Post-Anime NYC Reflections

Aug. 27th, 2025 01:51 pm
mozaikmage: (Default)
[personal profile] mozaikmage
After the Denpa/Kuma licensing panel at Anime NYC 2025, I wave goodbye to the acquaintance I’d first met at the manga freelancer mixer the day before and walk back to Penn Station alone.
Walking back to Penn Station alone is not in itself a novel experience for me: When I come up to NYC, it’s often to meet up with people who live in the city already. But still, something felt odd about this particular walk. As if I’d left a parenthesis open on my convention experience, and the weekend was still unfinished.
I thought back to my first convention at the Javits: New York Comic Con, 2012. My mother dropped me off by car because, at fourteen, I was still too scared to take the train up by myself. It was my second convention ever, the first being an anime convention at a local community college the previous year. I stepped out of the car next to the badge pick-up line to hear someone yelling “MASHA” at maximum volume— a friend I’d made at summer camp a few months prior, who I hadn’t realized was going to be at the show. (And was cosplaying God Tier Tavros. We’d bonded over Homestuck.) I spent most of my NYCC, and the three that followed, hanging out with my friends from summer camp and a bunch of other Homestuck cosplayers. I looked around the Artist Alley, I went to some silly fun panels like in-character Homestuck discussion panels or “Dos and Don’ts of Lolita Fashion”, and I spent my entire show surrounded by friends I’d made over our similar interests in...mostly Homestuck, but also 2012 Nerd Culture in general. I got to experience the warmth of belonging I mostly didn’t feel in my day-to-day life.
Since my school days, I’ve stopped going to conventions (or shows, as people “in the industry” call them) for pure fun, and started going to them for work, with a Press badge as part of the comics journalism websites I write for now. Or for the potential of future work: when Anime NYC started, I was two days out of my editorial internship with a manga publisher and was cheerfully telling everyone who asked how much I’d love to keep working in the manga industry. Which is 100% true: I loved every moment of my internship and spent a lot of it thinking “I can’t believe I’m getting paid to do this." I want to keep doing it so badly it aches.
It really is so much fun, to be on the inside of a convention instead of just a fan. Getting to skip the long line for badge pick-up, getting to sit in the Press Lounge (slightly more exciting than the staff break room at my day job), going to panels and not just knowing the people on the panel but knowing what they’re going to announce that day before they make their announcements (and not saying anything about it because I am soooo good at keeping secrets I promise.) I love seeing bits and pieces of the big machine that keeps fandom going, and knowing how everything falls into place to entertain hundreds and thousands of people for one overpriced weekend.
But going to the show For Work also made the show exhausting in a way shows weren’t when I was a student: the feeling of being constantly on the clock, frantically scribbling notes at panels I’d need to write up later, having my business cards at the ready for when I met someone I’d like to stay in touch with after the show. I spent almost all of my Friday in panels and running around from place to place, not getting any opportunity to check out the Artist Alley until the next day. I managed to miss seeing several of my online friends at the event entirely, and the friends I did see I could only overlap with for a few hours at most before we had to go to different panels or events, splitting up with an awkward, “hopefully see you later?” So I never really got to say goodbye properly to anybody because it was hard to be sure if we’d run into each other again later. 
And so, when I walked off to Penn Station alone, it was without having anyone to say goodbye to first. I wasn’t sure where my friends were: I think some had left already, and some were at the Seinen Manga panel at the Japan Society on the other side of Manhattan. The cell reception at the Javits is notoriously terrible, so there was no point in messaging people to ask if they were around. I stepped out of that giant glass fidget-spinner-shaped structure into the darkening night sky feeling that quintessential New York City anonymity. Just another nerd with an anime con badge, heading back to real life. 
I ended up getting dinner at Penn Station because every place I passed on the way was completely packed, and the timing of the trains worked out so I was scarfing down my fettucine alfredo on the train as it pulled out of the station. I kind of wished I’d been able to eat dinner with someone. And not inside Penn Station. That and the complete internet dead zone that happens between going down to the train platform and the train bursting out onto the surface again really accentuated the isolation.
Would I rather be going to shows like Anime NYC with my friends from school, to hang out in cosplay? Or do I like being an industry person, alone in the crowd of thousands, but with knowledge and access the masses lack? Or would I rather be even more than that: an invited guest, holding court at panels and signings for my scores of adoring fans? ...Well, it might be fun to try that last one someday.

Project 52

Aug. 27th, 2025 01:43 pm
mrs_sweetpeach: (Default)
[personal profile] mrs_sweetpeach
Click here for Week #34 )

My latest Guardian fanworks

Aug. 27th, 2025 07:31 pm
facethestrange: (guardian: weilan waking up)
[personal profile] facethestrange posting in [community profile] sid_guardian
All Weilan(ish): 2 novel fics, 1 drama fic, 1 drama drawing. :)

All Things Warm (200 words) by facethestrange
Fandom: 镇魂 | Guardian - priest
Rating: Mature
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Shen Wei/Zhao Yunlan
Characters: Shen Wei (Guardian), Zhao Yunlan
Additional Tags: Bloodplay, Blood Drinking, Scratching, Enthusiastic Consent, Tenderness, cntw because it is blood but it's not violence, Established Relationship, Shen Wei Needs A Hug (Guardian), Double Drabble
Summary: "I could just— Not stop."

In Bloom (228 words) by facethestrange
Fandom: 镇魂 | Guardian - priest
Rating: Mature
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Shen San/Shen Wei (Guardian)
Characters: Shen Wei (Guardian), Shen San (Guardian)
Additional Tags: Bittersweet, Fluff and Angst, Implied/Referenced Sex
Summary: Wei looks up at the branches and sees himself and Kunlun under a completely different tree — infinitely larger, completely bare, growing in the darkness that is the King of the Gui's real home. That used to be his home until Kunlun gave him this.

Tell Me I'm a Problem (250 words) by facethestrange
Fandom: 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018)
Rating: Mature
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Shen Wei/Zhao Yunlan
Characters: Shen Wei (Guardian), Zhao Yunlan
Additional Tags: Episode: e008 Zhao Yunlan Fails at Impressing Shen Wei, Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, the congee morning but Da Qing didn't come and Shen Wei didn't leave, Frottage, Non-Explicit Sex, First Time, Zhao Yunlan Being Zhao Yunlan
Summary: Zhao Yunlan should know better than try to talk nonsense when Shen Wei is moving against him like this, effortlessly undoing him, but he can't resist.

Taste by facethestrange
Fandom: 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018)
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Shen Wei/Zhao Yunlan
Characters: Zhao Yunlan, Shen Wei (Guardian)
Additional Tags: Fingers in Mouth, Comeplay, Come Eating, Hand & Finger Kink, this is Shen Wei's hand obviously, No Nudity, Explicit Sexual Content, (simultaneously), Fanart, Drawing
Series: Part 2 of Giving Zhao Yunlan more things to put in his mouth
Summary: Shen Wei putting more things in Zhao Yunlan's mouth.

Wednesday Reads the Side Catalogue

Aug. 27th, 2025 10:23 am
radiantfracture: Small painting of Penguin book (Books post)
[personal profile] radiantfracture
My recent reading features two short works by Tamsyn Muir, author of the Locked Tomb series.

I liked both of these books a lot: they seemed to me to feature Muir's strengths without some of the excesses of the Tomb books.

(I am aware that these excesses are precisely the source of delight for fans. I appreciate the meticulous artistry of the series; it's just that the particular qualities of deferral, substitution, and abrasion that are the formal and tonal preoccupation of these books, and that Muir wields so expertly and so persistently, are just not quite my tempo.)

The first book was Muir's 2022 novella, Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower.

This is a revisionist princess-in-the-tower story, so the pleasure comes not from a surprise twist but from seeing how the genre is executed. Very well, I thought.

(That said, there were two or three times I did exclaim out loud, "oh no!" etc. So it's not twistless.)

I liked it enough that when it was done I felt wistful about not being with the characters any more.

(Not in a sentimental way. Or yes, in a sentimental way, but not in a cute way. Or yes cute, but not cozy. Difficult and heartbroken and ridiculous. That way.)

ETA: I mean to say that genre-wise Princess Floralinda is solidly with Beagle's The Last Unicorn and Goldman's The Princess Bride as an anachronistic and self-reflexive take on the genre.

The second was a long short story, or maybe novelette? called Undercover, blurbed thus (in part): "A fresh-faced newcomer arrives in an isolated, gang-run town and soon finds herself taking a job nobody else wants: bodyguard to a ghoul. Not just your average mindless, half-rotted shuffler, though. Lucille is a dancer who can still put on her own lipstick and whose shows are half burlesque, half gladiator match."

