March 22nd, 2026
siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 12:31am on 2026-03-22 under , ,
[requires both audio and video]

Jonasquin on YT (previously) has written a wholly original motet in the 16th century style after Desprez upon the cantus firmus "Seven Nations Army", for the words of Psalm 10, verses 2, 3, 7-11.

Comment would be superfluous.

2026 Mar 20: Jonasquin YT: "A 16th century motet for the US President"



Click through to the video on YT to see the translation in the description.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Recovering, grumpily, after that 19-hour sleep that did do me a lot of good. When [personal profile] bunnyhugger got up she wanted to know why Meijer's hadn't filled my Paxlovid prescription. I had assumed they were getting a supply from another store and figured to give to later in the afternoon (when I'd assume everything got transferred around locally). She pressed me that this was way too long a wait, and I called the pharmacy and learned there was some problem with the prescription. They wouldn't say what. [personal profile] bunnyhugger, working from her experience, supposed this was the doctor's office not providing adequate instructions on how to take the medicine. Our doctor's office tends to just suppose that, like ``take per the box says'' or ``take per the schedule we worked out'' is enough and our local Meijer's tends to see that as ``not nearly enough instruction''.

And, yes, part of the point of separating doctor from pharmacist is to have an independent set of eyes looking at medicines and possible interactions and whether the instructions make sense. And you kind of want a pharmacist who's going to be hard on ``can we trust the patient has the information needed to take this right?'' But then, ``take like the box says'' ought to be enough. And, more, my doctor's office, which is like three minutes down the road from Meijer's, should know by now that this pharmacy is going to be the stickler and shouldn't be letting sloppy instructions through.

Anyway, the Meijer pharmacist called my doctor's office and got the on-call physician and straightened out whatever the issue was. (I am only assuming it was insufficiently precise dosage instructions.) [personal profile] bunnyhugger went to the store and got the medicine and I've taken my first round as I write this and plausibly the second by the time you read it. We'll see how long I spend asleep after this.


I know you're disappointed not seeing Dutch Wonderland pictures. Let me try and make up for it with some here:

P1110465.jpeg

Cute little kiddie ride (it is a kids park, mind) of bears orbiting a beehive. That's nice seeing.


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Array of heraldic-ish shields decorating the bathrooms. I don't know if they're referencing anything particular; I haven't played enough Crusader Kings to recognize particular shields well.


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Hey, want a Dutch Wonderland Driver's License? I was a little tempted, must admit; you don't get custom-printed souvenir nonsense like this anymore.


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Exploration Island was new to us since our 2010 visit. What does this slightly three-dimensional Duke see? Well ...


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A gondola ride, an antique autos ride, and the monorail all in one picture! I don't think there's a spot where all three are atop each other but they do come close.


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As Dutch Wonderland is in Pennsylvania yes, it's required to have a Turnpike ride.


Trivia: The medical applications of sugar and spices is reflected, by the end of the 13th century, the terms ``spicers'', ``pepperers'', ``apothecaries'', and ``spicer-apothecaries'' selling the preparations that, mixed with sugar and spices, became bearable to swallow. Source: Sweets: A History of Temptation, TIm Richardson.

Currently Reading: Inspired Enterprise: How NASA, the Smithsonian, and the Aerospace Community Helped Launch Star Trek, Glen E Swanson.

March 21st, 2026
posted by [personal profile] anniemal at 06:37pm on 2026-03-21
why are all the ads onour phones warning us that we are losing our minds? Does the GP really think that, contrary to natural cultures' belief, elders are more foolish than the young? We are wise, have experienced what younger people have only heard of. Maybe in their culture the elders are foolish. I see it happening. Not in mine. I am a quiet crone, a wise woman. I may not look wise, but watch my grocery slip. It is invariably at least off.25%. Usually 33%. I also know the edibility and health uses of everything growing in my yard. grass is useless.

I really wish I could speak to young people about the usefulness of the weeds around them. How many people even our age know thw usefulness of broad and lance-leaved plantain (plantago major and lanceolata) as very good fungicides? I have used them to broad good effect twice. as tea and poultice. It works. I will provide details, if asked. And there are many others, but one must ask and think to use the weeds around them. Ask those who have studied and know. Ask those who have done this.

Oh young ones, trace the tracks of knowledge of the elders' elders. There is balance. And stop overbreeding. Your genes aren't all that good. Also, having to remember things like phone numbers is L T 4 U. Lazy brains are evil's playground.

Thinking is fun. Creating useful things and beautiful things is the best humanity can do.
posted by [personal profile] anniemal at 05:06pm on 2026-03-21
If you are a priest or rabbi foolish ynogh to believe in a Christian God or Jewish ___________ That whose name is not to be spoken (you guys gotta be nuts), Your tenets have damned or excommunicated ten percent of your possible gullibles.

I personally have never subscribed to a belief in anyone else's silly notion of a god.

I believe that most of humanity is stupid ynogh to believe in all sorts of Gods

Ergo, I think most of humanity is stupid.

I think many Priests, Bishops, Cardinals, are liars


I wanted to be Pope when I was 12 Then they told me I had to have a penis.

Back to the LaRousse Encyclopedia of Astronomy. Uhh. Heaven was where?
posted by [personal profile] anniemal at 03:56pm on 2026-03-21
I am the hardest core feminist you'll ever meet. My business didn't hire men for ten years. We tossed their applications in the wastebasket as soon as they were out the door. A new generation of them made those things acceptable. We (I and the body of us who deemed someone okay to work with us. We WERE a tribe.) seemed to hire homosexuals. Go figure. I had to make the decision to hire, and the decision to fire. UUUGH! I HATED that. No wonder Joanne chucked it onto me.

Gender

I'm troubled by it. Not so much for myself, but for others. I've always accepted being XX, but not the boundaries and suppositions society wants to impose on that chromosomal normality. Look it up, ignoramuses. Being ignorant is a remediable condition. Smart people seek to remedy their ignorance. We are all ignorant about something. Dismissing something you're ignorant about as unimportant is my HORRIBLYSTUPID father's failing.If someone cares about it, it might be important. Check it out.

Most people, I find, are very touchy about transgendered individuals. Not being one, I can't really speakas one. But, as a sorta mixed gender, I understand. I don't love being female. I find skirts irksome except for dancing. I wear trousers for daily life. So do many women. We like freedom of movement and not having to wash the hems. Like the men wash anything of ours. Mostly. I encompass exceptions to my sweeping generalisations.

In my lifetime(65yrs.), I have seen many XXs try to achieve status in society by acting like dominant XYs. Pathetic. Stooping to the warrior level. It'll work for now, but long term....you're a washout.
I've also seen XYs try nurturing. They admit to having that in them and act on it. Men can contribute more than sperm. XYs can actually be real.

So thi nk hard about social roles, gender identity(which is different), and greet everyone you meet with an open mind. As an open window Homo sapiens sapiens.

I really try to do that mostly, and mostly get shot down. But still I wake up again, and tryto not make the world worse.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] austin_dern at 01:45pm on 2026-03-21 under ,

So, I'm sick. It's Covid-19, somehow. [profile] bunny_hugger too.

How did we get it? No really obvious answer. The thing out of the ordinary for us within the plausible infection window is going to that show at the Wharton, but the facility is lots of big open air spaces and it wasn't crowded. There was one party near us, down a row and to the right, but that's all. Day after that we went to pinball which is more plausible, as it's more crowded and we had longer contact with people. And then Sunday we went to [profile] bunny_hugger's parents and ---

Oh yeah. They have it too. There's a possibility that they actually gave it to us, by the vector of some of the people who were in their house all week installing new energy-efficient appliances. But that's a crisis because of their advanced age and rickety health. [profile] bunny_hugger and I can lie down and feel miserable a while. They have a rough enough time breathing at the best of times.

My temperature has risen as high as 98.1 degrees Fahrenheit, which I recognize is not classically regarded as a ``fever'' but I promise you, for me that's high.

Anyway last night I went to nap about 6 pm and when my alarm went off at 9 pm thought no, I can't possibly, and went back to sleep more, and I finally felt up to being awake about 1 pm today so that's the state I'm in. More on this as it comes to pass.

Trivia: The earliest known example of a living tea plant to make it to Europe arrived in 1863, for Linnaeus's study. Others he sought were lost to storms or were eaten by rats or were not tea at all. Source: Tea: Addiction, Exploitation, Empire, Roy Moxham.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski.

jayblanc: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] jayblanc at 04:21pm on 2026-03-21
I had my enby'ness confirmed, a neighbours dog that 'is sexist towards men' came up to me and licked my hand.
malada: This is Coffee! (This is coffee)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 09:01am on 2026-03-21
Gold coin with a picture of President tRump!

Because of US law: “Only the portrait of a deceased individual may appear on United States currency and securities.”

According to the law, tRump needs to die before he gets his own coin.

Just to give an idea about the size of said minted gold - the largest American coin that was in standard circulation that I know of is the silver dollar at about one and a half inches. It's a hefty coin. I've got a bunch of them. After my grandma gave me a few I started collecting them when I was in high school. Not especially valuable. In general, coins are a lousy investment.

So if tRump wants his three inch coin (twice the size of his micro penis) he's going to have to get the law changed (act of Congress) or die.

I leave the matter up to Congress and the Universe.
Mood:: 'indescribable' indescribable
March 20th, 2026
siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 10:33pm on 2026-03-20 under
I knew that other contemporaneous cultures than those of Europe had unfathomably higher numbers of books than Europeans did, but I didn't know about this in retrospect obvious reason why:

2026 Mar 19: Dwarkesh Patel feat. Ada Palmer [DwarkeshPatel YT]: "Why Medieval Books Cost as Much as a House" (1 min, 7 sec):


Without papyrus, what you're writing on is a dead sheep. And if you think of the price of a head of lettuce and the price of a leather jacket, you're understanding the difference between a sheet of papyrus and writing on a dead sheep. So every page of a medieval book is as expensive as that much of a leather jacket. And a medieval book hand written costs as much as a house.

And so to have a library is to be not just rich but mega rich. So only the wealthiest cities contain anybody who has a library. The great library of the University of Paris, the library from Europe's perspective, has 600 books.

There's definitely more than 600 books in this room. Every kiosk at an airport selling Dan Brown novels has more than 600 books. This is nothing.

And at the same time as that, in the Middle East, sultans have libraries of over a thousand books or 5,000 books. There are libraries in Sub-Saharan Africa with thousands of books.* There are libraries in China with thousands of books. Because they in China have cheap paper and rice paper. The Middle East has papyrus.

Europe, and only Europe, is writing on a leather jacket.
* Three hundred thousand. It's been thirteen years and I am still not remotely over that fact. Every time I encounter it anew, my SCA persona gets acrophobic trying to imagine a library that big and has to sit down and put her head between her knees so she doesn't pass out.
siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 09:34pm on 2026-03-20 under ,
The previously expected ICE enforcement surge never materialized. Curious.

I wonder if this just means they're short-staffed. Or perhaps distracted.

(I also wonder if somebody made a judgment call not to try what they did in MN in MA, but have largely rejected the notion. It would not be to anybody's advantage if they did, on either side, but I'm not seeing a lot of good judgment in evidence anywhere.)
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] julian at 07:59pm on 2026-03-20
I've got a friend, a MUSH person, [personal profile] badfaun here, who lives over in Seattle, and who I have known for uh, 20 years now?, who's in the late stages of metastatic breast cancer, that spread to her brain, and is now in the cerebro spinal fluid, which is impressive in its inventiveness and staying power if nothing else.

(This is ileah/Francisco/Heart, for any GarouMUSH people around.)

She's pretty stubborn and pretty great, but the spread to the CSF is Just Not A Good Thing, and she's now going to be going to hospice.

Love to her, and her husband [profile] aerynvale, who's been a rock in all this.
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
I woke up this morning with a really puffy arm, from elbow down to hand, and it felt like I had exercised a lot, but I Had Not, so Calluna and I bundled ourselves off to Urgent Care, and Urgent Care looked at it, said, "Hm, likely not, but Just In Case..." and bundled us off to Emerson Hospital to get an ultrasound, which made me almost fall asleep, which was nice.

And I don't have a blood clot, but I do have sucky blood pressure. Which I knew. So I don't *think* it's an allergic reaction, but I do think it's vein related somehow, so, mystery.

For most of the morning it was gorgeous and sunny and in the 50s, and very springlike, which fits since it's the equinox and the first day of spring, so, happy spring!

Then we got lunch and coffee and started down Route 2 to Arlington to retrieve my wallet, WHICH the Arlington Police in fact found a day or so ago, after I had ordered new everything, (But I can at least get my driver's license for ID purposes. And the wallet, which I like.) *But then*, sitting at a traffic light, we got slammed into on what I thought was my rear end but was actually my passenger side. Passenger side airbag deployed, lots of broken glass also deployed, some of it onto Calluna and a little tiny bit on me. All told, about 6-7 cars were involved, plus Route 2 was closed for like an hour.

I'm very much lacking information about who hit whom and how, but it *seems* as if the person who set the chain reaction going is the one who ended up in front, and rolled over. No one would let me stick around or figure out other people's information, which makes sense because there was like, gas leaking and stuff. Not-very-informative news article.

This time I let them impound it because Calluna needed to get checked a the hospital (same one we just came from!), and I went along for the ride/also to get checked out. (I'm fine; she may have a slight concussion and her neck's hurting.) 'm pretty convinced it's totaled, but unlike when I got run into in Coventry, RI, Concord's only 45 mins or so from me, so I can go retrieve all my Stuff from it Sunday when I also go get my durn wallet.

Happily, my s-i-l loaned me their ancient and venerable Prius so I have wheelz currently.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 05:48pm on 2026-03-20 under ,
It turns out that changing Medicare Advantage plans is not costing me significant money: it looks as though the money I paid for prescriptions at the beginning of the year counts for a calendar-year maximum, even though I switched plans. I ordered another dose of Kesimpta on Wednesday, and they aren't charging me for it. As I said to [personal profile] cattitude and [personal profile] adrian_turtle, I'm glad that I could have afforded to pay that twice, but there are plenty of things I'd rather do with the money.

As a side note, this plan will pay for $65 per quarter of over-the-counter medications and some related things. I used part of this quarter's today to order Mucinex, Imodium, and an under-the-tongue digital fever thermometer. I think I can get them to pay for non-emergency transportation to medical appointments, and I should check what dental coverage I have.
jayblanc: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] jayblanc at 03:04pm on 2026-03-20
I did a gardening. Planted some Self Heal in the shaded spot next to the cat shelter, and dug out some thistles. Now tired.
sabotabby: (doom doom doom)
posted by [personal profile] sabotabby at 09:46am on 2026-03-20 under
 I mean I have to recommend Wizards & Spaceships' "Amazing Stories 100th Anniversary ft. Steve Davidson, Kermit Woodall and Lloyd Penney." It's in my contract. :) If you're into classic SF, you'll dig this one a lot.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Time for the weekly recap of my humor blog, by listing titles and nothing to tempt you into actually reading stuff. Well, the titles of the pairwise bracket contests give you a good idea whether that one's going to be of interest, I suppose.


It's a full day of pictures at Dutch Wonderland! Hope you like.

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The maker's plate, as promised for the carousel Dutch Wonderland has. Maximum speed of five and one-half rotations per minute which would be a great ride. I think it was running at an ordinary four.


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Some of the carousel horses as seen from the inside. Also oh, caught a picture of a kid looking happy for the ride.


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The park has a couple of animated puppet shows, like this one showing a quilting bee among Pennsylvania Dutch women.


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The new roller coaster: Merlin's Mayhem. Mayhem is the dragon.


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Merlin is the guy in the video screen here, doing the safety spiel while explaining the premise, which is that Mayhem has gone missing and you might be able to spot him from the ride. (If you can I missed it.)


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Couple of pictures of Mayhem growing up (there's also one of him hatching) and causing cute pudgy dragon trouble.


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The loading station, startlingly, blocks you off from the ride, the doors opening only when the train is ready to load. It's done up in a Tudor Or Something style, and is much darker than you'd think from this picture (you can infer the sensitivity and duration of the exposure from the girl's hands blurring), so it really does kind of look like you're off in some medieval castle and then suddenly there's a roller coaster through the doors.


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Joust is another of their roller coasters and fortunately we rode it last time, because it was out of operation the day we visited.


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Here's the lift hill of Kingdom Coaster (formerly Sky Princess), and a drop for their old-school log flume.


P1110454.jpeg

Train freshly dispatched. While Kingdom Coaster is in the main a wooden coaster, they've replaced part of the track with metal box and, for some reason, done it on the segment leading from the station to the lift hill, the least rattling and stressful part of the ride. Maybe they wanted to test the material out without risking anything.


P1110461.jpeg

Here's Kingdom Coaster, seen from the front. It's a logo that says, ``we were on deadline''.


P1110462.jpeg

Kingdom Coaster is next to Joust and here's the inactive coaster from the one we rode.


Trivia: When first distilled in the mid-1600s the drink was known as ``kill-devil'', but by 1651 was also called ``rumbullion'', from southern English slang meaning ``a brawl or violet commotion'', before being shortened to ``run''. Source: A History of the World in Six Glasses, Tom Standage. Englishman Richard Ligon described it as ``infinitely strong, but not very pleasant in taste''.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski.

March 19th, 2026
posted by [syndicated profile] wapsisquare_feed at 11:01pm on 2026-03-19

Posted by Paul Taylor

Hey folks, no comic this Friday as we’re getting our tax stuff organized to get turned into out CPA. Also, I’m an idiot and was so busy this last year, I forgot to set aside money for our tax preparer. It’s normally around $700 for the bill, so I’ll need to take on some more $150 commissions, trying to keep them to simple ideas with a single character. If you’re looking for a commission like that, please DM me here. If anyone just wants to donate to the tax fund, please feel free to use this link: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/pablowapsi

sabotabby: (jetpack)
I feel guilty every time I post about something shallow and trivial. However, I enjoy shitposting and we could all use the distraction. The way I distract myself is being spicy in fannish communities.

If you have emotional attachments to a certain cancelled sci-fi show and its creator, skip this post.

Still with me? Okay.

So I want to propose a new TV show for you. It's set IN SPACE in the far-flung future, think gritty space dystopia, think found family, think QUIPS and BANTER and BIG DAMN HEROES. 

Our heroes are the crew of a spaceship. They dress in snappy black and silver uniforms. They're all played by white guys and women, most with blond hair, all of them extremely fit and attractive. They have a cool logo that looks great on merch. Their ships are very cool looking and the best in the galaxy. They stand up for the common man. 

They are fighting a snivelly and sinister enemy, a vast galactic conspiracy that is secretly pulling the strings behind every bad guy of the week. Maybe they turn out to be, IDK, some kind of lizard alien or something.

By the way in case you're getting ideas about historical analogies here, I should make it clear that the first officer on the heroes' ship is a Jewish woman and the heroes don't commit any genocides on screen. In fact, one of them has a speech about how violence is bad in the first episode! They are shown to be very against war crimes in fact, it's the antagonists who are doing all the war crimes.

Now, a poll:

Poll #34385 Which would be less bad?
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 17


Which would be better, if this show concept HAD to exist?

View Answers

Depicting the protagonists doing war crimes
10 (58.8%)

Not depicting the protagonists doing war crimes
7 (41.2%)

gingicat: woman in a green dress and cloak holding a rose, looking up at snow falling down on her (just me - portrait)
posted by [personal profile] gingicat at 08:45am on 2026-03-19 under
siderea: (Default)
Just hit play.

(All about the sound, but visuals also nice.)

2026 Mar 18: Benn Jordan [BennJordan YT]: "I'm here to disrupt the finance synthesizer scene."

siderea: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] siderea at 12:36am on 2026-03-19 under ,
Screenshot of two comments on X.  One says, "Reading Dune.  Frank Herbert was cooking." and shows a section of a photo of a book page reading, "'Once, men turned their thinking over to machines in the hope that this would set them free.  But that only permitted other men with machines to enslave them.' '"Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a man's mind,"' Paul quoted."  Below that someone replied, paging Grok, X's resident AI, "please explain this post and the quote in in, what should I understand about it?"

Debate is raging on BSky if this is deliberate wit or accidental idiocy.

(h/t user mlyp.bsky.social)
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Our fish population has grown! Not by anything our fish have particularly done, though. [personal profile] bunnyhugger keeps an eye on people in the area looking to re-home goldfish they can't keep, and it's finally paid off. Someone who couldn't keep two plain old ordinary goldfish anymore put them up for adoption and [personal profile] bunnyhugger leapt at the chance. The person then asked if we could also take two fantailed goldfish and absolutely we can; we haven't had a fantail properly in getting near a decade.

So returning from a university meeting that [personal profile] bunnyhugger hadn't realized was called off, she diverted to meet some laconic guy who handed her a pretty hefty plastic container half-full of water and fish. Asked if we should return the container he just said no, so, I guess we have one of those containers that looks like people use to put oatmeal or breakfast cereals in? This could be the seed of a new kitchen organization system we don't actually use.

The fish we set in one of our tanks, the one with the fish we thought least likely to be so big as to swallow the newbies whole. The new fish are very small and goldfish will eat most anything that doesn't occlude their mouths. [personal profile] bunnyhugger was horrified today when she couldn't find the two non-fantails, although when I went in with a flashlight I was able to spot one. (The other, being a more silver-grey, would be difficult to see in the turbid water stirred up by her moving the water filters around.) So we believe they most likely survived all right and, with luck, will be going out to the nice fresh water of our outdoor pond soon. That pond's been filled to capacity thanks to a lot of recent heavy weather (see previous entries) so we just have to wait for it to warm up enough. Maybe clean it too.


Last time you'll recall we got into Dutch Wonderland and got a picture with Duke the Dragon. What comes next? Establishing shots, obviously, but of what?

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As it turned out the characters were going in after the morning session(?), off Duke went to the behind-the-stage areas.


P1110406.jpeg

No! No, Duke, don't go headless! What do you think this is, furry cons anymore?!


P1110410.jpeg

One of the behind-the-scenes buildings has a bunch of fake windows and paints of various characters, like here, with Duke, Merlin (bottom left), and a new dragon we could come to know as Mayhem.


P1110413.jpeg

Oh also the Easter Bunny? They've started doing an ``Eggcellent Celebration'' around Eastern, with Tuft the Easter Bunny.


P1110415.jpeg

They also have a Christmas event with Santa Claus. The knight down below is Sir Brandon, if I'm reading their page right, and the princess is Princess Brooke.


P1110416.jpeg

And here ... ah, an antique carousel! ... Well, not so much. Wikipedia says theirs is a Chance carousel that they installed the distant past of 1999, although the serial number on the plaque is 81-2865 which to me makes it sound like they got it after nearly twenty years of use. No way to know.


Trivia: The United Kingdom lost more than 1,525 warships over the course of World War II. Source: To Rule the Waves: How the British Navy Shaped the Modern World, Arthur Herman.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski. Weird to be reading a book about books sufficiently old (original publication 1999) that it doesn't mention and apologize for Melvil Dewey being like six bastards stacked on top of each other.

March 18th, 2026
sorcyress: Drawing of me as a pirate, standing in front of the Boston Citgo sign (Default)
posted by [personal profile] sorcyress at 10:50pm on 2026-03-18
I slept like garbage and it has given all of today a weird vibe.

Okay, actually today was reasonable decent in the actual day of it all. My classes seemed to go well! Students were doing mostly working at their own paces, but also they were actually doing that! I spent my prep knitting, which is not like 100% most effective work choice, but felt good to be doing and is scads better than playing phone games.

And then we had our geometry team meeting with our department head to review our midterm data and talk about things for the future and I got as close as I ever have to crying in front of my boss. Frustration, mostly. It was normal levels of annoying work bullshit until we got to the point where it was like "maybe next year we have a hard deadline of end of q2 [instead of doing the midterm in q3 like we have the last couple years]". And so I ask "would my [SpEd] inclusion classes be expected to take the exact same midterm?" and boss is all "obvs yes" at which point like.......

...I literally cannot teach the Inclusion classes the exact same curriculum at the exact same pace as the mainstream Geometry classes. We are "only" about a week behind right now, but that's because me and my co-teacher have been extremely thoughtful about what we can cut out of each unit and then doing so. The classes just pace slower in general, compounded by needing to spend more time reviewing algebra skills, compounded by needing to spend more time on classroom management and norm-setting and behavior stuff.

So like. Either I give them a midterm where they do piss because they haven't learned some of the stuff being covered, or I give them a midterm where they all do piss because I've rushed everything so fast they can't actually learn it. "oh but you should have high standards of rigor for your students" _yes that's the problem_. If I didn't give a shit if my kids actually learned the material I could get through this stuff snaps easy.

It's just another step on a whole fuck of bullshit we've been having all year(s). Somehow I will make it work, I'm sure. (but first I must...1).

So the end of my work day had me all verklempt and off-kilter, and unfortunately equity team did not really fix the problem (some weeks it is the best meeting I attend, some weeks it's more focused on the depressing business of dragging the rest of the school kicking and screaming into being anti-racist. The work is always good, but sometimes it's more draining than others.)

Played a bunch of phone games. Did not adequetely prep for tomorrow, by which I mean, did fuck_all_ at the school. Gave up at 6 and came home and did manage to bully myself into a PowerHour which helped. I reread the Adventures of Blue Avenger and did a wee bit more knitting and then ate dinner. Played some Stardew after. Now I'm writing these so I can go off to bed in a maybe-timely manner.

I hope you are well and that tomorrow is better for us all (I always hope this second part). I love you.

~Sor
MOOP!

1: It occurs to me that this essay might actually be worth opening up in the tab next to Good Girls Aren't Here and just having both of them permanent features of my computer. I certainly reference it often enough.
malada: typing (typing)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 02:41pm on 2026-03-18 under
I developed a rash on my legs when I was around 20. Red, scaly, itchy. The dermatologist said it was para-psoriasis and it would go away in time.

It did not. For decades I suffered with dry, itchy skin. And it spread over 80 percent of my body.

When I was 40 I went to another dermatologist and he said I had psoriasis. After some coal tar treatments which did nothing he stuffed me in a Light Box. UVB treatment. After a few weekly treatments I started to clear. I was almost completely clear after a few months. Then he retired and no one had light treatment. The rash returned and I suffered.

A year and a half ago I decided to stop suffering and go find another dermatologist. They took biopsies and diagnosed me with psoriasis. They offered self-injectables. That kind of treatment is often hit and miss so they tried me on a pill - which did nothing. Finally I found a place that had a Light Box and again, within a month of weekly visits the rash was in retreat.

Then my scalp started flaking. Then itching. Then bleeding. Then came the scabs and the pus. A year ago my hair started falling out. I'm now 80 percent bald. During this time I saw my two dermatologists They tried a few creams and antibiotics with no effect.

Then they brought in a more experienced nurse. She took one look at my scalp and her eyes widened with horror. Steroids and a new antibiotic were prescribed along with more biopsies. After two weeks with new medications my scalp is 70 percent clear.

I now have a new diagnosis: Eczema.

The scalp may be something different but the treatment is working. The doctor is unsure if the condition scarred my scalp so hair regrowth is considered a stretch goal. I'm keeping a good attitude towards this but decades of suffering could have been avoided if I had been properly diagnosed at 20.
Mood:: 'quixotic' quixotic
sabotabby: (books!)
posted by [personal profile] sabotabby at 10:37am on 2026-03-18 under
Just finished: Indigenous Ingenuity: A Celebration of Traditional North American Knowledge by Deidre Havrelock and Edward Kay. This is worth a read but also I wanted it to be better than it was. My main issue was the tone of condescension cloaked in breathless wonderment towards its young audience and precolonial Indigenous peoples, which I honestly do not think is intentional on the part of the writers and more a factor of how people think that children ought to be spoken to. My second issue had to do with the ending, which focused on ecological technologies and suddenly jumped forward to present day Indigenous Nations working with governments to create sustainable ecosystems. Very cool, but because of the book's structure and emphasis on precolonial technologies, it made it seem like Indigenous societies today are only working in that field. (This is not remotely true! If the section on communication technology had, for example, included a jump forward to discuss the Skobot, I'd have been fine with this aspect.) But also, it described things like carbon trading fairly uncritically, when in fact while carbon trading is better than carbonmaxxing like our current overlords are doing, it's a fairly useless system that greenwashes the omnicidal criminal corporations turning our world into a burning hellscape. So if the book is inaccurate about this, what else is it inaccurate about?

Beowulf translated by Francis B. Gummere. It's Beowulf. This is the less fun translation, albeit the one I'm more familiar with, because my hold on the Headley one didn't come in on time. We can discuss whether or not it's the most metal of all historical epics.

Currently reading: To Ride a Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose. Speaking of Scandinavian-influenced epics. This is the sequel to To Shape a Dragon's Breath, which as you might recall broke all the way through my general dislike of YA to be one of my favourite books of the year. So far I am binging this and it's excellent. Our heroine, Anequs, wants nothing more than to get through her time at Kuiper's Academy, get licensed to ride her dragon, and return to her people on Masquapaug permanently, preferably with her two love interests, Theod and Liberty. But now the Anglish have set up a presence on the island and she's increasingly being drawn into shitty white-people politics that she wants nothing to do with.

This introduces a whack of new characters and factions. There's a Jewish character, Jadzia (Blackgoose, you fuckin' nerd lol), who I adore, and a secret society called the Disorder of the Grinning Teeth, which is the name of my new black metal band. There's also a new teacher whose name escapes me but who provides an interesting contrast in pedagogy from the first book. I should add that this is very much a magical boarding school story and not a residential school story, so it's very cool to see the idea of colonial educational institutions that could, theoretically, be reformed and democratized rather than needing to be closed and having the people who run them thrown in Forever Jail. 

Also the dragons are cool.
mrs_sweetpeach: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] mrs_sweetpeach at 10:52am on 2026-03-18 under
location: My home office
Mood:: 'sleepy' sleepy
zenlizard: Because the current occupation is fascist. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] zenlizard at 09:35am on 2026-03-18 under
Mood:: 'cynical' cynical
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

Sunday we had the time and chance to visit [personal profile] bunnyhugger's parents. Not for any special occasion, past that we hadn't seen them in a while and the next obvious time to visit, early April, will also have us busy with egg-dyeing. So it was a good chance to visit and talk with them and we were totally ready to bring board games except. You know how I mentioned the weather Friday was extremely windy to the point of being dangerous driving? The weather Sunday as extremely windy to the point of driving being annoying, but not actively hazardous. But they were warning about thunderstorms rolling in over the evening and our choices would be either to leave early enough we missed them or late enough that they passed. Given that I had to be up at 7 am, leaving early seemed the less bad course.

Still, there would be time for some pleasant ordinary stuff, like finding out just what had gone wrong with the iPad [personal profile] bunnyhugger's mother was using to read electronic books. (The system had logged her out and she didn't know how to tell that.) And they have a new induction stove, paid for by some federal program for energy efficiency that also saw them get a heat pump for the house. The heat pump we didn't see so much of except that the house was at 74 degrees which, even granting that the outside was at 70 degrees, seems like a lot. But I'll sometimes set my car that high while driving, if it's cold out, so I'm hardly a thermal innocent.

One side effect of the new stove is that they were very anxious to explain just how it would work should I make tea (which, somehow, it ends up I didn't). It turns out to be that you turn the dial, and use the induction-friendly tea kettle, which isn't really different from the old process. I think they're just anxious; they said they hadn't made anything with it yet, although they'd only got the new stove/oven two days before.

The other side effect is they offered us first dibs on all their old, induction-hostile, cookware, which, sure, we can use some new pots and pans. Also one of those big spaghetti pots with the built-in strainer which is going to change everything. Mostly pasta, and in small ways.

Her father, having sworn off weird impulsive eBay purchasing obsessions, has what are allegedly foghorns. When I got the chance to confirm I heard this right it turned out there was controversy about whether he had a legitimate foghorn. He demonstrated and it sounded, really, more like scooting the stool backwards in shop class, but I guess there are circumstances that might be a useful noise?

We set out so very early, and missed all but light sprinklings of rain getting home, when we discovered [personal profile] bunnyhugger had left her favorite travel mug with her parents. It'll be safe.


So on in to Dutch Wonderland. Hey, remember when I said I was going to be sharing fewer photographs so I could pick the better and more interesting ones instead of sharing five views of the same Tilt-a-Whirl ride sign? Me neither.

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You enter the park through the castle building and on the side is this event space, where we saw what looked like the mascot performers doing a pep rally.


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Right? You'd only be doing a Simon Says sort of thing to get everyone in synch at the start of a walkaround shift, right?


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Duke the Dragon is the mascot we're most interested in, of course, but they have a knight and a princess and royals and all and, most recently, Merlin.


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Clock tower as we enter. Note that it had the time correct.


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And here's Duke, getting a picture with some kid! This is three parks in a row we've seen the mascots for!


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So we got a picture with Duke and learned that actually, he was going in so somehow what we saw in the event room was the end of their shift? But they were taking spot photos while that lasted.


Trivia: Vanguard I had the highest apogee of any International Geophysical Year satellite. Source: Project Vanguard: The NASA History, Constance McLaughlin Green, Milton Lomask. NASA SP-4202.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski.

PS: What's Going On In Judge Parker? Who arrested Randy Parker and what for? December 2025 - March 2026 in one of the last two comic strip plot recaps still touching the long-ago distant past year of 2025.

March 17th, 2026
watersword: A compass and the words "a compass that doesn't point north" (Pirates of the Caribbean: compass)
posted by [personal profile] watersword at 09:52pm on 2026-03-17

Oh my GOD can it be spring yet, I am SO TIRED OF WINTER. There is a tiny tiny tiny pink nubbin of rhubarb in the garden. No asparagus yet. I cannot wait to get the dopamine hit of seeing my summer clothes for the first time in months.

The NT's production of The Importance of Being Earnest is of course a delight (Sharon D. Clarke deserves a knighthood and Ncuti Gatwa wears clothes, and few clothes, to perfection); [profile] velveteenrabbi and D's Pesach class is as excellent as one might expect; somewhere on this desk is an embroidery needle and I am convinced the gherkin is going to stab herself with it. Wednesday is actually largely unscheduled and I need only survive the conference Thursday, which requires me to leave the house at godawful o'clock.

I am looking forward to the three-hour train ride and the Dessa concert so much. And then I get a weekend in my favorite city! I have been promised brunch and a museum and rainbow cookies and bagels. (Promised by myself and I intend to follow through in every particular.)

redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 08:27pm on 2026-03-17
I am back from Montreal. The trip home had some annoying delays while they found us an airplane, or figured out how to tow the one they had, or something, but was otherwise fine.

Rysmiel gave me a back rub last night that did significant good for the tension in my neck and right shoulder. I currently have an unrelated shoulder pain, from spending too much time poking at my phone while spending several hours at the airport, but if I'm somewhat cautious now that I'm home, that should take care of itself in a day or three.

I am catching up on some of the PT exercises I didn't do while traveling because they require elastics, or the foam roller, or weights, but doing all of them tonight would be imprudent.
elynne: (Default)
Or rather, a repost, because I can't find the original post and it seems like the link I had is only working some of the time, so this is a test to see if this will work instead! It's a scene from early in "The Monsters We Become," where Soo Foun shifts to her dragon form to protect Hades and Urianger from a giant formerly underwater creature that is now extremely angry about not being under water. Meg James is the fabulous artist who created this scene based on my flailing descriptions of the critter Soo fights. And for reference, the dragon shown in the picture is about the size of a horse, so the eel-thing is really big!

Read more... )
malada: Canadian flag text I stand with Canada (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 12:52pm on 2026-03-17 under
Does the Strait of Hormuz need ships to protect it from Iranian aggression? All those important tankers need help getting through safely?

How about sending all those seized Russians yachts? Arm them with 50 caliber machine guns and drone jamming equipment. How about a nice rocket launcher and a mini gun? Maybe mount a few torpedo tubes just for good measure.

Then man them with MAGA members of the 101st Keyboard Division and some NRA Nut jobs. Make sure they fly some big tRUMP flags. They may not move very fast but the food should be excellent.








I meant this as comedy but I'm really starting to like this idea.
Mood:: 'creative' creative
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] julian at 11:22am on 2026-03-17
There's this Utah murder case I just found out about, with this woman who killed her husband with Fentanyl, who then wrote a children's book on grief and loss called "Are You With Me?"

I tried looking this up on Amazon, and presumably the listing's been taken down due to the, you know, murder parts, so the first result in the search currently leads to another author's book...

There Are Moms Way Worse Than You.

No, no, I don't... quite think so.

( Are You With Me? looks syrupy but perfectly fine. Meanwhile, There Are Moms Way Worse Than You looks quite fun.)
mrs_sweetpeach: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] mrs_sweetpeach at 10:55am on 2026-03-17 under


  Click to embiggen  


(If the card refuses to load, click here to open it in a new tab).
location: My home office
Mood:: 'okay' okay
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

This past Friday we planned to go again to Grand Rapids and another RLM tournament. Also coming in? Severe winds, with warnings that they were going to cause fallen branches and power outages and that travel would be very difficult. With the Active Advisory warning to not drive unless absolutely necessary I decided, you know, I don't need to drive an hour-plus to play the Pokemon pinball game again that much. We may have missed an exciting night; apparently, RLM Amusement had a partial power loss and could only operate about half the normal roster of games. As fans of things that carry on under adverse conditions we're sorry to have missed that.

But with an evening suddenly free [personal profile] bunnyhugger had a great idea. MSU's Wharton Center has had the touring company of Kimberly Akimbo all week, and we couldn't find a time to attend; why not this? Yes, it's still driving that's not absolutely necessary, but three miles is manageable where sixty would not be. Kimberly Akimbo had got our attention for the show's logo, derived from the logo Six Flags Great Adventure used in the 70s-80s, and I've heard a couple songs from it in the normal rotation on the Broadway channel. With the added information that part of it is a teen's wish to get to the Great Adventure drive-through safari? How could we resist?

Also it turns out you can just buy tickets to a show day-of. I mean, we wouldn't try this with The Lion King (coming in a couple months) or Wicked (which we forgot to ever get to last year) but for a show about the nostalgia of growing up in North Jersey to the point that her birthday cake is a Fudgie the Whale? That you can just roll up to.

We liked the show, in the main. The first act introducing all the characters and their particular weirdness was the strongest part. The piece not obvious from the show title or credits is that Kimberly has that rapid-aging disease so while she's turning 16 she has the body of a 72-year-old and the one strangest thing? Nobody mentions or compares it to that Robin Williams movie where he plays the 10-year-old-with-a-40-year-old's-body. You maybe forgot that, but the movie (Jack) came out in 1996 and the musical's set in 1999. I'd still think it'd be an inevitable reference.

The premise is Kimberly and her barely-functional parents are still settling in after having ditched Kimberly's aunt Debra after the trouble in Lodi (a North Jersey township). The aunt, of course, finds them, rampaging through like a felonious Auntie Mame and pressing Kimberly and her friends into an ``only slightly illegal'' scam. Two things there seemed peculiar to me; first, that the song and reprise for it haven't been on heavy rotation on the Broadway channel, and second that it's not either less or more of the story.

Like, the scam is set up in a couple scenes early in act two, and it's carried out off-stage; I'd have expected either more action in the scam or pushing it farther in the background to avoid tying Kimberly too closely to Debra. In the second act we get the revelation of just what happened that the family fled Lodi, and it's zany in a slightly edgey web comic way, and I'm not sure that Debra the character recovers from it. But, then, the whole story is kind of zany and when it does have a heavy emotional beat the contrast does help that beat land. It's gotten a lot of critical acclaim so it's at least registering well with some people.

We enjoyed it despite the ways we'd comment on it for an hour if you gave us the chance. It also reminded us how we really like going to shows and there's a really good venue for them not quite down the street but still, literally in walking distance for us. We should go to them more.


So our next day in the Most Extreme Mid-Atlantic Parks Tour? Dutch Wonderland, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Let's watch.

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Big unexpected discovery? That right next door to the park was the Carton Network Hotel. Why? Who knows. My best guess was Cartoon Network trying out the branded-hotel thing at a low-profile park where if it failed nobody would notice. This would be as close as we got to the place; they ended the Cartoon Network Hotel branding of the park with the end of the 2025 season.


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Here we approach Dutch Wonderland from the side; the park opened on the Lincoln Highway in 1962 and didn't really figure it would need quite so much parking on the side. The horizontal bar with the 12 FT marker is the monorail track.


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And here's the entrance. I had assumed the park started out as a Pennsylvania-Dutch-heritage-themed place that grew into fairy-tale castle by degrees but turns out no, it was always a Pennsylvania-Dutch-and-fairy-tale-castle place.


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Here's the front entrance, like a tiny Disneyland you can just drive to from central Jersey.


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And the castle has a moat! Totally a moat!


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I didn't say it was a lot of moat, but they have a moat!


Trivia: In 1257 England's King Henry III attempted minting a gold coin, which was short-lived; England would not have a viable gold coin until 1344. Source: Gold and Spices: The Rise of Commerce in the Middle Ages, Jean Favier. A ``gold penny'', of face value 20 pence, although it was unpopular and since its bullion value was more than 20 pence all but a few examples have been melted down.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski.

March 16th, 2026
sorcyress: Drawing of me as a pirate, standing in front of the Boston Citgo sign (Default)
wriiiiite the words

I am very tired and don't wanna write the words.

Work today was pretty good but also hella unsatisfying because there was Serious Bullshit with classroom assignments and needing to last-minute move the classroom. I had like......fifteen minutes of warning in order to pack up my everything I would need for class five and move down to a computer lab. It was awfullllll and I'm not happy about it. Blah.

But focusing on the good stuff...uh....the kids seem to grok the Pythagorean Theorem? That's nice. Tomorrow we're moving into our special rights triangles and it's not totally rubbish as a lesson --we did good work last year! I had a good long talk with my mentee last week about his future (and need to send some networking emails on their behalf). Even though the kids are being forced into super dysregulating situations, they were mostly fine?

And yesterday I got a bunch of things done and also had a nice evening with a friend/comet. I didn't sleep enough, but that's Unfortunately Normal, and at least all my sleep hours were in a bed with the lights off, which is Unfortunately Abnormal right now. I'm working on it?

Went to demo team on Sunday, which was fine, and then dance tonight which was...like...it was pretty decent, both Keira and Beth pick good dances and stuff. But for one of them I was dancing on the larks side with my buddy DJ on the Robin's side. And one of the other dancers made some comment about how we had "switched sides just to confuse her". Which like. Fuck off. Fuck off fuck off fuck offfffff.

I understand that I need to be gracious and kind and help people slowly understand in a non-threatening way but also fuck offff. I know I don't pass. I know I will never pass. I know you don't see me as anything as a woman. But you're wrong and you will never know how absolutely hurtful it is to be told that there is an obvious gender box you think I should be in and therefore if I'm on the lark's side it's "wrong".

It was intermission after, so I didn't have to dissociate for that long, and I could go and sit with my knitting and talk to all the various people who came and sat by me and then Sharon asked me to dance. But it still feels bad. I appreciate that the teachers here are trying to normalize larks and robins1. But the class does not actually get it, and as long as the dancers as a whole are just treating this as "weird names for men and women" nothing is actually going to change.

There's no wrong side to dance on. There is especially no wrong side for me, a nonbinary person to dance on. There is especially no wrong side for anyone to dance on when the role terms are Lark and Robin and have nothing the fuck to do with anyone's gender.

Oh hey, I figured out why I am so tired and draggy and don't wanna write the words. :/

Anyways, I will continue to quietly dance when and where I can with people who are willing to ignore conventions based on what genitals a doctor thought you had when you were born and instead take into consideration, like, who's taller if the dance has an allemande in it. And even that is negotiable.

I'm gonna snuggle Austin and go to bed.

~Sor (they/them)
MOOP!

1: (I am _genuinely thrilled_ that Beth is restating the terms every evening, and also that she is doing a much-better-than-average job of not using gendered pronouns with ungendered role names. Unfortunately, better-than-average means "occasionally says "their partner" instead of "her partner"" but baby steps!)
elynne: (Default)
I will be out of town for the second half of this month, so the next chapter will be posted Sunday, April 5th. Thanks to all for reading and commenting!

Read more... )
malada: Canadian flag text I stand with Canada (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 10:42am on 2026-03-16 under
Question: what kind of energy moves freely through the Strait of Hormuz?




Answer: Wind and solar.
Mood:: 'aggravated' aggravated
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

And with today's pictures I close out Six Flags America; tomorrow, pictures start ... oh, let's see if anyone can remember that far back. Got your guesses in for what was next on our tour?

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Back on the carousel. Here's some of the exotically-colored fiberglass tigers.


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My last ride was on a fairly normal-colored tiger.


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[personal profile] bunnyhugger enjoying a camel ride. Notice she's got our souvenir cup.


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Horse that's brown and horse of a different color.


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And your pink-purple elephant.


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Got to The Flying Carousel, which was well-run. Also you can see in the background Ye Olde Clock Tower with two different, incorrect, times on two faces.


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Late afternoon picture of ... well, the lockers are off-screen to the left. The big coaster in the background on the left is Roar, and on the right you can see The Wild One and Firebird.


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And then hey wait a minute! We didn't know we could see a mascot here! Also that Six Flags America had a mascot besides the Looney Tunes characters! So, we got to see Freedom The Eagle.


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Look at that, friendly as [personal profile] c_eagle here!


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I would have sworn I got a picture of Freedom hugging [personal profile] bunnyhugger but maybe we were too shy for that.


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And, alas, we had to get going. Here's the light streaming out over the reentry gate.


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As you exit the park you get one more reminder that they have the Looney Tunes license. And with this, we left Six Flags America, and would not see it again.


Trivia: Gemini VIII's Agena satellite, the goal of the rendezvous and docking mission, was qualified for flight the 4th of March, 1966, after four days of a final test series including 22 firings at simulated altitudes of between 83,800 and 114,300 meters. The same day, the Augmented Target Docking Adaptor satellite --- designed as a backup in case Agena could not get to actually working --- was qualified; it would fly when Gemini IX's Agena blew up on launch. Source: On The Shoulders of Titans: A History of Project Gemini, Barton C Hacker, James M Grimwood. NASA SP-4203.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski.

March 15th, 2026
cellio: (Default)
posted by [personal profile] cellio at 10:51pm on 2026-03-15 under

I've known [personal profile] minoanmiss online for decades, and got to meet her in person twice. She turned fifty in January, and two weeks ago she had a fatal seizure. Complicated family stuff meant delaying saying anything in public.

MM had an infectious smile and took joy in sharing art, music, and food. She always had stickers to give to children she encountered when out and about, she cooked meals for her local food bank, and she spread drawings and poetry online and in tangible form. I have many postcards, holiday cards, and magnets with her work, and I've enjoyed many of her fruitcakes and confections. In a last act of giving, her organs gave life to three other people.

Due to an abusive past she struggled to see her own value sometimes. But she also saw the many friends who gathered around her and the unknown people she helped in the world, and I hope that that helped her get through rough times. There was a non-religious service on Friday (which I attended on Zoom) and an in-person memorial gathering today in Boston, and it stands out how many people from different circles were together in those places. There's going to be a virtual memorial on April 12; details will be shared later on the announcement list (signup link).

She was doing what she loved -- cooking -- when it happened, way too early. I miss her.

twistedchick: watercolor painting of coffee cup on wood table (Default)
sorcyress: Drawing of me as a pirate, standing in front of the Boston Citgo sign (Default)
posted by [personal profile] sorcyress at 10:26pm on 2026-03-15
We're bad at everything. Let's write down the things we've done today:

  • Brushed hair

  • Braided hair

  • Ate Breakfast, also caught up on comics and even read a bit of Dreamwidth finally (I miss y'all, it's another symptom of the same Problem that is my brain right now.)

  • Unloaded dishwasher, reloaded dishwasher

  • Brought the load of laundry that's been in the dryer for three days upstairs finally (thanks Rey for basketing it, sorry to have left it)

  • Brought a bunch of laundry downstairs, started it (load two is just in the washer now, and load one in the dryer)

  • Switched my stuffies from their hamper into a steralite bin, eventually this will turn into like...one of those ottomans that opens up and you can store blankets (or stuffed animals) in but then it has a surface instead of being an amorphous blob sticking out of the top of a hamper, bonus, was able to use the hamper for my spare quilts/heavy blankets, double bonus, went through the stuffies a little and have some I can maybe give away.

  • Folded most of the laundry from that old load, while putting it away, successfully went through underwear drawer and pulled out the "good enough to keep but I'm not going to wear it regularly" stuff to put in the "save for Pinewoods" box

    (At Pinewoods I would like to have approximately three pairs of underwear a day. If I do something absolutely batshit crazy this year, that will change, but I want to have the option to be able to wear clean underwear always.)

  • Also socks, pulled out a handful of pairs I don't like so I stop wearing them by accident and being all :/ about it, also pulled out all the pairs that I know have big holes (they're currently due for the trash, but I may put some into my scraps bag instead)

  • Got stuck in a serious yak shaving rabbit hole but I think I have finally managed to put the additional music I wanted onto my phone, and also I have taken off last year's photos, which is important because now my phone should run smoother? Anyways, that took forever but now I can listen to music while I do additional chores? Seems fake. I'm into it!

  • I also reset the "accessories" boxen, which technically go with socks --long stockings, tights, kilt hose and accessories, suspenders and belts, scarves/pashminas. It's been a while, so that was good.

  • I'm now sitting down to eat lunch. Laundry load two is on my bed upstairs to put away, load three is in the dryer, four in the washer. (I'm aiming for like...six? It wouldn't be so high, but a) I have been slipping on the "own more than one set of sheets so that you don't get trapped with an unmade bed by having all your sheets dirty at once" and so I need to catch up there *and* there's been some sort of funky smell in my t-shirts boxen for a couple months and I'm not sure what's up with that, but I think step one is probably just wash _all_ my t-shirts.

    On the plus side, that latter problem doesn't seem to be anywhere in my dresser except my shirts, so that's a good sign? I guess? I mean, mostly it just means there's probably not, like, a dead mouse behind my dresser or something (a thing I would not be able to rationally deal with)).


***

I wrote all of the above earlier. I've since finished all the laundry --it appears that the shirts no longer smell, so success-- and gone to demo team and hung out with Maia some, so all of that is quite good.

I couldn't maintain GOGOGO the entire day, but also like, I shouldn't have to? I shouldn't in general? It is important to do mindless fuckoff stuff as well as Srs Useful Stuff? Yeah.

I hope you are well. <3

~Sor
MOOP!
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] julian at 09:41pm on 2026-03-15 under
I did manage to lose my wallet after Ny's thing, at/near Moruichi in Arlington, because I am Good Like That. I likely tried to put it back in my purse and it fell out.

Found out after the place closed, when I stopped for gas, so I couldn't even call them to see if they found it. (Will tomorrow, just in case.)

On the bright side, I'm going to be near my main bank tomorrow anyway, due to visiting my parents, so I can just get a new ATM card then. And I had to get a new driver's license anyway due to address change and not getting around to it yet, so, again, not a big thing.

Just, as usual, I liked that wallet, and I annoy myself. Harumph.
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)
posted by [personal profile] julian at 08:14pm on 2026-03-15
Went to a memorial Thing, for [personal profile] minoanmiss. (Speaking of, apparently her parents are getting told soon, so we're cleared to go posting in the clear.) Meant to get there early enough to help with cooking for the Watertown Free Fridge, but I didn't, or rather, I got there late because I hadn't had coffee and got some, and then discovered I had forgotten my seltzer I'd gotten as an event thing, so I waffled and came down on the "bringing something is important in a symbolic way" and stopped at Trader Joe's to get lemonade.

I did get there theoretically in time to cook (which we were doing as a memorial thing because Ny did buttloads of cooking for the Fridge), but I kept getting happily lodged in conversations and/or hugs instead, so, well, it was what it was, and it was good.

(I will donate to and/or volunteer at my local Food Pantry in her honor, methinks.)

Stickers, fans, poetry, food, pictures, recipes, music, people, laughter, sadness, occasional sudden memories popping up for people. Because of someone else's story, Eggplant Caponara will now be associated with Ny for me. And when I was outside taking a people break, [personal profile] katarik sang what turned out to be an Episcopal mourning hymn but which to me (before I asked) was someone with a very nice voice singing something that works very well for her voice, which was steeped in sadness yet joy and beauty. It spoke to and of the afternoon.

I took enough fans that I can use some of them as Kid Prizes at work. (And buy some more later. The stickers aren't quite my thing; Ny gave them to small people she met in the subway and doctor's offices and so on, but I think I'll leave that as a thing to smile about about Ny, not as a Thing To Adopt.)

Saw someone from High School I literally have not seen in what, 30 years? (I mean, we read each other's journals, but it's different.) Honestly, haven't seen most of these folks in at least 15 years, because school eats my brain and then my work schedule is peculiar and family stuff is what it is, but the point is: was good. Even though I felt like I was hyper and a little off balance.

(Thanks to the Cambridge Commons co-housing folks for hosting. And thanks to the snowdrops there, too. First of the season for me!)

The Virtual Memorial, I have just learned, will be on April 12 at 1 pm Eastern, via Zoom. I assume the link will be shared on the Google announce list. (If you're not on there yet, just follow the link and explain how you know Ny to the nice friendly info-boxes.)

Also, more info on Things Ny Related, including vague but pertinent info on who her organs went to, here.
gingicat: woman in a green dress and cloak holding a rose, looking up at snow falling down on her (just me - portrait)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
posted by [personal profile] redbird at 01:06pm on 2026-03-15
My right shoulder and neck started hurting Friday night, along with an ache on my right side. I tried Tylenol, which did nothing, but this morning it occurred to me that while I know naproxen doesn't help the weird neck/shoulder tension, it might help my back. I tried, and yes it helped.

Other than that, I went for a walk in the snow yesterday, after staying in all day Friday, and in the evening rysmiel, Sasha, and I watched the first half of the National Theater at Home production of _The Importance of Being Earnest_. It's very good, and we are going to watch the rest of it tonight.
austin_dern: Inspired by Krazy Kat, of kourse. (Default)

While I had thoughts about the show, it's a little more convenient for me to get through the rest of the Six Flags America pictures before posting them. Also I want to organize my thoughts some. So, sorry [profile] bunny_hugger, but there'll be narrative soon.

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A sign for The Wild One declaring that, so far as the park was concerned, they considered it to be the same coaster that opened in 1917.


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View from the exit path from the ride, looking back at the station and particularly the operator's booth.


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Like many legacy Six Flags parks they have a Looney Tunes section. We rode the Coyote-and-Road-Runner roller coaster in there but this time took a look around with pictures.


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Miniature train ride with the Looney Tune you first think of as a train person ... Forghorn Leghorn.


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Yosemite Sam's Hollywood Flight School makes sense because ... there was probably some cartoon where Sam was a Red Baron-esque figure? I'm guessing? That sounds like something they might have done in the late 50s or early 60s when the studio was kind of burned out.


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Now I know what this looks like, but this isn't all folks, not even of my Looney Tunes section pictures.


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Stroller parking's advertised by that one baby from that cartoon. Finster? Something?


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Not sure what this building was, but we had the feeling it predated Six Flags's takeover of the park. There's a bunch of signs added to the top that suggest midway fun.


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They also had Bugs Bunny's House here and I was curious what might be in there.


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Inside there's moulded plastic shelves of canned carrots.


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[profile] bunny_hugger enters to confirm what I saw in Bugs's home.


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And here's the other side of the shelter. You can see the mailbox on top there.


Trivia: After Julius Caesar's murder the Romans, trying to follow the new leap-day-every-fourth-year, would run two common years and then a leap year, bringing the calendar very out of date quickly; however, we do not know with certainty just which years were erroneous leap years. Source: Marking Time: The Epic Quest to Invent the Perfect Calendar, Duncan Steel. See, the Romans counted inclusively, so that, like, ``the fourth year from 2026'' would count 2026 as the first year, and so 2029 would be ``the fourth'' and how did these people conquer Europe? Europe must have been unbelievably easy to conquer is all I can figure.

Currently Reading: The Book on the Bookshelf, Henry Petroski. So I know the past was a different country and all that but for centuries after the creation of books in their modern form factor --- hard covers, identically-sized pages, bound spines --- the spines were kept on the insides of bookshelves? I'm sorry, old timey folks, you were just wrong about this one.

March 14th, 2026
mark: A photo of Mark kneeling on top of the Taal Volcano in the Philippines. It was a long hike. (Default)
posted by [staff profile] mark in [site community profile] dw_maintenance at 01:04pm on 2026-03-14

Happy Saturday!

I'm going to be doing a little maintenance today. It will likely cause a tiny interruption of service (specifically for www.dreamwidth.org) on the order of 2-3 minutes while some settings propagate. If you're on a journal page, that should still work throughout!

If it doesn't work, the rollback plan is pretty quick, I'm just toggling a setting on how traffic gets to the site. I'll update this post if something goes wrong, but don't anticipate any interruption to be longer than 10 minutes even in a rollback situation.

malada: Canadian flag text I stand with Canada (Default)
posted by [personal profile] malada at 01:40pm on 2026-03-14
https://armiphlage.dreamwidth.org/

Welcome to the Zoo Crew!

I don't know how you found me... do tell the tale.

Is armiphlage a "Fire on the Deep" reference? It sounds familiar. Great look.
Mood:: 'chipper' chipper

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