house. even if you turn out all the electrics before bed, it'll be too late. she's inside. and you'll wake up on the night and see her, and she'll be so awful to see it'll stop your heart."

[editor's note: the streetlights always flickered. this was because our neighbour monkey george kept setting the junction boxes on fire]

"I never did before and she never followed me home!"

"do you come down the alley after dark? or do you take the main road with the streetlights?" I knew she didn't use the shortcut, because I'd been the one to talk her into it that night. she was three years younger than me and scared of the dark.

C claims not to believe me, but she throws a chip over the fence too, and walks the rest of the way looking over her shoulder. I get to pride myself for the night on being good at scary stories, and don't think much more about it.

fast forward six or seven years. I'm back in town. I'm on my way back from the chip shop, taking the same shortcut home. ahead of me on the road are a couple of kids I vaguely recognise as old playmates' younger siblings.

they stop, and I watch one fish out three sweeties from the pack they're sharing. they take one each and throw them over the fence. they carry on walking.

I realise that this is probably my fault, as are any resulting pest control issues around the old electricity shack.

when I get to the fence, I throw a chip over.

  • random-autie-fangirl
    random-autie-fangirl reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • jerome123x
    jerome123x reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • jerome123x
    jerome123x liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • bannedonline
    bannedonline reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • seafoamstatice
    seafoamstatice reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • solsacrilege
    solsacrilege reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • hajskaeg
    hajskaeg reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • blogsonthefritsnfribbles
    blogsonthefritsnfribbles reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • danimoonstarr
    danimoonstarr reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • ladycelebrianofimladris
    ladycelebrianofimladris reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • addyad-adv
    addyad-adv liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • propelbottle
    propelbottle reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • socialdisaster
    socialdisaster reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • transpenguin
    transpenguin reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • orphanofkos
    orphanofkos reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • handyandy06
    handyandy06 reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • handyandy06
    handyandy06 liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • thelocaldogooder
    thelocaldogooder reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • froginaboat
    froginaboat liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • kshkonskpon
    kshkonskpon reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • kshkonskpon
    kshkonskpon liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • flaminbeast
    flaminbeast reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • flaminbeast
    flaminbeast liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • coralblitz
    coralblitz reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • coralblitz
    coralblitz liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • ff14hermes
    ff14hermes reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • masterpostsnstuff
    masterpostsnstuff reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • honoraryastronaut
    honoraryastronaut reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • danilidoodle
    danilidoodle reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • bitten-twicee
    bitten-twicee liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • milkovicho
    milkovicho reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • sluttywizardcowboy
    sluttywizardcowboy liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • americangothiic
    americangothiic reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • moogleplush
    moogleplush reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • velvetboyys
    velvetboyys liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • aggot
    aggot reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • manakhemia
    manakhemia reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • dryad-diana
    dryad-diana reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • dryad-diana
    dryad-diana liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • screamingwiththewolves
    screamingwiththewolves reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • snippythings
    snippythings liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • 0ct0pies
    0ct0pies reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • donationss
    donationss reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • ultramagnusbutagirlbutstillgay
    ultramagnusbutagirlbutstillgay reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • malelanguagemodel
    malelanguagemodel reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • thebabymammoth
    thebabymammoth reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • meme-and-mainblog-for--z8-cio
    meme-and-mainblog-for--z8-cio reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
  • grubbylilgoblin
    grubbylilgoblin reblogged this · 4 weeks ago
laberrant - Laberrant's labyrinth
Laberrant's labyrinth

laberrant, 20 yo, gender: hotly debated, pronouns: any

257 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags