2026 60 questions meme.

Feb. 4th, 2026 11:25 pm[personal profile] pattrose
pattrose: From Highlander_ii (00 JB3)
What are some of your favorite ways to show the people in your life that you love them?

I'm a cook and a baker when I want to do something nice for someone. Everyone likes to be spoiled with food and dessert.

The second thing I like to do for people is make moodboards. Love, love, love doing that.

What do you all do?

Community Thursdays

Feb. 5th, 2026 12:24 am[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: A blue sheep holding a quill dreams of Dreamwidth (Dreamsheep)
This year I'm doing Community Thursdays. Some of my activity will involve maintaining communities I run, and my favorites. Some will involve checking my list of subscriptions and posting in lower-traffic ones. Today I have interacted with the following communities...

* Posted "What Are Couple Goals And How Do We Achieve Them?" in [community profile] goals_on_dw.

* Posted "Sighting a Siberian Superstar: Local birder secures rare red-flanked bluetail for life list" in [community profile] birdfeeding.

* Commented in [community profile] awesomeers.
vriddy: K-9 Volume 1 Cover (k-9)
Two more little guys from K-9 are really capturing my imagination at the moment. Look at 'em:

Satsuki from K-9 embracing Yuu from the back and keeping Yuu quiet with a hand on his mouth

You can't just show me two characters that comfortably handsy with each other and not expect me to go "Oh šŸ‘€"?! For anyone familiar with Wind Breaker, their vibes are massively similar to Togame and Chouji, especially early on. They're scratching my "murderous protectiveness" itch in just the right way.

Yuu, the blond chibi, can transform into a cute sort of hybrid leopard and loves to fight.

Yuu from K-9, jumping backwards in hybrid human-leopard form

Meanwhile Satsuki can create and control huge branches. He may appear calmer and more reasonable, but that mostly means his expression won't change as he threatens to crush you between branches or tear your limbs apart. That kinda guy.

Satsuki from K-9 creating huge thick branches to attack with

Obviously, I love them. For many reasons, too. But also aren't their abilities kind of ridiculous?! This is a world in which only criminals get a superpower, one related to the crime they committed!! What kind of crime do you commit that you can transform into a leopard?!

And thus, having thought about it way too much, I'm writing what will apparently become my first K-9 multi-chapter fic. With zero members of my beloved OT4 showing up XD This series is just ridiculous. I love it. The author is clearly having a ton of fun, and I love that for them.

Grass, Voles, Water Report

Feb. 4th, 2026 08:51 pm[personal profile] ranunculus
ranunculus: (Default)
The war on grass is in full swing.  At the moment I'm winning.  Saw a vole scuttle away when I picked up a piece of plastic that had blown off the compost heap. That led to lots of grass removal in the area to make it a less attractive habitat.  
The State of California requires us to report how much water we "divert" from our spring/stream/well and store in our tanks/ponds/whatever.  It is a Huge PITA. This year was worse than most.  This year they moved to a new computer program.  I get really anxious about such reports so of course I was one of the people for whom the new system did not work.  Today a very nice fellow named Scott, with a very calming voice called and between us, and the programmers I finally got my report done.  Whew!

Tomorrow I'm off for Fort Bragg to have Richard work on my back.  Can't wait, I always feel so much better afterward!  I get two trips this month, next week Donald will be here and we will go over together. Speaking of Donald, he is currently on his way back from a couple of weeks in Australia where it is HOT.  

I realized today that I need to build a little platform before this my Obstacle Practice weekend (this weekend).  I have a 4' x 8' sheet of 1/2 inch plywood, used.  I think I can cut it in two, stack the two pieces together for strength and build a frame for it fairly quickly.  

Community Thursday

Feb. 5th, 2026 04:47 am[personal profile] vriddy
vriddy: Dreamwidth sheep with a red wing (dreamsheep)

Community Thursday challenge: every Thursday, try to make an effort to engage with a community on Dreamwidth, whether that's posting, commenting, promoting, etc.


Over the last week...

Posted and commented on [community profile] bnha_fans.

Commented on [community profile] booknook.

Commented on [community profile] getyourwordsout.

Signal boosts:

sweetsorcery: (aces high - croft)
Creator: [personal profile] sweetsorcery
Title: Sweeter than Honey and Bitter as Gall
Fandom: Aces High (1976)
Rating: T (for themes)
Word Count/size/length: 2,169
Characters/Pairings: Captain Sinclair/2nd Lt Stephen Croft
Notes/Warnings: WWI, RFC, Mutual Pining, Secret Wedding, First Kiss, Angst and Feels, Bittersweet

'If this were a different world, and we were free to do as we wished, I would ask you to marry me. Right here, in this lovely little church.' Captain Sinclair laughed softly; a warm, rumbling laugh. 'Aren't I silly?'

