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Mad Scientess ([personal profile] nanila) wrote in [community profile] awesomeers2025-06-19 08:59 am
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Just One Thing (19 June 2025)

It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
the_comfortable_courtesan: image of a fan c. 1810 (Default)
the_comfortable_courtesan ([personal profile] the_comfortable_courtesan) wrote2025-06-19 08:35 am

Connexions (4)

Pleased with the way things went

Nat Barron permitted himself to feel pleased with the way things went in his world. Here he was, taking his ease over the breakfast table with his very fine wife Ludmilla, that was an excellent spouse for a fellow in his line – bred up in pawnbroking and fencing, able to undertake a little simple forgery was it required – though naught to compare with her uncle Kaminski, that was quite the artist. And beyond these excellent personal qualities, it now came about that her former connexions in Stepney had come to hear of this very eligible match she had made: Nat Barron, that was not only chief of all the criminal enterprizes that went forward in Seven Dials, but had influence and alliances that extended a deal beyond that!

There was the very amiable relations he enjoyed with Ezra Klein’s Bishopsgate boys, and Abe Anglesmith’s Limehouse gang, that he was now bringing into a very useful exchange, by means of his own fellows. That would convey certain matters that the authorities would be looking out for around Bishopsgate over to Limehouse, and similarly matters that might be closely scrutinized about the docks, took over to Bishopgate, where they would look quite innocent upon market stalls.

There was this very profitable accord he had established with the Frawleys of Brighton, that had been Gentlemen of the Trade for countless generations, for could readily dispose of the fine liquors &C they brought over.

Had moved on considerable from the days when Nat Barron had been the fellow to call on was there one or another or so that was wanted teaching a lesson or mayhap even putting out of the way.

Though there was still good business in that! Not that he soiled his own hands with it, but here he was, the one that provided fellows to take care of any sharpers at Dumaine’s gambling-hell, and also to warn off any fellows that were well-paid to provide services at a certain discreet club for gentlemen of a certain taste did they grow grasping and threatening. And even to prevent trouble, as in the matter of rivals endeavouring kick up riot at the Buffle Arms Song and Supper Rooms, where that popular songstress, Clo Marshall, performed.

Then there was the dingers and the ken-crackers, and the whores, and Abbetts’ dog-fighting and ratting ring, none of it, true, what one might call within The Law, but all well-run, giving no trouble, payment made or favours granted in certain quarters –

Why, here you had young swells, come into Seven Dials to see life – would go to Black Tom’s and see the swearing parrot and his learned mate, and gawp at the low-life there – lay bets on a dogfight or so – take a girl to Lil and Joan’s 'commodation house – and nothing worse come to 'em than maybe a purse lost, a sore head in the morn – never a fellow found in an alley with a knife in his gut – crimped as a sailor – no real harm done –

Young Mr Reveley, Nat understood, was now married and would no longer be in the way of bringing his former companions from the country to see Town life himself, but very like his new-made brother-in-law young Osberton would take on the charge. He made a mental note to enquire of Bert Edwards, that now had that very fine situation at Raxdell House, and owed Nat a favour or so.

For Nat’s protection extended over Prancey’s molly-house, and Bert and his particular set found that a very useful spot for their revels.

Law, said 'Milla, sure you are deep in thought the morn!

Nat blinked, and looked at his wife. He chuckled and said, went be positive philosophical these days. And how did she do?

O, I come about well enough! She smiled. There were certain signs lately that she went with child, that was very gratifying, but also some cause of worry – Nat took a fret that perchance she should not be going to assist Grigori at the pawnshop, or climb the rickety stairs to her uncle’s attic to ensure he was well – but she laughed and poopooed his fears. Was not a fine lady that would go lie upon a sopha all those months, and one heard they had hard times of it when it came to bearing – she had rather be up and about her business.

And he had come to find himself in a habit of listening to 'Milla and trusting her judgement.

Indeed, she said, I am well enough in myself, but I heard a troubling thing from Lil and Joan t’other day –

For it answered very well to have 'Milla undertake those matters, for there were concerns that the women were more like to bring to another women. Besides, he had come about to see that women had very nice judgement, not only among their own kind – he must admit that had he asked any of the other whores about that trollop Franzie, they would have told him a tale or two that would have been of great benefit to his interests! – but of men, for men were often very loose-tongued and careless in their company.

