edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-04-01 08:37 pm

daily update, Wednesday April 1

1. Not the IRS 11am-noon. Wherein I finished one return and uploaded it for the client to approve or return with comments, and called a couple other clients to leave messages. I also mostly cleared out my little cubby in the back room since I currently only have one more scheduled shift before April 15 and whatever happens after than, it will be at the valley office rather than my office.

2. Phone call with Susan at 1pm. :D

3. Repaired one pair of pants and got 3/4 of the way through repairing a second pair. I intend to finish up this evening.

4. A few days ago I finished one Great Courses series -- The Terror of History: Mystics, Heretics, and Witches in the Western Tradition by Prof. Teofilo F. Ruiz (which is pretty cool, though I am a little 'eh' about some of his analysis of the history and purpose of religion in general (though it fits pretty well with Christianity and he does treat Judaism separately) and also I am firmly of the belief that all historical analysis can be improved by NOT drawing on Freud or Jung) -- and have moved on to How the Earth Works by Prof. Michael E. Wysession. I listened to several lectures today while doing various household tasks and walking or driving to various places.

5. Took my daily walk to Cascadilla Creek and back so I wouldn't start climbing the walls.

6. Made almond cake! I halved the cake recipe and loosely two-thirded the icing, and baked the cake in a 9 x 13 pan so it's a little thicker than the original intent (even with the halved amounts), but it smells fine and passed the toothpick test, so I think it came out all right. It's cooling on a rack now and I will have a piece or two for dessert.

I have not written anything yet today, but I may or may not get on that after I finish repairing my pants. *wry*
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-02-20 08:43 pm

daily update, Thursday Feb. 20

Things done today:

1. 9am-7pm at the rental office. Very boring day, given that many Cornell students are already leaving for February break. Both Mom Boss and Aunt Boss are currently on vacation, so Miss California has picked up some extra hours by being a second person in the office today and tomorrow. (I would have returned the favor on Wednesday, but I was at Not the IRS all morning and afternoon.)

2. I forgot to mention this yesterday, but I finished listening to The World of Byzantium on Wednesday morning, and started on a new Great Courses lecture series: How to Listen to and Understand Great Music (3rd edition). I listened to episode 2 today. The lecturer is not to be trusted when it comes to historical interpretation of non-musical trends (though he's fine on names and dates, thank goodness), but fortunately he mostly sticks to music and personal history anecdata, so I can grit my teeth and say "Oh for fuck's sake" a lot when he attempts to explain the fall of the (western) Roman Empire. (This is the same guy who did the Bach lecture series I listened to and enjoyed last year, FYI. He had the same "please stop trying to do social, political, or economic history and just stick to music, which you are admittedly very good at" issue there, too.)

3. Listened to The Magnus Archives episode 154: Bloody Mary. As I've mentioned before, I am slowing way down in the homestretch of season 4 because I don't want to run out of content and be stuck in a long hiatus. :/

4. Read chapter 5 of A Fistful of Shells, which felt a bit less in-depth than the previous chapters despite being ten pages longer, perhaps because it's trying to cover a much larger geographic area.

5. Wrote two 3-sentence ficathon fills.

6. Started folding and putting away linens from Sunday's laundry haul.

Now I am going to finish dinner, after which I think I will attempt a bit more writing since I have not yet reached my wordcount goal for the day... and, of course, fold some more linens since they're currently strewn all over my bed as part of my attempt to force myself to fold them because otherwise I can't go to sleep. (This trick does not always work. Sometimes I just chuck the unfolded items back in the laundry bag for another day. But it's always worth a shot!)

...

Oh! Tangentially and unrelated to anything, I just wanted to say that while I was walking into town to catch my bus this morning, I passed a woman walking a dog. I complimented the dog (I think a mutt with a hefty dose of standard poodle? very large and curly and with intelligent eyes), and she complimented my scarf. And I felt very nice about that all the way to work. :)
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-02-13 10:19 pm

daily update, Thursday Feb. 13

Things done today:

1. Remembered to bring broccoli in to work to be the vegetable supplement to my leftover storebought mac'n'cheese. \o/

2. Rental company office 9am-7pm. A slow day, so I spent most of it reading.

3. And what did I read? I finished The Clockwork Boys and read the entirety of The Wonder Engine. I enjoyed them very much!

4. Listened to two episodes of The Magnus Archives. I've been slowing down now that I'm in the back half of season four, partly because I have been spoiled for the ending and am emotionally wary, and partly because once I finish I will have to wait impatiently through the hiatus until season five begins posting.

5. Other stuff I am listening to: So, I finished the incredibly frustrating Great Courses lecture series. It did not get better. The lecturer's mono-focus on Western Europe continued (look, Eastern Europe existed during the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the early modern period! it offers interesting examples of how societies didn't wind up with Western European patterns despite being, you know, right next door, or tried to import those patterns with varying degrees of success! also the Ottoman Empire is just as European as the freaking Spanish Empire at this point in history and participated in the modern state-building process, so... maybe they should also be mentioned??? ARGH) and the lecturer's shaky grasp on facts also continued. (Like, okay, I realize English royal genealogies are not something everyone can reel off at the drop of a hat -- honestly I can't either, at least for the early bits of the Wars of the Roses and how the everliving heck the Hannoverians got into the line of succession -- but it is utterly trivial to discover that Mary II was the daughter of James II and this is why she was the obvious Protestant successor when Parliament kicked her father out for being A) Catholic and B) a would-be absolute monarch. She and William III (her husband, who was also her cousin because royalty have been weirdly inbred for centuries) were not "very far down" the line of succession. *headdesk* There were many other howlers, but that's the one that bugged me most because you can disprove it with like five seconds on Wikipedia, so it has NO BUSINESS being in a published lecture series.)

Apparently Audible now has an exchange policy where you can return an audiobook you disliked and get back either your money or your member credit. I can verify that the return worked. The refund is supposed to take several days to process, so we'll see if that works as advertised.

(The course, for the record, is The Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Rise of Nations by Prof. Andrew C. Fix. I disrecommend it.)

But anyway! I finished that mess last week and have moved on to The World of Byzantium by Prof. Kenneth W. Harl, which I am both enjoying and finding vastly more relaxing. Prof. Harl is both much better at citing his sources (did I mention that Prof. Fix basically NEVER cited sources? because he didn't) and at giving concrete details when needed, so you are never left in confusion as to who is doing what at any given point, or where events take place. :)

6. Watered my houseplants and my overwintering peppers and eggplant.

7. Steamed more broccoli, some for tonight's dinner and some for more lunch supplements. I really like broccoli, okay, and it's dead easy to cook. You just chop off the weirder/woodier bits of the stems, pop the pieces into a pot with a bit of water at the bottom, cover it, and turn the burner to high for... 5-8 minutes, probably? The timing depends on the pot size and how much broccoli you've put into it, obviously. You want the results to still be firm, but not so firm they squeak when you chew them.

I have not written anything today, and I think I may not bother. I will just go to bed at a reasonable hour (ie, 10:30ish) and catch up on my sleep.
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-02-01 09:31 pm

daily update, Saturday Feb. 1

Things done today:

1. Rental office 10am-6pm. Did two studio tours, fielded some phone calls, answered a few emails, and made supportive comments while Miss California put up our Valentine's Day hearts display for February.

2. Read about half of Six of Crows. I am trying very hard not to stay up foolishly late to read the rest of it.

3. Continued listening to the frustrating Great Courses lecture series. The lecturer has now fucked up the Second Defenestration of Prague, continued not to name popes, neglected to mention almost any dates for the Thirty Years War, etc. *sigh*

4. Continued listening to The Magnus Archives. I am currently through episode 129: Submerged.

5. Wrote four fills for the Three Sentence Ficathon, which is now open. Come play! The more people participate, the more fun it is for everyone! :DDD

6. Paid one credit card bill, which happens to be on a payment cycle about 10-12 days offset from my other credit cards. This is mildly annoying, but not enough to bother trying to change.

7. Took kitchen compost to the communal bin and texted Landlord Dude to let him know the compost company hasn't picked up the full bin and given us a new empty one even though I've had the full bin sitting on the curb for two weeks now.
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-01-30 08:41 pm

daily update, Thursday Jan. 30

Things done today:

1. Rental office 9am-7pm. Mostly slow, though again a weirdly large number of packages. (Seriously, WHAT are people ordering at this time of year???) Mom Boss had the March rent reminders ready, so I sent them out even though it's not quite February yet. Might as well get them done while we have the time, you know?

2. Read some more of Sovereign.

3. Continued listening to the frustrating Great Courses lecture series. We're dealing with the Reformation now, which is irritating on two counts. First, I happen to know more about the radical Reformation than the lecturer does (by virtue of being a Unitarian Universalist and interested in my own denomination's history, which has some roots in 16th century Poland and Transylvania), so I found a lot of what he said about it either wrong or so incomplete that it wildly missed the point; also, his relentlessly western-European focus drives me up the metaphorical wall because the Reformation didn't stop dead at the Austro-Hungarian border. Second, every time he talks about a pope, he just says "the Pope" and never bothers to say WHICH POPE (unless it's Paul III, and even then only sometimes). This is MADDENING, because it has the effect of collapsing all popes into a single ur-Pope with no distinguishing characteristics -- and he maintains this flattening lack of names EVEN WHEN he is also talking about how a given pope's personality affected his decisions! ARGH!!!!!

4. Wrote ~200 words of the untitled Narnia bridge fic. I have hit my [community profile] getyourwordsout wordcount target for January, with one day still to go! \o/ Also, I managed to at least partially wrangle the conversational subject back around to bridges rather than taxes, though possibly doing this by way of discussing drowned Telmarine soldiers from the climactic battle in PC was not the most tasteful way to do that? Oh well, whatever. I'm not going to prettify the logical results of a war.

5. Put away some of the clean laundry from yesterday.

And now I will have a slice of coffee cake and do a bit of websurfing before I hit the sack. :)
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-01-22 10:58 pm

end of day update, Wednesday Jan. 22

Things done since 2:30pm:

1. Worked 4-8pm at Not the IRS. I had my first tax client today! We couldn't finish because they were missing two pieces of information, but it's the kind of thing where somebody else just has to plug two numbers in and then run the signatures, so they're coming back on their Thursday lunch break with those numbers and one of my coworkers will get everything signed and paid.

2. Continued listening to The Magnus Archives. I have finished episode 101: "Another Twist," and continue to enjoy the podcast a lot. :D

3. Continued listening to my current Great Courses series, which continues to annoy me but not quite enough to call it a day and move on to something else. *hands* I have decided to treat it as an unreliable introductory survey course, which is basically what it is.

Thus far the lecturer has made howling genealogical errors for both the Medicis and the royal family of Castille-Aragon, has fucked up the timeline of the Portuguese voyages of exploration around Africa to India, and has also repeated negative rumors about the Borgias as if they were proven fact. (Which, like, I am not a Borgia fan? But there is a difference between saying, "There were widely believed stories that the Borgias did such-and-such shocking, immoral things," and saying, flat-out, "The Borgias totally did these shocking, immoral things," in the same tone as reporting clear facts like who was king of France in a certain year.) I also have serious arguments with his take on Columbus's voyages and Cortez's conquest of Mexico, though that's more an interpretation thing than an errors-of-fact thing. On the other hand, this is one of the first times I've heard someone devote time and attention to the growth of the popular piety movement in the late Middle Ages/Renaissance, so that's worth something.

4. Wrote ~525 words of the bridge-centric Narnia fic. I think I have figured out what the tax record stuff is doing there -- the theme is about building Narnia back into a functional and unified country in the years after PC (possibly also after VDT? I am as yet unsure of the exact timeframe of this fic), so cracking down on old habits of tax evasion (and also using taxes for public works rather than just making Miraz rich and hiring ever-more soldiers) is related to my protagonist's obsession with creating functional bridges to improve transportation networks and logistics. Also, I have worked out a good reason for her to meet a local naiad, and a reason for that naiad to have an interest in human engineering. So. Progress!

(Also, as of yesterday I am no longer in the red on my [community profile] getyourwordsout pledge of 75,000 words in 2020. \o/ I mean, ~205 words a day is not a particularly grueling writing pace, but I spent the first week of January writing literally no fiction, and most of the next week writing a grand total of 210 words over six whole days, so it's nice to prove to myself that I can still knock words out when I put in a little time and effort. Are these words aimed toward my planned Writing Projects To Complete in 2020? So far, mostly not. But some of them are, and any words are better than no words, you know?)

5. Bought some more groceries, including the zucchinis I was unable to buy yesterday because the store had run out of them. They were very nearly out again today, but I snapped up the last remnants -- they're quite small and some have weird marks on their skins (which is probably why no one else had bought them earlier), but they will roast just fine so I don't care.

6. Steamed broccoli for lunch tomorrow and Friday. Possibly dinner tomorrow as well? Or no, that will probably be taco salad.

7. Possibly I should mention that I washed all the dishes I used in my various cooking projects? I don't usually mention washing dishes, because that's not a task I have ever had trouble with. It doesn't eat spoons for me -- in fact, I find it meditative and a minor source of the "look, I have Done A Thing" satisfaction I get from creative endeavors. And I think because I know dishes aren't a problem for me, I don't get bothered if they stack up in my sink for a couple days -- I know I will get to them sooner or later, so there's no sense of building anxiety as the size of the task grows. It just means I get one long meditation session instead of two or three smaller ones spread over multiple days.

I have heard other people's dish-related issues, and I am really glad they're not something I personally share. Anyway, you can generally assume that I have eaten three meals, showered in the morning, gotten dressed, brushed my teeth twice a day, and flossed in the evening, even if I don't explicitly mention doing those tasks. I do put them on my to-do lists, but that's mostly to give myself some "freebies" so even on bad days I can feel like I'm still doing something, you know?

...

This has been a really good/productive week, actually. Suspiciously good. Now I'm suddenly waiting for the other shoe to drop. *headdesk*

...

Anyway, now I am off to bed, because I have to be up at 7:15am tomorrow instead of getting to sleep in until the luxuriously late hour of 9:00am. *wry*
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-01-19 10:23 pm

wherein Liz is slightly tipsy but attempts a coherent daily summary nonetheless

I was going to and-then my way through the next bit of the horribly recalcitrant prompt fic, but I ended up writing some actual proper-text paragraphs instead. (And going back to firmly locate a certain piece of set dressing, since that's relevant for the upcoming fight scene.)

~125 words, which isn't great but isn't terrible either.

...

Other things I did today:

1. Went to church, bearing brownies and banana bread. Did coffee hour setup (which I was not officially signed up for, but I was there so why not) and coffee hour cleanup. My hospitality team went out with a triumphant bang and we're now free until May. \o/

2. Finished two T. Kingfisher short novels/novellas, namely Minor Mage and The Seventh Bride. I liked the second better, though that may just be because, for reasons external to either novel in question, I am currently feeling moderate preemptive annoyance toward any original fiction that doesn't include at least one major female character unless there's a VERY compelling reason not to. I mean, I'd even be okay if it was the armadillo that was female. I don't think that's so much to ask.

3. Had a BLT for lunch with... malice aforethought is the wrong phrase. There was no malice involved. Why do we not have a good stock phrase for "I knew exactly what I was doing and yeah, maybe it was a dumb idea, but I knew the likely consequences and did it anyway because I chose to"? Pre-meditated maybe comes close, but that's also associated with crime so it's likewise not quite what I'm looking for. Anyway, I know eating a BLT for lunch means I'll lose the whole afternoon because I have to take a Benadryl so as to not have my throat close up and choke and/or suffocate me from allergic reaction to the tomatoes, and I did it anyway. And duly slept until 5:30pm.

4. Baked a loaf of banana bread all for myself, because I am an adult and I can do that if I want.

5. Continued listening to season 3 of The Magnus Archives, which I am enjoying very much. It's funny -- I don't think of myself as a horror fan per se, but Stephen King is one of my favorite writers and I am perfectly fine with horror elements in stories that are nominally in other genres. I guess it mostly depends on the writing and character work? Like, I won't seek things out on the basis of "it's so scary!!!" but if someone says "It's really well-constructed and the characters are engaging and there's a cool plot and such-and-such neat bits of worldbuilding," then the horror aspect is never going to be a barrier.

I should maybe make a list at some point of the few episodes that really got to me in a way more visceral/lasting than just feeling kind of delightfully shivery/horribly grossed-out while actively listening to them. That might be useful from a personal character analysis standpoint, you know? Pinpoint what really bothers me!

6. The other thing I've been listening to is yet another Great Courses series via Audible. This one is about the Renaissance, the Reformation, and how they led to the creation of modern Western society. It's a little frustrating because the lecturer has made some errors of fact -- like, I do know some about the Medici family tree and he's fucked it up TWICE so far -- and also will imply an event is something rare and special in one lecture, only to characterize the same event as part of a larger trend a few lectures later. Also he has a tendency to repeat himself but in different words. But I am not annoyed enough to metaphorically throw the "book" across the room (yet?) so I will press onward.

7. Changed my linens.

8. On a related point, finally put away my clean laundry that had been sitting in a laundry bag on my couch since Wednesday. *sigh*

And now I am going to bed because if I don't, I will sit up and eat cheese and crackers and make myself another Black Russian and reread old fanfic until past midnight, and that's an unfortunate idea in several different directions. *wry*

Good night!
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-01-15 10:35 pm

wherein Liz is tired, and annoyed about being tired

Things I intended to do today: a lot.

Things I actually did today: maybe half of that? Which was still a fair bit, and included getting sort of half-done with some of the unfinished items so I can do them properly tomorrow, so I'm not terribly annoyed.

I think what bugs me most is that I have been very tired lately. As in, when I have a day off I invariably seem to require a two hour (or three hour) nap in the afternoon or early evening, regardless of whether I've been getting adequate sleep in the preceding days. I don't know if this is a depression symptom or something else. I suppose for the moment my best bet is to continue maintaining a regular sleep schedule and see if this settles out or fades as the days get longer. Hmm. Also I could probably stand to use my little Verilux light during the afternoons as well as during breakfast and see if that makes a difference.

But hey, I washed all my laundry (even if I didn't fold and put anything away yet); I bought some cheap red wine, started thawing beef, and pulled out my slow-cooker to make pot roast tomorrow; I roasted zucchini and eggplant so I have vegetable accompaniment for the next few days; I took my kitchen compost to the communal bin; I checked out an interesting book from the library; I wrote my to-do lists for the coming week; I've been listening to a Great Courses audio series about US constitutional law; and I got through another handful of Magnus Archives episodes as I approach the end of season 2. Like I said, still a fair bit, especially when you figure in the 2.5 hour nap. *wry*
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2020-01-01 05:45 pm

audiobook list, November and December 2019

The following is a list of the 4 audiobooks (for varying definitions of "book") that I have listened to in November and December, 2019. They are in chronological order by initial listening date.

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35. War and World History, by Jonathan P. Roth (Great Courses, 25 hours 1 minutes)
-----Basically a history of war and related issues (politics, culture, economics, religion, technology, etc.) from a global perspective, focusing mostly on the "core" (western/southern Europe and western/northern Africa east through China and Japan) as a unified area where military technology and ideas traveled easily from culture to culture, and glancing less frequently at the "marginal" areas outside that unified geographic region (which then obviously shifts after Columbus et al). I think this course works best if you have a decent grounding in general world history to start with, so you have a solid foundation to stick any new information on top of, but it's fascinating and I really like Prof. Roth's unifying approach and refusal to treat Europe, India, China, the Middle East, and so on as walled-off areas, and instead his interest in tracing the back-and-forth flow of influences from one region to another and the reasons why various regions adopted or failed to adopt various innovations over the millennia. I would also be really interested in a few supplemental lectures to get his perspective on military history developments since 2008, which is the stop date/publication date for this course.

36. The Early Middle Ages, by Philip Daileader (Great Courses, 12 hours 32 minutes)
-----I actually listened to this series on CD about... two years ago now? That sounds about right. Anyway, Prof. Daileader did a trilogy of courses about the Middle Ages, but he started with the High Middle Ages because that seemed most likely to be of general interest. I believe this was the second series he recorded. The first part is about Late Antiquity, i.e., the slow alteration of the western Roman Empire into a very different form of society, with some attention paid to the related changes going on in the eastern half of the Empire, and then moves into developments in the new "barbarian" kingdoms of western Europe and the growth of the Carolingian Empire, with tangents on the growth of the Islamic world, the British Isles, and the Balkans and other Slavic lands. (The Vikings get salted in to a handful of lectures.) Very interesting, engaging, and informative.

37. Sleep Better, by Jade Alexis (Aaptiv free Audible member offer, 1 hour 58 minutes)
-----This is a series of seven guided meditations to aid in falling asleep. They start about 10 minutes long, and gradually lengthen until the seventh is about 30 minutes long. I play them at 75% speed because that's more restful for me. I found the third meditation less than useless for idiosyncratic visualization reasons, but the others are very relaxing. In fact, I have not yet managed to hear the end of the sixth and seventh meditations, because I fall asleep before then... which I guess is a pretty good anecdotal recommendation. *wry*

38. The High Middle Ages, by Philip Daileader (Great Courses, 12 hours 25 minutes)
-----Again, I previously listened to this series on CD a year or two ago. This course takes a more thematic approach than Prof. Daileader's lectures on the Early Middle Ages, with the first third being social history, the next third being mostly religious and intellectual history, and the final third being events and politics.

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---------------

In non-audiobook but still audio media news, I have picked up another podcast and am working my way through its... um... back catalog? *wry* Namely, The Magnus Archives, which is sort of a supernatural horror anthology with a unifying plot that starts sneaking in around the edges after a few episodes, and which apparently comes more and more to the fore over the seasons. I'm still in season one, but it's quite enjoyable despite my usual issues with listening to people read written fiction. I think that's partly because these episodes were written specifically to be heard rather than to be read visually, but partly also because the conceit of a lot of the initial episodes is a person reading other people's personal statements of paranormal/horror encounters aloud so the Magnus Archives will have an audio record as well as a written record, for accessibility reasons. And then there are some episodes that are actually structured as in-person recorded interviews, so overall the whole effect is more like a radio play than an audiobook.

Anyway, I like this series very much so far. (The fandom is also pretty cool, fyi.)
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2019-11-29 10:39 pm

audiobook list, January through October 2019

The following is a list of the 34 audiobooks (for varying definitions of "book") that I have listened to in January through October, 2019. They are more or less in chronological order by listening date. (I say "more or less" because Amazon's content-management function lists items by purchase date, and while my Audible app mostly lists by "last date you did something with this item," where "did something" can be either "listened to it" OR "purchased it" OR "downloaded it to your phone," sometimes parts of it glitch back to purchase order.)

Anyway, the list:

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---------------

1. The Other Side of History: Daily Life in the Ancient World, by Robert Garland (Great Courses, 24 hours 28 minutes)
-----Or more accurately, in the ancient Mediterranean world (Egypt, Greece, Rome, with a few digressions into Mesopotamia and Persia) and in medieval England. Garland's unexamined ethnocentrism grates after a while, but there's a bunch of useful information in here. (Just ignore most of what he says once he gets to the medieval period, particularly about the Vikings.)

2. Jingle Bell Pop, by John Seabrook (Audible free member offer, 1 hour 14 minutes)
-----A history of how/when/why various songs entered the "canon" of American Christmas music. Slight but entertaining.

3. Origins of Great Ancient Civilizations, by Kenneth W. Harl (Great Courses, 6 hours)
-----Which should probably be subtitled "maybe let's not skim over Mesopotamia and Anatolia/Persia so fast before diving into Greek history, hey?" This is fairly introductory level stuff, but well organized and interesting. Also, a note about Prof. Harl, since I have been listening to a bunch of his courses: he has a strong Brooklyn (or Brooklyn-adjacent) accent and a kind of strident speaking pattern, which I understand some listeners find off-putting, but which I find oddly endearing because it makes him sound like he's really into whatever he's talking about.

4. The Black Death: The World's Most Devastating Plague, by Dorsey Armstrong (Great Courses, 12 hours 10 minutes)
-----What it says on the tin. My one gripe is that Prof. Armstrong treats the course a bit too much like an actual college course where students can go several days between lectures and therefore includes a sort of five-minute "as we discussed in the previous lecture..." catch-up section at the start of each new lecture. This gets old fast if you're listening to a bunch in a row on a long drive. *wry* Other than that, very interesting and informative.

5. Maya to Aztec: Ancient Mesoamerica Revealed, by Edwin Barnhart (Great Courses, 23 hours 15 minutes)
-----Fascinating and informative. You could easily make a whole course (or multiple courses) on any one of the cultures Prof. Barnhart discusses here.

cut for length! )

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---------------

You know, looking at it all together, that is a lot of hours. What's especially interesting is that they're all hours I also fill with other tasks, because I literally cannot focus on audio-only input without something else to eat fidgety overflow. So I listen while driving, or while walking into work, or while cooking, or while doing laundry, or while raking leaves, or any number of random tasks. All of which are things I would be doing anyway, but adding the audio input makes those tasks less annoying because I no longer feel like "ugh, folding laundry is such a waste of time" since I am now Learning A Thing while doing a mindless chore.

Apparently the theme of 2019 for me is that this is the year I finally learned how to listen to audiobooks (and/or podcasts) and it improved my life in ways I was absolutely not expecting.

...Also, you have probably noticed that there is no fiction on this list. There's a reason for that, and it's that I am super-picky about narrative voice for fiction and also I get SO IMPATIENT at the pacing when I can't just read ahead at my own speed. I'm picky about nonfiction narrative voice, too, but less so. And lecture series are perfect because they're not a person reading written prose -- they're just a person talking like a normal human being. Like, okay, they're talking from notes about a specific subject, but it's basically a college lecture recorded on tape, and I'm cool with a wide variety of professorial styles, so. *wry*
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2019-11-28 11:55 am

Thanksgiving update!

Yesterday I met Susan for breakfast at Bagel Chateau, after which we walked around downtown a little to see what stores have changed since the last time I was paying much attention. She gently mocked me for not knowing the name of the tuxedo rental place and asking what kind of business it was -- but I always just knew it as "the tuxedo rental place on Main Street" so the idea that it even had a name was mildly surprising to me. *wry*

Mom, Dad, Nick and I then went to a matinee showing of A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, which I enjoyed. There was some intense mental dissonance at the start when Tom Hanks came on as Mister Rogers, but you get through that after a while.

In the evening we went to Osteria Trevi for dinner. I had veal with eggplant, Mom had a different veal dish, Nick had a fillet mignon with gorgonzola and a red wine reduction, and Dad had fancy lamb chops. (I mention this because Mom is into asking about "what restaurant did we go to at such-and-such occasion, and who ate what?" and I will never on earth remember any of that if I don't write it down.)

Today I have done some Thanksgiving set-up, started a load of laundry, and re-taught Mom's printer and laptop how to speak to each other. I am not remotely an IT person, but that was really just getting into her settings and telling the computer "use THIS device" and then following the printer's own instructions on how to hook it back into the house's internal wi-fi network. So, you know, pretty simple. I also showed Mom how to access the settings menu on her laptop, so hopefully she'll be able to do some of these things on her own in the future. :)

And now I'm going to check on the laundry and take a small walk despite the gray skies and strong winds, because walking is good for both body and soul. :D
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2019-08-06 11:47 pm

travel is absurdly tiring even if all you do is sit on a bus for five hours.

Today I caught the 9:40am Shortline bus to NJ, met Dad at the Ridgewood park-and-ride, and promptly crashed for a two hour nap upon reaching my parents' house.

Then Susan and I had takeout pizza for dinner at her house, I gave her her early birthday present and some brownies, and we watched the first three episodes of Broadchurch season 1, which were excellent. Tomorrow's plan is to meet at Frutta Bowls for lunch around 1pm, after which I will drive home to Ithaca.

And now, I think, I am off to bed. :)
edenfalling: colored line-art drawing of a three-scoop ice cream sundae (ice cream sundae)
2019-05-06 02:53 pm

a very full weekend

Things Susan and I did this weekend, in no particular order:

1. The Cayuga Lake Wine Trail's annual Wine & Herb Fest event, in which each participating winery offers a small food plus a paired wine to ticket-holders, and then you get to taste up to three additional wines for no extra fee. You also get a little book of recipes for all the snacks, and a small potted herb or vegetable at each winery. I have kept all the plants, because reasons. :)

2. While at one of the wineries, fired potatoes from a giant slingshot toward a basketball hoop both because it was fun and because if we did make a basket, we could win a free bottle of wine. (Spoiler: we did not win free wine.)

3. Made taco salad Sunday evening, which was delicious. Basically you make tacos but instead of trying to stuff everything into a small hard shell, you crumble up the shell into small tortilla pieces and put the other ingredients on top and eat it with a fork. This is especially nice because you can get enough lettuce to actually matter (both for flavor and for nutrition) without it inevitably spilling all over your hands. :)

4. Watched the first five episodes of The Umbrella Academy, two on Saturday night and three on Sunday. Episode five was a terrible place to stop because it ends on about three cliffhangers at once, ARGH. But sleep is also important. *sigh*

5. Went to my church Sunday morning, where the Stewardship Team did a little celebratory announcement that we've reached this year's initial pledge goal (the sustaining budget), and asked people to see if we can now reach the stretch goal (the vision of ministry budget) where we get to implement all the Cool Things you've wanted to do but didn't have the funds for. The celebratory aspect included throwing streamers and tossing/batting about a dozen beach balls around the sanctuary, which the kids loved and a surprising number of adults also got really into. :D

6. The Finger Lakes Chamber Ensemble's spring chamber concert (also at my church). The program was Mozart's Sonata in E minor for Violin and Piano (KV 304); Schubert's Trio No. 1 in B-flat for Violin, Cello, and Pinao (D 898); and Brahms's Clarinet Quintet in B minor (Op. 115). All the players were excellent, and I enjoyed the music too although I felt that most of Schubert's movements went on just a little too long -- particularly the first movement.

7. Bought a bunch of potting soil, some tomato cages, a spray bottle of animal repellent, six new plastic pots, and a replacement packet of carrot seeds, because gardening is a demanding occupation and also the local squirrels and/or cats have dug up and destroyed my poor little transplanted carrot seedlings. :(

8. Ate out twice -- at the Antlers for Saturday dinner, and Cafe Dewitt for Sunday lunch. At Antlers I got a scallop au gratin appetizer and a garden salad, while Susan got a crab cake appetizer and a side of vegetable of the day (which was green beans with grilled onions). At Cafe Dewitt, Susan got an omelette special, while I got a sausage side and a rosemary garlic potato side. In both cases, I found that combining two small non-entree items made exactly the right size meal so I had no leftovers. That was nice. :)

9. Installed my air conditioner Monday morning. :) That task takes all of ten minutes, since I drilled all the relevant screw holes the first year, but it really does require three hands and can't be done alone.

10. Poked around a local clothing/jewelry/art/souvenir shop while waiting to be seated at Cafe Dewitt. Susan bought a sundress, and I valiantly refrained from buying a half-dozen earrings.

11. Made brownies using Kahlua instead of water, and also mixing in a packet or two of instant coffee. Then we ate them in bowls topped with vanilla and chocolate ice cream. They were delicious.

12. Spent a bunch of time talking, and some more time just hanging out in each other's general vicinity.

...

It was a good weekend. :DDD
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2019-05-04 11:53 pm

tiny driveby update!

Susan arrived around 7:30pm on Friday, after which we had Chinese takeout for dinner. Today we did the Cayuga Wine Trail's annual Wine & Herb Fest event, which was fun but LONG, and we crashed for a nap when we returned to Ithaca. (Also I have so many small plants now, it's ridiculous.) We ate at the Antlers for dinner and both just got an appetizer and a vegetable which was exactly the right size meal. Then we watched episode 1 of The Umbrella Academy, took a break to go buy some ice cream (Star Wars themed, because May the Fourth), and then watched episode 2.

