For texture, I eat meat but always prefer additions that are delicious/good texture instead of meat replicas. Paneer, dumplings (check out Indian idli), fried tofu, halloumi, or seitan might work. Potatoes and cauliflower are good too. I also like impossible ground beef if you'd like to go in a different direction.
Edit: Sometimes with dishes I find it needs a "star" to be the focus. Try eating the curry over something heavier and see if that fills the gap. Naan, idli, vada, but also less traditional baked potato, cornbread, toast, etc.
Duplicate subs, people bulk posting, low content volume are all growing pains that I think will be a lot better in a couple months.
Apart from that, my advice is to experiment. I use Connect on mobile and usually switch between All/Frontpage and Hot/New. There are options on the app to hide seen posts. If you look at All a lot you'll probably want to block communities to make your feed a better experience.
I'm still a plant newbie, but your cactus looks very light green. Maybe it needs a different fertilizer? I find my plants get light green and eventually yellow without fertilizer.
My mom's favorite thing is cherries. I love my mom and I love cherries, but she ate so many that I can't stand the thought of eating fresh cherries. It's been maybe 20 years since I've had a fresh cherry and I expect it'll be many more until I can sit down with a bowl. Love cherries in dishes though.
+1 to the good advice, keep investing in a brokerage account. Vanguard has great index funds and you could go with a 3 fund portfolio like VTSAX/VTIAX/VBTLX. I found the target date fund and built the ratios off that but there's plenty of people who do something like 60/30/10 and let it sit.
Really what you care about is the ratio of wingspan to body length in the kind of moth you're creating. There are a lot of different kind of moths out there. Find the one you like, then math it out.
Find your ideal moth
Google that moth's wingspan, "A"
Use a tool like maybe pixels in a line or even a ruler against your computer screen to find the ratio. You want wingspan, "W" and height "H"
The ratios of real world measurements to what shows up on your screen will be roughly the same, so A/W = X/H. You can find the approximate real world height with X = H * A / W
Or just look at the moth and make a best guess. Anyone who calls you out can do the math themselves ;p
I remember asking my 8th grade english teacher if she got tired of reading young adult books. She said no, good books are good no matter the age range. Now I'm a couple decades older and 100% agree.
Given the chance, just about everything would eat us.