What's more, I think it is better that that sounds.

[personal profile] sabotabby, I felt like you might enjoy both of these. Like you might start out thinking "Why did Frac think I would like this?" but then fairly rapidly think "OH" instead.

Anyway, that appears to be most of Muir's non-tomb catalogue, which is too bad. I wish there were more.

§rf§
oursin: Photograph of small impressionistic metal figurine seated reading a book (Reader)
[personal profile] oursin

What I read

Finished A World to Win, and decided not to go straight on to next.

Read Anthony Powell, The Soldier's Art (Dance to the Music of Time #8) (1966), which is a very different angle on WW2 as Nick Jenkins is stuck in a backwater with Widmerpool. A particularly grim episode in its much quieter register.

Started Elaine Castillo, Moderation (2025) which started out fairly strongly, then hit a saggy point, and then I discovered I'd been a bit misled over its genre position, and anyway didn't feel much like continuing.

Picked off the shelf Susan Kelly, And Soon I'll Come to Kill You (Liz Connors #5) (1991), from the period when I was reading a lot more crime novels like this. It's not bad - at least Our Heroine has a plausible reason for getting mixed up in criminal matters, as a journalist specialising in crime reporting, but she has the almost obigatory for period/genre cop boyfriend. This one was probably a bit atypical of the series as a whole as it involved someone with a grudge against her (there are several suspects for Reasons to do with past reporting etc) stalking her with malign intent.

Andrea Long Chu, Females (2025), because I'd found Authority interesting and read something about this but while I am all for rediscovery of the out-there voices of the 'second wave', riffing off V Solanas was just a bit niche.

Laurie R King, Knave of Diamonds (Mary Russell & Sherlock Holmes, #19) (2025) - Kobo deal at the weekend - seriously phoning it in - scraping the bottom of the barrel -

On the go

Val McDermid, A Darker Domain (Inspector Karen Pirie #2) (2008) for some reason Kobo were doing a serious promotional deal on the McDermid Pirie series at the weekend so I thought, why not?

Up next

New Slightly Foxed perhaps.

You Can Be Warm Without an Embrace

Aug. 27th, 2025 01:11 pm
magid: (Default)
[personal profile] magid posting in [community profile] agonyaunt
From the NYTimes’ Social Q’s; gift link here. Posting because yay for boundaries!

I recently saw an occasional collaborator — with whom I’ve built a nice rapport — at a concert. When I approached him, I instinctively went in for a hug. His body stiffened, and he kept his arms at his sides. I thought: Oh, this was a mistake! I backed off, and we exchanged pleasantries. But his response felt excessive and rude. Should I let this go?

FRIEND


It’s easy to feel defensive — or chastened — when we accidentally overstep with friends. But it is wrong to blame others for our unwanted touching. Your collaborator had no obligation to return your hug or to make you feel better about it. So, to answer your question: No, you shouldn’t let this go. Instead, rethink your instinct to hug people who you aren’t sure will welcome it.

Fantastic Four #394

Aug. 27th, 2025 05:10 pm
iamrman: (Mooreen)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Plot: Tom DeFalco

Script: Mike Lackey

Pencils: Paul Ryan

Inks: Danny Bulanadi


In which I make good on my threats of continuing with the DeFalco/Ryan run.


Read more... )

Free Throws

Aug. 27th, 2025 01:00 pm
[syndicated profile] cakewrecks_feed

Posted by Jen

A while back one of our readers suggested a fun activity for the next book tour: set up plain frosted cakes, and let contestants hurl various bits of candy, flotsam, and ribbon at said cakes. Whichever looks "best" wins.

Unfortunately, I think some wreckerators out there took this as career advice.

And believe me: there are no winners here.

Wow. I didn't know you could get that kind of distance out of mini marshmallows.

You know what they always say about edible splatter paint!:

Nothing, actually. They're all too busy trying to avoid the pieces with the poo-colored jelly beans.

Here's one that made use of the drop method:

Most of it even landed on the cake!

Of course, when you're lobbing across such great distances, some breakage is to be expected:

Boops.

You can see that a lot of throwing went into this one:

(Psst. Throwing up counts, right?)

Hang on a sec, something's wrong.

This one's making me hungry:

Mmmm.

