May 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 2026

Page Summary

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags

May Manga Wrap-Up 4

2026-05-09 02:01 pm
bluapapilio: Iruma from Mairimashita! Iruma-kun (mairuma)
[personal profile] bluapapilio
 

 DNF'ed New World Lovetopia, I liked the world concept but couldn't take the hetare uke, rude seme and all the dub/non-con.

 Read Sekai de Ichiban Kawaii! and rated it 7.3/10.

 Read ch. 196-197 of Mairimashita! Iruma-kun!

 Read ch. of Akuyaku Reijou no Naka no Hito!

 Read. ch. 15 of Vampire Library.

 Read ch. 1 of Tensei Oujo to Tensai Reijou no Mahou Kakumei.

 Finished volume 19 of D.Gray-Man.

 Read ch. 41-43 of Men of the Harem.

 Read ch. 11 of BASARA!

 Read Fresh 'n' Fruity 4-Koma.

 Read ch.2 of Dengeki Daisy!

 Read ch. 1 of Kagurabachi.

 Read ch.7 of Sankaku Mado no Sotogawa wa Yoru!

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Briana Viser

She used to belong to the penthouse security guard, but found herself without a family. Now, she's the proud kitty of a rich penthouse family living in luxury! 

These kinds of stories are always heartwarming. This kitty knew how to get new pawrents, and she went ahead and did it. She didn't wait for an invitation or excuse. She used to belong to the penthouse security guard, but after he got sick she kindly made her way to another rich family in the neighborhood. 

post-op gripes

2026-05-09 11:07 am
sistawendy: me in a Gorey vamp costume with the back of my hand to my forehead (hand staple forehead)
[personal profile] sistawendy
I would like to state for the record that washing your hair when you have no sensation (back? yet?) in the top of your scalp is bizarre and difficult. And the prescription-strength dandruff shampoo that I'm using is particularly nasty if it gets in the eyes or mouth. And really, I'm supposed to leave it on for three minutes?

Yes, I know, this kind of surgery is mostly a rich bitch privilege and I should be grateful to even have this kind of problem. But that's hard to remember when your eyes are stinging.

I still don't quite have a solution for sleeping in the recommended position, i.e. with my back at a 45° angle to the horizontal. My camping recliner is almost there, but I think I need a sleeping bag with it. At the rate I'm going it'll be almost too late. My back's sensitivity is surely a sign of age.

Other things I've done that I shouldn't have according to a second reading of the post-op instructions: walk too long at once, carry too much weight (groceries), get busy with Clara*, and pull weeds.

I shall be buying foods today that I can eat when I go off liquids on Tuesday. Oh yes, I shall.



*The sex toy I designed.
badly_knitted: (Dee & Ryo black & white)
[personal profile] badly_knitted
 


Title: Brief Idyll
Fandom: FAKE
Author: 
[personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Dee, Ryo.
Rating: PG
Written For: Challenge 500: Amnesty 50 at 
[community profile] drabble_zone, using Challenge 452: Ripple.
Setting: After the manga.
Summary: The setting is idyllic, everything is perfect, but…
Disclaimer: I don’t own FAKE, or the characters. They belong to the wonderful Sanami Matoh.
A/N: Double drabble.
 


 

2026.05.09

2026-05-09 01:29 pm
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
Twin Cities residents report gas stolen from vehicles
Estelle Timar-Wilcox
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/05/09/twin-cities-residents-report-gas-stolen-from-vehicles

Experts wonder 'Where is the CDC?' as a hantavirus outbreak unfolds on a cruise ship
The Associated Press
https://www.mprnews.org/story/2026/05/09/experts-question-cdc-response-as-hantavirus-spreads-on-cruise-ship Read more... )

Birdfeeding

2026-05-09 01:28 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] birdfeeding
Today is mostly sunny and mild. It rained most of yesterday.

I fed the birds. I've seen a large mixed flock of sparrows and house finches, a mourning dove, and a fox squirrel.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- We went out to run errands, which included a stop at Rural King for more bagged goods and a few flowers. Sadly they're moving away from the small sizes that I prefer; much of it was big pots and I'm not going spend $15-20 on something I could get elsewhere for $3-4, especially when most of my plantings are mixed. I only bought one big potted thing this season, and that was a pot with 4 different violas (purple-lavender, purple-white, purple-yellow, purple-orange) in it.

We also finished reading Super Smoothies.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- I planted 4 celosia (3 pinkish-red and 1 yellow), a purple wave petunia, and a Bidens flower in the barrel garden. I hadn't seen the Bidens before but it is a yellow-and-orange flower similar to a marigold or coreopsis, so it fits well in the barrel garden. That's almost full -- I've got room to squeeze in a firecracker and maybe some marigolds but that's about it.

A petunia is blooming pale rosepetal pink under the maple tree, and an iris looks to be opening up sort of a chocolate color there too. I'm pleased that the peony has a strong scent; the dark pink one under the apricot tree is nearly scentless.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- I planted 8 yellow marigolds in pots around the new picnic table.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- I dug a whole for an oak seedling at the edge of the savanna.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- I planted a pin oak seedling at the edge of the savanna.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

EDIT 5/9/26 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.

I am done for the night.
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Sarah Brown

A cat rolling over for belly rubs is one of life's greatest honors.

Cats that like belly rubs are truly special little creatures. Most cats act like touching their stomach is a personal attack, so the first time a cat rolls over and actually wants belly rubs feels confusing. People approach slowly like they're trying to disarm a bomb because there's always a chance it's a setup.

But cats who genuinely love belly rubs are completely different. They'll throw themselves onto the floor dramatically, stretch all four legs out, and wait patiently like they booked an appointment for this exact moment. Some cats even look offended if the belly rubs stop too early. The second a human walks past, they instantly flop over belly-up like "excuse me, the service here has been terrible lately."

The best part is how relaxed they get during it. Tiny paws in the air, eyes half closed, little happy faces like they don't have a single problem in the world. Some of them even wiggle around to make sure the belly rubs are hitting the right spot. Meanwhile humans completely forget what they were doing because soft fluffy cat stomachs somehow override all responsibilities.

Of course, even belly-rub cats still like keeping people on edge a little bit. Everything will seem perfectly peaceful and then suddenly there's one tiny warning bite just to remind everyone that despite the adorable behavior, there's still a cat involved.

