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One of the biggest improvements I’ve seen since I was a kid has to do with how much easier it is now to find people who share the same hobby, interest, identity, or diagnosis.
Among countless other possibilities, if you are:
LGBTQ+,
A fan of a specific book series, tv show, or obscure hobby,
Trying to learn more about a new hobby,
A llama herder, or
Just coming home from the hospital or doctor’s office after you or someone you love has been diagnosed with disease X,
You can find communities of people online who are in the same boat.
This is valuable for everyone, but it is even more important for folks who are living in rural areas or with health conditions that limit how much they can travel and who therefore may not be able to find anyone in their neighbourhood to discuss such things with in person.
When the Internet became something that virtually everyone in the western world has daily access to, countless people were finally able to meet others like themselves online for both serious and lighthearted purposes.
For subjects like life-changing illnesses, this means that information about the latest tests, studies, and treatments can spread much faster and farther than it could have a few decades ago. There is no doubt in my mind that this has saved a lot of lives as well as reduced suffering.
But even if you’re only searching for likeminded folks online who share your interest in topic X, it is still a wonderful thing to find those kindred spirits and finally get to dig deeply into the minutia of what you enjoy. Hobbies are an important part of living a fulfilling life, and I love how much easier is to meet other people who like the same very specific things you do these days.
I am so grateful that such things are possible and common nowadays.

Therefore, I’m going to be making a list of books I was not assigned to read in school but wish had been on the syllabus. I ended up borrowing some of them from the library and reading them on weekends on over the summer. It would have been helpful to have a teacher around to explain certain cultural norms that have since changed or references to other works I didn’t quite get, for example.
This is one of those topics that makes me wish I could take a peek at all of the other answers before publishing my own! Will most folks choose serious or frivolous answers, I wonder?
I’m in a cheerful and confident mood and so will be sharing some bookish brags today.
I love becoming immersed in a world so unlike modern life.
I used to be much more willing to read the hottest new books even if they weren’t from genres I typically enjoy.
I started working on this back in March and have been slowly adding to it as I find more examples of things that tickle my funny bone. Some posts work better if they’re allowed to percolate for a long time.



When I first began working on this post, I couldn’t find anything that appealed to me.







Thank you to