kimberly_a: Hawaii (Hawaii)

Busy busy

Jun. 4th, 2025 10:37 pm

It's almost time for bed, but I wanted to write a quick journal entry so I can remember what to flesh out tomorrow.

I had a really good, really useful therapy appointment. I love my new therapist and feel like we work really well together. I don't plan to write a lot about what we talked about, but it was very constructive. I was struggling a lot with anxiety all morning before we talked, but our conversation helped me calm down and feel much more like myself.

I'm looking forward to starting the water exercise class at the YMCA again on Friday. The class is held Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, but I have a study group I really don't want to miss on Wednesdays, so only Mondays and Fridays would be possible. I currently have another study group that conflicts on Monday, but it's just a meeting with two of my friends, so we can find a different time that works for us. The Wednesday study group is a bigger thing organized by someone else, an official study group for a bunch of people on one of the Discord servers I belong to.

I got a lot of work done around the house today and just generally felt really productive, which feels good. I haven't been having much time for studying lately, but that's okay. I've been continuing to experience some sedation from the Valium, which has contributed to the "not having much time" problem, since I sleep during the day, but that has gotten a lot better. I'm predicting that tomorrow I most likely won't need to nap at all.

Gary got to meet Megara for the first time today, as much as any stranger gets to meet her. By which I mean he saw her from across the room and got about 3 feet away from her before she ran and hid under the couch. But that's the closest anyone besides Shannon and me has gotten to her since we brought her home, so it was great! Maybe when we go to California for Christmas she might even let the cat sitter approach her by the end of the week. I mean ... it's unlikely, but possible.

Anyway, time to get ready for bed.

Posted by Nancy Man

Flag of California
Flag of California

The digital newspaper Berkeleyside recently published an article about real-life baby names inspired by various locations within (or near) the California city of Berkeley. The article mentioned the following names:

  • Ada (for Ada Street)
  • Addison (for Addison Street)
  • Adeline (for Adeline Street)
  • Ashby (for Ashby Avenue)
  • Bay (for San Francisco Bay)
  • Berkeley
  • Cedar (for Cedar Street)
  • Edith (for Edith Street)
  • Ellis (for Ellis Street)
  • Linden (for Linden Avenue)
  • Parker (for Parker Street)
  • Rose (for Rose Street)
  • Sibley (for Sibley Volcanic Regional Preserve, in Oakland)
  • Tilden (for Charles Lee Tilden Regional Park)

Equally interesting, though, was the inclusion of Berkeley’s top ten baby names overall “between 2023 and 2024” (which I’m assuming means 2023 and 2024 combined), according to data from the City of Berkeley’s Office of Vital Statistics. The names were ordered alphabetically:

  • Angel
  • Dylan
  • Julian
  • Liam
  • Luna
  • Mateo
  • Mia
  • Noah
  • Oliver
  • Zoe

I’ve never posted rankings for the city of Berkeley before, but I regularly post rankings for the nearby county of Sonoma — here’s 2023, and here’s 2024.

Source: Furio, Joanne. “Ashby! Tilden! Ada Rose! Berkeley’s babies are often named after local streets and parks.” Berkeleyside 9 Apr. 2025.

Image: Adapted from Flag of California (public domain)

esteefee: John in black and white in a dark cloudy background. (bw_john)

bad scout

Jun. 5th, 2025 01:11 am

So, I sympathize with John Sheppard, because one time they took us to Joshua Tree National Park and tried to make me use a compass and a map and I got us so lost even the troop master couldn't get us found and we were 3 hours late getting back to the bus.
nowhere: (Default)

(no subject)

Jun. 5th, 2025 03:03 am

150 | wicked: for good ( TRAILER SPOILERS )


150 icons @ [community profile] insomniatic.
This was written for one of last year's prompt fests - Whumptober, I think - and never posted. At the time, I was really struggling to get words out, feeing pretty insecure about the words I did write, and I could tell this needed editing and didn't feel up to dealing with it. Also, it was too long to just post as a snippet of fic like most of the others. I sat on it for a while with the idea that it might be possible to clean it up and use it in an exchange, but it didn't fit anything I was writing for, and I finally got around to editing and posting it.

Old Words (1978 words) by Sholio
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Biggles Series - W. E. Johns
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: James "Biggles" Bigglesworth & Erich Von Stalhein
Characters: Erich von Stalhein, James "Biggles" Bigglesworth
Additional Tags: Post-Canon, Friendship, Developing Relationship, Secret Messages
Summary: Some time after Buries a Hatchet/Looks Back, Biggles and Erich find an old message in an abandoned dead drop.

Also posted under the cut.

Old Words - 2000 wds )
fred_mouse: Western Australian state emblem - black swan silhouette on yellow circle (home state)

Perspectives

Jun. 5th, 2025 01:08 pm

This anonymous comment over on [community profile] fandomsecrets made me laugh:

"But we didn't have cable growing up, just 4 or 5 channels on the TV and kids shows were only on at certain times, plus we just didn't watch much."

I grew up in the city. There were three channels (ABC, 7, 9), until 1986, when SBS launched here. The addition of channel 10 in 1988 brought us to 5. Cable television wasn't a thing for most of that time. I believe that the regional areas had two channels. I presume that most of the remote areas had none.

I have no idea how old that commenter was, but the idea of 4 or 5 channels still feels like luxury. Even though I've (yet again) been reminded about just how long ago 1988 actually was.

ETA: also, the part of the city I grew up in was really close to the transmitters for at least two of those stations. Because of physics, some of my school friends couldn't get at least one of those stations at home, because they lived too close to the transmitters (and sometimes because there was terrain in the way)

settiai: (Siân -- settiai)

Aurendor D&D: Summary for 6/4 Game

Jun. 5th, 2025 01:05 am

In tonight's game, the rest under a cut for those who don't care. )

And that's where we left off.
silver_chipmunk: (Default)

In Ohio

Jun. 5th, 2025 12:44 am

Posting from my phone cause I haven't got my computer set up yet. But I had no troubles with the airport or anything, got here just fine. More tomorrow.
mildred_of_midgard: (Default)

Knees

Jun. 4th, 2025 11:41 pm

From my utter lack of running updates, you can draw the correct conclusion about my knee.

It's fluctuating between better and worse, but not letting me run. I've been consistently sleeping on my right side, so my left knee has greatly reduced its popping and pain, and I haven't had to brace. But it's continued hurting in a different place, more front and center, just over the bottom of the patella.

I managed a run last Thursday--only one hill rep, because my cardio is trash again. Then Friday I was running again, but I was getting a stabbing pain on the top of my knee with every step.

I eventually figured out it was a tight quadriceps from weeks of compensating for a bad knee. So I kept running--tight muscles are the least alarming pain, for they respond to stretching. Then I did something monumentally stupid: I realized if I bent my knee more, the quad hurt less, so I bent my knee more.

One wrong step, and my knee went from painless to erupting in pain. I was stranded a mile from home, so I had to hobble and limp--and I couldn't even take my normal route home, because it goes up a hill. So I detoured down to Main Street, where the route was flat, and I ended up hobbling a mile and a half (in a way that obviously aggravated my quads, too).

My knee did get slightly better, in the sense that it didn't hurt if I walked on it around the house.

Then on Saturday I was continuing my decluttering project, and I don't know what I did, but I think maybe it was kneeling to get the DVDs and DVD player out from the bottom of the television console.

About a minute after I got up, my knee was hurting in a way that no amount of compensating could make go away.

I lay down and iced it, and it *still* hurt with every step an hour later.

So I didn't do any walking all weekend, except around the house. Monday I managed a walk to the grocery store, but no running. Yesterday I managed a 3-hour hike, with uphills and downhills and rock scrambling, and my knee mostly held up! Except that sometimes it protested the downhill slightly, and a couple of times, something moved in a non-painful but alarming "this isn't supposed to move like that" way. Fortunately, it didn't do that very strongly until the end of the walk, when I was literally standing across the street from my driveway. So I hobbled across the street and up the parking lot, and then it got better. I think it was triggered by something in changing my stride from trail walking to flat asphalt walking.

