redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
Redbird ([personal profile] redbird) wrote2025-09-11 02:50 pm
Entry tags:

covid vaccine and "underlying conditions"

[personal profile] siderea points out that you probably have >a href="https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1882720.html">"at least one underlying condition" for which the covid vaccine is (still) recommended by the US government, because most people do: the list includes being overweight, high blood pressure, depression, former smokers, and "physical inactivity." She speculates that the list may have been drafted to be as inclusive as possible, by someone who didn't have the authority to say "just give it to everyone."

The current official announcements, widely echoed, sounds as though most people can't get the vaccine, because the FDA is now being run by anti-vaxxers. That is almost certainly not an accident: if you think you can't have the vaccine, you won't ask for it.

Siderea also points out that even if you aren't on that list, a doctor can prescribe this, or almost any approved medication, to anyone they think it's appropriate for. In other contexts, this is what they mean by "off-label" use of a drug.

Note, however, that this may affect whether you have to pay for the vaccine yourself, rather than it being covered by insurance.

It has been pointed out elsewhere that you can always lie to them: nobody has a complete list of former smokers, for example.
tielan: kara/lee (BSG - Kara/Lee)
tielan ([personal profile] tielan) wrote2025-09-11 10:54 pm

sleeeeeep

Okay, so the bit where I'm falling down on the holiday is sleep.

Air-con is too much. Bed is too soft. Pillows are too hard. Not warm enough.

AAAAAAAUUUUUUGGGGGHHHHHH

Last night, I woke up at 3:30am and...didn't really manage to get back to sleep until around 6am. And even that was only for about half an hour.

I'm travelling okay, though. COVID has cleared up, although I sometimes feel a bit stupid lately, trying to work out what I'm saying and how to say it, and thinking "I'm sure I used to know how to phrase this".

Anyway, it's nearly 11pm where I am.

Time for sleeeeeeeep.
iamrman: (Sindr)
iamrman ([personal profile] iamrman) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2025-09-11 07:23 pm

Doom Patrol (1987) #7

Writer: Paul Kupperberg

Pencils: Erik Larsen

Inks: Gary Martin


The Doom Patrol rookies have a night on the town.


Read more... )

greghousesgf: (House Schroeder)
greghousesgf ([personal profile] greghousesgf) wrote2025-09-11 11:06 am

(no subject)

Not much planned today, just sitting around listening to music and watching MST3K.
maggie33: (strumiłło mandale 1)
maggie33 ([personal profile] maggie33) wrote2025-09-11 07:35 pm

Fanfic writing and drama watching

RL is meh. I don’t feel well lately, probably because of menopause. But I did go to my cardiologist just in case. And my heart is fine, but my blood pressure is too high, and I have to start taking a pill for that, too. As if I didn’t have enough health problems as it is. *sigh* And I have five mosquito bites on my face. Ugh... There were no mosquitos here all summer, maybe because we had a swallow nest on the top of our apartment building and there were a lot of swallows around in previous months when they were teaching their young ones to fly. It was so entertaining to observe as they were zooming outside our window like teeny tiny grey planes. But now there are no swallows and a lot of mosquitos. Just go away, you little bloodsuckers. 😠


On the positive fannish front – I bookmarked five wishlists from this year’s Guardian Wishlist. There is no way five fics are happening, but I hope at least two might. I already started writing them, and here is hoping they will get finished. My last Guardian fic was written in 2023, and I forgot how fun it is to write Zhao Yunlan bickering with Ye Zun, or Chu Shuzhi and Guo Changcheng saying ‘I love you’ and kissing a lot. 😊


And now my drama watching report.

I finished:

Love is for the Dogs

It was a lovely and adorable drama with a sweet happy ending. I was trying very hard not to get my hopes up about this drama ending with a proper threeway, because the finale teaser was very suggestive IMO. And it is a Japanese drama, so it could happen. Well, it didn’t, but even without it I enjoyed this cute, little drama a lot.

The Winning Try

It was fine and I enjoyed it. It was the best when the drama focused on the students and an underdog rugby team, and not on the school politics and disappointingly boring villains. Sometimes there was too much of the latter and not enough of the former IMO. But it was good when it was about the bonds between the rugby players, and about Ga Ram being an unconventional and inspirational couch. The romantic relationships were very much in the background in this drama, and I liked that, too. And I even ended up enjoying a cute budding romance between two students, and a mature and complicated exes-to-lovers relationship between Ga Ram and Bae I Ji.


I’m still watching:

Kill to Love

It finished airing, but I still haven’t see the last four episodes, because something happened in episode 8 that dampen my interest. Don’t get me wrong, it is entertaining. And everyone is so pretty. But I guess I wasn’t very deeply invested after all.


Major spoilers here.I found the main couple fine, but nothing special. Even if on paper it does sound like my kind of thing. But I was much more interested in the secondary pairing that gave me heaps of loyalty kink. And it’s a dark and fucked up flavor of loyalty kink. I loved it. I was also very much into a complicated and intense relationship between two princely brothers. And the death of the Crown Prince in episode 8 meant no more of my two favorite things in future episodes.

I do plan to watch those four episodes soon. But mainly because I want to have the knowledge of the whole canon in hope I will have a fix-it fic with the Crown Prince being alive to read in the future. 😊


Shine

Episodes 5 and 6 were excellent. But I’m so anxious about the last two episodes. I’m preparing for a lot of angst and heartbreak.


More with spoilers here.Wow, switching in a BL drama, that’s something you don’t see often. 😊 Or like at all. They only allude to it sometimes. I haven’t seen a BL drama explicitly showing it yet. Although apparently it happened in Suntiny, too, which I still haven’t watched.

After it happened I thought that it would be so cool if they went with ApoMile instead of MileApo for Trin and Tanwa’s first time. And they did. And it was hot and perfect. ♥

About more serious matters - I’m so scared for Naran. He says to Krailert that he cares more about fighting for change for the country than his own safety. It’s obvious that Naran was torn between his love for Krailert and his morals and doing his job as a journalist right. And at the end, as we see in episode 6, the latter won.

And after what happened to Win, I think Krailert is terrified that the same thing will happen to Naran now.

Also I was pretty sure that Trin and Tanwa would get their happy ever after, but after these two episodes I’m not so sure anymore. It probably won’t end happily for them, either.

Also I dipped briefly into tumblr’s Shine tag and I’m so amused by majority of fans being so invested in Shine’s background het couple (just like I am), and urging Dhevi to just have an affair with Veera already.


Affair

My newest love and obsession. I love Harmony Secret a lot, but this drama speaks to my id even stronger than Harmony Secret. And I have only one last episode left to watch. And then I think I’ll start a re-watch. And write at least one fic. Probably more. 😊


A bit more with mild spoilers here.Wan is like a character made exactly for me. I love her so completely. I love that Wan isn’t simply in love with Pleng, she’s obsessed with Pleng. That love is Wan’s reason for living, for doing what she’s doing all her life, even for becoming a doctor.

And Wan’s love is possessive and controlling. Ahhh, that scene when Wan gets angry and drags Pleng home just because Ek tried to kiss Pleng’s hand. And then she says: “I don’t like anyone touching you.” Her intense jealous possessiveness pushed my buttons so hard.

This kind of possessive and controlling love interest doesn't work for me at all in M/F pairings, and only rarely and in special circumstance works for me in M/M pairings. But give me F/F version and I will eat it up with a spoon every time. 😊

And wow, Lookmhee and Sonya’s NC scenes are hot, hot, hot. I would make gifs, but I still prefer not to strain my elbow too much. Even writing this post took me three days. But the official playlist on youtube have an uncensored version, so you can see it for yourself in episodes 5 and 6, if you want to. 😊


I dropped:

Twelve

I watched the first two episodes. It was mildly entertaining, and Park Hyung Sik makes a very sexy villain with those beautiful black wings. But I feel like the plot should move a bit quicker when they have only 8 episodes. But no, in these two episodes a lot of time was dedicated to, frankly speaking, not even very good fights instead of character development for our main characters. At the end of episode 2 I realized I didn’t care for any of the heroes, and that the villain was sexy, but also rather boring. So I don’t plan to watch the rest.

Doctor’s Mine

I rarely anti-rec things. But this is an anti-rec from me.

I take back everything I said about this drama being surprisingly good about consent issues. I dropped it after episode 5, and I haven’t watched the next episodes, only read discussions on reddit and tumblr, because I was so disappointed. And I’m glad I didn’t watch them. Because even reading about it was infuriating. It ruined Mon and Pak’s storyline for me, too.

Here is a good post on tumblr explaining what happened in episodes 5 and 6, if you want to know more.
wychwood: Atlantis seen under the curve of Earth's stargate (SGA - city exploring)
wychwood ([personal profile] wychwood) wrote2025-09-11 06:06 pm

september booklog's gonna take a whiiiile to write up

Interminable September progresses. The next two weeks are going to be the especially busy parts, but I made fifteen portions of pasta (waiting for me in the freezer), started refusing any invitations to do anything whatsoever in September that isn't already in my calendar ("not even for your poor sick mother??" she said, and I said NO but how about the first weekend in October), and am as up together as I can manage (not terribly).

I'm also in full hibernation mode and doing nothing in my actual free time except read intensely and greedily (already finished one of the poll-winners). I haven't bought any more books since last week, though, so that's something. I'm going to bribe myself with volume 2 of Wayne Family Adventures when I survive the month, though.
osprey_archer: (books)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2025-09-11 01:20 pm

Book Review: Account Rendered

In the afterward to Max in the Land of Lies, Adam Gidwitz mentioned Melita Maschmann’s Account Rendered: A Dossier of My Former Self as one of the most important sources for the book, and also a book that he would urge everyone to read. Of course I had to try it, especially given that Gidwitz’s Melita Maschmann is one of the most likable characters in Max in the Land of Lies, for all that she is a true believer Nazi who, moreover, gets only very limited pagetime.

Now I realize some people may object to the idea of a likeable Nazi true believer, but I believe in order to understand evil one of the things we have to let go of is the belief that there’s any clear relationship between likability and goodness. If you will excuse a digression into quadrant theory, likability and goodness are two separate axes, and most of us are happiest with the “likable and good” quadrant and the “unlikable and bad” quadrant. Neither of these create cognitive dissonance. We want the people whom we like to be good and the people we hate to be bad.

But “unlikable and good” and “likable and bad” can both be a torment. You know that you should like so-and-so, because they’re so useful and helpful and have all the right opinions, but really you would climb out a window rather than spend an hour alone with them because they just grate on you. Or, you like so-and-so a lot, because they’re so funny and charming, and when other people say they’ve done bad things it’s probably lies, or jealousy, or a failure to understand the complexity of their character, or… oh God what if they are bad. You like them so much and they’re bad?? What does that say about you??? NO the accusations of badness are LIES.

(Or else, you insist that you never really liked them THAT much, like my friend with the Harry Potter tattoo who insists she was never THAT into Harry Potter.)

So: Melita Maschmann, likable Nazi true believer, who very slowly after the war began to look back on her former self and say, “What the fuck was I thinking?” This book, written in the form of a letter to her former best friend, a Jewish girl who had to flee Germany, is Maschmann’s attempt to figure out what, in fact, she was thinking.

The idea of the book as a letter is sometimes slightly alarming (can you imagine handing someone a book-length manuscript and saying “This is why I was a world-historically bad friend”?), but as a literary device it’s useful, because it gives Maschmann an imaginary interlocutor to pull her up short whenever she reaches a particularly “But didn’t this make you rethink your choices?” moment. Kristallnacht? The starving Poles when you were first posted to Poland? The time the local German army didn’t have enough troops to evict the Poles from their village to make way for German settlers, so you had to help? Maybe the time that you drove a truck around stealing furniture from the local Poles to give it to a German family that had settled in one of these newly emptied villages?

This last in particular was not merely wrong but also illegal even at the time, but rather oddly it’s also the only one that Maschmann didn’t have a single qualm about when she did it. The rest of these events did give her pause, but at the end of the day there’s a vast gulf between being taken aback and actually rethinking the ideology that has shaped your entire life.

Maschmann turned to National Socialism because she was an idealist who loved the idea of the National Community that cuts across classes and binds everyone together and fixes the poverty and shame that have crippled her country since the Great War. It was a way of rebelling against her parents that nonetheless embraced many of their beliefs: not only the sense that democracy had failed, but also the belief that violent competition among countries is inevitable, so although you might flinch from things you saw while invading Poland, if you didn’t invade Poland then Poland would assuredly invade you.

By this point you, my imaginary interlocutor, may well be asking, “But what part of this is likable, you monster?” Well, part of it is the fact that Maschmann had the strength of character to look back afterward and try to make sense of what she had done. This is something that most human beings seem to find almost impossible even when there aren’t war crimes involved.

Her account is clear-eyed, both in the sense of sheer observation - there’s tons of interesting detail here about life on the ground during the invasion of Poland, for instance - and in the sense that she’s trying to look at these events squarely, to explain without justifying, to say “this is what we were thinking” and hope that this might help turn other people aside if they find themselves straying into a similar path.

But even in Maschmann’s younger self, there are many appealing qualities. She was an indefatigable worker with a yearning to help people, an idealist who latched onto absolutely the wrong ideal. If she had latched onto a different ideal –

Well, the twentieth century was not short on ideals that led to mass destruction, so if Maschmann chose a different ideal, she might have been just as destructive in a different direction. Why do I find something so appealing about idealists, when ideology is used to create and justify so much suffering?
the_shoshanna: a mouse rides a frog in monsoon waters, India, July 2006 (frog saves mouse from drowning)
the_shoshanna ([personal profile] the_shoshanna) wrote2025-09-11 05:42 pm

we've barely even been touristing, we've just been relaxing

Whew! Now ensconced in Hay-on-Wye for our pre-planned rest day between finishing the organized hike and spending a week on our own on the coast, first in Fishguard and then in Aberystwyth.

We had booked the cab driver who's been bringing our luggage from place to place (Sharon) to give us a lift partway along our second-to-last hike, from Knighton to Kington. She remarked that a lot of the hikers with our company do that, so she'd gotten curious and looked at their website, and boggled a bit at how strenuous the hikes are! She dropped us off at a beautiful meadow beside a stream, and off we went again.

I don't think I have anything in particular to say about the hike? It was fun and gorgeous, it didn't rain on us until the last half hour or so, we met lots of other hikers coming the other way (and often their dogs), including some our age or older who were backpacking all their luggage with them, wow. They did specify that they're staying in B&Bs, not camping, but even so that's much more than I'd want to carry, not to mention clamber up steep wooded hillsides in storm winds and hail with! Of course, they may be doing much gentler hikes. Anyway.

We walked through innumerable sheep fields, although possibly not any cattle fields that day. There's pork on every menu but we haven't seen any signs of pig farming, except that just after Sharon dropped us off, as we were getting ourselves oriented and booting up the navigation app, a truckload of pigs went along the road; we couldn't see them but we could hear them snorting.

The trail mostly parallels Offa's Dyke; sometimes it runs atop it, but apparently that has really contributed to its erosion. Still, Geoff did have me climb up on a scenic bit so that he could get a photo of what he wanted to call "hot dyke-on-Dyke action." I pointed out that I'm bi, not lesbian, and have never identified as a dyke, and he admitted my point but still wanted the picture. I made him promise not to tell that joke in public, and yet here I am, posting it!

(Today he took a picture of me by the River Wye that he has captioned "Wye Shoshanna? Wye not?" I told that, considering I named our wifi network "Because Fi," he could have that one for free.)

Food in general has been...fine. Most of the B&Bs offer the basic British full breakfast of an egg, a sausage, some beans and/or black pudding, some bacon, a grilled tomato half, and some toast, plus a self-serve spread of cold cereal and sometimes yogurt or something. There will also be a vegetarian version. (The first hotel we were in, in Bishop's Castle, had, among other things, whole almonds and dried apricots on the cereal-toppings bar, and we sneaked some for trail food. They also had a genuinely varied breakfast menu, and I got an excellent avocado toast with an egg. But it turns out that they spoiled us for the other places we've stayed.) Most of our dinners have been in the same hotel/pub/B&B we've been staying in; some were pre-reserved as part of the hike, presumably either as part of the deal between the hiking company and the hotel or just because the town was so small there weren't a lot of options so the hiking company wanted to ensure we'd be able to eat. (And indeed, most days we staggered in tired enough that we were very glad not to have to figure out what to do about dinner!) Anyway, over the days I've had a perfectly-decent-but-nothing-to-write-home-about pork roast in cider gravy; and a "sizzling chicken stir-fry" that turned out to be basically fajitas without the tortillas, except that the sauce was differently spiced; and something that was called a casserole but was much more like a loose stew. Geoff has had some good fish and chips and a nice pie and some tasty brisket and tagliatelle that was unfortunately mixed in with beans in a disappointing tomato sauce.

Two days ago was the day when, having had a shorter hike than usual because of getting a ride, we arrived at the hotel around 3:30 instead of collapsing through the door at 5:30, and the front entrance let us right into the bar, and on the end of the bar right in front of us as we came in was a glass cake stand displaying gorgeous wedges of Victoria slice. And I had a sudden craving. Geoff always has a pint of beer with dinner, and I often have a half; sometimes I haven't felt up to alcohol at all, especially our jetlagged first night, and once for a change I tried a local cider, but although I liked my initial taste of it it shrank on me (the opposite of "it grew on me") over dinner and by the end I found it nastily sour. But somehow as we arrived that afternoon I absolutely craved a big glass of rich red wine and a wedge of cake. So I had them! A made-that-morning Victoria slice, and a delicious fruity merlot that wouldn't be too tart next to it, and I had a very cozy happy slightly tipsy afternoon! And then that evening we had the best dinner we've had so far, one of the best meals in years. Their menu offered both a minted lamb shank and a hoisin roast duck, and we got them both and split them, and they were both amazing.

We'd told Sharon we'd want a lift partway on the next day as well, since the final hike, as planned, involved 830 meters of cumulative uphill, whereas the shortened option was only 510. But then we looked again at the distance; the full hike is 25 km/15½ miles, which is ridiculously more than we can do in a day, and we belatedly registered that even the shortened version was 17 km/10½ miles, which would still be quite a long day for us. And we checked the weather forecast that evening, and it was for wind and thundershowers all the next day; and when we checked again in the morning it had got even worse. And so we said fuck this, we've paid our dues, and called Sharon first thing in the morning to ask if she could just bring us all the way to Hay-on-Wye along with our luggage, and she said of course. Phew. We had pleasant conversation as we drove along; she said it was nice to actually meet some of the hikers whose bags she's always shifting! Her husband's a taxi driver as well -- I get the feeling that "Knighton Taxi" the company is just the two of them -- and their son drives a timber lorry for his father-in-law's company.

She also confirmed what we'd heard elsewhere: that it had been incredibly dry until this week, and the rain was desperately needed. Farmers have already been feeding their stock winter feed, because there's been nothing for them in the fields. So I don't begrudge the rain (as [personal profile] rydra_wong quite correctly commented, we are experiencing Authentic British Weather), although it is, er, personally inconvenient. Thank goodness my passport seems to have safely dried out!

Our B&B here, called "Rest for the Tired," is yet another centuries-old building; we're on the top floor/attic in what's basically a little suite, with a door leading to a little entrance hall with our bedroom on one side and our bathroom on another. All the beams and doorways are so low that Geoff has to be careful not to bang his head, and even I have to take the same care when coming down the stairs from our suite. As in most of the places we've stayed, there's just a shower stall, no tub, and this is the second place where the shower has an on-demand water heater with a separate, unmarked power supply that you have to know to look for and turn on before it will produce any water. At the first place Geoff, who had never seen that setup before, thought the shower was broken, but I showed him how it worked, having remembered it from decades-ago visits to the UK and having noticed an otherwise inexplicable pull cord in the bathroom. Here, we had seen a mysteriously unlabeled and rather intimidating red switch high up on the wall of our little hallway, outside the bathroom, and hadn't investigated because it looked, well, mysterious and official, like flicking it might cut off the house's power or something. But this morning I got up to take a shower while Geoff was still in bed, and when the on-demand water heater had no power light and did not respond to its On button, I investigated the mysterious switch with the help of standing on tippy toes and shining a flashlight on it, by which I could see that, whatever it was, it was set to Off. So I figured it was worth a try and switched it to On, whereupon the power light came on on the water heater and I was able to have a shower.

It's a functional but minimal shower stall, a big bathroom with zero counter or storage space anywhere near the pedestal sink but a huge counter and cabinet all the way on the other side of the room, and a toilet that only flushes if you pump the handle juuuust right, and then the plumbing shrieks and moans for a couple of minutes as it refills. And there's a nasty ammonia/cat pee smell in the back corner of the cabinet, under the sloping roof. Also it got quite chilly last evening, and although there are wall radiators in both the bedroom and the bathroom, they were ice cold. (And the bedroom window can't shut fully, because the latch mechanism is old and misaligned, and the wood of the window frame is rotted.) I googled to see if there might be any way to turn the radiators on ourselves, and got helpful web pages saying essentially, "It's easy to adjust these old-fashioned steam radiators! All you need is a pair of pliers, a wire, a needle, a towel and bucket, and access to the boiler!" So I eventually texted our host, an eighty-year-old woman named Mary.

Backtrack a moment: we had of course arrived hours earlier than expected, because we'd skipped the hike. The B&B building was unlocked but unstaffed; Sharon just heaved our bags into the front hallway, as is standard procedure. We poked around inside but didn't see anyone. A note taped to the door said that for B&B info before 4:00, ask at the bookshop next door (actually most of the ground floor of the same building, the B&B just has a narrow front hall and a stairway up); after 4:00, phone Mary at [number]. It was a little after 10, but the bookshop wasn't open, so we phoned Mary, who answered in a very energetic old-woman voice and said her cleaner would be in momentarily to show us our room. We didn't get the cleaner's name but she is also an energetic old woman, and rather deaf, to judge from the loudness of her voice. Mary also arrived as we were settling in and we chatted for a while. I am so glad these days to be able to answer "Where are you from?" with "Canada"! I mentioned that from here we would be catching a bus to Hereford, and she burst out that she was so glad I'd said it properly, "not like the awful way the Americans say it." Now I'm totally paranoid about saying it wrong!

Anyway, I texted Mary about getting some heat instead of phoning because it was almost seven pm at that point and I think of texts as much less intrusive than phone calls, especially at odd hours. But she didn't respond, so I texted her again at eight, and again she didn't respond; but at eight-thirty we found that the radiators had started putting out some heat: not much, but enough that I wasn't almost shivering any more. I texted once more just to say that everything was okay now. And then she phoned me at almost nine, not seeming to have read the texts but opening with "You called Rest for the Tired?" as though she were returning a missed call. I explained and we said goodnight, and then thirty seconds later she phoned back, returning the second text/call, not realizing I was the same person she'd just talked to. I had also initially texted Sharon, the taxi driver, to give her as much notice as possible that we wanted to change plans without interrupting her likely breakfast time, and then phoned when I hadn't heard back and it had reached a more reasonable hour, and she hadn't indicated she'd ever seen it. Maybe people here don't text routinely, the way people back home do?

Hay-on-Wye is famous for its bookstores, of which there are eighty gazillion, or possibly somewhere around 25-30. Mostly they're amazing warrens of used books numbering in the thousands, and if I ever read on paper any more I would probably be in heaven. They're a big reason Geoff wanted to spend an extra day here, but I'm already carrying two books he brought with him that don't fit in his pack, and if he wants to buy anything here he's going to have to have them ship it home. We wandered around town a bit yesterday and poked around several of them, but didn't do more than lightly browse. We also looked through the (much smaller, and new books rather than used) queer bookstore, delightfully named Gay on Wye, where I had fun standing in front of the romance and sf sections going "That author came out of fandom, and so did she, and so did she..."

COVID-related commentaryWe're not masking in our hotels/B&Bs, or at meals; we ate our very first dinner outside, but since then outdoor eating hasn't been feasible. And we've kind of let slide masking in shops, even when we could, partly because they often have their doors standing open. We haven't seen a single other person masking, although no one has been weird about it when we were. But being indoors unmasked when it's not necessary has been making me a bit uncomfortable (although we are using an antiviral nasal spray, for whatever good it may do), so I remarked on it to Geoff yesterday and he agreed that we would go back to masking when feasible. And the very next shop we went into, which was Gay on Wye, as we were just leaving after looking around for a while, pondering souvenirs and gifts, spotting fan authors gone pro, etc., I heard the guy at the register telling a customer/friend, "I had COVID last week, and it's left me with walking pneumonia."

And I just. I mean. Brother, for your own sake you should be home in bed, not working, but I don't know if you get sick time, I don't know if you're broke, I don't know if there's anyone else to mind the shop, I don't know your life. But if you had COVID "last week" you are plausibly still contagious with it, plus the pneumonia, and you're not even masking? SURE AM GLAD WE WERE. That definitely reaffirmed to me that we should go back to being more careful, jesus.


We had dinner last night at a pub next door called the Three Tuns, in a building that dates back to the sixteenth century. Geoff had the decent but ultimately somewhat disappointing aforementioned brisket tagliatelle, and I had an excellent pizza with hot salami and nduja and chili oil. We looked for other options for tonight, but everything we found nearby was either lunch-only (most of the restaurants in town), or disproportionately pricy, or basically a sports bar, or in one case had a series of terrifyingly bad Tripadvisor reviews within the last few months, so we're just going back there tonight; it's decent and convenient.

Today was the weekly town market! So after we made the mistake of having breakfast at our B&B -- I mean, it was fine, it was the usual "full English breakfast" except without beans because Mary despises them, it's just that that meant we were full when we went to the market -- we went to browse the market! Lots of fantastic breads and pastries, lots of veg and meat, a cheesemonger with it must have been at least thirty kinds of cheese, lots of pies, lots of jams and preserves, lots of clothes, plus everything from handmade soaps to jewelry to beautifully carved wooden canes. We admired many many things, and then decided to stock ourselves for a picnic lunch on a riverside walk. Geoff got a chicken, gammon, and jalapeno pie, and also a chocolate almond croissant (filled with almond paste and covered with sliced almonds, and then covered on top of that with chocolate and chocolate chips); I got a ciabatta roll and a small wedge of a cheese called Ticklemore that was described (I took a picture of the little display sign) as "mild, delicate cheese with a firm, slightly crumbly texture; citrus, grass, and earthy notes," and also a peach. Then we stopped back at the B&B to fill a water bottle and set out for the riverside.

It was almost strange to be setting out on a gentle stroll, with no time pressure, no expectation of strenuousness, and no intention of being out more than a couple of hours! We sauntered along the wooded riverside path, occasionally seeing the river between the trees (once seeing what may have been a heron) and also seeing some really skillful life-size carvings in tree trunks and stumps: a fox carved sitting on a stump, so realistic that for the first split second we thought it might be real; an owl atop another tall trunk and another owl peering out of a hole; and a bird of prey in mid-flight, depicted as just skimming with its talons the tree trunk it had been carved out of.

Eventually the path opened up into a large meadow, and we took advantage of a sunny interval to sit on a conveniently placed bench, looking out across the meadow and river, and eat. My cheese was delicious; Geoff's croissant was ridiculously over the top but also delicious in its own way. So restful! So civilized! So not being hailed on! Although it did rain, briefly but torrentially, on our way home; we just sheltered under a tree in the lee of a church wall for ten or fifteen minutes until it passed. And then we came back to the B&B to lounge about, and blog, and also we need to repack our bags because, being here for a whole two consecutive nights, we have somehow let them explode all over the room, and tomorrow morning we have to haul our own luggage for the first time in almost a week, onto a bus and then a train to our next stop, the coastal town of Fishguard.

We did have a fun conversation with Mary over breakfast this morning. She checked that we'd eventually been warm enough last night, and told us that when she was little, her family lived in an old castle -- until the roof fell in when she was five, and then they moved to what they called the mini-mansion, what had originally been the dower house or similarly associated building, I forget exactly what she said; it had had only twenty-six rooms(!), but they only used a small part of the house. And it was always cold; there was a fireplace at each end of the house, but unless they had company there was only ever a fire in one of them -- "and no more logs on the fire after nine pm!" her grandmother would bark. The kids slept in a huge old iron bedstead, two at one end and two at the other, heads in different directions, under layers and layers of quilts. The place got much warmer after her family eventually had the front door replaced and the whole front sill rebuilt; the old door had broken and rotted through in holes. And they eventually replaced the old, old window glass and crumbling window frames with new frames and triple-pane insulated windows. But when she was a child...wow. And, I mean, if she's eighty or so (we didn't ask, but she mentioned that her husband is 88), that was in the 1950s -- that's not so long ago!

(It occurs to me now that it did not occur to me then to ask about the plumbing in her childhood home. Now I'm curious!)

She also told more stories of terrible American tourists she's encountered: people who were rude or demanding. She tends to trail off a little and leave things to implication rather than being brutally specific, but she had a great deal to say about the American woman who complained vociferously that there was no refrigerator in her room ("This is a B&B. If you want a refrigerator, go to a hotel") and then couldn't find her boots and accused Mary's husband of stealing them. "Are you sure you didn't pack them in your bag?" asked Mary; "you did arrive here by taxi, not on foot." "Of course I didn't pack them," snapped the woman, "do you think I'm stupid?" "Well, let me help you look," said Mary, upended the woman's bag and dumped everything out, and lo, there were her boots. "I think you owe me an apology," said Mary, but she didn't get one. There were more stories about that woman, too; but apparently her traveling companion was lovely, sent Mary a beautiful little painting she'd done from a photo she'd taken of the B&B (Mary showed it to us), and still sends her Christmas cards! The two women hadn't even known each other before deciding to travel together.

Now I need to wrap this up and do a little packing before we go to dinner!
jesse_the_k: Panda doll wearing black eye mask, hands up in the spotlight, dropping money bag on floor  (bandit panda)
Jesse the K ([personal profile] jesse_the_k) wrote2025-09-11 11:52 am

Oh, this tiny video says so much about working!

Open captions

my brief audio descriptionAsian man faces camera, sitting at laptop with white earbuds and animated face. Another person's back enters the screen. "This motion" is him pointing to his ear then the laptop and nodding. The picture on his desk is just the words "food" and "healthcare"

Stream: right on here )


When you want to view a YouTube short in the classic YouTube screen (with the controls you're familiar with!) you replace the word "shorts" in the link with the word "watch"

I first saw this and the link was youtube.com/shorts/I908J9_u0WE

To use the classic horizontal player go to youtube.com/watch/I908J9_u0WE


Edited due to a strange Markdown bug: when I create a bare link with angle brackets, uppercase letters are transformed into lower case.

<https://youtube.com/watch/i908j9_u0we> becomes https://youtube.com/watch/i908j9_u0we (and the video ID string in the code example are I908J9_u0WE)

but when I create a Markdown link [youtube.com/watch/I908J9_u0WE](https://youtube.com/watch/I908J9_u0WE) the case remains as typed.

martianmooncrab ([personal profile] martianmooncrab) wrote2025-09-11 09:34 am

(no subject)

the rash is inverse psoraisis... and I have taken the blood screen tests (7 vials of blood!) if my blood chemistry is within specs I am might get a biologic treatment, but, then, Pharmacy has to approve it, and considering their track record in trying to kill me, I not getting my hopes up.

my 2nd CT scan was ambigious and I seeing pulmonary on monday, so they calling it ground glass opacity for now which is medical jargon for... yeah, something there dont know what it is... sigh.

still struggling, still depressed...
dolorosa_12: (sister finland)
a million times a trillion more ([personal profile] dolorosa_12) wrote2025-09-11 05:26 pm
Entry tags:

Quick note — comments

Unfortunately I need to take a preemptive (and hopefully temporary measure): screening all comments made by people not on my access list on most of my journal posts. This is because the level of filters available for comment screening are none, all, or non-access list only.

I'm hoping that this will only need to be a temporary thing and I can revert back to normal, unscreened settings, but I thought I'd take the opportunity to check if anyone subscribed to me, but not on the access list wanted to be granted access.

The vast majority of my posts have always been public, and I want to keep things that way, and I tend to defer to other people's preferences when granting access (i.e. if someone adds me as the result of e.g. a friending meme, if they subscribe only, I reciprocate, and if they grant access, I reciprocate in that way as well). But I'm not precious about this, and don't expect reciprocity.

If you're already on my access list, nothing should really change and you should be able to comment on most posts as normal. If you would like to be granted access, please comment on this post (here all comments are screened) or send me a message. If you're happy with things as they are, do be aware that future comments of yours may be screened, but I'll try to unscreen them at the point at which I reply.

I hope this makes sense — feel free to ask for clarification in the comments if you're not sure what I'm explaining here.
mxcatmoon: ML: Jayshay2 (ML: Jayshay2)
My Fannish Corner ([personal profile] mxcatmoon) wrote2025-09-11 12:15 pm

ML fic: Creatures of Habit

Written for the prompts, 114 Lucifugous, 137 Will-o'-the-wisp, 147 Connotations, 154 Liminal, at [community profile] vocab_drabbles 
Title: Creatures of Habit
Fandom: Moonlight (TV)
Author: Cat Moon
Rating: R (for brief, non-explicit sex)
Words: 965
Characters/Pairings: Josef/Shane
Summary: Josef contemplates changes in the status quo, dances, and does some star gazing. Shane is unpredictable.


Creatures of Habit )
glitteryv: (Default)
Glittery ([personal profile] glitteryv) wrote in [community profile] recthething2025-09-11 11:24 am
Entry tags:

Community Recs Post!

Every Thursday, we have a community post, just like this one, where you can drop a rec or five in the comments.

This works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)

(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)

So what cool fancrafts/fanvids/fics/podfics/fanart/other kinds of fanworks have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.

BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here.
smallhobbit: (Floral SAL)
smallhobbit ([personal profile] smallhobbit) wrote2025-09-11 04:06 pm

25 Things in 25 - Thing #15

Tackle stitching projects

I made a big attempt at tackling all the stitching/cross stitch kits, of various descriptions which I have, and am pleased with my progress.  Not everything is done, but I didn't expect that, and I've now started Christmas projects.

Some of these photos have been posted before, but for completeness I'm putting them altogether.

duckprintspress: (Default)
duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-09-11 11:07 am

Duck Prints Press Kinks Your October: A 2025 Kinktober Challenge!

Graphic overlaid with text. It's entitled Kink Your Tober Challenge! And is followed by a chart with four columns - one for the day, one for Prompt 1, one for Prompt 2, and one for Prompt 3. The text reads: Oct. 1: somnophilia/generational age gap or cross-gen/choking Oct. 2: pony play/solo play and masturbation/scarification Oct. 3: bathing/bitching and studding/exhibitionism Oct. 4: shibari/fighting as foreplay/circle jerk Oct. 5: war prize/horns as an erogenous zone/impact play Oct. 6: blood play/outdoor sex/forced orgasms Oct. 7: dacryphilia/gillplay or gillfucking/harem Oct. 8: reunion sex/phone sex or sexting/mind control Oct. 9: heats and ruts/sex toys under clothing/scent kink Oct. 10: role reversal/dendrophilia/silence kink Oct. 11: vore/sentient creature bestiality/cock cages Oct. 12: marking/intimate object gains sentience/breeding kink Oct. 13: voyeurism/sensation sharing/sounding Oct. 14: free use/power imbalance/biting Oct. 15: overstimulation/friends with benefits/sex while clothed Oct. 16: knotting/daddy or mommy kink/leather Oct. 17: proxyfucking/hand and finger kink/edging Oct. 18: stalking/stuffing or feeding kink/fisting Oct. 19: chastity belts/sensory deprivation/tentacles Oct. 20: kidnapping/non-sexual kink/gags Oct. 21: nipple clamps/object insertion/tattooing Oct. 22: wing kink/doing chores naked/wedding night Oct. 23: medical kink/higher being toys with a human/triple penetration Oct. 24: incest/public claiming/wound fucking Oct. 25: throat fucking/captor x captive/collaring Oct. 26: piss kink/consensual non-consent/lactation kink Oct. 27: fuck or die/cock-and-ball torture/pregnancy kink Oct. 28: deathbed sex/body worship/monsterfucking Oct. 29: ruined orgasm/coming untouched/oral sex Oct. 30: bodyswap/oviposition and egg laying/sex slave Oct. 31: infidelity kink/electrostim/mating hunts

Love prompt-a-day challenges? So do we, which is why we thought it would be fun to put together our own Kinktober list – assembled collaboratively with input from interested Duck Prints Press contributors. And now here we are! Welcome to the 2025 Duck Prints Press Kinks-Your-Tober challenge – 31 days of prompts, three prompts per day, loads of horny ideas there for the taking!
This is a rules-light challenge with no minimum word count or minimum art amount or whatnot. We’re kinking up your October, so anything goes! Pick one prompt per day or mix-and-match all three. Create fiction, art, graphics, playlists, or whatever else floats your boat. Fanworks or original works welcome. Combine our list with other October lists or don’t. Anything goes!! The only thing we won’t tolerate? Intolerance: no kinkshaming, shipshaming, fandom hate, etc.
We’re not reblogging or boosting works; this is a lowkey, for-fun challenge for y’all and for us. But, if you post your accurately tagged work to AO3, we encourage you to add it to the Kinks-Your-Tober 2025 collection. You can check out the 2024 collection too.
Also, feel free to come hang with us on our Book Lover’s Server!

Bring on the Kink, Y’all!

Full list in text form:

The 2025 list, featuring three options for each day:
Read more... )

settiai: (D&D -- settiai)
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2025-09-11 10:40 am
Entry tags:

Aurendor D&D

My poor cleric, Siân, has had a really bad couple of weeks in-game. Over the course of the last not even a full two weeks, she has:

- woken up from being held captive by mind-controlling plants for a week
- found herself in a prison camp in the middle of a warzone
- watched a friend die while trying to escape said prison camp
- failed to resurrect said friend
- watched the resurrection fail again when someone else attempted a higher level spell
- found out that her family has been accused of treason and placed under arrest
- found out that a bunch of powerful nobles want to make her father emperor
- saw the instant destruction of an entire town via a weapon of mass destruction
- watched the friend who died come back to life separate from his still-dead corpse
- given up the very last gift her deceased mother ever gave her
- had a bunch of ancient knowledge magically dumped in her head
- had her right arm chopped off
- found out that her father named her his legitimate daughter due to obvious coercion
- had her right arm unexpected regrown by way of alchemy
- almost been killed by malfunctioning golems
- almost watched her entire group be killed by a shadowspawn beholder
- been publicly seen with magic users in an empire where magic is illegal
- been involved in a very bloody battle
- joined a pirate fleet
- found out that the empire-wide newspaper has been smearing her name
- almost been killed by assassins
- found out an assassins' guild with a reputation for never quitting has been hired to kill her
- been involved in another very bloody battle
- found out that she's one of the most wanted people in the entire empire
- almost been killed by lightning
- almost drowned
- died instantly from a magical trap while in a shadow plane surrounded by enemies

Considering the circumstances of her death, I'm honestly not sure what's going to happen. Resurrection may or may not be on the table, especially considering the rest of the group is about to go into a pretty massive bit of combat without a healer.

Next week, I'm planning on basically just being off camera the entire night unless something very unexpected happens. I'll figure out future plans after I see what happens in-game over the next, uh, 60 seconds or so.

They do technically at least have access to an item that will let them cast unlimited Gentle Repose, but said item is on their ship which is currently shrunk and inside a bottle. Plus said item is being used on the dead body of the group member who came back to life by other means and therefore has both a mostly-alive body and a corpse sitting on the ship, so... yeah.

(Don't ask. Trust me.)
duckprintspress: (Default)
duckprintspress ([personal profile] duckprintspress) wrote2025-09-11 10:04 am

Artist Spotlight: Max Jason Peterson

We’re approaching the end of our campaign to fund making art prints and a 2026 calendar featuring queer art by 9 different artists – it’s only got 4 days left, with pre-orders closing on September 15th 2025. Check out the campaign now!

Max Jason Peterson is the third and final artist to have contributed two pieces (along with May Barros and Jagoda Zirebiec). Max’s charming watercolor pieces contribute greatly to the overall queer joy vibe of the art in our calendar!

Artwork of two older, white-haired white men sitting side by side on a red cushion on the deck of a blue ship. One man has his arm around the others' shoulder, and the other man is playing a lute. They are surrounded by a background of a lake with green hills in the background and other sailboats visible. A dragon curls its tail around the mast and there is a Nessie in the lake. On one side, an orange tabby cat looks over the edge of the boat to meet the gaze of a duck surrounded by ducklings looking up.Artwork of two men, one Black with short curly hair, the other white with red hair, wearing fantasy winter clothing and kneeling in the snow holding hands while looking at each other fondly. Where their hands are joined, magical sparkles and a heart rise up. The Black man is flanked by a bobcat; the white man has a cat in a basket beside him. There are snowy winter trees in the background.


The piece on the left is entitled Treasure; according to Max, “‘Treasure’ refers to many things in this piece: the treasure of a love that lasts; the treasure that each man is to the other; the wealth of their happiness together through all the years; and the beauty and peace of this setting (in which cats and ducks, sea monsters and sailboats exist in harmony). In this painting, ‘Treasure’ is both a noun and verb, for the men truly treasure each other, their lives, and these experiences. The beings depicted here treasure their friendship and good will for one another as well.” Buy art prints of “Treasure.”

Max chose not to share the inspiration behind his other piece, Snow Heart, but the love and affection radiates from the page. Buy art prints of “Snow Heart.”