Had he took that into consideration, mayhap would never have had that bother with Rodge and Art!

'Milla cleared her throat, and went on, had Larry Hooper come around about an investigation

Nat looked up sharply with a growl.

– naught to do with any business of ours! No, 'twas to do with that child Binnie that Whipping Marie took to look after her pup Pompey, makes quite a pet of the girl, that comes on to have quite the connexion for walking dogs and brushing 'em &C around Covent Garden, that her ma of a sudden goes wish to have back with her –

Nat snorted. That would be that slovenly Apsell mot – that took up with this fellow and that fellow and now finds herself left on her own resources – never did a day’s honest – nor dishonest! – work in her life. Living hand-to-mouth –

So, 'Milla went on, the notion is that she intends to live on the girl, that cannot yet have even come to womanhood –

Nat growled again. He would not be having that.

So Lil and Joan fathom it that here is Larry goes seek out evidence, so does the woman try taking it to a magistrate, crying and wailing that her dear daughter is being stole from her, 'twill show her bad character –

Nat banged a fist on the table. Magistrate! 'Tis a very chancy proceeding – these police courts –

Oh, those Allards were proud! They surely knew that they might ask him a favour in this matter, but no, mayhap they were thinking they already owed him over the little matter of Thad removing Trembourne’s corpse well away from Whipping Marie’s premises? Was they not the oldest of friends? Had not Maurie quite gratuitous made 'Milla a fine wedding dress and trousseau? Had not Maurie put him in the way of numerous remunerative matters?

He supposed they still thought he had deliberately murdered that wastrel Froggie sot Jacques Allard their father, whereas he had simply seen him lying drunk in a ditch, that had later filled in a rainstorm, whereby he drownded. Nat had foreseen the possibility, but no more than that. They had been glad to have been quit of the fellow – monstrous cruel to his poor wife –

'Milla pushed back her chair and said Grigori would be wondering where she was – should not dilly-dally –

So Nat went to the window and whistled up Bart and Fritz to escort her there, and having kissed his wife goodbye, with a few messages for Grigori, went back to the table to sit and brood.

After a while he got up, and pulled on his jacket and picked up his stout stick with the silver knob, then went find Thad, for the very sight of Thad was like to cause a certain trembling, even these days when he went be quite lovesick over a respectable woman in Matt Johnson’s employ.

They strode through the streets, greeted with the usual marks of respect as they passed, until they came to the low alleyway where Binnie’s ma was presently residing. Nothing like Marie Allard’s fine house in Covent Garden, kept quite separate from her business premises providing special pleasures for gentlemen that she did very well from.

Pausing outside the door they could hear voices within – had she found another fellow, then? No, it sounded like two women –

Nat rapped on the door with his stick.

He was about to rap again when the door opened.

God be with you, said the woman, that was certainly not that Apsell slut: very dark of skin, her hair done up in a cloth, dressed very plain but in good stuff –

Ah. 'Twas that biblewoman, that held prayer-meetings over to Covent Garden for the fine Misses there. And the gossip that gave her out as handsome enough to earn her living like 'em did not lie: not a young woman, but in good looks still.

She continued to look at Nat calmly.

Is Mrs Apsell within?

Indeed she is, but I do not think she is at present ready for company – there has been a deal of soul-struggle, but she comes about to see the light –

There was a sound of sobbing from within.

We come to see her, said Nat, concerning her daughter –

Oh, said the woman, she now sees that 'tis the right thing to leave her where she is –

Mrs Dorcas, Mrs Dorcas, what is it? came the weak cry.

Was the woman – Mrs Dorcas? – tall? Nat could not tell, as she drew herself up and said that 'twould be better did they leave – would only distress Mrs Apsell and very like send her into a hysterick fit.

Nat nodded, remarked that she appeared to have the business well in hand, conveyed her something towards the charities he had no doubt she was engaged in, sketched a bow, and departed.

