Inspired by Cleoselene, I am working on a couple of fandom cross-stitches. At the moment, I'm drawing out a John Wick sampler.
( The rest of the days )
A few birds earlier - mostly Blue Jays and one Wild Turkey, plus many Squirrels.
It's been mostly cloudy and cooler than the temperature reads. Some breaks of sun this afternoon and a big warmup is forecast for the next few days.
As usual, please share your progress (or lack thereof--no judgement here) with us in the comments. If you need advice, cheerleading, buttkicking, or anything I can provide, please don't hesitate to let me know.
( My Week in Review )
I'm sending you all the good vibes for a healthy week ahead, my friends!
If you are not visiting the palace in order to attend the Chara's court, then chances are that you are here to visit the council. As you enter the east doors of the palace, turn right, then left, then immediately right. The long corridor before you leads north to the council chamber and council quarters.
Upon reaching the end of the corridor, you will once again find yourself facing high doors, this time plated with copper. Unless you are actually attending a council meeting, the door you want is to either the left or the right of the council chamber. Enquire with the guards as to how to reach your destination. Mainland visitors are likely to be escorted, under guard, to the room they are seeking.
Attendance at meetings of the Great Council are by invitation only. If you are invited, arrive early. If you have been asked to speak with the council, you will be shown to a chair at the bottom of the council table. Do not be insulted. This is where the Chara himself sits, when he is invited to speak with the council.
Remember those high doors? They were designed to keep out the Chara and his guards, back in the days when animosity still simmered between the Chara and the Great Council. These days, the animosity takes less blatant forms, but the Chara is still not permitted to enter the council chamber except with permission of the Great Council's High Lord.
If you are not here to speak with the council but wish to attend a council meeting, you will be shown to a chair at the back of the room. (If you are not accustomed to sitting in chairs, it is best to practice beforehand.) As in the court, your job will be to stay as quiet and motionless as possible. At only two points in the meeting should you move: rise from your chair when the High Lord of the Great Council enters the chamber, and rise again when he leaves. A herald will announce when this is necessary.
After the council meeting, you may wish to visit the council library, just off the head of the chamber. This lovely, light-filled room was added during the reign of the Chara Purvis, at the beginning of this century. It is considered the finest law library in the world, containing hundreds of books of commentary on matters related to the law. Do not to touch the books unless you are here to do research. To Emorians, law books – even books of commentary – are sacred objects.
Northern mainlanders should be aware that stealing a law book can be punished by death. If you must steal something in the palace, confine yourself to objects unrelated to the law.
[Translator's note: In order to visit the Great Council in session, as well as its law library, read Law of Vengeance.]
I attended
minoanmiss’s online memorial yesterday afternoon. It was strengthening to share our sorrow. Witnessing the depth of our online connections bolstered my resilience. The children she co-raised loved her and knew her. I’ll link to the recording when it’s public.
One mourner has worked in public health for 40 years, and made it very clear that
minoanmiss had asymptomatic COVID which caused her death- that wasn’t documented in the hospital record and there’s almost zero chance to change that
- many people are still dying due to COVID, which is systematically not being reported
- continuing to mask is a fundamental contribution we can make to the health of our communities
There were lovely stories and slides and recipes — a poem and a song in the cut.

Natalie is a wildly successful trad wife influencer. She and her husband Caleb have a farm and six adorable children, and Natalie has parlayed carefully edited clips of her perfect life into a lucrative career. (She leaves out the two nannies, 30 farm hands, and the fact that Sassafras the cow is actually four sequential cows, replaced every time one dies, like goldfish.)
Then Natalie suffers a mysterious fall from grace. And then she finds herself in what appears to be an alternate version of her own life in the 1800s, with a husband very similar but not quite identical to her original husband, and children who claim to be her own. Has she time traveled? Is she delusional? Has she gotten kidnapped into a non-consensual reality show?
This is an extremely interesting novel that makes a good companion to Saratoga Schrader's Trad Wife. The beginning of the book is extremely similar, though Natalie is much more successful than Camille. Burke's version of a trad wife influencer deluding herself and lying to her followers about her supposedly perfect life is much better-written than Schrader's. But that's a double-edged sword, because it makes Natalie much more unlikable. She's an incredibly hatable character and the book is from her POV, and that makes a lot of the book not really enjoyable to read.
But the book turns out to be much more ambitious and clever than it seems at the beginning. When I finished it, I was glad I'd read it and appreciated it a lot. That being said, I enjoyed Trad Wife more on an emotional level.
I highly recommend not clicking on the cut unless you're 100% positive you'll never read the book. I really enjoyed the non-spoiled experience.
( Read more... )
Content notes: Domestic violence, rape (on-page, graphic), child abuse and neglect, farm animal neglect/poor caretaking (just mentioned), gaslighting, non-consensual drugging, current American right-wing stuff.
While attempting to buy Saratoga Schaefer's Trad Wife, I accidentally bought a different novel called Trad Wife by Michelle Brandon. And Sarah Langan is coming out with yet another book called Trad Wife in September. I am now on a mission to read all four trad wife books, to compare and contrast.
is that I'm not getting plot bunnies about fighting demons, as per baseline metaphor,
I'm just getting detailed daydreams about getting him to maybe possibly talk to the NHS again, this time maybe with informed care and actual modern treatment options.
It's interesting in the 2014 TV show it comes up that a character who had cancer until someone did a Deal reassured the person they were trying to talk out of the Deal by saying treatment is way better now, but so much plot depends on treatment just not working. Any kind. If it actually helped it wouldn't be a horror show. there'd be other options.
and yet horrors persist even with adequate medical treatments, so there's a corner to pull the story around somehow.
John needs a hug so much, let alone actual help,
and, also,
John makes so many of his own problems.
these are of course not unrelated.
But get him to actually quit the bad stuff and get all polished up and have friends and a team
and you have Legends of Tomorrow, more or less,
and then they undid it all to put him back in the box the way they found him.
for him to be in character he needs all his sharp edges left on
but you want him to be happy instead.
hence daydreams, not plot bunnies.
I should go back to rewatching Legends of Tomorrow.
https://bundleofholding.com/presents/PerilousVoid

This is cheap and has a lot of useful ideas if you want to create an adventure background in a hurry. Like most random generation systems the results will probably need some tweaking, and adaption for the rules in use, but it's cheap and ought to be useful. And it's time I posted my occasional reminder that I get to look at this stuff free - if you have to pay for it your mileage may vary.
Hi,
this is the weekly chat post. Come and talk Star Wars, if you wanna!
~ ~ ~
I'm (very gently) getting back into writing by starting a daily writing habit, and today I worked on the last ficlet in a ficlet series I started in 2021, Sister, daughter. 2021!Me thought that if it's a series, it isn't really a WIP and I won't feel bad if I take a long time finishing it, or abandon it altogether. 2021!Me was very naïve. What about you, do you have a (SW-related) skeleton in the closet? Or, are you forever waiting on a dead WIP?
but then I have to have a lie down and there goes the rest of the day.
Ducks are good and flowers are good and trees are good too though.
UPDATE: Thank you, we've heard back and will proceed with the rest of matching.
I fed the birds. I haven't seen any yet.
I put out water for the birds.
I've seen a six-spotted tiger beetle on the brick of the big red birdbath. I figure it's either drinking from the moist brick or hunting other insects attracted to the water. :D

This is how we imagined humanity's first trip to the moon before Apollo 11...
Five Vintage SF Works About Travelling to the Moon
Fandoms: Sherlock Holmes (ACD) - Retirement era
Ratings: G
Pairings: Sherlock Holmes, John Watson
Prompts from the Dancing with Daffodils section: Landscape, Replete, Hunter Morn, Fulfilment
A Spring Morning in the Garden on AO3
