Challenge 494: Brilliant

Oct. 10th, 2025 04:35 pm
teaotter: Parker, laughing at her phone (Parker laughing)
[personal profile] teaotter posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Our new challenge is:

BRILLIANT



As always, you can interpret the prompt literally or figuratively, in whatever way works for you.

Each work created for this challenge should be posted as a new entry to the comm. Posting starts now and continues up until the challenge ends at 4pm Pacific Time on Monday, October 20th. No sign-up required.

Mods will tag your work with fandom and challenge. When you've posted entries to three consecutive challenges, you will earn a name tag, and we'll go back and tag all your previous entries with your name.

All kinds of fanworks in all fandoms are welcome. Please have a look at our guidelines before you play. If you have any questions or concerns, don't hesitate to contact a mod. And if you have any suggestions for future challenges, you can leave them in the comments of this post.

You can view stats for [community profile] fan_flashworks entries and search and filter them via the Community Report and Creator Report. See our FAQ post for more details. (Three cheers for [personal profile] treonb! *\o/*)

Also, keep an eye out for the next [community profile] ffw_social post, which will go up in the next couple of days. If you haven't joined the [community profile] ffw_social comm, it's never too late to come and check it out. (Posts are locked, which means you have to join to see them.)

Guardian: fanfic: Retreat

Oct. 11th, 2025 11:10 am
china_shop: Close-up of Da Qing looking conspiratorial (Guardian - Da Qing conspiratorial)
[personal profile] china_shop posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: Retreat
Fandom: Guardian (TV)
Rating: G-rated
Length: 733 words
Notes: Much thanks to [personal profile] trobadora for read-through and feedback on an earlier version. <3
Tags: Gen, Da Qing, Napping spots, Very mild crossover
Summary: Hidden in the dim reaches of the SID library, behind stacks of old case files, is a portal.

Retreat )

Scream Park: fanfic: roll with it

Oct. 10th, 2025 01:58 pm
teaotter: Guo Chancheng holds up a sign: I have no idea what I'm doing (no idea what I'm doing)
[personal profile] teaotter posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: roll with it
Fandom: Scream Park (mods: you can use the board game tag if we have one)
Challenge: Garden
Length: ~300 words

Note: Scream Park is a fun board game where you're putting together a haunted house using the bits and pieces of previous haunts, and then trying to lure VIPS to come see what you've done.

Summary: It's a half-hour to opening, and things are still going wrong.

Read more... )

The worst part of October is over

Oct. 10th, 2025 10:23 pm
schneefink: Ambassador Yan staring out at enemy country (NiF ambassador Yan)
[personal profile] schneefink
I wrote my accounting/financial reporting exam yesterday, I'm so glad that's done. I'm cautiously optimistic but I'll find out in 6-8 weeks.

That means now I have time for all the things I wanted to do, especially fannish things! ...I thought and immediately felt overwhelmed because there's so much. In addition to playing more Silksong (and after that, Hades 2) there's books I want to read and things I want to watch, and fic I want to read and posts and fanworks I want to comment on and things I want to post and people I want to chat with and fic I want to write, and that's not even mentioning all the chores I've been putting off and RL social things. At least it's a better kind of stress ^^

No Fandom: Junk Journal Pages: Cycles

Oct. 10th, 2025 02:14 pm
drabblewriter: (Default)
[personal profile] drabblewriter posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Title: Cycles
Fandom:
None/original
Rating: G
Length: 3 junk journal pages
Summary: Hope in the cycles of democracy, justice, and progress.
Note: Quotes are adapted from a political coping conversation with ChatGPT. (I'm worried about getting hate for this, but I have to be honest. I would never claim something an AI wrote, least of all prose, as mine, but these lines were really meaningful for me in a time when I've been dealing with a ton of anxiety over current events.)

Read more... )
umadoshi: (autumn - jack o'lanterns 01)
[personal profile] umadoshi
It's a Friday off and I got some manga work done, so here's a bit of book-logging:

Her Halloween Treat (Tiffany Reisz) is a straightforward, enjoyable romance that has almost nothing at all to do with Hallowe'en. It takes place when the female lead is home for her brother's wedding, and his partner has always wanted a Hallowe'en wedding, so they're having a themed costume Hallowe'en wedding. It's also the female lead's birthday, but they checked with her and she's fine with it, so there's no drama there. Nothing of what I've just written is at all spoilery for the main plot or emotional arcs or anything.

