It's been an up and down month

Dec. 25th, 2025 04:35 pm
allekha: Victor smiles and waves (Young Victor waving)
[personal profile] allekha
Z's nasal surgery was successful; he had the stents removed the day before we left for Lake Placid, and I sat in to watch. Hoo boy I had no idea they were going to be that big. How did they fit??? He still had some stuffiness thereafter, but after a few weeks, he was pretty much recovered. He is able to breathe properly now :)

We had a great time in Lake Placid and Skamerica. It was actually a little weird to go online after and see the negativity, some of it felt like people were looking for a reason to be mad about the location, like when people claimed that nobody in town knew it was happening (you could hear locals talking about it everywhere, and there were tons of signs) or were freaking out about how a town in the Adirondaks was going to get a few inches of snow the day after the competition and how that was going to cause broken legs and stranded skaters. Can't remember ever seeing that before about other competitions. (There was one vaguely sketchy road going out of town; the highways were entirely clear.) I saw people begging for it to go back to Boston, but as someone who wrote a long email to the Boston organizers about the safety issues and baked-in ableism we faced at the event to zero reply, Iiii can't say I'm eager to ever return to that arena. Norwood was okay, but you couldn't walk to the event very easily due to its location.

Anyway, I will try to do a separate writeup about it, but the arena was cozy, very well-lit, and easy to navigate. The security people were nice and made no fuss whatsoever about my camera. I said hi to someone from my skating lessons. None of the seats would have had a bad view. I'm not usually a big skater-spotter, but it was hard not to see anyone in such a small town - I think I saw Alysa grabbing lunch one day. Overall, good experience! Lake Placid being quite expensive was the main downside. We also explored the town a little, and they have a beautiful public library with a reading area set on the lake.

This week, we were planning to see my mom again, along with my dad and friends at home. Unfortunately, Z developed a sudden case of vertigo, and even with medication, he's not up for that long of a car ride, so we're putting it off until he is feeling better. When will that be? We have no idea. He is scheduled to get PT on his vestibular system the first week of January, so we are crossing our fingers that will help.

So we have tried to have a cozy little Christmas here; we put his itty-bitty Christmas tree (it's about six inches tall) on our cat tree and put our presents to each other under that. We bought a log cake from the grocery store that we knew would not be as good as the bakery version, and it turned out to be pretty bad lol, but I baked some other sweets instead so I'll just have those. His parents came by today to say hello and bring us some food. One upside is that since washing dishes makes him dizzy, we finally got to work on the dishwasher the people who renovated the house left half-installed, and now it's working.

We also had the holiday show at my skating club! My coach and I did a variation on the Dutch Waltz with some original choreo thrown in, including a lift. Even made a bit of a costume this time with some net and a leotard. I biffed it on the spiral of all the things, but we ended on a good note, and I had fun :)

some things I'm currently doing

Dec. 23rd, 2025 07:44 pm
brainwane: Photo of my head, with hair longish for me (longhair)
[personal profile] brainwane
looking forward to the next episode of Pluribus

starting to read the scifi mystery Murder by Memory by Olivia Waite

making note of the upcoming Grolier Club exhibition on the mechanization of printing: "The Second Printing Revolution: Invention of Mass Media", starting January 14

thinking about whether I could make some use of the new Rx Inspector tool from Pro Publica

spreading word of the Otherwise Award's year-end fundraising campaign to celebrate scifi/fantasy/genre fiction that expands or explores our notions of gender (I'm on the board)

teaching activists how to use Signal features -- usernames, disappearing messages, nicknames, etc. -- to preserve privacy and improve convenience

listening to episodes of KEXP's Runcast (music) and an Australian guy's One Man, One Hammock (rambling monologues) as I do chores

playing an ad hoc guessing game with my spouse where I look up random records on the Guinness world records website and ask him to guess, e.g., how tall the tallest chocolate fountain is

dithering on whether to write a year-end retrospective for my blog

elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
[personal profile] elainegrey

I recorded one consumed medium every two and a half days (2.3), where the media are movies, documentaries, TV series,  articles, short stories (thanks to Amazon's proliferation of single shorts under one cover), novellas, and novels.   There does seem to be a growing pattern of shorter serials rather than large epics, so i've plowed through them when available. That's about 77% more entries than i recorded last year. I would have thought it was a greater fraction more, as i felt like i spent much of my time off in books this year, and the short stories would inflate counts. I guess the fatigue over the summer of 2024 had its impact.

I will admit that much of the reading is shaped by what is at my library's Overdrive instance and then by Kindle Unlimited. I've recorded 37 purchases.

I think Robert Jackson Bennett and Victoria Goddard are the new to me authors that most engaged me. I look forward to more Ana and Din mysteries.

We continue our tradition of Sunday night British mysteries, Monday night NCIS (including as of this year, NCIS: Origins - we have caught up with the network release), and Wednesday night science fiction.  On other nights we frequently end up watching NCIS: New Orleans. Sunday mornings we frequently watch art documentaries or Landscape Artist of the Year. Today we will likely watch the final episode of the 2020 season 6.

 Read more... )

(morning writing)

Dec. 20th, 2025 07:22 am
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
[personal profile] elainegrey

Maybe, i thought, after listening to Mary Oliver read "Wild Geese", maybe i should write psalms. So i opened Robert Alter's translation of "The Book of Psalms" and began reading the introduction in which he notes (in discussing how Hebrew poets new psalms to other gods and those lines can be found in their psalms)

a comparison with the proposed originals suggests rather that what the psalmists did was to adapt, briefly cite, or even polemically transform the polytheistic poems, which is, after all, what poets everywhere do with their predecessors—both building on them and emphatically making something new out of them.

It's not just poets, life, i think, builds on what came before -- ferns in the remains of their predecessors taking the remains of the star into their heart, birds with the song of their parents nesting in the same forest, i in my home haunted by the memory of my mother's housekeeping. Maybe the choice is how emphatically we focus on the newness: a gardener's choice different from a parent's, different from a poet's, different from a politician.

I think i ache for us all to be surrounded by humans making choices -- where perhaps the choices themselves are not emphatically new -- but what a new world if we all made compassionate thoughtful choices. We would still have pain and suffering, friction and loss, but so ever much less.

turak: (Default)
[personal profile] turak

The new year cometh!



Perhaps for some this year has been the year. Personally, I don't know anyone who has felt this way (including myself), so the end of this year has a sort of arbitrary sense of relief. The end of the year doesn't necessarily mean anything, but it's so deeply embedded in our culture as a point of change that you can't help but believe it.



For me, the biggest thing now is that my grandfather is dying.


It's not a huge shock, though it's a huge sadness. My family line has always had children quite young (my siblings and I are a pronounced exception. I don't think any of us will be having kids of our own), so we've had the privilege of being present for more last moments than some in older families do. There's something eerily tangible and manageable about this kind of sadness. It's more important and devastating than everything else that has happened this year, and yet I feel far more prepared for the inevitability of it.



Dementia is a very strange thing. When I first learned of what was happening, my father explained that his father had pancreatic cancer that had spread to his liver. To anyone familiar with cancer or the body, you'll know that damage to the liver is pretty damning, no matter the cause. Cancer is especially so, but still. I wondered how this could have gone undetected for so long? Cancer has many forms and paths of growth, but there are typically symptoms signs that are detectable before spreading happens.


I'm no expert in dementia, but as a person with memory problems, it is something that worries me. This incident has made me realize the depths of dementia in ways I had never considered before. My Grandfather: Papi, or Pip-Pop as I call him, is not aware of many things happening. Maybe more accurately - things happen to him, and he is aware, and then he is not. The ailments of his body are like smoke signals. He was not under constant medical supervision - to my shame. It was only Nani, my grandmother, keeping vigil. He would fall, or there would be blood in the urine: smoke pluming in the air, and then dissipating into the sky as though it were never there. There was no way to know that something so serious was brewing underneath the existing ailments.



