Back in April, I preached a sermon titled "God is our source of worth and approval." I was preaching for myself because I need to hear that message, but a lot of other people said that it helped them as well. Sharing here in case it might help you, too.

Here's the intro:
We all need to feel worthy, accepted, and that we’re doing a good job. There can be two errors that can cause us a lot of anxiety and to make bad decisions.

One error is looking for these affirmations of worth, acceptance, and approval from other people. That will cause us to always seek to try to please people. Our actions will be controlled by them.

The other error is to stop caring about what other people think and just do whatever we want. This could be good, but we all have sinful natures and can deceive ourselves. Besides that, pride is a very dangerous thing. The original sin of the devil was pride, thinking that he knew better than God. Adam and Eve fell because the devil promised them that when they ate of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, then they would become like God. For the first time in their lives, they choose something contrary to the will of God—because of pride.

So, what is the right way to fulfill our needs for feeling worthy, accepted, and approved?

Just like we trust God for our basic needs like food and clothing, we can look to him for our need for love, belonging, and esteem. The more that you understand this, the freer you will be in your life. You will be able to make good decisions and relate to people in a proper and healthy way.

Google doc for the full sermon notes: docs.google.com/document/d/11K…

YouTube recording of the sermon:
youtube.com/live/y_A6GKwlseo?s…

As an autist I don’t experiment sounds like non autists because they can filter and I can’t.

The video is a perfect example of how I AM experiencing sounds, and I’m sure it’s the same for many others of us. (However, some sounds mentioned in it, the sounds of the street, are missing).

The video is also a perfect example on how music in background (only at the beginning) makes difficult for me to focus on what someone is saying.

Be careful fellow autistic if you watch it with sound on.
(The video has closed captions).

“What Does Overstimulation Sound Like To Someone With Autism?“

youtu.be/_C2QJPjS2a0?si=8KYx-K…

#ActuallyAutistic #autism

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Me to siri: Turn on my 6:20 alarm.
Siri: I turned off all your alarms.
Me: No, turn on my 6:20 alarm.
Siri: Sorry, I don't understand.
Me: Turn on my 6:20 Alarm.
Siri: Just to confirm, you want to power off this device?
Me: *goes to home screen and reopens siri* Okay. Turn, on, my, 6:20, alarm.
Siri: I turned on your 6:00 PM alarm.
What the fuck? Can you like... Listen please. Who designed this shit

Oigan, ¿alguien de aquí le sabe al mejorar colores/tonos en imágenes RAW?

Tengo unas que quiero regalar para un album de fotos y quisiera retocar.

Las tengo en formato jpeg y RAW, pero hay algunas que no me terminan de gustar en jpeg (mucha o poca iluminación, contrastes sub-óptimos y tal).

Por su 🐤 que sería un trabajo remunerado.

Si le saben y les interesa, más detalles por mensaje directo.

We built local backdoors for Signal, 1Password & Slack through V8 heap snapshot tampering (CVE-2025-55305).

Method: Replace v8_context_snapshot.bin files with versions that override JavaScript builtins. When apps call Array.isArray(), malicious code executes.
Works because integrity checks ignore these "non-executable" files that actually contain executable JavaScript.

Impact: Nearly every Chromium-based app is vulnerable.
blog.trailofbits.com/2025/09/0…

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For obvious reasons, I have decided to protect my Mastodon account on this instance. This is all because of Ramon Salazar and his bullshit. I hate having to make this decision, but it has to be done. If anyone wishes to follow me then please feel free to do so. Just keep in mind that since my account will be protected, I will have to approve each follower request I receive. Stay safe everyone. And I hope all of you have an amazing day.

pri prebirani tour jednoho umelce jsme posilali sms listkodrzicim se zmenou data koncertu

43k lidi

neslo importovat URL

support odpovedel vyhalucinovanou featurou, kterou ten produkt nema

pisu, ze ta featura neexistuje

napise mi Chief Product Officer te firmy popis stejne vyhalucinovane featury s odkazem na video navod

dvakrat overuju, ze ta featura opravdu neexistuje
video navod je o necem jinem

proc? proboha proc? kde jsme jako lidstvo udelali chybu?