Doctor Who Drabble: Alien Army

2026-05-09 07:19 pm
badly_knitted: (Eleven & TARDIS)
[personal profile] badly_knitted
 


Title: Alien Army
Author: 
[personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: The Doctor, Companion.
Rating: G
Written For: Challenge 1024: ‘Potato’ at 
[community profile] dw100.
Spoilers: Nada.
Summary: Massed Sontaran troops look quite impressive.
Disclaimer: I don’t own Doctor Who, or the characters.
 


 
badly_knitted: (Ianto & Tosh)
[personal profile] badly_knitted
 


Title: Understanding Friend
Author: 
[personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Ianto, Tosh.
Rating: PG
Written For: Challenge 916: Hug, at 
[community profile] torchwood100.
Spoilers: Set just after To The Last Man.
Summary: Tosh is feeling down after sending Tommy Brockless back to the past.
Disclaimer: I don’t own Torchwood, or the characters.
A/N: Double drabble.
 


 

Survived the week!

2026-05-09 07:07 pm
ruric: (Default)
[personal profile] ruric
Had a lovely Bank Holiday away at [personal profile] gingerpig's.

Drove up Sunday early evening and had a very clear run so arrived in Suffolk just before 8pm - dinner of pizza, wine and chat and before we knew it we were into the wee small hours and retired at 1:30am.

On Monday we manage to leave the house briefly for a wander round the barns (antiques and jewellery) and I may have purchased a few small items which were calling my name. Coffee and cake in the cafe followed by a snacky lunch and we - perhaps unsurprisingly- had 6 eps of Heated Rivalry on the background whilst chatting.

After dinner I talked GP into watching the feeds for the Met gala (who are we and why are we watching this)? We had the feeds from the Mark and Carlyle hotels in on You Tube from 9pm to watch the departures, GP had her laptop queued up to the Vogue feed from the Met which was due to start at 11pm
(to make sure we missed nithing), and I was following the Met instagram on my tablet and in the London Loons Whatsapp chat for gossip.

A lot of time was GP and I saying who are these people (apparently we are now olds and not at all tuned in to pop culture) - fortunately the London Loons WhatsApp mostly knew the answers or the Met insta did. We were all hilariously scathing about most of the outfits (disappointing lack of imagination for most I felt) - though we were very impressed when Connor got his arms out on the Met steps and with Hudson leaving the Mark in little more than a bathrobe and stunning eye make up.

There was a sad lack of stills from the event on Tuesday - but some notable commentary on the fact the boys partied until dawn. If you can't do that in New York in your 20s when can you? I commend their ability to remain upright on so little sleep!

However from Wednesday onwards there's been a positive abundance of behind the scenes pixs and videos, from the sweet, to awkward to hilarious (the vids of Hudson trying to squash Connor into the matador jacket probably caused various designers/fashion houses to have a heart attack whilst the rest of us chortled in glee). I've been deriving a significant amount of second hand joy from them particularly in the hell week of local elections.

Speaking of which I pulled a 16 hour day on Thursday working as a poll clerk in Richmond. In some ways quite enjoyable (we were the party polling station with rounds of applause for first time voters and a chatty electorate), we were visited by many lovely dogs (despite the no dogs allowed sign) and lots of parents bringing kids along who we encouraged to pop the ballot in the box. I crashed as soon as I got in at midnight (fortunately didn't work the count) but the team whatsapp went mad at 4:30am the the news of the landslide. Every single one of the 54 councillors elected in Richmond was LibDem. I'd worried Reform might get a foot in the door but the voters came through with a very clear message.

Unsurprisingly my ward in Merton had voted our 3 Labour councillors back in with a strong majority, but more heartening the Greens were clearly in second place and Reform and the Tories were trounced. Forvoverall control of Merton - Labour have 39 councillors, LibDems 19, Conservative 4 and Indie's 2. Considering how many St George's flags turned up in the borough at one point I was very glad to see Reform not get any seats and they only made it to second place in one of the 20 wards.

Unfortunately nationally Reform took 1400 seats and several councils but their councillors have a habit of either stepping down when they realise the work involved or they say shitty thing which get them suspended. Going on the results of last year's local elections they'll fuck up the councils where they have control and cancel many much needed services whilst increasing council tax. Such absolute muppets.

As usual at work there's too much to do and not enough time but I'm feeling less stressed about it than before my weekend away.

Today was out allotment plant sale - I bought things - and tomorrow I'll be spending a lot of time on my plot strimming, prepping and planting. This evening I went back to my piercer, replaced the 3 studs I'd lost overvthe last few weeks and got my helix done again. There'll be a couple more helix piercings this year and then I start planning new tattoo's for 2027!

Tonight I plan to drink wine, eat a decent meals, clean the flat and read fic.

Tigers by Eliza Griswold

2026-05-09 02:00 pm
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
What are we now but voices
who promise each other
a life neither one can deliver
not for lack of wanting
but wanting can’t make it so.
We hang from a vine
at the cliff’s edge.
There are tigers above
and below. Let us love
one another and let go.


**********


Seen on the SIR

This poem references the well-known zen koan.
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
[personal profile] reviews_and_ramblings
 

"Masa, Sit." Masa, the owner of a boutique clothing store, is best friends with the heartthrob fashion model, Oto. Together, they turn heads wherever they go. Both are also high-level Doms. However, Oto struggles with the strength of his commands, making him too intense for any sub partners he's had so far. Masa, on the other hand, has three regular partners. Seeking advice, Oto invites Masa out for dinner, where he playfully gives Masa a command, and then...?!

My Rate: 8 (mangaplaza.com/title/0303010289/)

If you’re looking for a BL that prioritizes "cozy domesticity" over high-stakes drama, Moegi Yukue’s Tried Saying a Command is a standout. It’s a sweet, low-stress exploration of a long-term relationship finding a new rhythm through a bit of harmless, experimental play. The story follows Masa and Oto, a couple of friends who have known each other for years. They are both Dominant Doms, but by chance they discover Masa is a switch and can react to Oto's commando. They decide to experiment with "commands"—small, playful prompts to spice up their interactions and see how the other reacts. What makes this manga work is the groundedness of the leads: Masa: Often the more "composed" one, his reactions to Oto’s commands (and his own attempts to lead) reveal a vulnerability that is incredibly endearing. Oto: He brings a certain warmth and spontaneity to the dynamic. His relationship with Masa feels lived-in; they aren't just lovers, they are best friends who truly know each other. Unlike many BL titles that rely on misunderstandings or "non-con" tropes for tension, this series is built on consent and curiosity. The "commands" are a vehicle for them to express desires they might have been too shy to bring up otherwise. The art is soft, clean, and expressive. Yukue excels at drawing "gentle" men—characters who feel masculine but are capable of immense tenderness. The facial expressions during the more embarrassing "command" moments are gold. It’s rare to find a story that focuses on the maintenance of love rather than the initial chase. Seeing Masa and Oto navigate their domestic life together provides a sense of warmth that feels like a "warm hug" in manga form. A masterclass in soft, domestic BL, Tried Saying a Command isn't going to give you heart-wrenching angst or dark psychological turns. Instead, it offers a refreshing look at how a stable couple continues to grow. It’s charming, slightly spicy in a tasteful way, and deeply romantic. Best for fans of: Established relationship tropes. Soft, "fluff" heavy stories. Healthy communication and consent. Moegi Yukue’s other works (like The High Schooler and the Salaryman).

