fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
I actually had a few unexpected joys last year, but only one of them fandom-based.

Non-fandom joys:  I was able to get a surgery I've been wanting since I was 16.  I got a new day job which meant I could leave my old super stressful, extremely toxic day job.

Fandom joy:  While I was recovering from surgery, I joined a brand new fandom Discord server.  Within about a month, some Things Occurred, which split a handful of us into a group chat of "GIRL (gender neutral), DID YOU SEE THAT???" and our little subset has been going strong since.
fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
I'm going to limit myself to two wishes!  totally not because that's all I can think of, of course not, who said that?

I wish for...
  • Video games similar to The Darkside Detective (computer, phone/tablet, Nintendo Switch; I have other consoles, but these are the easiest for me to access for now)
  • Video games similar to Sorcery School mobile solitaire game (same systems as above)
Note:  For "similar to" in terms of games, I'm mostly looking for vibes.  Both games are fun and light-hearted, with a touch of dark humor.  I am partial to point-and-click and card or word games, but I definitely prefer games that I can take breaks between sections/chapters/etc.  (For example, I started There Is No Game on my phone last year, but I'm not 100% sure it actually has save points, which means I have not actually picked it back up since stopping.)

fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
Comics are a sprawling, convoluted, constantly-rebooted mess of timelines, continuities, and creative teams.  That said, I do want to give another shoutout to the short-lived Grayson series by Tom King and Tim Seeley.  It was fun, it was new, it was exciting!  It fell off a cliff when they pulled the original team three fucking issues from finishing it but I'm not still bitter about that, hahaha, noooooo, not me! but damn, we had a good run while it lasted.  Despite having some of the worst fucking haters (which I'm bitter about on record, just fyi) for no good reason (truly, Grayson came out at the beginning of fandom pissing on the poor), we had a very small but spirited love.
fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
Talking about how fandom has improved my life must include the ways in which fandom has also been a struggle in my life.  (Why must it?  Because my thoughts about the good things are intimately tied up with the bad things.)

In an attempt to keep this relatively brief, I'm only counting fandom from my college days on (about 13 years ago to present).

In my last couple of years at college, I joined a DC Comics roleplaying group on Tumblr.  I had, at this point, already made a couple of friends through tumblr, but it was during my time in this group that I really started posting my own fanfics online and getting very involved in the then-current Batfandom on Tumblr.  (Fun Fact:  My first ever smut writing experience was a threesome in a live chat/real-time RP with two other people.  This was the event that convinced me I could, in fact, write and post my own smut.  If I could do it live, I could certainly do it on my own time!)  I was on Tumblr for the New 52 event.  I was there for the entire run on Grayson, including the unnecessary (and, lbr, pretty damn racist) hatred towards the rebooted version of Helena Bertinelli and the absolute bullshit that was the aggressively loud Grayson-haters' Twitter harassment of Tim Seeley while he was on a dateSome of y'all fuckers need to learn some manners, I stg.

During this time, I went to several comic conventions (WonderCon and Long Beach Comic Con being the biggest two).  I met some local artists and creators.  I actually got to not only get some Grayson comics signed by Tom King for me and a friend, but also got to talk to him about the comic for a good chunk of time.  (My favorite story:  During the issue where Dick walks through the desert with the baby, there are two pages where he tells the story of a dream he had, which is actually the 1963 Batman story Robin Dies At Dawn.  The art in Grayson is of Dick walking through the bottom third of the pages while the sun beats down on the upper two-thirds.  Tom King had originally wanted the upper parts of the panel to be drawings from the Robin Dies At Dawn story as a nice reference/Easter Egg.  Editorial said no, so they stuck with the sun.)

I wrote a ton of fanfics between 2013-2018!  I did so many fandom events and big bangs!  I made some fandom friends who I still consider very dear friends!

And I also saw a lot of fandom explode at others and implode on itself.

Right around 2019, I got my first job outside home.  I still wrote a lot, but a lot of my fandom friends were either going into new fandoms or moving to different sites, especially after the 2018 Tumblr porn ban.  By 2020, I was starting to get back into fandom in a very light-touch way, but so many of us were gone.  I did end up writing my biggest/most involved fanfic in years during that year (a graveyard shift job as a COVID symptom checker where I only had to pay attention at the top of each hour helped immensely, ngl).  But, oof, there was a lot going on that I no longer wanted to be part of in fandom.

In 2021, I wound up back at the same company I worked for in 2019 (this time as a permanent employee) and my stress levels tripled.  I started to get back into fandom as a way to stay sane, and it worked, for the most part!  I was still doing too many exchanges and events (which ended up only adding to the stress, unfortunately), but I was getting back into that kind of fandom friendship space that I genuinely had missed.  I even ended up going back on Tumblr!

And then, in 2024, after an incredibly brutal end to 2023, I found a Discord group that seemed to have that old-school fandom feeling to it.  During my three months off work post-surgery, I not only joined that group, but found a subgroup of new friends within it (and we've been going strong since).

I feel like a lot of this post seems more negative, but it's not really meant to be.  I have made some great friends through fandom.  I've written some honestly fantastic things because of fandom.  I've also learned a lot about myself through fandom, about what stresses I can take, about what kinds of things I like to write and read, even about how to take care of myself and when I need to remove myself from the more toxic and/or anger-inducing aspects of fandom.

And yet, unfortunately, brevity is clearly not one of the things I've learned via fandom.
fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
Or however that phrase goes.

A legitimately soul-crushing end of 2023 led into a not-much-better start to 2024, during which I still set the same or similar goals I'd set for years.  And yet, just by the time we hit February, I genuinely could have never guessed how 2024 would've ended for me.  And while I don't think the exact same types of things will be happening this year...

Well...

These first 11 days have felt about a month long each, so, who knows.

And, actually, most of the changes that have happened for me have been really good!  Some of them even great!  But if I couldn't "see" where I'd be by the end of the year in 2023, I'm really sure I wouldn't be able to for this year.

So my goals are going to be very broad, actually, and very light.
  • Read
  • Write
  • Listen to music
  • Play video games
  • Pull some tarot cards
  • Work through some online classes/courses
  • Enjoy things as I can
fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
...every bird has them.

I don't know if this is so much a fandom opinion as much as a fandom practice, but if my [redacted] years online have taught me anything, it's that I really do not have the energy to spend gleefully hating on things.  Even if it sucks.  Even if it's factually wrong.  If it's in any way within my control to avoid seeing a terrible hot take or avoid a fandom, I'll do it.  So long as no one's being hurt where it's within my power to help, I just do not have the spoons.

That does not mean I won't ever go into a group chat and have a good laugh at such things.  I ain't perfect.  But there is a certain level of ire and rage that I just no longer have the energy to expend by engaging with the willfully obtuse.

That said, I also no longer have the patience to be nice about certain behaviors.  You don't get to come uninvited into my house and then complain about the decorations.  It's my house.
fleetsparrow: Drawing of Bear in a Batman costume, in her identity Bat-Bear. (Default)
I have been in online fandoms, in some shape or form, since at least 1999, possibly even longer.  I was casting back my memory to try and figure out exactly how long I've been here and, uh:
  • MuggleNet was created in 1999
  • Neopets was created in 1999
  • Putt-Putt Travels Through Time was released in 1997
  • I have an "Attack of the Killer Y2K Bug" t-shirt...from 1999
  • I remember hating when Disneyland added Jack Sparrow into the Pirates of the Caribbean ride
  • My first fanfic was posted in 2005, but I know I was roleplaying before that
  • My first Batman fanfic was posted in 2011
  • I first claimed Fleet Sparrow as my username in the very early 2000s
  • A guy on Gaia Online tried to claim he was dating me, which prompted a friend of his to straight up come to my defense with a "I'm so sorry about him, I'm gonna tell him to chill" and it... worked???
  • My first written fandom sex scene was written during a live chat RP in... 2012, I'm guessing
It all begins to blur, tbh.

Really feeling the Elrond life experience, rn.  I was there, Gandalf.  I was there 3,000 years ago.