You don't have to fly into the sun

Saturday, October 18th, 2025 10:32 pm
sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
[personal profile] sovay
Having somewhat wiped out my reserves with the glories of Corporation Beach, I only made it out to the salt marsh for about an hour between low tide and sunset, which was still great. I saw the copper-glaze glint of fiddler crabs in their burrows in the crenellated banks of mud. I saw the dark-fringed silhouette of an osprey sailing over the green-rusted brushes of cordgrass and salt hay, where they nest with the encouragement of the Callery Darling Conservation Area which includes the wetlands around the Bass Hole Boardwalk. The engine noise floating over from Chapin Beach turned out to belong to a powered paraglider who so annoyed me by effectively buzzing the boardwalk that I let all the other sunset viewers with their phones out enthusiastically take pictures of him. The long-billed, long-legged, unfamiliarly tuxedo-patterned shorebird stalking the deeper edges of a sandbar looks to have been a vagrant black-necked stilt. With the tide so far out, I am afraid there was little chance of another seal.

Take a little comfort from the little you've done. )

After which I ate dinner, read a little, and passed out for about an hour and a half. Family and friends have been sending me pictures of No Kings, the necessity of which I hate and the turnout of which I cheer. My mother told me about her favorite sign she did not carry: a photograph of the butterfly, the only orange monarch we need. I loved everything about the spare, specific exploration of marginalized languages and historical queerness in Carys Davies' Clear (2024) until the slingshot of the ending as if the author had lost a chapter somewhere over the side in the North Sea. Since the Cape is still autumnal New England, I am drinking mulled cider.

WoodRat of Leave

Saturday, October 18th, 2025 07:19 pm
[personal profile] ismo
Neither one of us felt as good today as we'd been hoping to. I had an interrupted night and had to take a nap, which soaked up much of the morning. It rained in the night, but I enjoyed hearing it. The day was pleasant in a cloudy, damp, autumnal way. We had planned to go to the parish celebration of their 100th anniversary. The bishop was going to be there, followed by a festive dinner of who knows what--hopefully not pizza, maybe spaghetti, the other church basement go-to. The event itself wouldn't have been big fun, but we wanted to see people and hear about the history of the parish as promised. The Sparrowhawk couldn't go, obviously, but he had been hoping I might make it, and then I could tell him about all the interesting parts. However, I just didn't feel up to it. Covid has deprived us of so many little pleasures in the last few years. I wasn't expecting this. But I suppose those are famous last words that could be applied to many an older person's experience!

Nonetheless, this has turned out to be quite a happy day! Staying home from the anniversary celebration meant that I was home when Dr. Nurse texted to say she was making some home-cooked ramen, good for colds, and would like to bring me some. Once I made sure she knew of the potential contagion, I was delighted to accept her kindness. I came out on the porch to accept a container of this treat, and she imparted the second part of her news: she is 12 weeks pregnant! This made it doubly painful not to be able to hug her, but I jumped up and down with joy at a discreet distance. When she got home, she sent me the sonogram. There's another little fledgling coming along to keep Bird Baby company! Callooh, callay!
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Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

Second paragraph of third story in The Casuarina Tree (“The Outstation”):

Now the prahu [boat] appeared in the broad reach. It was manned by prisoners, Dyaks under various sentences, and a couple of warders were waiting on the landing-stage to take them back to jail. They were sturdy fellows, used to the river, and they rowed with a powerful stroke. As the boat reached the side a man got out from under the attap awning and stepped on shore. The guard presented arms.

Second paragraph of third chapter of The House of Doors:

‘I have read your book, Mr Willie,’ said Ah Keng.

I enjoyed both of the previous books that I read by Tan Twan Eng – The Garden of Evening Mists and The Gift of Rain. Like The Gift of Rain, his latest, The House of Doors, is mainly set in Penang, which is a place of fascination for me as it is where my grandparents met and my father was born. As I started The House of Doors, I realised that it rather depends on knowledge of Somerset Maugham, one of many well-known writers whose works I had never read, so I got hold of The Casuarina Tree, his collection of short stories set in Malaysia, and finished it before I finished The House of Doors (it is slightly shorter).

