Tumblr and Triggers
Apr. 5th, 2013 07:34 pmA word to those of you unfamiliar with tumblr: it collects together all the blogs of the people you follow, and automatically adds them to your dashboard. So here, it's easier to decide whether to check up on friends who post on important-but-triggering topics, or wait another day, but there's it's automated. it allows users to post stuff below the fold/behind a link, and to post tags. At present, the usual expectation is that it's each user's responsibility to install special software to block tags which they associate with triggering material. I think this puts too much of the responsibility on victims/survivors and too little on posters.
First off, blocking entire tags means blocking supportive posts, hostile posts, peripherally-related posts, and directly related ones.
We all have good days and bad days, and can handle some posts but really need to avoid other posts.
Second, it’s a pain to tag everything, a literal pain for those of us with arm injuries, and I don’t usually bother. It’s no more of a pain and a good deal more helpful to insert a fold with an intro above fold and the likely-to-be-triggering sections below the fold.
We don’t all have the same triggers, but many of us have common triggers involving sexual assault and common situations which may have exposed us or our friends to sexual assault. A ten-paragraph essay on sexual assault can probably go below the fold.
Third, most of the tag-blocking software is written for Chrome, and the rest is indecipherably documented.
First off, blocking entire tags means blocking supportive posts, hostile posts, peripherally-related posts, and directly related ones.
We all have good days and bad days, and can handle some posts but really need to avoid other posts.
Second, it’s a pain to tag everything, a literal pain for those of us with arm injuries, and I don’t usually bother. It’s no more of a pain and a good deal more helpful to insert a fold with an intro above fold and the likely-to-be-triggering sections below the fold.
We don’t all have the same triggers, but many of us have common triggers involving sexual assault and common situations which may have exposed us or our friends to sexual assault. A ten-paragraph essay on sexual assault can probably go below the fold.
Third, most of the tag-blocking software is written for Chrome, and the rest is indecipherably documented.