12 Initial Pinch Hits

21 January 2026 12:00 am
littlefics: Three miniature books standing on an open normal-sized book. (Default)
[personal profile] littlefics posting in [community profile] seasonsofdrabbles
We have 12 initial pinch hits, which are due at the assignment deadline, Saturday, January 31 @ 11:59pm Eastern Standard time (Countdown).

If you would like to claim a pinch hit, please comment on this post with the name/number of the pinch hit you would like. Make sure to include your AO3 username! Comments are screened.

Please note: there may be a delay in assigning you your pinch hit, due to AO3's scheduled downtime.

CLAIMED PH 1 - Alien (Original Movies 1979-1997), Buffy the Vampire Slayer (TV), Supernatural (TV 2005), Terminator (Movies), Pretty Little Liars (TV 2010), Revenge (TV) )



CLAIMED PH 2 - Pokemon Concierge (Cartoon), 気になってる人が男じゃなかった | Ki ni Natteru Hito ga Otoko ja Nakatta | The Guy She Was Interested in Wasn't a Guy at All (Manga), Fence (Comics), Spider-Man: Spider-Verse (Sony Animated Movies) )



CLAIMED PH 3 - Free!, Natsume Yuujinchou | Natsume's Book of Friends, 薬屋のひとりごと | Kusuriya no Hitorigoto | The Apothecary Diaries (Anime) )



CLAIMED - PH 4 - 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018) RPF, 镇魂 | Guardian (TV 2018), 镇魂 | Guardian - priest )



CLAIMED - PH 5 - The Hobbit (Jackson Movies), 最凶の支援職【話術士】である俺は世界最強クランを従える | The Most Notorious  )



CLAIMED PH 6 - 呪術廻戦 | Jujutsu Kaisen (Anime), 呪術廻戦 | Jujutsu Kaisen (Manga), Wind Breaker (Anime), Outlast (Video Games), Given (Anime), Wind Breaker - にいさとる | Nii Satoru (Manga) )



CLAIMED - PH 7 - Psychonauts (Video Games), Umineko no Naku Koro ni | When the Seagulls Cry, Sonic the Hedgehog - All Media Types )



CLAIMED - PH 8 - Dance of the Vampires (Broadway version) - Steinman/Kunze/Ives, Phantom of the Opera - Lloyd Webber, Star Trek: The Original Series )



CLAIMED PH 9 - 仮面ライダーガッチャード | Kamen Rider Gotchard (TV), Ultraman Arc (TV), あぶない刑事 | Abunai Deka (TV), Kamen Rider OOO, Kamen Rider V3, Choujin Sentai Jetman, わが青春のアルカディア | Waga Seishun no Arcadia | Arcadia of My Youth (1982), 快傑ズバット | Kaiketsu Zubat (TV), Kamen Rider Ryuki )



PH 10 - Fireworks (1947)/Succession (TV 2018), O Fantasma (2000), O Fantasma (2000)/Succession (TV 2018), The Sergeant (1968), Succession (TV 2018) )



CLAIMED PH 11 - Jumurdzsák gyűrűje | Yoomurjak's Ring (Video Game), Night Prince - Jeaniene Frost, Hallo itt Mátyás király! - Bogáti Péter, Dracula Rising (Cartoon), Nosferatu (2024), Historical RPF, Jósika Miklós - Király És Koldus | King Matthias and the Beggar Boy )



CLAIMED - PH 12 - Team Fortress 2, Generation Loss (Web Series), 僕のヒーローアカデミア | Boku no Hero Academia | My Hero Academia (Anime & Manga), 逆転裁判 | Gyakuten Saiban | Ace Attorney, Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams, Petscop (Web Series), Homestuck )

Tuesday word: Grandfamily

20 January 2026 08:40 pm
simplyn2deep: (Teen Wolf::Sterek::BW)
[personal profile] simplyn2deep posting in [community profile] 1word1day
Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Grandfamily (noun)
grandfamily [grand-fam-uh-lee, fam-lee]


noun, plural grandfamilies
1. a family in which one or more children live with and are raised by their grandparent or grandparents: Grandfamilies exist because of absent parents, and the circumstances behind that can vary greatly from one case to the next.

Origin: First recorded in 1960–65; grand ( def. ) + family ( def. )

Example Sentences
“I hear from the grandfamily caregivers that they don’t want to be a part of ‘the system,’” Keith Lowhorne, vice president of kinship with the Alabama Foster and Adoptive Parents Association, said in the report.
From Washington Post

Gentry said she hopes more grandfamily communities like hers pop up around the country so residents can provide support for one another when resources are not readily available.
From Seattle Times

More older Americans are finding a haven in the “grandfamily housing” communities sprouting nationwide.
From New York Times

There are at least 19 grandfamily housing programs with on-site services across the United States, financed by a mix of public and private funding, according to Generations United, a nonprofit focused on intergenerational collaboration.
From New York Times

Projects are underway in Washington, D.C., and Redmond, Ore., and lawmakers in the House reintroduced the Grandfamily Housing Act, which would create a national pilot program to expand grandfamily housing.
From New York Times
siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
Hey, Americans! Do you live around or south of the Mason-Dixon line? If so, your weather report for later this week is shaping up to be a bit exciting. Looks like Actual Winter will be visiting places that historically have been poorly prepared for this sort of thing, i.e. TX, the South, and the mid-Atlantic.

(Also eventually the NE, but a forecast of a few feet of snow is threatening us with a good time.)

H/t to the RyanHallYall YT channel. He's a well-reputed amateur, but his report is congruent with what I'm seeing in conventional weather reports:


https://youtube.com/shorts/nh4JEVGWfFU

Good luck and remember running a charcoal grill in your living room is a dumb way to die.

Winter Natterings

20 January 2026 08:16 pm
jreynoldsward: (Default)
[personal profile] jreynoldsward
 
 
 

Weather-wise, this has been a weird, weird winter. Normally by now we have snow on the ground. Oh, we had some snow…and then it melted in a set of 40F temps, and we haven’t had any precipitation to speak of since.

Not that it’s been sunny all the time. Far from it. The fog blew in a couple of days ago. Until now, we’d been free from the freezing fog that gripped the lower valley. No longer. It started blowing in while I was preparing to go ride Marker, wisps suddenly blocking out the sun and limiting vision, then clearing out with sun while tendrils of fog rose faintly from the plowed land near the ranch before disappearing.

It looked promising to me, like maybe we wouldn’t get locked into days of rime ice and shadow.

No such luck.

That night, the fog settled in. The next day I rose to shadows and rime ice. While the fog hung a little bit above the ground in town, it hit the ground near the ranch. I couldn’t see even halfway across the horse pasture. We went from the ground thawing slightly enough to be soft over frozen soil to hard frost, and no thawing. A damp chill settles through everything, feeling colder than what the thermometer says it is. While the sun tries to break through, that doesn’t happen everywhere.

Everything slows down. The horses don’t do much running, except in small eruptions to warm up or break up the monotony. The ground’s just too hard. Unlike old Mocha, Marker doesn’t want to run very much in these conditions. I started riding him in the arena and in an open right-of-way to give him a break from the herd and the field. Because of the hard ground, we’re doing different types of work. Schooling at walk and occasional fox trot, although it’s a slow fox trot. Slow, careful, detail work. Spiraling in and out. Serpentines. Circles. But it’s a shorter period of work, avoiding concussion on his hooves. I don’t want to ride on the road in this fog, even though the visibility isn’t horrible—the fog can thicken without warning. Too much of a risk.

So we do our slow work in the arena, me riding him without a saddle today. Rime ice forms on his forelock, the tips of his ears, the hair on his legs, and the edges of my coat collar in sharp little spikes. But even though there’s a thin pad between us, to keep my pants cleaner, Marker’s body warmth radiates into my legs. A lot nicer than the saddle.

Meanwhile, the quail have decided to revisit our feeding area, though I suspect they’ve been sneaking in and out for some time now. The other day, I saw three males out there, then, later, the entire covey of about eleven or so. We think they might be a clutch that has gathered together for the winter—they’re all on the small side. No idea how often they’re coming by, but it’s a welcome sight to look out the window and see their bobbing topknots as they scratch chicken-like to unearth seed that we’ve either spread or that blew out of the feeders during windstorms.

The cold creeps into my bones and I find refuge in the heating pads. It’s damp. Not the same damp as the Willamette Valley, though—this is a sharper, edgier damp. I’m at the stage where I have the indoor base layers and the outdoor base layers. The chill gets worse at dusk, then warms back up.

A lot of people saw a truly amazing aurora last night. We didn’t. Oh, we probably could have driven out of town to a higher elevation—some of the people who did that got amazing pictures. But we just hunkered down, though I kept slipping out in hopes of seeing something.

Beyond a pinkish tinge to the fog at times, there was nuthin’.

The lack of snow means I don’t get the same vertigo I do when the fog sets in during a snowy period. It’s not as bad on horseback as it was when I was skiing the Magic Mile and had those moments when I didn’t know what was up and what was down, what was fog and what was snow. But it still has those challenging moments.

Eh, soon enough it will clear off. Maybe. Until then….


(no subject)

20 January 2026 11:05 pm
aurumcalendula: Jing Yi, Leng Yue, Chu Chu, and Xiao Jinyu from 'The Imperial Coroner' (Imperial Coroner sedoretu)
[personal profile] aurumcalendula
The Imperial Coroner Season 2, episode 5:

Read more... )

Daily Happiness

20 January 2026 07:55 pm
torachan: arale from dr slump with a huge grin on her face (arale)
[personal profile] torachan
1. Got my hair cut this morning. Carla wanted to get hers trimmed before her trip (she's going to Wisconsin for a week tomorrow for her aunt's 80th birthday) so it was the both of us and we decided to pop over to Universal Studios for lunch afterwards. The crowds were so low! If we'd stayed to go on any rides, almost everything was like 20 minutes or less, even the massively popular ones. As it was, we just had a nice lunch, spotted some characters, and came home.

2. Because of the haircut appointment, which was awkwardly timed for late morning, I just made today a WFH day. Did some stuff in the morning before we went, and then had a meeting later in the afternoon. I didn't really have a whole lot on the agenda for today anyway, so it worked out well.

3. Shake Shack is apparently having a Korean inspired menu right now, so we got the burgers with Korean BBQ sauce. They were so good! There's also a chicken sandwich and fries with kimchi powder and dipping sauce, and even a caramel gochujang shake, so if they've still got this stuff on the menu when Carla gets back from her trip, we're planning to try some of those as well. Actually now that I think of it, there's one near work, so I might just go over there for lunch one day...

4. Warming bed + stretching = best combo.

tafadhali: ([art] intricate rituals)
[personal profile] tafadhali posting in [community profile] vidding
Title: Gimme Sympathy
Fandom: Heated Rivalry
Music: "Gimme Sympathy" by Metric
Pairing: Shane Hollander/Ilya Rozanov
Summary: We're so close to something better left unknown

AO3
| DW | Tumblr

A Reckoning of Swords 19-20

20 January 2026 08:48 pm
kalloway: Neon "Lemonade Cafe" with lemons and flames, truly the most majestic of icons (Lemonade Cafe)
[personal profile] kalloway
Got some archiving done! I'm still a couple of weeks behind but, like, have you seen the last couple of weeks?

I'm trying to get better at picking at things when I have a few spare minutes, instead of feeling like I need a block of time to code/write/whatever.

The Lemonade Cafe's twenty-third (whut?!) anniversary is somewhere in the next couple of weeks. Looking back, it's traditionally been celebrated between the 30th of January and the 7th of February, so it's very much an anniversary week and not a firm date. This is basically because the original site was coded for a class project for a one-credit web-dev class I took my last semester of university. Once the class was over and the site (a fairly general KH site, tbh) graded, I promptly swapped it over to hosting the fanfiction I'd been writing for an entire month at that point.

I don't actually have any anniversary plans so um, help me make some?

Current gunpla/plamo kit is [redacted] for a contest so mostly all I can yell about is glitter and rhinestones, lol.
shadowkat: (Default)
[personal profile] shadowkat
It was bitterly cold today. In the teens (F) with windchills factoring in the single digits (F) this morning, and got up to the twenties by midday.
Tomorrow it may make it to 30 F degrees - which as I told Breaking Bad this morning is relatively balmy. If we make to the 40s, so New Yorkers may start wearing shorts.

My living room overhead (ceiling) light has gone out. So I'm using the lights in my window (the tree and the snowflake lights), along with the little planet light (my niece gave me for Xmas one year), and two small desk lamps. The Super's wife popped by just as I was departing the shower to attempt to change the light bulb in the living room - but alas she needs tools - so her husband (whose not feeling well or under the weather) may have to do it after all.

Knees hurt today - it's the commute. The steps, and the walking through the bitter cold. And work was a mixed bag. I ran into folks from Jamaica (aka the head honchos behind all my project managers) and the negative energy emanating from them - made me physically ill. It took me two hours to recover. Thank god, I'm in Manhattan now and not in Jamaica, Queens, and far away from them. The folks I'm sitting near including Breaking Bad don't have that type of energy.

***

I'm following the news but out of the corner of my eye? I'm kind of giving it the side-eye? Or through my fingers, like I'm watching a horror film? Told mother that I wanted to be in galaxy far far away, albeit not the Star Wars galaxy. I might be willing to tough it out in the Star Trek verse, but not the Star Wars one. Nor would I want to be in BSG, Farscape, or Doctor Who's verses. Definitely not Tolkien's. No, I think the only one I could survive in would be Star Trek's. (Which is ironic, considering I was afraid of Star Trek at the age of 9.)

Also conversations on Lord of the Rings popped up.

Would I go on an adventure with Gandalf? No way in hell. I would run in the opposite direction if I saw Gandalf coming my way, and possibly try to hide (assuming one can hide from a Wizard). Gandalf has a tendency to send you off on a journey, abandon you to your own devices half way through, and forget about you.

***

Buffy and Angel Rewatch.

I'm enjoying Buffy S7 at the moment more than Angel S4, although Angel S4 is a mixed bag? Everyone works but Cordelia and Connor - who clearly are miserable. Writing those two characters out at the end of S4, and replacing them with Spike was a stroke of genius. I know folks liked them? But I'm finding both to be annoying. (And apparently the actors weren't overly thrilled portraying them at that point either.)

Buffy S7 - I'm really enjoying. It's spending more time on the supporting characters. Also "Selfless" (Episode 5) - the Anya centric episode is fantastic and among the best of the series. Read more... )
God, I love this show. It is by far my favorite television series.

Poem: "A Hurricane of Butterflies"

20 January 2026 08:27 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
This poem was written outside the regular prompt calls, inspired by a discussion with [personal profile] a_natural_beauty. It also fills the "WILD CARD: Denial" square in my 2-1-25 card for the Valentines Bingo fest. It has been sponsored by a pool with [personal profile] fuzzyred.

Read more... )

(no subject)

20 January 2026 04:25 pm
nestra: (Default)
[personal profile] nestra
Wow, I only made one post last year? I'm here every day, reading, so I keep up with anyone still posting here.

I didn't put up the Yuletide polls this year. Just didn't have the oomph. It's been an oomph-sapping kind of year or so, hasn't it? (Fuck me -- just looked it up, and it's literally the one-year anniversary of that shitbag's inaguration.)

ANYWAY. Fun stuff. Things I have posted since...a while ago.

911 )

Heated Rivalry )

The Pitt

Bet

So as you can see, I'm generally obsessed with those three things. Putting more silliness and gay porn into the world.

Doing just fine.

20 January 2026 08:15 pm
hannah: (Library stacks - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
It's been well below freezing all day, and the only time I've spent outdoors was the pair of bike rides to and from the gig location, which itself is barely a 20 block ride. It was more than enough for my fingers and ears to get uncomfortably chilled, though I take it as a point of pride that continuing to mask up means my nose and mouth are just fine. I'm still thinking often on how safe I am for this cold snap - a safe place to sleep, hot water, layers to bundle up. Mostly, the tiredness comes from having rearranged a fairly sizable home library's substantial fiction section, up and down a stepladder, picking up armfuls of books over and over, and it's not digging a ditch, but between hours of that and the cold, I'm feeling pretty wiped.

I think next time I go, I'll bring a canned coffee with me. See about heading this off ahead of time.

(weather, therapy notes)

20 January 2026 07:59 pm
elainegrey: Inspired by Grypping/gripping beast styles from Nordic cultures (Default)
[personal profile] elainegrey

So weather is forecast this weekend, and by weather i mean DOOM SNOW for North Carolina. Because 3 inches is end of world, what is 12 inches? And then an inch of winter mix on top?

So i'm looking at the weather and my Sunday evening flight out of RDU through Charlotte and i'm just certain, that ain't gonna work.  And i'm just dreading the chaos. (And then i begin thinking of Christine and her surgery recovery and snow and....) So, as i churn, i asked my colleague if he could change the schedule so Monday isn't so important for my presence.  It turns out there's something called a weather waiver where airlines give you a chance to reschedule your travel instead of waiting for your flight to be delayed. I figured i would have to wait until Thursday before there would be a chance to change.

But no. I got the email this afternoon that my flight would be impacted. I've rescheduled for a midday Monday departure, a long layover in Chicago O'Hare/Orchard Field, then on to Columbus landing at 7 pm. That is far more relaxed.

So, tomorrow is grocery day, and i think we need a dump run so i can do that lifting, and then i need to wrap the well with heating tape (the next days are sub freezing and i just want to make sure things are prepared for Christine on the off chance the pump freezes). Oh, we need to keep the  water filtration system from freezing too. And i guess moving the generator and trying to start it..... And check the weight of the salt to make sure it's in a range she can lift.

--== ∞ ==--

I'm a little drained from therapy. I'm realizing i didn't have any reassurance, "Don't worry, it will be OK" growing up and i need to hear that from my inner mother more. I lean a lot on my faith: believing  that i only see a small part of all the things and i might not ever see t that i am helping the world be better place. But there's something different about the "Am i doing it right?" i constantly feel with respect to ... everything. And maybe giving myself reassurance more will help.

And this snow event and travel: 100% waves of am i doing it right, how do i make sure it's going to be OK, ....

--== ∞ ==--

Waffles with yarden blueberries for dinner! Maybe not weight wise, but yum.

all the airports American Airlines is worried about weather )

Here at the end of the lonely world

20 January 2026 07:47 pm
musesfool: Jessica Pearson from Suits (looking for what's next)
[personal profile] musesfool
The conference was interesting, if maybe 1 panel too long (it ended at 4:55 pm, but the last panel was...not great, imo), though the lunch options were, to me, appalling. (Many people ate and enjoyed the sandwiches but there was not one that I would eat. I made do with salad, chips, and cookies.) My boss and I both felt validated by some things being mentioned that we already do and some that we are planning to do (if the new board chair approves), so that part was good too.

It was hard to get up (it was hard to sleep, knowing I had to get up 90 minutes earlier than usual), but I did it. I also saw two fun signs on the way: "Lube Entrance" and "You can ship anything." As [personal profile] devildoll said when I told her, I'll take AO3 tags for $200, Alex. *g*

Now I'm going to try to stay awake for another hour and then go to bed because I am le tired.

*
[syndicated profile] the_marginalian_feed

Posted by Maria Popova

Here is the mathematical logic of the spirit: If love is the quality of attention we pay something other than ourselves and hate is the veil of not understanding ourselves, then loving the world more — the other word for which is kindness — is largely a matter of deepening our awareness and sharpening our attention on both sides of the skin that membranes the self.

George Saunders — whose gorgeous novels and essays are a kind of jungle gym for playing with your assumptions rigorously and sensitively enough to grow the agility of perspective called empathy — explores this equivalence with his characteristic precision of mind and grandeur of heart in a wonderful interview on The Daily.

Art by Virginia Frances Sterrett, Old French Fairy Tales, 1920
Century-old art by the adolescent Virginia Frances Sterrett. (Available as a print and stationery cards.)

A practicing Buddhist and a writer whose core subject is how to love the world more, Saunders considers the parallels between Buddhism and writing as instruments of kindness honed on awareness and attention:

We have thoughts and they self-generate and dominate us. We mistake those thoughts for us. In both Buddhist practice and writing, you have a chance to go, Oh, those are just brain farts. They’re just happening spontaneously, and I didn’t actually create them, and I’m not sure I really want to take ownership of them. At the same time, they’re affecting my body. So you have to just get clear for long enough to recognize them as being separate from who you actually are.

Kindness, he observes in reconsidering his now-classic 2013 meditation on the subject, is something both greater than and simpler than niceness — a stilling of that “monkey mind” just long enough to consider what is most helpful to the other in a given situation. (Few things are more moving in this culture of opinions tattooed on the skin of the self than to see a person change their mind or evolve their perspective in public.)

Art from An Almanac of Birds: 100 Divinations for Uncertain Days

Literature, Saunders insists, can quiet our habitual thoughts just enough to invite “a little more empathy, a little more engagement, a little more patience,” effecting “incremental changes of consciousness on the part of the writer and the reader” — changes that have to do with unclenching the fist of story and certainty that is the self and hold out to the world the open palm of curiosity. He identifies three awarenesses we must eventually attain in order to wake up from the core delusions that keep our lives clenched, that stand between us and kindness:

You’re not permanent.

You’re not the most important thing.

You’re not separate.

There are Buddhist precepts, but they are also the rewards of great literature — something Saunders captures beautifully in his introduction to the collected stories, essays, and poems of one of his own favorite writers, Grace Paley:

A great writer mimicking, on the page, the dynamic energy of human thought is as about as close as we can get to modeling pure empathy.

[…]

The world has no need to be represented: there it is, all around us, all the time. What it needs is to be loved better. Or maybe, what we need is to be reminded to love it and to be shown how, because sometimes, busy as we get trying to stay alive, loving the world slips our mind.

Showing us how has been his life’s work, whether or not Saunders realized it along the way — we are always insensible to our own becoming, bud blind to blossom. Two decades before he came to the question of kindness directly, he shone a sidewise gleam at its substrate — the relationship between storytelling and unselfing — in his prescient 2007 essay collection The Brainded Megaphone.

Illustration by Mimmo Paladino for a rare edition of James Joyce’s Ulysses

Given that narrative is the neurocognitive pillar of identity, the story we tell ourselves about who we are comes to shape who we act ourselves into being, who we become in relation to the world. This fundamental vulnerability of consciousness, Saunders observes, can be and is exploited, but it is also what gives storytelling its transformative power:

In the beginning, there’s a blank mind. Then that mind gets an idea in it, and the trouble begins, because the mind mistakes the idea for the world. Mistaking the idea for the world, the mind formulates a theory and, having formulated a theory, feels inclined to act… Because the idea is always only an approximation of the world, whether that action will be catastrophic or beneficial depends on the distance between the idea and the world. Mass media’s job is to provide this simulacra of the world, upon which we build our ideas. There’s another name for this simulacra-building: storytelling.

The point, of course, is that beneath the constructed idea is the world itself, just as beneath the self — the scaffolding of ideas upon which we construct our experience of reality — is the soul, that loose and baggaged word we use to hold something immense and pure: the elemental essence of being. In our culture, there is no greater courage than to strip the armor of ready-made answers and face the world as naked soul, blank as a question; to discover rather than dictate who we are and what this is — this brief burst of astonishment and anguish that we share before we return our borrowed stardust to the universe, wasted if seduced by certainty, wasted if shorn of kindness.

Art by Charlie Mackesy from The Boy, the Mole, the Fox and the Horse

Saunders offer the simple, intensely difficult remedy:

Don’t be afraid to be confused. Try to remain permanently confused. Anything is possible. Stay open, forever, so open it hurts, and then open up some more, until the day you die.

The great writer’s gift to the reader are not better answers but better questions, a greater tolerance for uncertainty, a mechanism of transmuting confusion into kindness, and at the same time a way of seeing the world more clearly in order to love it more deeply. I find Saunders’s generous words about Grace Paley to apply perfectly to his own writing:

Reading Paley will, I predict, make you better understand the idea that love is attention and vice versa.

[…]

What does a writer leave behind? Scale models of a way of seeing and thinking.

[…]

Paley’s model advises us to suffer less by loving more — love the world more, and each other more—and then she gives us a specific way to love more: see better. If you only really see this world, you will think better of it, she seems to say. And then she gives us a way to see better: let language sing, sing precisely, and let it off the tether of the mundane, and watch the wonderful truth it knows how to make.


donating = loving

For seventeen years, I have been spending hundreds of hours and thousands of dollars each month composing The Marginalian (which bore the outgrown name Brain Pickings for its first fifteen years). It has remained free and ad-free and alive thanks to patronage from readers. I have no staff, no interns, no assistant — a thoroughly one-woman labor of love that is also my life and my livelihood. If this labor makes your own life more livable in any way, please consider lending a helping hand with a donation. Your support makes all the difference.


newsletter

The Marginalian has a free weekly newsletter. It comes out on Sundays and offers the week’s most inspiring reading. Here’s what to expect. Like? Sign up.

Check In: Day 20

20 January 2026 06:24 pm
glitteringstars: (writing)
[personal profile] glitteringstars posting in [community profile] writethisfanfic
Hi all!

How was writing today?

Liaden Read Along

20 January 2026 07:10 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni
A new post of possible interest to those who are participating in the Liaden read-along
siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
I found this intriguing. YouTuber KnittingCultLady, who is an Air Force veteran and author about two books on military culture from the standpoint of cults(!), put out this rather frustrated video clarifying how members of the military respond to illegal orders. The tl;dr is they will follow orders of ambiguous legality, and refuse to follow orders of obvious illegality, and what is obviously illegal may not be what civilians think.

2026 Jan 18: KnittingCultLady on YT: Some Examples of Recent Malicious Compliance from the Military, ALSO Listen Carefully To My Words:


She doesn't put it this way, but it sounds from what she says that what makes something obviously illegal is that it resulted in a courtmartial or other nigh-universal condemnation when tried previously. Orders that are for doing things that are war crimes by the letter of the law but which did not result in prosecution or other negative consequences for the perpetrators when done in the past do not trigger the sense that they are illegal, e.g. if it was okay for Bush to seize Noriega, then clearly it must be legal for Trump to seize Maduro.
torachan: ryu from kimi ni todoke eating ramen (ramen)
[personal profile] torachan
Universal Studios has short hours during the off season, making it inconvenient to go for dinner on weeknights, but today we had an opportunity to go for lunch since we were sort of partway there.

The park wasn't crowded at all, but all the good parking was taken, so we had to park at the ET parking structure, which is at the far end of CityWalk, but at least that meant we got a nice walk to and from the park as well as inside.

Read more... )

第五年第十一天

21 January 2026 08:34 am
nnozomi: (Default)
[personal profile] nnozomi posting in [community profile] guardian_learning
部首
心 part 21
愿, to wish; 慌, to panic; 慢, slow pinyin )
https://www.mdbg.net/chinese/dictionary?cdqrad=61

语法
2.19 (part 1) Result complements 完,会,懂,住
https://www.digmandarin.com/hsk-2-grammar

词汇
程序, program; 工程, engineering/project pinyin )
https://mandarinbean.com/new-hsk-4-word-list/

Guardian:
你真的愿意帮助我们, are you really willing to help us?
你听我把话说完, wait until I'm finished talking
龙城大学生物工程系的教授, a professor in the bioengineering department at Dragon City University

Me:
慢慢来,别急。
你听不懂的话,我就再说一遍。

Website Updates

20 January 2026 05:29 pm
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
Thanks to a lot of work by [personal profile] fuzzyred, you can now read A Poesy of Obscure Sorrows on its own landing page. :D This series of linguistic poetry uses novel words presented in The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows.

Assignments out!

20 January 2026 06:13 pm
littlefics: Three miniature books standing on an open normal-sized book. (Default)
[personal profile] littlefics posting in [community profile] seasonsofdrabbles
Assignments have now been sent out!

  • The deadline is Saturday, January 31 @ 11:59pm Eastern Standard time (Countdown). If your assignment has not been submitted to AO3 by then, you will be defaulted.

  • If your recipient did not request a fandom, character, and drabble type you offered, please contact the mods at seasonsofdrabbles AT gmail.com ASAP.

  • If you need to default, please do so via the button on AO3.

  • For the requirements your drabble must meet, please see our guidelines. The collection is moderated and we will be doing a brief check of submitted works before admitting them into the collection. If we see an issue, we will contact you through email.

  • If you write a drabble for a fandom in the tagset but it doesn't fit anyone's request, you may post it to the collection anyway, with no recipient.

We'll post initial pinch hits as soon as we can, keeping in mind the AO3 downtime. Happy drabbling!

January Manga TBR 2

20 January 2026 05:09 pm
bluapapilio: Lil Black Cats & Ghost from LINE stickers (lil black cat + book)
[personal profile] bluapapilio
Used my manga TBR boardgame.

I finished 5/5 on my last board and had a good time.

Avatar:

Conan 
Skill:
 Beat trap tile once


Roll #1:

An 11, prompt: gender bender. Oh, more Basara then!

Roll #2:

A 12. Man, first I get an excellent skill now I get 2 excellent rolls. Why can't these happen on the boards I want them to?? orz Prompt: cafe/bakery/restaurant. Hmm let's see what I've got. Okay, Amai Jouken it is.

Roll #3:

An 8, prompt: game element. Let's how much I remember in My S-Class Hunters. Honestly about time;;

Roll #4:

Another 8, prompt: started in the month you were born. That took a while, there's no way to filter by 'only stuff on my list'. Anyway, I picked 3-manen no Kareshi.

Roll #5:

A 6 and 'generate from TBR pile'! Exciting and scary. #564 which is...huh. I was just thinking I didn't want to read another Nitta Youka yet but here we are at Haru o Daiteita. Since it's so long I might read it like am with Junjou Romantica, post by post.

Roll #6:

Alriight, a 10 and the end. The physical BL this time is NightS by Yoneda Kou.