And now I'm going to sleep because I am dragging Susan to church with me in the morning. :)
edenfalling: golden flaming chalice in a double circle (gold chalice)
2019-03-31 11:07 pm

waffles, audiobooks, and other random things

Stuff done today:

1. Went to church, which is something I almost always intend to do on Sundays but only succeed in doing about 1/3 of the time, most often when I have some specific reason for being there other than "I feel like it would be a good thing to do." Today's reason was to catch a ride to somewhere else after the service and use the church as our meeting point, but I am glad I went for the service instead of just showing up afterwards, because one of our members graduated from divinity school last year and next week we get to vote on whether to ordain her so she can step into ministry at another congregation. Today she gave one half of the sermon, and I was very proud for her.

2. Went to a champagne and waffle brunch hosted by two congregation members, to which I'd purchased a seat at the service auction in November. I've attended this once or twice before, and it's always been lovely. It's also set at a point in the year when I generally feel that I have earned a lovely brunch. :)

3. Did some general household chores, like boiling eggs, changing my linens, writing my to-do lists for the next week, taking recycling out to the porch bins, and so on.

4. Phone call with Susan. :)

5. Phone call with Cat. :)

6. Started reading a new book.

7. Earned my gold-level Daily Dipper badge from Audible, meaning that I have listened to at least a couple minutes of some audio "book" for 90 days in a row. I got an Audible account for slightly random reasons last fall, and have been using it mostly to listen to Great Courses series, with occasional ventures into other nonfiction projects. (I find these much less frustrating than audio fiction recordings -- the lecture series in particular are good because they're not a person reading a written text but a person just kind of talking like people do, albeit in a structured fashion.) Audible achievement badges annoy me a little because they're such an obvious bit of gamification intended to hook people into trying to earn them all, but damn if they're not effective. I am actually slightly disappointed that they don't seem to have a platinum level beyond gold to reach for, because I would totally aim for that if it were an option. *wry*

(This is similar to my reaction to a lot of audiovisual media, which is that I can see exactly how my emotional strings are being pulled and it pisses me off how obvious the techniques are... and yet it still works and I get all gooshy or cry or whatever. It's disconcerting to have my own emotional reactions hijacked out from under me, especially since knowing how the trick works doesn't stop its effectiveness.)

-----

And now I think I shall go to bed. :)
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2019-01-21 05:37 pm

today's ta-da list, at least thus far

So far today I have:

1. Not frozen. \o/

2. Rented a studio.

3. Rented a parking space for half a year since the previous tenant got evicted for not paying the second half of his rent.

4. Mostly rented a parking space for next year (pending payment).

5. Crossposted a Homestuck ficlet to AO3.

6. Listened to one and a half lectures in Maya to Aztec: Ancient Mesoamerica Revealed (my latest Great Courses project).

7. Read up to about halfway through Hidden Figures (not counting end matter).

8. Borrowed two more ebooks, because why not!


Now I'm debating whether I want to linger at work for twenty minutes past closing in order to catch a bus that will take me to about three blocks from my house, or whether I want to catch an earlier bus down to the Commons, walk to the library to pick up two hardcopy holds that came in over the weekend, and then either walk a mile home or try to catch another #17 bus. (I am NOT walking down the hill with this amount of snow on the ground and college students' lackadaisical attitude toward shoveling.)

On the one hand, I do want to pick up the holds and it will make my Tuesday schedule much less fiddly. On the other hand, it's dark and cold and it would be nice to just go directly home.

Eh. I guess we'll see how I feel in an hour.
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2019-01-01 01:04 pm

book list, November and December 2018

It's time for the continuing adventures of Liz and her reading list! These are the books I read in November and December 2018. Click on the cuts for summaries and reactions. I reserve the right to spoil all hell out of any book if spoilery bits are what I feel like talking about.

Lud-in-the-Mist, by Hope Mirrlees
-----thoughts )

The Road to Oz, by L. Frank Baum
-----thoughts )

Sky Island, by L. Frank Baum
-----thoughts )

The Scarecrow of Oz, by L. Frank Baum
-----thoughts )

The Magic of Oz, by L. Frank Baum
-----thoughts )

The Lost Princess of Oz, by L. Frank Baum
-----thoughts )

Glinda of Oz, by L. Frank Baum
-----thoughts )

A Night in the Lonesome October, by Roger Zelazny
-----thoughts )

State and Local Government by the People, 16th edition, by David B. Magleby, Paul C. Light, and Christine L. Nemacheck
-----thoughts )

All Systems Red, by Martha Wells
-----thoughts )

Provenance, by Ann Leckie
-----thoughts )

---------------
---------------

On the audiovisual media front, I saw one movie: Mary Queen of Scots, on Christmas Day, with my family. I don't know that I'd have gone to see it of my own volition, but I enjoyed it just fine.

