tielan: (go boom)
tielan ([personal profile] tielan) wrote2026-01-12 03:19 pm
Entry tags:

the personal stuff

I had a week off work - I think it was more a "work doesn't want to see full numbers of people back in the office until halfway through January, so if there's anyone who can be taken off the work roster during this time, do it".

Which, I had generally a good week, got some good writing in, managed to rejig the part of Nullifae 1 which had been giving me trouble, and have sorted out the "losing the mentor" part of the story and how we get there. Also, discovered a few things that will be relevant in later books (when we get there). A relief.

On Tuesday, B1 and I went to see the Ashes 5th Test at the Sydney Cricket Ground, had a good day of watching Aussies bat, a couple of hundreds gained, one of my sister's favourite cricketers play what could well have been his last innings (but wasn't), and saw Australia get ahead to the tune of about 230 runs - a nice cushion.

On Monday, we lost a chicken.

tw: not a peaceful going

Carambar was supposed to be one of our 'long-lived' girls. We bought two of a newly-developed heritage breed that were supposed to lay many eggs while still keeping going. It might be that their bloodlines may need a bit more breeding to properly settle, because the first one died with possible neurological issues having never laid an egg, and Carambar only laid for about 12 months before developing complications with laying, and needing a chip to keep her from laying.

She was otherwise perfectly healthy and surviving well. Unfortunately, while both B1 and myself were away from home, the neighbour's dog got out, chased her out of the yard and under the house. When we got her out (after the neighbour came and reclaimed her dog), she had been bitten about the head enough that she was bleeding and injured, and when we got her to the vet it turned out her wing was broken. We didn't have the resources and energy to try to get her back to health, so we had to have her put down.

The neighbour paid for the vet bill, but we're still furious about her dogs. She's nearly 70 and has two bouncing, energetic young spaniel-type dogs that she has always struggled to keep on a leash, and which she's been nice white lady oblivious to anything but her joy in gossipy conversation when walking them. They're probably companionship for her - her son is married, and her daughter self-terminated about 7 years ago - but she's not up to controlling them, and they keep getting out of her place. She's always apologetic, but that doesn't stop the fact that one of our chickens died because of her dogs!


Anyway. That was the start of the week.

By Wednesday the temperatures were rising, by Saturday it was nutso. 42C by 6pm...and then our street power went off. Just our street. *sigh*

A friend invited me over for a swim, and I spent a lovely hour in her pool with her youngest daughter, and then about 20 minutes discussing politics with her husband, brother-in-law, and older daughter. And when I went home, the power was back on again.

Today - first day back at work - has been tiring, but nothing dire. I did go to the gym this morning, and ended up walking 1. I have a call to Jury Duty, but I suspect I can't get out of it this time. Although my boss has just messaged me - apparently contracting is considered 'self-employed', so I might have a chance not to lose 3 months worth of income...
Ask a Manager ([syndicated profile] askamanager_feed) wrote2026-01-12 05:03 am

managing someone who wanted my job, should I tell my boss I’m having menstrual cramps, and more

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. I’m managing someone who wanted my job, and is acting like it

I have recently taken a management role with a new employer, and I love the work and the place I am working.

I am in a director position and have learned that the assistant director, Jane, also applied for the job, but obviously was not chosen.

How do I handle two things: (1) others in the office asking Jane instead of me when I should make the call (they then catch themselves), and (2) Jane trying to “agree” with what I decide or say, but in a way that suggests her agreement is needed or being solicited? I take pride in being a good manager. I know how to communicate items that are discussion points and those that are informational only, but I think she is trying to assert some authority she does not have.

She also had a “plan” for us to be co-directors, which will not work. My boss doesn’t think she should be in charge of the office due to some past questionable judgment, and I am trying to ease into the division of labor conversation. Overall, how do I navigate this without wanting to scream or not being a good manager for someone I supervise?

Mostly, by continuing to calmly and matter-of-factly assert your authority. You don’t need to sit Jane down for a big “I’m in charge here, not you” conversation — at least not yet. There’s a good chance that you can simply demonstrate that, by calmly continuing to do your job and owning your authority. If she agrees with your decision in a way that implies she’s part of decision-making when she isn’t, that’s fine; cheerfully accept her support. It’s going to be clear soon enough through the way work is actually handled that you’re making those calls. (The same goes for people asking her things instead of you and then catching themselves; you’re new right now and they’ll likely get used to you being there in time. If they don’t, you can matter-of-factly ask them to bring things like XYZ to you rather than to Jane.)

There might come a time when it’s clear you need to address it more explicitly, like if she’s undermining your decisions or actually doing work that should fall to you, but it doesn’t sound like that’s happening at this point.

However, I don’t know how straightforward you’ve been in telling her that her co-directors plan is off the table. If you haven’t clearly told her that, you need to.

2. How to encourage employees to do community service on their own time

My company’s leadership has been soliciting ideas for volunteer activities we can do together as an office, with the goal of being able to have a page on our website listing the wonderful impacts we are making on the community and show it off to our clients. Of course, leadership does not have a budget for this, meaning that they do not intend to pay employees for their time spent volunteering, nor offer extra PTO, nor do they want employees taking time out of the workday to volunteer.

In essence, they want us to give up our precious free time to do company-approved volunteer activities with our coworkers, in order to make the company look good. While I actually enjoy volunteering and have spent many Saturday mornings removing invasive plants with local organizations, this just rubs me the wrong way. There’s got to be a better way to encourage people to give back to their community!

So, I’d like to ask my fellow readers: Are there any workplaces out there that have succeeded in getting employees to engage in community service, without offering any monetary incentives? How did you do it?

I’m happy to throw this out to readers to answer since you’re asking for them to weigh in, but: No. If they don’t want to pay people or offer extra PTO or give them work time to do it … then too bad, sounds like they don’t get to credit themselves for employees’ private volunteer work. This is like saying, “We want you to be a good person in your private life but then let us take credit for it.” Or, fairly literally, “We want you to donate to charity and let us claim the contributions were ours.”

You and your coworkers should tell them that if they want the company to look like it’s active in supporting people in need in the community, they’ll need to provide work time for it to happen in.

3. Should I tell my manager I’m having menstrual cramps?

I’ve been dealing with some health stuff lately. Yesterday, after half a long day of meetings, I messaged my manager to let her know that I wasn’t feeling well and would be taking the rest of the day off. She expressed a good deal of concern and well wishes for rest and recovery.

The thing is, I wasn’t feeling well specifically because of awful cramps. This happens to me to me every so often, thankfully not on a monthly basis. Maybe a few times a year. I’ve even taken a whole sick day before due to cramps. I’m probably overthinking it, but is it ever appropriate to share the reason for these episodes? Should I let my colleagues or manager know that I’m not contagious and it’s not the sort of thing that will necessarily get worse? I work hybrid, and I’m going to show up on Zoom today looking pretty normal. I guess I’m getting in my head thinking that my manager might think I was lying or something. I’ve never given her any reason to believe I’d do that. I’d just love to hear your thoughts!

You can, but you don’t need to — just like you really don’t need to get specific about any medical issue you’re having (and it’s good to normalize not sharing details, for all sorts of reasons). And it doesn’t look suspicious to take a sick day and then show up looking okay on Zoom soon afterwards; that’s super normal!

It’s also perfectly fine to refer to this as “a flare-up of a chronic condition, but nothing to worry about.”

Related:
how much detail do you have to give when you call in sick?
can I keep mentioning my period at work?

4. How soon is too soon to ask for a raise?

I began a new job three months ago and was brought on to support someone in an existing role and to bring more processes in house. To use a made-up example, I have close to a decade in teapot analysis, with three years most recently having full ownership of all systems in place, the transition to a modern data system, and extensive experience in digitizing and streamlining processes. I was brought in as an expert to help them migrate to this modern system and help overhaul their entire workflow. The person I was brought in to support had experience in entry-level teapot analysis but was thrown into the deep end when she started working here. Additionally, very few of the processes I thought were already in-house are. I didn’t know most of this until I started.

I came to this agency enjoying the prospect of a larger scale overhaul and was offered the middle salary range for the position, which I accepted but was somewhat of a pay cut. However, my last agency was in turmoil because of funding cuts so I felt afraid to negotiate and figured this was what they could offer. My mistake there.

As part of my role, I have access to funding information and know that the person I support, who has only been in the role 18 months, makes a staggering 30% more than me. Since I have been here, I have taken on more than half her workload, have introduced new streamlined workflows, and am on schedule to migrate us and pull more than 50% of what a consultant is doing into our office.

I am feeling caught between a rock and a hard place. While seniority surely factors into some of her wage, they brought me on as an expert with significantly more experience to help them and I am having a hard time reconciling the difference. I am fortunate to work somewhere very stable and get on well with my boss (who also has little experience in teapot analysis). I am really struggling now with the pay difference, both mentally and in terms of my budget. But working in an NGO also means everyone is talking about funding and I don’t want to seem out of touch by bringing this up. Would I be off base to ask about a bump in pay to get me closer to what my coworker is making?

It depends completely on what her job is versus yours. If she’s, say, the director of fundraising and manages donor relationships and you’re the person managing the fundraising database, it makes perfect sense that she’s paid a lot more even though you’re far more skilled at managing the database. In that example, there’s a huge and important part of her job that’s separate from (and generally more senior than) the database work you took over. On the other hand, if she’s the database manager and you’re the one managing the database and bringing all the strategic perspective too, then you have much more of a case for a salary bump to bring you closer to hers.

As a general rule, though, three months is way too soon to ask for a raise unless something significant has changed about the job since you were hired. It doesn’t sound like that’s the case here; it sounds like the motivation behind asking for a raise is really about finding out what your coworker is making. Given that, wait until you’ve been there close to a year and make your case then.

5. Is planning a promotion a work-hours activity?

Should “planning your career growth” happen during work hours, or on your own time?

I’m currently working toward a promotion, and my manager has asked me to propose what my scope of role would be if that were to happen. The idea is to give them talking points to make the case to their boss, and also to make sure we are on the same page about what meeting expectations looks like at the next level.

On whose time and dime should this thinking and planning happen? It’s work-related and I wouldn’t be doing it if not for my job, so it seems pretty straightforwardly a “work hours” thing when you put it that way. But it still feels weird to do that instead of getting ahead with my current workload. My job is one where there’s never really a point where the work is done and I have time left over for other things.

It feels like this is complicated by the fact that this is in service of a promotion, too; obviously in addition to convincing my manager the scope is there at next level, I need to be delivering well at my current level. But perhaps that’s omnipresent imposter syndrome clouding my thinking.

It’s squarely a work activity that shouldn’t need to be on your own time. You’re thinking through a role at the company and how it would be structured and what it would be responsible for and what success metrics would look like. Those are work activities regardless of whether you’re the one doing them or your boss is.

The post managing someone who wanted my job, should I tell my boss I’m having menstrual cramps, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

settiai: (BG3 -- settiai)
Lynn | Settiai ([personal profile] settiai) wrote2026-01-11 11:44 pm

Baldur's Gate 3: Taviana

Ages ago, I said that I was going to start making posts about my various OCs in video game playthroughs since I mainly play TTRPGs. And then, you know, I never actually did it. So, since I actually managed to spend most of yesterday and today playing Baldur's Gate 3, let's talk about the playthrough that I focused on. Minor spoilers for early Act 3 and a few very, very broad ones for Acts 1-2.

Meet Taviana.



More under the cut. )
tielan: harry from wizard of Azkaban looking grim (HP - not strong)
tielan ([personal profile] tielan) wrote2026-01-12 02:57 pm

HP fic rec: The Sum Of Their Parts

The Sum of Their Parts (138205 words) by holdmybeer
Chapters: 11/11
Fandom: Harry Potter - J. K. Rowling
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Characters: Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, Ron Weasley, George Weasley, Neville Longbottom, Susan Bones, Kingsley Shacklebolt, Portrait Dorea Black Potter, Andromeda Black Tonks, Dean Thomas, Ernie Macmillan, Anthony Goldstein, Hannah Abbott, Molly Weasley, Teddy Lupin, Fleur Delacour
Additional Tags: trio, Oaths & Vows, Dark Lord Harry Potter
Summary:

For Teddy Lupin, Harry Potter would become a Dark Lord. For Teddy Lupin, Harry Potter would take down the Ministry or die trying. He should have known that Hermione and Ron wouldn't let him do it alone.



--

Welp.

I never read much HP fiction for the most part, even when the fandom was a big thing. But this? I think I saw a post on Pinterest that mentioned a Dark Lord Harry story and I went looking for it.

Hoo boy. Did I find it!

This is a full and satisfying and complete read. It's the kind of thing that I, as someone who's been writing in fandom, would love to have written. It's hugely popular (at least by my standards) and brilliantly done.

Character-perfect, with a believable plot, and excellent extrapolations, it marks the story of how Harry takes on the Ministry of Magic in an attempt to make the Wizarding World better, never mind that it will see him labelled a 'Dark Lord' and enemy of the Ministry. And sweet holy FUCK does it do a spectacular job of telling the story!

There are some really excellent lines in there, but the one that made me laugh out loud, even in the midst of dark shit going down was:
“Bad Dark Lord. Bad! No biscuit,” George said. Then he smiled, a little wry and a little tired. “I won't let you take the fall when I'm the one cheerfully working with a Dark Lord. You can't defend yourself under Veritaserum. Why should I?”

The author doesn't have any other works to their name; this is a one-shot under a psued (nobody drops this quality of writing out of nowhere), and it's bloody good.

It's long - 11 hours reading time, or so AO3 helpfully informs us, so set aside a good couple of days for it in-between your regular programming. Or else be prepared to binge-read it in the oldest traditions of fandom.
silveradept: Domo-kun, wearing glass and a blue suit with a white shirt and red tie, sitting at a table. (Domokun Anchor)
Silver Adept ([personal profile] silveradept) wrote2026-01-11 08:03 pm

Snowflake Challenge 02026 #6: The Top Ten

[community profile] snowflake_challenge has sent up number 6 on the challenge list, and it's one of the ones I struggle more with than not, the recommendations-related one.

Every challenge we try to make at least one rec post, and each year, we try to find a new way to make it fun for everyone. This year's attempt:

Challenge #6

Top 10 Challenge.


The category(ies) you choose are up to you. You can give top 10 Fics you read last year, the top 10 songs to create to, the to 10 guest stars on your favorite show, top 10 characters in your favorite book series, top 10... well, you get the idea.

Can't think of 10 of anything? That's okay, 10 is just an abstract. It's totally up to you.


This is one of those situations where being profoundly multifannish is a disadvantage, because a top ten list of anything may or may not make it to me. Or I might not get so deeply into a fandom to where there would be enough material for a top ten list. And while I read and enjoy the gifts that get sent my way in the various exchanges that I participate in, they don't necessarily cohere to any kind of top ten list of anything, either.

Eventually, a random idea will settle into my head, and I can go forward with it and see what might happen from there. So, here you are:

10 roles one person played during my formative years )
tielan: (Default)
tielan ([personal profile] tielan) wrote2026-01-12 02:36 pm
Entry tags:

snowflake challenge 2026 - day 5

Snowflake Challenge: A warmly light quaint street of shops at night with heavy snow falling.

In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts.

0. No generative AI works.

1. An epic fanfic about any of my favourite fannish pairings or characters. I'd love new stuff, because I've mostly read through all the old, but I'd also take recs. I love action-adventure, drama, real conflict, internal questioning, and not-a-black-and-white-outlook. Complex questions and thorny problems that are dealt with by emotionally mature and politically savvy adults.

