this post was submitted on 13 Jan 2025
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Fedigrow

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[–] [email protected] 15 points 2 days ago (1 children)

[email protected] has been getting some people posting things of their own lately and it's been really nice to see!

A couple people have submitted pics they've taken of owls they've encountered, and there's been some art and articles. Good variety of things.

I like it because I don't mind posting all the things as the content is pretty easy to get, but it's all coming from my taste and perspective on what is interesting, so it's good to see what I'm missing or overlooking, plus I like seeing people's real life experiences with nature.

I'd been feeling uninspired, and this has given me a big boost as it feels I've finally inspired some others to contribute. I'm happy to teach and answer questions, but seeing others take an active role in the growth of the community is truly something else. I want it to be a space for everyone to be happy and enjoy each other being there together looking at beautiful nature things.

Also I've been having decent luck incorporating more non-English speaking content. Got nice photos and stories from Kuwait, China, Slovenia, France, Germany and others rolling in now. It increases variety and perspective, and I like learning about the language and culture aspects from other users and from just reading and learning the terms to find the content. A German user also provided some links to German animal rescues for the sidebar links.

Comments feel a bit slower, but with all the other good, I'm not going to sweat that right now. Activity is still there overall.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Always nice to see superbowl on my homepage, thank you for creating it! :D

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Glad to hear that! I didn't start it, others beat me over here, but it was becoming inactive, and I didn't want to see that, so I am keeping it active until it can become self-sustaining.

Gave your Latin community a look. Only suggestion I'd make is if you're short on content, just post one thing a day until you pick up some more members so you don't use up all your material. I use an app that I can save drafts in, and I've built up a couple weeks reserve content in case I hit a dry spell. Now I can easily make 4 posts a day, but I worked my way up from 1 as I built up my stream of sources. Keep it active, but don't burn yourself out mentally or on ideas.

Other than that, building a community is really slow here, but it is worth it as there are some really good commenters here once you can land a few. You've got 200 subs in half a week, which sounds like a great start. Much like anything else, res = labori. Stick with it, maintain your happiness posting to it, and people will come to see you and hopefully share back. If you're having fun, that will attract people.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Thank you! my original goal was 3 posts a day, but that's more laborious than i thought (lmao) i think i'll diversify a little, maybe at least 1, at most 2 a day. An article and an etymology/meme post, depending on what i have.

As for the subscribers, i estimate it'll be ~130 by the end of this week, or the middle of the next (depends if i'm lazy or not). But the community had a very strong start; i remember creating it, going to the bathroom, then going back to my monitor 5 minutes later, seeing i had 35 subscribers already lol, i actually thought they were bots at first, but it seems not.

Building a community is much harder than i thought 😅 My original plan was to bootstrap a latin community, then once it becomes self sustaining, i'd only be a mod/commenter and not a poster, and focus on creating more communities, to expand the fediverse. I'll still try to do it, but it'll take me months. They will pass anyway, might as well have a cool latin community after they pass.

Thank you for the tips!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I never intended to be a poster, I'm normally moderately social at best, but the community was more important to me than maintaining my comfort zone was. When I was posting 1 or 2, I'd more actively go out into other communities to comment to try to get them active as well, but now I kinda get stuck enjoying the goings on at Superb Owl and I can sometimes forget about the other people trying to build their stuff. I don't know how people like Blaze with all these communities manage it all! The mega posters I assume just have a lot of time and like attention, but the actual work part of building the Fed is something else I feel.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Blaze with all these communities manage it all

I usually just repost good content from Reddit. That's the trick, there's no magic behind it 😅

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

Lol it's still work. As much of my stuff is largely reposts with some repacking and expansion, I know.

You maintain a ton of dialog with people too. You've definitely got something going on that isn't part of the majority of people here, and we're all grateful for that!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I don't know how people like Blaze with all these communities manage it all!

That's just because Blaze is omnipotent, and is somehow able to divide his attention into 50 separate communities. Unfortunately, my attention can only be focused on one thing at a time; sometimes i neglect Latin (i haven't posted anything at all yet, it's 5pm but I'm searching for content right now) I'd say I'm a pretty slow person mentally. Not in a bad way exactly, but i am very slow in everything i do, and that's pretty bad for the community 😄. And same, I'm a hermit/lurker most of the time, but maintaining a community really makes you feel apart of the fediverse, and makes me more active in general.