He has been placed into palliative care, and evidently his condition has been declining rapidly since. That dementia could take away the most base acknowledgement of the body is terrifying. I can only hope that memories of pain are lost along with everything else. Pip-pop does not recognize Nani lately. I'll be visiting him in the hospital tonight along with my father, who is flying in from Nova Scotia. He too, feels guilt over his lack of presence in the recent years. It will be a strange thing to see my father in this time. He has always had this sort of somber dissonance at funerals: sad, but never falling apart or faltering. This kind of "well this is how the world is. It is sad, but fine" attitude. I'm not sure if others find it alienating or a reliable strength in these moments. In some ways, I wonder at my own disposition at these key life events. I've always been asked to cheer up the dying - hold a conversation with those in their precious last minutes because I can do so without crying. Without distressing the soon to be departed. I can be called up to give a speech with a steady voice. My father is much the same, but I wonder about now.



I'd like to read Pip-pop a good book, or ask him for a good joke. He was always one for a good joke, or especially a good prank. I remember hearing the story about him setting off a stinkbomb in public, only becoming a tad embarrassed when the stench of it spread and lingered longer than he had expected it to. I want to recall the good times with him, because it's the kind of things people like to think about. It's the kinds of things everyone else will be thinking about for years to come.



I took a brief break from writing this to do a bit of research for my visit. Visiting Relatives with Alzheimers and How to Visit a Love One Who is Dying have both been invaluable insights. I am forever humbled by each new thing I learn. While it is a topic some may find grim, death is the singular inevitability shared by all living things. I think it's important to be knowledgeable on how to treat others with dignity at this time.



Aside from this, the racoon is still stuck in the roof and trying to avoid leaving it. Any time he nibbles or gnaws or slaps his paws against the walls at night, I have to play Daft Punk and dance about wildly for a bit to encourage him to stop. I hoped that continuous agitation in this fashion would permanently deter him from wanting to stay, but it looks like the cold of winter makes a better argument than I do. All I can really do is keep him from destroying things too badly before the spring. It'll be an expensive thing dealing with it. $1500 just to rid myself of the bugger, and lord knows how much for the roof.



I am feeling a small bit better after some support from my partner the last few days. I thought I had expressed the trouble I was feeling and the help I needed earlier in the year, but I think perhaps he was feeling similar. I've lost some weight and have been having troubles with my health from the stress, and I think now he's feeling better enough that he has the energy to be a bit more patient and supportive for me.



And yet I can't help but be a bit hopeful for the new year. The knot in my stomach that has kept me from eating much has slowly started to unfurl. Even as a kid, I am amazed and a bit mortified at my own perseverance at times. So many weeks and months this year where I thought that this could be my breaking point, that any moment now I would slink into something lower than I had ever known and never come up from it, only to find myself in a position of feeling even the smallest amount of hopefulness.



I sometimes wonder about the division between the man and the machine which he conducts, and in which he is conducted by in turn. Do the cogs of the machine that is animal screech out with their own base desire? The desire to run, to consume, to live? -Despite the weakness of the spirit, does the machine burn whatever it can in order to give one last burst of energy - to push the man into momentum?



Sometimes, it does feel this way. -That when I dream in the dark and cold depths of some dastardly ocean - when I, the man, am deep in sleep, the machine hums and ticks and plans its unknowable schemes. The machine breaths and fusses in my unconsciousness. Do we write the dream together, or are these the sole hours of our separation?

(morning writing)

Dec. 18th, 2025 07:37 am
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
[personal profile] elainegrey

If i miss writing in time, i hope everyone is able have the observations that make passing through this solstice period a joy or at least the darkness eased. I am enjoying my LED lit branch (up all year) and tree during the long dark morning, and found that BritBox has streaming holiday light shows to run in the background of doing other things.

Some quick notes

  • no car news, but we don't really need two vehicles, so we are OK. What we have is a good reliable car (that is now dmaged) and a vehicle for taking things to the dump. Christine managed to find a really nice take things to the dump vehicle some years back, so we'll drive it about more and live with the lousy gas mileage.

  • Bruno and Marlowe have had a step of improvement in how they get along and how Bruno believes he can access the rest of the house. He doesn't need coaxing to leave his safe room, Marlowe is not nearly as vigilant. It's odd to see how things seem to have little jumps and not gradual change. We went from much coaxing to get him to leave his room on his own to him dashing out in the morning.

