Subject: Rambly thing about my relationship to all things PPC...
Author:
Posted on: 2012-05-29 02:45:00 UTC

I came to the PPC through a Google search, as some of you might know. Also, as some of you might know, immediately after I introduced myself I posted a badfic I wanted sporked, only to see it get deleted soon after. That was my initial contact with the PPC community at large, and... well, I stuck around after that.

It was weird, really. Once I was introduced to the PPC community at large, I started discovering all of these terrible fanfics (and taking a look back and realizing how terrible nearly all of my early output was--it's to the point where I'm dead set on making fun of a terrible crossover I once wrote). And that... well, that eventually got me to ask for Permission. It was also something I bonded over, talking the logistics of particularly bad fanfics, writing missions, doing all that jazz.

And... well, it's been a rocky road from there. Some missions turned out okay, some got shunned, and I trust you all know the rest.

And now, twenty missions and four interludes later, I think I've finally come to a realization. It's a long story how I got to that realization, but I think what it came down to is the fact that I don't look at badfic the way everyone else at the PPC does--and that this disconnect has led to a lot of my issues with some in the PPC community.

See, when most people look at badfic, I notice that it's like 'look a horrible fanfic oh no' and then the subject is dropped. For me, I don't drop it there. If I encounter a bad fanfic, it genuinely makes me angry, to the point where I will rant about a fic in real life if it's bad enough. You can ask the guys in the Arts Criticism course I took last semester about that: we were once given a writing exercise to write about something we didn't like without using any empty adjectives to describe why we didn't like it, and I ended up writing about a particularly bad fanfic that I had on the Claimed Badfic list for a short time. I ended up reading it to the class, and when I did, the teacher actually told me that I had used an ad hominem in the short write-up I had written. The crazy thing? I didn't even realize it could be taken as an ad hominem until he pointed that out. (The ad hominem, by the way, related to the use of the word 'dunce'.) So when I look at badfic... well, to quote Samara from Mass Effect 2, I tend to think along the lines of "you're a disease to be purged, nothing more".

And I think this disconnect has led me to think about missions very differently from most other people throughout my time at the PPC. I'll admit to the fact that in some of my missions I've looked at it less as an opportunity to parody it and more as an opportunity to cleanse it from my mind, and that has led to the tendency for some of my missions to be more on the not-so-funny side and a little less on the 'oh hey let's laugh at this' side. One thing that this holds true for especially was my Subject 23 mission, which got notoriety for having an original version that's 108 pages long. That one, I know that I was not aiming for it to be a parody once Part 1 of that mission was done with: honestly, I was thinking of that mission less as a parody and more as an actual story that got all mixed up in there. The point is, that I haven't always looked at the PPC as an outlet for parody, even after I got Permission.

And I think that's a pretty good indicator for how I've felt as part of the PPC, from the perspective of someone who's been in the newer generation of the PPC for a while: I've always felt like the lonely child who only had a few friends that's trying to get accepted by the community at large yet finds himself stymied at every turn because he's just not in the right place at all. I think you'll agree that I tend to clash a lot with some of the older members of the community. And the less I say about the stupid shit I've done, the better. But over my time in the PPC, I've always felt ostracized by the old guard, but lately it's become amplified thanks to some admittedly very stupid actions on my part as of late. It's to the point where now, drama within the PPC has actually taken a physical toll on me: I've lost some of my appetite, I'm not sleeping as well as I normally do, and I just feel a lot less happy now than I did when I first joined. It's gotten to the point where I've seriously been debating just dropping the PPC and leaving the community for good. (Well, that, and I've made a colossal fool of myself these past few weeks, so that feeds into it too.)

I guess the point is that this disconnect between myself and certain people in the old guard has always tainted my experience with the PPC. I've stayed this long because of the opportunity to write missions, but there have been several times (including now) where I've wondered if it's really worth dealing with the community at large just to spork bad fanfic.

This perception problem, too, is something that's plagued my reactions to some things the old guard have said. I will freely admit that some of the responses I've gotten to things I have written/said/done have been interepreted by me as being displays of animosity or just plain old ill will: it's gotten to the point where I will blatantly disregard the advice of one of the people in the old guard just because I think that the person in question is, to put it bluntly, 'out to get me'. Is it fair? No. Can I help it? Nothing I have tried has worked, so I don't know if I can.

And ultimately, I think all this boils down to a few simple things:

1) It is very easy to make me angry.

2) It's even easier for me to dislike something to the point where I start actively hating it.

3) If I'm angry at something, I cannot let it go, no matter what I try.

And when I respond with anger... my reaction has almost always been to lash back at the thing that's making me angry. And it's true with my relationship with things in the PPC, whether it's to someone who is justifiably correct about my behavior in the PPC or it's a bad fanfic that I'm sporking in my latest mission. So I think mostly, this is the main reason I can't connect with most people on the PPC.

And if I have to be honest? I'm not sure there's anything anybody else on the board or on the IRC can do about it. I've tried a lot of different things to manage my anger, but so far nothing has worked. No matter what I do, I always remain combative with some things, especially if I'm feeling like I'm being mistreated by people. And the worst thing is, I don't know how to deal with it.

This disconnect, for me, has always been at the heart of my time here, and it's only taken me until the recent stuff that's been happening in the IRC and here on the Board for me to realize that it's as massive a problem as it actually is. And unfortunately, there's nothing that I can suggest to fix it: how can you ask others to account for your own psychology? It's not fair to the old guard, it's not fair to the newer generation, and it's not fair to me.

So... I guess to sum it up, it's been a rocky road here at the PPC, and I think the main contributing factor to everything that I have experienced here is that I have one of the worst tempers here at the PPC. To put it in the shortest terms possible: I'm not a very good PPCer. And to be honest? I'm not sure I'm right for this community anymore.

... Wow, this started as a response to the questions Nesh posed, and it's ended in what I guess can be described as a rambly self-analytical session. And honestly, this is probably the most honest I've been with myself in a looooooooong time.

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