jan 2025 media log
Feb. 18th, 2025 01:40 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
hello. i have decided to give dreamwidth a try again. i was thinking that one immediate change i could make to my life that would have major improvements and zero drawbacks would be to massively roll back my consumption of short-form media and exchange it for any thoughts from anywhere at all that are more than two ideas deep and forty-five seconds long. if self-reflection is the goal (though it may simply be poorly-disguised narcissism), then wouldn't it be easier to read through my thoughts in long-form?
i am, at my core, a logger. life-long, obsessive, hoarder-like. starting from middle school through the end of college, i timestamped my handwritten journal entries, and if i took a pause in writing, i would timestamp the time that i started writing again. my high school tumblr reblogs were militantly tagged by fandom, ship, and character. i used to handwrite lists of every single movie, television season, and book i consumed, manually sorted into lists for class and for fun. last september, i started logging every single patient encounter i had in school, what happened and what i did and what i learned. still haven't missed a single patient, and don't intend to until i graduate. the previous sentences are literally a meta-log of what i used to log. i'm getting sick of single-genre media-logging platform. no more letterboxd, no more goodreads, no more imdb...!! the great unification of the things i consume seriously will happen on dreamwidth!
genuinely, i am a shittier writer today than i was at 15 years old. it 100% has to do with the fact that the most frequent long-form "writing" i do is when i write patient encounter notes in my school's EHR. this is searingly humiliating to admit. i can't even blame anyone for this. how can i be so, so much worse at expressing myself today when it is literally my job to learn how to communicate clearly an almost-expert in my field.
i don't think it is possible for me to do a complete digital detox. i don't think i've lived a single day without looking at my phone since i got the lg optimus slider in seventh grade and discovered you could read ao3 on its funky little native browser. i don't have a desire to completely separate myself from consuming content, only to redirect it. being fed random content deemed entertaining to people of my age/gender/racial demographic that i forget about as soon as i close the app: horrible! choosing to follow certain topics of interest where posts and chatter are contributory to my engagement with said topic: surely better.........
final thought: obviously i still can't quite kick internet validation and narcissism, but i'm also over humiliating myself in front of my irl colleagues. the happy middle-ground is clearly another blog-type thing that about three people are going to read. it's literally fine this is for #me
actual media log, (mostly) jan 2025:
the seven husbands of evelyn hugo by taylor jenkins reid — 2/5
squid game season 2 — 3/5
i listen to probably more podcast minutes than music per day, but it's never occurred to me to a podcast round-up before! here are some that i sort of keep up with:
see you in the next one!
i am, at my core, a logger. life-long, obsessive, hoarder-like. starting from middle school through the end of college, i timestamped my handwritten journal entries, and if i took a pause in writing, i would timestamp the time that i started writing again. my high school tumblr reblogs were militantly tagged by fandom, ship, and character. i used to handwrite lists of every single movie, television season, and book i consumed, manually sorted into lists for class and for fun. last september, i started logging every single patient encounter i had in school, what happened and what i did and what i learned. still haven't missed a single patient, and don't intend to until i graduate. the previous sentences are literally a meta-log of what i used to log. i'm getting sick of single-genre media-logging platform. no more letterboxd, no more goodreads, no more imdb...!! the great unification of the things i consume seriously will happen on dreamwidth!
genuinely, i am a shittier writer today than i was at 15 years old. it 100% has to do with the fact that the most frequent long-form "writing" i do is when i write patient encounter notes in my school's EHR. this is searingly humiliating to admit. i can't even blame anyone for this. how can i be so, so much worse at expressing myself today when it is literally my job to learn how to communicate clearly an almost-expert in my field.
i don't think it is possible for me to do a complete digital detox. i don't think i've lived a single day without looking at my phone since i got the lg optimus slider in seventh grade and discovered you could read ao3 on its funky little native browser. i don't have a desire to completely separate myself from consuming content, only to redirect it. being fed random content deemed entertaining to people of my age/gender/racial demographic that i forget about as soon as i close the app: horrible! choosing to follow certain topics of interest where posts and chatter are contributory to my engagement with said topic: surely better.........
final thought: obviously i still can't quite kick internet validation and narcissism, but i'm also over humiliating myself in front of my irl colleagues. the happy middle-ground is clearly another blog-type thing that about three people are going to read. it's literally fine this is for #me
actual media log, (mostly) jan 2025:
books
the seven husbands of evelyn hugo by taylor jenkins reid — 2/5
- sadly, i really don't think this book lived up to the hype. the entire novel is so tell-not-show, a principle of creative writing we were meant to kick by the fifth grade. i mean, i understand that it's supposed to be memoir-style, but she really beats it into the reader that evelyn is telling this story at 80 years old with decades of emotional detachment from the events we're meant to care about. evelyn's life outside of her multiple platonic husbands is so incredibly simple — how does she not have more friends, more enemies, more complicated workplace relationships? author seems not to understand that the average reader who picks up a book about golden-age hollywood drama is probably quite nosy about it all. book is as if someone had the task of writing a novel strictly off the facts of a "personal life" wikipedia page section, no extra research or embellishment allowed.
- the one interesting husband relationship was the one with harry cameron. guess i've never rly thought about whether one would develop strong partner feelings towards their beard if they had a biological child together but were dating someone else. never even crossed my mind
- this one was really fun!! i am a layman and a somewhat lapsed environmentalist from my college days (hello environmental biology bachelor's degree that i never used for even one day), and this book gave me ideas for and validated a lot of the current unconventional choices i make in decreasing personal waste. i retained a surprising amount of information about induction stoves but almost none about clothing waste. also realized through the course of my reading that maybe my interest in sustainability isn't as self-driven as i thought — the place where i grew up, the city where i went to college, and the city where i live now were all brought up pretty explicitly in the examples of places that are reducing certain types of waste. not that i can find many peers irl who are interested in more sustainable practices within our extremely high-waste field. idk. my colleagues don't get it but this book really really does. i love individual sustainability; just need to get a little bit better at it
total garbage: how we can fix our waste and heal our world by edward humes — 4/5
television
squid game season 2 — 3/5
- started watching this with my friends, pirated a few episodes on my own (living a blissful netflix-free existence), and didn't finish the last couple. i thought it was super unrealistic that people could watch other people get executed and know that they could die next and still vote to keep playing, then felt a bit contrite for not empathizing hard enough with whatever dire life situations they must be in to feel this kind of life-or-death desperation, which felt both fun ironic (not empathizing with people who don't empathize, haha) and stupid ironic (worrying about if i'm worried enough about people who are taking action to take my rights and opportunities away; am i too much of an internet liberal). i will probably finish this season. i wish park sunghoon weren't a fucking scumbag. stan jo yuri
- i love you reese witherspoon. mark duplass's character reminds me a lot of my clinic group leader
the morning show season 1 — 3.5/5
podcast
i listen to probably more podcast minutes than music per day, but it's never occurred to me to a podcast round-up before! here are some that i sort of keep up with:
- news:
- up first
- the journal
- the npr politics podcast
- today, explained
- journaltainment:
- planet money
- search engine
- pop culture happy hour
- the big flop
- diss & tell
- crime junkie
- audio fiction:
- midnight burger
- the nosleep podcast
see you in the next one!