Curse you, Wreckerators, and your nefarious mind-washing piles of

whipped cream and berry goodness!

I mean, what next? Will a professional chef on a national reality show get in on the act??

[holding head] We're too late! AAHHHH!!

Thanks to Jill N., Ashlee M., Cassie G., Julie V., Kimberly B., & Elizabeth L., who all get to be first in line come book-tour-throwing time.

*****

P.S., Speaking of books, I just found one right up our wrecky alley:

A Wizard's Guide To Defensive Baking

I don't even need a synopsis. I'm sold.

*****

And from my other blog, Epbot:

Wednesday reading

Aug. 27th, 2025 10:23 am
asakiyume: (Em reading)
[personal profile] asakiyume
Ah, four good things on the docket right now, two of which were recommended to me by other people.

1. Journey, by Joyce Carol Thomas

I was intrigued by [personal profile] rachelmanija's write up, and when I said so, she said, "You specifically would enjoy it." And I DO. The language is gorgeous, and the story moves along. Rachel quotes the final line of a sermon in her post, but man, that entire sermon! Here's more from it:
"Death dealing is the devil's duty.

"The devil's still swishing his long reptilian tail, hooding his ruby snake eyes, walking up and down seeing who he can devour, strewing banana peels on the steep path of life trying to see who he can trick into slipping. Be aware!

"Carry a light in your heart. Some of you're already shining like neon. Don't even need batteries;** you've got everything you require to keep the light going."

2. The Apothecary Diaries, vol 1, by Natsu Huuga, trans. Kevin Steinbach

My first-ever light novel! I got into it because of reading really intriguing fanfic of it on Mastodon; I loved the intelligent MaoMao in the fanfic, and lo and behold, the actual character is equally intelligent. Pressed into service as a poison taster to an imperial consort, she uses her knowledge of medicine to solve mysteries ... appears to be how it'll go. So far she has correctly diagnosed that it was the lead-containing face paint that was causing mysterious illnesses among some of the consorts and killing off their babies (who weren't wearing the face paint but were exposed to it via their mothers). Apparently there's also an anime.

3. Saint Death's Daughter, by C.S.E. Cooney

Continues to be just a breathtaking tour de force.
The twelfth and most abject of the Quadoni apologies was the truest word Lanie had ever spoken. It could be no louder than a breath; it was that fragile ...

All three sounds hung in the air, and together created a fourth sound, an overtone that hovered so delicately, so tremendously, over them all.

And burst.

And rained down such music that all their voices fell silent.

4. The Book of Questions, by Pablo Neruda, bilingual edition with both the Spanish and translations by William O'Daly

I became interested in this from going to an exhibition on endpaper art at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art that featured endpapers from a picture book version of this featuring only some of the questions.

The questions come in fours that form a poem. Sometimes one question in the poem stands out to me; sometimes the effect of the overall poem is what does it. Here's one where I love the overall poem, but especially the second question:

Do salt and sugar work
to build a white tower?

Is it true that in an anthill
dreams are a duty?

Do you know what the earth
meditates upon in autumn?

(Why not give a medal
to the first golden leaf?)

~ ~ ~

Trabajan la sal y el azúcar
construyendo una torre blanca?

Es verdad que en el hormiguero
los sueños son obligatorios?

Sabes qué meditaciones
rumia la tierra en el otoño?

(Por qué no dar una medalla
a la priemera hoja de oro?)


I haven't read them all but I see repeated words, themes--bees, lemons, yellow, tears, clouds ... I love it. I think creating a concordance could be a meditative thing to do.

**Queue Sia: "Unstoppable" 🎶I'm so powerful, don't need batteries to play🎶

Graphics - incorrect quotes

Aug. 27th, 2025 03:36 pm
meridian_rose: pen on letter background  with text  saying 'writer' (Default)
[personal profile] meridian_rose
Made for a Lands of Magic challenge, where you pair a screencap from one fandom with a quote from another.
I've always loved seeing and making the incorrect quote/texts from last night graphics on LJ/DW and Tumblr so this was a fun one! Each fandom for both the picture and the quoted text is listed beneath each one.
Read more... )

sozology

Aug. 27th, 2025 07:39 am
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
sozology (soh-ZOL-oh-gee) - n., the study of protecting the natural environment from the destructive effects of human civilization.


