Subject: *crawls out of the grave*
Author:
Posted on: 2012-05-29 22:10:00 UTC

It's stranger and stranger to think that technically, I'm one of the oldbies around here. 0_o When the heck did that happen?

That being said, though, I've been thinking a little about the way the PPC has changed since I was a fresh-faced little snot. Herewith, my tale and reflections . . .

I found the PPC in . . . oh . . . 2006? Thereabouts, anyway. I stumbled onto them via an extensive bit of link-hopping, from fanfiction.net to the Bagenders series to OFUM and hence, to Miss Sandman's homepage and the PPC. I must have read the entire Original Series in maybe two sittings--talk about absorbing! At the time I was about seventeen or eighteen, and had been writing fanfic for four or five years, but most of it was LOLRANDOMHUMOR and Sue crap. I'd been writing since I was thirteen, but aside from my slightly esoteric tastes (I was big into World of Tiers back then, for example--not much fandom) I didn't know what to do with myself. But I'd had success in roleplaying, so I guess I approached it from that perspective.

You'll see a lot of that immaturity in my early stuff, frankly, which is why I tend to compulsively reedit and update the older missions.

Back then, the community was a lot smaller and more close-knit. I won't say everyone knew everyone else, but there was more . . . interaction, I guess. Trolls or spammers were pretty unusual; we had a troll once ("Alexandra") who was being uber-dramatic and sockpuppeting and talking about e-mail hacks, and Al's Waiter and I had some fun deconstructing the stuff she did.

My earlier RP experiences had taught me how to put ass to chair and produce; being with the PPC, though, helped me get a sense of what it was like to be part of a real writing community, and to not be so squeamish about criticism.

I drifted along for a couple of years; aside from Agent Suicide, I suppose I've never really contributed anything humongous or life-changing to the PPC community. (And I wouldn't classify Suicide as 'life-changing.' XD) I've tried to do it a few times, including helming the Official Fanfiction University of Final Fantasy, but I learned pretty quickly that I didn't have the skill to manage something that big. If I try to get involved in something too huge, where other people are relying on me all the time, I have a bad habit of losing interest. (It's a good thing I wasn't around for the Crises.)

Around the time Subjugation went up for PPCing, in . . . '08, I want to say . . . I was in college and having a rough time of it. My first novel had been accepted for publication, and on the advice of my professors I began withdrawing from online life, so I left the PPC for a while. Neshomeh kindly agreed to take care of Suicide, Diocletian, and Ithalond, and I tried to focus on non-fiction pursuits.

Alas, the siren song of the RC was difficult to ignore. By late '10, the book had been published, and Neshomeh was living in Chicago and telling me what had happened during my absence. Before I knew it, I was eager to get back into the fray, and Suicide and Diocletian came out of retirement (or were discovered after their long stretch of being AWOL, whichever you'd prefer to call it).

Why was the PPC so hard to leave? Like I said, the sense of community. It was a small community of Grammar Nazis who dealt with a world composed of text--with all the insanity that entailed. People weren't afraid to tell you if you were doing something wrong (a tradition continued by the lovely July), but it was building-up rather than tearing down, and things weren't 100% serious. Agents, too, were bizarre and fascinating characters: nerds, geeks, oddities, lost souls, confused individuals, badly-paid but on-fire passionate about what they were doing.

Nowadays, post-Crises and all the rest, I do feel that the organization has changed. For the first time, we really have too many people to keep track of, and there's a visible Younger Generation (mostly the TVTropes incomers) who aren't sure how we do things or chafe against the old authority. Change isn't necessarily bad, but I do feel that we're in danger of losing that spark of community. Agents are getting more powerful, and while the place does feel more like a home instead of a job, there's the danger of making it a kingdom.

If that makes sense. Which I don't think it does.

I think I've actually answered most of the questions in this little TL;DR of mine, except . . .

5. How do you think you could get more involved, if you want to? How can we help?

I can't think of many ways I could get involved. I'm terrible with coding and administration, so I doubt I could be any use on the wiki, and I have no knowledge of the current interpersonal wars on the Board, so I'm not sure I can help moderate. I've been through the publishing process, though, and I've tutored in English and creative writing--anyone who has need of those things, you have my red pen. :D

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