The Drowning House (Cherie Priest) is almost not a ghost story at all--the supernatural elements are something else--but ghosts flicker around its edges. I enjoyed it, although there's a piece of the story that I feel the epilogue was intended to shine a light on and...it didn't do that. (Alternatively, that wasn't the author's intention, but if so, I feel like it should have at least nodded to that specific thing? Or something?)

Specifically [ROT13], gur rcvybthr vf n tyvzcfr onpx ng gur '50f jura gur gjvaf ner cynaavat gb xvyy jung'f-uvf-snpr, naq vg qbrfa'g fnl nalguvat nobhg jul Zef. Phycrccre (arneyl) frag ure fvfgre gb ure qrngu, be vs fur npghnyyl zrnag gb qb gung, naq qbrfa'g tvir nal uvag gung gung'f tbvat gb unccra, vagragvbanyyl be bgurejvfr. Vg'f whfg na vagrenpgvba orgjrra n cnve bs fvfgref jub qba'g ernyyl trg nybat nf gurl cercner gb qb gur guvat gurl'ir qrpvqrq arrqf qbvat.

It's one thing that I'm not really a horror reader but read the occasional horror novel anyway, and quite another that I'm deeply squeamish about eyes (and just about everything to do with eyes) and yet after someone recced it, I bought The Eyes Are the Best Part (Monika Kim) a while ago when it popped up on sale...and then proceeded to actually read it this week. This book is very clear from the cover alone that it involves cannibalistic eyeball consumption in loving detail. It is not the book's fault that I am 1000% not the intended audience and yet read the whole thing in one sitting anyway when really I should've just read the rec (whenever that was) and not bought the ebook, sale or no sale, never mind read it. (But I don't begrudge the actual sale, however much an on-sale ebook purchase actually helps an author.)

Now I'm taking a bit of a break from trying to read ~seasonally~ and am a few chapters into KJ Charles' All of Us Murderers.

I've also finally finished Daniel Sherrell's Warmth: Coming of Age at the End of Our World, which is...fine? I forget if I've actually mentioned that this book is a letter to a future child Sherrell may or may not ever have (a question he's wrestling with the ethics of), talking about the climate catastrophe and his work as a climate activist and how he tries to fortify himself and find meaning in the face of it all and what he hopes to learn/pass on to any child he may one day have.

"I bet I can do better tomorrow"

Oct. 10th, 2025 06:10 pm
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by chavenet

Sister Marion saw no contradiction between her vocation as a nun and her love of competitive running. "God expects us to live our lives to the fullest," she said in a 2010 video interview, "and if I was meant to be an athlete, I guess I should work at it." She found she could meditate more deeply while running than while kneeling in a chapel. Nor did she apologize for enjoying her life. from Marion Irvine, the 'Running Nun' Who Won Races in Her 50s, Dies at Age 95 [WSJ; ungated]
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher posting in [community profile] ebooks
 
Till "midnight." Still no clue to which midnight.

Filter genres and/or booksellers at top of page.

https://earlybirdbooks.com/deals/best-ebook-deals
 

Kathy Griffin returns!

Oct. 10th, 2025 03:46 pm
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by Dawn Trask-Dontell

Kathy Griffin: My Life On The PTSD List is Kathy's 21st (or maybe 22nd) comedy special. The nearly two hour set comes after years in the wilderness after being literally cancelled by the US government over a photo she took, and she has a lot to say about her experiences and of course lots of celebrity gossip. Content warning for language and detailed suicide attempt description. Through the lens of comedy, of course.

If you like Kathy, here's a playlist of all her specials.. Nearly 30 years of celebrity gossip and Kathy's humor.
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by joannemerriam

Help define the next chapter of Canada's AI leadership. Canadians, weigh in on what you think our AI strategy and priorities should be (h/t Halifax Examiner, from which I took the title of this post). You can also email ised-isde@ised-isde.gc.ca.

open thread – October 10, 2025

Oct. 10th, 2025 03:00 pm
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s the Friday open thread!

The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on any work-related questions that you want to talk about (that includes school). If you want an answer from me, emailing me is still your best bet*, but this is a chance to take your questions to other readers.

* If you submitted a question to me recently, please do not repost it here, as it may be in my queue to answer.

The post open thread – October 10, 2025 appeared first on Ask a Manager.

bluedreaming: (*killuazoldvck - dewi aesthetic stars)
[personal profile] bluedreaming posting in [community profile] fan_flashworks
Fandom: Game Loading - Long Qi
Mods please use the f: book (category) tag
Rating: T
Length: 100 words
Content notes: mild blood reference
Author notes: The title is from A God Asleep in a Garden by António Ramos Rosa, translated by Alexis Levitin. (extra rambles)
Summary: Midnight interlude during the Collapsed God arc.

Read more... )
[syndicated profile] metafilter_feed

Posted by chavenet

Lithium, it turns out, is a lot more than an entry on the periodic table or a component in photovoltaic array. Rather, it's Schrödinger's element: it may (or may not!) be a commodity; it is the stuff of dreams and already the source of nightmares. And extraction isn't just a question of a binary between simplicity and grandeur. It is inherently political, contested, from the mines and those who work in them, to the communities and sacrifice zones around them, to unevenly distributed local, national, and transnational dilemmas and geopolitical conflicts. [The Baffler; ungated]

A conversation with Thea Riofrancos, author of Extraction

Follow Friday 10-10-25

Oct. 10th, 2025 12:42 am
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith posting in [community profile] followfriday
Got any Follow Friday-related posts to share this week? Comment here with the link(s).

Here's the plan: every Friday, let's recommend some people and/or communities to follow on Dreamwidth. That's it. No complicated rules, no "pass this on to 7.328 friends or your cat will die".
tsuki_no_bara: (Default)
[personal profile] tsuki_no_bara
i know yom kippur was a week ago but i hope you've all been sealed in the book of life for a good year. [1]

last tuesday, over a week ago, i was waiting for the bus in the morning and got a text from my bank asking if i'd sent a money order for $485. i had not. so the bank froze my card and marked the money order as fraud, and i checked my email and learned that someone had signed up with some online money order company - with my name, my address, my phone number, my bank card - and sent $485 to peru. so i reported it as fraud to the money order place and later talked to a human at the bank who let me know they'll keep an eye on my account for ten days and send me a new card. have i gotten the new card yet? i have not. did i have to go to the bank over the weekend and wait in line to get actual cash from an actual teller like it was still the 70s? i did. OY.

wednesday night i locked myself out of my car and discovered i don't have a spare key, so my sister waited with me for an hour until the road assistance guy showed up and kind of broke me into my car. ALSO OY.

and then saturday my sister locked herself out of her house and the first set of keys i brought over were for her previous apartment because for reasons that escape me i kept them even after she moved out. >.< usually i keep people's spare keys in the junk drawer in my kitchen but the spare keys to her current place were in my sock drawer. because that makes sense. mom thought it was funny when we told her on sunday but at the time it really really wasn't. (we did however end the evening with chinese takeout and mission: impossible - fallout which brings us to the last two m:i movies which we saw in the theater what feels like a very short time ago.)

the night before yom kippur, when you stuff your face in preparation for your fast, we went to cousins j&r's house and had brisket, and the night of yom kippur, when you break your fast, we went to cousins m&e's and had the world's best egg salad. it's also the world's simplest egg salad - eggs, mayo, salt, pepper - but it is so, so good. cousin e can be kind of a bitch tho (is it intentional? is it just the way she is? who knows!) so we may find someplace else to go next year. and for some reason we always end up talking about high school - m&e met in high school when i think she contrived to sit next to him on the bus on a ski trip, and they and both their sisters were all only a few years apart so they remember the same people and the same teachers and my sister and i just do not care about the cousins' high school experience. and yet somehow we always end up there. but the egg salad, seriously.

the day of yom kippur, because we didn't want to sit in services the whole day, my sister and i saw downton abbey: the grande finale which i really enjoyed even tho i never watched the show. the stakes are high for the characters but not so much for the audience and the hats are fantastic and it's just a really nice movie. but oh my god elizabeth mcgovern's face looks old.

work is work. busy. occasionally one of the students in one of my groups will bring me a baked good because it's her turn to bring snacks to the group meeting and i guess she likes to bake. (she's a good baker. today the random baked good was a red bean cinnamon roll.) i submit all the students' expenses and i try to do it right away and as a result some of them like me. :D also one of the admins m is retiring next month and we had her party yesterday. her significant other showed up and it was nice to finally put a face to the name after hearing admin m talk about him for like five years. we got a banner that said "we were just starting to like you" and another that said "congratulations quitter" because that's the sense of humor she has. her so said some nice things and one of her pi's said some nice things and she said some nice things and a bunch of her students showed up and it was lovely. and! we had three cakes. and they were very good.

(it's been an unusually cakey couple of days.)

she told this story about how ten years ago or so when it was really snowing and her so came to pick her up, he told her they needed to stop for kleenex on the way home because she was getting a cold and sniffling everywhere and she said "there's a foot of snow on the ground, we are not stopping for kleenex", and so she just grabbed a box off her desk and took it home. and he asked are you allowed to do that? and she said i'll pay them back. so now it's ten years later and she's retiring and telling us this story and she pulls a box of kleenex out of a bag - "i'm paying you back" - and then pulls another box out of the bag - "and this is interest" - and maybe you had to be there but it was really funny. she is 100% not the person to go to if you need sympathy for anything but she's been at the u like twenty-three years and she's great for work related advice.

i guess this is now old news, but i still can't get over the french prime minister resigning after less than a month in office and less than 24 hours after announcing his cabinet (i read somewhere his cabinet picks were too left for the right wing and too right for the left wing). i think he was the third pm this year and is definitely the shortest serving pm since 1958. i'd say good lord, france, get your shit together but, well, you all know where i live and no one needs to get their shit together as badly as the us does.

costco has a new advent calendar that's five feet tall. that's a lot of chocolate.

if anyone out there wishes their romantasy novels were scented, i bring you the primal of blood and bone, which smells like garlic mayo. because, i dunno, hellman's really wants to reach the booktok crowd. i guess.

fred ramsdell co-won the nobel prize for medicine and as of this past monday the nobel committee was unable to get in touch with him to tell him so because he was "living his best life" hiking in the wilds of idaho. imagine going off-grid for a while and when you finally resurface you learn you've won a nobel prize. surprise?

the guardian knows what's what, as evidenced by this article about the mummy, everyone's favorite bisexual awakening movie.

and finally, rip jane goodall. she was one of the good ones. if you have netflix, if you skip to about 15:30 during this interview, you can hear her discuss who she'd want to put in a spaceship and send away from earth. and then skip ahead to 50:24 for some words of hope.

[1] on rosh hashanah it is written and on yom kippur it is sealed, who shall live and who shall die, who shall perish by fire and who by water, who by hunger and who by thirst, who by strangling and who by stoning, etc etc.
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Posted by Ask a Manager

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

1. My abusive former boss is my new editor

A beloved editor at my job left in July. This week, their replacement started — and it is Jane, my abusive former boss from five years ago.

Needless to say, I was extremely taken aback (and grateful I was working from home). I have decided to just wait it out and document anything bad that happens should it happen (as you pointed out in another post that I read yesterday, five years is a long time and maybe they changed). Jane won’t be my boss but can assign work to me.

But I don’t know how to talk to my coworkers about it when they ask about us working together before. I don’t want to poison the well against this person before I have any real idea what she’s like now, but I also am not someone who likes to be dishonest with people! Do you have a diplomatic script I can lean on? And yes I am looking for a new job!

Oh, no. On one hand, it’s true that you don’t want to poison the well and the relationship may be different now that Jane isn’t your manager … and there’s a risk that whatever you say could get back to people who you didn’t intend to hear it … but on the other hand, you probably feel some loyalty to the colleagues who are asking you about what it was like to work with her (and rightly so). In general, I think it’s fair to say, “She was tough to work for, but it’s been five years and the culture here and the reporting relationships are different. I’m keeping an open mind.” (For coworkers you’re very close to, you might say more.)

Also, the details of her abusiveness matter. Someone who pressured you with unreasonable workload demands/unrealistic hours requires different treatment than someone who, say, was verbally abusive and screamed at people.

Also, if you have decent rapport with your current boss, you might confide in her about some of your previous experience. Make it clear that you’re keeping an open mind, but there are some managers with whom you absolutely could share the details of your previous experience with Jane and ask for their help navigating it if those issues come up again.

2. I could hear my coworkers critiquing my work while I did it

My workplace recently required everyone to return to on-site work after 5+ years of most people being remote.

I work in a large room with others and we interact — I take your inputs and make outputs for someone else, etc. We are under some time pressure in that we have a set number of tasks to accomplish each day, but our workday has a lot of margin in it to make sure we can get done what we need to. In six years of working here, we’ve never run over or missed a deadline. Going back to all working in the same room has been a bit of an adjustment.

One day recently, I was tasked with a fairly complex set of inputs. Due to the complexity, I asked for a little extra time, and that was granted. However, a few people were waiting for me to finish and standing nearby. Conversation soon turned to ways to improve on what I was doing and how they could do it more elegantly and faster and how they would definitely have been done by now. I couldn’t see them, but it sure sounded like some eyes were being rolled. This was really distracting, and frankly demoralizing, since their tones were fairly condescending and I was already feeling pressured. Frankly, it made me slow down even more and flustered me enough that I made a few minor errors we had to go back and address later. However, I know the people in question well enough to be nearly 100% certain they didn’t realize I could hear them when they were saying these things. I expect they just forgot, hey, they aren’t on Zoom anymore where they can DM their complaints and no one is the wiser.

Is this “don’t talk crap about your colleagues when they can hear you; we aren’t all on Zoom anymore” worth bringing up in our weekly tag-up? I don’t want to be working in a big room where people are badmouthing their colleagues audibly, but I also think it might be a one-off and I’m being overly sensitive and don’t need to make a big deal about it since it’s over and done with. If it matters, the people in question are my peers.

If we could go back in time, I’d say to speak up in the moment. Even just “Hey, y’all, those comments are not helping me finish this — could you take that somewhere else?” probably would have gotten the point across.

Now that it’s passed, though, I don’t think you need to raise it since it’s only happened once. If it happens again, speak up in the moment — and if it keeps happening, then maybe it’s something to raise with the group more broadly. But I bet just addressing it in the moment if there’s a second round of it will take care of it.

3. Can you use PTO to go to Al-Anon meetings?

Is it legit to take leave to go to Al-Anon? I’m not worried for myself (I work too much anyway) but I wonder if it counts as medical/sick leave.

Good question. You could argue it’s similar to therapy, which is a valid use of sick leave, but it’s also a peer support program rather than a medical treatment program run by healthcare professionals. It’s certainly a health-related activity, though.

I think it’s legitimate, personally, although you’d need to read your own workplace culture to know for sure.

Practically speaking, they also probably wouldn’t know, if you just referred to it as a therapy appointment. I wouldn’t do it weekly, but every once a while? I don’t think it’s a big deal.

4. “Dear Sir or Madam”

I’ve read your guidance on the issue of “Dear Sirs” and how it is obviously outdated. I am curious about your take on “Dear Sir or Madam.” Without going into boring and irrelevant detail, there are many occasions in my particular line of work where I have to address a letter to an entity and I really do not have a contact name. There are a few other areas where we’ve (officially or not) moved to using they/their instead of a gendered pronoun. Using “sir or madam” is, obviously, binary. Am I left with “To Whom it May Concern” or is there another option?

To be clear, this isn’t true “correspondence” where I’m anticipating that an actual human being will reply, but I would still like to know that I’m not ignoring the identity of the ultimate recipient.

“Dear Sir or Madam” is better than “Dear Sirs” for obvious reasons, but in most fields it’s still going to feel pretty antiquated and stuffy. Often you can use a job title or department name (“dear hiring manager” or “dear editorial board”) or even the company name (“dear Taco Town”). If none of those work, personally I prefer “to whom it may concern” over “dear sir or madam,” but at that point it’s personal taste (and maybe with a nod to conventions in your field).

The post my abusive former boss is my new editor, can you use PTO to go to Al-Anon, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

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