rachelmanija: (Books: old)
[personal profile] rachelmanija


Mosscap and Dex's adventures continue from where they left off. They visit human places, including Dex's large and confusing family. Mosscap has a brush with mortality. Dex does not return to being a tea monk, their vocation still up in the air.

I enjoyed this novella for much the same reasons I enjoyed the first one, though I missed the tea service, which was my favorite part of the first book. Mosscap does turn out to be fallible and learns from Dex as much as Dex learns from it, which was nice. My favorite part of this book was the glimpses of the world, which still seems like an extremely nice place to live in.

Culinary

Jan. 11th, 2026 07:09 pm
oursin: Frontispiece from C17th household manual (Accomplisht Lady)
[personal profile] oursin

Last week's bread held out for most of the week.

Friday night supper: ven pongal (South Indian khichchari).

Saturday breakfast rolls: Tassajarra method, 50:50% wholemeal/strong white flour, maple syprup, dried cranberries, turned out nicely.

Today's lunch: game crumble - the game mix (partridge, pheasant and venison) casseroled in red wine with onion, garlic, bay leaf, juniper berries, coriander seed, 5-pepper blend and salt, before putting the crumble topping (mixture of approx 2:1:1 wholemeal flour/strong white flour/pinhead oatmeal) on for the final half-hour; served with tenderstem broccoli tips which I cooked thusly - sizzled some chopped ginger and cumin seeds in oilve oil, turned the broccoli in this, added some water and steamed for half an hour, turned out rather well although I think the original recipe said fennel seeds....; and stirfried tat soi.

Hild's Song, by Himring

Jan. 11th, 2026 06:51 pm
hhimring: Estel, inscription by D. Salo (Default)
[personal profile] hhimring posting in [community profile] tolkienshortfanworks
Author: Himring
Title: Hild's Song
Characters: Hild (Helm's sister)
Pairing: n/a
Text type / Format: Poem (a lanterne, but repeated)
Source / Fandom: Lord of the Rings (Appendices)
Rating: Teens
Warnings: Angst
Word Count: 19
Summary: Hild's spinning song, during the winter while she was besieged with some of her people in Dunharrow. For the January challenge, to go with an earlier post about Hild and Frealaf. Also, because I was just listening to a radio programme about Distaff Day (apparently on 7 January) that featured a number of spinning and waulking songs.

Read more... )

Football Sunday

Jan. 11th, 2026 10:50 am
susandennis: (Default)
[personal profile] susandennis
We did finally get to the Chinese restaurant and it was pretty much a fail. Mostly the food was struggling to get to fair. BUT, good to know. We don't have to go back. It was a pleasant evening so no big loss.

This morning we had breakfast here and then did a short walk through the complex and now we're watching a football game.

Biggie is fairly fond of Bill's lap but Julio got up there just now to get some action. Julio sat for ear scratches from Bill for longer than any other human in his little life. But, then Biggie decided he was done and so then was Julio but it was amazing for a bit.

PXL_20260111_184723348

Our team is winning and I've got an idea for a new knit toy that I'm playing with.

20260111_101930-COLLAGE
marcicat: (starburst)
[personal profile] marcicat posting in [community profile] beagoldfish
Title: Icons from the Murderbot tv show
Fandom: Murderbot (2025 tv)
Summary: Icons from the Murderbot tv show!

Sorry mods! Now with correct formatting to put everything under a cut!

5 icons from the Murderbot tv show )

Check-In Post - Jan 11th 2026

Jan. 11th, 2026 06:38 pm
badly_knitted: (Get Knitted)
[personal profile] badly_knitted posting in [community profile] get_knitted

Hello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.

Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?

There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.


This Week's Question: What are your crafting goals for 2026?


If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.

I now declare this Check-In OPEN!



Monopoly 01.26 - Playlist 1

Jan. 11th, 2026 07:36 pm
prisca: (empire mod)
[personal profile] prisca posting in [community profile] fandom_empire

Week 1

has officially started now. Good luck, everyone!

Under the cut, you find the weekly playlist. To check out what prompts/minimum/points are waiting for you this week, please visit the Board

In case you don't like your prompts, remember your Joker Card. Every Joker card comes with 15 tokens.
Use two tokens to roll the dice again.
Use five tokens to move to any square of your choice (exception: go!, chance, jail)

To re-visit the rules go here.

Weekly Playlist )

If you want to create more than two works/earn more points, you might want to check out the Team Challenge (sign up until January 15!).

Post all your finished works at [community profile] fandom_empire_workplace until Sunday, January 18, 18.00 UTC, but I will allow belated works until I've made the closing post Countdown here.

The AO3 Collection for Monopoly 26 can be found here.

Monopoly 01.26 - Team Challenge Omega

Jan. 11th, 2026 07:32 pm
prisca: (empire mod)
[personal profile] prisca posting in [community profile] fandom_empire
Team Member
Flipflop Diva
Melacka
Melime
Overmore
Pattrose
Sinful Slasher

To participate, post at least one work for the weekly regular challenge.
Participants can post one work each week to earn points for their assigned teams, as well as individual points.
Prompts can be used multiple times by different participants.

Check out the rules, prompts and possible points HERE

Monopoly 01.26 - Team Challenge Alpha

Jan. 11th, 2026 07:30 pm
prisca: (empire mod)
[personal profile] prisca posting in [community profile] fandom_empire
Team Member
Dianafortyseven
Endlesstwanted
Jedi of Urth
Orangeblossomteas
Peppermint_Shamrock
Suzy Queue

To participate, post at least one work for the weekly regular challenge.
Participants can post one work each week to earn points for their assigned teams, as well as individual points.
Prompts can be used multiple times by different participants.

Check out the rules, prompts and possible points HERE
bluedreaming: (pseudonym - tinyfingers)
[personal profile] bluedreaming posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Fandom: 子非鱼 (Zi Fei Yu) - 林盎司
Rating: T
Length: 100 words
Content notes: none
Author notes: The title is from Flight (extract 1) by Yu Jian, translated by Simon Patton, and A Single Woman’s Bedroom by Yi Lei, translated by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi.
Summary: Lin Fei belongs to Ji Leyu.

Read more... )
bedes: Fanart of Click Clack from Great God Grove, talking and typing on their typewriter. (clickclack)
[personal profile] bedes posting in [community profile] videogamefanworks
Title: A Fickle Editor
Creator: [personal profile] bedes 
Fandom: Great God Grove
Characters/Relationship: Click Clack/Thespius Green
Rating: G
Length: 932 words
Summary:
"Click Clack carefully edits his thought process (lest it leads to something he's not yet ready to face).
He can't let his mask fall off, after all!"

Read it on... AO3, SquidgeWorld, SuperLove, Dreamwidth, my personal website
[personal profile] ciexmod posting in [community profile] videogamefanworks

EDIT: This pinch hit has been claimed!

Hello! We are seeking a pinch hitter for this inital pinch hit that has lingered. If anyone can help, or knows somewhere else to promo this, please let us know!

Exchange rules:

All works must have either a Mature or Explicit rating. Fic must be at least 1,000 words and must include a beginning, middle, and end. Authors should avoid stopping mid-scene. Art must be one finished piece of clean line art on unlined paper, or digital equivalent. Sexual content with dubious consent or non-consent must appear in the work. See the complete rules for details, especially if you aren't familiar with this exchange's "xcon" terminology.

To claim this pinch hit, email ciexmod@gmail.com. Include your AO3 handle, the AO3 handle of the pinch hit you're claiming (angledust), and the pinch hit number (3). The deadline for this pinch hits is January 15th, 2026, 10:00 PM US EST.
 

PH 3 - The Dark Pictures: The Devil in Me (Video Game), Kingdom Come: Deliverance (Video Games), Manhunt (Video Games)

View this request in the automagic app

Request details )

 

 

umadoshi: (hands full of books)
[personal profile] umadoshi
What I Just Finished Reading: A novella and two novels since the last time I posted about books, I think: Automatic Noodle (Annalee Newitz), about sentient robots winding up running their own restaurant; Stone Yard Devotional (Charlotte Wood), a very-much-~literary~ book about a woman who winds up living with a group of nuns, although not a nun herself; and The Lovely and the Lost (Jennifer Lynn Barnes), about a search-and-rescue case from the POV of one of a trio of teenagers who're involved with the rescue effort, who was herself rescued from the woods as a child after she'd been there long enough to go feral and was (largely) resocialized and adopted by her rescuer. Many layers of family history and secrets in that last one, which was my favorite of the three.

(And since I've mentioned a couple of YA books recently where their flavor of YA really didn't work for me, I should say that The Lovely and the Lost is also very clearly YA but in a way I could work with just fine as a reader, despite being very much not the target audience.)