The Casuarina Tree, published in 1926, is not one of Maugham’s best known books – it’s not in his top twenty according to Goodreads or even in his top forty, according to LibraryThing. But it is set in Malaya after Maugham’s visits there in 1921 and 1925, six short stories of between 34 and 45 pages each, with a prologue and afterword. They are all about expats with dreadful secrets, whose character flaws may become public or may remain hidden, with the moral depravity of the English brutally exposed as a result of contact with the human and physical geography of Malaysia.

The most successful of the stories is “The Letter”, based on the real case of Ethel Proudlock who shot and killed her English neighbour who, she claimed, was attempting to rape her. But they are all effective, brutal vignettes of colonial life.

Supposedly Maugham became persona non grata in Penang because too many of the episodes that the stories are based on were recognisable. That sounds like a marketing myth to me – they may just not have liked him very much. Anyway, you can buy The Casuarina Tree here, though it’s easy to find for free on the internets.

There is one person who pops up both in The House of Doors and in my grandmother’s memoirs of Penang a few years later, the lawyer Hastings Rhodes, who was the state prosecutor in Ethel Proudlock’s trial in 1911 and then hosted my grandmother for dinner just after she and my grandfather got engaged in 1927. She reports that “Hastings Rhodes drove me home and professed to be heart-broken at my engagement, but I took that with several grains of salt.” He was recently divorced, and the same age as my grandfather, and died unexpectedly in 1929.

The House of Doors is about Lesley Hamlyn, living in an unsatisfactory marriage with her husband in Penang in 1921, and hosting her husband’s old schoolfriend Willie Somerset Maugham and his secretary/lover Gerald Haxton, while also looking back on her own friendship with the Chinese revolutionary Sun Yat-Sen ten years before, and coming to the realisation that both she and her husband are emotionally involved with Chinese men. There is a framing narrative set in South Africa, and Ethel Proudlock’s murder trial gets a look in too.

There is a lot here, and I didn’t think that Tan Twan Eng juggled the balls of plot and character as well as in his other books. When a story is based on real events, authors sometimes let their imagination get fettered by the historical record, and I felt that had happened here. Oddly enough Maugham, the person about whom most is known, comes across as the most well-rounded of the characters, while Lesley, the ostensible protagonist, felt a bit flat to me. But other people seem to like it, so perhaps I was just in the wrong mood. You can get The House of Doors here.

oursin: Cod with aghast expression (kepler codfish)
[personal profile] oursin

When I glanced through Mr J Jones' review here of Sami artist Máret Ánne Sara’s Turbine Hall installation (spoiler alert: he did not like it), my thought was, there is no point in asking Mr Jones for an opinion on anything which does not feature nekkid laydeez, because I can remember him being snotty about a Barbara Hepworth exhibition. (And we are not that keen on his opinion on the nl's, either.)

Anyway, two correspondents take to the letters column to have a go at him:

completely misses the point. The land the Sámi live in is “quite big”, just as the Turbine Hall is in Jones’s words, but the Sámi do not take over the entirety of their landscape. They live within it. The “fort” is not a place to “hide”. That is a city-boy reading rather than a deeper understanding of the ancient methods that Sámi families use for herding reindeer in the vastness of their lands, combined with the political realities that surround them. Jones is too close to playgrounds and not close enough to the realities of the Sámi and northern political history.
***
I was appalled by Jonathan Jones’s review.... There is something incredibly unique and, in the end, pristine about existence in these Nordic villages. Maybe it is the ultimate quiet that falls upon the forests at times. Everyday life is not silent, but the forest silence after a day’s work is peace. Is art not art unless it includes some gore, an exhibit of violence? The artist has captured the ordered existence necessary for survival in harsh conditions and the peace that comes from living with nature rather than against it.

Books Received, October 11 to October 17

Saturday, October 18th, 2025 09:11 am
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Seven books new to me. Well, six and one replacement. Four fantasy, one historical, one horror, one science fiction. Two appear to be part of series.

Books Received, October 11 to October 17


Poll #33737 Books Received, October 11 to October 17
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 40


Which of these look interesting?

View Answers

Boys With Sharp Teeth by Jenni Howell (July 2026)
4 (10.0%)

Behind Five Willows by June Hur (May 2026)
13 (32.5%)

Daggerbound by T. Kingfisher (August 2026)
26 (65.0%)

Heir of Storms by Lauryn Hamilton Murray (June 2026)
2 (5.0%)

City of Others by Jaren Poon (January 2026)
17 (42.5%)

Starry Messenger: The Best of Galileo edited by Charles C. Ryan (November 1979)
6 (15.0%)

How to Lose a Goblin in Ten Days by Jessie Sylva (January 2026)
15 (37.5%)

Some other option (see comments)
0 (0.0%)

Cats!
27 (67.5%)

(no subject)

Saturday, October 18th, 2025 12:32 pm
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
[personal profile] oursin
Happy birthday, [personal profile] tavian!

And deregulate the couple at the bottom end

Friday, October 17th, 2025 11:20 pm
sovay: (Otachi: Pacific Rim)
[personal profile] sovay
The very first thing that happened when I climbed over the huge barnacle-scaled chunks of granite and weathered pilings that form the breakwater at the western edge of Corporation Beach was that I saw a seal: sleek, dulse-dark, bobbing its head in the waves not more than two breakers offshore. It looked at me. I sang it the seal-calling song learned from Jean Redpath. If I had just spent the afternoon till sunset sitting on the breakwater and watching the tide come in serpentine-green under thick foam and burst into spray that showered me to the shoulders of my coat, it would have been a wonderful time.

Penny on the water, tuppence on the sea. )

Being now officially unemployed after an internal ten and really fifteen years at the same job and having Robert Carlyle on my mind, I should probably just rewatch The Full Monty (1997). Tomorrow I plan on a salt marsh.

BrambledBriar of Leave

Friday, October 17th, 2025 06:55 pm
[personal profile] ismo
Yesterday, the Duchess surprised me by very kindly asking if I had any errands that needed running. The Sparrowhawk had a prescription that needed refilling, but alas, by the time it was ready, the Duchess was already back at home. She said they were coming back today to see Dr. Nurse, so they might be able to get it this morning. Today, they were running late, and she texted to ask my status. I was just in the process of re-testing myself, so I told her I'd know in ten minutes. Either there was no line, or it was somehow invisible to my ageing eyes! The Sparrowhawk couldn't see it either, so I concluded that I'm virus-free! Yay--I got those little varmints on the run. Sadly, the Sparrowhawk was still positive, although less so. He's getting better--just a couple of days behind me. I told the Duchess I could go to the store myself. She reminded me to breathe deeply and get plenty of rest.

Before going to the store, I wrote up four birthday cards and two sympathy cards. They've been piling up while I dawdled. I mailed them and then picked up the prescription and a few other essentials like coffee cream, milk, potato chips (for the Sparrowhawk), some ham, and a little extra ice cream. By the time I got home and unloaded everything, I was beat again.

While I was having a cup of tea, a curious little package arrived. It was from my cousin in Peoria. I have dozens of cousins, but I don't know most of them. My father gradually became distant from his family, and by the time we were teenagers, we had lost touch with most of them. My Peoria cousin is one of a handful that I remember. In the process of her parents and my parents dying, we exchanged some communications. The package contained a note and two artifacts. One was a beautiful and rather impressive "reading glass" from Bausch and Lomb, which my cousin said my aunt (now deceased) had said was sent to her by me. I honestly don't remember doing that, but the instrument looked kind of familiar, so maybe I did! It's a great piece of equipment, and I will keep it for times when the proverbial print is too small. The other item inside was a very old little book, an edition of "Silas Marner," with my father's name written inside, in his own hand. What a poignant mix of feelings swept over me, like a breath of autumn wind mingling snow and summer, to see that familiar signature. I went back upstairs where the cards were and wrote my cousin an appreciative note forthwith, lest this good intention, too, get swept away by the winds of time.

Yuletide Letter 2025

Friday, October 17th, 2025 06:10 pm
moon_custafer: sexy bookshop mnager Dorothy Malone (Acme Bookshop)
[personal profile] moon_custafer
Dear Yule Writer— Thanks for volunteering to write a fic for me. I am moon_custafer on AO3 as I am here. Repeating the first part of this letter from past years:

General likes— Hurt-comfort. Conversation. Period-specific details. Ghosts or supernatural. Found family. Casefic or plotfic. I don’t mind explicit sex scenes, but I’m usually indifferent to them. OTOH kissing or touching hands, foreheads, stroking hair, etc, are great, as are descriptions of the characters’ appearance.

