katriona_s: (Default)
katriona_s ([personal profile] katriona_s) wrote2025-12-23 12:55 pm
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I don’t feel well today…

This morinng it's cold! They said the temperature was about 3°C early in the morning. Then there came the sun still the air is very cold. I came to the office, though today I have felt tired and sluggish for hours, could not do my job properly :( I feel like I was getting a cold. I was sitting at my desk but literally just looking at the computer... I was not sleeping but thinking nothing, spacing out. I don't like this, this is just waste of the precious time! I just wanted to go to bed and sleep... X(
selenak: (Bayeux)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote2025-12-22 05:05 pm
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Homer adaptations. Strike 2

Aaaaand the first teaser for Nolan's Odyssey is out. In some ways, my "will be the opposite type of adapatation of The Return " expectation came true - i.e. firm emphasis on the adventure on sea part of the story - in some it didn't, because Nolan seems to go for a traumatized war veteran aura around Odysseus (and his men) as well. Also - is that Tom "Spider-Man" Holland as Telemachus? This conjures up a few weird images. Oh, and, to give credit where credit is due: the aesthetics are gorgeous.




Speaking of Greek myths adaptations, I never read a single one of the books, but I am following the tv series adaption of Percy Jackson on Disney + and am charmed. Definitely much closer to the myths than either Disney's past endeavours (*cough* Hercules *cough* or Marvel's relationship to Norse mythology), though am confused to why the second season apparantly (we haven't seen him yet, he just keeps getting mentioned in dialogue) has decided to include Polyphemus as a villain and yet no one has mentioned a major mythological spoiler. )


There are still free spots on the January meme list. Greek (and Roman) myths opinions totally count as a topic. Ditto if you want me to speculate how the Odyssey would have been adapted by: a) Orson Welles, b) JMS (given the Tennyson of it all on B5), c) Ronald D. Moore. Bonus: Charlie Chaplin.
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julesjones ([personal profile] julesjones) wrote2025-12-21 10:36 pm

Happy Gauda Prime Day!

A happy Gauda Prime Day to all who celebrate. :-) Let us raise a glass to toast Chris Boucher, the man who made this day in 1981 one that many of us will never forget.
reapermum: (Default)
reapermum ([personal profile] reapermum) wrote2025-12-21 06:33 pm

4th Sunday in Advent

I like having a set of Advent candles every year, even thought I don't light the candles in case they set fire to the artificial flowers, ribbon and the greenery.

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reapermum ([personal profile] reapermum) wrote2025-12-21 06:19 pm

20th December

These are some of our festoons, we like festoons an put some up every year. And now the BBC is telling me that they are very fashionable this year. The latest look for your decorations is Retro apparently, meaning the 80's and 90's. And here was me thinking 50's and 60's.

katriona_s: (garden)
katriona_s ([personal profile] katriona_s) wrote2025-12-21 08:52 pm
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Good bye my mimosa

My mimosa tree, which I have planted in our backyard some years ago, has overgrown, I have trimmed it several times in the past but it has again grown too much. And it had countless small flower buds - must be beautiful in coming spring. Though we (I and mother, especially my mother) worried its roots would also overgrow and destroy the concrete block wall, I gave up to wait for its bloom and asked the gardener to cut it. I have treasured the tree for years so it's not an easy decision :(



The overgrown mimosa tree next to the block wall.

Yesterday morning the gardener came to cut it. His work was quick and efficient, I enjoyed looking at his work in spite of my regret about the mimosa flowers.



He cut the branches to small pieces to load them onto the small truck. I asked him to leave one branch but it doesn't have flower buds so in the next spring I'll see no mimosa flowers :(



Do you see the stump and small branch grown from its foot? I'm not sure if I could keep the small tree (and it would soon grow!) but I will talk to the gardener how I can do with it. Sometimes I remember the countless small flower buds which would surely bloom wonderfully in Feb - but now never bloom - and feel sad, feel like I have killed beloved small animal...

But, before the gardener came, I cut some twigs from the tree and put them in flower vase. The flower buds are too small and no yellow colour still these twigs are beautiful, I think.

reapermum: (Default)
reapermum ([personal profile] reapermum) wrote2025-12-19 05:36 pm

19th December

Isn't this a beautiful piece of art decorating the window of a business in the town centre? I don't think it's a commercial transfer, it looks more like it's airbrushed directly onto the glass. I think it may be a tanning studio, and if one of their staff did draw it they are very talented.

selenak: (Breaking Bad by Wicked Signs)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote2025-12-19 06:21 pm

Pluribus 1.08

In which someone becomes Sheherazade, but is it Zosia or is it Carol?

Spoilers go on the charm offensive )
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Judith Proctor ([personal profile] watervole) wrote2025-12-19 01:08 pm
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Diabetes and weight

 It's surprisingly hard to gain weight when you actually want to.

I'm down to 48.2k (go back four or five years and I was probably closer to 58k)

The loss is because my insulin doesn't work as effectively as it used to, so what I eat isn't all converted into useful energy for the body.

I'm now eating larger portions at meals, and I'm adding in snacks of nuts/cheese/fruit/other nibbles between meals, but the catch comes whenever I'm ill.

I gain gradually, then I get an asthma attack.  One steroid course, and I've lost half a kilo.

Then I catch a bug from Theo - sick one day and not eating the next - I lose weight again.

It's rather like the old analogy of a frog climbing out of a well.  As fast as I climb up, I start to slip down again...

But, at least I know what the problem is, and I'm doing what I can to improve it.  As long as I can stay well, I'll hopefully get a bit more weight and energy...

It's still important to avoid foods with a high glycemic index - if too much sugar enters the system, it gets overloaded and enters shutdown mode for a while - that causes blood sugar to spike (which is a BAD thing).  one thing I've learnt from what I'm being taught is that bananas have a high GI - best to only have half a banana, unless they are very small ones.

 

 

 

 

andraste: The reason half the internet imagines me as Patrick Stewart. (Default)
Andraste ([personal profile] andraste) wrote2025-12-19 10:46 pm
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Hazbin Hotel Fanfic: Caught In The Undertow

Caught In The Undertow (9931 words) by Andraste
Chapters: 6/6
Fandom: Hazbin Hotel (Cartoon)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Alastor/Vox

Summary: It takes Vox a long time to find out what the radio demon wants from him, and that Hell really is what you make of it.

Or: five times Vox wanted something out of Alastor (and mostly didn't get it) and one time Alastor wanted something back (and did).

katriona_s: (Default)
katriona_s ([personal profile] katriona_s) wrote2025-12-19 04:12 pm
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lost in this world

This morning before 5am the nature call woke me up. I went to the toilet, back to my futon bed and slept again - then had a dream. In the dream I was going to leave some office I've visited in unfamiliar town, but there was no local bus nor taxi service going back to the train station. So I decided to walk to the station and asked for directions to the staff of the office. Her answer was quite unclear and useless, though I had my smartphone and iPad in my bag and thought "OK I'll check the way on Google Map". In real life I'm always clumsy about using the IT devices so naturally, in the dream my smartphone didn't work well and I got lost and just wandered around the narrow streets. There's nobody on the streets I could ask the direction, and I even was not sure which station I'd like to go to. I was totally lost and helpless... Then the alarm clock woke me up. Phew!

But, I thought... I feel like I have been always getting lost in my life like this dream. ... do not know the direction, can not understand the situation in which other people seem to feel comfortable, do not know how I can get the information to manage the situation, cannot find the people who would help me...

The reason I often do not know "how" might be that I am careless, and do not have much interest in other people and society. Since my childhood I have spent much time to indulge in fantasies. Now fully matured I don't fantasize much but my interest in other people or in society doesn't increase much XD And to me, who tend to lean on my own fantasy and abstract ideas, my house, my job, and my friends are kind of anchors which fasten me to the real world. With them, I can feel I belong to this world, not a complete outsider.

