Hold your head up high.

Jan. 24th, 2026 09:42 pm
hannah: (Interns at Meredith's - gosh_darn_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
Challenge #11

In your own space, grant someone's wish from Challenge #5. Leave a comment in this post saying you did it and include a link to your own post with the wishes you granted if you feel comfortable doing so.


That was a fun way to spend a good hour or so. A very good hour, even.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text
lannamichaels: Brachos 2a, caption: "There's a debate about that" (daf yomi)
[personal profile] lannamichaels



Menachos! Basically Zevachim except with flour offerings... FOR NOW.

My notes on perek 1:

Read more... )

Nature and Bunnies!

Jan. 24th, 2026 04:43 pm
muccamukk: Telya standing in the forest. (SGA: Forest Woman)
[personal profile] muccamukk
These are all taken with my phone, but some of them turned out okay, and I figure it's a good time for nature and bunnies?

Ten pictures: Some nature, one cat, one rabbit, the northern lights )

we went to the ZOO

Jan. 24th, 2026 11:32 pm
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
[personal profile] kaberett

for a Treat. and we saw (highlights edition):

  • the baby white rhino!!! three and a half weeks old, nose still not pointy, ridiculous little ear tufts; at one point got startled and did a tiny canter, and at another point was subsided into the straw pile with its eyes closed and its ears doing intermittent sleepy waggles
  • the baby giraffes!!! two of them, both with TONGUES and both (obviously) much much taller than us
  • ostriches doing A Gentle Jog, and also flapping their wings about a bunch
  • The Pygmy Hippo (who also at one point got startled and GALUMPHED about it)
  • the New Tapir, who is not a Common Hippos
  • a CHEETAH (who then decided everything was Too Loud and it was going to slope off to the private paddocks thank you very much)
  • The Flamingoes, who were almost all asleep; majority were on two legs not one, and it was Immediately Apparent from watching the one-legged sleepy flamingoes swaying enthusiastically that this was on account of The Wind
  • Medium Elephant once again became Very Startled, made a Loud Noise With Her Face, and needed reassuring by All Her Grown-Ups
  • baby giraffes (again)
  • wolverines go LOLLOP, and
  • A Penguin Pedicure (and lots of porpoising)

(Many other good things included Running Creatures, a very muddy tiger, the sleepy bongos, a baby monkey bum, the ponies labelled Lesser Rhea, a selection of sheep, and a sleepy African Wild Dog.)

The weather was extremely cooperative. I am very very glad we managed this outing. (And then I fell asleep listening to The Hidden Almanac in the car on the way home...)

(no subject)

Jan. 24th, 2026 08:35 pm
marina: (burn shit down)
[personal profile] marina
This post has been brewing for a while, and I guess I'm finally going to just write it down, even though it doesn't feel "complete" or fully processed or anything of the sort. But it probably never will be. So, this is as coherent as it's going to get.

long text under the cut )

Whose idea was this?!

Jan. 24th, 2026 11:21 pm
dhampyresa: (Default)
[personal profile] dhampyresa
I've borrowed the Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 artbook. I've not finished it yet, but the art is very pretty so far. The writing, however, is fucking unreadable on account of being white on matte gold.

(no subject)

Jan. 24th, 2026 07:55 pm
thisbluespirit: (winslow boy)
[personal profile] thisbluespirit
Some things that I have had stashed away for a little while:

1. [personal profile] sovay very kindly sent me a copy of Exit Through the Fireplace by Kate Dunn, which was waiting for me at the new house when I got here. It is about repertory theatre with lots of accounts on every aspect from actors and others involved, including a lot of people I have watched in old telly, so I enjoyed it a lot.

But having only recently before tried to make a post explaining what I loved about Terence Rattigan's plays, including floundering about trying to say how effective his dialogue is, I was v pleased to find this quote:

John Moffatt: (On being in rep, and the difficulty of remembering the lines, doing a new play every week): "You got to know who the good writers were. With Rattigan you barely had to learn it at all, even after just blocking it you almost knew it because it is so beautifully written. The only way to reply to something that has just been said is what he's written."


2. Talking of people being kind, [personal profile] swordznsorcery wrote me a lovely Sapphire & Steel story with a new Element and a stealth crossover very RTMI here, and if you also like S&S, I recommend taking a look, as it's great! <3


3. The book I was reading introduced me to the utterly untrue but very S&S like urban myth/ghost story of the Zanetti Train. Sounds like an Assignment to me, or a film I would watch, anyway. (It seems to have been taken from a Ukrainian work of fiction, most likely - certainly not one detail of it has any truth in it).


4. Making personalised bingo cards proved to be exactly in my wheelhouse right now, so I had fun with that. If anyone missed it the other day and would like one, feel free to still ask! (Here or there, whatever).


5. Random AO3 tag found while wrangling that is currently amusing me: It is literally just Twelfth Night but with Moomins.


Otherwise still slowly progressing and all that etc etc etc.

[ SECRET POST #6959 ]

Jan. 24th, 2026 02:35 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6959 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.



More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 45 secrets from Secret Submission Post #994.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

Is Our Car-Owning Strategy Kaput?

Jan. 24th, 2026 10:28 am
canyonwalker: Uh-oh, physics (Wile E. Coyote)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
I'm still fuming about the $4,000 maintenance repair we had to make on our car this past week— a car that at 60,xxx miles is way too low-mileage for crushing upkeep costs. It's German, so yes, maintenance is expensive, but it's not British— so it shouldn't be falling apart! If this is the new reality for owning a late-model BMW, and far from an expensive BMW, I wonder if our strategy for car ownership is now broken.

Our strategy for many of our car purchases has been:

  • Buy a good-condition used car, typically a 3-year lease return with below-average miles

  • This lets someone else take the big hit on initial depreciation. At 3 years many cars have lost 30% or their market value.

  • At 3 years old and in good condition with low miles, the car feels basically new

  • And with low-ish miles, there's still some original warranty left, in case we discover problems in the first year or two of our ownership

  • Then we drive it "until the wheels fall off"— expecting to get 10 years/100,000 miles of our own use out of it, until either it starts to become too expensive to maintain (vs. the costs of buying a newer car) or we'd really enjoy a newer/nicer/better car.


We did this with a Mazda Hawk bought many years ago, driving it from 30k miles to over 130k before trading it in. At that point it wasn't even having maintenance problems; we just wanted a nicer car. Our previous BMW convertible, "Hawkgirl", we bought at 30k miles and traded in at almost 150k because she had become too costly to maintain.

I mentioned this strategy to the service advisors at the shop this week. Their reaction was, "No, no, no, you'll be better off just leasing. That way you'll always have a new car and no repair bills. Trade it in before stuff starts breaking."

Oookay, but this is the 2020s, not the 1960s. 60k is not "high mileage" anymore! People expect cars to last well over 100k when taken care of— and routinely they do! Or did.

The notion of leasing cars and trading from one lease to the next is attractive in the sense of always having a new car and never having maintenance bills. But it also means stepping onto the treadmill of always having car payments. With average car payments running toward $1,000/month now— and 2x that if we're leasing 2 cars for 2 independent adults— that's a costly treadmill I do not care to run on!


January Meme: The new 1930s?

Jan. 24th, 2026 06:26 pm
selenak: (Charlotte Ritter)
[personal profile] selenak
[personal profile] maia asked: Compare and contrast the US right now and Germany in the 1930s.

Welll, that's the 1 billion question, isn't it. (Literary so, given that the Orange Felon wants to have this sum of money from any fellow autocrat so they can join his "board of peace".

Now: being German, I instinctively shy away from invoking Godwin's law, so I'll start at the outset by declaring that no, I don't think the Orange One is Hitler 2.0, or that ICE are the Gestapo. (The SA during the late Weimar Republic might be a better comparison, as in, paramlitary units lustily doing their best to create and exude violence in the cities so that the dear leader can declare only he can restore order.) Also, I wish we'd have had as many demonstrations against our newly authoritarian government in, say, 1933-1935 as there are in the US right now, instead of, well, none. Individual acts of resistance, sure. Also the SPD being the sole party speaking out against the Ermächtigungsgesetz after the Reichstag burning. (Don't remind me that our current bunch of Neonazis wants to inhabit the very room named after the brave SPD guy who spoke against Hitler on that occasion in 1933.) But no equivalent to the "No Kings" demonstrations, or the current ones in the bitter cold of Minnesota, not until it's the 1940s and the women married to some of the last free Jews in Berlin actually demonstrate in front of Gestapo headquarters when their men get rounded up. I respect and admire the hell out of these women, but given the reaction by Goebbels & Co., who really didn't know how to handle this, I can't help but which these kind of demonstrations had happened in 1933 already, when the ostracisation and taking away of civil rights of everyone's neiighbours started.

Anyway: where I do see parallels is the way rich industrialists paved the way and/or quickly fell in line and profit from the autoritarian government that came to power legally and then promptly started to destroy the republic it was supposed to govern from the inside, and the way huge swaths of the media of the day even before complete state control lis established cleave to the new Overlords. And on the other side of the political spectrum, I see a parallel in the tendency of the left and/or liberal parties to attack each other instead of allying against the authoritarians. (This would be the early 1930s pre 1933.) Now this is hardly unique to the 1930s; a friend of mine who is in his late 80s and actually is a member of the SPD, our traditional centre-left party, said you can always rely on the left to attack each other with more vehemence than anyone else to the profit of their opponents.) Seriously, in the late Weimar Republic the Communists might have had their streetfights with the Nazis, but they kept declaring the SPD was the true enemy, and never mind the communists, your avarage progressive journalist was far more likely to attack and complain moderate or left leaning politicians than the Nazis. (Famously, journalistic icon Karl Kraus declared this was because "nothing about the Nazis inspires my imagination" ("Zu den Nazis fällt mir nichts ein"). Thanks, Kraus.) I'm not saying Democrats should be above criticism, absolutely not, but honestly, I have no time at all for the type of purist who declared they couldn't vote for Kamala Harris (or Hilary Clinton before her) because "Republicans and Democrats are the same anyway" or other arguments along that line. They knew what was at stake, just as anyone paying attention back in the Weimar Republic day did.


Of course, the Orange Menace has been far more open about his grifter status and his unending greed than the Nazis back in the day, but that's because of the difference in eras and societies; financial shakedowns and mafia tactics are getting admiration from huge parts of US society, it seems, whereas the Nazs while being no less interested in robbery by state (some were a bit more blatant about it like Goering, but it really was practised on every level, starting, of course, with forcing German Jews to "sell" their property for ricidiculous little sums) felt the need to dress it up far more, not least because part of Hitler's image included priding himself on "asceticism" and "living for the people". But they - and pretty much every populist/authoritarian system not just in the 1930s - use the same basic structure in their rethoric which unfortunately keeps working through the decades (centuries?).

1) You, the audience, are the best, you're perfect, anyone who wants you to change or adjust is an evil tyrant.

2.) But evidently your life isn't perfect. This is the fault of THEM. (Never, ever, is it the slightest bit your responsibility.) THEY are a mixture of external bogeymen and within-the-society scapegoat. THEY have absolutely no redeeming features and so you don't have to consider talking or negotiating or what not - THEY just deserve to be squashed. Punishing THEM will also magically solve whatever problems your society currently has.

3.) Of course, the squashing and punishing of THEM cannot be done with those lame old laws already existing. On the contrary, these have to be gotten rid off. Any attempt to restrain the punishment and squashing of THEM is clearly treason anyway.

4.) The glorious movement you, you wonderful person, are now a part of is led by the best leader ever. If he doesn't deliver all you want from him immediately, well, he's punishing both the weak traitors and the evil brutes for you, and isn't that the best part anyway?


Meanwhile, any half way responsible take on political situation basically has to start with "it's complicated", analyze and use "maybe it's this way, but maybe there are also other factors" type of qualifications, and any policy of a democratic government is by nature of the government a compromise. Meaning you always leave some disappointment in your electorate. And in an age with an ever shorter attention span, where the majority of people are not bothering with reading or listening to longer explanations anymore and just want short and punchy reassurances, this is possibly more dangerous a fertile ground for the transition of a Republic to a totalitarian state than Germany of the early 1930s was.

Not least because Germany, not as the Kaiserreich nor as the Weimar Republic nor even as the Third Reich, was ever the most powerful state of the world, with the largest miilitary and economic might. The fact the US won't be this for much longer anymore if things continue the way they are going isn't a comfort, because then it will be China.) It did a lot of damage when ruled by evil people anyway. But it had at no point the type of power the US has right now. This is not a comforting thought, either.

Lastly: in school, we were taught that a problem the Weimar Republic had was that there weren't enough republicans with a small r in it, that the Empire had conditioned its subjects to a strictly hiearchical society, that as opposed to England Germany hadn't had a centuries long transitonary period between absolutism and parliamentary rule, let a centuries of a Republic with the resulting self-understanding the way the uS has. On the one hand, I am a bit more sceptical on tha last part now. I mean, I always knew that The West Wing wasn't reality tv, but I didn't think The Handmaid's Tale was, either. Especially with the Nixon precedence, where the Republicans did turn against their blatantly caught at wrong doing President instead of removing their spine and denying he could have possibly done something wrong, I did believe the whole checks and balance thing I had learned about in school did work. For enlightened self interest reasons if not for moral reasons, because who would want their career to depend on the whim of a despot with more self control than a toddler? But no. On the other hand, see above. I only wish we would have had so much visible protest and opposition to horrible injustices in the 1930s as I see every day happening in the US. The Weimar Republic ceased to be within three months of Hitler becoming Chancellor, basically. By autumn, the transformation into hardcore dictatorship was complete. Whereas the US is still a Republic. If you can keep it.

The other days

This is interesting

Jan. 24th, 2026 12:19 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
I got an email from Riotminds providing me with a free preview of their upcoming Wicked Dew - Victorian Horror RPG. What caught my eye is that it seems to be entirely online. I've asked if there's a downloadable rulebook I overlooked, but I can see why a company might adopt a purely online approach.

[Update]

There will be a printed book.
catness: (flowers)
[personal profile] catness
Snowflake Challenge: A warmly light quaint street of shops at night with heavy snow falling.

Challenge #12

Make an appreciation post to those who enhance your fandom life. Appreciate them in bullet points, prose, poetry, a moodboard, a song... whatever moves you!


The Friday Five on a Saturday

Jan. 24th, 2026 03:37 pm
nanila: me (Default)
[personal profile] nanila
  1. What type of hair do you have? (Thin, Normal, Thick, Frizzy, etc.)

    Thick, fine, and wavy. There is a lot of it and it grows very fast.

  2. What color is your hair currently?

    Starting from my scalp, the first 5 inches are my natural salt and pepper, which I quite like. Then there are a couple of inches of very faded blue. Then there are another 7 or 8 inches of stripped brassy blonde, from when I was dyeing it at home and then stopped because we redecorated the bathroom and I don't want to mess it up. I mostly wear my hair clipped up or in a tight bun right now. As you may have spotted, I have thus far failed at my new year's resolution to find a new hairdresser.

  3. What colors have you dyed/highlighted your hair?

    Black, brown, red, green, blue and purple. When I had dreadlocks, I often had synthetics woven in in bright colours.

  4. If you could dye your hair any color, what would it be?

    L'Oréal Blue Mercury is my current favourite.

  5. What is your hair's length?

    It's down to my shoulder blade, which is longer than I'd like it to be. I prefer it closer to the tops of my shoulders.

Heavy Lifting

Jan. 24th, 2026 10:20 am
mallorys_camera: (Default)
[personal profile] mallorys_camera
Snow-pocalypse minus 21 hours.

I have done all the prep work I can.

The arctic front swooped down yesterday, and it is currently 4°F—up from -2°F when I first woke up. Shortly, I will gird up & trek out to the chicken coop to lay down more straw for insulation. That's the only thing I can think of to do for the chicks. Then I will see if the Fluid Film has worked to keep my Prius doors from freezing shut.

The Catskills are supposed to be getting three feet of snow, which has got me so worried about real-life Mimi that I am seriously considering inviting her to come down here, where conditions are predicted to be marginally better. I don't actually like real-life Mimi, but I can't bear the thought of her isolated & helpless in all that snow.

Worth noting that the cost of natural gas, which many folk around here use for heating, has jumped by 63% in the past week. Never let it be said that price gaugers aren't lightning quick to skim a profit from human helplessness.

I'm debating heading to the gym. I am fairly certain this will be my last chance till Wednesday. The YMCA is in Middletown, & I'm such a wuss, I'm actually worried about breaking down on one of those remote country roads twixt here & Middletown, and freezing to death while waiting for Triple A, though I suppose that's unlikely.

###

Only wrote 500 words on the WiP yesterday. The coming storm has my mind on full skitter.

Chapter 5 has to do some heavy lifting: Debbie Reynolds dies of COVID in the ICU, Grazia has a psychological breakdown & goes off to stay with the New Millennium Kingdom cult, the creepy old New Millennium Kingdom mansion catches on fire, Neal rescues Grazia, and they have some kind of Deeply Meaningful Conversation on Neal's front porch—so I can segue back to the opening scene of the novel of the three sister wives on Neal's front porch.

My great friend Tom read the first four chapters of the manuscript. He thinks they're strong—but noted that there is a considerable difference in tone between the first chapter and the subsequent three chapters.

Of course, I knew that, too.

And had been thinking, In Draft 2, you'll tighten up that first chapter.

But now, I'm thinking, Hmmmmm... Maybe Chapter 1 frothiness could be a feature not a bug? Like if I could make the final passages of Chapter 5 equally frothy, it could be a wonderful, structural full-circle as well as a plot full circle.

Not sure I have the writing chops to pull that one off, but I'll give it a whirl.

Also, Chapter 6—which will be written from Daria's POV—has to contain much bickering with annoying Mimi.

###

In political news, here's a photograph of yesterday's Minneapolis protests:



Tens of thousands of people marching in sub-zero temperatures.

So inspiring.

woman on vibrant blue background

Jan. 24th, 2026 04:50 pm
wickedgame: (Ivan & Patrick | Elite)
[personal profile] wickedgame posting in [community profile] nexticon

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