See also the Anthropocene and geoengineering. Coined in 1965 in Polish by geologist and ecologist Walery Goetel from Greek roots sōízō, to rescue/save + -ology, study of.

---L.

Extreme Justice #1

Aug. 27th, 2025 02:56 pm
iamrman: (Sindr)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Writer: Dan Vado

Pencils: Marc Campos

Inks: Ken Branch


The heroes try to explore their new headquarters, only to get attacked by more killer robots. At least, I think that’s what is going on. It is hard to tell with this art.


Read more... )

Wednesday Reading Meme

Aug. 27th, 2025 08:03 am
osprey_archer: (books)
[personal profile] osprey_archer
What I’ve Just Finished Reading

Ruth Goodman is always a good time, and her book How to Behave Badly in Elizabeth England: A Guide for Knaves, Fools, Harlots, Cuckolds, Drunkards, Liars, Thieves, and Braggarts is no exception to the rule. It does what it says on the tin, except for “Elizabethan England” read “England from the time of Elizabeth up to the Civil War (with brief excursions before and after),” but I suspect that the publishers believed, correctly, that their title would sell more books.

A fun fact: quoting Shakespeare would have been seen as proof of boorishness, as it showed that you spend time at the theaters down by the bear-baiting pits and the whorehouses, like a COMMONER. I also very much enjoyed the advice manual for young noblemen in service, which begged them to “try not to murder people.” You might think that goes without saying, but nope!

Jacqueline Woodson is also always a good time, although often in a mild to moderately heart-wrenching kind of way. Peace, Locomotion is an epistolary novel, told as a series of letters from a 12-year-old boy (nickname Locomotion) to his younger sister. They’re both in foster care following the death of their parents in a fire a few years ago. A book with sad moments but not overall a sad book; I particularly enjoyed Locomotion’s journey as a poet and his poetry. (There’s a companion novel-in-verse. Woodson is one of the few authors I trust with a novel-in-verse.)

Warning: you will walk out of this book with the song “Locomotion” stuck in your head.

Jane Langton is much more up and down than either Goodman or Woodson, but I’m happy to say Paper Chains is one of the ups. Evelyn has just started college, and the novel alternates between traditional narration and Evelyn’s never-to-be-sent letters to her PHIL 101 professor, on whom she has a swooning freshman crush. A good mix of college hijinks and intellectual discovery. Just kind of stops rather than having a real ending, but it works well for the story, which is very much about beginnings.

What I’m Reading Now

Onward in Gaskell’s Gothic Tales! We just had one of Gaskell’s trademarked “three people of three different faiths get together to deal with a problem, and it’s good for them all!” scenes. (Okay, I’ve only run across this twice in her work, once here and once in North and South, but it’s an unusual recurring theme.)

What I Plan to Read Next

I’ve decided it’s time for another Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn. I’ve already read A Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovitch and all three volumes of The Gulag Archipelago. What should I read next?
spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
[personal profile] spikedluv
What I Just Finished Reading: Since last Wednesday I have read/finished reading: The Woman Who Would Be King: Hatshepsut's Rise to Power in Ancient Egypt by Kara Cooney.


What I am Currently Reading: The Golden One (An Amelia Peabody Mystery) by Elizabeth Peters. I’m also still slowly working on my re-read of An Archer's Awakening (Of Crowns & Quills) by Casey Morales.


What I Plan to Read Next: Probably another library book as I’ve already had to renew them all at least once because Hatshepsut took me so long to finish.




Book 94 of 2025: The Woman Who Would Be King: Hatshepsut's Rise to Power in Ancient Egypt (Kara Cooney)

I finally finished this! It was really interesting. I didn't know anything about Hatshepsut or Egyptian politics of the day, so I learned a lot. One of the things that peaked my interest was something that the author said about women in power in the cover blurb and preface. It's not spoilery, since it's in the cover blurb and preface, but I'll put it behind a cut just in case

spoilers )

I really enjoyed this book (even though it took me forever to read; that's the way of non-fiction for me) and would recommend it if you're interested in the subject. I'm giving it five hearts.

♥♥♥♥♥

(no subject)

Aug. 27th, 2025 11:31 am
angrboda: Viking style dragon head finial against a blue sky (Default)
[personal profile] angrboda
I. Pictures from my summer holiday have been posting every other day over on my pillowfort. I wanted to have them post between 11 and 12 midday. This is not what has happened. I don't know why Americans can't just use a sensible way to read a clock. Oh well, it's not a disaster. I have enough posts scheduled that the last one will be in end September. Husband also gave me some photos that he took and I'll put up some of those as well.

II. Luna's appetite is yo-yoing a bit. After we came back from our holiday it started getting difficult, and then the other day she had another little hairball, and now she's eating well again. I really think the issue is hairball related rather than kidney issues, but we'll see. She's got a vet visit scheduled soon to have her teeth checked and the vet wanted to try and get a blood sample for her kidney values at the same time. It's easier for everybody, especially the elderly cat, if we can do both these two things at the same time without having to knock her out.

III. Still very motivated about the new bed project in the garden, but Husband says wait until later in the year for a higher chance of success and also because he says after we've had some proper rainy days, it'll also be easier to dig it up. So I'm trying to keep up steam here until I can order the plants and start digging a big hole! I kind of want to order them now just because I'm excited, but since I can't plant them anyway that would stupid. Plant nursery people can look after the same pots way better than I can in the meantime.

IV. Summer holiday has come to an end. Back to work kicking and screaming as per usual. Well, actually, I have seriously tried really hard not to complain too much about it this year, but some grump slipped out Sunday evening and Husband laughed at me.

V. Holly is having a nap on my lap at the moment and she's dreaming something. It's immensely cute, but the twitching tickles madly.

VI. Sunday also marked the return to watching opera from the Met in our little cinema. This one was The Barber of Seville which was very good and funny. I've been listening to bits of it again since. There are a couple of titles in the program for the next season that we would like to see, but some of them unfortunately won't be possible. These are only shown one time, so it's not like you get a choice. Rigoletto coincides with a family event, and Tristan and Isolde is shown on a Friday because it's so super long (5 hours!) AND we already have tickets for the music house that same evening. Neither of us are really up for that kind of marathon! The Met does have it's own streaming service with over 800 titles on it and it's not even very expensive, so we've been considering trying that out.

Doom Patrol (1987) #5

Aug. 27th, 2025 12:16 pm
iamrman: (Chopper)
[personal profile] iamrman posting in [community profile] scans_daily

Writer: Paul Kupperberg

Pencils: Steve Lightle

Inks: Gary Martin


The Doom Patrol intercepts a message that seems to suggest that Niles Caulder is still alive.


Read more... )

(no subject)

Aug. 27th, 2025 01:46 pm
taelle: (Default)
[personal profile] taelle
 My sister's family visited for three weeks. It was lovely, busy and full of nerves about them crossing the border, but it turned out OK. I last saw baby niece in 2023, that's almost half of her life back. She's five and a half now - not a baby at all any more, but a very interesting person. We had philosophical conversations about stars in the sky and plants growing from seeds and about who she wanted to be when she was little and so on. They left yesterday morning and I miss her already (which is compounded by the fact that our government is now trying to stop us from having audio and video calls to other countries, all for our safety. My sister and I spent half an hour today looking for a video call messenger that would work).

Read-in-Progress Wednesday

Aug. 27th, 2025 06:50 pm
geraineon: (Default)
[personal profile] geraineon posting in [community profile] cnovels
This is your weekly read-in-progress post for you to talk about what you're currently reading and reactions and feelings (if any)!

For spoilers:

<details><summary>insert summary</summary>Your spoilers goes here</details>

<b>Highlight for spoilers!*</b><span style="background-color: #FFFFFF; color: #FFFFFF">Your spoilers goes here.</span>*

Reading Wednesday

Aug. 27th, 2025 06:41 am
sabotabby: (books!)
[personal profile] sabotabby
Just finished; Nothing, my life has been clown shoes lately.

Currently reading: Careless People: A Cautionary Tale of Power, Greed, and Lost Idealism by Sarah Wynn-Williams. This is so horrifying. Obviously, the genocide and destruction of the political process is the most horrifying thing about it, but the neat thing about evil is that it's fractal, and the interpersonal stuff is much more visceral. Like Joel Kaplan sexually harassing Sarah shortly after she's almost died in childbirth (because, yeah, you can be one of the top people at Facebook at the height of its success and almost die in childbirth. America!). Or the weird obsession Sheryl Sandberg has with getting women to nap with their heads in her lap on her private jet. These people are so creepy and awful, and nightmarish as you think Mark Zuckerberg is, this memoir depicts him as much worse than that.

