What’s this I see in your tags about you turning 30 this week? HAPPY BIRTHDAAAAAYYYYY!!! *confetti cannon* I can sympathize with your late twenties not being a good time. I dreaded turning 30 after that shitshow, but things have turned out okay for me, and hopefully they will for you too. ^___^ (hashtag)ItsGotBetteMidler

Awww, thank you so much!! 😀 Yeah, my 30th was yesterday. I spent most of the month wrestling over how to feel about it, since going through truly rough stuff in your 20s can exacerbate the “oh man, I’m so old! This isn’t what I wanted! I’m running out of time!” sensation. But I think it kind of helps you realize how TOTALLY RIDICULOUS that is, too. Like, dang, of course my progress doesn’t measure up to “everyone else,” because no one else was fighting through all those extra obstacles! So I’m choosing to just think of it as a clean slate – onwards and upwards!

Can I ask how long you were homeless for? I’ve been following you for quite some time and I had no idea.

Oh, it was between September of last year and February of this one. I didn’t talk about it at all, because I didn’t really know how to… But basically, my mother (who is physically disabled and has crazy health issues) and I lived in a tiny dilapidated travel trailer for five months. It was about the size of most people’s bathrooms, with zero privacy or amenities, just a small metal box. It leaked and didn’t have a lock on the door, and one of the windows got busted out a few months into the whole ordeal. We didn’t have anywhere to park it, so we would sneak into rundown campgrounds after hours, and occasionally parked on the side of the road, until we’d get chased off by cops.  There were times one of us didn’t eat anything so the other one could, and times we didn’t have the gas money to get to the food bank, so we just split a peanut butter sandwich every day for a week.

It all happened because we were moving, and figured we’d find an apartment once we got to our destination. The weather was decent then, we had a little money put aside, and my mom originally got the trailer to fix up, so we were like, “Hey, we can hack this for a few weeks, no problem.”  We put our things in storage and went for it.  But unbeknownst to us, in recent years there’s been a huge surge of discrimination against people who get government housing assistance (which we have because my mom and I are disabled, and therefore poor).  No landlord would even consider renting to us. Like, NONE. They didn’t care that we had good references – they would just have a policy of refusing to rent to anyone on government programs, which in the state of California is not technically discrimination. (The more you know!)  So we started looking at other towns and other counties, until we were searching in a hundred mile radius of our original destination. It was the same everywhere, week after week. Our car broke down numerous times, which quickly ate up all the money we had put aside. By Halloween, there was no other word for it but “homeless.”

Throughout the whole ordeal, we were scouring craigslist and local newspapers, going to rental agencies and literally begging people to even consider our applications. We’re competent women; we would always clean up and present ourselves well. We had one good outfit each that we only wore when we met with landlords.  And as soon as the words “housing voucher” passed our lips, it was like lightning flashed outside and the room went cold. I had people yell at me to get out of their offices. I had people laugh directly into my face while shaking their heads and going, “No, sorry, goodness, no.” One of them told me I would never find an available rental, because the people who get into “Section 8 apartments” are like rats, and live there till they die. I vividly remember sitting in the car after that meeting and bawling my eyes out, wondering how so many people could look me in the eye and treat me like I wasn’t even human. That guy had just got done showing us a dank, miserable little one-bedroom that I would never have chosen to live in, given any options, but it was too good for me!  Meanwhile, my mom was going without her vitally needed medications. Mine are pretty important, too, but they’re psychological in nature, and hers aren’t.  She lost over ten pounds.  We went to an urgent care at one point to try and get her prescriptions, and a nurse practitioner accused her of being a drug addict and said she might sell her thyroid and pain medications.  You really have no dignity left when you hit that point.  Like, you can’t even argue anymore, you just go limp and walk away.

Shortly before Christmas, I was looking at online rental listings that were posted directly to the local housing assistance office – there hadn’t been any available in months, but it was a desperate, automatic daily ritual – and saw a new one right as it went up. We called about it and went to see it, and it was a fucking beautiful, spacious three bedroom apartment in a Victorian house. There were hundreds of other applicants (because we were BY NO MEANS the only people suffering because of these crazy policies), but since we were the first and this landlord primarily dealt with housing vouchers, we were his top choice. But our housing voucher is only good for a two bedroom! So then I had to petition the federal government to extend our housing voucher to cover a three bedroom rental.  I kid you not.  There was a whole chain of command involved through the Housing and Urban Development department – first I had to make my case to the head of the local office; then I had to make it to the head of the regional office for Northern California in San Francisco.  Then I had to write a letter explaining the nature of my mother’s disabilities and how no other apartment on God’s green earth could accommodate them quite like this one could (because they didn’t give a fuck about the homelessness thing, either – they would only consider playing ball if I was vaguely insinuating that anything else was violating her rights as an American with disabilities), which was submitted to a committee in Washington D.C. and voted on. Granting my request required waiving the federal guidelines for HUD funding allocations. So… not really great odds, but I had literally no choices in front of me.

I called the local office every single day for a month and a half, looking for news about what they had decided. This was when food was particularly short. My computer died right around Christmas. The entire month of January was the worst of my entire life. I haven’t been a Muslim since I was about twelve, but I was praying at least five times a day. I was hungry most of the time and getting no sleep, and my entire existence was riding on this long shot. Towards the end of January, the landlord of this apartment told us we had one week left to get this straightened out or he was going to give the place to the next applicant in line. And a few days later, out of the misty fucking blue, we got a call from the local housing office saying our request had been approved.  I now live in that beautiful three bedroom apartment. 

But I have nightmares all the time and my PTSD, which I already had from numerous traumas, has basically become an inflexible part of my personality. We lived here for three months with no furniture, just sleeping on air mattresses, because we couldn’t afford to go get our things out of storage.  We just got our stuff at the beginning of May, and I basically had to sell my soul to payday loan places (against my disability checks) to get the money to do that. I’m legitimately scared about how that’s going to pan out.  A lot of my stuff is still in boxes, because I’m afraid to unpack the things that are precious to me. Some part of me can’t believe I’m not going to wake up to someone telling me to get out of here. This is technically a happy ending, in that I do have a roof over my head, but I don’t really have… me, anymore, and I think it’s going to be a long time before I do.

But yes, I was homeless for about five months.

i get stressed out about reviewing fic like i try to review but i probably only do it 10% of the time bc i want the reviews to sound good

As someone who typically rewrites comments/asks/etc multiple times, I understand! It seems like a lot of people in fandom avoid leaving feedback for this reason – they don’t know what to say, or they’re self-conscious about how to say it, and it seems intimidating.

The thing is – and I really mean this – reviews don’t have to be eloquent! They don’t need to be lengthy or detailed at all. I promise you, even a very simple comment means the world to a fic writer. Think about it this way: they’re WAY more stressed out about wanting what they wrote to sound good. You have the upper hand in the situation! You are just reassuring them that this thing they’ve put time and energy into doesn’t suck, because that’s a writer’s default assumption if you don’t say anything at all. 

You cannot go wrong with:

  • Fantastic story, I really enjoyed.
  • Great work!
  • This was wonderful, thanks for sharing it.

If you want to give them the old razzle dazzle, you can also mention one thing you particularly enjoyed, such as:

  • I love the vivid descriptions, I could picture everything so clearly.
  • You really captured [character]’s voice.
  • The slow build of tension was incredible.

That’s all it takes! A simple, sincere 1-2 sentences will be greatly appreciated by any writer. I know it seems like that sentiment is conveyed by likes/kudos, but honestly, it’s a million times more rewarding to get an actual comment on a fic. I can’t even really explain why, except it’s the difference between “someone liked this enough to hit a button” and “someone liked this enough to send a message to you, one person to another, because they wanted you to know your effort was appreciated.” It feels much more meaningful and encouraging, especially since so few people bother to do it these days. I have 28 fics on AO3 and get kudos pretty regularly, but getting the rare comment absolutely makes my day. When you genuinely like a fic, please, just say so!

how is Kurt a 21 yr old freshmen in college.

WELP. let’s do this.

his NYADA application lists his birthday as may 27th, 1993. at the beginning of season one, kurt’s sophomore year of high school, he says he got his car for his “sweet sixteen.” so he turned seventeen at the end of that school year, eighteen at the end of his junior year, and nineteen at the end of his senior year. that’s not terribly unusual; people with summer birthdays end up slightly younger or slightly older than everyone in their grade.

he was accepted to NYADA at christmas, and turned twenty the following may (around the time blaine and sam graduated). he presumably took classes over the summer to catch up, which is common in that situation, and was a sophomore with rachel that fall. that’s why he said “you’re a freshman!” when questioning how blaine got into all of his classes.

the time jumps make all of this confusing, but the last six episodes of this season span about eight months of time. rachel’s funny girl run starts in april 2014, which happens two episodes after NYADA’s “midwinter critques.” but at this point, canon is caught up with real time, kurt just finished his sophomore year of college, and has now turned twenty-one.

Ok so was Naya fired or what? And why do you hate her lol

Haha, I don’t hate Naya?? I am pretty bewildered by how much her team is fumbling her career right now, though. They pushed her to expand her fanbase in a way that alienated her former fans; they failed to get in front of the Big Sean break-up story; they let these rumors about her fester in the media long enough to seriously tarnish her image; they only released one statement about any of it, and that was ranty and hostile and categorically denied things that clearly have some truth to them. It’s a hot mess.

She hasn’t been “fired” from Glee — meaning they haven’t revoked her season five contract — but some shit definitely went down if they were willing to eat the production costs of everything she’d already recorded/filmed for the finale. Fox’s statement doesn’t really give us new information, because she’ll have a new contract if she’s signed for season six. My best guess is that negotions for that are going badly, and both sides are still hoping to come to an agreement. But it’s all pretty ambiguous.

I don’t know what part of the fandom you were looking at but Brittany being bisexual was never the problem last season. It was the blatant favoritism the writers had for writing scenes with Sam that was frustrating. The inequality in terms of writing for Brittana/Bram was blatant. The fandom isn’t biphobic, the entire show is. I don’t think Brittany herself has ever said the word “bisexual” on the show. Always some ridiculous variation we were supposed to “get” and find funny.

like i said, fandom started saying these things long before brittany was actually dating sam, when there was nothing for them to compare except the concepts of bram v. brittana. representation is a legitimate issue, but it quickly became a catch-all excuse for any complaints about brittany being with sam, because no one wants to be called out on their bullshit.

the huge format change in s4 left sam and brittany, previously two minor characters, as some of the few familiar faces at mckinley who hadn’t dated; of course their relationship got more screentime than brittana in s3, when all three of the show’s pairings were dating and it was everyone’s senior year. but no one ever factors that into discussions about representation, or the fact that brittana’s season as a “new couple” was actually s2. instead of comparing klaine’s screentime with finchel and brittana’s screentime with bram, the more accurate comparisons would be s3 klaine v. s3 brittana.

there are valid complaints about the lack of physical affection, absolutely, but the point is that representation is a complicated issue that absolutely does not justify or explain fans saying they wanted to puke when bram stills were released, or reblogging bram gifsets with comments like “EW UGH GET YOUR FILTHY HANDS OFF OF HER.” if you ever dipped into the bram tag last year, the blatant “brittany being with a guy is disgusting” sentiment was really hard to miss.