General DNWs—AUs that deviate from canon to the point of being a completely different premise/setting, i.e. high-school/coffee-shop/ABO dynamics.

My requests for this year:

Мастер и Маргарита - Михаил Булгаков | The Master and Margarita - Mikhail Bulgakov
Hella, Behemoth, Margarita Nikolayevna
I’d love to know more about Hella, beyond “she’s a sexy vampire”; I’d like to see how she interacts with Margarita; and Behemoth is always a delight to read about.

The Moonstone - Wilkie Collins:
Ezra Jennings, Mr. Candy
My favourite character in the book has always been Ezra Jennings, the mysterious mixed-race doctor with a clouded past and a terminal illness. His only friend is his colleague, the flamboyant Mr. Candy who unwittingly contributes to the mystery. I’ve shipped these two for years. Pre-canon would be nice, but feel free to write whatever you want.

Decoy (1946)
Margot Shelby, Sergeant Joseph "Jojo" Portugal, Frankie Ollins, Dr. Lloyd Craig.
This movie packs a lot (including SF/horror) into its runtime. Margot is the most gleefully evil femme fatale I’ve ever seen. I wouldn’t mind a little of Frankie’s PoV after he’s returned to life by the dose of methylene blue.

The Green Man (TV)
Maurice Allington, Rev. Sonnenschein, Joyce Allington, Amy Allington
Maurice is a somehow-endearing absolute trash-fire of a man. Also I love that he and Rev. Sonnenschein successfully exorcise the ghost even though the Reverend doesn’t personally believe in the ritual he’s doing. Possible prompts: Maurice reconciling himself to the fact that his wife and his mistress have dumped him for each other. Maurice and Rev. Sonnenschein teaming up to investigate another supernatural event. How much does Amy remember about what happened, and how does it change her relationship with her father?

Get Crazy (1983)
Toad, Reggie Wanker, King Blues, Auden 
The ending of this movie leaves plenty of room for further adventures for any or all of the characters. Reggie and the band’s new direction? King Blues and his band and their adventures in the Motor City? Auden’s new album? Or anything you wish.

Mainly a tiny bit of posterity: Thanksgiving dinner

Friday, October 17th, 2025 02:43 pm
umadoshi: (pumpkin pie (icons_by_mea))
[personal profile] umadoshi
I somehow mentally misplaced a week when we were booking our covid/flu shots and I was looking at the last market date of the season for the little one on the corner. Unsure how my brain concluded that they were on the same day. (Market's last day is tomorrow, shots are a week from tomorrow, so it's FINE, just...odd.)

The rest of this is entirely about what we did for our little Thanksgiving dinner (with a bit of blood glucose talk), so it's going under a cut. cut! )
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Posted by fromtheheartofeurope

Second paragraph of third chapter:

In Gweedore the crisis was exceptionally severe. A total collapse in the demand for seasonal laborers—the “tattie-hokers” who went en masse to harvest potatoes on Scottish estates—had left most families without a supplementary income, forcing them to buy goods on credit from local shopkeepers. Some of these acted as the district’s bankers—the hated “gombeen men,” who were regarded by the community as money-grabbing usurers. They, too, were refusing further loans. From Dublin a certain amount of aid was being organized by two influential private charities; in London a group of Quakers who had provided relief during the Great Famine stepped in again. One was led by a gentle, white-whiskered philanthropist named James Hack Tuke, who set off for Donegal at the beginning of March.

On 6 May 1882, the newly appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, Lord Frederick Cavendish, arrived in Dublin for his first day in the job. In the evening, as he was walking from Dublin Castle to his official residence in Phoenix Park, Thomas Henry Burke, the Permanent Under Secretary who also had an official residence in the Park, spotted him from his own carriage and dismounted so that the two could have a chat as they covered the last few hundred metres to their homes on foot.

They never made it. Seven members of The Invincibles, an extremist Irish nationalist group, surrounded them and stabbed them to death with surgical knives. They had been planning to attack Burke for weeks, and did not even know who Cavendish was, but did not want to leave the red-bearded chap alive as a witness. The attackers were driven away in a cab whose driver rejoiced in the nickname “Skin-the-Goat”; he pops up in person in Chapter 16 of Ulysses as the keeper of the cabmen’s shelter at Butt Bridge where Stephen Dedalus and Leopold Bloom get their heads together before going back to Bloom’s house for cocoa. (That’s not the only reference to the 1882 murders in Ulysses; James Joyce would have been three months old at the time, but they cast a long dark shadow.)

