fennaixelphox

I'm Phox, and welcome to Jackass.

  • he/him (or they/them for both K&A)

What's up gamers, it's ya boi Phox. 23 yo furry, Pac-Man shitposter, Fennekin and Hisui Zorua appreciator, and occasional hobbyist. I exist, sometimes, also. I haven't decided yet.

I don't really post much of my own stuff, but I do occasionally share NSFW/kink stuff, so please be 18+.

Check out my ask blog! @ask-the-phox-gang

Current project: Exodus
Current icon by me!


My Discord server
discord.gg/MeZsYvEvGz
RabbitHole Discord
discord.gg/zm9H7pFteW
Twitter (bruh)
x.com/Fennaixelphox
AD Twitter (double bruh)
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Windows Live Messenger/Escargot
fennaixelphox@escargot.chat

Webster
@Webster

you know who hasn't lost their third places? your homophobic evangelical uncle. he knows his neighbors names and has guided discussions with them every sunday.


Webster
@Webster

when i was growing up in the church i would participate in worship with my neighbors every sunday and recreation at minimum every wednesday. the most common hardship i see expressed on the exmormon subreddit is the shock of suddenly losing anything resembling a community. there just isn't a secular analogue for what the church provides.


pervocracy
@pervocracy

shit, this is true. now I want to start an Everything But The Church meetup that's in a nice big old building (tax-free plz) and imposes some gentle obligation to show up at least once a week for pre-planned activities with free social time after

am I just inventing UU again

there's one in my town and I kind of love that they've hung pride flags on a church from 16something, I should check them out

(in my limited experience their services are kinda culturally Christian, albeit in a very non-hellfire way. it doesn't fill the role of a truly secular church, it's just the closest approximation that has a big national structure. I realize UU doesn't actually fix the "where do people who don't want to sit through prayers go" problem.)

actually what I'm inventing is an Elks Club, except I know Elks Clubs exclusively as the place where you can rent a smoke-drenched dance hall from 300-year-old white men. but, you know, that general concept of a structured social club. we should bring that back.


Webster
@Webster

a few years ago my audubon society chapter started doing monthly joint meetings with a local permaculture guild. it was something that started as an attempt to get young people interested in habitat preservation and restoration, they called it "birding for millennials" at first, but that title was dropped as one month in attendance had already grown to encompass a span of generations.

these meetings would start with a land acknowledgement, then a potluck, then all members of the guild were invited to discuss needs and offerings. someone had leftover water bottles from a pride event. someone had some perennial grasses in their car. someone requested cinder blocks, and somebody else offered some of theirs. then the audubon reps would present about birds, their ecological needs, and opportunities to help. then board games and recreation.

these meetings were free to attend and held in a university building, but they could have just as easily been held at a public library. we got to do three of these before covid became an international emergency.

i guess all this is just to say it's possible, and people are eager for it.


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in reply to @Webster's post:

I'd certainly not posit that churches are GOOD community spaces though, they're full of super credulous people who are easy marks for scams and recruiting each other into pyramid schemes, and the level of toxicity that people are capable of when they feel obligated not to actually confront anyone is always impressive. Trying to sell each other scams and sharing wild, unfounded gossip about anyone who isn't present definitely beats just living in a lonely bubble though.

in reply to @Webster's post:

I've had this thought too, and i don't struggle with feelings of loneliness as a result, but the role of a furry convention is different from the role of a 90s shopping mall, a church, or a neighborhood market. Especially considering the significant economic barrier of a furry convention. Church activities are free to attend and motivate political base-building. And that's a problem.

Maybe a suspiciously wealthy furry can get in on this idea and make something like this and gain traction to getting others to do so! Though the problem of making their own political base will remain, but it's kind of unavoidable for people making a third place without any financial gain to not have some sort of aim or agenda

in reply to @pervocracy's post:

Best part of this idea is that the original "secret societies" / "brotherhoods" / etc. also fulfilled the function of mutual insurance collectives. Let's bring that back too!

I grew up UU, and I've found that different congregations vary fairly widely. There are definitely a bunch, particularly in new england, that are absolutely culturally christian, but there are quite a few that aren't! I visited one that was very culturally jewish. I'm not sure if there's a great way to tell without attending a service? websites might offer some details, but idk for sure

in reply to @Webster's post: