[syndicated profile] theatlantic_health_feed

Posted by Hana Kiros

A year after the Trump administration began the dismantlement of USAID, it is initiating a new round of significant cuts to foreign assistance. This time, programs that survived the initial purge precisely because they were judged to be lifesaving are slated for cancellation.

According to an internal State Department email obtained by The Atlantic, the administration will soon end all of the humanitarian funding it is currently providing as part of a “responsible exit” from seven African nations, and redirect funding in nine others. Aid programs in all of these countries had previously been up for renewal from now through the end of September but will instead be allowed to expire. Each of them is classified as lifesaving according to the Trump administration’s standards.

The administration had already canceled the entire aid packages of two nations, Afghanistan and Yemen, where the State Department said terrorists were diverting resources. The new email, sent on February 12 to officials in the State Department’s Bureau of African Affairs, makes no such claims about the seven countries now losing all U.S. humanitarian aid: Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Malawi, Mali, Niger, Somalia, and Zimbabwe. Instead, according to the email, these projects are being canceled because “there is no strong nexus between the humanitarian response and U.S. national interests.” (The nine countries eligible for redirected funding are Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, Uganda, South Sudan, and Sudan.)

A spokesperson for the State Department told me in an email that “as USAID winds down, the State Department is responsibly moving programming onto new mechanisms” with “longer periods of performance and updated award and oversight terms.” The State Department has recently begun signing health-financing agreements with some African governments—including Cameroon and Malawi, as well as five of the nine countries eligible for redirected funding—that will go into effect later this year. These agreements focus on strengthening health systems and containing infectious diseases but don’t seem to address the hunger or displacement crises that aid groups are fighting in these countries. The department’s internal email notes that aid projects in the nine eligible countries will be able to receive U.S. assistance via a UN program. But aid groups in at least one of those countries have already lost their U.S. funding, and much remains unknown about if and when additional support might come. The State Department spokesperson, who did not provide their name, offered no further specifics when asked.

As I wrote earlier this month, under Donald Trump, the U.S. has adopted an “America First” approach to foreign aid, in which many humanitarian projects are selected based not on need but on what the administration might receive in return. This latest aid purge appears to be following that pattern. Across the seven countries barred from U.S. aid, at least 6.2 million people are facing “extreme or catastrophic conditions,” according to the UN. But they have little to offer the U.S. in return for help. In other cases, the State Department has restored or offered aid in exchange for desirable mineral rights, or as payment for agreeing to accept U.S. deportees. Six of the seven countries mine comparatively few minerals that the Trump administration needs to fuel the AI boom. And only one, Cameroon, appears to have accepted a handful of deportees.

[Read: The logical end point of ‘America First’ foreign aid]

The email also confirms that the U.S. will no longer allow American taxpayer dollars to flow to these seven countries through the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, or OCHA. Previously, the U.S. placed a significant amount of money in the UN’s global humanitarian pool, then trusted OCHA to allocate it. But in December, Jeremy Lewin, a senior official in the State Department, announced at a press conference that the administration would allow its contributions to the UN body to be spent only in an initial list of 17 countries, which included none of the seven whose current aid will soon end entirely. (According to Eri Kaneko, a spokesperson for OCHA, one more country has since been added to the list.) Lewin also announced that the U.S. would be contributing an initial $2 billion in 2026, far less than the country’s typical contributions.

The State Department spokesperson called OCHA’s pooled funding “a gold standard in flexible humanitarian funding.” But according to two senior humanitarian-aid experts and one State Department employee—who, like a number of people I interviewed for this story, asked to remain anonymous to discuss matters they were not authorized to speak about publicly, or because they feared the administration's retribution—Lewin’s announcement blindsided State Department officials, embassy heads, and aid groups.

The nine other countries named in the internal State Department email appear to be included in the reworked partnership between the U.S. and OCHA. According to the email, the State Department will end lifesaving awards in those places, for reasons that the email does not explain and the State Department spokesperson did not provide. (Ethiopia, Congo, and Kenya will be among the beneficiaries of Food for Peace, a program that was formerly part of USAID but is now, as of Christmas Eve, run by the Department of Agriculture.) The aid the selected countries receive through OCHA will come with new restrictions and monitoring requirements. According to guidance that OCHA distributed and I obtained, any American contributions to OCHA must be spent within six months of being donated. According to the two humanitarian experts, one based in South Sudan and the other in Washington, what groups will get this money and when any of it will be distributed is still hazy.

Since the December press conference, “the legal work of formulating formal awards for each recipient country has been taken forward rapidly,” Kaneko, the OCHA spokesperson, told me in a text message. “Extensive preparatory work has also been underway at both the country and global levels on the administration of this grant.” Kaneko defended the six-month deadline for spending, writing that, because several major countries have pulled back their contributions, “it is critical that these funds are translated swiftly into life-saving action for people who urgently need assistance and protection.”

The aid programs being phased out this year were already notable for their continued existence. From January to March last year, the Department of Government Efficiency, led by Elon Musk, helped purge 83 percent of American foreign aid. Many more awards were canceled during a review by the White House’s Office of Management and Budget. The administration’s stated aims in so aggressively reducing foreign aid were to eliminate wasteful, “woke” awards while preserving work that it determined saved lives.

The administration’s definition of lifesaving was particularly strict. Funding for programs that fought tuberculosis and sent food to people who are chronically hungry, not yet starving, has been canceled. But stabilization centers that provide inpatient treatment to the most extremely malnourished children have generally, though not universally, been spared. Each of the newly canceled awards represents an occasion in which federal workers had previously convinced Trump appointees that the money would help meet the most basic survival needs of people fleeing war, caught in deadly disease outbreaks, or in danger of starving to death, a former senior State Department official, who left the administration last fall, told me. “It has to be: ‘If we don’t deliver this, people die immediately,’” they said.

[Read: The world’s deadliest infectious disease is about to get worse]

Since the destruction of USAID last year, administration representatives have repeatedly insisted that lifesaving aid was being preserved. Last March, Musk posted on X, “No one has died as result of a brief pause to do a sanity check on foreign aid funding. No one.” Secretary of State Marco Rubio has similarly claimed that reports of people dying because of USAID cuts were lies, and promised last spring that “no children are dying on my watch.” But reports of deaths that appear clearly linked to the cuts abound.

Conditions in some of the countries where aid is being canceled are already dire. Somalia, which will soon receive no American humanitarian funding at all, is undergoing a severe drought; earlier this year, analysts for the federal government reported that the hunger crisis is so extreme it could deteriorate into full-blown famine by this summer. Hundreds of health and nutrition centers in Somalia shut down after last year’s steep aid cuts, according to Doctors Without Borders. In a regional hospital that Doctors Without Borders supports, deaths among severely malnourished children younger than 5 have increased by 44 percent, Hareth Mohammed, a communications manager working for the organization in Somalia, told me. Jocelyn Wyatt, the CEO of the Minnesota-based nonprofit Alight that works in many countries affected by war or natural disaster, told me that her organization will have to close more than a dozen health facilities in Somalia in the next week, leaving as many as 200,000 people without any health care.

According to Wyatt, State Department officials had said in December that they were “optimistic” about funding for her organization’s work in Sudan being renewed in 2026. But last month, the State Department said the grant would actually end in February. Alight has run out of U.S. funding, and Wyatt told me that she has received no confirmation of if and when OCHA funds will materialize. (“We are working on allocating the funds as quickly as possible,” Kaneko said.) Alight has been forced to pull out of three refugee camps in Sudan, which Trump described on his social-media platform in November as “the most violent place on Earth and, likewise, the single biggest Humanitarian Crisis.” In nearly three years of civil war, more than 150,000 people have been killed in the country. The Trump administration maintains that genocide and famine are taking place there. Yet the global humanitarian effort to respond remains severely underfunded; this year, the World Food Program plans to reduce the rations it gives to people facing famine by 70 percent. Over the past month, Alight has closed 30 health clinics, 14 nutrition centers, and laid off more than 250 doctors, nurses, and staff members around Sudan, Wyatt said. In the three camps Alight exited, the organization had provided the only sources of health care. (The State Department spokesperson did not respond to questions about Alight’s funding.)

I spoke with an Alight worker who has been breaking the news of the sudden closures to people in displacement camps in Sudan over the past month, to sobs and disbelief. Many arrive at the camps wounded, and now, the nearest health facility—a regional hospital—is a three-hour drive away from the camps through a war zone. “They are afraid,” the worker told me, of venturing into territory that’s rife with the same militants they have fled. Alight would drive refugees to the hospital when they presented with issues too severe to treat at the camps. But with the new cuts, the organization no longer has enough money to rent the cars.

Poem: "The Spectrum of Your Being"

Feb. 22nd, 2026 05:51 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This poem is spillover from the September 1, 2020 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired by a prompt from Dreamwidth user Librarygeek. It also fills the "How do you want to do this?" square in my 9-1-20 card for the I Want Fries With That! Bingo fest. This poem has been sponsored by a pool with [personal profile] fuzzyred. It belongs to the series Not Quite Kansas.

Warning: This poem contains intense and controversial topics. Highlight to read the more detailed warnings, some of which are spoilers. It includes feeling lost, a headless chicken running around, a fight with bit character fatalities, moderate injuries to a main character, messy medical details, an imprisoned demon, torture, binding magic, demonic healing, and other challenges. If these are sensitive issues for you, please consider your tastes and headspace before reading onward.

Read more... )

Another Needlepoint Update

Feb. 22nd, 2026 06:30 pm
lightbird: http://coelasquid.deviantart.com/ (Default)
[personal profile] lightbird
The throw pillow I needlepointed in the late summer/early fall is now finished!

My Completed Masterpiece:
pillow

I also made ornaments which will be gifts for my friends. Pics under the cut.

more masterpieces! )

Dark romance girlies are eating good

Feb. 22nd, 2026 05:13 pm
[personal profile] reversesock posting in [community profile] bakerstreet
Image

THE DARK ROMANCE MEME



Rules:
1. Post your character.
2. Tag to others using RNG
3. Profit!


Read more... )

Just Because.....

Feb. 22nd, 2026 05:10 pm
disneydream06: (Disney Friends 2)
[personal profile] disneydream06
Call me sentimental, but this song really pulled the old heart strings as I was driving home this morning.....


kaffy_r: Bang Chan in paint (Channie paint)
[personal profile] kaffy_r
Job One: Remember that Computers Are Stupid

Job Two: bake Bob's favorite cookies to thank him for setting up my new laptop, and putting up with the occasional stupidity that's part of dealing with ones and zeroes.

We both knew it would take a couple of days, or even more than that, and I'm trying to be patient as he preps the new one (an Asus Vivo) so that we can download all my files from my slowly dying Lenovo, files that have been downloaded onto a delightful little red portable 2T hard drive.

That drive may will come in handy after the transfer, since I might need to keep it connected to my new laptop for a few weeks, or maybe months. My Lenovo has 1.82 T of storage, whilst my Asus only has 1T. We'll eventually see about getting a new, larger, drive in the Asus, but I don't foresee me using up the 1T of storage the Asus has. 

I've named the little hard drive Ada, and my new laptop is officially Alice-Alyx. It's the first time I've named a laptop, but it seemed the right thing to do with this one. I'm laughing a bit at myself, but hell, why not name some things that will help keep me happy for a good long time?

Now one of the remaining questions is whether Alice-Alyx will recognize my Samsung Galaxy ear buds. We tried to get them paired up yesterday, and the Asus laughed at us. Once again, I'm reminded that computers are stupid; they only do what we tell their ones and zeroes to do. 

In the non-computer part of the weekend, I was able to get in touch with a skiffy fannish acquaintance whose holiday card came back to me a bit ago. It turns out that he and his partner had indeed moved from the address I had for him, so I can send him something soon, and most definitely this coming holiday season. 

I also cleaned the bathroom, and sorted a small mountain of paperwork that had grown so high it was in danger of toppling over. I'm terrible at organizing and sorting, but I managed to do it today. I'm inordinately proud of myself. (I probably shouldn't be quite so loudly proud, because the universe will undoubtedly send something my way to punish me for such hubris. Heh.)

So that's my excitement for the weekend, and I am very happy that that's the most excitement I've had to deal with. Compared to this time last week, it's easy-peasy. 

january booklog

Feb. 22nd, 2026 10:39 pm
wychwood: Zelenka is worried because the city is in danger and McKay is winning at Tetris (SGA - Zelenka Weir Tetris)
[personal profile] wychwood
1. Hogfather - Terry Pratchett ) Pratchett at his best balances the comedy with really meaningful moments, and this is definitely one of those.


2. The Book Eaters - Sunyi Dean ) Definitely not my jam.


3. Annoying: The Science of What Bugs Us - Joe Palca and Flora Lichtman ) Very light, sometimes questionable, but packed full of fun anecdotes (and a surprisingly good examination-in-passing of how scientific research works).


4. Ocean - Colin Butfield and David Attenborough ) Not life-changing, but well worth a read.


5. Common Goal, 6. Role Model, and 7. The Long Game - Rachel Reid ) I wasn't keen on CG, but I liked the other two a lot - and I'm looking forward to the seventh book coming out later this year! More Ilya and Shane: give it to me.


8. The Fifth Form at St Dominic's - Talbot Baines Reed ) Worth a read! But it's not going to shoot up my list of favourite school stories.


9. Time to Shine - Rachel Reid ) Not brilliant, but sweet.


10. Identity - Nora Roberts ) Mostly you know what you're getting with Roberts! This was very heavy on the wealth porn, but despite all my mockery I did enjoy reading it.


11. Persuasion - Jane Austen ) A delightful story as always.


12. Strange Pictures - Uketsu ) Short, weird, and interestingly different.


13. The Snow Tiger - Desmond Bagley ) This has aged much better than I expected; I was genuinely gripped.


14. Swallowdale - Arthur Ransome ) These are just such good books.


15. The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up - Marie Kondo ) Interesting to read the original after all the cultural osmosis, but actually I disagree with her quite a lot! I'm not sorry I read it, though.


16. Sassinak - Anne McCaffrey and Elizabeth Moon ) I did still quite enjoy this, but it was a distinct let-down from my much-better remembered version!

A varied update

Feb. 22nd, 2026 09:47 pm
mtbc: maze B (white-black)
[personal profile] mtbc
Yesterday, I had a headache all day which obviously wasn't great. I still went shopping in the town center with R. but was more content being a beast of burden than making any choices, also for busier or more cramped shops I was happy enough to wait outside in the space and the breeze. My headache finally improved somewhat in the evening, after some paracetamol. I don't think that my head was affected by fasting for Ramadan, the previous day and today were fine. One of our errands was to pass by the newer Asian grocery store (our neighbourhood has many Middle Eastern and South Asian people) to pick up more fast-breaking dates. At this latitude, I could get used to these winter Ramadans.

My annual appraisal at work went decently, especially given that it includes a period of my finding my feet. At the moment I'm working mostly in my comfort zone, on somewhat mathematical/algorithmic code that does not require figuring out other complex aspects of our system. I'll probably help out with some other random thing too, this coming (Agile) sprint.

I finally bought a cross-trainer, a JTX Strider-X8. It's smaller than the previous NordicTrack Audio Strider 500 from before moving to the US, it just about fits in the flat, and the flywheel's also rather smaller so maximum resistance gets it up only to being just about worth bothering with, but it's somewhat affordable and far better than no cross-trainer. I look forward to planning it into my weeks.

We've been bad at festivals again. This weekend featured excellent meatloaf yesterday (it happened to be just to my taste) and a variant of kedgeree today, thanks to R. as usual. At some point, we will get around to eating Asian round things for the Chinese New Year and pancakes for Shrove Tuesday, but delayed as usual. As we're not exactly observant of the wider context of these, such flexibility doesn't exactly detract from whatever authenticity there is in our celebration.
taz_39: (Default)
[personal profile] taz_39
**Disclaimer** The views and opinions expressed in this post are my own, and do not reflect the views or opinions of my employer. DO NOT RESHARE ANY PART OF THIS POST WITHOUT PERMISSION. Thank you.

This post covers the weekend.

---    ---    ---    ---    ---    ---

First, Thursday evening's show was "ok-but-weird."
For some reason, every single one of us in the pit was struggling. Even DAR, even the drummer!
I remember there were days like this on the circus sometimes...it was like we all hit a cosmic stumbling block and struggled for no discernible reason. It's a thing that happens on tours, I think? Where you're playing the same thing over and over again, and idk what causes it. It's very mysterious and weird.
DAR actually apologized afterward, and we were like, "No, don't apologize, it's us too! Join the club!"

But other than that, the show was still just fine, so....*shrug*

---    ---    ---    ---    ---    ---

FRIDAY


I fell asleep early. Woke up once to pee and saw that Jameson had finished his third/final overnight with Disney around 3:30am(!)
Congratulated him via text so he'd see it in the morning, and slept again until 7:30am.

I was up early to do laundry. My throat feels bad from postnasal drip, but whatever, it still feels like a mild thing brought on from stress. I am SO GLAD that I managed to reserve Friday entirely for myself to rest and recharge.

Some of you will think I'm being a baby / overly dramatic by needing a whole day to recover from extroversion like it's some big deal. And maybe I AM being a baby? But my anxiety used to be a LOT worse than it is now, and has gotten much more manageable over the years. When there are weeks like this one, where every day is non-stop go go go--outings, interactions, performances, events, evaluations, every single day--I may be able to HIDE the fact that I'm stressed, but ultimately "the body keeps the score." Long-term fight or flight activation for days in a row often results in physical symptoms and a need to intentionally withdraw so I can rest, recover, and convince my subconscious to calm down. I don't WANT to have to do that, but haven't found a better solution that doesn't involve dependency on some sort of drug.

All that is to say that I did laundry and then stayed in my pajamas for the entire day. After lunch I walked to MOMs Organic Market for another tube of that fantastic chai lotion (I never want to run out of it!) and some oats. Wrote to O'Malley Brass Instruments, who is building my trombone, and was dismayed to hear that the timeline is now 6 months or so. In other words I won't have a trombone until the end of this year at the earliest. That isn't the timeline we'd discussed by far, but at the same time I understand they're literally five people building horns from scratch and they'll take as long as they take.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

SATURDAY


TMI Warning, highlight white text to read: ( Around 2am I woke up with painful abdominal cramps and had to rush to the bathroom. And that's pretty much how the rest of the night went, all the way up to 8am or so :( It was diarrhea and nausea but no vomiting. I have no idea if I ate something bad, or if it's a virus, or what. Around 7:30am after I'd been dealing with this for 5 hours, I tried to eat breakfast and found I was too nauseous for it. Forced myself to drink half a cup of coffee just to avoid a caffeine headache later. Texted DAR to simply say I wasn't feeling well and could we make sure that the pit door would not latch behind us (it has an auto-lock function, as we found one intermission when it locked us into the pit!) I'd hate to have a bathroom emergency and be TRAPPED in the pit!! He confirmed and sent condolences. I then texted Raven, who was supposed to arrive around 10am, to let her know that I was sick and might not be able to follow through with our plans for the day (which were Liberty Bell and lunch at a nice restaurant.) She said she'd gotten delayed anyway and wouldn't arrive until 11ish. In lieu of breakfast, I found sugar and salt packets in the hotel room and mixed them with water to create a nasty sort of electrolyte-thing, sipped that, and curled up in the bed trying to ride out this nastiness.   END)

When Raven arrived I was still feeling bad enough that I didn't want to come get her. Instead, I suggested she swing through Reading Terminal Market because she's like me and I knew she'd be captivated by everything in there. Asked her to find something nice for herself for lunch and bring it to the hotel, where she could either risk being in the room with me or I could give her a key to the lounge on the lower level and she could eat in warmth and with a TV. While she was doing that, I dragged myself out of bed, got cleaned up and dressed for work, and straightened up the hotel room for company. AND wiped down all the touch points, AND put on a mask.

Being my sister, she wouldn't hear of anything but coming to my room, and not only that she picked me up a Gatorade and a big hot bowl of homemade Amish chicken soup!! I could have cried. It has been a long time since anyone "mothered" me and it was very much needed today.

We ate together...well, she ate, and I took a few bites and sipped some broth before feeling nauseous again and having to stop. We chatted about everything that sisters talk about, as much as we could, before it was time to walk to the theater for the show. And before anyone asks: yes, I had two shows to play today while sick. This is the downside of a life in music (and many of the arts, while we're at it.) It's a selective skill to begin with; only so many professional-level trombonists are in the area, even in a big city like Philly. And then, even among professional-level trombonists, there are few who could sightread a Broadway show requiring doubling on tenor and bass trombone, to the level required for the show. I'm not even sure that *I* could do it if asked. So unless it is a REAL emergency, i.e. your appendix has ruptured or you cannot stop puking or something, you MUST play the show no matter how badly you feel (or whether your peers might also become infected.) Womp WOMP sad trombone, but that is the price of doing what you love.

I walked Raven to the box office where we retrieved her tickets, then to the lobby where we parted ways. I went backstage and steeled myself for a rough show, and it WAS rough for me. It is hard to blow air through big tubes when your stomach is a mess and when your body is exhausted and aching. But my personal issues aside, the show went very well. I was glad that nothing wonky happened while Raven was there! She came to the pit at intermission to say hello, and also after the exit music so that I could introduce her to my coworkers. DAR and Tim (trumpet) were so sweet, they took the opportunity to butter me up and say how they enjoyed working with me :)

Raven is not much of a one for pictures; she took a pic of the program and that's about it.
639762275_18567877450033231_509295944592713322_n.jpg

On the way out the door I saw that our presenter (the theater reps, I think that means?) had brought a huge goodie bag full of Pennsylvania specialty treats: TastyCakes, Herrs potato chips, Keebler cookies, Utz pretzels, Asher's chocolates, and more!
Untitled.jpg

I grabbed one with the intention of giving it to Raven but Ryu (violin) said she didn't want hers, so I took that one to Rave instead! We walked back to the hotel...slowly, because now I had a low-grade fever and body aches. Uuuugh :( When we got back we decided to just DoorDash something. Raven ordered tacos and I got some al pastor tacos knowing I couldn't eat them now but maybe they'd come in handy tomorrow. When the food arrived she ate her burrito and I warmed up the chicken soup. I was pleased to be able to eat half of it this time, along with half a bagel and half a banana (why all these halves lol.)

Soon it was time for Raven to catch her bus, and I had to walk to the theater. We hugged and parted ways in front of the hotel. Although I really wish I hadn't suddenly gotten sick and ruined our well-laid plans, I am so, so grateful for my sister and for being able to spend any time with her. And I really, really hope she doesn't catch whatever I've got. C'mon universe, don't repay her kindness with yuck!!

The evening show was good but we had one show hold when Maurice's invention broke (that thing, I swear! Crew must be having a meltdown over it!) I had taken some painkillers with dinner and they got me through the show, but by the end of it I was very much ready to lie down. On the way back to the hotel I met some of Tim's (trumpet) family, who had come out to see the show. They were all adorable and pleasant, and I made sure to butter Tim up as he had done for me with my sister!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------

SUNDAY


Thankfully, oh thank goodness, I was able to sleep through the night (or as much as I normally would.) I did not have a fever when I woke up, or anything else going on except (TMI highlight text to read:   still having the runs and starting my period and  )  still feeling under the weather. I decided to try a normal breakfast, and although that went well, digestion made me feel too nauseous for a full lunch. I managed half a banana and the last dredges of chicken soup. Packed snacks for the theater and started packing for the bus ride to Pittsburgh.

Forgot to mention that yesterday we found out that there's a nor'easter moving in. Being from Pennsylvania, I have been through several of these storms. They are essentially a winter hurricane. And as such they feature heavy snowfall, high winds, whiteout conditions, and are overall extremely dangerous. Forecasts were conflicting on Saturday, but as of today they're saying between 16-22 inches (40-55cm) in Philadelphia between Sunday night and Monday, plus 45mph (72kph) winds. We have a 6-hour bus ride to Pittsburgh on Monday, and we're all kind of wondering how that's going to go.
(remember that you can click on the image to open it in a new tab, and click it again to enlarge it.)
Untitled1.png

But the other issue was my that sister Kate and her family were to come see the show on Sunday. They would be driving 2.5 hours to get here, then 2.5 hours back in the initial phases of this incoming storm. I wrote to her to reassure her that it was totally OK to cancel if she didn't feel safe. And ultimately after watching the forecasts for a while, she decided she'd rather not risk it (and I don't blame her one bit.) I am bummed that she won't get to see our show and we won't get to visit...but on the upside I'd much rather she be safe, AND I was able to get a refund for her tickets, which I was not expecting (there's usually a no refund policy.) Huzzah!

And that's why I got to have a slow morning with time to settle my stomach and pack before getting dressed and walking to the theater for our final show here in Philly.
Untitled2.jpg
Untitled3.jpg

It was a totally normal show and a good audience, though clearly weather had been an issue for more than just my family as there were several patches of empty seats. I could FEEL everyone's impatience to finish the show; many people are involved in loading out in this blizzard, and many are driving their own cars and were anxious to get out of dodge ahead of the storm. But we all still did an excellent job, and soon enough the show was finished and we were hurriedly packing up. 

While I was packing, a little girl waved and yelled down to me: "How does Chip get on that table?" 
It's the first time I've been asked that! I finally got to give the classic answer: "It's DISNEY MAGIC!!"
She put her hands on her hips and gave me a questionable look while her parents laughed. Sorry, no spoilers, kid! :D
disney-s-beauty-and-the-beast-the-musical-7.jpg
(photo courtesy QPAC/Queensland production. Chip is in the center of the table.)

I am always very fast to load out. As I was leaving, I could see that crew were FLYING to pack up...they're always fast but this time they were HUSTLING. And once outside I could see why. It was already snowing heavily. Big wet flakes falling from the sky so fast and thick that I was soaked in minutes. 
Untitled4.jpg

Video w/sound.


I walked quickly back to the hotel and typed this post off while my coat dried. And then...sweet rest. 
A hot cup of tea and the tacos that Raven had gotten me yesterday (managed them without too much stomach complaints.) 
Curling up under the covers with Priory of the Orange Tree. 

Bye, Philly. 
Maybe next time I'll actually get to SEE you!! 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Monday:
A riveting 6-hour bus ride to Pittsburgh, and settling in.

Tuesday: Opening day in Pittsburgh.

(no subject)

Feb. 22nd, 2026 02:13 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
While that was not the result I wanted...

Today's USA versus Canada game was a big deal because NHL players couldn't be in the Olympics for a while. Today was the most top talent on the ice that's been seen ever, because last time USA was in the Olympics we had far fewer NHL players on our roster. This was as close to 'just let all the best players play each other' as we've ever gotten.

Youtube short that is a visualization of the increasing parity between countries and comparing this year to the last time NHLers could play.

Challenge 201: Texturize 2

Feb. 22nd, 2026 12:54 pm
impala_chick: (Default)
[personal profile] impala_chick posting in [community profile] iconthat
iconthat-texture3.jpeg Image

Both from Heated Rivalry.

URLs and Alt )

Mid-February reading roundup

Feb. 22nd, 2026 03:40 pm
atamascolily: (Default)
[personal profile] atamascolily
Slayers of Old by Jim C. Hines - standalone urban fantasy about 3 veterans of various magical scuffles who have settled down and moved in together (platonically) only to be drawn into a fresh new conflict with the fate of the world in the balance. Fun, but not especially memorable; I liked this better than Hines's earlier Ex Libris series, where I only read the first two volumes.

What Stalks the Deep (Sworn Soldier #3) by T. Kingfisher - Novella following our nonbinary hero from a fictional eastern European country with an abundance of pronouns to America, where they confront eldritch horrors in an abandoned West Virginia coal mine. I saw a lot of twists coming, but the vibes are great, and the worldbuilding was fun.

Through Gates of Garnet and Gold (Wayward Children #????) by Seanan McGuire - I've kind of lost count of where we are at this point, but I enjoyed learning more about the Halls, and how we appear to be building towards a larger plot re: the doors' agenda. Also, I love pomegranates and moths, and the statues' aesthetic is great, as is its origins in "playing freeze tag so the horrors can't get you".

Emily of New Moon by LM Montgomery - Similar formula to Anne of Green Gables but even more autobiographical. Emily is not charismatic as Anne, but she's a born writer, which is its own kind of appeal. I'm not thrilled by the "guy old enough to be her father who is heavily and unsubtly foreshadowed as a future love interest" who turns up in the last third or so, even though it's also pretty clear she's going to end up with an artist kid her own age. We'll see how the other two books play out.

Manga:

-Apparently, "cute cottagecore fantasy witch" is its own subgenre these days - what surprised me the most about Aria of the Beech Forest is that the second chapter takes an abrupt turn by revealing the story is actually set in modern-day Ireland, which I was not expecting, hahaha. 3 volumes, complete, I read this mostly because it was on the library shelves.

-The Failure at God School's story is by the same person who did The Apothecary Diaries (which I loved) but unfortunately the first volume of this doesn't rise above "spunky girl gets sent to magic boarding school and turns out to be the most powerful of all" formula - no surprises here.

-Smoking Behind the Supermarket with You volume 4 introduces a few new characters and fleshes out the supporting cast, which is good because the leads' relationship is stuck in stasis (which they acknowledge) because they're scared of change. Considering how many more volumes have already been published, it's going to be a long road.

Rules of Civility by Amor Towles

Feb. 22nd, 2026 01:50 pm
altamira16: A sailboat on the water at dawn or dusk (Default)
[personal profile] altamira16
My book group likes this mess, and I do not.

I do not want to read books about WASPs who are oblivious to the world beyond the city that they live in. And even in that city, they are about some white people striving and oblivious to anything beyond their own attempt to make it.

They can discuss the trappings of wealth in detail, but when it comes to discussing people, it goes like this:

The interior was a fantasy of soon-to-be-cliched Oriental fixtures: large porcelain urns, brass Buddhas, red latterns, and self-postured silent deference of an Oriental waistaff (the last servile ethnicity of American's nineteenth century immigrant classes.)


Holy hell. That is racist.

Then if that was not enough,


In front of me a broad-shouldered man with the twang of an oil-producing state was trying to communicate with the maitre d'


This is racist against Asian people AND white people all in two paragraphs. The character making this observation cannot be bothered to figure out if someone is from Texas or Oklahoma, but they decide that the rude person in the restaurant is from Texas because who cares about anything outside of New York City. Truly, a literary achievement.

Now, this author is a talented and capable author, but was any of this scene really necessary?

In the first chapters, there are references to so many other books, as if it is inviting you to write a Ph.D. thesis.

The most obvious thesis about how this book compares to "Great Expectations." The author invites that comparison so many times. One of the characters picks up "Great Expectations" and turns to Chapter 20 as soon as she hears from her friends to London. That is the chapter in the book where Pip, the young character from "Great Expectations" goes to London, and it is just a dirty and corrupt place to be.

In this book, like in "Great Expectations," there is a wealthy benefactor warping the characters around herself, but it is best to leave the details of that for the people who are interested in the book.

Chapter Six is "The Cruelest Month," and it starts with "One night in April" slamming you over the head with T. S. Eliot's "The Waste Land."


April is the cruellest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.


There are too many characters in this book that like to read, and they like to read the type of literature that is ruined by high school English teachers. These characters are absolutely obsessed with "Walden;" and I am happy for them for being able to conceive of Massachusetts, a state outside of New York, but not really.

Early Humans

Feb. 22nd, 2026 03:01 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Homo erectus fossils in East Asia rewrite the timeline of human migration

A new analysis dates three Homo erectus skulls from central China to about 1.77 million years ago, making them the oldest securely dated hominin fossils in eastern Asia.

That older age shifts the arrival of early humans in the region back by roughly 600,000 years and compresses the timeline of how quickly our ancestors spread across Eurasia.
[---8<---]
The same layer holds stone tools and animal remains, tying the skulls to a specific moment nearly 1.8 million years ago rather than the younger dates long cited.

Keep an eye on your inbox!

Feb. 22nd, 2026 03:54 pm
[personal profile] fthmods posting in [community profile] fandomtrumpshate

We have started posting auctions, which means that we have started sending emails with your auction link and the link to submit edits!

Please keep in mind:

  1. These WILL be coming from our new proton.me email address, so be sure to tell your email client not to send it to spam!
  2. We will be sending these emails throughout the week. If your friend got theirs and you haven't gotten yours, please be patient. We can only post a few hundred of the 1600 auctions per day.
  3. Your auctions may not all be posted on the same day. You'll get one email for each auction post - some email clients may put these in one thread together, so keep an eye out for that.
  4. You will not be notified when edits are made, you will have to check your post. If you still do not see your edits by Thursday evening, and it's been at least 8 hours since you filled out the form, email us to check.

Please remember that just because your post is up for your viewing, does NOT mean that browsing is open in general! Please don't send bidders to check things out until Friday, Feb 27!


Media Post

Feb. 22nd, 2026 02:16 pm
inchoatewords: Miss Piggy from the Muppets, dressed like a librarian with hair swept back, a long-sleeved white blouse, and a purple skirt. She is holding a book and is reaching up with her other hand to a case full of books. Above her head is the word book and a heart (books)
[personal profile] inchoatewords
Movies: None

Television/Streaming: a couple of episodes of Buffy and Farscape.
Buffy:
  • "Faith, Hope & Trick" - first appearance of Faith (she's an interesting foil to Buffy)
  • "Beauty and the Beasts" - Angel comes back. Oz might have mauled some kids out in the wood when he escaped his cage.
  • "Homecoming" - Both Cordelia and Buffy are annoying as fuck in this one, but I am watching this through adult eyes and that's probably coloring my attitude with some of these episodes. (Use your words)!
  • "Band Candy" - this one had some pretty funny bits; especially Giles being an absolute fool. And Principal Snyder!