On the nonfiction side, I read The Crone Zone: How to Get Older with Style, Nerve, and a Little Bit of Magic (Nina Bargiel), which was...mostly odd, honestly. It's from the same publisher (and I guess the same...product line?) as Goblin Mode: How to Get Cozy, Embrace Imperfection, and Thrive in the Muck, which I read last year, and the presentation and vibe were really (I mean really) similar in a way that might've made more sense to me if they were also by the same author, but they're not. The Crone Zone's subtitle does accurately reflect its contents, so I feel weird saying "it's such a weird blend of exactly what it says it is", but...yeah. Not my thing.

What I'm Currently Reading: Chuck Wendig's Wanderers, which I chose at random from my ebooks and probably would not have started had I actually known anything about it. It's a 2019 novel that starts with a mysterious phenomenon where people just start...walking...somewhere, but also spotlights (*checks notes*) a world-changing disease, AI, and right-wing violence tearing at the seams of the US, all of which are being amply provided by reality. It's also pretty hefty, length-wise. And yet I keep reading.

I've also begun reading Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants (Robin Wall Kimmerer), as the starting point for my 2026 goal* of "aim to read at least one chapter of nonfiction each week" (swiped from a friend else-net). (Another goal is to aim to read a volume of manga each week, and that one hasn't been started in on yet, but we'll see how strict I feel like being about "each week".)

*I have a full bingo card of goals! I will probably share it at some point! But not this minute.

What I Plan to Read Next: K.B. Spangler's newest Rachel Peng novel, Inside Threat is out/about to come out! (It was supposed to come out this week, but Amazon dropped it early, so she's also released it on her website.)

Plus: What I've Been Watching: [personal profile] scruloose and I are two episodes into Pluribus! I also recently watched Challengers. (A movie? So soon in the year?) Hopefully we'll get the premiere of The Pitt season 2 watched today.
kingstoken: (Christmas tree outside)
[personal profile] kingstoken posting in [community profile] pinchhits
Event: fandomtrees
Event link: [community profile] fandomtrees
Pinch hit link: Google Spreadsheet 
Due date: Jan 10 Jan 17

We have 3 trees with no gifts and 13 with only one gift, and the minimum is for everyone to receive two gifts. We could use some help filling them. The minimum is only 100 words for fic or a simple sketch for art. Please see the community for rules and FAQs
  1. mastershield's Tree: f:astro boy, f:balan wonderland, f:kingdom hearts
  2. aftonheir's Tree: f:five nights at freddys, f:kingdom hearts, f:portal
  3. memobu's Tree: f:karaoke iko, f:mahotsukai no yskusoku, f:nu carnival, f:tiger and bunny
  4. plicate's Tree: f:head on, f:set it off, f:succession
  5. soricel's Tree: f:les miserables, f:little women, f:raven cycle
  6. badass_tiger's Tree: f:discworld, f:hades, f:original fiction/artwork
  7. kalloway's Tree: f:brave nine, f:crossovers, f:fire emblem, f:granblue fantasy, f:gundam, f:kingdom of heroes, f:super robot heroes
  8. whoremoantreatments' Tree: f:advance wars, f:bleach, f:hypnosis mic, f:kuroko no basket, f:pokemon, f:tales of berseria, f:the world ends with you
  9. EstelRaca"s tree: f:alan wake, f:control, f:fbc firebreak, f:max payne
  10. Kalika_999"s tree: f:given, f:grimm, f:jujutsu kaisen, f:midnight scenes, f:outlast, f:wind breaker
  11. akuuni's Tree: f:boku no hero academia, f:danganronpa, f:haikyuu, f:milgram, f:persona, f:tokyo dedunker
  12. TeaOtter's Tree: f:el eternauta, f:family by choice, f:i wanna hear your song, f:love like the galaxy, f:original fiction/artwork, f:recipes, f:the double, f:the gorge
  13. galerian_ash's Tree: f:book recs, f:flight of the intruder, f:once upon a time in shanghai, f:silent flute, f:terminator, f:unbeatable
  14. uchihabait's Tree: f:mononoke, f:naruto, f:original fiction/artwork, f:rurouni kenshin
  15. pitchblackrenegade's Tree: f:backstage, f:beyblade, f:beyond the universe, f:black dynasty, f:pokemon, f:teen titans, f:toonami, f:yu-gi-oh
  16. overmore's Tree: f:identity v, f:limbus company, f:one piece
bedes: An icon of Marina from the official Hana vs Dango Splatfest art (marina)
[personal profile] bedes posting in [community profile] addme

Decorative divider


Gonna try to make a tradition of re-promoting myself yearly in January~

Name(s): Azure or Bede. I answer to both, so use whichever floats your boat!
Age: 20-something
Hobbies: Writing (fanfic, essays and fan analysis), drawing, editing (videos, images and gifs), coding, researching (almost exclusively things that don't matter), and gaming!
Fandoms: I mainly participate in video game fandoms! Right now, I'm really into Pokémon (my one true fandom), Cookie Run, Great God Grove, In Stars and Time, Kingdom Hearts, Vocaloid, and Splatoon. I'm at least passively interested in most Nintendo games, though. I'm also a furry (rabbit fursona)!

I mostly post about... My fandoms, non-fannish interests (including disability, queerness, the indie web, writing, art and alterhumanity), and some personal stuff!
I'm looking to meet people who... Have similar interests (whether that be fandom or non-fandom), or who just pass the vibe check and have interesting things to say.
My posting schedule tends to be... A little bit sporadic! I go through small periods of inactivity. When I come back, I always cross-post everything I've posted onto other platforms with the back-dating feature, though! I love commenting on other people's posts, and try to do it as often as possible.
When I add people, my dealbreakers are... Bigots, right-wingers, and AI "artists". Christians who try converting others, or who don't CW for religious discussion. (No offense to the latter, it's a personal thing.) Regarding fandom, I'm squicked out by Harry Potter (I'm trans; I hope you can understand!) and Hazbin Hotel, and have pedophilia/incest/rape as triggers.
Before you add me, you should know... I'm autistic and otherwise mentally disabled, so please be patient with me! I'm from the South of the USA, so I use petnames very casually ("honey, darling, dear," etc). You can also (or alternatively) add my account for my fanfic and fandom meta exclusively, [personal profile] fairyfic.

A blinkie that says, 'I was uncool before uncool was cool' A blinkie that says, 'Fairy type Trainer', with a Fairy-type symbol next to it A blinkie that says, 'It's gay love, baby!', with hearts on either side

ReRead McCarthy's Tennessee Novels

Jan. 11th, 2026 07:56 am
bleodswean: (angel)
[personal profile] bleodswean
 
I know there aren’t any diehard Cormac McCarthy fans on the flist and that’s too bad. I will hold forth about him regardless. LOL. I do recognize that he’s a bit of a peculiar flavour for an unusual literary connoisseur. I was standing dumbly in the library wanting to read something and feeling that strange deep brain itch. What is it what is it? And my eye fell on the Cormac shelf and I thought HUH I never finished my plan last year to read the four Tennessee tomes. And when I reached up for the thin volume title Child of God, it was as though struck by lightning, and I remembered that I had loaned that to my father the year before he died. And that was all a complicated bit of emotion, but I drew it down anyway and decided to take that dark, unsettling plunge into fetid waters.  This book is difficult. And I had to LOL when all the pearl clutchers were outraged that Cormac had some sort of underaged bird in a cage at some point in his life as though they were exposing a saint as a chronic masturbator and yet I’m pointing wildly to this book – PEOPLE PEOPLE PEOPLE! This is the cat who wrote Child of God, puhleaze get yourselves comported. This book. Sheesh. And I thought my father should read this. WUT?! Actually he was a Cormac fan but like most Cormac fans, the SouthernGoth foursome are rarely known. We did discuss it at the time and then I loaned him Annihilation. Which he actually enjoyed muchly. 
 
Anyway. I read CoG and spent most of yesterday in a dreamlike space in which my mind wandered the universe seeking out this man’s spirit. I love him so very very very desperately. He was a genius and a wordsmith, yes, but more, his was a Dangerous Intelligence and a life laid out with strange signposts and somehow someway he managed to take his brilliance and observational gifts from start to finish. The Tennessee four are IMPORTANT in his oeuvre and some in the Ivory Towers need to put Blood Meridian the eff down and study these four novels. They are biographical in that this man clearly had an issue with his Family of Origin because no one would write Child of God unless they truly wanted to self-flagellate and publicly humiliate themselves as a way to punish their father.  
 