Most looking forward to: Basara and My S-Class Hunters
Least looking forward to: Everything else lmao

~Manga TBR List~


[Shoujo/Fantasy] Basara
[BL/Romance] Amai Jouken ✔️
[Fantasy/Action] My S-Class Hunters ❌
[BL/Romance] 3-manen no Kareshi ✔️
[BL/Drama] Haru o Daiteita ✔️
[BL] NightS

x1 shoujo, x1 shounen, x4 BL

(no subject)

20 January 2026 05:40 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
Made it to the dentist. Did not die, though I thought I might while waiting on College St for my cab. Wind tunnels at -10C will get you wind chills of -22, whatever that may be F, because 'forking freezing' is not a scientific measurement. Driver kept yawning since extreme cold also leads to somnolence. Am yawning now at quarter to six. Which may be fallout from the dentist or may be tiredness from getting up this morning when I first woke up. Seems I need the extra hours I get from sleeping in.

Cabs always come early so I had an hour to kill. Intended to get something from Tim's and then found I'd forgotten the toothbrush and paste I'd carefully put in a bag for this eventuality. Well, fine, shall mail that parcel I've had ready for weeks since there's a post office in the same building. Had the photo of my QR code for overseas customs declaration. But as ever the PO scanner couldn't read it and a 1 o'clock line was forming behind me. So I went to the side and filled out the form again on my phone-- and let me say, people who live on their phones must have different keyboards or smaller fingers than I, because writing anything on my android is a fiddly heartbreaking exercise. This goes double for Japanese addresses, but in the end my phone was completely readable. So this is what I'll do in future. Asked the clerk what people do who don't have smartphones and she said They just don't send parcels. I begin to lose sympathy for Canada Post. We won't mention sending anything to the US, with customs to be paid in advance via one app only. The customs thing is their current administration (quae delenda est) but I think the mandatory app is pure Canuck bureaucracy.

Mysterium (Robert Charles Wilson)

20 January 2026 05:31 pm
js_thrill: shizuku from whisper of the heart, at a library table, reading intensely (books)
[personal profile] js_thrill
I am sort of annoyed that this book wasted such a good premise. 

Archeologists discover a strange jade-like rock, and it gives off weird radiation, and some folks die. The government hushes it up and takes the rock off to secretly study it in a facility in rural-ish Michigan.  One night, the facility where the thing is being studied explodes with light, and the facility, including the nearby town as well as everything else within a sizable but not too sizable radius, has disappeared and been replaced by old growth forest. Of course, we follow the town/facility to wherever it went, which is another world? Dimension? Anyway, it's another earth, whose history is quite a bit different from ours. North America is under a the rule of some sort of Theocratic rule, that government is at war with Spain, and the appearance of this town is a challenge to the government's religious outlook.

WHAT A PREMISE!

And there are moments that attend to interesting details. The town isn't swapped with another town, so it lacks power for some time. It's far away from cities/settlements, and so it takes some time for them to even make contact with locals. But Wilson doesn't wind up doing *doing* anything with this stuff.  Characters speculate on what the historical point of divergence is, and idly guess about what major events did or didn't happen in this new universe, but nothing really comes of it.  We don't really see the protagonists use their (somewhat superior) technological knowledge much (nor do we see them hampered much by not knowing how the technology they rely on works). We fast forward past some of the more interesting parts of the plot so that we can get to the "action movie heroics" parts of the story.

Can you imagine how good the world-building could have been in a book with this premise?  Characters decide to emigrate from this town and try to integrate into this new world, and we don't get any real insight into their mindset or discussion about them other than that they hadn't been from that town and had simply been visiting when the town got ripped into the new world, so they didn't have friends and family in the town. I don't know about any of you, but if I was visiting Peoria, and it got zapped to Percei Omicron VIII, maybe I would decide to stick around Peoria, maybe i would decide to go explore the alien world, but I think there would be a lot to explore in why I made that decision beyond "well, he's not from Peoria."  Are they planning to convert? Are they good at following orders from the (brutal) enforcers of Church Law in this government? Do they speak French? 

Anyway, I wound up reading this book because after I finished The Last Astronaut, Kobo sent me an email with books I might like, and, in fairness to Kobo, the synopsis was a rock solid recommendation for me. But I think I gave the book a generous 2.5 stars.

This Year 365 songs: January 20th

20 January 2026 05:11 pm
js_thrill: goat with headphones (goat rock)
[personal profile] js_thrill
 Today's song: Quetzalcoatl Comes Through


I listened to the wrong version for a while (it wasn't bad), I've written before about how Darnielle is a Christian musician, and he is, for sure, but just as he is fascinated with Classical Antiquity, and loves to sing about Roman and Greek mythology, he has other fascinations (a lot of them are just being a huge history fan in general, which comes through with this song being inspired by a book about Aztec history that he was reading, but later we'll see that his enthusiasm for regional pro-wrestling or Magic: The Gathering also get their share of space in his corpus). Anyway, I think part of the appeal he brings is just his general enthusiasm. Darnielle has genuine passion for things that comes across vividly.  The other part is that he brings a perspective.  Whether it is the tragedy of the alpha couple's eternally traumatically dissolving yet somehow fixed orbiting of each other, or that riff on Auden's take on Bruegel's Icarus, the wedding of his enthusiasm for whatever he turns his attention to and the point he wants to get across about it is really the heart of why the songs resonate with so many people. 

This is one of the better tracks we've hit so far, I think.

a wee bit giddy

20 January 2026 02:20 pm
yaaurens: (Elephant Trampoline)
[personal profile] yaaurens
So at work cohort yesterday, I volunteered to read, which I've been trying to avoid, just cuz... I dunno. I will happily read Shakespeare out loud with my pals, but reading out loud to strangers reminds me too much of childhood and being put on the spot and getting teased for not being able to pronounce certain letters right.

Anway. I read my section, and someone else in cohort that I had been messaging sent me a very sweet message saying, "thank you for reading, you have a very soothing, calming, trusting voice sir" and then called me Mr T-- and I just about diiiiied. She's from the south and always calls every Ms -- and Mr -- which is just adorable now that I'm mostly over hating the very gendered nature of it, but eeeee apparently when I read it's not painfully obvious and that makes me very happy indeed.

Write Every day 2026: January, Day 20

20 January 2026 11:21 pm
trobadora: (terrible)
[personal profile] trobadora
What I did during my lunch break: assemble Ikea shelves \o/
What I didn't do during my lunch break: write /o\

(And then the entire afternoon was non-stop meetings until smoke came out of my ears.)

