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Last week I was feeling pretty terrible at the end of the week, and I was trying to figure out how to describe it to Psyche.

It was tied up a lot with the energy I invested into preparing the talk for Gallifrey One. Getting ready for a public presentation (performance) was exciting, and it got a lot of creative engines running that had been rusting for a while. For all the self-doubt and anxiety that came from putting myself on the line, it felt good to research something I found interesting, shape it into a script, iterate it, and finally present (perform) for an audience.

But afterward, I was feeling both amped up and let down. My brain was often in overdrive, and I found it hard to focus, and it was tiring. My own self-doubt crept in, and I felt at wits end to follow up the excitement from the week before. It didn't feel like a similar convention experience a few months earlier, when I ran some games at Big Bad Con, which also took preparation, but left me feeling energized and excited to do more. It felt more like the end of my time in college, when every play I directed or acted in felt like a lifeline out of despair. It was making me wonder if public performance might be hazardous to my happiness.

Psyche, noted that what I was describing was very like (in very broad terms) the actions of dopamine and serotonin. The high and drop I was describing from performance was like how dopamine acts for thrill-seekers. In contrast, serotonin was more like community and contentment. This definitely struck a chord with me. I'd felt unable to take a breath that week and relax and enjoy the sky as I often do. And I was already thinking back to my 20s, a darkness I ultimately emerged from by taking SSRIs (which keep serotonin in the system).

It's been a helpful framing for me. And something to think about as I try to do things like get in the habit of writing a blog again. The extreme highs of performance are not something that's going to go away, but having a less magical way of confronting them helps. And it helps to keep things like that in mind while trying to keep writing a blog.

tablesaw: A redshirt says, "I'm just here to pay off my Academy loans anyway." (Academy Loans)

Last weekend, I attended the Doctor Who convention Gallifrey One for the sixth year. It was loads of fun, and I'd love to write all about it, but it's a big topic, and I've been bad at updating, so I'm going to post this blog the moment I'm done with my tea, regardless of what I left out. Maybe I'll make another post with more info, maybe not!

Gally is kind of a big deal in the Doctor Who fan world, but it's always been a little weird for Psyche and me, because it's also a local convention. On Twitter, I'm following people preparing a week in advance for intercontinental flights to spend a week in Los Angeles on vacation, but for me it's just half of my commute. In fact, for the first few years, we didn't even take Friday off to attend all three days of events.

This is also the first year that I was a part of the programming. A feature for the last few years has been a block of TARDIS talks. They're structured like academic talks, though that refers more to the approach to a topic than the occupation of the presenter. At some point the organizers described as something like a chance to talk about your favorite Doctor Who subject for fifteen minutes uninterrupted, and I took that to heart. For almost two years now, I've been obsessed with the connections between the ancient story of the Trojan War (which most people know about), the medieval story of Troilus and Cressida (which most people don't know about), and the Doctor Who story "The Myth Makers" (which pretty much no Who fans have actually seen because the BBC lost all the tapes). It's a superstorm of niche obsessions, and I finally had a chance to unleash it on the unsuspecting world (at least, the world that decided to skip the interview with Tosin Cole.

I'm hoping to put it online in some form, but the version I ended up with was mostly notes, so I need to reconstruct it. I'm thinking of putting it together as a video on YouTube, because I did some PowerPoint humor that I don't really want to give up on. Maybe set a goal to have that done by the end of the month.

The big guest was Christopher Eccleston, who was the Doctor in the first season of the rebooted show. I have big feelings about his performance, and it was really great to see him talking about his life, his art, masculinity, and vulnerability. We'd hoped to get an autograph, but the convention was overwhelmed, and we ultimately didn't want to give up most of our day to see him. But it seemed like he had a good time, so hopefully we'll get a chance to see him again.

And that's the honey-thick end of this mug of tea. Have a good night!

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