twoeleven: (gardening)
twoeleven ([personal profile] twoeleven) wrote2025-09-10 10:26 pm
Entry tags:

two flowers is gonna make a post

Scabiosa "Black Knight"

i've been trying to get this variety of scabiosa to bloom for years. it appears to be touchier than the normal varieties for some reason.


Fading Dahlia

it's a bit past its prime. i think the color blew out my camera's color gamut, since the dahlia is a shocking pink in person. it was supposed to be red and white, though. i guess the tubers ended up being mislabeled.
sistawendy: me looking confident in a black '50s retro dress (mad woman)
sistawendy ([personal profile] sistawendy) wrote2025-09-10 11:09 am
Entry tags:

the joys (and sorrows?) of staying at home

For the second time in as many weeks, I skipped bleepy goodness because my body told me not to. It may be just as well: I'm going on vacation next week and I don't want to get sick before then.

But I managed to stay awake long enough for the Tickler to debrief me about Dragoncon. I think maybe I might like to go someday? It sounds like the kind of thing I might enjoy, but there are so many other events I'd like to travel to first.

I also managed to stay awake for my latest circumflatulation project: I used some of my inheritance to buy a Roland Juno-X synthesizer. (Yeah, I love raver music and I'm a trans woman. It was inevitable.) I've got Apple Logic Pro as my digital audio workstation, and in the last few days I've figured out how to record MIDI, edit sounds, etc. If I ever put something on Bandcamp, you'll be the first to know.

My smoke alarm went off twice last night, but I miraculously got enough sleep anyway. I think it's time to get a HEPA filter. Come to think of it, even when there isn't smoke in the air there's tire dust because I live fairly close to a big arterial.
rebeccmeister: (Default)
rebeccmeister ([personal profile] rebeccmeister) wrote2025-09-10 10:44 am
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Executive function [status]

Just before classes started, while I was clearing old papers off my desk, I encountered a quotation by that thought-stylist* Rebecca Solnit about how no one will ever ask you to make the time to do the deep thinking and creative work that you might want to be doing. They'll ask you for everything else, but not that. So if you want to be doing some deep thinking and creative work, you have to create that time and space for yourself.

I think you can make a wild guess as to why I might have printed out that quotation for myself.

When I woke up this morning, I had that feeling that I was overtapped on tasks requiring executive function. Yesterday at rowing practice I wound up in a context that asked a lot of executive function of me (teaching new rowers), and then I had a full day of teaching ahead of me. This morning I had intended to go do some strength training, but yet again there would have been a period of negotiating and figuring out and deciding what sort of workout to do, and I just didn't want to do that. (I also suspect all of this has been influenced by my jaw continuing to be achy as it continues to heal)

So instead I slept in, made myself a nice breakfast and some coffee, and sat out on the catio with the cats. Our tomato harvest this year has been pretty satisfying.

Wednesday Catio Breakfast

Wednesday Catio Breakfast

From that book on Mindful Sport Performance Enhancement, I am aware that consistent training and practice can improve one's mindfulness during performance activities. I don't actually know whether something similar is true or not for what I'm referring to as "executive function," which involves mustering self-motivation to do things, and engaging in a lot of decision-making (also managing oneself across task switches). The main thing I do know is that I sometimes run up against hard limits in how much I can do; if I go too far overboard I start to get really grumpy and negative.





*She does some good stuff, but at other times it's all a bit much for me.
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)
radiantfracture ([personal profile] radiantfracture) wrote2025-09-09 05:37 pm

Bonus Ross Gay poem

Again
By Ross Gay

Because I love you, and beneath the uncountable stars
I have become the delicate piston threading itself through your chest,

I want to tell you a story I shouldn't but will and in the meantime neglect, Love,
the discordant melody spilling from my ears but attend,

instead, to this tale, for a river burns inside my mouth
and it wants both purgation and to eternally sip your thousand drippings;

and in the story is a dog and unnamed it leads to less heartbreak,
so name him Max, and in the story are neighborhood kids

who spin a yarn about Max like I'm singing to you, except they tell a child,
a boy who only moments earlier had been wending through sticker bushes

to pick juicy rubies, whose chin was, in fact, stained with them,
and combining in their story the big kids make

the boy who shall remain unnamed believe Max to be sick and rabid,
and say his limp and regular smell of piss are just two signs,

but the worst of it, they say, is that he'll likely find you in the night,
and the big kids do not giggle, and the boy does not giggle,

but lets the final berries in his hand drop into the overgrowth
at his feet, and if I spoke the dream of the unnamed boy

I fear my tongue would turn an arm of fire so I won't, but
know inside the boy's head grew a fire beneath the same stars

as you and I, Love, your leg between mine, the fine hairs
on your upper thigh nearly glistening in the night, and the boy,

the night, the incalculable mysteries as he sleeps with a stuffed animal
tucked beneath his chin and rolls tight against his brother

in their shared bed, who rolls away, and you know by now
there is no salve to quell his mind’s roaring machinery

and I shouldn't tell you, but I will,
the unnamed boy

on the third night of the dreams which harden his soft face
puts on pants and a sweatshirt and quietly takes the spade from the den

and more quietly leaves his house where upstairs his father lies dreamless,
and his mother bends her body into his,

and beneath these same stars, Love, which often, when I study them,
seem to recede like so many of the lies of light,

the boy walks to the yard where Max lives attached to a steel cable
spanning the lawn, and the boy brings hot dogs which he learned

from Tom & Jerry, and nearly urinating in his pants he tosses them
toward the quiet and crippled thing limping across the lawn,

the cable whispering above the dew-slick grass, and Max whimpers,
and the boy sees a wolf where stands this ratty

and sad and groveling dog and beneath these very stars
Max raises his head to look at the unnamed boy

with one glaucous eye nearly glued shut
and the other wet from the cool breeze and wheezing

Max catches the gaze of the boy who sees,
at last, the raw skin on the dog's flank, the quiver

of his spindly legs, and as Max bends his nose
to the franks the boy watches him struggle

to snatch the meat with gums, and bringing the shovel down
he bends to lift the meat to Max's toothless mouth,

and rubs the length of his throat and chin,
Max arching his neck with his eyes closed, now,

and licking the boy's round face, until the boy unchains the dog,
and stands, taking slow steps backward through the wet grass and feels,

for the first time in days, the breath in his lungs, which is cool,
and a little damp, spilling over his small lips, and he feels,

again, his feet beneath him, and the earth beneath them, and starlings
singing the morning in, and the somber movement of beetles

chewing the leaves of the white birch, glinting in the dark, and he notices,
Darling, an upturned nest beneath the tree, and flips it looking for the blue eggs

of robins, but finds none, and placing a rumpled crimson feather in his mouth
slips the spindly thicket into another tree, which he climbs

to watch the first hint of light glancing above the fields, and the boy
eventually returns to his thorny fruit bush where an occasional prick

leaves on his arm or leg a spot of blood the color of these raspberries
and tasting of salt, and filling his upturned shirt with them he beams

that he could pull from the earth that which might make you smile,
Love, which you’ll find in the fridge, on the bottom shelf, behind the milk,

in the bowl you made with your own lovely hands.

§rf§
rebeccmeister: (Default)
rebeccmeister ([personal profile] rebeccmeister) wrote2025-09-09 01:17 pm
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The Hudson River School exists for a reason [rowing]

I find the art of the Hudson River School to be way over the top and ridiculous. However, I fully appreciate why the style exists. The artists were all looking at the Hudson River during the fall. It absolutely is that stunningly beautiful.

And we get to go enjoy it all the time during our rowing practices.

This morning we had mist and pockets of fog. (first three pictures taken by a teammate)

Tuesday morning practice

Tuesday morning practice

Tuesday morning practice

The light and color coming through the clouds - sublime!

I was out with our very newest rowers on only their second time ever out in a rowing shell.

Tuesday morning practice

Plenty of time to just sit and enjoy the scenery.

Tuesday morning practice

The newest rowers did great.

The rest of the day is all about biology. There is a copse of trees along the edge of campus that I bike past every day on my commute, where the leaves are just barely starting to turn. I'll admit I'm as much of a leaf peeper as anyone else when we get into the fall.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
elainegrey ([personal profile] elainegrey) wrote2025-09-09 07:10 am
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(morning writing)

Optometrist visit yesterday did not take forever, leaving me spinning a little with the extra hour, which then dissolved into audiobook listening and poking at things.  I definitely had part of my brain saying, "I didn't plan anything, oh well, can't help but fritter this away!" I am giving myself a tiny pass in that the workday was packed and i did work over the weekend to meet a deadline in the style i wanted.

The optometrist office is on my Do Not Trust With Data list ever since they seem to have hooked up with some for profit optometry management business. That year i was asked to sign a data release that signed off on releasing medical data to a for profit company. I am not sure they had read their release. They ask for my medical insurance and i decline to give them that. I'm not sure what nefarious use could be made of it, but decline under the theory that the less data people have, the less correlating information can be amassed when they eventually have a breach.

Then, my favorite new thing: you are asked to sign a note that they gave you your prescription.  "But you haven't seen me yet." "It was being forgotten." PFFFFFTTTT. I suspect they are sick of people calling up and asking for a prescription to use at one of the inexpensive glasses places, then pitching a fit when they don't get one, pointing to state law requiring they give it. Well, now one has pre-signed a document saying they did give you the prescription. It's a nice signal that making money is more important than eye health.

I'm not excited about any frames, but i think the new ones will be comfy. I will continue to wear the current pair for yard work. I do really like these frames, but they are heavy, and a bit of the metal inlay (in the metal) has snagged and broken off. I forgot to have them readjust the nose pieces before i left. Piffle.

davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
David Gillon ([personal profile] davidgillon) wrote2025-09-09 03:29 am

Close. Ish.

 I had one of those login challenges: someone in X is trying to log into your account, if it's you enter the code we just sent.
I'm used to X being well outside the local area, but the latest one sets a new record. Rather than Kent it was "someone in East Kilbride", so outskirts of Glasgow and only 435 miles out!
brithistorian: (Default)
brithistorian ([personal profile] brithistorian) wrote2025-09-08 01:11 pm
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An odd and pointless writing statistic

When I sat down to write last night, I noticed that the last time I had left off working on this particular story, I had ended with a character brushing her teeth and going to bed. I knew that I had mentioned characters brushing their teeth before (enough that A. had commented on it), so I got curious as to just how much my characters brush their teeth. I searched all my story files for the word "teeth," then looked through those hits to see how many of them refer to brushing their teeth, as opposed to anything else characters might do with their teeth. I found 23 occurrences of characters brushing their teeth (gritting was a distant second tooth-related activity, with eight occurrences). Dividing my lifetime fiction production by this means that my characters brush their teeth, on average, every 63,000 words. I'm pretty sure this is high, but (obviously) I've never seen this statistic from another writer. It's a meaningless statistic, but since I could calculate it, I did. And then, having done so, I decided to share it with you. Have a great day!

rebeccmeister: (Default)
rebeccmeister ([personal profile] rebeccmeister) wrote2025-09-08 01:49 pm
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Yet another weekend on the water [rowing]

There's an early September regatta over in Springfield, MA, that two of my teammates attended last year and enjoyed. The experience was good enough that one teammate advocated for adding the regatta to the club calendar. However, because of all the everything the club is doing these days, about a month ago it became clear that trying to mobilize everyone to go to the regatta was one thing too much, so plans to go as a team were scrapped.

Since I now own a car, I recently purchased my own singles cartop rack, which means that I can go to regattas on my own if I so choose. (I mostly bought the rack on the principle that if I am going to own a boat I should also own the means to relocate it). However, the thought of driving myself out to this regatta to go and race by myself wasn't especially appealing. During a team meeting, my teammate L said she was still interested in trying to go. That's all it took to tip the scales and get me excited.

L also offered to spearhead the driving, since she wanted to race in the double and it would be best for her to cartop her own boat; unsurprisingly, doubles are longer than singles, and require their own rack and setup.

Rockrimmon Regatta

The race was a 5 km "stake race," which means that the start and finish line are in the same place. Racers pass through a starting chute, head up the Connecticut River, make a 180 degree turn around some turn buoys, and then race back downriver to the finish line.

Even though I wouldn't say it was my Best Singles Race Ever, I was very glad that I entered the singles race, because that gave me a chance to preview the course before L and I raced it in the double. The 180-degree turn was sharper than I'd hoped, so we modified our strategy to account for that.