30 Days of Blake's 7 - Day 9

2026-05-09 05:37 pm
julesjones: (Default)
[personal profile] julesjones
 Day 9: Least favourite series

As with "most favourite", I'm pairing two seasons, and for the same reason - the Blakeless series 3 and 4. Blake, and the interplay between Blake and the others, is what transfixed me about the show in the first place, and that's gone. Tarrant's constant sniping at and jockeying with Avon for control of the ship and crew doesn't work for me, and doesn't have the same dynamic, in the way Avon doing it to Blake does. Ditto Jenna's mild hero worship of Blake, and Dayna's (initially) of Avon.

There's also a lot of aimless drifting in series 3 and 4, and 4 suffers terribly from the change in producer and the incoherent characterisation from a parade of writers who knew nothing about the series (and also Ben Steed...). This doesn't mean there are no redeeming features, because there are some good to stunning episodes, including anything written by Chris Boucher. There's a reason why that man had his own fan following, not just the actors.
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox posting in [community profile] common_nature
I’m assuming he’s been a formative influence for a lot of people in this community.

spring is plant sale season

2026-05-09 12:48 pm
starandrea: (Default)
[personal profile] starandrea
We had a frost warning the last two nights, but "frost free" or our last average frost date is coming up next week. Spring is here!

Since I have plenty of plants already, there is no need for me to acquire more. Fortunately my sister told me about the following tumblr meme: "Don't let anyone tell you not to spend $25 on plants. That $75 will be the best $300 you've ever spent."

Then she came with me to our first plant sale of the season, guarded plants while I paid and got the car, and carried not one but four bags of compost ♥

bunch of flowers )

PS, This was my first time attending a fundraising plant sale sponsored by a nursery. Highly recommend.

PPS, Do you see the innocent looking green sprig behind the pink flowers on the left? That's a palm tree. Someday I will not have room to overwinter plants indoors because the entire lower level of our house will be filled with trees. "The forest floor," I'll call it.
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Sarah Brown

Cats clearly see themselves as higher beings and hoomans as mildly useful assistants.

Cats genuinely believe they're superior to humans and their entire lifestyle backs it up. Humans wake up early, sit in traffic, answer emails, and slowly lose their minds over bills while cats spend the day rotating between naps, screaming at into the void, and sitting in windows judging birds like retired old men.

A cat can demand food while actively standing next to a half-full bowl and somehow make the human feel guilty about it. They'll cry dramatically outside a closed door, finally get it opened, stare into the room for three seconds, then walk away because the mission was never about entering. It was about control.

Cats also have levels of confidence most people could never imagine. A cat can miss a jump, crash directly into a wall, and immediately act like everyone else was weird for noticing. Humans accidentally wave back at someone who wasn't waving to them and think about it until 2047.

The craziest part is how humans completely rearrange their lives around cats without questioning it. People sleep in uncomfortable positions because the cat is comfortable. People buy expensive beds the cat ignores in favor of a grocery bag. Entire vacations get planned around "who's watching the cat."

And despite contributing almost nothing to society besides occasional cuddles and emotional manipulation, cats still walk around like enlightened beings watching humanity struggle beneath them.

soricel: (Default)
[personal profile] soricel
Random Community of the day:

[community profile] writethisfanfic

This is a big community that looks very cool and helpful. Its purpose seems to be offering support and encouragement for fanfic writers via, among other things it seems, daily check-ins in which members can post about any progress they've made on their WIPs. As I'm currently plugging away at a long (for me) fic project, I feel like this is something I'd probably benefit from. It also looks like community members volunteer to host these check-in posts, which is cool.

FlashLight by YANGMA

2026-05-09 06:10 pm
reviews_and_ramblings: (Default)
[personal profile] reviews_and_ramblings
 

Aaron Hunter’s got it all. Looks, talent, and he just won the award for best actor. He does have one issue though: trouble sleeping. The only thing that’ll get him to fall asleep is a certain song by a certain someone. And when they finally meet, this is Aaron’s chance to get him to write a new song. But will the mysterious singer accept this deal? And will past traumas become illuminated by their newfound relationship…?

My Rate: 8 (www.lezhinus.com/en/comic/flashlight_en)

Flashlight by YANGMA is a striking entry in the psychological BL genre, known for its intense atmosphere and the complex, often volatile chemistry between its leads, Aaron and Yujin. If you’re looking for a "sweet and fluffy" romance, this isn't it. Flashlight leans into the tension of past trauma and the blurred lines between obsession and protection. The heart of the story lies in the friction between two very different men tied together by a shared, painful history. Yujin is the emotional anchor of the story. Haunted by past events, Yujin’s life is defined by a sense of fragility and a desperate need for stability. His journey is less about falling in love and more about navigating the suffocating presence of Aaron. Aaron is a classic "complicated" lead. He is intense, protective to a fault, and often morally ambiguous. His actions frequently walk the line between devotion and control, making him a polarizing figure for readers. YANGMA excels at creating a claustrophobic, cinematic mood. The manhwa uses "quiet" panels effectively to build tension before a confrontation. The narrative constantly plays with who holds the upper hand, both physically and emotionally. It explores how two people can experience the same event and come out with completely different psychological scars. The art is one of the manhwa's strongest selling points. Sharp, clean linework emphasizes the coldness of the setting. The character designs are highly expressive, particularly in the eyes, which convey a lot of the subtext that the dialogue leaves out. The use of lighting (fitting for a title like Flashlight) helps highlight the "darkness" the characters are trying to escape. Flashlight is a must-read for fans of psychological dramas like Killing Stalking or Warehouse, but who prefer a slightly more grounded (though still very dark) narrative. It’s a beautifully drawn, haunting look at how the past can keep you trapped in the dark.

Sigh

2026-05-07 11:31 am
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
My shampoo is no longer being produced and I need more shampoo.

It needs to be perfume light, and ideally I should be able to get shampoo, conditioner, and body wash that don't clash with each other. I generally find that products marketed as natural are more likely to have scents that aren't overwhelming and don't make my eyes itch, give me a sore throat, or trigger a headache - but there's no guarantee there.

And, of course, it needs to get my hair clean, ideally without drying it out.

Help?
oursin: Painting of Clio Muse of History by Artemisia Gentileschi (Clio)
[personal profile] oursin

Though I suspect it's more just 'did not bother to do any research'.

Two pieces in today's Guardian Saturday.

The one about blokes being (IMHO) totally scammed over testosterone doesn't appear to be online yet, but I, who have done my time in the noisome pits of sex-related quackery, was going: this is the latest round of what used to be rejuvenation operations of various kinds (HAI! WB Yeats!), the Blakoe energiser, electrical belts, devices to prevent the leakage of the precious manly fluids, pills to restore Lost Manhood, and I wouldn't be surprised if radium tonics had featured at some point.

The placebo reaction is a powerful thing.

And then we get The rise of the literary nepo baby? The children of famous novelists on following in their parents’ footsteps.

Well, maybe in these parlous times it does help getting an agent and one's foot in the door at a publisher? But it is hardly a new phenomenon that there is More Than One Writer In The Family.

Will concede that perhaps I am thinking of those literary families of an earlier era which were perhaps more into churning out more or less hackwork as a cottage industry (e.g. the Allinghams).

Then I bethought me that Angela Thirkell's son Colin MacInnes was also a writer, albeit, as one may see from that Wikipedia entry, a very different article from Mama, wot. (I seem to recall from the bios of her that I read that they were estranged and he was a hostile witness.)

There's also a bit of a reverse pattern in the Drabble family, whereby John Drabble took to novel-writing after his daughters. (Famous Sibling Literary Feuds....)

MerMay The Ninth

2026-05-09 11:25 pm
leecetheartist: Photo of me coming at the camera, in my colourful mermaid gear (Default)
[personal profile] leecetheartist posting in [community profile] drawesome
Title: Chasey
Artist: leecetheartist
Rating: G
Fandom: n/a
Characters/Pairings: na
Content Notes:


I dragged myself away from games at the club for a bit to draw this playful mermaid. I used VanDiemen's ink Great Ice Lake, I think it is, which has a silver shimmer. The darker blue is Azure Kingfisher. And a little black for the fish. I used one of
[personal profile] rdm 's 3d printed pens with a Schmidt nib with the Lake, and then the Lamy Demo with the Azure Kingfisher, and the Rotring Art Pen with whatever black it was I put in it ages ago.



Blue mermaid in Seagrass
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Sarah Brown

It only took Rosie two weeks to become the smallest diva alive.

Rosie is less than 2 weeks old, weighs only 221 grams, and already sounds like she runs the entire household. She was found abandoned in a box with a towel inside, and thankfully she ended up with people who knew exactly what to do with a tiny kitten in need. Her new family already has experience raising bottle babies, so Rosie basically landed in the best possible situation.

Of course, despite being smaller than most sandwiches, she already has extremely strong opinions. She only accepts one specific bottle setup and prefers being fed with a syringe because apparently regular feeding methods are beneath her. Tiny kittens always act like they're celebrity clients at a luxury hotel.

She also just opened one eye 45 minutes ago, which somehow feels like a major historical event. That little face is about to start seeing the world and immediately causing problems in it.

The cutest part is that she'll be raised alongside June and Lilli, two cats who love kittens. Rosie went from abandoned in a box to having an entire family, furry babysitters included. Honestly, this tiny spicy little creature already has a better support system than most adults.

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Blake Seidel

Who knew kittens could get so huge?

When you adopt a kitten, you probably imagine a tiny little head with four even tinier paws that is smaller than a can of soda. Those petite meows, the falling asleep in random places, the hissterically uncoordinated eating… it's all a part of the quintessential kitten expurrience. This is the time that we cherish the most, because believe us, they won't be that small for long, or ever again. But for our family below, that time flew by faster than a cat with zoomies. They adopted a Himalayan ragdoll, who started out as an illegally smol kitten. But then, he started growing, and growing… and growing.

Within five months, he already outgrew their adult cat, and he isn't showing any signs of stopping. They learned that this purrticular breed of cat can get pretty big - much bigger than they expected. Nobody knows how big this kitty is going to end up being, but there is good news: he's purrfectly meme-worthy. He may be big, but he is also dumb, and that's exactly how he's supposed to be. 

pauraque: drawing of a wolf reading a book with a coffee cup (customer service wolf)
[personal profile] pauraque
Economics has been defined as how self-interested actors compete in response to scarcity. In this short book, Indigenous botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer argues for an alternative model of human economy inspired by the abundance and interdependence found in nature.

Scarcity in the human world is largely manufactured: There actually is enough for everyone, we just act like there isn't. Hoarded resources are wasted, like unpicked berries whose seeds are never scattered. While reading Kimmerer's thoughts on artificial scarcity, I found myself also thinking about the interpersonal scarcity mindset which leads people to cling to damaging relationships because they're afraid they'll never find anyone else. The commonality is a refusal to see the abundance that's right in front of you.

The impersonal competition of capitalism is contrasted with gift economies which build community and reciprocal relationships rather than cutting them off; status is gained by how much you give away rather than how much you keep for yourself. Birds and people enthusiastically gather around the serviceberry tree because of how generously it gives to them—and through animal seed dispersal and human husbandry, the plant gets it all back and more. (This discussion reminded me again that I want to re-read David Graeber's Debt. In gift economies there is an obligation incurred, but it's ongoing, mutual, and unquantified.) Gift economies do already exist alongside the money economy at small scales, and I appreciated the mention of digital economies, where information is what's exchanged. It made me think of how fandom can function as a gift economy, with creative works and resources being shared without expectation of a fixed payment—but the community can only continue to function if others are also sharing in kind or at least offering recognition and support.

One framing that was new to me was the comparison of colonizer capitalism to environmental succession. Disturbed natural environments like clear-cut forests are first taken over by fast-growing species that rapidly consume resources, but this constant competitive growth is unsustainable and is eventually replaced by a more stable ecology of interdependent species. We live in a disturbed environment, but that doesn't mean that stability isn't in the future.

The book is an expansion of a previously-published long-form essay, and it's only 100 pages, so obviously it can't offer a comprehensive exploration of these ideas, but I found it an inspiring and hopeful read. (If you like this, definitely read her essay collection Braiding Sweetgrass!)

I bought this book from the bird sanctuary gift shop on our trip to Rhode Island; I'm trying to keep my personal library under control, but I figured the profit went to a good cause. I want to keep the book because I think I'll re-read it, but I'm also tempted to get another copy and put it in a Little Free Library.
petrea_mitchell: (Default)
[personal profile] petrea_mitchell
I've had books that I mean to blog about piling up for a while. I'll start with the most recent one.

Ice was originally published in Polish in 2007, and just made it into English last year. It's set in an alternate history where the Tunguska impact created a spreading zone of altered physics in Siberia. The protagonist is charged to travel into Siberia to find his missing father, who may have developed some influence on the possibly sentient phenomena that accompany it.

This is a very long book. An extremely long book. A book of such size that the sheer volume of it crushes any attempt to think about any of its other aspects. A lot of that space is taken up by political and philosophical speeches, which are interesting at first as the reader is introduced to the factions of a world in which Tsarist Russia still exists and Irkutsk is a boomtown for miners exploiting the alien ores brought in by the impact, but eventually left me sighing and wondering when another tidbit about the main plot would drop.

Politics and philosophy are relevant because it isn't just that different events have led to a different history, but that the Ice, as the altered zone is called, appears to directly retard inspiration and progress. The central question ultimately becomes whether to harness that effect, and if so, how.

But man. People go on and on. This book could have used some editing. By the time the main character made up his mind, I didn't care anymore, I was just checking to see how much more book there was to get through.

Two other long books came to mind as I was reading Ice. One was Ash: A Secret History by Mary Gentle, which also played with weird physics, and also contained the idea that (another effect of the weird physics in both books) history is malleable even well after the fact. The spaces between the big plot revelations in Ash, though, have a lot more action and drama.

The other one I wound up thinking of was The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson. This takes place in an alternate timeline where the Black Death killed nearly everyone in Europe, but scientific and political advances happen more or less on the same schedule, just in different places. It has a deliberate focus on some of the slower and less exciting stretches of that history. It is practically a novella compared to Ice, but it felt like a very long book at the time. And it's a good parallel otherwise because it's another case where I feel like the author achieved what he set out to do, only that thing was not sufficiently interesting to me to like it at that length.

I'm not sorry to have tried reading Ice; I believe in having a varied literary diet and it did have ideas that were entirely new to me. But one of it is enough to last me some time. I'm not going to be seeking out any of Dukaj's other work.
[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Blake Seidel

Cats have main character energy. With, or without, Photoshop.

There was a huge phase of the internet where everyone was obsessed with photoshopping themselves into hilarious pictures, historical landmarks, or adding themselves into pictures to make the purrfect photobomb. We should know, because we did it. And it wasn't just true for hoomans, pawrents photoshopping their cats into pictures for the Olympics or just for fun became an instantly shareable pic that would circulate the internet back in the early days of social media. 

Now? It's a bit tired. A little "been there, done that". Why? Because it became so easy to do. In 2012, everyone and their grandmother knew how to Photoshop themselves, and you probably didn't even need Photoshop to do it. Now, we have AI, which can do everything Photoshop can do without having to know all the technical processes to achieve the end result. 

And yet, when we came across this thread of a pawrent Photoshopping their cat into famous hisstorical meowments, we noticed something different. Sure, the cat was edited into the tearing down of the Berlin Wall, supervising the moon landing, etc, but what we loved about these photos was that the cat, even if it wasn't in the center of the image, was that the kitty was center stage in every era. We couldn't not look at them, and not because the editing was bad (well, it was in some of them), but because the pictures were infinitely better with them inside.

It just proves what we've been saying for years: cats give off "main character energy" as naturally as breathing. It also proves another thing we've been saying for furrever: more historical pictures should include cats. It might make history more fun to learn.

(no subject)

2026-05-09 09:47 am
skygiants: the aunts from Pushing Daisies reading and sipping wine on a couch (wine and books)
[personal profile] skygiants
I have succumbed to peer pressure and started rereading Robin Hobb's Farseer trilogy -- well that's not true, I have reread the first book, Assassin's Apprentice, and told myself [lying] I PROBABLY won't go on from here, I just want to remember what's what! But it seems I will in fact be going on from here because to my surprise I thought Assassin's Apprentice was better than I expected or indeed remembered it being and now I want to get to the Liveship Traders trilogy, which is the one I actually actively remember as being good [citation: fourteen-year-old Becca, a notoriously unreliable narrator as we have many times established.]

The thing is I essentially remembered nothing about Assassin's Apprentice because at the time I read it I didn't really know the narrative value of the fraught emotional bond between a protagonist and their mediocre-to-bad mentor and Assassin's Apprentice is NOTHING but mediocre-to-bad mentors. This book is chockablock full of problematic adults intensely projecting their various personal traumas and failures on our young protagonist and attempting to extend him care and guidance through these various highly distorted lenses, and unfortunately their best at its best is never very good but you can't say they're not trying: not really appealing to me at fourteen but delicious to me at forty.

Assassin's Apprentice begins with the arrival of our protagonist on a royal doorstep, age sixish: this kid is the illegitimate son of the famously upright, faithful, virtuous, happily married, non-slutty heir to the throne, Prince Chivalry, and his unknown relatives have decided that it's time for the child to be Chivalry's problem. This immediately and publicly blows up the entire political situation in the country, as Chivalry and his wife subsequently remove themselves from the line of succession and retire to a remote country estate without ever interacting with the child in question.

So that's Fitz, a kid with no official status who's a walking Weird Situation For Everyone. As for his various mediocre mentors, we've got:

Burrich, who was Chivalry's overwhelmingly devoted right-hand man, and due to a one-two-three punch of inconveniently timed injury/Fitz's arrival/Chivalry's retirement has found himself demoted from Heroic Hand of the Heir to the Throne to local stablemaster and accidental foster parent to the kid who blew up his life and his boss'

Chade, the king's assassin, who started from a similar position to Fitz and has been tasked by the king with molding Fitz into just as useful a tool for the royal dynasty as Chade has been for all these years

Verity, Fitz's uncle and the new responsible-but-overwhelmed heir to the throne, a pleasant and dutiful man with minimal emotional intelligence, who is always sort of absently nice to Fitz until the Kingdom's Problems start Eating Him Alive and suddenly things become enjoyably fraught as the potential increasingly arises that perhaps the Kingdom's Problems would eat Verity alive a little less if he let them eat Fitz alive a little more, but he is not going to do that! because he has ethics! but they both know that the possibility is there!!

Lady Patience, Chivalry's wife, who shows up midway through the book when Fitz is a teenager like 'oops possibly this child should have been parented by us? who says you can't fix the failures of the past! I'm doing it right now!'

What I find charming about Lady Patience in particular is that it's really obvious that to Chivalry she was his beautiful carefree manic pixie dream girl and to everyone else she is a nightmare. In fact all these people are sort of nightmares, and they all do care deeply about Fitz, and are also all failing him in important ways that have to do with their own deeply personal blind spots. The book's strength is in the evenhanded way it looks at these people and their strengths and their failures, and lets both the love and the mistakes matter equally.

The book's weakness is in that Robin Hobb apparently decided that since she had all these deeply flawed sympathetic characters, she also needed some actual villains that no one could possibly feel sympathetic about. There's an evil prince who wants to usurp the throne, and there are also some evil pirates who are kidnapping people from the kingdom and turning them into Soulless Monsters, or rather what [personal profile] blotthis accurately describes as video game NPCs that you don't need to feel bad about killing. The fact that Hobb goes to great lengths to explain how everyone is very distraught about the situation and does some failed experiments to ensure that there's no way to turn these people back from being soulless monsters and you really truly don't need to feel bad about killing them really just makes it worse.

Also, I think it's important to note that Robin Hobb really is better than most of her peers at thinking about the practical requirements of domestic animals in a Nineties Eurofantasy environment; the proper care of horses and dogs forms a significant underlying element of the book and occasionally becomes a major plot point, especially since Fitz's Special Secret Skill is dog telepathy [Burrich thinks From Personal Experience this is an evil perversion that will ruin Fitz's life and that he must train out of Fitz as much as possible] [this is definitely not a metaphor for anything] [Robin Hobb wants to know how you could you possibly ask that]. Anyway the flip side of this is that Robin Hobb will Not hesitate to kill a puppy. Never think she won't do it. She has a knife to another puppy's throat right now. spoilers )

(no subject)

2026-05-09 03:46 pm
summerstorm: (Default)
[personal profile] summerstorm
This week has been exhausting. Not because of anything active, but because of the way I've woken up every day. If it wasn't Ciri yowling, it was my sister talking loudly in the hallway at 10 am (which she'd give me hell for) and today it was Gorgug dry heaving on the floor. I almost went back to sleep yesterday, and today I did actually curl back up under the covers, though I never dozed again. I've been doing the bare minimum, which in fairness is more than my bare minimum was months ago, let alone years ago, but I would like to vacuum and mop my room, and I would like to have the strength to make coffee every day instead of resorting to energy drinks.

I've had zero games because the one consistent one, our DM is currently traveling, and I'm glad it's worked out this way, because the last time this happened I had to cancel on them, and I pride myself on being extremely reliable in this one aspect of my life.

-

Edit: I'd been meaning to look up how you're supposed to drink soju, because I could not remember the one time I had it at a Korean BBQ restaurant (in Prague), and it turns out I've been using the right glass this whole time, purely by accident, because I found it on the dryer rack two weeks ago and was like, what the fuck, who used my shot glass (that I have never used myself nor seen in four years)? Turns out my mom used it to try to sprout a lettuce? I've also been sticking to (kind of) drinking with friends, because it's a fantastic boost for ttrpgs with no negative side effects because it's so little. I'm pretty happy with this whole thing. (I do not "shoot the first glass." I sip from one (1) glass and then move on to kombucha or an energy drink. Because sobriety is important to me.)

-

Anyway, other than that, Hades 2 has eaten my life. It came out for PS5 at some point late last month, and I got it on April 27, because a friend gave me the money and because it's one of those indie games that's not eighty (80) whole ass bucks for years before it goes on sale. I was very overwhelmed at first, but learned quickly, and three days in, I put it on God Mode for no good reason and I've been coasting since. Rambling. )
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Six works new to me. Three are SF, two fantasy and Fiyah is a mix. At least two of the novels are series. Interesting that SF is such a large fraction. Is SF making a comeback?

Books Received, May 2 — May 8


Poll #34579 Books Received, May 2 — May 8
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 40


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

If We Cannot Go at the Speed of Light by Kim Cho-yeop (April 2026)
23 (57.5%)

The Republic of Memory by Mahmud el Sayed (May 2026)
21 (52.5%)

Mortal Things by Marie Lu (October 2026)
4 (10.0%)

Maker of Gods by Maria Z. Medina (October 2026)
1 (2.5%)

Forged in FIYAH: Celebrating Ten Years of Black Speculative Fiction edited by Davaun Sanders (September 2026)
16 (40.0%)

This Crimson Ruin by Rebecca Thorne (December 2026)
5 (12.5%)

Some other option (see comments)
2 (5.0%)

Cats!
32 (80.0%)

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Ayala Sorotsky

Wait. Stop. Hold. There are cats, and that's more impawrtant than anything right meow.

When Caturday arrives, the number one priority for all cat people is to just stop. Stop the rush of work, stop the week's stress, and start relaxing with your cat. Caturday is that sacred time of getting yourself all tucked in - with your cat. It's that ameowzing time when you can freely snack because what is even mealtime - with your cat. It's that cute day when you can let all your worries out - and let your cat in. It's a day full of cat energy, and we're all here for it.

But what's "cat energy" anyway? It's that special flair of meows that your cat starts to sing in the middle of the night. It's the zoomies all over your furniture, followed by a sudden stop-and-flop somewhere on the floor. It's that perked-up tail of excitement when you dare to even remotely breathe near the snack drawer. It's that sass combined with cuteness, that hissterical humor combined with wholesomeness. All of that is that cat energy everyone is looking for on a Caturday.

And since we're all about it here - hanging out with your cat, enjoying Caturday, and generally having more and more cats in your life - we brought you some cute Caturday cat pawsts to enjoy today. Extra enjoyable with your cat on your lap.

Ticking

2026-05-09 09:17 am
frith: Violet unicorn cartoon pony grinning like Cheshire Cat (FIM Twilight crazy)
[personal profile] frith
Spring_Fern04

Spring keeps on springing. Caught the llama sleeping this morning around six AM, lurching as she dreamed, long enough for me to crouch down and pull two ticks off her face before she woke up. I heard on the radio that there's a website for collecting pictures of ticks along with a questionnaire, but the two had already expired on the stove's hotplate and they want the ticks frozen, not cooked, just in case they're special ticks.

Weekly Challenge

2026-05-09 03:09 pm
goodbyebird: X-Files: Mulder running off a long list of theories in the background, Scully ain't having it. (X-Files the nutbags are out there)
[personal profile] goodbyebird posting in [community profile] 3weeks4dreamwidth
Weekly Challenge: You have three weeks to make a post to a Dreamwidth community where you don't regularly participate and to leave a comment on someone else's community post.


the pledgetag requests
• weekly challenge 1 . 2friending memeevent iconsjournal memespaid account gifting
community love

Another roadtrip

2026-05-09 02:02 pm
mtbc: maze F (cyan-black)
[personal profile] mtbc
Our weekend trips away from home displace activities like my writing here. Last weekend, we stayed near Sunderland, renting a garden flat looking out toward Roker Beach. The weather on our full day there was unremittingly dreich. We had some luck getting a good parking spot on our last morning there: before we departed, we walked out on to Roker Pier from where we could stand at the lighthouse and watch dolphins in the North Sea.

