omens: transit bus (misc - citybus)
omens ([personal profile] omens) wrote2025-10-16 01:48 pm
Entry tags:

nothing in particular

There is something about me that really drives old people to initiate agonizingly oversharing conversations. Like, I'm kinda glad I could be there for the old lady in the grocery store who is still really going thru it with her mother's death just before 2020. And her declining mobility. The last old lady I chatted with at the lake was also having extremely valid big feelings about her declining mobility. And tbf, I do not have enough adults to talk to IRL so like. Maybe it works out for both of us?? Still, hard to guard my natural O_O face when I am feeling very "why are you telling me this, a complete stranger, please," when the conversation maybe should have ended with "after you!"

This woman, in particular reminded me of my grandma, who would just have really strong opinions about things and charge in with them like you had been arguing against them or maybe she could tell you intended to (whether you did or not, or even knew wtf she was talking about lol) - either way, she was already deep in the trenches 😅

My neighbour was another one, with the awful details of his cat's death. I mean. O_O He was obviously suffering, too. And also, I liked that cat a lot. He was very noisy and had much to say about us being in our his backyard.


These pics have probably far less broad appeal than northern animals, but when I was at the grocery store we were getting buzzed by planes and I was like "THERE ARE HORNETS IN MY TOWN!" and very upset I was doing the stupid shopping when I could be lookin at em. LOL. The grocery store is right beside the airport, so the planes all land and take off right over the parking lot. We don't often get fighter jets!

But!! I got outside finally (after hearing the hornets 4x and a globemaster once), and they were just doing a final lap before landing. You can see their little feetsies sticking out:

2 cf-18 hornets )

In unrelated news, one of my peppers started turning red ON THE VINE! I had lost hope completely and was going to bring them all inside anyway, just to see what happens. AHHH a baby đŸ„č



Off to go buy Pokemon Z-A with L! I did not like A-Z so I'm not going in on this with him, but he is very excited.

Ask a Manager ([syndicated profile] askamanager_feed) wrote2025-10-16 04:29 pm

should you reject candidates by phone or email?

Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

Should you always call to let a candidate know that they won’t be getting a job offer?

Here’s the context: I’ve gotten calls and emails letting me know when I wasn’t accepted for a position. And my colleagues and I all agree that we hate getting phone calls. It’s awkward! If you don’t answer the phone, you’re not going to get a voicemail telling you you didn’t get the job, you’ll get a voicemail asking you to call back. Which means you’ll get excited thinking you’re getting a job offer! And then you’re live on the phone with a hiring manager trying to manage an awkward conversation.

I’ve taken to emailing rejected candidates rather than calling, for these reasons. I take it as a kindness, rather than getting their hopes up for nothing.

But recently, a week after I sent the rejection, a candidate sent me a long email expressing her disappointment having gone through a long hiring process only to receive an email and not a phone call. I haven’t responded yet, but I plan to share why I send emails and thank her again for her time. What’s your opinion on the matter?

I answer this question over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here.

The post should you reject candidates by phone or email? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

MetaFilter ([syndicated profile] metafilter_feed) wrote2025-10-16 04:26 pm

Kryptos' fourth passage plaintext found.

Posted by msbrauer

The plaintext of K4, the fourth passage of Jim Sanborn's Kryptos sculpture outside the CIA headquarters, has been found, but not disclosed (gift link). (previously)

The sculpture was installed outside the CIA headquarters in 1990, and the first three passages had been secretly solved by an NSA team by 1992 and publicly by various people throughout the 1990s. But the fourth passage has remained a mystery, despite several clues being revealed by the artist over the last two decades. The plaintext, accidentally found among papers this month in the Smithsonian's vault by Jarrett Kobek and Richard Byrne, has been confirmed to be correct by the artist. But this solution threatens to disrupt a planned auction (gift link) of the solution and other papers related to the coding scheduled for November 2025.
Ask a Manager ([syndicated profile] askamanager_feed) wrote2025-10-16 02:59 pm

what did you learn from your parents about work?

Posted by Ask a Manager

Growing up, we pick up all kinds of lessons from our families about work, often without even realizing it. You might have learned from your parents to view all managers adversarially, or that gumption is essential to getting ahead, or that you should keep your head down and never speak up about problems or to be excessively deferential, or that messing up was unforgivable … or maybe there are things you wish you had learned from your parents but didn’t.

Let’s discuss in the comments. What lessons about work did you learn (or not learn) from your family, and how did those affect your career?

The post what did you learn from your parents about work? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

MetaFilter ([syndicated profile] metafilter_feed) wrote2025-10-16 01:57 pm

Creator of GZDoom says Stick a Fork in It

Posted by postcommunism

Drama in Doomworld! The (somewhat absentee) creator of GZDoom resurfaces to blast a super-shotgun of... nonsensical code changes? Is an LLM to blame? Are the unhappy members of the project simply haters who "will lose out in the end and be ridiculed"? Will GZDoom die and arch-villianously rise again as UZDoom? Find out in issue #3395: [Bug] Project management.
glitteryv: (Default)
Glittery ([personal profile] glitteryv) wrote in [community profile] recthething2025-10-16 10:04 am

Community Recs Post!

Every Thursday, we have a community post, just like this one, where you can drop a rec or five in the comments.

This works great if you only have one rec and don't want to make a whole post for it, or if you don't have a DW account, or if you're shy. ;)

(But don't forget: you can deffo make posts of your own seven days a week. ;D!)

So what cool fics/fanvids/fancrafts/fanart/podfics/other kinds of fanworks have we discovered this week? Drop it in the comments below. Anon comment is enabled.

BTW, AI fanworks are not eligible for reccing at recthething. If you aware that a fanwork is AI-generated, please do not rec it here
MetaFilter ([syndicated profile] metafilter_feed) wrote2025-10-16 07:01 am

The future is already here, it's just not even Derrida

Posted by chavenet

Money thinks. In fact, it out-thinks us, insofar as reflection is brought to it late, after its own cognitive operation has been long at work, and ultimately perhaps also in other ways, yet to be apprehended (from our side). It has already made sense of things, before we have begun to make sense of it. We have no grounds upon which to affirm, with confidence, that money and general intelligence can be finally distinguished. from Crypto-Current by the not uncontroversial Nick Land [Outsideness; ungated]
tsuki_no_bara: (Default)
cindy ([personal profile] tsuki_no_bara) wrote2025-10-16 01:19 am

i believe she was a sperm thief. a semen demon.

happy humpday, o my flist. i hope my fellow americans enjoyed the long weekend, assuming you got indigenous people's day off. (i did. altho to be fair the u gives us a lot of random holidays.) i took advantage by a. driving all the moving boxes up to my cousin's house so she could stuff them in the back of her garage - they're my sister's boxes and since neither of us has any storage space our cousin said she'd store them for us, b. going to ikea with my sister (i need to buy some bookcases and i just wanted to see them in person) (we did not have meatballs and also the little snack counter was closed so i couldn't even get a soft serve), followed by c. dinner and a movie (one battle after another which i really liked), and finally d. sitting on my ass watching tv and doing laundry. also i met a couple of cats who live on the first floor of my building. they're very friendly and one of them is THE SOFTEST.

what i spent a chunk of monday watching was wayward, which is on netflix and is DEEPLY disturbing. DEEPLY. it's about a school for wayward kids (hence the title) and it's got some very culty vibes and is set in 2003 for some reason and did i mention that it's disturbing?

i'm also watching the lowdown with ethan hawke and am enjoying it thoroughly altho i think the plot is starting to get away from me. it's on a regular channel so there's only one episode a week so i have to WAIT. on the one hand i don't mind that i can't binge watch but at the same time i want to know what's going to happen NOW. anyway it's much less disturbing and not at all culty which is refreshing and ethan hawke is fun to watch. his character is kind of a chaos magnet - his heart's in the right place but, well, chaos follows him everywhere. that part is very entertaining.
Ask a Manager ([syndicated profile] askamanager_feed) wrote2025-10-16 04:03 am

2 of my employees don’t get along, are gift cards taxable, and more

Posted by Ask a Manager

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


1. Two of my employees don’t get along

I am a manager of a few different groups, including a group of customer service representatives. This team seems to always have tension between two people. They both feel that the other isn’t doing enough or doing things incorrectly/not up to standard. They get in passive-aggressive arguments on Teams about very minor things like who will do the mail and who highlighted something on a sheet. I had to create a mail schedule and remove their access to items.

Now they are both refusing to speak with each other and continue to complain about each other. I have told them both that I can see what both parties are doing and will address high-priority items. I have asked them what they want the outcome to be when they come to complain to me about these petty minor complaints, and they don’t have an answer. I have explained that even though they don’t like each other, they still have to work together. Now the entire team’s production has gone down and this tension is taking over.

Any advice on how to handle it as a manager? Neither are doing anything outright that I could escalate to HR but this underlying tension is destroying morale, including mine.

You don’t need to escalate things like this to HR, even if it were worse. It’s squarely in your purview to handle as a manager, rather than being something HR should need to intervene on (although you could certainly ask HR for coaching to help you handle it yourself). But it’s definitely at the level where you need to act. Aside from the morale impact, it sounds disruptive and like a huge distraction.

Meet with each of them individually and tell them that they can feel however they want about each other privately, but effective immediately they need to treat each other with respect and professionalism. A good litmus test is that no one else on the team should be able to sense negativity from one of them toward the other. They don’t have the option of not speaking to each other; it’s a requirement of remaining in their jobs that they do not freeze out colleagues and will treat everyone with kindness and respect, period. The complaints about X and Y need to stop (be specific there rather than saying complaints need to stop in general, because at some point something might happen that you need to know about, but you can give examples of the types of petty complaints you don’t want to receive anymore).

And then you need to hold them to that, which means that treating this like a performance issue like any other where they’re held accountable to conduct expectations and there are consequences if they don’t meet them.

More here:

how to solve a conflict on your team

two of my employees won’t speak to each other

how do I manage petty behavior between two employees who dislike each other?

two of my employees don’t get along — is it just a personality conflict?

2. Are gift cards taxable income?

Your recent question about corporate gifts got me thinking … I’m a manager, and my current employer has forbidden me from giving gift cards as corporate gifts because apparently they are taxable income!

I was so surprised, every other place I have worked has given out gift cards freely. Is this a new thing? Does it apply to some places and not others? Do some companies just not care about tax law?

My employees are so disappointed, they love gift cards. :(

It’s not a new thing! Gift cards from employers to employees are indeed taxable income. The IRS considers them cash equivalents, regardless of the amount, and employers are supposed to include them on the tax forms they issue employees.

As far as I understand, this is at least partly because if it weren’t the case, employers could try to restructure how they compensate employees, with a larger piece coming through (untaxed) gift cards. It’s also because it’s your employer essentially giving you cash, gift card or not.

3. People using “rape” metaphorically

Twice in the last six months — and in entirely different and unrelated professional contexts — I’ve had men use “rape” metaphorically. Things like, “XYZ Company is raping me” or “This is exactly how we get raped by ABC client.”

Like many women, I have been sexually assaulted. The man who raped me later spent months stalking me, vandalizing my car, and threatening to kill me. He is the reason I now live in another time zone, far from friends and family. Although it has been many years, the impact of this event is understandably lifelong and significant. I deeply resent being reminded of it in such a casual, thoughtless way, and especially while at work.

Both times, unsure of what to say or how to react, I just pretended it didn’t happen. I was stunned the first time it (in person, talking with someone senior to me), and I honestly cannot believe it has now occurred twice (the second time was over Zoom with a large peer group; I’ve never met the man who said it). How should we handle this if and when it happens?

It can be really hard to know how to respond to something like that on the spot — not only figuring out what to say, but also juggling all the power dynamics and politics that can be in play in a work situation. But if it happens again, it’s perfectly reasonable to say, “I don’t think that’s the right language to use” or “That’s not the right word to use” or “I’m sure you didn’t mean anything by it, but that’s not the right language to use.”

4. How do you learn to manage people?

How do you learn to manage people? My boss and I recently talked about my taking on managing duties as our team expands, but he didn’t have any suggestions when I asked how best to prepare for that. It would be my first time in that role — is it a learn-by-doing kind of thing or can you actually learn in advance? (Or is my anxious perfectionist brain making it out be a bigger adjustment than it really is?)

Ideally from good mentors who can support you and who you can bounce situations off of … but, with or without them, often from messing it up and then learning from your mistakes. The people who go on to become good managers are the ones who know they’re going to mess up but commit to reflecting on the lessons they learn from doing that and incorporate those lessons going forward.

You can learn the basic “what does managing look like day-to-day” and “how should I navigate situation X or situation Y” ahead of time through classes and reading, but nothing comes close to what you learn when you’re actually doing it. (A lot of books and classes on management are more theoretical, so to the extent I could, I tried to make my book for managers focused on the nitty-gritty “here’s what this conversation sounds like” as much as I could, so that could be one place to start. If you happen to be at a nonprofit, the Management Center also runs classes based on the book.)

5. Contacting references if I’m not actively job-searching

I have a question about contacting references and when the appropriate time to do so is. You’ve advised that people should do it before they start a job hunt. However, do you have advice for someone who isn’t actively job hunting? Occasionally I’ll apply for a one-off job or two because it looks like something I would enjoy, but I am not regularly searching or desperate to leave my current job. In this case, is it okay to contact potential references after I’ve received a request for a first interview? Or should I do it on a regular basis (i.e., at the start of each year) just in case I end up needing a reference later?

It would be weird to do it at the start of every year whether you were job hunting or not, but it’s fine to wait until you’ve been invited to interview. The vast majority of the time, employers aren’t going to be contacting references before that.

The post 2 of my employees don’t get along, are gift cards taxable, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

china_shop: New Zealand painting of flax (NZ flax)
The Gauche in the Machine ([personal profile] china_shop) wrote2025-10-16 04:35 pm
Entry tags:

Write Every Day: Day 16

Welcome to Write Every Day! I'm [personal profile] china_shop, and I'll be your host for October Part 2! (Much, much thanks to [personal profile] cornerofmadness for sharing the month with me. ♥)

For the regulars who have been doing this a while and just want the details: I'm on NZDT (UTC+13), and I plan to post between 4pm and 6pm local time, which should line up pretty well with [personal profile] cornerofmadness's posts. Please comment on the most recent post, and specify what day(s) you're checking in for.

For everyone else: what is Write Every Day and how does it work? )

I go to London Writer's Salon Antipodean Writers' Hour on weekdays, and that usually starts off with an encouraging/inspirational quote. Here's one someone shared a while back.
"When you go mountain climbing, the first thing you’re told is not to look at the peak, but to keep your eyes on the ground as you climb. You just keep climbing patiently one step at a time. If you keep looking at the top, you’ll get frustrated. 
"I think writing is similar. You need to get used to the task of writing. You must make an effort to learn to regard it not as something painful, but as routine."
–Akira Kurosawa, via The Script Lab




My goals and check-in
This morning I wrote 1,028 words of flashfic for the current "Brilliant" round of [community profile] fan_flashworks. I'll finish it tomorrow, and then... has anyone seen Bon Appétit, Your Majesty who'd be willing to beta? :-)

Writing goals for the rest of month include not stuffing up my arms, so this afternoon I walked along a local mountain-bike trail, through the trees, then met up with my partner for hot drinks and chocolate brownie by the sea. The weather has been cold, wet and windy lately, but yesterday and today the sun finally came out. Yay!

Other goals for the next 16 days: finish my flashfic, finish a treat I started for [community profile] guardian_wishlist, sign up for Yuletide, and write something for the next (amnesty) round at [community profile] fan_flashworks. Other than that, I'll see where the spirit takes me.

How about you? Did you write today?
moontyger: (invisible sword)
moontyger ([personal profile] moontyger) wrote in [community profile] yuletide2025-10-15 06:36 pm
Entry tags:

TransTide 2025

What is TransTide?

Since trans headcanons and the portrayal of trans characters can be personal for many people, writers might be nervous to write trans headcanons without invitation. This mini challenge is for people to signal that they would love to receive trans headcanons, as well as to showcase their requested fandoms with canon trans characters.

Note that this exchange is open to nonbinary characters as well.

To participate, simply copy-paste the following into a comment:

AO3 name:
Letter link:
Likes and DNWs:
Fandom:
Characters:
Details:



If you post a fic for Yuletide with one or more trans characters, tag it with TransTide so people can find it easily
larryhammer: Chinese character for poetry, red on white background, translation in pale grey (Chinese poetry)
Larry Hammer ([personal profile] larryhammer) wrote in [community profile] yuletide2025-10-15 04:05 pm

Poems and Ballads in the 2025 tagset

Here’s a list of all poems (including ballads and traditional songs) in the 2023 tagset, with links to texts as best I can find, and a notation of original language if not English. Please let me know of any additions or corrections.

Allison Gross (Traditional Ballad)

Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came - Robert Browning

Flower Fairies - Cicely Mary Barker

The Epic of Gilgamesh [Akkadian]

Goblin Market - Christina Rossetti

Heer Halewijn (Traditional Ballad) [Dutch]

Her strong enchantments failing - A.E. Housman

Lady Isabel and the Elf Knight - Anonymous (Song)

Nibelungenlied [Middle High German]

The Odyssey - Homer [Ancient Greek]

The Romance of Silence [Old French]

Summoned By Bells - John Betjeman

Tam Lin - Anonymous (Song)

Two Loves - Lord Alfred Douglas

The Waste Land - T. S. Eliot

Wulf and Eadwacer [Old English] (original, modern English translations one, two, three, note)

è” ç­”èŻ— - 金蜊矎äșș (ćŒ˜ć†œ) | Poems Composed in Reply - Beautiful Woman in a Golden Carriage (Hong Nong) [Classical Chinese]


Bonus: poets for RPFing in the tagset include:
  • Richard I of England (in 12th Century CE RPF)
  • Lord Byron, John Keats, Percy Shelley, and Herman Melville (in 19th Century CE Literary RPF)
  • Enheduanna (in Mesopotamian RPF)
  • Christopher Marlowe (in 16th Century CE RPF and in Shakespeare RPF)
  • Ben Jonson and William Shakespeare (in Shakespeare RPF)
  • Edna St. Vincent Millay, Emily Dickinson, Gertrude Stein, and Sappho (in Women's Literary RPF).
isis: starry sky (space)
Isis ([personal profile] isis) wrote2025-10-15 04:40 pm
Entry tags:

wednesday reads and things

Hiya! It's been a while! I blame Yuletide. (The preparatory work is a Lot, even with all the comods and tagmods who do an amazing job of putting things together. So, make me feel like it was worthwhile: go sign up! 😁)

But I have been consuming media!

What I recently finished reading:

Chaos Vector and Catalyst Gate, the second and third books in the space-opera Protectorate series by Megan E. O'Keefe. I enjoyed the series overall, though I feel like O'Keefe slowed things down and lost momentum after the sequence of clever twists from the first book. The actual story behind the story turned out to be less novel and captivating than I was expecting, and although a few of the reveals were "a-HA!" great, some parts just felt as though the worldbuilding was being done on the fly, and the plot built around to justify it.

The writing occasionally felt a little fanficcy to me, like, "let's express found family sentiment here! Let's throw in an obstacle that turns out not to be one!" but overall it was easy to read and fairly entertaining.

Europe in Autumn by Dave Hutchinson, which like the first book of the previous series is a reread so I can read the rest of the books in the series. This one I first read in 2014, and as with the Protectorate books, I am stunned at how much I completely don't remember at all. Here's my review from 2014:
A whole lot of elements in this book hit my buttons perfectly. There is the alternate-history/near-future aspect, which centers on the interesting idea that the EU has not just fallen apart but splintered into dozens of tiny pocket states (and I have to say, there was a strange resonance to reading the bit about Scotland's explosive parting from the UK only a month after the real-world vote failed). There is the largely Eastern European setting, the Estonian and Polish and Hungarian characters, which read delightfully exotic to this American (though I wonder how it will read to my European friends!). The writing is strong, never getting in the way of the story but frequently delighting me with clever phrases and evocative images, exactly the style I love reading. And I adored the idea at the heart of the eventual reveal.

But...there were problems. The pacing was a little odd, slow to get going, with scenes (or parts of scenes) that did not obviously contribute to the story. Some, granted, played a part later. But it didn't feel tight to me; yet at the same time, there were all these questions that were answered in oblique ways, or left hanging such that clearly the reader was supposed to connect invisible dots, which made me feel a bit too stupid for the clever author - not as bad as Ken MacLeod's books make me feel (and there were bits of this that were reminiscent of his The Execution Channel, but along those lines. And the cool reveal I mentioned above comes practically at the end of the book - but when I hit it, I felt, that is what I want the book to be about! Not all this preparation stuff! And there wasn't enough about the cool part!
I mostly still agree with this, though I now think the pacing works better for me, maybe because I missed some details before or failed to understand how a later section made use of information from an earlier one. Also - there was an offhand bit of building up the undergirdings of this near-future world, the why of Europe having splintered into micro-polities, involving a pandemic of the "Xian flu" which "had brought back quarantine checks and national borders as a means of controlling the spread of the disease..." and I was, holy shit, this was published in 2014. (This fictional pandemic was 10-20x more deadly than Covid-19, which was certainly bad enough.) Other contributors to European disunity were "Economic collapse, paranoia about asylum seekers – and, of course, GWOT, the ongoing Global War On Terror," and about there I started thinking damn, if it wasn't for the Great Uniter (of everyone else against him) this would be playing out right now...and maybe it will play out here, as the states attempt to sort themselves by political party.

I guess the point is, I enjoyed reading this both as an escape and also as a a warning. On to the second book, which according to my notes I read in 2016 and liked even more (because it was mostly about the cool thing at the end of the first book)!

What I recently finished watching:

Two episodes of Resident Alien which was too cringe for me. I liked the concept, in theory? But the execution was excruciating.

Foundation S3, which - well, another way that civilizations crumble, I guess. I enjoyed it, particularly watching the various Cleons diverge from their assigned paths, but alas the problem with a generation-spanning epic is that the characters you liked in a previous season are (mostly) long dead now. Probably my favorite part was Bayta (and Toran, I guess) who felt very much like Star Wars characters to me.

What I'm still playing but not for much longer:

I'm about to start the endgame sequence (at least, that's what the quest screen tells me) of Dragon Age: The Veilguard. Time to kill those pesky gods!
alwaystheocean: black and white image of Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra, text: an almost all greek thing (Default)
alwaystheocean ([personal profile] alwaystheocean) wrote2025-10-15 11:12 pm

Adventures in psychiatric diagnosis

So as mentioned on Bluesky, I'm having a very exciting month! I got diagnosed with ADHD last week for a start! I had my first day on stimulants today!

Let me tell you, it's been stimulating!

Like, early doors obv, and it really could be psychosomatic, or a placebo, (...is that the same thing?) which is part of what I'm doing here, I always want to make more time for DW and I really would like to document the experience so why not combine the two.

Today I:
- made the conscious choice to turn off my alarm and go back to sleep till 11 (I'm off work right now, why deserves its own post)
- took my stimulant at around 11
- again, actively chose to stay in bed and dick around on my phone for an hour. This is pretty standard but today it didn't feel like I was stuck and dragging my heels the way it usually does, having made the decision to take it easy today, it felt like I was hurkledurkling and enjoying it. (We went to the Globe yesterday, which is always great but always fatiguing, plus a bunch of other stuff lately has also been a lot.)
- when I did decide to get up, it happened really quickly and easily, normally I get distracted, sit back down a lot, switch around between tasks in an entirely unproductive way, etc, but at 12ish I decided to get up and by 12:30 I was up, had eaten, dressed, made my bed, washed etc, and had settled down to the day's tasks, which is already wild, honestly.
- by 2pm, I had completed the jobs I'd set myself for the day. (Catching up with my accounts, which I was 6-8 weeks behind on, unpack from the weekend, and start laundry going.)
- While doing my accounts, I didn't get distracted by notifications on my phone or laptop once, which is W I L D.
- I then did half my physio exercises for a knee injury, another thing I normally drag my heels on and struggle to get done.
- I got a call from the garage, informing me my car was ready to pick up. I said "how's now?" and had left the house within 5 minutes, also unheard of, and was back home with my car with the whole thing start to finish having taken inside 30 minutes.
- I then cast about for something else to do, and decided to write my Dear Festividder, which, again, I did in one sitting, no distractions, and it was really easy.
- I then hung out my laundry (as soon as the cycle ended), put on more, made lunch, tidied up the kitchen, ate lunch, and read my book and did some knitting.
- by this time it was only 4pm, at which point I got a few bits done on my laptop, and headed out to the gym exactly at the time I meant to, and finished my physio before doing a workout with [personal profile] usuallyhats, headed home, showered, had a phone call with our mortgage broker, and made dinner.
- I've also done my sketch for the day (I've been doing a sketch a day journal since April) with no heel dragging, and written this entire entry.
- We also watched Crit Role Campaign 4 with dinner and then tea and knitting.

So that's my whole day. I don't intend to start journalling my whole life like this, tho I guess it does have its appeal. Written down like that I'd say the med is working. I feel fine. I feel *great* even, like I'm not fighting myself to get things done and like it's easier to focus on just deciding to do a thing and put things in order to do them. After breakfast this morning, I started playing a phone game but at some point while waiting for an ad, just got up and got on with my day. That is another pitfall that just...didn't happen to me today.

If things keep up like this I've got plans for world domination before the end of the year.
infinitum_noctem ([personal profile] infinitum_noctem) wrote in [community profile] fan_flashworks2025-10-15 06:30 pm

Kim Possible: Fanfiction: Brilliant Minds

Title: Brilliant Minds
Fandom: Kim Possible
Rating: G
Length: 45 words
Summary: The Possibles live up to their name.

Read more... )