Any of my fellow #streamer peeps get this thing where you’ve been all extrovert on camera and then in the subsequent hours revert to a Gollum-like state, recoiling from daylight and sentient beings?
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Any of my fellow #streamer peeps get this thing where you’ve been all extrovert on camera and then in the subsequent hours revert to a Gollum-like state, recoiling from daylight and sentient beings?
Just me then?
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Any of my fellow #streamer peeps get this thing where you’ve been all extrovert on camera and then in the subsequent hours revert to a Gollum-like state, recoiling from daylight and sentient beings?
Just me then?
@operationpuppet I feel seen.
I used to teach, and after a couple hours in front of students doing the knowledge dance, all I wanted to do was hibernate.
It’s… exhausting being “on”. I have to rev up to do my streams, and while I never regret doing it, it does sorta wipe me out for while. I can’t imagine livestreaming for more than three hours at a time—that’s my max. And only a couple days a week.
But it is a sort of “happy place” that I have come to cherish and protect vehemently. I get out of sorts when conflicting schedules prevent me from streaming sometimes.
Turning on and off the extrovert/introvert switch is a thing. Yes. You’re not alone. I am right. there. with. you.
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Any of my fellow #streamer peeps get this thing where you’ve been all extrovert on camera and then in the subsequent hours revert to a Gollum-like state, recoiling from daylight and sentient beings?
Just me then?
@operationpuppet@mastodon.content.town
Yeah... something I experience every time. But in my case I am not really often on cam. I use to have an avatar (experimenting with VTube stuff).
And even my chat is empty most of the time I feel kind of burned out for a short while after streaming. I guess it's the inner tension or something like that. -
N nocci@punk.cyber77.de shared this topic