  • Christine is having a more serious flare (infection) of the issue that sent her to the emergency room in June. Less than a month to the surgery that should resolve things.

  • I am fighting my own self denigration around gift giving and not really winning but avoiding. I hope i can take some time off today to label and wrap and pack and ship. I had so much joy making and thinking about giving -- years of it imagining when i could gift things from the orchard -- and ... anyhow, i will focus on that and try to  take the insecure part of me and tell her ... that people already know i am a flake so it's ok? No, wait, that's not the message. We'll work on that.

  • i've gotten in my (pathetically low count of) steps the past two days. I think i feel better for it. I am worried about how fatigue hit me out of the blue a few weeks ago, but i have no evidence that the fatigue is caused by doing things, i just NOTICE when i am doing things. Acting like i am fatigued all the time is not the solution.

Orion II

Dec. 14th, 2025 12:20 pm
vaxhacker: (Default)
[personal profile] vaxhacker

I mentioned earlier that having only partially done the Orion questionnaire, I was somehow now destined to keep coming back to write in my journal even after NaBloPoMo was over, like the blogging analogue of the siren’s call of the Trevi Fountain.1

I find myself with a quiet moment here today and only multitasking less than a dozen other things, so why not move it along a little further as well?

  • If you could make pancakes with anyone living or dead, who would it be?
    I’m going to make the assumption that the question is asking about someone I can’t readily do this with today if I wish, so the easy answers of making and sharing breakfast with my spouse and children which would always be my first and everyday desire, or even my own parents, should be stated but for our purposes here set aside for the sake of the deeper “what if…” implied here. I think my grandfather would be my choice. As a young boy I spent many hours with him, learning a lot about his technical expertise and generally looking up to him and spending time with him. It would be nice as an adult to be able to have pancakes (or whatever) with him and be able to share our perspectives now about life and everything looking back on our experiences after all this time.
  • What are some of your favorite words?
    你們 (nǐmen—in Chinese they have a plural form of “you,” distinct from the singular— nǐ 你—which is brilliant to make it clear whether you mean “you” as the one person you’re addressing, or the group of people you’re with; there’s yet another form of “you” when addressing a large audience as well), scrumptious, kerfuffle, ephemeral, gazebo, skullduggery, quux, firebottle, frobnitz.
  • Who are some of your heroes, heroines, real or fictional?
    The previous question revealed one of mine already. My father has always been another of my real-life heroes especially as I was growing up when it seemed to me there was nothing he couldn’t do. Even as I got old enough to realize he was a regular mortal, I started to appreciate the choices he had to make and how he sacrificed to support his family, always putting others first with patience and compassion that was a role model to me to try to aspire to be like.
  • What is something new you’ve done recently?
    Maybe not extremely recently but I’ve been expanding my range a bit on the microcontrollers I’ve been playing with in recent years. Back in the early 2000s I was exclusively using PIC chips but now it’s all Arduinos and Raspberry Pis these days. And I’ve been dabbling a little more in trying to appreciate Anime a bit more.
  • What’s the wildest thing you’ve experienced or witnessed in nature?
    Earthquakes, monsoon season, and a really good tropical thunderstorm with lightning bolts striking way too close for comfort certainly remind one to respect Mother Nature and realize how small we humans are when out in the elements by ourselves.
  • It’s late afternoon on a summer Saturday, you’re sitting with your feet in a cool creek and someone hands you the perfect beverage. What is it?
    Right now, it would typically be a Diet Coke, I’m embarrassed to admit, but I need to cut down on that, so let’s say a lemonade.

I hate giving interviews.
—Bobby Deol



__________
1Which I have, actually, tossed a lira coin into a few years ago but that return trip remains on my “to do” list.

Bush vs. Gore vid

Dec. 14th, 2025 05:59 am
brainwane: My smiling face, including a small gold bindi (Default)
[personal profile] brainwane
Happened across this Bluesky post embedding a TikTok of a vid about Al Gore "losing" the 2000 election to George W. Bush, set to a Sabrina Carpenter song. Enjoyed and wanted to share.