On the audio media front, I have continued to listen to Great Courses both via Audible and via CDs borrowed from my local library system. I am on the final lecture of a 36-lecture series about food (a "cultural and culinary history," IIRC), finished a really interesting 24-lecture series on pre-contact cultures of North America, and am nearing the end of something called "The Other Side of History" which is notionally about the daily life of (mostly) ordinary people in various periods of European and Mediterranean history: mostly Greece, Rome, and medieval England, but with a few detours into others areas and eras. The Greece and Rome parts are good, but the medieval stuff is kind of meh, honestly. *shrug*
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2018-10-28 04:31 pm

wherein Liz gets stuff done

Stuff I have done so far today:

-bought cheese, crackers, and tiny clementines for after-service coffee hour

-helped set up for coffee hour instead of attending the church service (it's technically more work/energy, but less socially stressful, so, you know *makes equivocating gesture*)

-worked from 11:45 to 12:45 on coffee hour cleanup

-took the Camry to Goodyear to get the burned-out tail light replaced; the workers discovered the two plate lights were also burned out so I got them replaced as well

-bought a sheet of trash tags from the Meadow St. Tops (since my Tops, up on Triphammer, has mysteriously stopped carrying City of Ithaca tags *hands*)

-drove to the Triphammer Tops to do my grocery shopping (because I know that store's layout better, and also the two locations have slightly different items available)

-picked a tiny handful of raspberries and ate them outdoors because I could

-changed my linens

-took my two peppers that are attempting to flower outdoors in hopes that they'll manage to set fruit before I have to bring them indoors full-time over the winter

-arranged a phone date with Vicky

-continued refamiliarizing myself with one of my matched Yuletide fandoms

-wrote half of my to-do lists for next week

-listened to a full half-hour lecture from Etruscan history & culture Great Courses audiobook, and a lecture and a half of my Italian Renaissance Great Courses CD set (one's on my phone for around the house and while out walking; the other is for while I'm driving)

Now I intend to finish washing my lunch dishes and go take a nap, after which I will continue being productive, goshdarnit! :)
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2018-03-26 02:40 pm

wherein Liz watches A Wrinkle in Time

I was afraid I wasn't going to make it to A Wrinkle in Time before it closed at my local theater, but my morning appointment finished early and I didn't have anyone scheduled until 2pm (and that guy is thus far a no-show, grr), so I blocked a fake appointment for myself, walked over to the mall, and watched a movie. :)

I don't know if I'd say it was objectively a very good movie -- though it was worlds away from a bad movie -- but I am unable to be completely objective about A Wrinkle in Time and the movie captured enough of the heart of the book that I love it too. ♥

spoilery thoughts )

This sounds like I'm complaining a bunch. Really, it's just that the movie got the heart of the story so utterly right that I am harping on relatively minor details because I wish they'd matched up/been in tune with that heart a little more. I gripe because I love. *wry*

And like I said, the movie is visually gorgeous. I am glad I got to see it on the big screen, and I am glad the story was adapted by people who so obviously understood its point, and how vastly important a story it is to tell. ♥
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)
2018-03-13 02:23 pm

wherein Liz rambles about this, that, and the other

Haven't posted for a while, whoops. Anyway, life is going pretty well!

I seem to be doing okay in my classes (full participation marks, yay!) even though Prof T got kind of panicked about plagiarism in his other classes and made us all resubmit our ethnological study book reports through a plagiarism-checking program. Meanwhile, Prof. L's communications class involves three times the weekly reading that the anthro class does (to be fair, it's a 10-week course rather than a 15-week course, so obviously each week has to cover proportionately more of the total class material) and also too many videos. Oh well, at least it's not podcasts?

I find the subject matter kind of annoying and/or "I already know this!" but I have found a relatively successful workaround, which is pretending I am in spy school and this class is really Social Engineering 101: How To Manipulate People. Which, honestly, is what communications is... from a certain point of view. *evil grin*

In other news, I stopped crossposting my pepper updates to Dreamwidth last year because I got sick of coding the images, but you can find all of them over on Tumblr under the adventures in botany tag -- or the peppers! tag if you want just the peppers without my houseplants and occasional photos of neighborhood trees and flowers. The latest update is that the Lazarus pepper bloomed this winter and has successfully produced and ripened one tiny pepper! I have overwintered three other peppers (which I need to give proper names), and yesterday I planted my new seeds for 2018. :D

The First Unitarian stewardship team held our annual pledge campaign kickoff event on Sunday the 11th. This year, instead of a midweek dinner we hired a small band and a caller and had square/line dancing in the parlor right after the service, with additional food to make it a sort of lunch special instead of just the regular coffee hour. We also had music and dancing during the service, courtesy of Rev. Weis -- people got to dance our offering and pledge cards forward -- which went over very well after a minute of initial awkward trepidation.

Barring catastrophe, I have my summer vacation pinned down. I will be flying to Minnesota on Thursday, June 14 and flying back to Ithaca on Thursday the 21st. I will spend the intervening time on Star Island, where I should overlap my parent for the first few days and overlap Vicky for the final two or three days. (I may have one day entirely to myself in the middle, depending on Vicky's schedule.)

I have not been getting any writing done this past week -- all my brain power is going toward other things. I think what I really need to do is establish a time of day when I sit down and get some writing done, because trying to write at work is very iffy (so many potential interruptions, and also I use work free time for classes) and I'm usually kind of fried when I get home in the evening. This suggests that I should get up a little earlier and use that extra 15 minutes (plus my previously carved out 20 minutes of breakfast) to write instead of to check email and social media.

I am deeply weirded out that I seem to slowly be turning into a morning person. This is not remotely part of my self-concept... and yet. *hands* The world is a strange place, and my mom (a morning person to the core) is right that early mornings are a great time for private contemplation without the weird melancholy you can get while being up alone late at night.

So that's pretty much where I am. :)

ETA: Oh, also! I saw Black Panther on Monday the 5th, and loved it. I hope to see A Wrinkle in Time this coming Monday. And... that's about it for my movie-watching this year, probably. We'll see if I can dredge up the time and focus for any TV shows. *wry*