So, I read The Orchard Keeper which is dismissed by academicians. I love it and it shows McCarthy reveling in his discovery of language. HIS LANGUAGE. Then I read Suttree which is his biographical masterpiece and most clearly obvious outloud musings about a symbolic meaning of Death. Then I had to gently gently return to my favourite novel of all time – Outer Dark and relish it entirely without wearing it too thin to hold onto. And yesterday I read Child of God. I find myself purged and resatiated and now am ready for the Westerns. Which I don’t care for as deeply as I care for the SouthernGoths, however, one must ruck through in order to reach the Dantean conclusion which is his twinpack – Stella Maris and Passenger. 
 
That’s where my head and heart and body have been and currently are. I have time to wallow in this pit. But by tomorrow I have to return to what we call The Real World. 
 
dolorosa_12: (fever ray)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
I've had this post written and locked for over 2.5 hours, hoping that the next [community profile] snowflake_challenge prompt would be posted so that I could add it here and then unlock things, but it's getting to the point in the day when I close all screens and step away from the internet, the next prompt is still not posted, so I'm going to unlock things now and update ... who knows when?

We were promised apocalyptic storms and snow all weekend, but apart from a bit of sleet on the ground yesterday, and now some wind that keeps blowing our green bin out of the front garden and onto the footpath, the dire warnings were not necessary in this part of the world. Nevertheless, it was a weekend for hunkering down at home, although I was out at the sports centre for my classes yesterday and my swim this morning (nearly slipping over on the ice as I walked there both days), and Matthias and I did a quick run into town to return a bunch of library books this morning. The heating has been on almost constantly all week, and I supplemented it last night with a fire in the wood-burning stove. I added branches from the Christmas wreath, and the whole living room smelt of pine sap.

The combination of global politics and some difficult stuff with my family back in Australia have rendered me incapable of getting to sleep without watching dialogue-free cottagecore videos of Youtubers gardening, cooking and cleaning their cosy houses, but between that, and deliberately selecting yoga classes which feature kittens (my yoga teacher fosters cats, and tends to foster mother cats with new kittens when she does so), and ruthless avoidance of social media and news websites, I'm doing about as well as I can to manage the situation.

Last night Matthias and I picked the Guillermo del Toro Frankenstein adaptation for our Saturday movie night. It's been over twenty years since I read Shelley's novel, but as far as I could remember, this was a pretty straight adaptation — some characters fleshed out and some details added, but in essence faithful to the ideas of the source material, unsubtle biblical and birth and death metaphors and Victoriana included. This was a real labour of love for del Toro, and he and the cast clearly had a fantastic time bringing the story to life.

This week's reading was two novels, and a couple of SFF short stories, one of which I found bafflingly unsatisfying (the characters' choices and motivations seemed to boil down to 'I love you so I'm going to order my underlings to stop torturing you' and 'I love you so I'm going to forgive the fact that your underlings tortured me and we are on opposites sides in a cosmic battle, and clearly your side is in the right'), the other of which I found hauntingly folkloric and charming.

The first of the novels was The Lantern Bearers, as I continue to make my way through Rosemary Sutcliff's works for the first time. This one is set at the moment in which the last Roman legions are withdrawn from Britain; our point-of-view character is a legionary who opts to desert rather than forsake his family and their farm in Britain, and then barely survives defending said family and farm against Saxon raiders, in an attack in which his father and most of their employees (their farm does not use slave labour) are killed, the farm is destroyed, and his sister is carried off by the raiders and later goes on to marry one of them and bear his child (with, it is assumed, not much choice in the matter). Aquila — the protagonist — is left embittered and broken, unmoored in the aftermath, drifting into the orbit of the remnants of the Romano-British order, pushed out into what is now Wales, struggling to hold back the tide. Here we are treated both to a retelling of some Welsh Arthuriana, and also a very painful personal story of the limits of revenge as a motivating factor, and how to survive and carve out a life when you are hollowed out by grief and loss. I liked it a lot, but found in this book that Sutcliff's appparent absolute lack of interest in the interior lives of women almost tipped over at times into actual misogyny, which I had to essentially push aside and ignore in order to enjoy and appreciate the story she was interested in telling.

Also, sentiments like:

'I sometimes think we stand at sunset. It may be that the night will close over us in the end, but I believe that morning will come again. Morning always grows again out of the darkness, though maybe not for the people who saw the sun go down. We are the Lantern Bearers, my friend; for us to keep something burning, to carry what light we can forward into the darkness and the wind.'


are almost painfully relevant but also excruciatingly optimistic, given the state of the world. Ooof.

Finally, I picked up The Silver Bone (Andrey Kurkov, translated from the Russian by Boris Dralyuk), the first in a series of historical mystery novels set in post-First World War Kyiv. This one takes place in 1919, at a point when the city kept changing hands between White Russian, Red Army, and Ukrainian nationalist control, and Kyiv residents are just trying to keep their heads down and survive. Kurkov strikes a great balance between conveying both the terror (the novel begins with the protagonist's father's death before his eyes at the hands of a bayonet-wielding Cossack, an attack which he survives but costs him his ear), and the absurdity (all these different armies keep issuing different documentation and currency and the population struggles to know what to use, in the end settling on bartering things like fuel, salt and sugar, which at least remain useful no matter who is in charge). Via a convoluted series of almost comedic events, Samson (the protagonist) falls into a job working with the police while Kyiv is under shaky Soviet control, and, after overhearing (via an almost magical realist mechanism) the nefarious plans of a pair of Red Army soldiers who have commandeered most of his flat, he has his first case to crack. There's also a charming subplot about Samson's halting courtship of Nadezhda, an earnest, idealistic young woman who works in the Soviet bureau of statistics. In terms of historical mysteries, I would say this is heavier on the history and lighter on the mystery — a great evocation of a city and its people experiencing (as they are also, tragically, now) turbulent change. I'm very much looking forward to the following books in the series.

I'm going to spend the rest of the afternoon watching the rain on the windows and the wood pigeons frolicking in the hedgerows over the road, as the weekend draws to its grey, windy close.

What I've Been Doing

Jan. 11th, 2026 10:20 am
seleneheart: (woodcut surfboard)
[personal profile] seleneheart
Here's a catch up of my life recently:

TV Shows
  • I'm still in the middle of going through Gilmore Girls with my daughter but she went to Europe for three weeks over the holidays. She just got back Friday, and we haven't picked back up with watching yet.

  • Heated Rivalry. I cannot even express how much I loved this show. I sort of knew I would, given that Jacob Tierney is the showrunner for Letterkenny (on my all-time favorites list) and Shoresy. I got a month of HBO Max just to watch it.

Once this month runs out, I plan to get a Netflix subscription and watch Stranger Things and some other things I need to catch up with.



Movies
  • I watched Red One on Christmas Eve. A very good time, loved JK Simmons as 'Red'. A good movie for what it is.

  • We did our bi-annual watch of the extended editions of The Lord of the Rings movies on Christmas Day. More than 20 years later and I still tear up.




Video Games
  • I'm on the last level of Pikmin 4. I love this game so much - it's a great combo of puzzle solving/figuring things out and combat.

  • I just started Winter Burrow this week. It's a bit of a farming/crafting game, but there is a survival/battle aspect to it, too. There are 4 health meters that you have to pay attention to, one of them being 'cold' because it takes place in winter. I'm really having fun with it.

Two of my close friends got Switch 2, one for Christmas, and I'm really fighting the FOMO. Especially because my Switch is having issues - like the joycons won't connect to the Switch for playing with it docked. My pro-controller works just fine though, so I'm trying to be good.


That's pretty much what I've been doing, except working two jigsaw puzzles I was gifted. I finished one, and decided to make it into a poster. I got some jigsaw sticker sheets to 'glue' the pieces together. I just need to figure out where to hang it. I've started the next one, but it's a more difficult one that will probably take me longer.
spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I did not go downtown today. In fact, I went back to bed and slept a couple more hours after Pip left for work and I got the dogs in. \o/

I did a load of laundry, hand-washed dishes, went for several walks with Pip and the dogs, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, and scooped kitty litter. Pip had leftovers for supper so I didn’t have to cook anything.

I went back to the Christmas Spice tea today. I typed in ~1,000 words on my fic! I’m not even halfway done, but I’m making progress!

I watched the first three eps of Heated Rivalry! No comments yet, because I plan to watch the whole thing, then watch it again once I’m not desperate to see the whole thing. *g*

I read some more in Amelia Peabody, watched new eps of Lottery Dream House and House Hunters International, and an ep of Secrets of the Zoo. Dr. Pol was my evening background tv.

Temps started out at 35.8(F) and reached 41.0.


Mom Update:

I talked to mom and she sounded good. (I like when she sounds good, because it’s better than when she could barely speak, but I’ve stopped thinking that because she sounds good she’s doing really well physically, which is a bummer.) Sister A had visited her earlier, which is nice.

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