johnpalmer: (Default)
johnpalmer ([personal profile] johnpalmer) wrote2018-01-08 09:20 am

(no subject)

I hear tell that folks in the east are probably trying to use the mythical 15 terms for snow to form the legendary "look at all this f*ing snow". Has anyone gotten past the stumbling block: "Observe the snow; it fornicates"?

Please remember that those who speak of "global warming" are either stone cold stupid, or deliberate trolls. A mention of this is worth far more than trying to counter any "points" they might seem to be trying to make!

And happy new year. I made it out to the office; pre-Christmas, Christmas->New Year, and first week of the new year have had a lot more physical, mental, and emotional stresses than I'd thought possible, but there you have it. Some people will talk about embracing challenges and changes, but I'm more of a "be aware they'll be there, and always remember, when you're going through hell, *keep going*."

Heh. I also had a discussion with a friend recently. I said "don't borrow trouble from tomorrow, it'll have plenty of its own for you." That is, don't waste time worrying about scary situations when there's nothing you can do to change them.

She didn't like that, because she was more of a "... tomorrow might not actually have any troubles." Which was a good point! Sometimes, things go right. Never forget that - I very much like the line at the end of the first Charlie and the Chocolate Factory movie, where Wilder's Wonka asks if Charlie knows what happened to the boy who one day got everything he wanted, and when Charlie says he didn't, the response is "he lived happily ever after."

Sometimes good stories happen, and have good endings. But I still prefer the slightly cynical "tomorrow will have plenty of trouble on its own," because even if the thing you imagine doesn't happen, there will be trouble - some kind of trouble, on some level - tomorrow.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)

[personal profile] redbird 2018-01-08 07:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't recall whether Marty Walsh said "global warming" or "climate change" when he pointed out the flood zones in Boston from last week's nor'easter as evidence that yes, this is a real problem. But he's not the only person I've seen recently point out the relevance of global warming to sea level rise and Arctic vortices.
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gingicat: deep purple lilacs, some buds, some open (Default)

[personal profile] gingicat 2018-01-09 01:47 am (UTC)(link)
Well, the first couple of days after they fly out of the factory in the Great Glass Elevator are quite a doozy.