I have no idea how some people do it, i guess when the fediverse was fresh, young and unpopulated, everyone had an equal playing field; a popular community like [email protected] was very small back then, and was probably equal to a niche community. Unfortunately we are not early adopters :)

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I think you're still an early adopter. Instances are still growing, there's still new communities every day, and I still think we're forming our identity as a media platform. We're getting pretty far from Lemmy's founding focused on communism, and becoming something diverse and unique. A lot of the copies of well established groups may be taken already, but they're not all so big a better version couldn't overtake them, and with federation it doesn't need to totally replace it, they can compliment each other. It's a different model of doing things and we're still learning to play to its strengths and weaknesses.

People are hearing about Bluesky in the news now, but I've yet to encounter and real life folk who have heard of Lemmy. That still makes it the uncharted waters of the internet to me!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Bluesky is meh, but it's a step towards people coming here. I tried it once, it felt almost as lifeless as twitter. It just feels really boring, and impossible to get to the top page; because since alot of users are from twitter, they're just point farmers (or at least, that's how it feels to me)

Lemmy can feel like that too (especially posting US politics on an unrelated comm, practically infinite upvote glitch) but not as much as "mainstream" social media. I like lemmy, i just wish people had more niches, but i don't want it to go mainstream.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I've never felt drawn to the Twitter model of social media. I've been staying away from the more large volume communities for similar reasons, and last month I added a bunch of keyword blocks for things like Trump/Elon/RKF and my feed has been much improved. I already know anything about them will just be bad, and if anything actually serious goes on, I'll hear about it from any of the multitude of mainstream news sources. I don't need Lemmy filled with it all too. I keep this place for fun.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yeah, i subscribe to news and political communities on here, but i just can't stand US politics specifically. I'm not american, and i'm constantly seeing posts on global communities about Elon, Trump or some other bs. I don't block them by keywords due to FOMO (even though i never really miss out on anything)

And yeah, same. I never liked twitter (especially since it's a cesspit of the worst of humanity) and Bluesky is basically what reddit is to 4chan: still bad, but not downright agonizing. I still keep a mastodon account around though, for not much reason though.

I do hope the lemmy userbase diversifies so we get less content on one country.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Ugh, US politics right now is trash if you're an American, I can only imagine how old it has gotten for those who aren't. It's not like near every other country is going through equal drama of their own right now. My FOMO finally lost out, and I feel it's a total improvement. Like I said, it's not like I won't hear something truly important from a million other places. I don't need to hear about every bit of brain diarrhea these people have for the next however many years. If they actually start doing anything, wake me up then. The opposition is too busy infighting to slow anything down much anyway. If you live in a place where you've still got a chance to stop things before it's too late, I wish you luck!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'm not american thank god, i don't have to live with those daily shenanigans (I mean, it's not like living in a third world country is much better. but eh, what can you do lol) "Brain diarrhea" is the perfect word to describe US news, it's just brainrot politics.

But what really irks me more as some dude living in the middle east, is seeing a terrible news article about an woman getting killed for example, for not wearing the hijab; and some dipshit in the comment says "Republicans taking notes!!!" And it's like that in every article.

It's depressing to live here, but seeing americans make our misery about them in literally every way is actually rotting my brain. I saw an article yesterday about Iraq planning to lower the age of consent to 9, and a highly upvoted comment was just about the US and republicans. Even when i complain about my country, some american has to compare Saudi arabia to the US for some reason lol

Sorry, had to vent; Thank you, i wish you luck too!

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Some percentage of people will say things for attention, and I try not to publicly comment such things like you mention, but I feel it is natural to think them.

Our first instinct in comprehending something is going to be relating it to something we already know and understand. To an American, that's going to be something in their life here they can relate it to. We can say, oh here is some horrible stuff, I could imagine this group I don't like doing something like this. America can't even cover its own news well, let alone global news. We don't have context to a lot of what will be going on in parts of the world we aren't familiar with. Many of us don't even get to leave our home states still, let alone get over to other countries to learn about other people. It's really unfortunate.