I walked to the grocery store and back today, and it was fine, but as I got home, the side of my knee started doing the weird thing again. So I decided not to do the housework I had planned, which involved kneeling.

Maybe at some point, I'll be permitted to run again. Hopefully while I can still do one cemetery loop, and not where I was a couple months ago, where my cardio was *so* bad I couldn't even do one.

Consider me disgruntled but determined.




Poll #33203 Shen Wei's composure
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 7


When the drunk guy in the Dixing bar says, “[Zhao Yunlan] is dead! He has been killed by my huge fist," why doesn't Shen Wei react?

View Answers

Shen Wei has a lie detector power
3 (42.9%)

no one else is acting as if a murder's taken place
3 (42.9%)

Shen Wei would be able to sense if Zhao Yunlan were dead
5 (71.4%)

Shen Wei would be able to bring Zhao Yunlan back from the dead
2 (28.6%)

drunk guy is infamous in Dixing for boasting about killing people for real or imagined offences, every other day
3 (42.9%)

other (please specify in comments)
0 (0.0%)

The real purpose of Shen Wei's sleeve garters is

View Answers

they keep his shirt cuffs safely clear of the inkstone when he's writing
2 (28.6%)

they're purely a fashion statement
5 (71.4%)

when he’s in Envoy mode, he wears them as hair ties, and he just keeps them around his biceps the rest of the time so he won’t lose them
2 (28.6%)

they restrain his tentacles and/or other alien appendages
1 (14.3%)

other (please specify in comments)
0 (0.0%)



Thanks to [personal profile] trobadora for help with the poll options in question 1.
calimac: (Default)

what are they waiting for?

Jun. 4th, 2025 07:50 pm

Here's something that bugs me, and that seems to be happening constantly these days: People who get into their cars, turn the engine on, and then just sit there, maybe checking their phone or doing nothing at all.

The reason this bugs me is that they're doing this in parking lots, and my car is next to theirs or directly across the lane, and I want to leave but I don't want to risk hitting or being hit by another car leaving at the same time, because it's awfully hard to see behind you, despite turning head and rear-view mirrors, and they got to their car before I got to mine. So I wait for them to leave. And wait, and wait ...

Occasionally I've actually gotten back out of my car, gone to theirs, knocked on the window, and asked, "Are you planning on leaving soon? Because I'm parked next to you, and I don't want to move if you're going to be moving." But mostly now I give up, and figure if they don't leave after one minute they're unlikely to leave before two, and go out myself.

But if people would just go when they're ready to - again, they've turned the engine on - there wouldn't be this problem.

Since my last reading post:

Nobody Cares, by H. J. Breedlove. This one is good, but dark: it's dedicated this to Black Lives Matter, and fairly early on I got to the first mention of Missing and murdered indigenous women and girls. It's also book 3 in the Talkeetna series, with further developments in the friendship-turning-romance of Dace and Paul.

The Disappearing Spoon, by Dan Kean: a history of the periodic table, with a bit about each of the currently-known elements and the people, or groups of people who discovered them. Someone recommended this after I mentioned liking Consider the Fork, but the two books have almost nothing in common.

The Electricity of Every Living Thing, by Katherine May: a memoir, about walking and what happens after the writer hears a radio program about Asperger's and thinks "but that's me." (I don't remember where I saw this recommended

Return to Gone-Away, by Elizabeth Enright: read-aloud, and a reread of a book I read years ago. Sweet, a family's low-key adventures in an obscure corner of upstate New York. As the title implies, this is a sequel; read Gone-Away Lake first.

Beautiful Yetta, the Yiddish Chicken, by Daniel Pinkwater, a short picture book that we read aloud after Adrian and I realized Cattitude hadn't read it before. Conversation in three languages, with translations (and transliterations) for the Yiddish and Spanish. Not Pinkwater's best, but fun.

Thimble Summer, by Elizabeth Enright, because I enjoyed rereading the Gone-Away Lake books. Several months of a girl's life with her family on a farm. The plot and adventures are relatively low-key. I liked it, and am glad I got it from the library.

Also, it looks as though I didn't post about the summer reading thing here. It started June 1, and the bingo card has a mix of kinds of books, like books in translation, published this year, or with an indigenous author; some squares with things like "read outside" and "recommend a book"; and some that go further afield, like "learn a word in a new language" and "try a new recipe." Plus the ever-popular "book with a green cover." (OK, last year it was "book with a red cover.") I do a lot of my reading on a black-and-white kindle, so I don't know what color the covers might be. Therefore, I walked into a library yesterday, looked at their summer reading suggestions, and grabbed a book with a green cover.

kevin_standlee: (Kevin and Lisa)

Trip and Trip Again

Jun. 4th, 2025 07:21 pm

I got the notification from Bank of America that the Euros I ordered were ready to collect, so this afternoon, Lisa and I drove to Reno/Sparks to collect it. First we went to drop off the recycling, because Lyon County has no collection nor drop-off for any sort of recycling, and the Washoe County (Reno) drop-off closes at 3 PM. After doing that, we drove over to the Sparks Bank of America. There I realized to my horror that I'd left my wallet at home! I went ahead and drove home (being careful to stay under the speed limit) and as we neared home, I thought that possibly we could get my wallet and get back to Sparks before the bank closed at 5 PM.

We got my wallet and we headed back to Reno, which just under an hour before the bank closed. Just as we passed USA Parkway (the road from the giant Tahoe-Reno Industrial Center, traffic ground to a halt. Apparently lots of businesses change shifts at 4 PM, and they all flooded onto westbound I-80. There are no alternative routes.

It would be several miles before the next exit, so we just ground our way along. The traffic started to speed up again, and we concluded that there was no accident or incident blocking traffic: just too many cars and big rigs for the freeway to handle. We decided to see if we could possibly get to the bank, which is on the east side of the Reno/Sparks metro area, before they closed. Somewhat to my surprise, we got there with just under ten minutes to spare.

There were no other customers in the branch. The clerk went to the vault, got the cash, counted it out for me, and I signed for it and left, with them locking up as I left. Whew!

I suggested to Lisa that we go to the Sparks Nugget and get our favorite meal there, the shrimp pan roast at John's Oyster Bar. The restaurant is named for John Ascuaga, who built the Nugget and grew it until he and his children sold it to corporate interests when John retired. We like that the casino kept the name of the Oyster Bar and preserved its nautically-themed decor.

It had been a long time since Lisa and I had been there together. We initially had the place all to ourselves, but more people arrived while we were eating.

Lisa initially wanted to go grocery shopping, but in deference to my having to work tomorrow, agreed that we should just go home. Amazingly, the heavy westbound (toward Reno) traffic from USA Parkway was still creeping along on freeway, but westbound (toward Fernley) was wide open. We'll go back for groceries in a few days.
senmut: Yusef looking back over shoulder, book open in lap (TOG: Yusef)

Daily Check In

Jun. 4th, 2025 09:23 pm

*\o/* Word Count Step Count Headache?
Daily 1,059 9,485 no
Monthly 5,218 38,017 1 days
skygiants: Jane Eyre from Paula Rego's illustrations, facing out into darkness (more than courage)

(no subject)

Jun. 4th, 2025 08:47 pm

Over Memorial Day weekend [personal profile] genarti and I were on a mini-vacation at her family's cabin in the Finger Lakes, which features a fantastic bookshelf of yellowing midcentury mysteries stocked by [personal profile] genarti's grandmother. Often when I'm there I just avail myself of the existing material, but this time -- in increasing awareness of the way our own books are threatening to spill over our shelves again -- I seized this as an opportunity to check my bookshelves for the books that looked most like they belonged in a cabin in the Finger Lakes to read while I was there and then leave among their brethren.

As a result, I have now finally read the second-to-last of the stock of Weird Joan Aikens that [personal profile] coffeeandink gave me many years ago now, and boy was it extremely weird!

My favorite Aiken books are often the ones where I straight up can't tell if she's attempting to sincerely Write in the Genre or if she is writing full deadpan parody. I think The Embroidered Sunset is at least half parody, in a deadpan and melancholy way. I actually have a hypothesis that someone asked Joan Aiken to write a Gothic, meaning the sort of romantic suspense girl-flees-from-house form of the genre popular in the 1970s, and she was like "great! I love the Gothic tradition! I will give you a plucky 1970s career girl and a mystery and a complex family history and several big creepy houses! would you also like a haunted seaside landscape, the creeping inevitability of loss and death, some barely-dodged incest and a tragic ending?" and Gollancz, weary of Joan Aiken and her antics, was just like "sure, Joan. Fine. Do whatever."

Our heroine, Lucy, is a talented, sensible, cross and rather ugly girl with notably weird front teeth, is frequently jokingly referred to as Lucy Snowe by one of her love interests; the big creepy old age home in which much of the novel takes place is called Wildfell Hall; at one point Lucy knocks on the front door of Old Colonel Linton and he's like 'oh my god! you look just like my great-grandmother Cathy Linton, nee Earnshaw! it's the notably weird front teeth!" Joan Will Have Her Little Jokes.

The plot? The plot. Lucy, an orphan being raised in New England by her evil uncle and his hapless wife and mean daughter, wants to go study music in England with the brilliant-but-tragically-dying refugee pianist Max Benovek. Her uncle pays her fare across the Atlantic, on the condition that she go and investigate a great-aunt who has been pulling a pension out of the family coffers for many years; the great-aunt was Living Long Term with Another Old Lady (the L word is not said but it is really felt) and one of them has now died, but no one is really clear which.

The evil uncle suspects that the surviving old lady may not be the great-aunt and may instead be Doing Fraud, so Lucy's main task is to locate the old lady and determine whether or not she is in fact her great-aunt. Additionally, the great aunt was a brilliant folk artist unrecognized in her own time and so the evil uncle has assigned Lucy a side quest of finding as many of her paintings as possible and bringing them back to be sold for many dollars.

However, before setting out on any of these quests, Lucy stops in on the dying refugee pianist to see if he will agree to teach her. They have an immediate meeting of the minds and souls! Not only does Max agree to take her on as His Last Pupil, he also immediately furnishes her with cash and a car, because her plan of hitchhiking down to Aunt Fennel's part of the UK could endanger her beautiful pianist's hands!! Now Lucy has a brilliant future ahead of her with someone who really cares about her, but also a ticking clock: she has to sort out this whole great-aunt business before Max progresses from 'tragically dying' to 'tragically dead.'

The rest of the book follows several threads:
- Lucy bopping around the World's Most Depressing Seaside Towns, which, it is ominously and repeatedly hinted, could flood catastraphically at any moment, grimly attempting to convince a series of incredibly weird and variably depressed locals to give her any information or paintings, which they are deeply disinclined to do
- Max, in his sickroom, reading Lucy's letters and going 'gosh I hope I get to teach that girl ... it would be my last and most important life's work .... BEFORE I DIE'
- Sinister Goings On At The Old Age Home! Escaped Convicts!! Secret Identities!!! What Could This All Have To Do With Lucy's Evil Uncle? Who Could Say! Is Their Doctor Faking Being Turkish? Who Could Say!! Why Does That One Old Woman Keep Holding Up An Electric Mixer And Remarking How Easy It Would Be To Murder Someone With It? Who Could Say That Either!!!
- an elderly woman who may or may not be Aunt Fennel, in terrible fear of Something, stacked into dingy and constrained settings packed with other old and fading strangers, trying not to think too hard about her dead partner and their beloved cat and the life that she used to have in her own home where she was happy and loved .... all of these sections genuinely gave me big emotions :(((

Eventually all these plotlines converge with increasingly chaotic drama! Lucy and the old lady meet and have a really interesting, affectionate but complicated relationship colored by deep loneliness and suspicion on both sides; again, I really genuinely cared about this! Lucy, who sometimes exhibits random psychic tendencies, visits the lesbian cottage and finds it is so powerfully and miserably haunted by the happiness that it once held and doesn't anymore that she nearly passes out about it! Then whole thing culminates in huge spoilers )

Anyway. A wild time. Some parts I liked very much! I hit the end and shrieked and then forced Beth to read it immediately because I needed to scream about it, and now it lives among its other yellowing paperback friends on the Midcentury Mysteries shelf for some other unsuspecting person to find and scream about.

NB: in addition to everything else a cat dies in this book .... Joan Aiken hates this cat in particular and I do not know why. She likes all the other cats! But for some reason she really wants us to understand that this cat has bad vibes and we should not be sad when it gets got. But me, I was sad.
Title: When Love Lasts
Fandom: Criminal Minds
Pairings: Jennifer "JJ" Jareau/Emily Prentiss
Characters: Emily Prentiss
Rating: G
Length: 88 words
Summary: Emily chooses her family.

Read more... )
I really hate to give up on a book, but sometimes, there are too many other tempting things on the horizon to keep ploughing through an active read in the hopes it gets better. Today I put aside Luck in the Shadows by Lynn Flewelling. While I would have liked to have gone all the way to the end before making a judgement, there just over 9 hours still to go on the audiobook and the book has simply not given me enough to power through that.
 
At nearly 9 hours in (about halfway) my overall feeling towards this book is indifference. Towards the plot, towards the characters, towards the setting. It's very generic fantasy and just doesn't give much to bite onto outside of that. The first half of the plot has some fun adventure elements, but when the mentor-figure, Seregil, becomes incapacitated partway through, the youthful protagonist Alec is simply not enough to carry the story. The second half of the story is more political intrigue, and I can't help but compare it to The Traitor Baru Cormorant which I'm also currently reading, and that comparison does Luck in the Shadows no favors. 

Seregil and Alec's escapades are fun, and it's interesting to see the creative ways they go about their tasks, but for me it's not enough to make up for the lackluster plot and detailed but unremarkable worldbuilding.
 
There's a disappointing dearth of women in the story, although one of the fantasy kingdoms in which the second half of the story takes place has been ruled by a succession of queens for centuries. There is some casual queerness in the story which I liked, but when I looked for more reviews on this to help me decide if it was worth pressing on, I learned (SPOILER) that Alec and Seregil become a couple later on. Given that Alec is barely sixteen at the start of this book, and Seregil is a middle-aged man, I'm just not here for it.
 
This is the first book of a series (the Nightrunner series), but my general feeling on series is that it's a cop-out to rely on later books to make up for weaknesses in earlier books. Particularly here, where each book gets longer, the author is asking for me to take a lot on trust that this story will get better with time.
 
I really wanted to like this book, as I really want to like all fantasy novels, but it's just not worth the amount of time investment needed. Also, in general, not looking for stories about adults falling in love with teenagers. Disappointing, but there are other things to move on to.

sovay: (Silver: against blue)

I know it made your head spin, what we did with money

Jun. 4th, 2025 08:30 pm

Thanks to the Canadian wildfires, our sunset light is Pompeiian red, by which I mean mostly the cinnabar and heat-treated smolder of the pigment, but also the implication of volcano.

Because my day was scrambled by a canceled appointment, after I had made a lot of phone calls [personal profile] spatch took me for soft-serve ice cream in the late afternoon, and once home I walked out to photograph some poppies I had seen from the car.

Did you love mimesis? )

I can't help feeling that last night's primary dream emerged from a fender-bender in the art-horror 1970's because once the photographer who had done his aggressive and insistently off-base best to involve me in a blackmail scandal had killed himself, all of a sudden the hotel where I had been attending a convention with my husbands had a supernatural problem. Waking in the twenty-first century, I appreciate it could be solved eventually with post-mortem mediation rather than exorcistic violence, but it feels like yet another subgenre intruding that the psychopomp for the job was a WWI German POW.

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