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Mad Scientess ([personal profile] nanila) wrote2025-06-22 04:13 pm

The Friday Five on a Sunday

  1. If you were a fruit, which would you be and why?

    I would like to be a guava. They are a tropical fruit that does not export well, and are almost as tetchy as avocados. Unripe, unripe, unripe, unripe, unripe, RIPE AND SUCCULENT, hahaha you missed the 10-minute window when I was perfect and now I shall rot secretly on the inside so you won't be able to anticipate your disappointment.

    When you do manage to catch them at the right moment, they are sooooo delicious.

  2. If you wake up and smell smoke, and you have to get everybody (pets included) out of the house safely, but you have time to grab one item, what would you grab?

    My phone. No question. Once upon a time it would have been passport or driving licence or some such, but we do everything on our phones now, so I can think of nothing more essential than that. Yes, the documents are a faff to replace, but how are you going to get online to do it without your phone?

  3. If you were stuck on an island, who would be the one person you would want with you and why?

    I hate it in films (and in fact in real life) when people are ordered to choose between beloved family members. I would want my partner AND my children with me, or else I would refuse to choose.

  4. If you could change one thing about your physical appearance, what would it be?

    I'm not sure changing one thing would make much of a difference.

  5. If you could spend the day with one famous person, dead or alive, who would you choose?

    I'd quite like to have a chat with Jaron Lanier.
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nineveh_uk ([personal profile] nineveh_uk) wrote2025-06-22 02:24 pm
Entry tags:

It's hard to remember the Alamo if you don't know what happened there in the first place

I had an excellent weekend last week in Ilkley, watching the Saturday of the Lexus Ilkley Open Tennis Tournament (an early grass season event) with my sisters. They are more into tennis than I am, but live sport is always fun to watch, and we had a lovely day of sunshine that wasn't too blistering, and relaxing entertainment, punctuated with occasional bleating of the nearby sheep.

On the train, I read James Lee Burke's Two for Texas a novella that which has been sitting on my shelves for the better part of two decades. TBR piles never do get shorter. It's an early work by Burke, and lacks the depth of his later books, while showing that promise in his fantastic sense of place and descriptions, and ability to draw the reader straight into scene and character. However its compactness as a narrative was a problem for me because it was drawing on a lot of US cultural history/national mythology that I am simply unfamiliar with. I felt like someone reading a short novel about the trial of Anne Boleyn from the POV of a clerk, written for a British audience, while knowing nothing more about Henry VIII than his name. Sam Houston? Never heard of him, but the city must be named after him so presumably he wins something. Santa Anna? A name with no resonance whatsoever. David Bowie? I know he had a knife... But it was engaging nonetheless, and a reminder that I haven't read Burke for a while. It's time to pick some more recent Dave Robicheaux novels off the TBR pile.
sabotabby: (furiosa)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-06-22 08:05 am

Dear Americans

Always remember that if they had the money to bomb Iran, they had the money for universal healthcare, affordable housing, USAID, even egg subsidies if y'all* were so hell-bent on cheap eggs that you'd elect a fascist.

cut for some impolite thoughts )

* Not you, obviously. Or you wouldn't be reading my blog, which has beaten the "don't invade other countries" drum since the early 2000s when I started it.
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soricel ([personal profile] soricel) wrote2025-06-22 12:12 pm
Entry tags:

Week notes: June 16-June 22 2025

Teaching:

Nothing really. Last week of classes, so just babysitting and festivities. I really dislike any part of teaching that doesn't involve just being in a classroom with kids and, y'know, teaching, so weeks like this are always rough. But it's done, yay! 

Also played the last session of the year with the little D&D group. I've been stringing together a kinda chaotic little homebrew thing since this handful of kids expressed interest in playing back in 7th grade...I keep expecting they'll lose interest, but they haven't yet, and they just finished 9th grade. Some players have disappeared, but the core group remains, and they remain fairly invested. It's kind of poignant too because I get the sense that they may not actually hang out too much together at this point, and yet they keep coming together for these games. Anyway, right now we're doing an abridged/modified Dungeon of the Mad Mage thing that I've tacked onto the campaign; it's been a bit boring so far, and I find that in the more dungeon crawly adventures the kids kinda default to video game mindset, just wanting to speed-run and clear rooms, but that's to be expected. I also feel like I haven't been doing a great job as a DM in giving them many opportunities for character development and relationship-building...that's something I want to prioritize next year.

Outside of school, did another creative writing workshop at the Artsy Personal Development NGO this weekend. I was sort of dreading it, but I felt good and satisfied afterwards.

Learning:

Slacked off on my DuoLingo Romanian this week, and didn't really read or listen to anything in Romanian either. Did go to another session in the somatic movement workshop series, though, and those are all in Romanian, so I guess that counts. The workshop was fun, and again, brought up some little insights here and there. At one point we got sent into breakout rooms with partners and we were invited to dance, on camera, to a song of our choice. I thought I'd feel much more nervous and uncomfortable with that than I actually did; I enjoyed it, actually. I chose this song. Again, I feel like some Gender Stuff is coming up for me in these sessions, and I'd like to sit down and try to process that a bit more, or, ideally, talk about it with the instructor, but that feels a little dicey--you never know how people feel about that kind of stuff here.

Listening:

Didn't really listen to much music this week, though did put on a Stars of the Lid album as I was reading on the balcony a couple times.

Listened to a bunch of episodes of this podcast Botanical Studies of Internet Magic. As the name suggests, it's a bit twee and woo-y, and it doesn't 100% resonate with me, but it's given me some things to think about in terms of my relationship to my creativity--specifically in terms of how and why I share my creative work, or don't. Maybe I'll write a longer post about it when I get caught up.

Reading:

Finished Doxology. It felt like a *very* cynical book overall, and I was pretty uninterested in the plot that developed in the last quarter or so, but I still enjoyed reading it overall. Like I said last time, I feel like it explores the cultural/ideological differences between Generations X and Z in a pretty thoughtful way. I also really appreciated the dialogue, and the fact that most of the characters seemed to speak in a similar way, with this strange mix of irony and earnestness and referentiality (and often, unfortunately, crass misogyny or ableism) that I found most touching when it seemed like some kind of coping mechanism. It sort of reminded me of this line from Chris Kraus' I Love Dick: "The Ramones give 'Needles and Pins' the possibility of irony, but the irony doesn't undercut the song's emotion, it makes it stronger and more true." And yeah, that all feels very Gen X.

Just about done with Jenny Erpenbeck's novel Kairos. The plot itself is kinda unremarkable: Hans, an older guy with a wife and kid starts an affair with a 19 year old girl, Katharina; they're both infatuated with each other, etc., but then she hooks up with a guy her age and Hans goes berserk with jealousy etc. Except it's set in East Germany in the late 80s, so like T. keeps saying, it feels like there's a metaphor in here somewhere. Unfortunately I don't know enough about the history of post-War Germany to really get it. I do see that the way Hans starts interrogating and surveilling and abusing Katharina, and his obsession with her deceit/betrayal/impurity/selfishness/etc. feels very...Nazi/Stasi-like, and I guess maybe there's something here about all of that cultural conditioning poisoning people's minds and their relationships etc...plus, Katharina's performance of submission and obeisance and contrition, plus her apparently genuine love for Hans, plus her secrecy, etc., feels somehow reminiscent of, I guess, the behavior/mentality of the mostly powerless individual in a totalitarian system etc...but I don't know, I feel like I'm missing something. 

Watching:

More Big Bang Theory. The sexism is still pretty hard to get past, but even so, I find myself developing a kind of fondness for this show, and I've actually started looking forward to watching it with T. at dinnertime and bedtime...

It was film festival week here, and I marked a whole bunch of movies I wanted to see, but only saw one: Embrace of the Serpent.

I probably wouldn't have seen it on my own, but my Poetry Buddy invited me, so yeah. I had a bit of a better feeling about it after listening to the director speak during the Q&A afterwards; he said some things about the importance of listening to indigenous voices, and the relevance of the story to contexts like Palestine and Tibet, and so on. I guess the main question the movie asks is how/to what extent can/should indigenous peoples/cultures "heal" the white supremacist imperialist capitalist nightmare system. But yeah, bleak.

Writing:

Wrote a few RP posts, that's it. I also wrote a post on here venting about some family drama, but quickly deleted it. I just don't feel right sharing that kind of stuff here, for a number of reasons. To be honest, I don't even feel totally right sharing *this* kind of stuff (what I'm reading etc.) here, and I constantly question my motivations for doing so. I feel like I keep coming across stuff online (such as in the abovementioned podcast) that celebrates sharing art and ideas, and almost presents doing so as some sort of imperative...especially in the age of A.I. and platforms, the argument seems to go, sharing messy/imperfect/"human" art and ideas, especially on one's own website, or in oldschool paper zines or something, is super important etc. And the impulse to withdraw, to hide, to be quiet, to not share--or to only share in this very closed way, as in a 1x1 RP--seems almost pathological. But this impulse is very strong in me--and I don't think it's *just* because of some neurotic fear of being "seen" or "known." Anyway, more to reflect on as I continue listening to that podcast, I think.

Other stuff:

As I alluded to above, I actually did some social stuff this week! I was really grateful that my Poetry Buddy invited me to the movie; we got ice cream and chatted for a while afterwards too, so that was nice. But related to what I wrote above about sharing things online, I'm feeling a really strong pull right now toward withdrawal from a lot of different areas of my life. 
watersword: A steel bridge and a wooden pier near turquoise water. (Stock: pier and bridge)
Elizabeth Perry ([personal profile] watersword) wrote2025-06-21 11:01 pm

patience in a garden plot

Got a Cake Batter cone (working my way through the non-coffee-flavors at my local ice cream shop) and walked over to the garden; I am very pleased to report that the rhubarb has come up, and so has the parsley and the cosmos and the sweet alyssum! Could there be 100% more of all of these plants, considering how many seeds I put in? Yes. But: I created plants! The basil is going to be so happy over the next week of heatwave. The peas are doing great and I am going nuts over the lack of watermelon, hopefully they will also rejoice in the heat.

And then I stuck a couple of coreopsis in the front garden, which I impulse-bought this morning at the farmer's market, not even a little sorry. Other impulse purchases today included a bag of basil (PESTO) and a container of corn salsa, which I will add to fish-stick tacos.

conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-06-24 03:52 pm

Welp

We're gonna get in the triple digits by Tuesday. Fun times!

Stay cool, guys.

~~~~~~~


Read more... )
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kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2025-06-21 11:51 pm
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kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2025-06-20 11:40 pm
Entry tags:

egregious backdating for completionism's sake

I went "HOLD ON I HAVEN'T POSTED--" at 00:01 last night, when I had already been in bed but failing to sleep for about twenty minutes, and so I will tell you that part of the reason that I did not manage to actually post, actually yesterday, is that my reward for having finally e-mailed the headache clinic and said "so yeah I took my loading doses in mid-April, sorry I didn't manage to e-mail at the time, executive dysfunction has been eating my entire brain"...

... was of course a response like "well ideally your follow-up appointment would have been last week but, okay, fine, how about Monday? :|"

"... oh and by the way you know those questionnaires we want you to submit a minimum of a week in advance? yeah if you could get those done too--"

-- which: ENTIRE brain.

(I managed to confirm the Monday appointment. I did not manage to get the headache diary and questionnaires done.)

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cathrowan ([personal profile] cathrowan) wrote2025-06-21 10:56 am

Circus!

I'm covid-cautious, and for last five years I've been staying out of theatres. But there is a circus arts festival taking place this weekend and it's an artform I adore watching. I decided to mask up and roll the dice.

On Thursday I went to see a performance by House of Dust called HAUS of YOLO. It's bawdy and messy and the audience was there for it. I had such a good time - I had not realized how much I'd missed seeing this kind of show.

Here's a review of their Vancouver performance earlier this month

Tonight I have a ticket for Flo, by a Quebec troupe, where the stage set is a life-sized ship built inside the theatre. I'm looking forward to it a lot.
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cathrowan ([personal profile] cathrowan) wrote2025-06-21 10:36 am

Productive and pleasurable

It's been a good, and busy, month.
  • For the first time in four years, bought new glasses
  • Attended Scintillation, [profile] bluejo's book gathering in Montreal
  • Went to my first SCA event since last winter, to see a friend made a premier member of the new Order of the Mark


I think the hypomania is starting to wear off, so I'd better find those overdue lab requisitions and book appointments, so future me can get her thyroid meds renewed.
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Rachel Coleman ([personal profile] rmc28) wrote2025-06-21 12:39 pm
Entry tags:

A week ago I was in Prague

(I forgot to mention that for about twenty minutes of the day I flew to Prague, I couldn't find my passport, because it was not in the box where it normally lives at home. That was not a fun twenty minutes, and much love to both Tony and Charles for joining me in the search. We found it eventually, it had fallen down the side of the shelf on which the passport box lives, in a way that meant you could only see it from one specific angle. Thankfully, I eventually stood at that angle and spotted it.)

The ice hockey camp continued to be excellent and very hard work, and I feel like I learned a great deal (and now I need to remember to keep using everything I learned and not fall back into bad habits). The coaching was very supportive and kind while pretty much pushing me to my physical limits. I very much hope to return on future camps.

The Saturday evening we went into central Slaný where there was a kind of beer festival happening, lots of different beer stands around the town square, a live rock band on stage, and a bunch of fairground rides. Sunday lunchtime, after the camp was finished, the original three of us got an Uber into Prague in the gloriously hot and humid afternoon. The other two had been to Prague before so I went off on my own to do some tourist things (boat tour! historical tram! walking across the Charles Bridge!) and messaged them when I was ready to meet up again. Turned out we were about five minutes walk apart at that point.

I took a load of photos but actually this random selfie for my family is one I'm really happy with:

We had dinner in Prague, during which time the hot weather broke into torrential downpour, and did a bit more walking around once that tailed off into intermittent showers, but eventually got back to Slaný for the evening. We got packed up and out of our rooms as requested in the morning but were able to leave our kit in storage while we had a leisurely walk and hipsterish brunch in Slaný before it was time to head to the airport.

Getting home was tediously delayed by train cancellations but I still got home in time to put the first washload on and repack my kitbag for Warbirds practice Monday evening.

conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-06-23 11:05 am

It's time for some NYC-picking!

Now, I've already told you about the alleys (no alleys in Manhattan) and right on red (none of that either), and now it's time for - garbage.

Since the 1990s it's been the law that residential garbage in NYC has to have the recyclables sorted out. And since this year we also have to separate out the compost, though weirdly they only pick that up once a week, I've complained about this. It's completely backwards.

Anyway, as I said, it's been the law since the 90s that you can't put your cans and bottles in with your regular trash. Do people always follow that law? Oh, heck no. But if you don't and the city catches you at it they'll give you a $300 ticket, and if you don't pay they put a lien on the house. So even if you don't care, your landlord might, and if they care and perhaps only have one tenant at that location you can bet they won't just eat the cost.

And if your protagonist is even minimally conscientious she'll at least glance around for a recycle bin before tossing her water bottle in with the regular trash.

(As a reference here, our terrible neighbors, who have had sanitation and once the fire department called on them multiple times due to the trash they pile up in their yard, still separate out the bottles and cans from the regular trash. Though in their case they may somewhat optimistically believe they'll get around to redeeming them one of these days, honestly, who knows how they think.)

This rant is courtesy of Elsbeth, which Jenn has been watching. Sure, Elsbeth is a snoop and the best way to dispose of several bushels worth of murderous apple pulp was probably to flush it, but all the same - it's weird that such a generally responsible character goes straightaway to throw out her water bottle in the general trash in somebody's house without at least checking that there's no recycle bin.
used_songs: (Ianto fuck you)
opal trelore ([personal profile] used_songs) wrote2025-06-20 06:18 am

Password hell

I just spent an hour resetting a bunch of passwords. I didn't do them all, but I did all of the email account ones, my bank, apple, etc. The big ones.Which, ugh, now revisiting the Forbes article, I guess I need to do the FB ones as well. YMMV but it's probably a good idea to change your passwords if you haven't already done so. 
sabotabby: plain text icon that says first as shitpost, second as farce (shitpost)
