avatarPagebound Royalty Badge

seema

head in the clouds, nose in a book ✨🌈 she/her

48375 points

0% overlap
Top ContributorPride 2025Early User
Readalong Completionist 2025
Cozy Fantasy
Dark Academia
My Taste
The House in the Cerulean Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #1)
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches
The Bear and the Nightingale (The Winternight Trilogy, #1)
The Starless Sea
Reading...
Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)Bury Our Bones in the Midnight SoilA Love Song, A Death Rattle, A Battle CryLike Water for Chocolate

seema commented on crybabybea's update

crybabybea earned a badge

1h
Level 15

Level 15

42000 points

113
51
Reply

seema commented on SnailsTales's update

seema commented on a post

13h
  • The Everlasting
    Thoughts from 28% (Chapter 8)

    I flushed with heat, hungry to be handled as roughly as I deserved.

    img

    42
    comments 20
    Reply
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    Thoughts from 65% (page 278, end of Conclusion: Relationships, Reciprocity, and Struggle)

    Okay Kelly Hayes thanks for inspiring a (hopefully) last batch of tears to really wrap this thing up! But in all seriousness what a stunning love letter the last few pages of this conclusion are. The list of hopes for a better future are so moving, and the picture drawn is so beautiful, all the moreso knowing that these are active hopes, hopes for a future that the authors and interviewees and even readers are all working towards creating. It is at once inspiring and empowering and grounding to hear how much faith Hayes has in all of us and in the work being done. I genuinely want to print it out as a reminder of what it looks and feels like to reject cynicism and choose to believe.

    8
    comments 1
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    15h
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    Thoughts from 62% (page 265, mid Ch10) - Respect Your Season

    Really incredible seasonality metaphor being presented here as a framework for understanding the rhythms of movement work and it ties so beautifully into the discussion of burnout.

    I was initially uncomfortable with the suggestion that burnout was in a way a personal failure, almost egotistically self-sacrificial. But thinking about it more and reading through the chapter I can agree that it is kind of a choice, a choice to see yourself as irreplaceable and choose not to set up safeguards for your absence should you need one, and in doing so put the larger movement at risk. It isn't something unavoidable and par for the course. I like the framing of periods where you need to reduce your effort as a winter season because it is essential and it is natural and it is is morally neutral, unlike pushing endlessly and waiting for burnout to hit and then struggling to recuperate. Your winter season isn't just a not-summer but carries its own key function as a time for introspection and processing and return to baseline before the next period of growth. It's kind of like sleeping every night. I love that.

    I think it's also really compelling to embrace the winter season purely in pettiness and rejection of the capitalist forces that demand otherwise.

    "I believe one of the main reasons why it's so difficult for us to be in a rhythm of seasons nowadays is because of the nature of the global system that we're in, that is highly, extremely productivist, which is capitalism." Saavedra explained that capitalism "creates this expectation of what we call the eternal summer and this expectation that everyone should be in the eternal summer all the time."

    19
    comments 5
    Reply
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    Thoughts from 62% (page 265, mid Ch10) - Respect Your Season

    Really incredible seasonality metaphor being presented here as a framework for understanding the rhythms of movement work and it ties so beautifully into the discussion of burnout.

    I was initially uncomfortable with the suggestion that burnout was in a way a personal failure, almost egotistically self-sacrificial. But thinking about it more and reading through the chapter I can agree that it is kind of a choice, a choice to see yourself as irreplaceable and choose not to set up safeguards for your absence should you need one, and in doing so put the larger movement at risk. It isn't something unavoidable and par for the course. I like the framing of periods where you need to reduce your effort as a winter season because it is essential and it is natural and it is is morally neutral, unlike pushing endlessly and waiting for burnout to hit and then struggling to recuperate. Your winter season isn't just a not-summer but carries its own key function as a time for introspection and processing and return to baseline before the next period of growth. It's kind of like sleeping every night. I love that.

    I think it's also really compelling to embrace the winter season purely in pettiness and rejection of the capitalist forces that demand otherwise.

    "I believe one of the main reasons why it's so difficult for us to be in a rhythm of seasons nowadays is because of the nature of the global system that we're in, that is highly, extremely productivist, which is capitalism." Saavedra explained that capitalism "creates this expectation of what we call the eternal summer and this expectation that everyone should be in the eternal summer all the time."

    19
    comments 5
    Reply
  • seema commented on seema's update

    seema made progress on...

    16h
    Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)

    Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)

    Kelly Hayes

    65%
    11
    1
    Reply

    seema made progress on...

    16h
    Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)

    Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)

    Kelly Hayes

    65%
    11
    1
    Reply

    seema commented on caait's update

    caait made progress on...

    1d
    I’m Glad My Mom Died

    I’m Glad My Mom Died

    Jennette McCurdy

    18%
    34
    4
    Reply

    seema commented on Isabela's update

    Isabela earned a badge

    6d
    Level 2

    Level 2

    100 points

    53
    11
    Reply

    seema commented on Isabela's update

    Isabela earned a badge

    6d
    Pagebound Royalty

    Pagebound Royalty

    Supports Pagebound with a monthly contribution 💕

    72
    5
    Reply

    seema commented on a feature request

    23h
  • 24
    comments 5

    Featured shelf on profile

    Right now the way that your profile has the top 5 books and currently reading books on it, it would be so cool if somewhere around there was also a preview and link to a featured shelf from the users library. I imagine it as somewhere in their library like in the settings for a shelf they'd be able to mark and set one as being featured right on their profile. This kind of goes with the other requested feature to favorite lists and quests in a way that moves them to a more prominent display postion

    Approved - Will Do ✅
  • seema commented on a post

    23h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    seema
    Edited
    Thoughts from 3% (page 18, end of María Ch II)
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    29
    comments 7
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    1d
  • Catching Fire (The Hunger Games, #2)
    Thoughts from 10% (page 47)

    the first time I read this, I fully missed that although Victors never have to get jobs or work after winning the games, they also never go back to school?! So they have to have talents to demonstrate to everyone what they do, but also it means that the like 13/14 year old Victors would miss so much school??

    like I get this is meant to be a part of the "prize" for winning the games, but it must also act to isolate the winners from their peers even further than the moving to the Victors Village would already do 🤔

    20
    comments 5
    Reply