This year some of my longtime friends have passed away. I miss them - first, for the friendship, but also, for the sake of my own sense of reality...
feng_shui_house: Animation pink happy face (Happy face)
feng_shui_house ([personal profile] feng_shui_house) wrote2025-12-18 01:45 pm

Yay, my mousies arrived.

During a free shipping promo, I ordered 2 mouse pads from Shutterfly with my photos, then I thought about it and ordered an extra of one of them a few hours later, and then the next day I realized I'd missed a chance to do another one I'd been thinking of doing.

They arrived today only 2 days later than estimated, which is pretty good for free and this time of year.

They look good. Smell a bit plasticy, so I left them on the back table to air out before I put them into 'gift storage'... ok, back to other work.

Currently have the sewing room in a jumble- going to make a fake fur/plush rug to cover up a bare cement patch of floor so I pushed aside the bags and bags of sorted by length strips of fabric I'm cutting for a log cabin star quilt in order to reach the sewing machine.

Feels good to use up stuff. While looking for plush found more stuff to throw out. I'm trying to unhoard at least SOME. :^)
reapermum: (Default)
reapermum ([personal profile] reapermum) wrote2025-12-18 05:54 pm

18th December

These were lights in Lichfield. I always liked looking at them as I walked back to the car after the December meetings of Lichfield Science and Engineering Society. But they weren't there last year. In fact the Three Spires Shopping Centre had very few lights up at all, nothing that needed a ladder in fact.

reapermum: (Default)
reapermum ([personal profile] reapermum) wrote2025-12-17 09:55 pm

17th December

I knitted a set of crib figures in 2018. It was for the small children at church to play with and learn the nativity story. But they all vanished during lockdown which is a shame. A lot of things got lost during lockdown with no one allowed to take care of them.

oracne: turtle (Default)
oracne ([personal profile] oracne) wrote2025-12-17 11:17 am
Entry tags:

Three-Part "Messiah" Podcast

Making Messiah on Freakonomics. There's a transcript as well.

The podcast does have some advertisements.
katriona_s: (garden)
katriona_s ([personal profile] katriona_s) wrote2025-12-17 11:53 pm
Entry tags:

winter color

Today it's mostly fine, and without winds, thankfully it's a comfortable day. I worked at home so could enjoy the quiet beauty of early winter in our garden sometimes. I worked all day, then late in the afternoon went out to get the aromatherapy massage, came home and had supper alone (mother was going out all day), and finished my New Year cards to my Japanese friends. An ordinary, but good day.



In the morning cats were enjoying the sun on the verandah.









Soon these leaves and fruits would be gone, but today, they showed their last beauty in the mild sun...
reapermum: (Default)
reapermum ([personal profile] reapermum) wrote2025-12-16 11:24 pm

16th December

Some of my glass baubles in storage. I don't know how old these baubles are, I believe they were most probably bought in 1952 for the first Christmas my parents had in their own house, so 73 years old. And still in their original cardboard box.

And yes, I do still use them every year.

feng_shui_house: Avon red-tinted with gun text what did you say (Avon what did you say)
feng_shui_house ([personal profile] feng_shui_house) wrote2025-12-16 03:53 pm

Spam can be inspiring.

Along with all my other hoarding, for some years I've been compiling a collection of the results a Google search gives me for an unknown phone callers. If my phone says spam risk, I just block, but if it's a mystery number I feed it to Google.

At first a lot of results were web pages registered in Turkey. Mmm, Turkey Spam, less fattening than Ham Spam? The results are usually so weird I think they're good starting points for writing.