Stephen gave a sob of happiness. 'No, you're not! Why don't we pretend it's a different world? That everything is just as we want it to be. Ask me. Oh please, do ask.'

Link: Read on AO3.

mistressofmuses: Image of nebulae in the colors of the bi pride flag: pink, purple, and blue (Default)
I woke up around 4:00 this morning and couldn't get back to sleep, so went for a social media scroll. I got some absolutely tragic and painful news.

A friend of mine, Mark, died yesterday. I'm still struggling to wrap my head around it.

Alex and I met Mark back in, I think, 2011 (possibly 2010). His band Synapse was opening for Faderhead. We really liked them as the openers, and then ended up chatting with him and the other members of the band for a while after the show.

After that, we made it a point to try and see Synapse as often as we could. One time we even drove all the way up to Steamboat Springs and back to be moral support for a night, because they were booked for a show in a venue that didn't seem like the right type of place, ha.


Here's Alex, Mark, and me. We were wearing our Synapse shirts.

We also hung out frequently at the various goth nights, back in our clubbing days. Eventually we hung out at his house a few times, sometimes as part of a larger party, sometimes just us.

A few years later Synapse broke up, and Mark started up a new project: Voicecoil. We've been to a lot of Voicecoil shows. He also had a side project, Gravity Corps, though we never saw him perform as that project. (I know that he had a previous project as well, Machinegun Symphony, though that project was over by the time we met.)

We were excited to see him as part of an upcoming festival in May, and he seemed excited, too. I'm beyond gutted that it simply... won't happen. We're not going to see him. As many, many times as we went out to see him perform, and as many times as we hung out outside of that... I wish we got to do it again.

Mark was always kind to us, and to so many others on the scene. He was well-known and popular, but he always made us feel like he wanted to spend time with us. He always asked about how we were doing, remembered the things we specifically cared about. Even on show nights, when he was often in high demand, he made time to sit and chat with us, often for long stretches of time. Even at his album release party in 2022, he spent nearly an hour with us. The last time we saw him in person was last May, when he opened for Beborn Beton. It was a great show, and catching up with him beforehand was one of the best parts of the night.


Alex, Mark, and me again. This was either a late Synapse show or an early Voicecoil one.

Today, his Facebook is full of other people saying the same things that I remember most. That he always made so much time to talk to and spend time with so many people, to make sure they were doing all right, taking a genuine interest in them. He mentored our friend Jake in his music. He was always, always so encouraging to other artists.

He had a rough several years. Recently, I know he felt very betrayed by someone... He refused to name names, but someone he'd thought was a friend that he trusted turned out to be saying some extremely cruel and awful things to and about him. Mark was almost completely blind (could see things from one eye within about an inch of his face, and otherwise just faint light and dark, as I understand it.) Apparently this person was being absolutely awful about his disability, and it very clearly bothered him in a way that he was rarely willing to express.

His very long-term partner and he broke up a couple years ago.

Most significantly, a few years ago he lost a different partner to a sudden accidental death. He absolutely never got over that loss. Her birthday would have been on Monday, which was the last thing he posted about, and I think that may be what led to him leaving us.

I'm heartbroken, and still struggling to feel adjusted to him not being here anymore.

Wildlife

Feb. 4th, 2026 10:02 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
What is the American red wolf?

The American red wolf is the world’s most endangered. This species is found only in the United States, and fewer than 20 remain in the wild. It is one of the most endangered mammals on Earth.

Now, an unprecedented partnership between universities, government agencies, and biotechnology companies is using the latest genetic tools to save this iconic predator from extinction. The effort represents a new model for how technology may reshape wildlife conservation in the decades ahead.

Birdfeeding

Feb. 4th, 2026 09:58 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Today is cloudy and cold.

I fed the birds.  I've seen a large flock of sparrows, several cardinals, and a starling.

I put out water for the birds.

EDIT 2/426 -- I did a bit of work around the patio. 

EDIT 2/426 -- I did more work around the patio. 

I am done for the night.

starandrea: (Default)
So Garmin has a sleep coach, and every day it has prompted me gently, "You could use a little more sleep. Try getting 8 hours tonight."

Until today when it told me, "You could use a lot more sleep. Try getting 9 hours tonight."

Marci says it's doubling down.

Robin says there's a pace coach too: if you tell it how quickly you want to finish a race it will give you a pacing strategy. I asked her if "keep going" was a pace or a strategy, and she said she uses the "don't stop but slow down until you're barely moving" strategy.

That one's my favorite, I said.

Cuddle Party

Feb. 4th, 2026 09:52 pm[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
Everyone needs contact comfort sometimes. Not everyone has ample opportunities for this in facetime. So here is a chance for a cuddle party in cyberspace. Virtual cuddling can help people feel better.

We have a cuddle room that comes with fort cushions, fort frames, sheets for draping, and a weighted blanket. A nest full of colorful egg pillows sits in one corner. There is a basket of grooming brushes, hairbrushes, and styling combs. A bin holds textured pillows. There is a big basket of craft supplies along with art markers, coloring pages, and blank paper. The kitchen has a popcorn machine. Labels are available to mark dietary needs, recipe ingredients, and level of spiciness. Here is the bathroom, open to everyone. There is a lawn tent and an outdoor hot tub. Bathers should post a sign for nude or clothed activity. Come snuggle up!


Read more... )

Femslash February: This Is How You Lose the Time War

Side-by side watercolor illustrations of a Bluejay and Red Cardinal on a light blue background with the text ā€œThis is How You Lose the Time Warā€œ written in elegant text.ALT

For Femslash February we’re spotlighting ā€˜This Is How You Lose The Time War.’ The award-winning novella by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone captured fandom’s imagination with its poetic prose, time-traveling intrigue, and enemies-to-lovers sapphic romance between agents Red and Blue.

From its initial release in 2019 to its viral resurgence in 2023, the novella has inspired everything from lyrical fanfiction and stunning fanart to countless memes and emotional meta. Fans quote its lines like scripture, analyze every letter exchanged between its main characters, and use ā€œthis is how you lose the time warā€ as shorthand for beautiful heartbreak.

Want to learn more about the fandom’s devotion to Red and Blue? Check out its Fanlore page: This Is How You Lose the Time War - Fanlore

___

We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

The background is collage of torn scrapbook paper and stickers. On the right is a mauve tinted image of the Tenth Doctor as John Smith smiling at Joan. Text reads 'Featured Article, Marble House'ALT

This week’s Featured Article is focused on Hollywoodgrrl’s popular and widely debated fan video ā€œMarble Houseā€ from the Doctor Who fandom, originally shown at 2009 Vividcon.

Reviewers praise the technical skill that Hollywoodgrrl employed such as the montage moments within the video to further the story being depicted surrounding the unintended implications The Doctor had in World War I through his actions; while others within the Live Journal community of Vid Commentary question the use of real World War I footage within the video.

The video is still available on Vimeo for viewing as well as the extended commentary for the rationale behind the making of ā€œMarble Houseā€ in the LJ Vid Commentary community. This video is settled between the eight and ninth episode of the third season of Dr. Who featuring the Tenth Doctor – played by David Tennet. The musical score of the video featuring the song by the same name as the title of the video, ā€œMarble Houseā€ by The Knife, has lyrics that invoke the imagery of a beautiful but cold home and uses the grungy alternative music sound to create a dark ambiance to overlay these relationships. This song being carefully picked by Hollywoodgrrl to describe the relationship felt between Martha Jones and the Time Lord in these episodes as well as the destruction that is left behind not just between the two of them but on the world

See the Fanlore page to learn about this fannish history.

—–

We value every contribution to our shared fandom history. If you’re new to editing Fanlore or wikis in general, visit our New Visitor Portal to get started or ask us questions here!

lebateleur: Ukiyo-e image of Japanese woman reading (TWIB)
Well, I guess the gubmint is turned back on. Anyway, I read some things over the last seven days.

What I Finished Reading This Week

The U.S.-Indonesia Security Relationship – John Haseman & Eduardo Lachica
I knocked this out over the course of a day as part of an effort to read and release more perennial shelf-sitters this year. The U.S.-Indonesia Security Relationship was published in 2009 and is generally informative, although padded and sloppily edited in places, particularly toward the end ("The Indonesia until it recovers its purchasing power" reads a one such example sentence. No, it doesn't make more sense in context.) In general, it's pretty interesting to see which of the authors' predictions, recommendations, and concerns have come to pass 17 years lateromghowisitpossiblethatthisbookandtheworldandIareall17yearsolder😭😭😭😭

The Bone Chests - Cat Jarman
The Bone Chests reuses the structure Jarman employed to great effect in River Gods: she uses a historical artifact(s)—in this case, 10 wooden chests filled with human bones in Winchester Cathedral—as a jumping-off point to examine the history of a pre-modern ethnic group in England (the Anglo-Saxons in this case). I enjoyed River Kings very much, but enjoyed The Bone Chests well enough. Part of this is to do with the fact that, unlike the previous volume, scientific work on The Bone Chests's framing artifacts hadn't finished at the time of publication; the subtitle promises to "unlock the secrets of the Anglo-Saxons" but the book's conclusion is essentially an unsatisfying "watch this space". Part of it is because The Bone Chests focuses primarily on a small number of elites: a bunch of kings, some clergymen, and a scant few queens, whereas River Gods dealt more heavily with the everyday people whose lives I find more interesting. And as plenty has already been written on Anglo-Saxon kings and clergy, there's not as much that's new in The Bone Chests, or that distinguishes it from those other volumes. The end result is that the parts of this book I found most interesting were the ones discussing the Scandinavians and Normans and how their societies influenced Anglo-Saxon dynastic politics, not the Anglo-Saxons themselves. I fully acknowledge that these things are, if not Me Problems, certainly Me Preferences. But Jarman's writing is as effortless and engaging as ever, and people who are interested in the book's actual focus will find much to enjoy here.

The Scottish Cookbook – Coinneach MacLeod
What can I say? If you like all the elements of the first three cookbooks (gorgeous photographs of gorgeous food and gorgeous landscapes, artfully composed to suggest that electricity, plastics, and phones or computers don't exist in this universe; interstitial "highland life" chapters that mix humorous anecdotes with summaries of folklore from Carmina Gadelica and The Silver Bough; a mix of ridiculously sugary confections and—often ridiculously dairy-heavy—savory dishes) you will like this book too. I also get the feeling MacLeod has made an effort (for better or worse) to include more recipes that aren't as heavily reliant on main ingredients that are difficult to source outside of the UK. At any rate, we've already made several dishes out of this volume, they've been very rich and very good, and yeah. It's certainly more of the same, but the same is good stuff.

The Disabled Tyrant's Beloved Pet Fish vol. 1 – Xue Shan Fei Hu
This book was so much fun; exactly what I needed to be reading this week. Our premise is that the narrator awakes to find himself a drab-colored carp about to be turned into soup for the mute oldest son of the emperor by his primary wife—the eponymous tyrant of the title, only before internecine court politics have turned him from a prince into a bloodthirsty fiend. Of course there's a system, and of course it immediately starts spamming out prompts that have our piscine main character trying to endear himself to said proto-tyrant and attempting to save secondary characters from canon doom. It is the utter opposite of Kafkaesque and I love it for that: the main character is mildly bemused to find himself a fish but takes to it with aplomb; he's a bit intimidated by the prince but takes to him immediately too; and the prince is instantly calmed and fascinated with his new pet fish. It's so nice. And the recurring plot element? In which cut for spoilers. ) I am delighted by this first volume and will absolutely continue on to the next one.


What I Am Currently Reading

The Dog Stars – Peter Heller
Basically, I am hate reading at this point.

The Stations of the Sun - Ronald Hutton
I read the chapter on Candlemas.

Lake of Souls - Ann Leckie
I am not a big short story reader, but Leckie is an excellent author in any format and I am plowing through these.


What I’m Reading Next

I acquired Roberty Henryson's The Testament of Cresseid & Seven Fables (Seamus Heaney, trans.) this week.


ć“ć‚Œć§ä»„äøŠć§ć™ć€‚

Wednesday Reading Meme

Feb. 4th, 2026 08:20 am[personal profile] osprey_archer
osprey_archer: (books)
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

D. E. Stevenson’s The House on the Cliff. This was Stevenson’s last novel, and although it’s technically set at the time it was written (the 1960s), it feels more like an interwar period piece. But otherwise it’s classic charming Stevenson. Young Elfrida Jane inherits a house in Cornwall from her estranged grandparents (who disinherited Elfrida’s mother after she married an actor), and the book is all about her settling into the neighborhood, reveling in the possession of her own home, learning about farming and gardening, and swimming on the delightful little beach at the base of the cliffs.

E. M. Delafield’s The Provincial Lady in London. Somehow Stevensons and Delafields often end up going together in my reading, although I think Delafield at her grimmest gets much darker than Stevenson, who doesn’t have a grim mode. In any case, the Provincial Lady books feature Delafield at her most sprightly. In this book, the Provincial Lady uses the funds from her first book (Diary of a Provincial Lady) to get a flat in London, and also meets many literary people on the strength of her newfound literary fame.

Finally, I zipped through Jane Langton’s Her Majesty, Grace Jones. After a neighbor tells Grace that she looks just like the little English princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose, Grace Jones decides that she’s obviously a secret, third Windsor sister, growing up in secret in America to take the throne once she gets older! Mostly family hijinks. The kids put on a circus, which is always great fun.

What I’m Reading Now

Hilary McKay’s latest, Rosa by Starlight. Loving this book! Finally, a book that remembers fictional orphans are for Gothic Whump and Adventure and Magic. I believe we may be getting a literal magic cat and I’m so excited.

What I Plan to Read Next

I am going to give Project Hail Mary a try if it kills me. Baffling that I feel so resistant to it, because I really liked The Martian! But here we are.

Challenge #231 - First Movie

Feb. 4th, 2026 08:33 pm[personal profile] mulhollands posting in [community profile] your_favourites
mulhollands: (Moriarty | šŸ‘€)


Beetlejuice

links )

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