So while we can sound ignorant by saying things like that, I think most people are just trying to wrap their head around something horrible in the only way they can understand. I have a constant desire to ask "why?" so I try to take time to learn the backstory to events, but there's only so much I can gain from reading that you know because you've lived through it. Sometimes people need to shut up and listen before reacting. As you said, it can steal the spotlight from the actual tragedy and redirect it to someone else's problem, but there's probably a better time and place. But people need to cope with what bad thing they just read, and they will express it in the only terms they can.

Most of us don't even know that much about our own country's problems. We know what gets told to us, but I don't think many look far beyond that. It's depressing, and I can see not wanting to put extra effort into learning how every country is depressing no matter where in history you go. For someone like yourself that has a better understanding because it's the life you live, it's got to be obnoxious seeing endless bad takes and irrelevant conversation. It's got to be like when you watch a show/movie that talks about something you do for a living and you see the actors doing things that would never happen in real life and it's just like, did the writers not talk to anyone that actually knew anything about this first???

For things like the women getting taken away for not wearing hijab and such, we have many unanswered questions of our own that are similar. During the police violence protests a few years back, we had police covering their department logos and name badges and they were throwing people in unmarked vehicles. Things like that are new to us, and that makes it hard for us to understand. We then see your protesters taken away in a similar manner and we look to draw a parallel to try and understand. Are the situations related? Perhaps not, but we're expressing our thoughts in real time through some of these comments, so they may be out of line, but you're hopefully watching someone grow mentally, and if they are concerned by what is going on, hopefully they will end up doing more digging into what is going on in both the situation over here, but also over there as well.

I've tried to learn more of the history of the Middle East, Africa, and other places as well through reading news and not really being able to grasp the full effect of what it was I read. But there's a whole lot of history, a whole lot of depressing things, and not a lot of positivity for the future.

I suppose the only inverse situation I can give is about gun things, since that seems to be one of the big things about America people outside of here don't get. There are just so many guns here. If we stopped making or buying new guns, you could still give everyone probably at least 5. Most non-Americans really can't seem to grasp that because it's different from where many of you live and how it's been for a long time there. Most countries seem to have at least a few arms restrictions. In that sense we come from different realities because it's alien to many of you, while it's ingrained in our culture. In all our media, there is glorified violence, we hold armed police and military people to ridiculously high regard. Even those of use that aren't gun fans probably support people who are armed. The perplexion those people get from reading about all our mass killings is hopefully not something you relate to. You may have militia type groups killing each other and many times hurting civilians by mistake, but we have regular everyday people killing other everyday people and that sounds pretty uncommon for most parts of the world.

This is getting long, so I just want to say, we don't usually mean to be self-absorbed. It's just many times how we've been raised.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

That really changed my viewpoint, thank you. I guess I was just mad at how much sympathy Americans are getting, yet people like me are persecuted everyday by our terrifying, practically all seeing governments. And what do we get as sympathy? Nothing.

The middle east is a sealed jar of violence, with millions of lives at stake in it. It is chaos here. I have fully accepted the fact that there is no hope for this place anymore. It hurts to say, truly; but that's life.

But when trump got elected, I saw sympathy and solidarity with American minorities around the whole world. And I get it, I do. But what about us? Where were they when we were being murdered for wanting dignity? We've been living in misery for a century, yet no one cares.

On a post of mine, showing blahaj zone got blocked due to censorship laws, a trans person commented this is what texas will do next. I commented my condolences, but I was kind of annoyed at how I was showing how censored and propagandized our lives are. Then she, as someone living in the free west, tries to equate our plight with theirs; I saw this as minimizing our issues. But I shouldn't have seen it that way. She as I said, is living in the west. She isn't used to our draconian laws, outlawing trans and homosexuality, living under an autocratic monarchy, not being able to criticize it at all. And when she felt a fraction of it, it was a tragedy. And it's not her fault; she shouldn't have to suffer like us for her struggle to be valid. She saw something weird, almost as if it was fiction, and couldn't comprehend it, and tried to understand it with situations that affect her directly.

I've gotten used to laws that seem dystopian, draconic or fictional to people living in the west. And to show you how horrible it is here, take this for example: ive said some things on this account, which are completely fine in a western country, but here? I could be executed by beheading for my comments. I still think they're worth saying. I live in fear everyday, and some people living comfortably outside can't comprehend it, and that's okay.

For the record, I grew up with unrestricted internet access and spent most of my time on the western internet. That's how I'm so progressive compared to my peers, and how I know so much about the horrors of my own country.

Thank you, you've opened my eyes on this. Sorry this got so long and dark. I wish you the best.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

America is advertised to us and everyone else as a place of near unlimited freedom. But a lot of us are learning this may or may not have been true once, but many aspects of our society are getting exposed as something else, and it's quite recent for us. We see officials becoming openly corrupt. We see police turning on citizens while protecting the wealthy. We see people being told they are not allowed to see certain doctors. We see people trying to make their brand of religion law. We see blind eyes turned to genocide. These things we were taught were un-American. These were only things done by despots. So why now, do we see them at home? Our Republicans were traditionally the ones that were preparing to combat any threat of dictatorship. They hated Russia and other authoritarian governments. They were all for the rights of individuals. But many things have happened since World War 2, and now all of that is backwards, and we see near half of our country is talking like the authoritarians were right all along.

We just aren't ready to cope with all this that we could be one of these despotic countries, and it's very scary in a way we aren't used to. Especially as many civil rights here aren't much more than 50 years old. Women have only been able to vote for a hundred years. Equal rights on started for black people in the 60s and we haven't even gotten that far on that yet. Rights for LGBT+ people are very new. It seemed we were on a pretty good trajectory to become better people, but the ones who did not like it seem to have hit their limit and are fighting back very hard, and now have the upper hand in almost every part of our government.

Good and evil don't know our borders. We have many people here, probably the majority, that would love to help people in your country and around the world. I'm sure your country is full of mostly good people too. Yet while the individuals seem to be good, something seems to corrupt us as institutions. One trans activist I listen to was recently discussing her neighbors after a massive flood in one part of our country where many people were stranded or died. She said her neighbors have all the Trump and company signs and if asked would probably say they don't approve of her being trans. But she also said she didn't feel they were any immediate danger to her, because at the end of the day, they lived together, and she felt even though they weren't comfortable with her being her, she didn't think it was to the extent that they would just sit back and watch something bad happen to her. She said the same that even though she hates their politics, she doesn't want to see them die, she just wishes they would grow out of their hateful beliefs. If we had some kind of civil war here again, much of my family and of my girlfriend's family would be on the other side, and I can't even begin to imagine that.

We are just people like you. We feel powerless at home, let alone across the planet. I would give everyone a home and safety and food and the freedom to be who they want to be if it were within my power. I don't understand how a person could put wealth or fame or power above wanting to do good for their fellow people. But we are all given just enough to try to keep us from revolting. Some people do want to kill gay and trans people here though. Some do want to impose religious law. It's insane to me that anyone is still stoned or beheaded these days while we are sending probes to the ends of the solar system. It seems like the 2 things should be so exclusive of each other that we could be this advanced yet so backwards at once.

To people reading this news of these things going on around the world, it's generally only going to be done by people here who do care at least a bit about what is happening to you there. It's just causing us to see something in a reflection of ourselves as a country that we weren't expecting to see, and you show us a glimpse to our possible future, and that takes it from learning about someone else's predicament into something a bit more self-centered, but more immediate to us personally that we may not have been prepared for.

I'm not glad you have to take risks to maintain an outside perspective, but I am glad that you do. It's important to have things flowing in and out from everywhere. We learn what each other are experiencing and how we are trying to deal with it. While we may not be able to always cooperate as states, there is nothing that can stop us as individuals. No state will last forever. Greece, Rome, Spain, England, Turkey, Mongolia, whatever empire you look at once seemed it would last forever. One day nobody will care about the US anymore either. A lot of bad happens until then, but all we can do is keep doing the best we can to be good people.

I'm glad I was able to help you find another perspective. Talking with people who have taken the time to explain things to me is how I've learned the most about people in other situations. The world can feel small sometimes, but as a white person from the country, even the lives of my coworkers of color from the nearest city can be so different from my own. There are many stories we will never hear, so I want to hear all of the ones that people take the time to share with me. It is how we grow, understand, and hopefully avoid making some of the mistakes of our past and present over again in the future. Sometimes spending some time, patience, and a little effort is the best thing we can do for each other.