He shook his head. Law, she has managed to give the old bitch religion. 'Tis a miracle.

tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
tamaranth ([personal profile] tamaranth) wrote2025-06-19 07:44 am
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2025/094: Return of the Thief — Megan Whalen Turner

2025/094: Return of the Thief — Megan Whalen Turner
Nahuseresh tells me I am not king. We’ll see if he really prefers the Thief. [loc. 3700]

Series finale, and it really delivers.Read more... )

tamaranth: me, in the sun (Default)
tamaranth ([personal profile] tamaranth) wrote2025-06-19 07:44 am
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2025/093: Thick as Thieves — Megan Whalen Turner

2025/093: Thick as Thieves — Megan Whalen Turner
There is freedom in this life and there is power, and I was ambitious for the latter. [p. 15]

Kamet is a slave, albeit an expensive and efficient one: he is secretary to Nahuseresh, the erstwhile Medean ambassador to Attolia. Disgraced by the failure of the mission to Attolia the year before, Nahuseresh has returned to court in Ianna-Ir, hoping for a new post. Unfortunately his latest request has not been granted -- and the court is a dangerous place for a man out of favour.Read more... )

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Azure Jane Lunatic (Azz) 🌺 ([personal profile] azurelunatic) wrote2025-06-18 09:31 pm
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More tiny excitements

* Shelves are fairly well stuffed. The other brackets have arrived, so we can go get more boards and tiny hardware at our convenience.
* There is now Shelf in the living room. Things are going in it.
* Household tidying progresses.
* Today I filled boxes for 13 weeks of my morning and evening pills. It feels like it took less time than usual, but I think that's a trick of the light. I think I usually start later in the day, and keep going until it's dark. It took about four and a half hours; I try to allocate at least 5.
* This means that I've got pills packed until sometime in September. Go, me?
* Juneteenth is tomorrow!
* Turns out that being a director at a certain kind of non-technical organization means that you spend evenings face-down in the user interface level of a misbehaving database. I am chockablock with sympathy.
* Yellface is adorable, and likes to spend the part of the day when I'm awake but still in bed sitting on my legs.
* Had games and pizza with friends last week; they've got a young-ish teeneager placed with them right now. She wasn't up for games but she did appear to fill her water bottle. Luna-cat is very curious about new people and apparently charged her, which was off-putting. I faded early.
* I got some new bras; I'll have to add pockets but the test wear was promising!
* Nobody told me about the dragons in The Priory of the Orange Tree, everyone just mentioned the lesbians.
* There's a new serial at [personal profile] the_comfortable_courtesan!!!
WIL WHEATON dot NET ([syndicated profile] wwdn_feed) wrote2025-06-19 12:34 am

it picks me up, puts me down

Posted by Wil

I’ve been open and unashamed about my mental health struggles and triumphs, always willing to talk about my CPTSD, always willing to supportively listen when someone chooses to share their experience with me.

I make this choice every day, because I am doing my best to be the person I need in the world. I need people who are kind and compassionate, who are willing to share their struggles and victories in a way that validates my own experiences. I make this choice so that maybe I can be the person I need, for someone I will never meet, the way people like Jenny Lawson, or Gabe and Tycho from Penny Arcade were for me, when I was beginning my healing journey.

It’s in that spirit that I’m writing today. This is sort of a general update on how that journey is going, and a look at where I am, with some thoughts on how I got here.

So, broadly and generally speaking, I’m doing great! I mean, everything in the whole world is terrible, but the little bit of reality that’s being rendered around me at any given moment is pretty great. I’m healthy and safe, my family is healthy and safe, I have all the work I need, I have time and space for activities.

But … the chaos, cruelty, rage, and unpredictability coming out of the White House is identical to what I experienced growing up1 and holy shit has that activated a lot of stuff for my body to remember.

For the two weeks or so that preceded Sunday, I woke up to intense anxiety every morning, before I was even fully awake and aware of anything. It was really unpleasant, but at least I knew that it was nervous system dysregulation2, and I have a lot of skills I can use to help my nervous system get back into a parasympathetic, resting, state. I’m grateful that I know what to do, but my god did I wish I didn’t have to do it every morning at the start of my day.3

Then, Sunday, I woke up like Frodo in Rivendell, and I have, every morning since. I don’t feel tight and clenched in my chest. I haven’t sweat through my pajamas and woken up shivering. I have had peace and warmth and gentle calm.

And the thing is, I didn’t know when this would happen, but I knew that it would. This sort of nervous system freakout thing tends to happen when I’ve been working hard to reprocess one or more specific traumas, and I’m really close to closing a circle on my imaginary trauma healing watch. It’s like my body doesn’t realize, yet, that I’m safe and I’m now, and it needs to be gently coaxed out of dysregulation.

I’ve closed a few metaphorical circles over the years since I started EMDR and IFS therapy, and I have had some version of this experience each time. When it does, I imagine a drawing of my body, like from one of those old Disney SCIENCE IS FUN cartoons. In some places, there is fear and anxiety.4 In others, confusion5. Depending on how old I am in the drawing, there’s anger and resentment6. And all around these memories, connected to each of them, is sadness and loss. Over time, as I’ve worked so hard to heal from the abuse of my emotionally immature, toxic parents, those pieces I see in the drawing have faded away, eventually joining together in lingering loss and sadness.

And honestly, I’m okay with that. It’s okay to feel sad. It’s okay to acknowledge the loss. I hasten to clarify that this took literal years of work. When I first began to see all the sadness, it was like looking into infinity. When I first felt the enormity and profundity of the loss, it was free falling into an abyss. There were a lot of stops and starts as I learned how to regulate it, how to reprocess it in a way that wasn’t overwhelming.

Again, not easy. Again, years. Again, worth it.

Now, listen, I am not a doctor and I have no professional experience or education. I’m just sharing my experience. But if you see something familiar, I encourage you to look into what nervous system dysregulation is, and learn some of the techniques we use to calm our bodies down when they aren’t on the same page as our mind, our soul, our Self.

A few resources I value include

There’s a somatic component to emotional healing and trauma recovery that I didn’t expect. It’s only recently that my emotional self and my physical self have started to work in harmony, and that wouldn’t have happened if I didn’t know that the somatic part existed. It’s taken such a long time, and though the work is ongoing, I hope that someone who needs to know that they aren’t alone sees this. I hope this helps on your own healing journey.

Thanks for reading my blog. If you would like to get these updates in your email, here’s a thing:

Take care of yourselves, friends, and take care of each other.

  1. My father’s rage, my mother’s fear, and the tension between them was so thick in the air, it was suffocating. I never knew what was coming down the hallway, or through the front door. Would dad be mean to me, or would he just ignore me? Would mom and dad fight so ferociously that it ends with my mom kicking another hole in another cabinet? We’re running out of towels to hang over the ones that are already there. I’m going to put headphones on and turn them up as loud as they can go because that’s the only way to escape the yelling and arguing that vibrates through the walls into my bedroom. ↩
  2. For decades, I had panic attacks every night when I was falling asleep. More often than not, I had night terrors, these vaguely remembered nightmares that had no images or other senses associated with them, just pure terror. When it was really bad, they happened more than once a night and the only reason I stayed asleep was after I’d cried myself to sleep in exhaustion. Trying to escape them was a big part of my alcohol abuse. I’m so grateful that doesn’t happen anymore. ↩
  3. And it still kind of lingered with me throughout the day, you know? It was a lot. ↩
  4. Oh, imagine that Professor Duck guy, giving a lecture at a chalkboard. ↩
  5. Why is he so mean to me? Why won’t she just let me be a kid? Why won’t they love me like they love my brother and sister? ↩
  6. Or, there was. The healing ring I am most proud of closing, the one that was the key to closing so many others, was this one. When I realized that my anger was no longer a shield that protected me, but something else entirely that only caused me pain, it was astonishingly easy to find it, coax it out, validate it, and send it on its way. There isn’t any anger in my drawing now. Where it used to be is something that is almost indifference. ↩
APNIC Blog ([syndicated profile] apnic_blog_feed) wrote2025-06-18 10:31 pm
APNIC Blog ([syndicated profile] apnic_blog_feed) wrote2025-06-18 10:25 pm

Is ‘Postel’s law’ causing protocol ‘ossification’?

Posted by George Michaelson

A recent routing incident sparks renewed debate on protocol design, error handling, and whether Postel’s law is helping or hurting the Internet’s evolution.
SLIME MOLD TIME MOLD ([syndicated profile] slimemoldtimemold_feed) wrote2025-06-18 08:14 pm

Philosophical Transactions: Potato Serendipity (and FODMAP testing)

Posted by slimemoldtimemold

In the beginning, scientific articles were just letters. Eventually Henry Oldenburg started pulling some of these letters together and printing them as the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, the first scientific journal. In continuance of this hallowed tradition, here at SLIME MOLD TIME MOLD we occasionally publish our own correspondence as a new generation of philosophical transactions.

Today’s correspondence is from a husband and wife who wish to remain anonymous. This account has been lightly edited for clarity, but what appears below is otherwise the original report as we received it. 

The potato diet has mostly been used for weight loss, but it’s also notable for involving mostly one food and being close to nutritionally complete, which means you can use it as an elimination diet to study things like food triggers. We’ve been interested in this idea for a long time, and we find this case study particularly compelling because it’s a rare example of someone doing just that!


Since around 2018, K had been suffering from stomach pain, bloating, gas, and chronic constipation. Chronic constipation worsened after two pregnancies, so K sought medical intervention again in Feb 2025. K was prescribed medication (Linzess) to treat the constipation, which initially improved symptoms but was unreliable and had unpleasant side effects. She had been on that medication for 1 month before starting the potato diet.

Family and friends were bewildered to hear our plan, warning us of muscle loss and blood sugar problems since potatoes are ‘bad’.

Her initial goal was to lose 5-10 pounds from a starting BMI of 23.4 and test out the claims we read online about the diet. K actually joked, “wouldn’t it be funny if this diet fixes my stomach problems?”

We started the diet on 21MAR2025. The first two and a half days were 100% potato for both of us. Morale was suffering by the afternoon of day 3, so we caved and had a potato-heavy dinner with our kids. Afterwards, we agreed to eat only potatoes until dinner so we could still have a normal family meal time. We did make sure potatoes featured heavily in the weekly meal plan.

Within a week, K noticed improved symptoms and regularity without any medication. Initially, she thought she might have a lactose intolerance, so she switched to lactose-free milk and quit the potato diet once we reached the end of our planned testing window.

Back on a regular diet (but still avoiding lactose), K’s symptoms came back worse, with constant stomach aches and bloating. K realized that she had unintentionally been on a low-FODMAP diet while on the potato diet and decided to do intolerance testing. 

Her methodology for intolerance testing follows:

  1. Ate a high-potato, low FODMAP diet until minimal symptoms were present.
  2. Used NHS FODMAP rechallenging protocol to isolate FODMAP groups (lactose, fructans from wheat, fructans from onions, fructans from garlic, fructans from fruit, fructose, galactooligosaccharides, sorbitol, mannitol, fructose + sorbitol) and identify foods to use for testing each group
  3. Spent 3 days of rechallenging per group: day 1 – small portion, day 2 – med portion, day 3 – large portion of challenge food (ex: 1/4 cup milk, 1/2 cup milk, 1 cup milk)
  4. Kept daily log of symptoms and severity
  5. Allowed 3 days of ‘washout’ after rechallenging
  6. Rechallenged next food group, but did not incorporate challenged foods into diet to avoid multiple FODMAP effects
  7. If symptoms appeared after a food challenge, waited till symptoms subsided and repeated the rechallenge over another 3 days

Incorporating lots of potatoes allowed K to test out food groups while still eating a well-balanced diet. The culprit for K is fructans from wheat, which is why cutting out daily servings of wheat has made her symptoms disappear.

K is finishing FODMAP testing (still a couple more groups to go), but has had reliable relief from all symptoms without any meds. Potatoes are a regular addition to meals these days. 

Below is the blank version of the log she used.

wychwood: Wimsey is a 20th Century knight (Fan - Wimsey)
wychwood ([personal profile] wychwood) wrote2025-06-18 08:10 pm
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april booklog

38. The Interior Life - Dorothy J Heydt ) I will be re-reading this forever.


39. The Fellowship of the Ring - JRR Tolkien ) An excellent start to an epic adventure; I enjoyed re-visiting this a lot, although I had forgotten quite how many poems there were.


40. The Poisoned Chocolates Case - Anthony Berkeley ) The gimmick was a fun idea but it got a bit personal for me; still, mostly this was pretty entertaining.


41. Encore in Death, 44. Payback in Death, and 45. Passions in Death - JD Robb ) I gobbled all of these down and thoroughly enjoyed them, as ever.


42. Venomous Lumpsucker - Ned Beauman ) Bleak and kind of funny and also depressingly ridiculous; this is more towards the literary end of things than I usually go, but I did rather enjoy it.


43. Artificial Condition - Martha Wells ) Mostly I wish novellas were longer, but I can't deny that Wells manages to pack a lot into them!
purplecat: The family on top of Pen Y Fan (General:Walking)
purplecat ([personal profile] purplecat) wrote2025-06-18 07:15 pm

Inca Trail: Day 2

Day 2 on the Inca Trail was the least fun of the trip. We had to climb 1,200m to get up and over "Dead Woman's Pass". Wilbert, our guide's plan was to get going as soon as it was light (around 5:30am) and aim to reach our campsite at lunch time. His reasoning was to get most of the actual climbing done while we were in the shadow of the tall mountains around us. It also made life simpler for the support team who wouldn't have to pick somewhere en route, unpack to make lunch, and then pack up again to get to the campsite. He also, I think, quite liked the idea of catching up with the group that were ahead of us who were starting around 700m up the climb and who would be having lunch at our evening campsite. In the event we arrived at our campsite about 2 hours after they had left, having another pass to go over before they got to their campsite for the night.

We were on modern trails, according to Wilbert, and although I think we passed some Inca ruins at a campsite en route, we didn't look at them. Wilbert's explanation for the route wasn't entirely clear. As I understood it the original Inca road went over a different pass, though I never figured out if it was higher or lower. I got the impression a large section of the road from Cusco to Machu Picchu was destroyed by the Inca themselves, triggering landslides, in order to prevent the Spanish finding their way along it, so maybe that explains why we were following a modern alternative.

We started at about 3000m. At around 3,700m I began to feel quite tired and a little concerned about the 500m still go. At 3,900m as we came out of the shade and into the sun, my legs felt like lead and I made it up to the pass only by doggedly walking 300 steps and then stopping (300 steps, if you are interested, gets you up about 50m). At the time we put this down to the fact Manchester is super-flat and so our uphill muscles don't get a lot of exercise. However, I wasn't remotely stiff the next day, at which point it occured to us to measure my blood oxygen using my watch. It was down at 81%, rising to 88% if I took several deep breaths (B., in contrast was generally in the high 80s/low 90s). So it's possible the issue was lack of blood oxygen - even though I wasn't showing any other symptoms of altitude sickness.

Once over the pass we descended around 600m to our campsite. I badly wanted to go to sleep, but B. and Wilbert forced me to have some lunch first. Then I slept for an hour, after which I felt much more like myself.

We walked a total distance of just under 12km.

Pictures under the Cut )
the cosmolinguist ([personal profile] cosmolinguist) wrote2025-06-18 07:27 pm
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PIP assessment

I knew it'd be awful but the PIP assessment was really awful.

I've mostly had nice assessors in the past, which helps as much as anything can. But this one wasn't doing a good job of hiding her glee at her petty power over me. Mean-girl vibes.

When we told V we were having coffee and cake afterward, they expressed their approval and said they'd hoped I would be. I said I learned this from them the first time I had one of these fucking assessments and they went along with me: they had to buy me the cake after that because I was too poor to do it myself, so I remember it.

V replied: "They will not be allowed to take away our joy." Damn right.

From the Heart of Europe ([syndicated profile] fromtheheartofeurope_feed) wrote2025-06-18 05:05 pm

Wednesday reading

Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

Current
The Impossible Contract, by K. A. Doore

Last books finished
The Prince of Secrets, by A.J. Lancaster (did not finish)
Would She Be Gone, by Melanie Harding-Shaw 
Castrovalva, by Andrew Orton
1913: The Year Before the Storm, by Florian Illies
The Ancient Paths, by Graham Robb (did not finish)
“The Faery Handbag”, by Kelly Link
Under the Pendulum Sun, by Jeannette Ng
The Burgundians: A Vanished Empire, by Bart van Loo

Next books
The Making of Martin Luther, by Richard Rex
The Green Man’s Quarry, by Juliet E. McKenna 
Métal Hurlant Vol. 1: Le Futur c’est déjà demain, by Mathieu Bablet et al

ffutures: (Default)
ffutures ([personal profile] ffutures) wrote2025-06-18 06:09 pm
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Another Horror Bundle - Shadowlands Raven

This is a bundle of material for Shadowlands Raven, a gothic horror RPG from Shadowlands Games inspired by Poe and other 19th authors in that vein:

 

https://bundleofholding.com/presents/RavenGothic

 

It looks interesting, it's cheap and I think it's the first RPG I've been offered that comes in multiple languages. And there are cats and ravens, of course...
From the Heart of Europe ([syndicated profile] fromtheheartofeurope_feed) wrote2025-06-18 04:02 pm

The King in the North: The Pictish Realms of Fortriu and Ce, eds. Gordon Noble and Nicholas Evans

Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

Second paragraph of third chapter (“Fortified Settlement in Northern Pictland”, by Gordon Noble):

The 5th and 6th centuries in northern Britain are a key period when historical sources increase in frequency for the societies that had lived north of the Roman frontier (Chapter 2 of this volume; Evans 2008, 2014; Fraser 2009a; Woolf 2007b). The literary sources suggest that this was a transformative period with the emergence of more developed systems of rulership and social structure. Important changes can also be identified in the archaeological record in this same chronological horizon: for example, after more than 1,000 years of very limited burial evidence, the dead become a more prominent part of the archaeological record (Chapter 5 of this volume; Maldonado 2013; Mitchell and Noble 2017). As well as cemeteries, memorials to the dead and traditions of monumental carved stone monuments emerged and played notable roles in creating and maintaining new forms of personal and group affiliation (e.g. Forsyth 1997a, b; Goldberg 2012, 155-9; Henderson and Henderson 2004; Samson 1992).

A short book of essays about the Picts, more specifically the archaeological remains that exist in the land to the south of the Moray Firth as far as Aberdeenshire, the ancient realms of Fortriu and Ce. I must say it is surprising just how little is known about this culture; there’s a little bit of “No one knows who they were or what they were doing“. They seem to have left no written records of their own at all. One of the few contemporaries to write about their attitude to Christianity was very negative:

…ecclesia plorat et plangit filios et filias suas quas adhuc gladius nondum interfecit, sed prolongati et exportati in longa terrarum, ubi peccatum manifeste grauiter impudenter abundat, ibi uenundati ingenui homines, Christiani in seruitute redacti sunt, praesertim indignissimorum pessimorum apostatarumque Pictorum.…the church mourns and weeps for its sons and daughters whom the sword has not yet slain, but who were taken away and exported to far distant lands, where grave sin openly flourishes without shame, where freeborn people have been sold off, Christians reduced to slavery: slaves particularly of the lowest and worst of the apostate Picts.

That’s St Patrick, in his Letter to Coroticus, from the fifth century; though it’s clear that the Picts ended up Christian like everyone else.

The single most fascinating artifact for me is the Rhynie Man, found at what seems to have been a major political/cult centre along with other decorated stones, a life-sized figure carved onto a megalith, now casually sitting in the headquarters of Aberdeen Council. All ancient art is interesting, but human figures are particularly compelling; was the Rhynie Man a portrait? a memorial? a deity? all three? Fourteen centuries on, he is ignoring us and ready to use his axe – on what?

Though the Gaulcross Hoard is fascinating as well, a hundred or so worked silver pieces from the end of the Roman Empire; and the Rhynie Man is but the most striking of many Pictish symbols stones. But it makes you think of the Silurian hypothesis; the Picts had a thriving material culture and presumably everything else that goes with that – yet we do not even know their name for themselves with certainty.

Anyway, well worth a read. You can get it here.

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal ([syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed) wrote2025-06-18 11:25 am

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - Alpha

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
The weirdest part is him doing this after changing all of science forever.


Today's News:
watersword: "Shakespeare invaded Poland, thus perpetuating World Ware II." -Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Abridged. (Stock: Shakespeare invaded Poland.)
Elizabeth Perry ([personal profile] watersword) wrote2025-06-18 11:37 am

/me screams into a pillow

To recap: I spent winter break putting together a plan for a pollinator garden in the local park; I wrote & won a grant to fund said garden; I have been trying to get the parks department to tell me what they need from me for next steps since February (I contacted multiple! people! multiple! times!).

In the most Rhode Island thing ever, a coworker who knows the director of the parks department was able to get her to answer an email, in May. This prompted the landscape designer (who is the person I actually need to talk to) to also reply, mentioning he had previously heard from us, and saying he would need more (unspecified) information from us. I responded enthusiastically, asking what he needed from us and if a zoom call would be helpful, and ....silence.

This week, I attended a meeting of the local neighborhood association, and asked them for help getting the parks department to engage with me further; they said to try emailing them again, this time cc'ing the president of the neighborhood association, and lo and fucking behold, there is an answer from the designer in my inbox, with what is apparently their standard form for people who want to add plantings to public parks. They could have sent me this literally months ago!!!

I will of course fill it out this weekend and send it back ASAP, because I have all the information they're asking for already, but first I gotta scream into the void for a minute.

(I know they're overworked and underpaid, I SWEAR I am being extremely polite in all my emails, they could have sent me this form in February omg.)

From the Heart of Europe ([syndicated profile] fromtheheartofeurope_feed) wrote2025-06-18 02:56 pm

2025 WSFS Business Meeting: Retro Hugos

Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

A proposal to abolish the Retro Hugos was passed by the 2024 Business Meeting and has landed on this year’s agenda as item E7 (page 29), requiring ratification. It was put to a consultative vote of WSFS members last month and was narrowly rejected, by 167 votes to 164.

Another proposal is on the agenda for this year’s Business Meeting as item F21 (pages 53-54), in case that E7 fails ratification, to allow Worldcons to present Retro Hugos in a multiple of ten years after a gap in the Hugo sequence. The “missing years” are 1940, 1942, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1952 and (it is argued, though not convincingly) 1957. So we could polish them all off between 2027 and 2032.

I think that has helped to clarify my own thinking. The absorption of volunteer time and bandwidth, and of money, by the Retro Hugos is not a good use of resources, at a moment when the demands on Worldcon volunteers in general and Hugo administrators in particular are increasing. So if I’m in the room when it happens, I’ll vote in favour of E7, and if that is rejected, against F21 which would leave the cycle at a 25-year pace.

2025 WSFS Business meeting posts:
C5
D4
D5, D6
D9, D10, D11, D12
E7
E8
E9
F3, F4, F5 and F6
F11
F21
F22
Investigation Committee on the 2023 Hugo Awards report
Hugo Administration Process Committee report
Business Meeting Study Group

oursin: Photograph of small impressionistic metal figurine seated reading a book (Reader)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2025-06-18 04:00 pm

Wednesday had an online meeting about reviving a project they began decades ago

What I read

Finished Wide is the Gate, and while things are getting grimmer and grimmer as regards The World Situation, I am still very much there for Our Protag Lanny being a mild-mannered art dealer with a secret identity as anti-fascist activist, who gets on with everybody and is quite the antithesis of the Two-Fisted Hollywood Hero. (I was thinking who would I cast in the role and while there's a touch of the Jimmy Stewarts, the social aplomb and little moustache - William Powell?)

Lates Literary Review.

Mary Gordon, The Chase of the Wild Goose: The Story of Lady Eleanor Butler and Miss Sarah Ponsonby, Known as the Ladies of Llangollen (1936), which is sort-of a classic version of their story recently republished. But o dear, it does one of my pet hates, which is blurring 'imaginative recreation' with 'biographical research' and skipping between the two modes, and then in the final chapter she encounters the ghosts of of the Ladies, I can't even, really. Plus, Gordon, who was b. 1861, obtained medical education, fought for suffrage, etc, nevertheless disses on Victorian women as 'various kinds of imbecile', unlike those robust and politically-engaged ladies of the Georgian era. WOT. TUT. Also honking class issues about how the Ladies were Ladies and always behaved accordingly.

Began Robert Rodi, What They Did to Princess Paragon (1994), which was just not doing it for me, I can be doing with viewpoint characters being Not Nice, but I was beginning to find both of them (the comic-book writer and the fanboy) tedious.

Also not doing it for me, Barbara Vine, The Child's Child (2012): sorry, the inset novel did not read to me like a real novel of the period at which it was supposed to have been writ as opposed to A Historical Novel of Those Oppressive Times of the early C20th. Also, in frame narrative, I know PhD student who is writing thesis on unwed mothers in literature is doing EngLit but I do think someone might have mentioned (given period at which she is supposed to be doing this) the historiography on The Foundling Hospital.

I then turned to Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in the Castle (1962), which it is a very long time since I read.

Then I was reduced to Agatha Christie, By the Pricking of My Thumbs (1968), and Murder in the Mews (1937).

On the go

I happened to spot my copy of Margery Sharp, Cluny Brown (1944), which I know I was looking for a while ago, and am reading that though it looks as though I re-read it more recently than I thought.

Have also begun on Books For Review.

Up Next

Really dunno.