MCU
Maria Hill
Maria Hill & any character
Maria Hill/Steve Rogers

There are other pairings and characters I like in MCU, but those are easy to find. These are stories that I really really want and very few are willing or capable of writing them. So I ask.

I'll take AUs, vignettes, missing scenes, friendships, that really long epic story that nobody but me will ever write... I'm happy with just Maria-centric, but I want it in the context of the Avengers movies, not her taken out into another context. I want it to be her story, with cameos and interactions from the familiar characters - but she's the main character with the chief agency of the story. People can write it for random female (and male) characters throughout the canon, I just would love to read the equivalent for Maria.

Ignore Secret Invasion. It was stupid.

PS. If you're giving recs, if it's at AO3, I've probably already read it..


Pacific Rim
Mako Mori & anyone
Mako Mori/Raleigh Becket

One of the things I enjoy about this is seeing how Mako and Raleigh actually vibe together when they're not having to save the world by going through each others' minds. And really anything about Mako and her relationships with the people in the Shatterdomes. Even Chuck.

Ignore Pacific Rim: Uprising. Whoever wrote that missed the entire point of the original movie.


Stargate Atlantis
Teyla Emmagan
Teyla Emmagan/John Sheppard
Team

Again, one of those 'I can pick a needle in a haystack' options. Not the kind of thing most people will write (or would have written, back in the long ago days of SGA fandom) but still something that I long for and enjoy.

The best I get is the Stargate Atlantis: Legacy series of books, which is a six book "Season 6" for Stargate Atlantis, complete with plot arcs, character development, space battles, and a definitive 'ending' for the Wraith storyline. It does it inventively and cleverly, and doesn't leave any of the characters out. Which is something that one could never count on, even in the canon.

If anyone would like to write the story of the Stargate Project twenty years later - with Teyla as a major character - I would love to read that.


Stargate SG1
Sam Carter/Jack O'Neill
Team (whether with Daniel, Jonas, or Cameron)

One thing I really did enjoy about SG1 fandom was the number of longform fics there used to be for the team and for Sam in particular. Plot arcs, big long epics, and often a bit of Sam/Jack romance, with or without regs.

Ah, it was long ago.


Bridgerton
Kate Sharma
Anthony Bridgerton/Kate Sharma

Look, I'm a simple soul. I want a better story of their romance than they got. The series was too busy trying to launch Queen Charlotte, so they had Edwina be the sympathetic character to the Queen and the King at a point when they're just "old people" so that there was some interest in "what's their backstory" and they could get people to watch the other series.

If you have recs for this one, I'll take them. I haven't really trawled through the archive for this - too much risk of dross


Star Wars - Prequel-to-Original
Padme Amidala

Okay, so I've seen a few people ponder how the story might have played out if Padme had survived and been organised in the resistance.

I'd like recs for this. If you want to write your own story, that's fine, but I figure the fandom is wide enough and deep enough and broad enough and talented enough to already have those stories. I'd love to see Luke and Leia growing up knowing who and what they are and whether that makes a difference to who they become as adults.


2. Detailed comments on any of my fanfics. The more detailed the better!

3. A publishing contract. Or even the opportunity to sub to an agent. I have a finished manuscript, first draft, it presently sucks. I hope to have it whipped into basic shape in a month. There are some lovely people who are willing to plough through the early drafts, but in the end, there's nothing like an agent.

Hey, if you're going to aim high, why not shoot for the moon? :D
hamsterwoman: (LeGuin quote)
hamsterwoman ([personal profile] hamsterwoman) wrote2026-01-11 07:43 pm

Snowflake (days 5-6) and Taskmaster NYT

Snowflake Challenge: A warmly light quaint street of shops at night with heavy snow falling.

Challenge #5: In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts.

- [community profile] fandomtrees reveals got pushed to Jan 17 because there are still some trees (16 as of this posting) that don’t have the minimum amount of gifts (at least 2) necessary for reveals. So, any fills for the needy trees listed here (real-time updates at the Google spreadsheet). Most of the fandoms I don’t know anything about (but hopefully some of you do!), but of the ones I do, there’s a request for the Raven Cycle, Discworld, and some Original Work requests, and a niche rec request.

- My tree does have the minimum number of gifts, so is not holding up the fest opening, but does list all kinds of things I want (fandoms: Chronicles of Amber, Discworld, Dragaera, Rivers of London, Taskmaster, Terra Ignota, Vorkosigan Saga, and critter art).

More specific requests for Dragaera, Taskmaster, Elis&John fandoms and crossovers/fusions )

- I included this in last year’s Snowflake wishlist and it worked really well, so doing it again: I'm planning on Doing the Hugo Awards (and hopefully Worldcon) this year, and have just recently come to the realization that if I'm going to nominate some short fiction, I should actually, like, read some that was published in 2025. So, looking for recs for "Hugo-worthy" SFF short stories and novelettes published in 2025 that are ideally accessible online. Authors who tend to semi-reliably work for me in short form are Sarah Pinsker, Kelly Link, and Naomi Kritzer, to give some sense of what I like. And also happy for any recs for published-in-2025 novellas, Related Works, and dramatic presentation short form things (<90 min) that are standalone (i.e. not episodes of a serial show, but either a short(ish) film or part of an anthology show but standalone), and Astounding-eligible authors to check out.


Challenge #6: Top 10 Challenge. The category(ies) you choose are up to you. You can give top 10 Fics you read last year, the top 10 songs to create to, the to 10 guest stars on your favorite show, top 10 characters in your favorite book series, top 10... well, you get the idea.

After some consideration, I’m going to do my Top 10 Dragons :) I’m currently reading a book with dragons (To Shape a Dragon’s Breath, which I’m enjoying a lot), whose dragons are, so far, somewhat different than I’d been expecting, and that’s been making me think about various other fictional dragons I’ve known and loved and the universes they come from, so I figured I’d make a list of my favorites.

They can be dragons that can assume human form, or even spend most of their time in said human form, but they can’t be just humans who are for some reason called Dragons (i.e. no Sarkan from Uprooted or the Dragaeran Dragonlords). Moreover, I tried to keep it to one dragon per canon. So here we go!

Top 10 dragons )

What about YOUR favorite dragons? Introduce me / sway me over to any I might've missed, or squee with me about my favorites :)

*

I think I was actually low-key avoiding the Taskmaster New Year Treat because I subconsciously resented it for being 2 episodes when I wanted CoC to be 2 episodes, lol. But I have watched it now, and it was fun!

Part 1 – Ooh, I knew one of the contestants (Rose) was deaf, but it was still jarring to see her interpreter sitting there next to Alex. Alex’s banter (OBE/oboe) and the several layers of bad joke was pretty fun. More, with spoilers )

My midpoint impressions are that I do enjoy Susie, but in exactly the same way I enjoyed her on Catsdown, so the “revelations” are Sam and Rose, who are both extremely adorable cuties whose cheeks I want to pinch. I’m very meh on the others – Jill’s doing well, but is a bit deadpan for me, and also I’m not a fan of how she brings up football all the time – like, I don’t feel like I’ve learned anything about her outside of her football career (in stark contrast to David James, who mentioned some footballers or travels associated with playing football, but talked about things like painting and just came across as a delightful massive weirdo – IDK, goalkeepers are different, I guess, was the consensus at the time). Apparently even the cat costume, which I did find cute, is a football reference, to her local football team, which someone on Reddit said she said in the studio taping. And Big Zuu is just kind of there… It sounds like he’s a charming person to work with, from all the podcasts, but as a viewer I have not been charmed.

Anyway, I don’t mind spending another episode with these guys!

Part 2 – Greg made me laugh out loud with his Alex intro: More, with spoilers )

And of course there was also the Series 21 cast reveal. Spoilers? )

I still have some Taskmaster stuff to catch up on – Acaster’s ultimate episode, the next installment of Taskmastermind, and some outtakes. But meanwhile WILTY has returned and is being a lot of fun )
althea_valara: Caius Ballad from FFXIII-2, with eyes closed (close your eyes)
Althea Valara ([personal profile] althea_valara) wrote2026-01-11 09:19 pm

Snowflake Challenge 2026 - Challenge 6: Top Ten (and then some) Challenge

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Challenge #6

Top 10 Challenge. Post your answer to today’s challenge in your own space and leave a comment in this post saying you did it.

Include a link to your post if you feel comfortable doing so. Also, feel free to entice engagement by giving us a preview of what your post covers.


Well, I wrote a love letter to Final Fantasy for Challenge 3; it seems only fitting that I'd make a list of favorite music from the games, because it really was the music that first enraptured me and keeps me interested. So here are my favorite songs, one from each game, with some runner up songs because I can't just choose one, lol. Also, these are my favorites TODAY. Ask me tomorrow and it'll probably change.

(I have no idea if Dreamwidth will allow so many YouTube embeds; I guess we find out!)


Seventeen Favorite Songs from the Final Fantasy Franchise )
hannah: (Toast and butter - obsessiveicons)
hannah ([personal profile] hannah) wrote2026-01-11 09:31 pm

Scoville.

Some months ago, in an attempt to clear some congestion, I started adding ghost pepper flakes to my morning eggs. A few weeks ago, in an attempt to punch up the spice, I started adding a crushed up chile de árbol or two. Now I'm finding the issue with a meal's heat isn't the spiciness, but the temperature when it's served right from the stove.

I've now realized I don't have much of a context for what constitutes spiciness anymore. I can tell when there's some heat, I can tell when there's a fair amount of heat, and I'm going to have to keep looking for ways to get the kinds of lovely warm, playful sensations from good restaurants into my own kitchen. But not until I work through more of this bottle of ghost pepper flakes, because I've only got so much room in my apartment - which I suppose is all the more reason to try the Calabrian chili oil I bought on impulse a little while ago.
troisoiseaux: (reading 5)
troisoiseaux ([personal profile] troisoiseaux) wrote2026-01-11 09:59 pm
Entry tags:

The Left Hand of Darkness - Ursula K. Le Guin

Read The Left Hand of Darkness (1969) by Ursula K. Le Guin, because I've been trying to catch up on my neglected sci-fi classics; it was a fascinating read. This book is famously interesting for the way it plays with gender, being set in an "ambisexual" world (essentially, everyone can, theoretically, physically both bear and beget children) narrated mostly by a character from Earth(?) who grapples with this societal genderlessness by referring to everyone as a "man" and using he/him pronouns— which I found threw me off more than, say, the universal she/her in Ann Leckie's Imperial Radch series?— but I was just really struck overall by the way that Le Guin uses language to fling the reader headfirst into this alien world: she uses made-up words for recognizable concepts, and recognizable English words as signifiers for world-specific/made-up concepts, and you've just sort of got to puzzle it out as you go. I was also surprised to discover that the one plot point I'd known about going in - ... ) - actually takes up less of the novel, and occurs later in it, than I had expected.

Read more... )
mecurtin: Icon of a globe with a check-mark (fandom_checkin)
mecurtin ([personal profile] mecurtin) wrote in [community profile] fandom_checkin2026-01-11 08:39 pm
Entry tags:

Daily Check-In

This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Sunday, January 11, to midnight on Monday, January 12 (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #34071 Daily check-in poll
This poll is closed.
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 24

How are you doing?

I am OK
15 (62.5%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now
9 (37.5%)

I could use some help
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single
7 (29.2%)

One other person
11 (45.8%)

More than one other person
6 (25.0%)



Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
moon_custafer: neon cat mask (Default)
moon_custafer ([personal profile] moon_custafer) wrote2026-01-11 08:29 pm
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moving books slightly to the left ([syndicated profile] marginaliana_tumblr_feed) wrote2026-01-11 03:45 pm