Which isn't to say that Sarah is great—she paints herself as a naïve idealist, but the scale of awful at this company is such that after a certain point, you kind of roll your eyes every time she notices that it's bad. But that's storytelling for you. Highly recommended.
spikedluv: (summer: sunflowers by candi)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I hit Price Chopper and the Pharmacy while I was downtown and got in a walk around the park. I had to be to mom’s by 10am because her generator guy was coming to do the annual maintenance.

I did two loads of laundry (both washed, dried AND folded), hand-washed dishes, went on three short-ish walks with Pip and the dogs, baked and cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, swept/swiffered/mopped the hallway/laundry area (getting a new throw rug for in front of the door will do wonders for my motivation), scooped kitty litter, and showered.

I started the next Amelia Peabody, watched some HGTV programs, and added ~600 more words on my SFBB fic!! I rarely break 10,000 steps these days, but today I got over 11,700!

Temps started out at 53.8(F) and reached 75.0. It was mostly sunny with quite a breeze. It was lovely until the sun went behind a cloud.


Mom Update:

There’s good news, and bad news. more back here )

LJ IDOL WEEK 7

Aug. 27th, 2025 11:06 am
xeena: (Default)
[personal profile] xeena
This is part of an intersecrtion. My prompt was OXYTOCIN LOOP. [personal profile] inkstainedfingertips was my partner and I would recommend reading his amazing entry first. You can find it here - I would recommend reading his first! https://inkstainedfingertips.dreamwidth.org/6834.html


[personal profile] inkstainedfingertips, thank you so much for being the best partner I could have asked for. This entire experience was also just the absolute best.thanks to you! (LONG LIVE PEPSI COLA AND TIRAMISU 💋)


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It's the longest night of the year.

Winter solstice.

Her birthday.

Their birthday, technically.

Just because someone isn't around physically, doesn't mean it stops being a birthday.

Even if they were never actually here.

He was still with her, after all.

No matter how brief their time together was.

Vanishing twins, the medical professionals call it.

She's always hated that description.

How the hell does a fetus vanish?

They make it sound like her mother's womb was a stage magician's cabinet.

She jokes about it, of course.

"I ate my own twin!

She figures she earned the right to do that, to ignore the loss she always felt but can never fully explain.

The way long before she knew, she was drawn to twins, would tell people she was one.

"I have a brother, but he's not here right now!

Later when she found out the truth, she would always think of him as being the voice in her head, part of her thoughts, her north star guiding her.

Until life, and the loneliness that came with it led her into the arms of other things that steered her further away from her true north.

Being described as an only child has never sat right with her.

How is someone who was made to be part of a pair be supposed to be defined in singular?


But loneliness followed her, her entire life. A dogged stalker, a constant preseence, a dull ache in her ribs, a fog thick as cream, asphyxiating her.

Her hands are shaking as she stands on the bridge and pulls out a blue pill from the bag decorted with yellow smiley faces.

She dry swallows it, experienced enough by now, scoffing at the decal on the baggie. That fake smile feeling like a taunt.

"Happy fucking birthday," she scoffs, her voice carrying on the wind that whips her hair out around her like a fan. A shock of red against a backdrop of greys and white.

"Is there any reason to live?" she silently asks the universe, willing someone or something to give her a sign.

Snow is falling softly, and below her is the river, not frozen over.

Not yet.

Still time for her to do it.

Her feet are on the ledge.

She knows all it would take is a few minutes.

To be free.

To leave this world on the day she came into the world.

She's always fancied that symbolism.

Especially as she's never really been quite sure she should be here at all.

Not after her brother vanished, leaving her the only survivor of her mother's womb just by chance.

Not after her best friend ate her father's gun while she survived near death experiences more times than she could count.

Her latest one; almost overdosing, another near miss.

She survived.

Again.

"You must have a guardian angel," the doctor told her, disapproval for the cause of her near death experience evident on his face as he scanned her records which told him this wasn't her first rodeo. "Technically, you should have been a goner."

She responded with silence, unable to voice how survival can sometimes feel like a punishment.

Like the tag line of a movie she's always loved.

(WhO WILL SURVIVE AND WHAT WILL BE LEFT OF THEM?)*

Looking at the water swirling beneath her, she wonders, not for the first time, how or why she's lasted this long.

Would she survive if she just stepped off the bridge right now?

"You don’t want to do this," a voice inside her sounds off loud and clear, and she wonders if its the pills taking effect already.

They were supposed to be the good stuff, according to her dealer.

“You don’t know what I fucking want.”

"I do. We’re the same, you and me. We’re one."

“Shut up. You don’t know anything,"
she voice it to no one and nothing she can see but the night, voice breaking as unwanted tears sting her cheeks, her hand clutching the freezing railing so tightly it looks as though bone will break through skin.

But she knows it's the truth.

For someone so eager to end this, she still can't seem to let go.

She's never been able to.

Maybe there is a reason she always survives.

A gust of wind, sharper than the last spears her forward, and for a moment she isn't sure what she'll toss into the void; the baggie or herself.

Then music fills the air with a song that once brought comfort and joy to her, and the night itself answers the question for her>

And then she knows what she has to do.

"Take me by the hand
Take me somewhere new
I don't know who you are
But I... I'm with you
I'm with you"



The lyrics ring out as the car glides by like a shark in the dark sea, and in one fluid movement, she closes her eyes as she drops the pills.

She open her eyes, watches as it falls. Yellow smiley faces hurtling towards a watery grave.

The world is quiet up here and it's a long way down.

She leaves the bridge only when she's sure the abyss has swallowed the poison she tossed into it.

The voice in her head is quiet again as she steps back from the ledge.

As her feet finally meet the sidewalk, she stands for a moment, enjoys the feeling of her feet planted firmly on the ground then turns her gaze up towards the full moon and the glittering diamonds that shine on pitch black velvet.

She finds the one she's looking for with ease.

Staring up at the North star, for the first time in a long time, she smiles.

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fiction with elements of non-fiction. this is based on Vanishing Twin Syndrome.

* (WhO WILL SURVIVE AND WHAT WILL BE LEFT OF THEM?) is the tag line of the 1974 movie, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.
** the lines in italics are from inkstainedfingertips piece.
*** the lyrics are from the Avril Lavigne song "I'm with you."
beanside: (Default)
[personal profile] beanside


And sometimes, Ghost's music boils down to Tobias being a naughty boy. "And then, we fucked, in the church on the altar, hehehe." But goddamn, it's catchy.

How are you all this Wednesday? I am in pain. I was slicing a tomato and caught the tip of my thumb. It's still in the throbbing stage. It didn't need stitches, but it was a nice little cut. The new Wusthof steak kinves are really, really fucking sharp. Fortunately, I don't really use the tip of my finger for anything, but it's still a bit painful. That'll learn me to be more careful with those knives. Jess sliced their hand on one almost immediately after we got it, cutting a bagel, so I'm not in bad company.

Yesterday was a busy day, but not horrible. Plus, we were looking for vacations, and we settled on one, so I'm excited.

We've been talking about doing a short cruise to see if we like it before we jump into things. But there's really no short cruises. They used to do a 2-3 night "Cruise to nowhere," where the idea was to enjoy the amenities and just get your feet wet, but they seem to have done away with them. The shortest one I found was a 5 day to Bermuda or a 6 day to the Bahamas.

The problem is that I hate hot weather, I don't really like beaches and as a queer couple, I'm leery of going to places that don't have protections.

So, we decided to bite the bullet and do a 7 day cruise, this one to Alaska, where Jess has always wanted to see.

In May of next year (Which is super early in the season, so it'll still be a little chilly) we're going to head out to Vancouver to get on the Holland America Konigsdam for a 7 day round trip to Ketchikan,Skagway and Juneau. I'm really excited about it, and have begun doing research.

We're staying in the Pinnacle Suite, which is kind of the owner's suite and is way more than we actually need, but if you're going to do it, you might as well do it right. It's a once in a lifetime experience, and we're going to have fun.

I got our hotel room for the night before the cruise, so now I need to figure out after and then the dreaded flights.

This is a big week of games, starting tonight, then Friday, then Saturday, then Sunday! We've been so bereft of games lately that it's very exciting.

Work should be a little bit quieter, though the whole insurance thing is driving our calls up. We'll see!

And on that note, I'm going to hop off and start getting myself together. I got up a bit early today because I was awake at five, and if I drifted off for half an hour, I'd just feel extra tired. Everyone have a wonderful Wednesday!
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