Today's writing

A little more than an alibi sentence, but not much more.

WED Question of the Day

Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 18


I find ...

View Answers

shorter fic easier to write than longer fic
11 (61.1%)

longer fic easier to write than shorter fic
4 (22.2%)

something else (see comments)
3 (16.7%)

I mostly write ...

View Answers

drabbles and ficlets (<1k)
2 (11.8%)

short fic (1-3k)
5 (29.4%)

medium length fic (3-6k)
4 (23.5%)

longer fic (6-10k)
4 (23.5%)

long fic (10-20k)
0 (0.0%)

very long fic (20-50k)
0 (0.0%)

epic fic (>50k)
2 (11.8%)

I often write ...

View Answers

drabbles and ficlets (<1k)
9 (56.2%)

short fic (1-3k)
12 (75.0%)

medium length fic (3-6k)
8 (50.0%)

longer fic (6-10k)
7 (43.8%)

long fic (10-20k)
3 (18.8%)

very long fic (20-50k)
1 (6.2%)

epic fic (>50k)
3 (18.8%)



Tally

Days 1-15 )

Day 16: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] chanter1944, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] shadaras, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 17: [personal profile] alightbuthappypen, [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] chanter1944, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] shadaras, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] the_siobhan, [personal profile] trobadora, [personal profile] ysilme

Day 18: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] chanter1944, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] luzula, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] shadaras, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora

Day 19: [personal profile] badly_knitted, [personal profile] brithistorian, [personal profile] carenejeans, [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] cornerofmadness, [personal profile] goddess47, [personal profile] sanguinity, [personal profile] shadaras, [personal profile] sylvanwitch, [personal profile] trobadora

Day 20: [personal profile] china_shop, [personal profile] trobadora

Let me know if I missed anyone! And remember you can drop in or out at any time. :)

Long time, no movie post

20 January 2026 11:18 pm
sandrine: (Bucky)
[personal profile] sandrine
The Long Walk: This was one of my favorite books when I was a teenager. Thirty years on, as an adult, I find the story infinitely harder to stomach. It's incredibly brutal, and even more so when you watch it rather than read it.
But despite the brutality of the premise, it's also a really heartfelt movie about friendship that has enough moments of levity to be enjoyable. Ray's and Pete's relationship is the heart and soul of the movie. Both protagonists are more likable than their counterparts in the novel, and Cooper Hoffman (reminding me vaguely of the "Heartstopper" guy) and David Jonsson (hugely charismatic) were great. All the actors were brilliant, actually – I love how they brought the characters to life and fleshed them out, even those who only got a few scenes.
The book's ending with Ray being the last one standing but seeing an imaginary shadow walker in front of him he's trying to catch up to was so haunting that I vividly remember it decades later. Changing it made it somewhat less memorable, but also gave it more of an emotional impact because it centered the Ray/Pete friendship and was at once triumphant, tragic and ambiguous. ★★★★½

Thunderbolts*: I was fairly unimpressed with the first half hour or so because Valentina assembling a ragtag team of antiheroes, using them for shady missions and then trying to clean up the evidence felt like a knock-off Amanda Waller thing. But I liked how the team came together – grudgingly and with a lot of bickering – first to unite against her and then to save Bob (and save the world from Bob).
I enjoyed all the characters individually, though I felt like Walker turning from a rampant selfish asshole into a mostly okay guy was a bit odd. I didn't know Ava before, but I liked her. I liked Bucky's role in bringing the team together, and how gung-ho Alexei was about being a hero, and the movie's focus on Yelena really worked for me. I'm generally meh about Florence Pugh, but she's great here. Bob was at once such a likable character, and such a scary villain!
I was spoiled for the twist at the end, which is a shame, because I think it would have been hilarious to see it without knowing what was coming. Their dumbfounded looks are so great. The post-credit scene was fun too and actually makes me somewhat excited about "Doomsday", though given that there's not been a single big MCU team-up movie I actually enjoyed much, I'm trying to manage my expectations… ★★★★

The Rip: I thought the first ninety minutes of this were brilliant – I loved how it kept us in the dark who was perhaps a dirty cop the whole time, the mutual suspicion and the manipulation and the character dynamics. 10/10, instant favorite. And then it just… fell off. A predictable, boring car chase culminating in an even more predictable showdown, and a drawn-out ending sequence that looked like it might reveal a clever twist that never came. It was so incredibly frustrating! D:
Ben Affleck is very hot, though. And even though I'm not a big fan of Matt Damon, he and Affleck still have great chemistry. The antagonism between Affleck's character JD and his FBI agent brother (Scott Adkins) was fun as well. I also really enjoyed Kyle Chandler as JD's friend DEA Agent Matty, and Sasha Calle as the young woman sitting on 20 million dollars of cartel money. It was really a shame that the script didn't end up delivering what it promised. ★★★½

Kiss of the Spider Woman (2025): The new screen adaptation seems to try to find some middle ground between the movie and the musical. I wish I'd known that beforehand, because going into it expecting a straightforward movie version of the musical got me off to a disappointing start. The main plot in the prison is stripped of all of its songs, so you really only get the musical when Molina (Tonatiuh) is telling Valentin (Diego Luna) the movie plot about Aurora. It's a decision that makes sense because it enhances the stark contrast between the dire, gloomy reality and the vidid beauty of Molina's imagination.
JLo does a really good job both as the embodiment of a Golden Age Hollywood diva and as the menacing mythical Spider Woman, but it's Tonatiuh's and Diego Luna's performances who make the movie so engaging. It's been a minute since I watched the 1985 movie, but from what I remember, I find the Molina/Valentin dynamic in the new film a lot more emotionally resonant. ★★★★

The Running Man (2025): The 1987 movie with Arnold Schwarzenegger was pretty formative for me when I was a teenager. I haven't watched it in years, I don't know if it would still hold up almost 40 (and let me tell you, writing this number made me die a little on the inside) years later or if I mentally built it up to remember it as better than it was, but the remake doesn't really cut it for me. It was slow to start, has a pretty good, fast-paced and really exciting middle part where Ben is trying to outrun the Hunters, and then it falls off really badly at the end with a resolution twist that stretches suspension of disbelief until it snaps. And Glen Powell just doesn't work for me as some kind of rugged, down-on-his-luck working class guy. ★★★

