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People Sure Are.
A woman claimed the chair next to mine and was joined shortly thereafter by her companion. She sent him into the building. He returned with a phone; I assumed she'd forgotten hers. Then she ordered him up again and he came back with second phone. And then a tablet. I realized to my chagrin that he was being dispatched to find a device that would connect to the bluetooth speaker she had with her. Alas, with the fourth device, they managed to get it to work. Goodbye, peaceful rustle of the wind in the trees, I thought, and resigned myself to having to listen to whatever music they chose to inflict on the rest of us.
Half an hour later another resident came down, grabbed a table by the grills, and fired up his bluetooth speaker. Pool Woman lost her mind. "Oh my god, I can hear his music from here. Doesn't he realize we can hear his music from here? I don't want to listen to his music. Oh my god, this is so obnoxious." I, and the 15 to 20 other people who undoubtedly also own bluetooth speakers but had collectively elected not to use them so that no one would have to listen to anyone else's music, bit our tongues.
And kept biting them as Pool Woman spent the next 15 minutes commanding her partner to move their speaker to various locations around the pool deck and progressively ratcheting up the volume as she and Grill Man engaged in passive aggressive sonic warfare with each other. Ironically, this turned out to be better for my reading concentration because Pool Woman and Grill Man's music combined to become a white noise racket that was easier to tune out than a single source of noise pollution.
When a third dude appeared with yet another bluetooth speaker, I knew it was time to (ahem) throw in the towel and head back up. I wonder what the final speaker count was by the time the pool closed.
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Picture Book Monday: A Time to Keep
She recalls dancing round the bonfire for the New Year; sugaring off in March; an Easter egg tree the decorated eggs of âgoose, duck, chicken, bantam, and pigeon,â with tiny canary eggs at the very tip top. (What I would give for a sight of this tree in real life!) May baskets and Maypoles in May, watching the fireworks in the nearby village from the top of the hill on the Fourth, and her daughterâs birthday in August, with a stunning two-page spread showing the cake all glowing with candles as it floats down the stream.
Even if I had a stream, I donât believe I would ever come up with the idea of floating a cake down it, or have the guts to do it. What if the cake capsized! But this is the difference between me and Tasha Tudor: Tudor doesnât imagine what could go wrong, but how ethereally beautiful it would be if the cake floats down the stream all right.
A Halloween party for Halloween, with bobbing for apples and âpumpkin moonshines,â as Tudor calls jack-o-lanterns; and then Christmas, Christmas, Christmas, starting with the Advent Calendar and St. Nicholas Day (with St. Nicholas cake, whose existence I have hitherto not suspected), and a walk through the woods on Christmas eve to see the Christ child in a full size creche. And then back to the house for the Christmas tree, all glimmering with candlesâŚ
All of this is quite a lot of work, of course. A full size creche does not construct itself, and a Christmas tree with candles has to be fresh cut from the woods and watched like a hawk. But so much of the joy of holidays is in the work, if you feel the work not as a task that needs to be disposed of but a part of the celebration.
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Sunshine Revival Challenge #4. #5 and #6
No energy at all for doing the creativity prompts right now.
Challenge #4
Fun House
Journaling: What is making you smile these days? Create a top 10 list of anything you want to talk about.
Getting a message from Stepdaughter with pictures of my granddaughter.
Face-timing with my nephew and niece.
My cat.
Taking a walk by the lake where I live.
Going to the summer house.
Finishing a sewing project.
Trying a new recipe and really liking it, so it gets added to the dinner rotation.
Thinking about it, cooking in general makes me smile.
Finishing cleaning the house. I loathe the actual cleaning, but love the finished result.
Listening to music I love.
Challenge #5
Journaling prompt: Be a carnival barker for your favorite movie, book, or show (or any other of your choice - game, comic, anything else)! Write a post that showcases the best your chosen title has to offer and entices passersby to check it out.
I will do a little rerun here, and point you to this post, where I talk about two of my all time favorites, Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë and Gaudy Night by Dorothy L. Sayers.
Challenge #6
Journaling prompt: What games do you play, if any? Are you a solo-gamer or do you view games as a social activity?
I don’t play computer games, apart from solitaire. I’ve tried, and promptly get mind-numbingly bored. I do enjoy board games on occasion, though.
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Jo Graham: The Blood of the Bull (Book Review)
( Mild spoilers ensue )
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Sunshine Revival Challenge #6
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The Midway
Journaling prompt: What games do you play, if any? Are you a solo-gamer or do you view games as a social activity?
Creative prompt: Write a story/fic around the theme "game night".
Well, since you asked. :P
I've played video games for as long as I can remember. My dad was an early adopter of technology and he brought home an IBM clone in the late 1980s, when I was in grade school. He would download tons of games from BBSes for my brother and me. Sometimes these were pirated games from big companies, but this was also a huge heyday for what we would now call "indie" gamesâstuff coded by one guy in his basement or a couple of college students in the computer lab. Platformers, shooters, puzzle games, arcade clones, roguelikes, RPGs, text adventures, you name it, we played it. Often we didn't know what a game even was until we ran it, because while the original BBS post might have explained what it was, all we saw was an EXE file that was limited to eight characters.
I think gaming was always social for me. Some of the early games my brother and I played did have hot-seat multiplayer (alternating who's sitting at the keyboard) but if it was a single-player game we'd just take turns, and shamelessly order each other around if we thought the other wasn't playing it right. XD When I got a little older and more of my friends started to have computers or consoles at home, inviting people over to play games was a huge thing. I was just recently reminiscing about going over to my friend's house to play Myst, which was a massive phenomenon in 1993. We were young and the logic puzzles were too hard for us, so it would just degenerate into heckling the game and each other until we collapsed in hysterical laughter. That's still one of my favorite gaming memories... and I still don't think I've ever actually beaten Myst.
( cut for length )
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ST: Strange New Worlds 3.01 and 3.02
( While the season opener resolves last season's cliffhanger, episode 2 makes one of Peter David's inventions canon )
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The Beauty Way
And here is the point of no return: I am watching their vlogs and having Feelings.
When they all visit the sea and a dripping Yonghee revenges himself on Hyunsuk by catching hold of his legs to flip him into the water, Hyunsuk stands up drenched, and they hug. It's the sort of hug where you can't tell whether Yonghee initiated it or Hyunsuk, but their arms around each other enclose my heart, making it squeeze with affection, assuring me of much to daydream about these two. Later, at their hotel, Yonghee plays the flute while Hyunsuk reads aloud, bits of prose that sound like poetry, and the moment passes, but the feeling doesn't. The feeling persists, like a floating bubble, when Seunghun asks Hyunsuk to pass him the book he was reading from, only to place it under his head as a pillow. Yonghee jokingly tells Hyunsuk to keep the book ready as a coaster when they make ramyeon. I love this feeling, warm and fuzzy around the edges, floaty, big enough to burst.
They're already on their six-year anniversary, so their contracts will likely expire at seven. I'm melancholy.
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Weekly proof of life: books (reading and ordering thereof), inc. an audiobook | A bounty of berries
As for fiction, I started--brace yourself--listening to an audiobook. I don't really do audio formats at all! But
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*A small order from Book Outlet contained What Goes with What: 100 Recipes, 20 Charts, Endless Possibilities (Julia Turshen); Half the Sugar, All the Love: 100 Easy, Low-Sugar Recipes for Every Meal of the Day (Jennifer Tyler Lee and Anisha Patel), which crossed my radar early on in the "must keep an eye on blood sugar" process and stuck because it doesn't use any artificial sweeteners (since I've never met one I didn't hate); Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End; and the first and third installments of the Murderbot Diaries consolidated editions, which means I now own books 1, 2, 6, and 7 in hard copy.
Not sure if I'll just keep an eye out for the second volume to turn up there too or if I'll cave and just buy it. I'm glad there's a release that combines novellas! But I'm also eyeing the hard copy option for Network Effect and wondering if there's going to be a release of it that matches this set. I like all the original covers, but I also like my physical books to match. (Does anyone know if there's any plan for a matching rerelease?)
(Am I still grumpy that--unless something's changed?--it seems like the first three of Wells' Raksura books got released in mass market paperbacks, which I pounced on because that's my preferred format, but the fourth and fifth didn't? YES.)
Cooking/Baking: Mid-week,
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Yesterday
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Signalboost: fan_writers comm - for meta about writing
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And here's code for the promo banner that links back to the comm. You can select-all of the contents, then post it wherever.
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New Community for Fan Writers!
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Come on over to
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- "Where I Need to Be": A discussion on your preferred writing environment.
- "Links to Writing Meta": Writing meta from AO3 and Dreamwidth.
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Foundation: 3.02
( Spoilers want more time )