sabotabby ([personal profile] sabotabby) wrote2025-06-20 06:49 am
Entry tags:

podcast friday

 Listen this is the best episode of a podcast you'll listen to all week. Maybe ever. In this podcast lies the seed of all other podcasts.

The Aurora-nominated podcast Wizards & Spaceships episode "The Ur-Pisode: The Queer Heart of The Epic of Gilgamesh, ft. Julian Gunn" is about the Epic of Gilgamesh (obviously), why it still matters after 4000 years, and most importantly, why Tablet XII is canon despite what homophobic translators have done with it over the past century or so. It's so good you guys. It makes me happy every time I listen to it. [personal profile] radiantfracture is just one of the most brilliant people I know and hearing him geek out about this is a delight you won't want to miss.
conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-06-22 12:22 am

WTF even is this?

"Square children's book with hex code 03fcdf for the covers"

Why. Just. Why...? Seriously, who thinks that a hex code is a better description than the name of the color in English?

(This time, I wasn't paraphrasing. I usually do, but....)

*****************


Read more... )
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Oliver Moss ([personal profile] olivermoss) wrote2025-06-19 10:10 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

I've finished Game Changers by Rachel Reid. No, not just the book called Game Changer, tho whole series which is called Game Changers. Getting through the whole series that fast is fine, probably. Anyway, tl:dr whole series review is that the books are of very uneven quality. Some people say to skip book 1, and I can see that. It's a bit more fluffy than some of the other books and some of her later writing is much better. But to me book 4 is just confusingly bad, and that can be skipped easily. The Ilya and Shane books (2 and 6) are fantastic and I also really, really liked 3 and 5.

One thing the writer really excels at is having a distinct feel to her characters. For example, most of them have reasons to be anxious with all the pressures they face, but that manifests in different ways in each character. How it feels to them, if they try to ignore it, how they handle it, etc.

The TV series will be based on book 2, Heated Rivalry, which is about Shane and Ilya. But book 6, Long Game, continues to story of Shane and Ilya and is excellent. It also wraps up the series very well, even though it wasn't the intended ending. The author has scrapped book 7 because it wasn't working, but honestly 6 feels like a great series finale. Maybe 1 or 2 scenes more would have been ideal, but the book pays off a lot of stuff and feels satisfying.

The quality of the writing varies a lot over the series, and also each book has a different dynamic. I am very glad I read it, but I think for anyone reading this series there are going to be books that don't click with as much.

Anyway, the individual books.

Book 1 - Game Changer: When I saw the blurb I was like 'oh, it's this book'. I remember this creating a splash when it came out. In spaces I was in, people were pushing this book hard. No matter what you asked for, people rushed in with this recc. There was a point where I really wanted people to shut up about this book. But, that probably says more about the spaces I was in than the book or the fandom.

It's the coffee shop AU trope, but as original fiction. Read more... )

Book 2 - I already talked about Heated Rivalry here

Book 3 - Tough Guy: This was very interesting as it dipped into the darker side of hockey as a business and also the impact of hockey injuries. major spoilers )

Book 4 - Common Goal: This is about a retiring goalie and a much younger character who is a friend of the couple from the first book. Spoilers )

Book 5 - Role Model: This book is about someone who was caught up in the toxic side of hockey culture. Again, bringing in some real stuff. The MC starts out spiraling because his best friend was accused of sexual assault and he has reason to believe the women. His life had just collapsed in a dozen ways. He gets traded and his new team has an openly gay social media manager who is lively, sweet and loves to bake. I really liked this one and how things developed between them.

Sidenote: I think it's fine to just read the Shane and Ilya books, but Role Model does leads into the last book in some interesting ways. A chunk of both books overlap timewise and the MC from this book is on Ilya's team. I really enjoying getting the additional perspective on things.

Book 6 - Long Game - Time to see how Shane and Ilya are doing. Shane and Ilya are such great characters. They are really in a different and have been stuck watching other couples come out and able to love openly and get married and by truthful to their friends. Lots of amazing call backs to the first book and building on things that happened in it. Read more... )
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conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2025-06-21 01:35 pm

Rewatching the second season of Prodigy all in a rush with E, trying to finish within a week

I noticed something I didn't notice before about Ascencia. Read more... )

**************


Read more... )
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Oliver Moss ([personal profile] olivermoss) wrote2025-06-19 06:04 pm

(no subject)

* I have my Leyfarers Chapter 7 Finale tomorrow. I am interested to see how things go. Between that session and the start of Chapter 8 we will be switching from the 2012 D&D ruleset to the current one. We'll be able to change characters or even reroll at our current levels. I am not changing much, because 2012 rangers were so weak that a lot of people refused to play them. I've been looking forward to this for a while.

The finale will involve a reality-distortion that will account for all the changes that will happen. My Dwarf is losing his stone sense which is going to be very weird for him.

I spent all this time trying to learn one ruleset and now I need to relearn things and set up all new reference materials for myself.

* I really want to be posting interesting Pride related pics, but I haven't found much this year. It's been a weird June. Some of the events I did last year don't seem to be happening this year. Maybe I should go early tomorrow and poke around Laurelhurst Park. I know it's not much, but when shit gets tough people tend to thank me for my posts, shows them not everything is dark. But I just haven't come across a rainbow yarn bombing yet!
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kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2025-06-19 11:01 pm

oof but I am having difficulty getting back into routines post-event

I have managed all of my physio once and only once this week. I have not yet got on the mat at all. I have been spending a lot of time asleep, which probably shouldn't surprise me, and a fair amount migrainey, which does (unpleasantly). Have this evening at least managed to send the email to the headache clinic that's been due since April, and consequently may or may not actually get an appointment in time to get a prescription in time to not need to reload the f2f galcanezumab again.

(Have also been really struggling with actually opening notebook since the last trip up north, which is helping precisely nothing. Maybe acknowledging that here will make it a little less scary to go back to, at least.)