Our route took us near the Solway Aviation Museum which made an excellent pausing point, R.'s sons got a tour of a Vulcan. In subsequent reading I now learn that the Tornado can carry nuclear weapons and that the UK's buying F-35A's for carrying them too. I had not realized that there was interest in delivery other than from submarines.
creepy_shetan: cropped color manga illustration of the inner and outer Sailor Senshi lying in a wide circle, their heads together (SM // solar system color wheel)
[personal profile] creepy_shetan posting in [community profile] comment_fic
[ If you're interested in being a Tuesday-Thursday guest host, you can sign up here. Thanks! ❤ ]
↑↑↑ Available dates:
May 12 & 14
May 19 & 21
May 26 & 28


G'morning and come on in! :3 You're just in time for this week's Free for All. There are no themes to follow for prompts or fills. Btw, if you perhaps missed a prompt theme that you liked, or you've had any ideas that didn't really work with Tuesday's or Thursday's posts, then today's your chance to prompt 'em. Be free, and have fun! ✎

Just a few rules:
1. No more than five prompts in a row.
2. No more than three prompts in the same fandom.
3. Use the character's full name and the fandom's full name for ease in adding to the Lonely Prompts spreadsheet.
4. No spoilers in prompts for a month after airing, or use the spoiler cut option found here. Unfortunately, DW doesn’t have a cut tag, so use your best judgment when it comes to spoilers.
5. If your fill contains spoilers, warn and leave plenty of space, or use the spoiler cut.
6. If your story has possible triggers, please warn for them in the subject line!

Prompts should be formatted as follows: [Use the character's full names and fandom's full name]
Fandom, Character +/ Character, Prompt

Are today's prompts not catching your eye? No worries, because we have plenty of older prompts that just might do the trick! You can browse through the comm's calendar archive (here on LJ or here on DW) for themed and Free For All posts, or perhaps check out Sunday posts for Lonely Prompt requests. (Or, you can be like me, and try to save interesting prompts as you see 'em... and then end up with multiple text doc files full of [themes + links + prompts] that you can easily look through and search for keywords.) Multiple fills for one prompt are welcome, by the way! Oh, and you are very likely to find some awesome fills to read as well, and wouldn't it be nice to leave a comment on those lovely little writing distractions? ~_^

We are on AO3! If you fill a prompt and post it to AO3, please add it to the Bite Sized Bits of Fic from 2026 collection.

If you are viewing this post on our Dreamwidth site: please know that fills posted here will not show up as comments on our LiveJournal site, but you are still more than welcome to participate. =)

If you have a Dreamwidth account and would feel more comfortable participating there, please feel free to do so… and spread the word! [community profile] comment_fic


A friendly reminder about our posting schedule: Themed posts for new prompts go up on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Saturdays are a Free for All day for new prompts of any flavor. Sundays are for showing Lonely Prompts some love, whether by requesting for someone to adopt them or by sharing any fills that you've recently completed.

Little things

2026-05-09 08:54 am
legalmoose: (Default)
[personal profile] legalmoose
Puttering around the house this morning, doing all sorts of little maintenance things. Watering the new grass-and-clover mix in the back yard, brushing a cat, refilling the dish soap dispenser. The foaming hand soap dispenser in the kitchen is starting to run low so I looked online to remind myself what the ratio of soap-to-water is (1 part soap to 5 parts water). In doing so I discovered that the designers made it easy for you - fill the clear part at the bottom with soap, then fill the rest to the 'max fill' line under the metal portion with water and voila - just the right ratio without needing an external measure. I love little details like that, where designers work with the product to make it easier to use and aesthetically pleasing.

Stacks

2026-05-09 01:47 pm
puddleshark: (Default)
[personal profile] puddleshark
The Pinnacles 3
I have stacks. Not stacks of money. Not stacks of time. Just stacks.

Studland to Handfast Point and Ballard Down )
[syndicated profile] theatlantic_health_feed

Posted by Rachel Sugar

From the beginning, Soylent was shorthand for a certain kind of guy. A guy who worked in tech and probably wore a hoodie. A guy who, despite his six-figure salary, lived in an unfurnished apartment. Soylent Guy, above all else, did not have time for quotidian tasks such as cooking and chewing. One way you knew this was that he slugged the nutrient-dense slurry known as Soylent.

Remember Soylent? In the mid-2010s, Soylent promised to change the world by solving a timeless problem: Everybody has to eat. Instead of chopping vegetables or defrosting a meal, you could fertilize yourself, like a needy rhododendron, with a blend of oat flour, maltodextrin, brown-rice protein, canola oil, fish oil, and just enough sucralose to mask the flavor. For a brief moment, Soylent was beloved—at least in Silicon Valley, where venture capitalists helped turn it into a $170 million brand. It was also a dystopian punch line: What if you stripped life of all joy and bottled the result? Ha! In 2023, Soylent was sold off for a fraction of its former valuation.

John Coogan, who co-founded Soylent in his early 20s and now co-hosts the popular tech-business talk show TBPN, chalks up the company’s decline largely to inexperience. “We were always trying to be a little bit too clever,” he told me. But perhaps Soylent’s greatest fumble was that it came too soon.

You can find Soylent-like drinks almost everywhere these days. Fairlife—a line of protein shakes that bills itself as “a satisfying way to get the nutrition you’re looking for”—is so popular that it has become Coca-Cola’s fastest-growing U.S. brand. One of its competitors, Huel, recently sold to Danone for $1 billion. You can buy nutrition drinks from Rebbl and Orgain and Koia and Oikos, along with many, many other companies whose names have the wrong number of vowels.

If you are one of the many Americans who chugs these shakes on the regular, perhaps you might balk at the comparison to Soylent. (You don’t even wear a hoodie!) The point of nonfood nutrition is no longer to fuel yourself so that you can sit at a computer longer. You are instead becoming healthier, hotter, more beautiful, more jacked. The shakes are engineered for our protein-obsessed times. Fairlife’s Nutrition Plan shake, for example, comes with 30 grams of protein in a mere 150 calories. But many of the shakes do not stop at protein. They want to talk to you about adaptogens and your gut health, your antioxidants and your immune-boosting support. Only some of them explicitly identify as a meal replacement. Instead, they are “next-level nourishment” to “fuel every move.” They go from “gym bags to lunchboxes to morning smoothies” and match pace “with your everyday, get-strong hustle.”

[Read: America has entered late-stage protein]

Still, there is a striking resemblance to Soylent, and not only in form. These shakes aren’t meals, but they aren’t not meals. “There was a time when you had eggs for breakfast and a sandwich for lunch and a TV tray for dinner,” Leigh O’Donnell, an analyst at the market-research firm Kantar, told me. But we have become a nation of snackers. Instead of having three meals a day, she said, many Americans now eat “maybe six … somethings.” This is because of our lifestyles but also because of our newfound dietary needs. GLP-1s, for example, have created a new customer: people trying to mitigate potential muscle atrophy, a side effect of rapid weight loss, by consuming more protein, ideally in a form that doesn’t require eating all that much. The current high-protein, low-calorie, micronutritionally supplemented ready-to-drink shakes may not exactly constitute a “meal” in the conventional sense, but they certainly constitute a “something.”

