Subject: Re: On Aging
Author:
Posted on: 2012-05-29 16:26:00 UTC

I was not - and still sort of am not, to some extent - a very 'fandom' sort of person. I didn't write fanfiction, I didn't draw fan art, I wasn't really involved with any major fandom communities. The deepest I had ever delved before finding the PPC was becoming involved with a RP board centered around the tabletop game of Paranoia. Heck, I even got to be one of the IC moderators before the whole board sunk into general disuse.

That's not to say I wasn't aware of fandom and the various bits and bobs that accompanied it. Some of my online friends would occasionally nudge me into reading amusing little fics or drawings they had found on their wanderings through the internet. My response was usually something along the lines of 'That's interesting, I suppose.' Nothing from the fan community had ever really hooked me.

Then, in late 2009, I discovered MSTs.

The original Mystery Science Theater 3000 TV show holds a very special place in my shriveled and blackened heart. I didn't get up on Saturday morning bright and early to watch cartoons; I got up to watch MST3K. I loved every moment, every snarky comment, every backhanded jibe. It was my Lord of the Rings, my Hetalia. It helped shape the way I view the world.

As a result of this background, I took to MSTs like a duck takes to water. I devoured them; I hunted down whichever ones I could find. Some were fantastic examples of deconstructive comedy, some were awful author-bashing nonsense, but most were just meh. They were, in some ways, an encapsulation of everything that was fanfic.

It was during my quest for MSTs and other such playful pokes at fanfic that I discovered the PPC in April 2010. I lurked around for a bit, reading this and that - the stories with Trojanhorse/Pads and JulyFlame's agents particularly stuck in my head, if I recall correctly. After a bit of hemming and hawing, I posted my introduction on the Board.

Again, it should be noted that fandoms were not my thing. What mattered to me most back then - and still does now, for that matter - was improving my writing skills. My college creative writing courses had taught me that constructive criticism, while at times damaging to the ego, was one of the best ways to improve your skills. By 2010, those writing courses had ended. I didn't really have anyone to look at my work apart from my dad. The PPC seemed like a good way to kill two birds with one stone; I could write MST-like material with a community of like-minded folks, and I could get an audience that could review my writing to a depth beyond the congratulatory clap-trap sadly found in many online writing groups. A bit selfish, I'll admit. But that's the way things go.

Connecting with the community... that's a toughie. There are times when I feel like the majority of folks here don't really know or care about me - inso much as knowing and caring is possible over the internet, of course. Part of that's my fault. I spent a great deal of my first year here still vaguely in lurker mode. I missed out on RP opportunities, writing challenges, and the like. I'm getting better about that, though, or at least I'd like to think I am.

Part of the problem seems to be that my 'fandoms,' so to speak, don't seem to be too much in vogue with large sections of the PPC population. My focus so far has been on video games and contemporary cartoons. There's occasionally a bit of Kingdom Hearts or Mass Effect talk, but not to any great extent. Nothing that would inspire bonds over. And I can't recall ever seeing someone in the PPC discuss Avatar: The Last Airbender or the Teen Titans cartoon while I was present.

I haven't really forged any close connections with anyone here, sad to say. You know, maybe enough to toss around a few jokes or whatever in the IRC, but for the most part I've remained somewhat disconnected from the sheer closeness of the PPC community. At least, that's how I perceive it.

I've been around long enough to have seen some stuff, some drama popping up here and there. The PPC2 debacle and the increasing friction between the Board and the IRC are the two that immediately come to mind. Not really sure what I can say about those incidents that hasn't already been said in some way or another.

The newbies... I can appreciate their sense of enthusiasm, but it is like trying to deal with a new puppy at times. There's a lot of repeated requests, a lot of face-palming, and occasionally one of the old guard has to clean up a mess and deliver a scolding. I can't really relate to stuff like magical girl anime shows or Hetalia (the historian in me is somewhat put off by it,) but I'm in no place to judge. The Last Airbender, remember?

Still. Despite the stuff, despite the newbies, despite the sense of outsider-ness that I still have in regards the PPC community, I have no plans to leave. Like Nesh said, I'm not done telling stories about my agents. I can't be certain that I'll ever run out of stories. Even if I did, there are still more characters rattling around inside my head. They have stories of their own that need to be told.

My writing skills continue to improve and evolve. I saw that clear enough just by going through all my missions from the time I joined until now. It's working. Take note, newbies: for all the craziness and occasional drama, the PPC can help you improve your writing. You know, provided you're willing to listen to criticism. So when the old guard says they're trying to help you, believe them.

In short, I'm like that friend in college who you invite in to sleep on your couch for one night and then can never get to leave. You're stuck with me, PPC.

P.S. - "We went through some stuff, man." I immediately pictured Nesh as the Dennis Hopper character from Apocalypse Now the first time I read her post.

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