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Sarah Allen's avatar

I for one welcome our future feline overlords.

For reals though this was so encouraging and soothing. Thank you!

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Heather Waugh's avatar

This is sound advice! I think anyone who had Facebook at launch and sees the cringe-worthy memories from high school has shifted away from oversharing on social media. Plus the cancel culture could always get you in the future after all the cat-tastrophes occur and cats are bad business. Things that are okay to share today may contain a bias that is problematic but not loudly known until there is a platform and space to discuss.

As someone whose newsletter centers around tough parenting topics, some with comedic relief and some darker relating to my PPD experience, it's hard to remember that perspective of permanency on what you publish. I try to set boundaries with myself on what to share about my family or experiences. I also really focus on the point of the piece. What is the message or how do I think my story will help someone else? Those two things help me keep it in check. Your tips are a great reminder on where the lines are in publishing.

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