In the Heights: Watching this as a fan of the stage musical was a bit of a wild ride. The newly added opening sequence with Usnavi (Anthony Ramos, who's amazing!) telling the story to the group of kids threw me for a loop because it seemed to contradict the ending of the movie (and thus turn the entire point of the story on its head), but the ending twist was SO. GOOD. and made me incredibly emotional. So that was a change that really worked well for me.
On the other hand, they cut some of my favorite songs and with it entire chunks of background story and plot – I really missed Nina's (Leslie Grace, also brilliant) parents' songs, but cutting "Everything I Know" in particular feels unforgivable because it's such a pivotal song and arguably the emotional climax of the story.
And still, standing on its own, it's a good movie. The music is fantastic, the actors are great and their voices are wonderful, and LMM as the Piragua guy was a great little easter egg. ★★★★

Eden: It's a weird movie, and it's even weirder to think that this is actually a true story and not one that seems to be heavily dramatized for the screen either. It took me a while to get into it, mostly because most of the characters are deeply unsympathetic, and even when the story started gripping me, it's not a pleasant movie to watch, in the same way "Abwärts" or the Doctor Who episode "Midnight" are unpleasant to watch, because they all show how regular people when isolated and cornered bring out the worst in each other in a way that's frankly frightening. "Eden" has a lot of actors I like (excellently) playing characters I find deeply appalling (Ana de Armas, most of all, but also Jude Law and to a minor degree Daniel Brühl, though the Wittmers are the least unlikable of the bunch).
As the closing credits rolled (presumably over real life footage of the actual settlers?), I had come to feel mostly favorable and mildly impressed by the movie – it's a good movie and an absolutely wild story that it tells in a fairly engaging manner. Will I watch it again? Eh, probably not. ★★★½

Materialists: The plot is very straightforward: a matchmaker (Dakota Johnson, looking weirdly like Anne Hathaway in "The Devil Wears Prada") with a lot of success coupling up wealthy clients but a cynical outlook on love is charmed by the attention of a rich, attractive businessman (Pedro Pascal) who seems like a perfect match for her, but she's secretly hung up on her perpetually broke ex-boyfriend (Chris Evans, looking devastatingly handsome). It's a charming movie. All the main characters are more or less good, if flawed, people, and the movie never tries to create unnecessary drama or antagonism between them, which makes for a really pleasant change of pace compared to the usual romance plots. It's also fundamentally not about two guys competing for one woman but rather a woman trying to figure out her priorities in life.
The only thing is… I was rooting for John and Lucy all along, but absolutely nothing about this story convinced me that their relationship has any kind of future. Despite all the chemistry between them, they're a terrible match, and it's plain to see that their marriage is going to fail for the exact same reasons their first relationship failed. Which made the 'happy ending' feel very bittersweet in a way that I'm 90% sure isn't intentional. ★★★½

I also watched the first 15 minutes of "Sinners", which I know got rave reviews, but I couldn't get into it. Maybe I just wasn't in the mood? I might or might not give it another try at a later point.

January Manga Wrap-Up

20 January 2026 03:54 pm
bluapapilio: Iruma from Mairimashita! Iruma-kun (mairuma)
[personal profile] bluapapilio
 

 Read the BL oneshot Peeping Tom and rated it 4.5! 

 I read the BL Staining the White Pine with Crimson Frosted Snow and rated it 7.5/10. 

 Read vol. 24 of Dr. Stone!! 

 (Re)read v21ch 184-185 of Mairimashita! Iruma-kun, excited to get going reading new content now! 

 (Re)read the BL Lover's→Flat, the rating went from 9->7 and I'm reading to pass it along. 

(no subject)

20 January 2026 01:49 pm
olivermoss: (Default)
[personal profile] olivermoss
* More straight hockey content creators liking Heated Rivalry and not being weird about it. This time it's Eck. Two guys write for the channel. One really preferred the Skip content, but interestingly the other was more into Hollanov. It's only ten minutes, but it doesn't say anything revolutionary. it's interesting that it's happened again.

* The Sens' Heated Rivalry jerseys sold out in about an hour. The sales benefit Ottawa Pride Hockey.

Importantly, this is the logo for the Ottawa Pride Jerseys:


Perfection.

* I haven't watched the whole thing, this goes on the pile with some other interviews to watch when I have time, but Linus Ullmark has addressed the batshit rumors about his brief leave of absence in this interview. I've only seen a clip, but he talks about why so many players seen closed off in interviews, don't talk about their lives, and seem to not have personalities. There has been a lot of talk about how it's a real thing in hockey culture that players are closed off, never give real answers and seem to be robots all running on the same software.

That this is a real thing/problem is hockey has been something hockey fans have been trying to explain to parts of HR fandom. There is a certain Kraken who still gets dunked on by Canadian sports media for a single comment taken out of context back in 2014, he later wound up being trained by Sid himself in No-Speak, the art of saying literally nothing ever in front of media.

Anyway, I am still new to hockey but it must be frustrating to see a lot of new people come in with very strong assumptions about what is and isn't accurate in the GCU books. Hockey isn't a monolith, there are exceptions. Joey, for example, is very open about parts of his life and does chat with fans. But also, hockey players being media trained into being politeness bots who say nothing is also a big part of the scene.

son of Smith post

20 January 2026 01:37 pm
calimac: (Default)
[personal profile] calimac
So I wrote about the conference on Clark Ashton Smith that I attended. I've now had the chance to follow a link that I took note of during the panels. It's a (virtually?) complete file of Smith's writings online. If you've never tried his writings, here's your chance. One story of his that I found searingly memorable will make a bracing introduction to whether Smith is an author for you. Unusually for Smith, the main character of this one is the hero, not the villain, but nothing goes well for anybody in this story. I'm reminded as much of Tiptree's "The Last Flight of Dr. Ain" as of anything else by this story.

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     1 23
4 5678910
11 121314151617
1819 20 2122 2324
2526 2728293031

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 27 January 2026 03:59 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios