Excellent timing

20/6/25 11:46
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Started to rain about two minutes after I got home from my walk. Had to go back out a few minutes further on, to fetch the trash barrel, but I still count it as a win. Locust trees shedding their blizzards of petals in the wind. No cat friends seen.

Minor amusement

20/6/25 07:22
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
This month's edition of my amateur radio magazine has a "classic radio" article on a series of "home-brew" receiver designs from the 1960s. I showed the photos to Wife and she laughed. I built one of them for my own station, exhibited it as a high-school physics science fair project, and we schlepped it through five moves before I handed it over to an e-waste collection a few years back . . .

Hand-basket central

20/6/25 07:04
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Air temperature 64 F, wind south about 7 mph, fog at the airport. Haze or mist here, can still see across the park. We do have a "special weather statement" for scattered dense fog, but they haven't scattered it in our personal neighborhood. This fits in with the general attitude -- if it isn't happening to ME, it isn't real.

(no subject)

19/6/25 17:47
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
We currently rejoice in severe weather watches (not warnings) spread across the state. Our personal county is not included, but that's awkward because it extends over a hundred miles up into affected areas.

I'm back.

19/6/25 13:13
sartorias: (Default)
[personal profile] sartorias
Please forgive mush-mindedness; I'm three days out of the hospital and it's taking time for the simplest thoughts to come back on line.

Scintillation was wonderful, as always. And so was Fourth Street Fantasy Convention--what little I saw of it. No fault whatsoever to the con. All fault is due to the trash human in front of me in a very crowded assisted seating area, who coughed and hacked for the entire eight hour ride, refusing to put on a mask. "It's not a rule! And masks are all political anyway!"

By the next night I had a high temp, joints with ice picks stabbing them, skin like the worst sunburn ever. So I missed a lot, but managed to get to some programming including my panels. And I almost made it, tho by then I hadn't eaten for four days, and drunk only sips of water, which tasted terrible, like rusty pipes.

I was moderating my last panel, and I thought it was going okay when we opened to Qs from the audience and I realized that everyone was curiously black-and-white, then the next thing I knew, I was lying on the ground, surrounded by voices.

Here's where perceptions get kind of surreal. I slowly became aware that someone was stroking my arm. I've always known that Marissa L has an infinite capacity for genuine empathy, but I understood it was real. That empathy convey through the slow, reassuring touch, even though when she murmured "non-responsive."

Oh dear. I was not doing my bit! Worse, I'd totally spoiled the panel, yet here I was having somehow floated gently to the ground. I had to get up! Return to my room. Rest! Apologize to everyone for my dumbass move! Yet it felt so much better to lie there, and let trusted voices do whatever they were doing. So reassuring.

I knew those voices. I trusted them. Marissa, who seemed genuinely pleased that I was responsive after all, but she kept up her reassuring touch. (I do know the difference. I've had to drop my head between my knees a few times at distressing moments, and this one specific time, a person I'd known since college kept pawing me, the angle changing in the direction of their voice, as if they were busy looking around the room)

Then E Bear asked for my phone code, and I knew that voice, it's Bear, of course she must need my phone. I trust Bear. Then came the questions as I began to rouse a bit. Scott L, long-serving firefighter and fully trained EMP started what my spouse (who was a volunteer fireman for 20 years, and worked alongside EMTs) called the litany. Scott's strong, clear voice foghorned something much like, "Sherwood, I hate to do this to you, but what asshole is currently infesting the White House?"

And I laughed. I don't know if the laughter got past my lips, but it's strange how humor--laughter--can rouse one. I muttered, "Yesterday was NO KINGS DAY."

Then it seemed they wanted to send me off to emergency services; there was talk, then a fourth trusted voice, belonging to Beth F, insisted that it was not a good idea to be sending me off without anyone knowing where. She informed the company that she was a Registered Nurse and this was SOP, or the like. Beth's on the team, I thought.

Shortly thereafter they got my wreck of a bod onto the conveyance and I was in for an ambulance ride. It was beautiful teamwork--cons these days have security teams, and here I was proof that their protocols were functioning swiftly and smoothly, which would permit them to pivot straight back to con stuff.

While I was in for a wad of tests. So many tests. I soon had two IVS going, one in each elbow.

Presently the doc came in and said that I had an acute case of influenza, compounded by severe dehydration. Beth F heroically came to spring me, and saw me to my room, promising me a backup call the following morning.

Another perceptual eddy: I thought, wrongly, I'd wafted quietly and softly to the floor. Maybe even discreetly. Ha Ha. When I stripped out of my influenza clothes I discovered gigantic bruises in weird places--the entire top of one foot is discolored, another baseball-sized bruise on one calf, and so one. I began to suspect that I had catapulted myself whammo-flat with all the grace of a stevedore hauling a sack of spuds.

The following days I slept and slept, forcing a few bites of salad and oatmeal. I have zero stamina, must work on that, but at least I am home, and I guess all that unwanted experience can sink into the subconscious quagmire.