#ai #support

How is it even legal to have such barbaric employment policies like this. Surely air crew should be on the clock from the moment they start security clearance, until they exit the secure area at the end of their shift. Anything else is exploitation.

How does this compare with European airlines.

mastodon.social/@AnnaAnthro/11…


US flight attendants push to be paid after the Air #Canada union finally get a contract that pays for all work including when planes aren’t in the air: ‘Most of our passengers have no idea’

theguardian.com/us-news/2025/s…


I can't say enough good things about Paperback, the ebook and PDF reader written by @TheQuinbox. It's truly amazing to have a text-based PDF simply open and be readable. No screen reader optimization, no Adobe alerts, no useless controls or lack of pages in a browser. Just the text, ready in a couple seconds. It even saves your reading position. github.com/trypsynth/paperback
@Quin

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US flight attendants push to be paid after the Air #Canada union finally get a contract that pays for all work including when planes aren’t in the air: ‘Most of our passengers have no idea’

theguardian.com/us-news/2025/s…

in reply to ts 🚇

We understand, but we can't make features happen by magic, no matter how many people request them. We're a volunteer-driven project with very limited resources. Anyone can step up to help us, or fund developers: documentfoundation.org/certifi… – If just a few people do that, we'll get all these improvements, and more!
in reply to Patrick Perdue

What's this TS-12 day thing all about, you probably didn't ask?

Well, my first pro keyboard workstation, obtained when I was 16, was a used Ensoniq TS-12, which still had it's original bill-of-sales sticker on the back, from September 04, 1994.

On September 04, 2015, when my TS-12 turned 21, I sequenced this silly thing.

A guy from an Ensoniq dealer demo sample disk says "Hey, check this out!"

A long intro featuring the default sound that comes up when you turn on a newly initialized TS-12, which is called Genesis, with some other pad-like sounds is followed by the TS playing 'Happy Birthday' to itself in various styles using many of the more obvious built-in sounds, several different patch libraries, and the occasional external sample.
The TS-12 eventually gets a bit drunk, because it was 21 at the time, and I'm American.
After passing out, it is awoken by a fake alarm clock from it's internal wave ROM, which it throws something at from one of the ASR10 stock sample disks. At the end, the original sampled guy says "So, what do you think?"

borris.me/audio/ts21.mp3

This entry was edited (1 week ago)

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in reply to Patrick Perdue

that's wild. I had a Motif XS7 and I just could never figure out how to use it properly. So once I figured out that Reaper existed and how to properly edit midi, and realized that it took up more space than I had at the time, I sold it. Now when I hear this I know how I'd sequence it in Reaper or even in Ableton, but when I think back to the interface of the Motif I get scared. lol. I have absolutely zero clue how I'd make anything like that happen there. At all.
in reply to Talon

@talon Oh man... I lived in the Motif pattern sequencer for a long time, first with the original Motif, then the Motif XS, which, along with almost everything else I own, has been in storage for the past half decade.
I have a lot of that workflow again with Ableton Move, but of course, it's sound set is much more limited.

I did a ton of junk with the Ensoniq's built-in sequencer, this being a prime example.

One of these days, I will learn how to actually use a DAW the way you're supposed to.

in reply to Patrick Perdue

how? Seriously how? I learned so many menus and so many button sequences and I'd forget them, then I'd write them down but somehow I kept messing them up and ruin something... I don't even think I have any menu guides left and I definitely don't remember any of it. I do miss it though a little. Think the person who ended up with it did more with it than I ever would have, so probably better for it, but definitely do miss it.
in reply to Talon

@talon Mostly, it came from a combination of not having access to a reasonable PC-based sequencer for years after I started really getting interested in this stuff. Even when I had my Motif, the best thing going was Sonar, and I never got on with it. I learned about QWS a bit later, but never really got comfortable using it, either, and I wanted more integration with other stuff. So I just learned menus and button presses and screen layouts for that and a lot of my other outboard gear. I got really good at operating almost every aspect of the TS-12, but I never could quite figure out transwaves. It was way too easy to get lost in those screens attempting to create different events for each step, let alone building complex patterns with the up to six elements per voice (more than the Motif had.)