Some S.F. alien name possibilities? ) Then it went on to weird word groups and sentences ) Went back to odd names for a while. And then it began inventing weird businesses )
selenak: (Schreiben by Poisoninjest)
selenak ([personal profile] selenak) wrote2025-12-16 07:02 pm
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This and that and history

Watched completely on Apple +: Down Cemetery Road, a new series (I would have written miniseries, except I hear there'll be a second season), based on an earlier novel by Slow Horses author Mick Heron. Starring Emma Thompson and Ruth Wilson, both cast somewhat against type and having fun with it. Emma Thompson plays Zoe, a cynical private detective right out of the hard boiled age, if that one had female cynical hard drinking PI's, Ruth Wilson plays Sarah, starting out as somewhat naive, idealistic and disorganized. (I have seen Ruth Wilson in roles where she isn't a brilliant sociopath before! I swear I did! But Alice and Marisa Coulter are just so memorable!) Zoe starts out the story married, to another P.I. who is more the benevolent goodshoe type and whom she has feelings for but cheats on and generally argues a lot with, while Sarah is with a guy hiding total jerkness between a placid facade, but before the pilot is over, neither of these relationships are existent anymore. Both women - who live in Oxford, not London, which is a change, but the action doesn't stay there - through different ways find themselves uncovering the central dastardly plot which unsurprising given the author the show is based on involves fuck-ups by awful government agencies and the attempt to cover this up which leads to an ever higher body count. The Zoe and the Sarah storylines after a brief meeting in the pilot stay apart for half the season, and I was about to complain, but then the second half reunites them and gives me these actresses playing superbly against each other. If I have one complaint, it's that there wasn't really a pay-off for the existence of Talia the new defense secretary. But presumably in the second season?

Started to watch and stopped watching: Gunpowder on Amazon Prime. Look, show, two podcasts managed to turn me around on James VI and I and got me interested in Stuarts beyond the Restoration era, I'm in the market for this ! I'm also with you pointing out Catholics got a truly rough deal in the late Elizabethan and in the James era. But Kit Harrington brooding as Robert Catesby isn't going to cut it, and who does Mark Gatiss as Robert Cecil think he's playing, Shakespeare's Richard III?

Started watching, may or may not continue: The Name of the Rose, new tv version on Disney +. I mean, if there is an early 1980s novel begging for the miniseries treatment, it's absolutely that one, the OG Murders at a Monastery story. I would have thought a mniseries could offer the chance to include a lot more from the novel than the movie was able to, but foolish me, the show creators instead thought they needed some adiditional subplots. Adson now starts out as not really a novice, though he wants to be, because his father wants him with the imperial army instead. That's right, he now has Daddy Issues. (This is where you can tell there must be some American money involved.) William of Baskerville, aka the cleverest Holmes avatar in another setting before House, is played by John Turturro, who doesn't look anymore like the (reddish blonde) William of the book than Sean Connery did but does a decent job playing him. Somewhat unsurprisingly, like the movie, the series beefs up the part of Bernard(o) Gui. Who in the book shows up only in the second half and leaves again long before the big showdown, but Jean-Jacques Annoud already decided he didn't want an evil inquistor going to waste, but apparantly so did the creators of this one, so while Gui still doesn't arrive in the monastery before half point, we see him being evil and fanatical en route in every freaking episode. Did I mention there are new subplots? About which Adson, who is our narrator (voiced as an old man by Peter Davison, omg, that was a nice surprise), can't know?

More spoilery observations for the first part of the series )

Incidentally, the excellent podcast History of the Germans (currently in its "Fall and Rise of the House of Habsburg" season where the family with the famous chin and lower lip first seemingly hits rock bottom in three generations before young Maximilian marries Marie of Burgundy) did a great episode last year about the actual political and theological background of the rl events The Name of the Rose touches on, hilariously summarized as "Der Kurverein zu Rhens - starring William of Ockham and the cast of the Name of the Rose". You can listen to it or read the transcript here.
feng_shui_house: Photo merged woman's face with cat face making felinoid person (cat-marian)
feng_shui_house ([personal profile] feng_shui_house) wrote2025-12-15 07:29 pm

Cat Herding Day

Sally https://sallymn.dreamwidth.org/ said today is cat herding day, so I had to repost the old (2009?) cat herding Super Bowl commercial.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_MaJDK3VNE

(I have totally forgot how to do things on Dreamwidth. Please excuse the formatting? what formatting?)