Rockrimmon Regatta

The conditions were breezy and choppy, but nothing like the conditions I rowed my single in during the sculling clinic two weekends ago. I'm so glad I took that risk! In the double we had a highly satisfying row: maintained a consistent pace, got ourselves around the turn buoys effectively, and we did not incur any buoy penalties (I did get one in my single, but it didn't really affect the overall outcome - the rower faster than me had a good minute on my time). That was good enough to net us third place out of seven. My teammate L is just returning from an injury, so she was thrilled to make it through a 5k race successfully for the sake of building confidence to know she can do so.

We encountered some really interesting weather on the return drive - a tornado warning in the Berkshires. I'm grateful L's husband R was behind the wheel; as with the other vehicles we saw, he slowed way down and put on his hazards. Because the storm was moving east and we were moving west, eventually we drove out of it and made it home safely.

--

On Sunday, a different teammate hosted a backyard gathering.

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

She lives right on a small lake to the south of here, Kinderhook Lake, and has a bunch of small watercraft to take out and mess around in.

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

Several teammates and I hopped in and enjoyed exploring.

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

The conditions were sublime.

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

I loved watching the sunlight that reflected off the water, as it danced on the surface of the bridge tunnel.

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

There's an island towards the center of the lake that is known as One Tree Island.

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

My teammate P commented that it looked like a good place to go and practice for being alone on a desert island. Bring that one book over, hop onto the island, give it a try.

There is at least one resident on the island, however. A banded fishing spider lives in the end of this piece of wood:

Sunday Afternoon on Kinderhook Lake

--

This morning we had even more beautiful fall rowing weather, starting with the setting of the full moon:

Monday Morning Practice

Monday Morning Practice

Monday Morning Practice

Things are now starting to pick up for teaching and research for the week. I'm still having some aches and pains from the tooth extraction, but am generally functional, at least.
vvalkyri: (Default)
vvalkyri ([personal profile] vvalkyri) wrote2025-09-08 12:40 am

It's late but I wanted to write a bit

or maybe not i dunno.

I'm down on a long penninsula south of virginia beach right now, with Joe and Bernadette and there's been a bit of an object lesson in "sleeps 2 adults and 3 kids" and it's somewhat tempting to sleep in the living room/kitchen instead of my bedroom in that I absolutely do not recommend these mattresses even stacked, and it's cold tonight so at least the lack of a/c is less of a problem.

today we went to great dismal swamp. the earlier part of this was about 1.5 hours of walking out and back on a gravel road to a trailhead before deciding to go to somewhere else in the car. At that point I was kinda wishing that I had gone to acro. But the rest of the time, the time on the boardwalks was cool. I hadn't seen cypress roots before. Freaky. And the lake. And the swamp near it.

Yesterday I stayed with a couple acro people paddleboarding out to some concrete battleships that are used as breakwater (a bit sad my waterproof camera didn't get better pics), and got some [abrasive] acro in while J and B got really sweaty in their hikes.

Day before, 22k steps including a whole lot of beach.

Sadly it'll be another rather cool day tomorrow. Probably will try to get to the beach at least tho. This morning I was simply way too exhausted and went back to sleep after breakfast.

Back in DC there were 10s of thousands at the We Are All DC march and that was good. Come the 19th there's the We Are America march, where folk started today from Philly.

I've been looking at socials some. And everythign is argh. Turnberry said something about how I'm doing the good fight and I'm like "I'm mostly useless and if it gets to that I'll just die." Conversely he got AR14 training back in 2013.

I'm really not enjoying looking at White House and State Department socials and thinking "It's like Idiocracy but make it malevolent."
rebeccmeister: (Default)
rebeccmeister ([personal profile] rebeccmeister) wrote2025-09-07 08:38 pm
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Schrodinger's cream cheese [food]

Some time ago, there were some batches of homemade jam that turned out less than ideal - i.e. too sweet, too much pectin, et cetera. One of the ideas that arose to help dispatch those jams was to make thumbprint cookies. S found a recipe for apricot thumbprint cookies, that called for a block of cream cheese. I bought two blocks at the time, but after making the first batch of cookies, came to realize that they weren't going to use up all that much jam, and they were something of a production to make.

And so the other block of cream cheese sat in the fridge.

There comes a point where a person wants to clear out the fridge. I looked at that block of cream cheese, and thought, "Hmm, I wonder if it's still any good."

But if I were to open the packaging and check it...it would definitely not keep for very long, so I'd need to do something with it ASAP.

I could either leave it be, and not know what kind of condition it was in, or open it and have a project on my hands.

Anyway, the cookies are delicious.
sistawendy: a cartoon of me in club clothes (dolly)
sistawendy ([personal profile] sistawendy) wrote2025-09-07 04:10 pm
Entry tags:

Nun cuts rug.

I celebrated the end of a hellacious work week at the Mercury. Shallow fashion details: bra-like top with cone shaped studs (good for scratching people), short pink sparkly circle skirt, and for the first time in over a decade, thigh high boots. I'd kind of promised Funny Lady and DJ Hana Solo I'd wear the boots, so I did. I don't regret that too much, but you know you're going to pay a price when cis women younger than you are say they can't walk in heels like that. I was dancing in them.

Funny Lady invited me to an afterparty, and you know I don't say no to invitations from her if I can help it. So, Temptress is dating two fellas, which is sort of good news: one of them is vile, and the other is Bearded Decent Guy. BDG lives just a short walk from the Merc in what, it must be said, is a nice place with really high ceilings. There were kitties to pet and clothes that mysteriously came off as we afterpartied.

I finally bailed at 0220, having scratched a few people, as the last of the Red Bull was wearing off. Oddly, I couldn't find BDG on my way out the door to say goodbye. There weren't many places he could have hidden. [Edited to add: Funny Lady thinks he was having a smoke on the roof.]
anne: (awesomesox)
anne ([personal profile] anne) wrote2025-09-07 01:45 pm

help I fell in

I've been fandoms-in-law with kpop for decades, but KPop Demon Hunters pushed me over the edge into the rabbit hole. So far my kpop buds have told me about EXO, Stray Kids, Ateez, and Mamamoo. Other suggestions very welcome--Athénaïs, I'm looking at you, obviously!

My current favorite subgenre is "Youtube vocal coaches losing their everlovin minds about Ejae belting an A5 and ad-libbing a D6."

technical singing wonk alert: those are notes that opera singers hit, except for the belted A5, which is...I'm not sure even Mariah Carey ever did that. D6 is one step higher than you hear in Allegri's Miserere. tl;dr Ejae should have been a household name a long time ago and I hope she gets a recording contract if she wants one.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
elainegrey ([personal profile] elainegrey) wrote2025-09-07 09:29 am
Entry tags:

(morning writing)

Spent a remarkably long time making email filters yesterday: too many things i don't want to unsubscribe from but are frustrating when mixed in with different messages. Hopefully tagging and sorting by those tags will create an easy to skim, easy to purge alternative inbox.

Then worked on the work thing.

I sat on the couch all day and think that did in my lower back. I didn't want to sit at the desk.

Spicebush berries are coming in. I haven't used the ones from last year: too much waiting for a special occasion. I'd mashed the fatty fruit part up with sugar creating a rosy orange sugar i kept in the fridge. I'll probably do that again as well as a dehydration batch.

Meeting my dad and sister to celebrate Mom's birthday today. I had completely forgotten it. Which has no emotional significance for me - just the relational piece of being surprised with the need to participate in a gather.

sistawendy: me in a Gorey vamp costume looking up (skeptic coy Gorey tilted down)
sistawendy ([personal profile] sistawendy) wrote2025-09-06 12:54 pm
Entry tags:

a nearly Pyrrhic victory

[I meant to post this yesterday. Sheesh.]

I slept from 2120 to 0510 last night — with interruptions from two on-call pages and my smoke alarm, which faraway wildfires set off. Hey, at least I don't feel zombic.

Speaking of on-call, I had plans to go to a munch or maybe circumflatulate, but I spent the evening at my desk. It's as if I'm paying for a couple of months of relatively easy on-call shifts. So I wish I had something to write about dating or (ahem) unusual tastes, but I don't.
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
elainegrey ([personal profile] elainegrey) wrote2025-09-06 07:54 am
Entry tags:

(morning writing)

Dad's heart surgery on Tuesday went very well, the mitral valve flap modified so there is no more backflow. Sister L was at the hospital during the day Tuesday and Wednesday. I came in Tuesday evening and helped him with dinner and various needs. L got him home on Wednesday.

I've spent the past Wednesday and Thursday evenings with Dad, slept the night on the couch, and drove home to be at work on time. This was to be there in case the surgical incision location had issues or the lingering effects of anesthesia needed counteraction by a clear headed person.

Work has been intense although i couldn't really say why.

The long Labor Day weekend had some yard work, an obsessive analysis about Louisiana Irises to identify ones that bloomed late and would give me color diversity -- and then i questioned whether i should spend money that way. (And whether i would complete the plant removal needed to create the home for them - -would having them need a home be motivation?) I also made fig jam with pectin which had irregular setting. I think the pot isn't getting hot enough in the top level, and that the first jars filled are the ones that didn't set. I will need to re-address this batch, too.

brithistorian: (Default)
brithistorian ([personal profile] brithistorian) wrote2025-09-05 02:49 pm
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Watching "Kpopped" on Apple TV.

Yesterday I started watching Kpopped, the new song competition show that blends K-pop and Western artists. I watched the first two episodes last night, and I'm really enjoying it. I think the format is really great — everyone has fun because the stakes are so low. Each episode follows the same format:

  1. A K-pop group is split in half.
  2. Each half of the group works with a Western artist to create and perform a "K-popified" version of one of that artist's songs.
  3. The in-studio audience votes on the winning group.
  4. Immediately after the winning group is announced, the two halves of the K-pop group are reunited to perform one of the group's songs along with the Western artists.

There are no penalties for losing, no prizes for winning. Just performance and comradery between musicians.

The two episodes I've watched so far are:

  1. Half of Billlie performs "Savage" with Megan Thee Stallion, the other half performs "Lady Marmalade" with Patti LaBelle.
  2. Both halves of Itzy perform with Emma Bunton and Mel B from the Spice Girls. One group performs "Wannabe" and the other performs "Be As One."

A recurring theme is the Western artists having trouble learning the K-pop choreography. (Except for Patti LaBelle — out of respect for her age, they had her stay still and everyone danced around her.)

brithistorian: (Default)
brithistorian ([personal profile] brithistorian) wrote2025-09-05 01:47 pm
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About riding a pegasus

I'm currently reading Dragons of the Autumn Twilight[^1] by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman and it's given me a question about riding pegasi. I had always pictured pegasus riders as sitting behind the wings, probably leaning forward and holding on the bases of the wings. But in chapter 12, when the characters have to ride pegasi, Weis and Hickman explicitly describe them as "sitting in front of the powerful wings." This seems to make sense, because it would put the riders in front of the flapping of the wings (and the powerful gusts of wind that the wings would create), but at the same time it seems problematic from a point of view of equine anatomy, because it doesn't seem like there would be room for a rider to be in front of the wings. And as I write this post, I find myself wondering if there's really something here, or if I've just been struck by an oddly chosen word that the authors wrote and then never looked back at.[^2]

When you think about humanoids riding on pegasi, where do you imagine them relative to the wings?

[^1] I missed reading the Dragonlance books back when they were new, but I was recently able to grab a huge mob of them as ebooks from Humble Bundle and I'm enjoying them. It's brutally obvious (at least in the first book, which this is) that they're the result of someone recording their D&D campaign as a novel, but they're still fun to read. [^2] It doesn't help matters that the pegasi use magical/psychic powers to put the characters to sleep as soon as they take off, in order to keep them from freaking out during the course of the ride.[^3] [^3] Which then opens up the question of how unconscious humanoids stay on the pegasi's backs. Do the pegasi have magic for that as well?

rebeccmeister: (Default)
rebeccmeister ([personal profile] rebeccmeister) wrote2025-09-05 01:27 pm
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Sigh, goodbye, tooth [status]

Somehow, it's the Friday of the first week of classes. Tooth-out Day. I'm glad that this one could be done at my regular dentist's office, instead of having to travel to the oral surgeon. A small comfort. There is nothing about tooth removal that is good, even in the best possible circumstances it is tragic. This was the best possible circumstances.
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jeliza ([personal profile] jeliza) wrote2025-09-04 09:46 pm

Commerce!

 I have three shows this month, after having only three in the entirety of the year up to this point.  It is exciting and also slightly terrifying. 

First! The Ballard makers market and bar hop, specifically the old stove brewery. I have made many boxes and bookmarks to accompany the beer.

Second! Armadillo Con's art show, which will have boxes and jewelry but not me. 

Third! Pancakes and Booze Seattle, with all the things including me.