The shakes are portable and easy and wildly efficient, in that they deliver a lot of meticulously calibrated individual nutrients and require no thinking. As a person who is not generally doing anything particularly demanding with my body (or, arguably, my time), I know that traditional eating should be just fine. All else being equal, eating food, not too much, mostly plants is probably superior to downing ultra-processed shakes. And still, I find myself drawn to these drinks. Food is fraught and confusing, but the shakes are reassuringly precise: This much protein! This much fiber! These carbohydrates! This unquantifiable but still notable immune-boosting defense! I am, as the protein-shake brand OWYN promises, getting “Only What You Need.” This was, of course, the promise of Soylent: You could glug down everything you needed and get on with it.

In recent years, “what you need” has only escalated. The list of nutritional necessities now “contains all these things that you didn’t even know you needed five minutes ago,” O’Donnell said, “whether it’s turmeric or potassium.” Obviously, you can be generally healthy, eating your beans and grains and salads, but can you reach the pinnacle of your potential? Can you maximize, in one single serving, your protein, your fiber, your ashwagandha, and your time? That’s the appeal of something like Ka’Chava, an “all-in-one nutrition shake” enhanced with antioxidants, probiotics, prebiotics, and digestive enzymes. Or consider Rebbl, which includes, in addition to protein and fiber, 2.2 milligrams of zinc and “adaptogenic Reishi mushroom extract.” Even Soylent itself has pivoted its messaging to keep up with the times, updating not only its recipe but also its mission. “We’ve shifted from being a meal replacement company to a complete nutrition company,” then-CEO Demir Vangelov told the tech newsletter dot.LA a few years ago. In an interview with Food Dive, he went further: “Every one of our consumers, they know what they believe they need in terms of protein, in terms of carbs, in terms of fiber and vitamins and minerals, and they’re curating their nutrition across their week to fit those needs.” (Soylent did not respond to several requests for an interview.)

[Read: Soylent, meal replacements, and the hurdle of boredom]

Soylent had a bold, even ridiculous vision for a post-food future. So far, it has not materialized. After several days of searching, I finally got my hands on a bottle of Soylent through the magic of the internet. It tasted strikingly similar to the other shakes on the market—dominated by notes of their low-calorie sweeteners. Coogan, the Soylent co-founder, has given up the stuff. “I have a very regimented schedule now where I have breakfast with my team every morning,” he said. But when you walk into a grocery store and glance at the refrigerated row of shakes, with their minimalist packaging and maximalist promises, the original dream of Soylent can seem comparatively quaint. The goal is no longer to match food. The goal has become to transcend it.

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Ayala Sorotsky

The CDS is outdoing itself every single time.

Correct us if we're wrong, but doesn't it feel that every cat rescue mission we hear about is getting more and more complex, boisterous, and daring? It's like the narrative strings are being pulled from behind the curtain with more force, more meaning. When just a few years ago, we got wholesome adoption stories to soothe the hearts and souls of cat people from all over, now we get adventures with story arcs with a heroic cat as the purrtagonist. But we've got to be honest, we love every second of it. It's like every adoption story is a dangerous escapade with high stakes - and it's exciting.

We think we have to directly thank the Cat Distribution System for that. We know that they are the ones who pull the strings to bring us an end result such as this one - a kitten abandoned on the road, cars passing over her head, a college student rescues her from danger, but "throws" her into her mother's arms, while the mom now has to juggle the health of the kitten with the health of the resident senior cat. Now that's what we call a complex story with a branching narrative. Such an exciting one!

rydra_wong: Lee Miller photo showing two women wearing metal fire masks in England during WWII. (Default)
[personal profile] rydra_wong
Important things:

* Just as you should not read The Fortunate Fall if you want a romantic Happily Ever After, you should not read What We Are Seeking if you want a book which neatly ties up all its plot threads.

It's not quite in the same league of non-resolution as Stars In My Pocket Like Grains Of Sand (my beloved), but.

Assorted important things happen; the initial situation is radically changed; key decisions are made and alliances are formed. How it will play out is something that will clearly evolve over subsequent years and decades, but the book chooses to leave it at that moment of resolve rather than resolution, with the crucial shifts being internal and interpersonal.

* As an author, Cameron Reed may be the most "not aromantic but she believes in their beliefs" I've ever encountered.

Romantic love is a very real thing in her work, but it doesn't sway the moral or narrative universe of her novels in the way we're trained to expect (and the presence of an explicitly aro character in What We Are Seeking is not accidental).

I love this SO FUCKING MUCH.

* John Maraintha and Iren and Laura and Suddharma and Vo and Pirro and Blue Green.

British election

2026-05-09 11:22 am
mtbc: maze N (blue-white)
[personal profile] mtbc
The election happened. Feeling rushed, I took less care than usual in researching my options but there were readily available links online to manifestos and suchlike. As a sufficient discriminator, I focused on parties' positions on the subset of issues where I care more and where I expected more divergence.

Britain is good at offering abundantly many polling stations open for long hours, I have never seen much of a queue. It was R.'s and their eldest first time voting here so I tried to be informative but not overly so. I was surprised how long our regional ballot paper was in person, my not having thought through how it had to fit well over a dozen parties plus a couple of independents. It all seemed to go easily and smoothly even though our polling station serves three … districts? each of which needs two ballot boxes for each of that district's kinds of ballot. It is nice to be in a country that can count elections in hours rather than days.

In every election, my tendency is to weigh my options; over the years, I have voted for a good range of parties. The main exception might be that I don't believe I've ever voted Republican in the US. Twenty years ago I might have at least given them thought but, especially in this modern era, Republicans will have to find some principles, honesty and compassion before I can ever even consider them again. In recent years, the Conservatives in Britain have also moved enough rightward to be beyond the pale for me. I don't think I've moved much leftward in my old age, I think the parties moved under me: Labour remains much more Blair's than Kinnock's, and Badenoch's running scared of Reform. (Some Reform members think the National Socialists made some good points.) I'm slightly awkward because I'm more progressive socially than along other policy axes so it's always a tradeoff: in this case, drawing a few almost-red lines on issues narrowed the options nicely.

The results leave me quite comfortable with remaining in Scotland: Reform did the worst up here. Locally, and in general, the SNP did well. I am not their biggest fan but there are certainly worse and, not winning a majority in Parliament, perhaps they can focus more on governing than referenda. The SNP has this habit of campaigning on many issues then deeming every vote to be a mandate for Scottish independence.

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Page generated 2026-05-10 03:54 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios