Subject: Re: On Aging
Author:
Posted on: 2012-05-28 23:55:00 UTC

Man... this feels like a Serious Business topic. So I'm gonna settle down and answer it as best I can.

WARNING: On re-reading this, I think it might be rather emotional. I'm certainly being frank about my worst times. If talk of death/suicide bothers you, might be best not to read.

1. First off, I found the PPC in 2008. I was nineteen, in university and failing badly due to a hell of a lot of stress. it was also the first time I had ever had unrestricted access to the internet. I'd been able to use school and college internet, but the siteblockers were so heavy there I had trouble doing necessary research, let alone surf the web. At home... well, my mother was paranoid enough to never let me use the computer without her hovering over my shoulder in case I saw Bad Things, and once I moved out when I was seventeen my only access was the college system.

So at university, reveling in the newfound freedom, I stumbled onto OFUM while looking for LOTR stories. And then I looked around and found a link to the PPC. And, eventually, in April 2008, I peeked at the Board. A lot of things that I didn't understand were going on, mostly to do with something called a Macrovirus. I was extremely nervous; a lot of warnings were running around my head about the dangers of talking to Internet People.

But I was really hoping to find people I could talk to about things I liked, things that nobody I knew already had any interest in. So I summoned up my courage and posted a tentative little message introducing myself.

All my fears dissolved as a massive wave of friendliness washed over me. People were giving me amusing presents, inviting me to chat on MSN, helping me to shape my first Agents, and I realised that the PPC was somewhere I felt happy. Crazy IM roleplays helped on the days I was really miserable. I could chat to people about anything and everything. I made a number of very good friends who I trusted a lot.

I went to my first Gathering about three months later - I felt integrated enough with everyone by that point that I dismissed the warnings about meeting strangers out of hand. We were going to meet as a group, and PPCers wouldn't hurt me. I wasn't disappointed, and since then the PPC's been a rock for me even when there've been explosions of disagreement and unpleasantness. No matter how bad things've got, you guys're here.

2 + 3. My first experience of the PPC was the 2008 Mary-Sue Invasion, and I really threw myself into that. As people who were around then can testify, I talked Trojie into helping me mastermind the foundations of a movie/radio play based on the sheer epic that the Invasion produced. While that has sadly fallen by the wayside, I do have the original plans knocking around somewhere. I got talking to a lot of people through Trojie, actually; she was mumsy and took me around to say hello to people and made sure I didn't run away in fright, and was a great help while she was around.

Since then I've more or less dipped into and out of things that caught my interest, but I bonded with people more over how much fun we had in chats than on the Board itself. Even though we don't chat very often these days, July's been a great help to me, especially at my absolute lowest point. I wouldn't be here today if it wasn't for her pretty much bullying me, in the middle of the night, to stop and rethink what I was about to do to myself. (If you see this, July, all the hugs for you. Won't ever forget that.)

Platinumyo, as a number of you might remember, was one of the people I grew close to early on; we were an Official Board Couple for quite some time, and being with him was my first experience of a romantic relationship. We're not together any more, but I still think of him as a special friend of mine. A number of people I knew back then have slipped away from the PPC - Oozaru Angel, Sara, Fynn, Jai - but others have stayed around, even if they lurk even more than I do these days. KGarrett, Rilwen and Lycaenion especially are the three I'm closest to these days, and I wouldn't have met them without the PPC.

And one thing I remember very strongly is that about a year after finding the PPC, I lost my brother in a road accident. My family pretty much splintered around that - my parents especially, and being the eldest child I was caught in the middle - and I had no RL friends to turn to. My mother cut her ties with me for several months for "siding" with my father, and I couldn't turn to him for help because he lived down the other end of the country. All I had left was the PPC, and you guys offered me shoulders to cry on and all the sympathy I could have ever hoped for.

I lurk a lot these days; not as much seems to catch my interest enough to comment on. I'm not much for writing missions any more, though I RP theoreticals regarding my Agents a lot in IM chats. But as I've said before, the PPC's a rock I know I can come back to. The community here is wide-ranging and often opinionated, but rarely in such a way that we can't all find a way to get along regardless. What do I get out of it? The nearest thing I can get to a proper home on the internet.

I'm not exaggerating in the slightest when I say the PPC's pulled me through the very worst times in my life just by being here. If that's not a good reason to stick around, guys, then what the heck is? :)

4. I don't really interact much with the newest PPCers. I have to admit it's mostly because I don't feel I see anything in common with them other than the PPC itself; my fandoms seem to be a bit older, and I'm not as vocal about them as I once was. (Although I seem to've picked up something of a reputation as a Tolkienite, if July's past hints are to be believed. :P Not that I'm complaining.) I just prefer to sit back and watch the newer PPCers develop things, and offer a bit of guidance and advice and occasionally beta-reading where I figure it'll help. I guess I feel sort of mumsy to the new people now.

5. I'm pretty happy as I am, really. I get involved as I see opportunities, and that's enough.

- Cassie, apparently essay-writing

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