I'm having a hard time figuring out what book I want to read next, so of course that means I haven't read anything but fic this past week. In that, I have read a ton of JunDylan, because rewatching ThamePo really sparked something for me lol Currently I'm reading lightning (never) strikes twice by praystation , which I'm really enjoying :)
Watching
The roommate and I finished Ossan's Love. It was very goofy and I kind of hated the main character (soooo immature and stupid in frustrating ways), but overall a pretty good show.
The roommate and I started watching Head 2 Head. I was really excited for another SeaKeen show, and they have definitely not let me down so far! It's a very interesting premise that reminds me of a couple other shows we've watched, so I'm interested to see how it turns out.
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episode of Goddess Bless You From Death. Shit's finally going down! Very exciting and gross and I'm loving it.
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the last episode of Me and Thee. What a fucking good show <3 I am kind of devastated it's over, but they have announced a special episode (or episodes? unclear), so hopefully sometime this year we'll get that.
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episode of Melody of Secrets. It continues to be kind of incomprehensible in ways that I'm starting to worry are not going to come together in the end...
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episode of Dare You to Death. I'm very intrigued by the mystery, but also definitely enjoying the JoongDunk of it all.
The roommate, best friend, and I finished 4 Minutes. That uhhh sure was a show. Very odd and I do not see how they're doing a sequel from here, but I did really enjoy JesBible.
The roommate, best friend, and I started watching Kidnap. A rewatch for the roommate and I and I'm loving it! This was one that really grew on me more afterwards, so it's very fun to see it again.
Listening
Little bit of T-pop here and there, but haven't had much time for music this week.
Caught up on some more Ouija Broads episodes.
Writing
I wrote one of my two overdue holiday card ficlets.
Learning
Had to return Pimsleur's Thai to the library (already back on hold), so nothing really this week.
I played a bit of Palworld with my bf this morning. Is fun but kinda weird to learn. Definitely not Minecraft blocks or sandbox but still crafting and survival... plus Pokemon kind of animal catching but not the same really either. The pals do more than battle things. I'm considering drawing a pal. Not sure which IF I do.
I'm super tired. I don't think I've fully recovered from the flu plus now I have a girl bit infection because of antibiotics destroying good bacteria. I'm too sensitive to over the counter cream. I've been suffering a week with this issue. The doctor wouldn't prescribe me anything for it and I have to go see him Friday. By then it'll definitely be not so spiffy.
I'm trying to keep drinking water.
I have been having pelvic cramps. Maybe related to the infection.
Just finished: Mavericks: Life Stories and Lessons of History's Most Extraordinary Misfits by Jenny Draper. I don't have a lot to add since last week. If you read my blog you will like this. It is my jam. It's a rather inspiring read for—look, I haven't written about politics in a public post in awhile but you know. You know.
Currently reading: Choices: An Anthology of Reproductive Horror, edited by Dianna Gunn. This one I picked up because a lot of the authors in it are my kind of people, and it's a cool concept. There must be a particular subgenre of leftist, author-led anthologies, and like. I want to fix that subgenre. I want it to exist, but I want to push it like, a notch further or two.
Part of my problem here is absolutely personal, which is that I'm intensely phobic of pregnancy and childbirth, and so in order to ping as horror in my brain, a story has to somehow be worse than my own fairly intense reactions to the subject. A few of the pieces are but they're mostly "wow it would be awful to be pregnant in a dystopian regime that viewed women as chattel" well, here we are. I have the same critique of my own writing btw. You simply cannot write bad things fast enough to get your book out before those bad things are just an accepted part of reality. Plus a lot of the stories are earnest, which is one thing that horror can't be. There's one story about an anti-abortion protestor that goes straight for black comedy and it is excellent; so far it's my favourite.
Challenge #5: Wish List
In your own space, create a list of at least three things you'd love to receive, a wishlist of sorts.
One of my favorite challenges! Which doesn't mean it's not somewhat difficult, but I do like thinking about what kinds of things I really want to ask for and also looking at other people's lists.
More fanworks for Thundercloud Rainstorm. I watched this a few weeks ago and really enjoyed it, but I've been sad to see there are less than 10 fics! I'd love to see more fics, but also art and edits and meta and anything else.
Tarot, oracle, playing card, rune, or other magical reading. I do tarot readings for myself occasionally, but I rarely have the chance to have a reading done by someone else! If you do readings that are a little less than standard, whether that's in medium or interpretation or whatever, I'd especially love one.
Artwork of my D&D characters. I play in a few different campaigns at the moment, and I'd love to have artwork of my characters! Under the cut I have descriptions and reference pictures.
Telling a secret can be transformative; it can change our relationship with people we know, and even those we will never meet. More than once, I have watched strangers inspired by a shared secret self-organize into purposeful communities of kindness.
One of those stories began years ago when I pulled a postcard from my mailbox made from a photograph of smiling friends. The words taped to the photo read, “I found your camera at Lollapalooza this summer. I finally got the pictures developed, and I’d love to give them to you”.
I shared the secret on the PostSecret Blog, hoping someone would recognize one of the young people at the table and we could return all the photos to the group. Messages poured in that week from the PostSecret Community, but no one was able to identify anyone in the picture. However, one of the messages came from a Canadian student, Mathew Preprost, who was inspired to do more.
Believing that everyday people can sometimes have a worldwide impact on the web with a good idea and determination, Mathew designed and built a website that would serve as a lost-and-found for cameras. He called it, “I Found Your Camera,” and when I helped him spread the word, we were both surprised by how many lost cameras there were in the world and how many people wanted to help return them.
A 21-year-old vacationing student lost his camera at Union Station in Chicago. He thought it was long gone when a friend of his girlfriend saw the couple smiling together on the “I Found Your Camera” website. “She went crazy when she randomly stumbled upon our picture at Wrigley Field.” He said.
Dozens, then hundreds of cameras were mailed to Mathew’s Winnipeg address. When they arrived, he would post some of the photographs from each camera on his website, and millions of people would visit virtually to see if they could identify anyone in the pictures so they could be contacted. “It was exciting for me to see strangers helping strangers return lost cameras to the people who were sometimes desperately searching for them,” Mathew told me.
The owner of this camera (in yellow) left it behind in Santa Cruz (not far from the background pictured) on a long bike ride . A month later, she was surprised and relieved to find herself on “I Found Your Camera”. She contacted Mathew and in two weeks she had all the photos from her California journey.
Mathew was being interviewed by USA Today, the CBC, and other national news services. One of the stories he liked telling was about the journey of George Metz’s camera. To get George’s Mardi Gras pictures back to him in Pennsylvania, Mathew coordinated an international effort involving good Samaritans in four cities across three countries and two continents. As the success stories spread, more and more cameras began arriving in his mailbox.
Wedding pictures, photos from family reunions, parties, and graduations all found their way back to those who had lost them – over 1,000 in all – and the thankful emails Mathew received revealed heartfelt gratitude.
“Thank you, Thank you, Thank you, my son’s birth was on that camera and he turns 4 next week.”
I have traveled to Mexico, New Zealand, Spain, Canada, England, Australia and throughout the US sharing the heartening story of how a single secret sparked the imagination of one student who united people around the world to help others they will never meet.
Every time I told the story, I shared the original picture of happy people sitting around a table that started it all, always hoping that one day I would be able to complete the story. Finally, it happened.
Here is a picture of the young woman from the table whose lost camera inspired so many other stories of kindness before returning home itself. She asked me to pass along her thanks to the community for her lost, then found collection of “slightly out-of-focus memories of a lifetime”.
And here is a picture of Mathew along with a quote he told a USA Today reporter.
I mostly post about: life, coding, activism, politics, idk things? I'm just getting back into "Real Life" blogging so am setting up a new journal. My pervious one was theladyunicorn and I think I had another potentially ~immortalaussie before that but those were well over a decade ago.
My hobbies are: reading, writing, fandom, collecting old books, web design and development, collecting and dropping hobbies, candle and jewellery making, gaming, doing to much, volunteering
My fandoms are: My main fandom is BTS at the moment but I dabble in a lot of things. If you're after fandom specific posts that will be over at my other new journal thequirkyfan which I'm also still setting up.
I'm looking to meet people who: Cool and want to be friends
My posting schedule tends to be: Who knows!
When I add people, my dealbreakers are: I strongly believe that Love is Love, Anti Genocide, BLM, Disability Rights, and all of that stuff and I ask that you are too
Before adding me, you should know: At the moment I imagine a lot of my stuff will be public unless its super personal etc. I will use content warnings as appropriate as I will talk about mental health, health problems, disability and weight loss etc
I'm nonbinary/genderqueer possibly ftm idk things and use they/them pronouns. The link above has a lot more info
I mostly post about: Everyday life, thoughts, feelings. My version of a walk-a-bout in this season of life. I have made a lot of changes in the last few months, and I have a re-new excitement for...things, everything. I do have my moments of gloom and doom because human, but I don't get stuck there.
My hobbies are: Reading, running, exercising, gaming, movies, music/concerts, anything that induces frisson. Who doesn't like free dopamine?
My fandoms are: Star Trek , Star Wars, X-Files. I was born in the 80's.
I'm looking to meet people who: anyone with an open heart and an open mind.
My posting schedule tends to be: I am going to try to post every day, since I do have a physical journal that I jot things down.
When I add people, my dealbreakers are: don't be mean. You can be angry, sad or whatever you are feeling, but when you take it and turn it around on me, we're done. I've been a punching bag for far too long and for far too many people in my life. Not going to tolerate it.
Before adding me, you should know: I'm human, just like you. Searching for connection.
Today's episode is Wizards & Spaceships' "Editing Roundtable ft. Alexandra Pierce and Josh Wilson." If you read any SFFH, you'll know that the short story and critical essay markets are central in ways that they really aren't in other genre fiction or in literary fiction. If you hang out with SFFH people, you'll notice that "we should start a magazine" gets said almost as often as "we should start a podcast." Anyway, this episode looks at magazine publishing. Alexandra is the editor of Speculative Insight, which publishes critique and analysis about genre fiction, and Josh Wilson is the editor of The Fabulist, which specializes in extremely short SFFH. It's, among other things, a much more positive episode than I normally post here, so you should check it out.
Hello, all! I know I'm a little late to really consider this a new year's post, but here I am looking to meet a few new people nevertheless.
About me: My name is Katie. I'm 47 years old, and this summer will mark my 25th year of journaling on LJ/DW/both.
I'm a writer by profession, primarily of literary fiction with occasional book reviews for variety. I live in Philadelphia with my partner of 27 years (she's a high school physics teacher). We have a pair of eight-month-old kittens named Oscar and Zorro. I'm the oldest of three sisters in a pretty close-knit family. My sisters have five kids between them, and being an aunt is basically my favorite thing.
I love books and am always reading. Favorite authors include E.M. Forster, Marilynne Robinson, Leo Tolstoy, Virginia Woolf, Ursula K. Le Guin, Lauren Groff, Andrea Barrett.... The list could go on and on. I also love the outdoors and learning about nature. I've been a birdwatcher for years; more recently I've gotten into things like butterflies and insects, reptiles, wildflowers, and more. In summer, my favorite thing is finding wild orchids. My partner and I like to travel, and when we do, I use it as an opportunity to learn about the amazing variety of nature in other places.
In case you haven't already guessed, I'm a very introverted person. I spend most of my time at home, where I keep myself busy writing, reading, or in the kitchen. I like cooking, baking, and food preservation, and I'm always working on some sort of kitchen project or trying to teach myself a new skill.
About my journal: My journal began as a place for me to keep track of my reading, and that's still the subject I write about most often. Other frequent topics include the interests mentioned above: writing, nature, cooking and baking. I tend to post more about what I'm thinking than about what I'm doing at any given time, although I do sometimes use my journal to keep track goals or record projects that I'm working on. I often include photos. I would say I post about once a week...but realistically it's probably a bit less than that.
If you're looking for a friend who comments on every single post, I'm probably not the right person for you. I do like to interact and I always read my friends page, but I prefer to comment only when I have something worth saying. Also, I've found over the years that I don't mesh well with extremely prolific posters. Once a day is fine, but if it's more than that I have trouble keeping up.
My journal is friends-locked for privacy, but I will be happy to add anyone who's interested in checking it out. And I won't be offended if it turns out that it's not your style.
I finished Clariel by Garth Nix. It was fine, but I didn't enjoy it as much as I'd hoped. I was much more interested in the potential story a after the story than the one that was, you know, in the actual book. Oh well.
Ficwise, I've been reading a lot of NutHong and JunDylan fics, with a sprinkling of other things including more Yuletide fics.
Watching
The roommate and I finished Cherry Magic. It was great! Very sweet and I enjoyed TayNew and JuniorMark a lot. I did wish there was a bit more of the side pairing's relationship, but what we did get was good.
The roommate and I started watching Ossan's Love. Even sillier than I expected, especially Earth's character! I was getting a bit of second hand embarrassment tbh, but I'll push through and hope that passes.
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episode of Goddess Bless You From Death. I feel a little like we're getting edged for shit really going down, but it's still great. I also was proved right for a theory I voiced in like the second episode, so very happy about that lol
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episodes of Me and Thee. So sweet! So funny! Still so sad it's almost over!
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episode of Burnout Syndrome. The drama with these characters is like watching a train wreck tbh lol
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episode of Melody of Secrets. Halfway through and I can confidently say I still don't know what's going on :)
The roommate, best friend, and I watched the latest episodes of Dare You to Death. Things are definitely picking up! Like, wow, really picking up. I was not expecting them to kiss in the third episode, but here we are. Not that I'm complaining!
The roommate, best friend, and I finished ThamePo Heart That Skips a Beat. Loved it once again! The best friend did as well, which I'm very happy about. Made me more excited to see everyone's upcoming shows this year.
The roommate, best friend, and I started watching 4 Minutes. I'm not sure what I expected from this series, but it's definitely a lot darker than I'd assumed it'd be. In some ways similar vibes to Dead Friend Forever, which I don't love, but I am liking it more than that so far. The allure of Bible is at least strong enough to get me through, especially since it's a shorter series.
The roommate and I went to see Labyrinth in theaters for the 40th anniversary. It was so nice seeing it on the big screen for the first time! Love this movie.
Listening
T-pop this week has been a lot of Perses after seeing them on Idol Energy. They've got a different vibe than what I'm used to, but I'm enjoying them.
Caught up on some more Ouija Broads episodes.
Writing
I wrote a fic for a Just the Tip flash exchange.
I started writing an OhmLeng fic after waking up yesterday being suddenly very sad about them lol
Learning
New category! Because I am trying to do more active learning of things this year and maybe this will be good incentive to keep that up.
Did some more of Pimsleur's Thai. Still need to do more to see if I like it and it's working, but the second lesson was definitely easier than the first. To be fair, it's covered several words/phrases I already know, so we'll see if that continues as it goes on.
Just finished: Invisible Line by Su J. Sokol. This was quite good. Xe did a good job in not just complicating utopia—I have a minor dislike of "flee to Canada" as a plot point in dystopian fiction, and the portrayal of Montreal as a bureaucracy subject to limits on its ability to do the right thing is very nuanced and well done—but also making the characters messy and traumatized. The big crisis in the last act could have been averted if the parents talked to their damned kids, but of course they are too paranoid and distrustful from years of living under fascism, so they don't. Looking forward to reading the sequel.
Currently reading: Mavericks: Life stories and lessons of history's most extraordinary misfits by Jenny Draper. This is really fun—TikTok-sized portraits of history's interesting (not always good) characters. I knew about a lot of them, like Ellen and William Craft and Noor Inayat Khan, but a lot of the others, like Eleanor Rykener and The Chevalier d'Eon, are new to me. It's very fun and conversational.
Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom
Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!
When I saw this challenge, I knew immediately what I wanted to do for it. I've gotten really into Thai BL dramas the past six months, and have started following a ton of the actors on instagram. And also following their pets as well! So here's some of those :)