    Farscape:
  • ". . . Different Destinations" - they end up going back in time at the memorial and change the path of history.
  • "Eat me" - they come upon a damaged Leviathan and find all the Peacekeepers turned feral and cannibalistic. Also some of the Moya crew get split into two. Crichton's double makes it back on board ship with him. That would be freaky! It will be interesting to see what happens with the two of them.

    Books: It has not been a great week for books! I had two books I stopped reading: T. Kingfisher's Hemlock and Silver and Ben Greenman's Emotional Rescue.

    The Kingfisher book was a book club read for January that I never got in time. It just recently became available as I was finishing The Reformatory. I got about twenty percent or so in and I was just kind of annoyed at the book, so I stopped reading.

    The Greenman book is essays on music. I thought it would be more like Rob Sheffield's Love is a Mix Tape or Talking to Girls About Duran Duran. No. Greenman's book was rather boring and also felt a bit misogynistic, so I had to quit reading that one, too.

    I'm now reading Pylon by William Faulkner. It's a bit different than the other fare of his I've read, but I'm interested to see where it goes. It's set in a fictionalized New Orleans during an air show, so lots of talk of planes and pilots.

    Listening to: only one Rolling Stone Top 500 album this week. Number 488 is The Stooges self-titled album from 1969. On the 2012 list, this album was at 185. Rolling Stone blurb:
    Fueled by “a little marijuana and a lotta alienation,” Michigan’s Stooges gave the lie to hippie idealism, playing with a savagery that unsettled even the most blasé clubgoers. Ex-Velvet Underground member John Cale produced a primitive debut wherein, amid Ron Asheton’s wah-wah blurts, Iggy Stooge (né James Osterberg) snarled seminal punk classics such as “I Wanna Be Your Dog,” “No Fun,” and “1969,” bedrock examples of the weaponized boredom that would become a de rigueur punk posture.


    This one is not really my cuppa, but I didn't outwardly hate it (like the Suicide album). It's a pretty short album, too. I can see the influences they had on other bands. Of the songs here, I like "I Wanna Be Your Dog," which I've also heard covered by several bands, as well.

    Playing: I finished Assemble With Care; this is by the same studio that did Alba: a wildlife adventure. It's a visual novel with puzzles; you are Maria, who repairs electronics and such, and you've come to a little town for their festival. Various folks want your help, so you take apart and reassemble game systems, tape decks, watches, and more as you learn about issues in these folks' lives. It's a short but sweet game. The controls were occasionally a little frustrating (you can use your mouse on PC, but sometimes if I clicked too quickly, I'd put the piece I was working on to the side and then would have to hover over and pick it up again).
  • Done This Week

    Feb. 22nd, 2026 11:52 am
    scrubjayspeaks: hand holding pen over notebook (done this week)
    [personal profile] scrubjayspeaks
    More furniture moving at work. Big things are happening, which is prompting a bunch of structural changes. Remodels, equipment moves, repairs. Oh, and the weather caused a bunch of power issues, which fried various pieces of equipment. And in a completely unrelated event, a water pipe got broken and flooded part of the building, so now all that has to be repaired on a tight turnaround. I’m staring down the barrel of Saturday overtime for a while to get things done by the deadline.

    Meanwhile, both the vehicles are due for smog tests, so we planned to rotate them through the mechanic’s shop over the next couple of weeks. Only mum’s truck had more issues than expected and wasn’t ready when we planned to pick it up. So she’s spiraling about that, and I’m spiraling about her.

    The first flowers (daffodils and wind flowers) are blooming in the castle garden. Between the torrential rain and the freezing nights, spring is sneaking up on us.

    Lewisia: 3 new pieces written

    Day job: 42.5 hours

    Cleaning: tub, bathroom sink, mirrors

    Crafting: collected up and measured all prints that need to be framed and hung

    Reading: The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy: Hexagonal Phase (the last of the BBC radio productions, more coherent than the last one was at least)

    Watching: The X-Files season one, episodes 1 to 7 (why did I feel compelled to try to work through this series from the start for the first time, having only seen scattered episodes from weekend syndication in the 90s and a few streamed in the last decade? idk, man, I’m just trying to cope)

    Listening: DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS by Bad Bunny (I am not immune to the occasional Superbowl halftime show, incredibly enjoyable music whether one understands the language or not)

    Clock Mouse: 97 minutes of planning work

    February 2026

    S M T W T F S
    123456 7
    8910111213 14
    15161718192021
    22232425262728

    Style Credit

    Expand Cut Tags

    No cut tags