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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-21 05:38 pm

Today's Adventures

Today we visited several places in Tuscola.

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dialecticdreamer ([personal profile] dialecticdreamer) wrote2025-08-21 08:25 pm

First Steps on a New Road (part 1 of 1, complete)

First Steps on a New Road
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1754
[End of March 179-]


:: Laszlo sets out on his planned trip toward the orphanage in Cluj-Napau. Part of the “Lost Son” story arc in the Frankenstein’s Family universe. ::




Golden light draped over the tops of the trees as Laszlo double checked the latches on every drawer and cabinet. He dusted his hands as he inspected the interior of the vardo again, then put his gloves back on. The sound of a single set of footsteps made him hurry toward the door.

Kálmán walked steadily toward the house and vardo, smiling faintly. When he spotted Laszlo, he raised a hand to wave, and his smile widened. “Good morning!”

Laszlo waved back. “Morning! What brings you up this early?”
Read more... )
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mdlbear ([personal profile] mdlbear) wrote2025-08-21 09:30 pm

Thankful Thursday

Today I am thankful for...

  • My health, what's left of it. Beats the alternative.
  • USB-C Power Delivery making some of the random chargers I need to carry around obsolete. Less thanks to things that take IEC 60320 cables. NO thanks for the many things that still use wall-warts. Power bricks with IEC cables are somewhere in between, because brick. So are charging cables with USB on one end and some random connector on the other.
  • My bandmates, m and N.
  • My little Zoom H2 recorder, which I have had since August 2007. Eighteen years later, it still does a great job of recording concerts and practice sessions.
  • High-capacity SD cards and micro-SD cards. (I usually get micro-SD and use an adapter, of which I have more than I can use at any one time.) Pro tip: wrap a post-it around your micro-SD and label that.

jhetley: (Default)
jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-21 03:22 pm

(no subject)

Ethics must be reciprocal . . .
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-21 01:33 pm

Birdfeeding

Today is cloudy and mild.  :D

I fed the birds.  I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.












.
 
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-21 09:29 am

(no subject)

From this point forward, the goal of "national intelligence" will be to tell The Boss what he wants to hear.
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-21 07:00 am

Locally-sourced angst

Air temperature 51 F, wind southwest about 4 mph, airport weather station reporting fog but clear sky on our side of town. Appointment this morning, walk or bike ride afternoon. We'll see if our mowing crew shows up this week -- we don't really need them, with the dry weather.
dialecticdreamer: My work (Default)
dialecticdreamer ([personal profile] dialecticdreamer) wrote2025-08-20 08:09 pm

Trading Confidences (part 1 of 1, complete)

Trading Confidences
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1666
[End of March 179-]


:: Vladimir helps Laszlo get his mind and heart aligned before he sets out. Part of the “Lost Son” story arc in the Frankenstein’s Family universe. ::




An hour before sunset, Laszlo picked his way down the still-muddy path, walking on the stones and bits of stick at the edge, and taking his time. Staying clean was worth the extra effort, but one badly placed foot could mean slipping, and having to drag himself to Gregory’s wearing a cloak of cold mud from crown to knee.

Vladimir met him at the intersection of the two paths, holding up a lit lantern that they did not need. Laslzo stepped into a half hug, then brushed past almost without faltering.

The man rubbed at one faun-brown eyebrow, then took a deep breath, and stopped walking. “Am I really setting out to just find some strange child and bring it home to my parents?”
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-20 03:25 pm

Affordable Housing

In this all-women tiny home neighborhood, rent starts at $450. Residents want it to be a nationwide blueprint

Robyn Yerian, 70, used to live in a two-bedroom tiny home that cost just $57,000.

In 2022, she was yearning for more connection — as well as some “passive income.”

So she took some money from her retirement savings, bought a 5-acre plot of land in Cumby, Texas, and is now the landlord and community leader of The Bird’s Nest, an all-women tiny home neighborhood home to 11 women ages 60 to 80
.

Read more... )
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-20 03:08 pm

Birdfeeding

Today is cloudy and cooler. :D

I fed the birds. I've seen a mixed flock of sparrows and house finches.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I watered spaces to put the irises.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I planted a Dangerous Mood Bearded Iris (lavender standards with near-black falls) in the purple-and-white garden. I planted a Montmartre Bearded Iris (purple with yellow edges) and a Ziggy Reblooming Bearded Iris (yellow standards with burgundy-and-yellow streaked falls) under the maple tree.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I watered the newly planted irises.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I watered the old picnic table and the patio plants.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I watered the new picnic table and septic garden.

EDIT 8/20/25 -- I watered the telephone pole garden and some of the savanna plants.

Cicadas and crickets are singing. Fireflies are out.

As it is now dark, I am done for the night.
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-20 01:42 pm

Read "The Bottle Wall" by Smokingboot

This is a lovely romantic fable about a widow who falls in love with a cloud-herder. 
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jhetley ([personal profile] jhetley) wrote2025-08-20 07:47 am

Rite of passage

Air temperature 55 F, light northeast wind, mostly cloudy. Heating system service today, in which we find if the equipment will survive another Maine winter. Walk later.
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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-20 04:45 am
Entry tags:

Cuddle Party

Everyone needs contact comfort sometimes. Not everyone has ample opportunities for this in facetime. So here is a chance for a cuddle party in cyberspace. Virtual cuddling can help people feel better.

We have a
cuddle room that comes with fort cushions, fort frames, sheets for draping, and a weighted blanket. A nest full of colorful egg pillows sits in one corner. There is a basket of grooming brushes, hairbrushes, and styling combs. A bin holds textured pillows. There is a big basket of craft supplies along with art markers, coloring pages, and blank paper. The kitchen has a popcorn machine. Labels are available to mark dietary needs, recipe ingredients, and level of spiciness. Here is the bathroom, open to everyone. There is a lawn tent and an outdoor hot tub. Bathers should post a sign for nude or clothed activity. Come snuggle up!
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Elise Matthesen ([personal profile] elisem) wrote2025-08-20 01:10 am

on the approach to this birthday

 Life is certainly enhanced with the improvement of available captioning in real time through various browsers and software. I want to have virtual tea with so many different people! I can see what they are saying! And it doesn't leave me exhausted the way lip-reading so often does. Maybe making a whole bunch of virtual tea dates will be another set of birthday presents. Things to look forward to. Always good.

Also there needs to be some storytelling. Some virtual storytelling gatherings, I mean. Even more things to look forward to.  In the meantime, I plan to continue enjoying the next few days as we approach Friday, which is the birthday actual.

If anybody wants to do a kind thing, letting people know about my Birthday Month Sale is a very kind thing indeed, and maximizes the amount of good stuff like bill-paying and bead-acquiring that this Lioness is able to do. <3 <3 <3

LionessElise's Birthday Month Sale:
Sale goes all through the month of August. 
As usual, there will be special birthday markdowns on the 22nd.
There will be more markdowns as the month goes on.
Expect the last days to be lively. And the last hours to be very bouncy indeed.
When it's done, anything left goes back to full price.
www.etsy.com/shop/LionessElise

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Elise Matthesen ([personal profile] elisem) wrote2025-08-20 12:08 am

I'll have the indecision platter and a side order of WTF, please.

[Content Notes: this is a discussion of food and eating, and diabetes and new experiences, and I am a recovering eating disorder person. If that's not what you want to read about right now, please skip with my good wishes.]

Since it's that time of the year, I have been ordering a few things, telling myself that I might as well try them for this birthday rather than wait, because the possibilities of various tariffs may put them out of reach in the future.  When I say that the indecision platter is often my favorite thing on the menu, I'm talking about those meals that have samplers of several sort of dish. They are very good for learning about the range of foods sometimes. Also they can be a dopamine hit jackpot, at least for me. (If it's the dopamine that's providing the fun in here, as people who know the recent hypotheses tell me.)

They also save time if I can't make up my mind, which can be handy.

When looking at an unfamiliar menu, do you usually first make note of what you've never had before? Is it even more intriguing if you'd never heard of it before? 

The ordering has been proceeding with perhaps too much vigor, but hey. I have so few wild indulgences left on my to-do list these days, or should I say the can-do list? Probably. But I am doing my best to be sensible. I took the canned haggis off the list because I already know I love haggis. I did not take the little durian cakes off the list because although I already know I love durian, they were just a few dollars and MUST HAVE. (Note to self: ask brother-in-law to scope out CostCo's supply again. A year or two ago they had multipacks of durian mooncakes for ridiculously good prices. Om nom nom.) Some of my favorite drinks are coming (Milkis and San Pellegrino pomegranate/orange drink) because I fully expect tariffs to play hob with their prices. Even now they are a bunch higher than they were, but a person sufficiently motivated can make a melograno/arancia drink be the long-lasting slowly savored high point of their day, which is how I'll be approaching those. 

There are some garlic sable cookies coming. Garlic sable cookies! I have never! I must!  Those are an excellent example of the treasured WTF category. If it makes me immediately ask "Can you DO that??" it's a WTF delight and I want to know what it's like. Or to put it another way, my ignorance has provided endless opportunities for learning, and learning is so often so much fun -- and very tasty.

Part of the reason I'll be savoring things slowly is that I'm adapting to living with type 2 diabetes, which I've been dealing with for a year now. I got really, really lucky and got two excellent things from becoming a Metformin taker. One is an effect, and the other is, I think, a side effect. The effect is that it apparently went and repaired whatever sensor in me has to do with satiation, and tweaked the setting some, so I turn out to be done having food now,, thank you very much, earlier than I historically have been. A lot of this is because -- OK, I don't know if anybody else has this, but I used to do comfort eating, where certain things are very soothing. And that's different now. There is no soothing from food. It was pretty startling when I realized it. It's so weird when suddenly it does not work. I mean, at ALL. So that's one thing, and I think it's an effect.  The other thing is a side effect, but I do not mind it. It is this:  everything tastes wonderful. No, I mean WONDERFUL.  Plastic packet ramen might as well be gourmet. But the effect mentioned earlier holds: I don't feel like overeating. No matter how wonderful. I can go "Oh, that was so good," mean it entirely, and then go do the next thing. 

It is all so very weird. But it's kind of fun. (I appear to have also lost the ability to fret about food or weight or whatever.) We shall see where it leads.

Right now where it's leading is to ordering some birthday treats and then wondering how long they will last under the new schedule of savoring things. (The only thing I have found that I nom more than I want of is Swedish Bubs in pomegranate/strawberry flavor. Well, and those jelly snails. But those are both texture craving things, and that's a different issue.) Neurodiversity and food stuff is complicated even before getting to the land of Metformin. So far, though, it's better rather than not, even the uncomfortable bits where a coping mechanism isn't any more and needs to change. In the meantime, though, I have durian cakes and garlic sables and fruit-juice-filled gumme koi coming, and life is good that way.

Is there a new-to-you thing you have tasted that was a learning experience? Was it a delight? Was it tasty? Do you have texture cravings? Other cravings? Did you ever do comfort eating and then have it stop working for you? What then? (I find myself going to the workbench more. Which is not a bad result, really. Art is also comfort. Still comfort, I guess I should say. Do you have anything like that?)


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ysabetwordsmith ([personal profile] ysabetwordsmith) wrote2025-08-19 07:41 pm

Robotics

WARNING: Do not watch with mouth full.

Robots race, play football, crash and collapse at China's 'robot Olympics'

BEIJING, Aug 15 (Reuters) - China kicked off the three-day long World Humanoid Robot Games on Friday, looking to showcase its advances in artificial intelligence and robotics with 280 teams from 16 countries.
Robots competed in sports such as track and field, and table tennis, as well as tackled robot-specific challenges from sorting medicines and handling materials to cleaning services



Watching the evolution of robotics on a primitive planet is hilarious.