With all due respect to Lord Mountbatten and Kevin O’Higgins, the Phoenix Park murders were the most dramatic political assassinations ever to take place in Ireland – the victims were the British government minister responsible for Irish affairs, and the most senior civil servant in the Irish administration. On top of that, Cavendish and his wife Lucy were very close to her aunt and her aunt’s husband, who happened to be the prime minister, William Ewart Gladstone; Cavendish, whose father was the Duke of Devonshire, had been Gladstone’s private secretary for several years, and more or less ran the Treasury between the Liberals winning the election in 1880 and his appointment to Ireland in 1882. As for Burke, he was the most visible and most senior Catholic in the Irish government, and it was not until twenty years after his death that another Catholic got the job of Permanent Under Secretary.

The timing of the murders could not have been more disastrous in the delicate dance of British policy and Irish nationalism. The dominant Nationalist leader Charles Stewart Parnell had been released from prison only a couple of days before, and Cavendish had been sent to Dublin by Gladstone with a mandate to try and find reconciliation with the Nationalist Party and the Irish Land League, which had mounted a highly successful civil disobedience campaign against the (often absentee) landlords and against the British state, bringing attention to the dire economic situation of Irish tenant farmers. They had introduced a new word to the English language, after a land agent in County Mayo who was ostracised by the local community, to the extent that local shopkeepers refused to sell anything to him or his household: the unfortunate Captain Boycott.

The immediate effect of the murders was cataclysmic. Parnell’s reaction to the news was that he must resign from politics entirely, though he was dissuaded by Gladstone among others. Nationalist politicians condemned the murders, but of course for the English (and Scottish and Welsh) public, there was a seamless connection between Nationalist parliamentary activism and the assassinations. And in fact it turned out that several of the Invincibles were also senior officials in the Irish Land League. Several years later, The Times published letters apparently from Parnell which seemed to endorse the murders, though these were dramatically proved to be forgeries.

Superintendent John Mallon of the Dublin Metropolitan Police narrowly missed being on the scene of the murders himself, and pursued a dogged investigation of the crime. From good old human intelligence, he already had a good idea who the leading members of the Invincibles were, and interrogated them all until two of them confessed, one of them James Carey, the leader of the gang. The other five Invincibles were all hanged, including the two who had actually carried out the stabbing. The getaway driver, Skin-the-Goat, was imprisoned for sixteen years but emerged in time to make his appearance in Ulysses.

There was a grim postscript to the grim story. Carey, the informer, was given a new identity by the British government and sent off to make a new life with his family in South Africa. On the boat he made friends with one Patrick O’Donnell, a Donegal man from Gweedore. When they arrived in South Africa, O’Donnell saw an account of the Invincibles trial in an English newspaper which included a recognisable portrait of Carey, even though he had subsequently shaved his beard off. O’Donnell, who was politically motivated but seems not to have had any direct connection with the Invincibles, realised that his new friend on board was in fact the notorious informer, went back to the boat and shot Carey dead. (Most of the passengers seem to have brought their own guns with them.) He was convicted of murder and hanged. Carey’s fate was then used by Arthur Conan Doyle in the fourth, and worst, of the Sherlock Holmes novels, The Valley of Fear.

Julie Kavanagh is best known as a historian of ballet, but she has turned in a great piece of work here, not only going to the well-plumbed depths of British official sources, but also delving deep into the Invincibles and their structure, as far as one can trace it given the relative lack of written records and the mutability of some of the protagonists’ names. One unusual source that she uses extensively is the correspondence of Queen Victoria, who was deeply interested in the Irish situation, and of course hostile to the Nationalist agenda. There is one odd glitch where she starts to explore why O’Donnell was tried in London rather than South Africa, but fails to put in the actual reason why it happened that way. Otherwise this is a very readable account of a very dramatic (but nowadays overlooked) historical event. You can get The Irish Assassins here.

One last note relating to my Cambridge days. The unfortunate Lord Frederick Cavendish and his wife Lucy had no children. She dedicated the rest of her life (another four decades) to the promotion of girls’ and women’s education. Forty years after she died, her great-niece, Margaret Braithwaite, was one of the founders of a new Cambridge college for postgraduate women students, especially those from under-represented and non-traditional backgrounds; and the new college was named after Braithwaite’s great-aunt. During my not very successful tenure as Deputy President of Cambridge University Students Union, I was assigned Lucy Cavendish College as one of my liaison responsibilities. I always vaguely wondered who it was named after, and now I know.

This was my top unread book in the rapidly dwindling pile of those acquired in 2021. Next up is The Partition: Ireland Divided, 1885-1925, by Charles Townshend.

Sport for fun and sport for - not

Friday, October 17th, 2025 04:13 pm
oursin: Picture of Fotherington-Tomas skipping, with words subversive male added (Subversive male)
[personal profile] oursin

Though even conkers people take seriously apparently: 'King Conker’ cleared of cheating at World Conker Championships (Is nothing sacred?)

However, this sounds like it brings a certain anarchic spirit to the business: ‘Cheating is encouraged’: nut crackers at Peckham’s Conker Championships go for the fun

But apparently the TikTok generation post videos of gently unpeeling them???

The conkers danger is actually a Top Elf'n'Saftee Myff: 10 ridiculous Health and Safety myths debunked.

Am not sure why conkers should be having a moment just now, because they were dropping off the local trees several weeks ago, and are surely now past.

But at least the people playing conkers seem to be having fun: apparently - and counter to all those exhortations to do this thing for the good of your mental health - doing marathons has a downside: One in four endurance runners displays ‘worryingly high’ levels of anxiety and depression.

One wonders how far it's the obsessive dedication as much as any physiological factor that has an adverse effect.

The Last Door (2014, 2016)

Friday, October 17th, 2025 11:00 am
pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
[personal profile] pauraque
This cosmic horror point-and-click was released in two "seasons" of four episodes each, which I believe were produced as Kickstarter funding allowed. The two seasons together comprise a complete story.

Set in Victorian Britain, Season One follows Jeremiah Devitt, an alumnus of a remote boarding school where he belonged to a secret society performing occult experiments. As an adult, he receives a cryptic letter from a former classmate, but by the time he arrives, the classmate has died by suicide, prompting Devitt to investigate. Season Two follows Devitt's psychiatrist Dr. Wakefield, now investigating his patient's mysterious disappearance and the true nature of the secret society and the hidden reality it has uncovered.

an oak casts a dark shadow on a red building and is silhouetted against a sepia yellow sky

This one is sleep-with-the-lights-on scary. Lots of suspenseful sequences and expertly timed jump-scares. Something horror games can do that horror movies can't is to make you decide to keep walking further into the dark hallway where the creepy voice is coming from, and this game really leans into that. There were many moments when I found myself creeping forward inch by inch, dreading what was coming but knowing I had no choice but to press on. I loved it.

cut for length )

If you really want to be scared this spooky season, I highly recommend The Last Door. It's available on Steam (Season One, Season Two) for $9.99 USD per season, but GOG (Season One, Season Two) currently has both seasons on sale for $3.49 USD each.

Chop Water, Carry Wood

Friday, October 17th, 2025 09:49 am
mallorys_camera: (Default)
[personal profile] mallorys_camera
Seasonal affective disorder has begun seeping in through whatever spots in my psyche the day's activities have worn thin.

Yesterday, I spent a big chunk of the afternoon wanting to weep hysterically.

It got so intense that I finally went out tromping in the middle of the afternoon—which is Not Good because I find it very difficult to recalibrate and get back to Useful Work after I exercise.

What did I want to weep about? Oh, you know. The usual. The meaninglessness of all human life. The inevitability of human pain. The delusion all 8.142 billion humans share—I am special, I am special. The reality that none of us are any more special than any other polyp in the vast coral reef and all our strange, mostly endocrine-modulated behaviors are useless flux, this side of random.

Most years, I'm able to keep the SAD at bay by just remaining stoned out of my gourd till February.

This year, I can't really do that because I need a clear head to complete everything I have to do.

Creativity helps. Because imagination does reinforce one's unique vision—even if all you can see are those limestone-like exoskeletons that make up the dizzyingly immense reef where all those other polyps have died or are dying.

It is the blight that man was born for...

Like they say. Chop water, carry wood. Keep calm and carry on.

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