(no subject)

19/6/25 11:28
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
We are developing a fine crop of white clover in our "lawn" to provide more bee-forage. Wife thinks that grass lawns are boring. One of many ways in which our world-views agree.
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Air temperature 62 F, wind southwest about 5 mph, cloudy. No rain on the weather radar. Bike ride morning? One of these years age will give up on such diversions and you will be left with walk reports. The rest is silence.
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Puddles on my walk route from last night's rain, rimmed with yellow pollen. Air needed a good washing.

Always check power

18/6/25 07:13
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Air temperature 61 F, wind south gusting to 25 mph, cloudy after rain showers. Bit of a computer scare this morning, machine woke up and accepted my password, but then the cursor wouldn't move. After assorted thrashing around and two reboots, I replaced the battery in the trackball . . .

No idea why I didn't get the red LED warning of low battery.
alfreda89: (Blankenship Reeds)
[personal profile] alfreda89
I believe this link discount is good until July 12, 2025. The book is BARNBURNER by Sharon Lee
[personal profile] rolanni. I enjoyed the two Maine mysteries she did that I've read (I have the plain white cover ones, it was in the Olden Days). Plus if you are young enough that you never even heard of chat rooms or local intermediaries to the Internet? Here you go!

On list: See if other Sharon Lee mysteries happened. (I know about the Carousel Tides gang, but am behind on the short pieces.)

Note that this is 75% off retail price!

https://www.audiobooks.com/promotions/promotedBook/431003/barnburner?refId=198976
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
C-17 parked in the visitors' lot at the airport/base, even though the runway is closed again. Not a priority mission, it would seem. I could see construction trucks out on the runway, wetting down the fresh concrete and clearing away dust. They are on a 3 or 4 day schedule now, open and closed, until they complete repaving the runway.

Other than lime trees, there's little new in the floral department. No identifiable roadkill.

Got out on the bike, across town and around detours and home. Still sorting out the route while that bridge is closed. Did not die.

15.25 miles, 1:35:30
alfreda89: (borrelia burgdorferi)
[personal profile] alfreda89
I often say (in best short convention bio speak) that I don't read or watch horror, I live it.

This is not merely a joke--it's a statement of fact. I had to walk back the trail of Change to get to where biology started to change me. Then I saw the nightmares my system had hidden from me, way back then. So yeah--a touch of humor for you, and not a joke. Even the best fantasy reminds me that for the average human, I'm an Other. And always have been--I didn't fool anyone. (But of course some people find The Other attractive and exciting.)

Laura Elliott has spent a lot of time thinking about horror, how it's often written and used. Who is the monster--and why? How? Is there subtext (and in the best stories, it may be subtext all the way down.) She has found many horror tropes to be ultimately freeing and encouraging.

Here's her thoughts on the why.

https://crimereads.com/the-horror-of-a-border-laura-elliott-on-writing-the-abject/
alfreda89: (Books and lovers)
[personal profile] alfreda89
Now from Book View Cafe--DESCENDING FROM THE MOON by Steven Popkes.

*LeRoy Parkin had a secret: a project to raise the intelligence of chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans, and baboons to human levels.*

Some would say that wasn’t a very high bar. Fifteen years after he began, plagues – preventable but not prevented – broke the world.

Then the apes began discussing who they were, what they wanted, and what they should do next.

Popkes reminds us of the connections that both sustain & endanger humanity and the world around us.

Stop by and read a sample! #books #SFF

https://bookviewcafe.com/bvc-announces-descending-from-the-moon-by-steven-popkes/
alfreda89: 3 foot concrete Medieval style gargoyle with author's hand resting on its head. (Default)
[personal profile] alfreda89
This story (with its long title) came out as a bonus if we pre-ordered NETWORK EFFECT, which I did. And now Tor/Reactor offers it freely to you to read.

I really enjoyed it from Ayda's POV, seeing what SecUnit is and means to her, its confidence in its own realms.

https://reactormag.com/home-habitat-range-niche-territory-martha-wells/

A sign of the times

17/6/25 07:50
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Recreation in the Maine woods remains dangerous. But this one is peculiar. I suspect that the men involved lacked "documents" and that is why they vanished before help arrived . . .

https://www.bangordailynews.com/2025/06/16/central-maine/pedro-quizhpi-dies-canoe-capsizes-papoose-pond-maine/

What's it all about?

17/6/25 06:57
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Air temperature 58 F, wind south gusting over 20 mph, cloudy. Foraging morning, maybe bike ride afternoon. Or not. No rain until tonight.

Philosophical

16/6/25 07:08
jhetley: (Default)
[personal profile] jhetley
Air temperature 52 F, wind southwest about 3 mph, fog at the airport but lifting and wan sunshine here. Plans extend no further than a walk and continued survival The world has proven unworthy of my genius.

March 2023

S M T W T F S
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627 28293031 
Page generated 28/6/25 15:37

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags