tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-26621983177761456572024-03-13T11:06:42.149-05:00Scribbling into the Abyssby Nayad MonroeNayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.comBlogger124125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-79043482560350728522023-07-02T15:29:00.000-05:002023-07-02T15:29:54.884-05:00Mid-Year Book Freakout Tag 2023<p> <table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><tbody><tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnFr0WOBuA_x9a-RA4i4RbLYR7G_1ivHyUVyCrLbmhTF9jVAszxNNr81dFo_nXn3GfOOq_aMvaXRr0bSbnnbjOFiPMMJYxc7MztbE4iX8VY4R3K8S6MnlMrKwSIfUdZqFVuSb8ebNuVLgK3-jQPPMaNhx18R8zrPp8v_SsMbkYY3Jme83LrFAYxsFSItQ/s3024/MidYearBookPhoto2023.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="3024" data-original-width="3024" height="320" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjnFr0WOBuA_x9a-RA4i4RbLYR7G_1ivHyUVyCrLbmhTF9jVAszxNNr81dFo_nXn3GfOOq_aMvaXRr0bSbnnbjOFiPMMJYxc7MztbE4iX8VY4R3K8S6MnlMrKwSIfUdZqFVuSb8ebNuVLgK3-jQPPMaNhx18R8zrPp8v_SsMbkYY3Jme83LrFAYxsFSItQ/s320/MidYearBookPhoto2023.JPG" width="320" /></a></td></tr><tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;"><i>The Secret History</i>, by Donna Tartt; <i>Catherine House</i>, by Elisabeth Thomas; and <i>Bunny</i>, by Mona Awad<br /><br /><br /></td></tr></tbody></table>In 2022, I read fifty-one books in the entire year, and I felt good about it. That was actually more than I had read in the previous year.</p><p>In 2023, in the <i>first half</i> of the year, I have read seventy books! </p><p>What changed? In January of this year I found out about "BookTube," otherwise known as the part of YouTube in which people review and discuss books, otherwise known as something I may be the last reader on Earth to have discovered. I mean, before I stumbled across BookTube in my recommended videos page, I never got the idea to look for videos about books. I would just read books! But it turns out that it's motivating for me to hear other people talk about books. I've found so many good recommendations, especially after figuring out which reviewers line up with my taste in fiction. I've also tried some genres that were new to me, or less likely to come to my attention.</p><p>Several of the reviewers I watch have made videos for the "Mid-Year Book Freakout Tag," answering a set of questions about what they've read in the first half of this year and what they plan to read later. Since I'm not making videos, I thought I'd take it to my blog. I did not come up with these questions myself; my sources indicate they came from YouTubers known as <a href="https://www.youtube.com/c/IsThatChami/featured">Chami</a> and <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@EarlGreyBooks">Earl Grey Books</a>. And now...</p><p><b>WITHOUT FURTHER ADO, LET'S GET INTO IT.</b></p><p><i><b>Best book you've read so far this year?</b></i></p><p>I have a little set of books to discuss. I read <i>Bunny</i>, by Mona Awad, and I loved it. Later I read <i>The Secret History</i>, by Donna Tartt, and I loved it. Later, I read <i>Catherine House</i>, by Elisabeth Thomas, and I see it as a book that combines some of the best things about the previous two. I think you've already guessed that I loved it! All three of these novels are "dark academia," with some weird, otherworldly elements. I think it would be fun to re-read all three in a row, both to see what it's like to start with some understanding of what's going on and to be able to compare them more intentionally.</p><p><b><i>Best sequel you've read so far this year?</i></b></p><p>I haven't read many sequels this year. I'm not opposed to reading a series now and then, but most of the books I read are standalones. I enjoyed <i>Hell Bent</i>, by Leigh Bardugo, but it didn't have much competition in the sequel category.</p><p><b><i>New release you haven't read yet, but want to?</i></b></p><p>Because I've been Influenced by the many, many, many, many, many BookTubers who are sponsored by a subscription box known as Book of the Month, most of the brand-new release books in my possession came from the blue boxes I am now buying every month. I'm talking about <i>The Last Word</i>, by Taylor Adams; <i>Weyward</i>, by Emilia Hart; and <i>Ink Blood Sister Scribe</i>, by Emma Törzs. I'm also planning to read <i>Translation State</i>, by Ann Leckie, and <i>Happy Place</i>, by Emily Henry. </p><p><b><i>Most anticipated release for the second half of the year?</i></b></p><p>Let me look at my pre-orders... The book I'm the most excited about at this moment is <i>Rouge</i>, by Mona Awad. So far, I've only read one of her other books, <i>Bunny</i>, which was outstanding. I just started to read <i>All's Well</i> yesterday, so I don't know how I feel about it yet. It could either feed or dampen my currently fiery passion to read <i>Rouge</i>, but I'll read <i>Rouge</i> either way.</p><p><b><i>Biggest disappointment?</i></b></p><p>There was one book I thought would be good, but didn't like: <i>Piñata</i>, by Leopoldo Gout. There was another book I didn't know much about but I had heard good things, and then I actually hated it: <i>Normal People</i>, by Sally Rooney. I'm going to say that <i>Piñata</i> was the more disappointing, though, because the premise had potential that raised my expectations, but then I didn't enjoy the way the story was told. Not just "didn't enjoy." The part of my mind that edits fiction kept yelling about the point of view choices, the structure, the pacing, and the implausibility of a certain object making it through customs from Mexico to the United States. It was not a good reading experience. </p><p><b><i>Biggest surprise?</i></b></p><p>I liked a romance novel! Actually, I liked <i>two</i> romance novels!! Those were both by Emily Henry: <i>Book Lovers</i>, and <i>Beach Read</i>. I hardly ever read romance novels, so that is a stunning achievement for this author. I'm sure she's somewhere reading this right now and bursting into happy tears because she totally knows who I am and cares what I think. Congratulations, Emily Henry!</p><p><b><i>Favorite new author (debut or new to you)?</i></b></p><p>This goes to Sarah Gailey. I've read three of her books in 2023: <i>The Echo Wife</i>, and <i>Magic for Liars </i>(which is one of my very most favorites for the year so far), and <i>Upright Women Wanted</i>. I'm looking forward to reading <i>Just Like Home</i>. I also managed to never read anything by T. Kingfisher before 2023, and now she's one of my insta-buy authors.</p><p><b><i>Newest fictional crush?</i></b></p><p>I don't really get crushes on characters! But I'll say that Gus from <i>Beach Read</i> would probably catch my attention if he were a real human person. :)</p><p><b><i>Newest favorite character?</i></b></p><p>I'm going to stick with Gus. :)</p><p><b><i>A book that made you cry?</i></b></p><p>It's rare for me to cry when I read, but that did happen once this year while I was reading <i>The Undertaking of Hart and Mercy</i>, by Megan Bannen. I never would have heard of this book if I hadn't started to support <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@oliviareadsalatte">oliviareadsalatte</a> through her <a href="https://www.patreon.com/oliviareadsalatte/posts">Patreon</a>, which includes a couple of different book clubs at different levels; this was the first book I read for the book club I joined. It's a secondary-world fantasy romance novel for adults that is not too spicy, but not altogether without spice. I liked the unusual setting and the somewhat cozy story that wasn't <i>too</i> soft. There was a part toward the end that made me cry, but then got resolved beautifully. Not a sad book! But it made me care a lot.</p><p><b><i>A book that made you happy?</i></b></p><p>Also <i>The Undertaking of Hart and Mercy</i>. :)</p><p><b><i>Most beautiful book you've bought this year (or received)?</i></b></p><p><i>Poison Ivy: The Virtuous Cycle</i>, by G. Willow Wilson, Marcio Takara, and Arif Prianto. The artwork is gorgeous. I hardly ever buy special editions of novels, but I bought a couple with particularly nice covers: <i>Demon Copperhead</i>, by Barbara Kingsolver, and <i>What Moves the Dead</i>, by T. Kingfisher (Maybe it helps to have a surname that starts with "King").</p><p><b><i>What book(s) do you need to read by the end of the year?</i></b></p><p>Lol, "need" is a strong word. I have no book-reading responsibilities, and I'm a mood-reader. If I state for the record that I <i>want</i> to read a certain book by the end of this year, there's a decent chance that I'll be more interested in another book by next week. Especially since these charismatic people on the internet keep Influencing me! So you might want to look to them for predictions about what I'll decide to read, and then check back here in late December.</p><p>Aside from Olivia (oliviareadsalatte, mentioned above), I'm also a huge fan and patron of <a href="https://www.patreon.com/jordalinereads/posts">Jordaline</a>, of <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@JordalineReads">Jordaline Reads</a> on YouTube, and <a href="https://www.patreon.com/allisonpaiges/posts">Ally</a>, aka <a href="https://www.youtube.com/@allisonpaiges">allisonpaiges</a> on YouTube. There are several others I follow, but these are the three I'll drop everything and watch when a new video comes out. </p>NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-65803895221726400532021-11-03T19:38:00.002-05:002021-11-03T19:38:53.778-05:00Whoo, It's Been a Time<p> Hey there. Hi. Long time no post. I get it! I apologize.</p><p>Anyway, I'm alive. When the pandemic started in March of 2020, I became very cautious and probably at least a little bit depressed, and all of my writing suffered. I watched a lot of shows and got deeply absorbed in playing a few video games. One high point of 2020 was receiving a hardcover, illustrated author copy of an anthology with one of my stories: "The Circus Reborn," in <i>Midnight Under the Big Top. </i>It was edited by Brian James Freeman and released by Cemetery Dance, and it contains stories by a lot of really excellent, well-known authors (like Stephen King and Neil Gaiman, for just two examples). I would have promoted it way more, but the book was a fancy limited edition that sold out within twenty-four hours! Never has a peak publishing experience felt more exciting and more painful at the same time. I really wish there were a larger release of a paperback version to tell you about. If there ever is, I will.</p><p>I'm a mask-wearing, vaccinated avoider of crowds at this point, due to variants of the virus going around. A couple of months after getting my second dose of the vaccine in April of 2021, I did go on a road trip with my now live-in fella, but then the case numbers started to rise radically and we started to stay in a lot more, to be careful.</p><p>I've started to write fiction again, and I'm actually enjoying it. No new publications to report, but I thought I'd post a wee update to reveal that I'm still here, doing the thing. I hope you're also alive and well. Maybe I'll even get back into the habit of writing new posts on a semi-regular basis.</p><p><br /></p>NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-12426893991868864162019-08-17T18:25:00.000-05:002019-08-17T18:25:31.594-05:00Two Sonnets<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(Sunset over Lake Mendota)</div>
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To get myself back into blogging, I've decided to let you know that I sometimes write sonnets! Here are two of them - one new, one old. Enjoy? I hope you will.</div>
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<b>Into the World</b><br />
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We did not meet while I was in the maze,<br />
Believing that I wasn’t lost at all,<br />
Yet winding ever deeper through my days,<br />
To inward darkness, ever more in thrall.<br />
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We could not meet while I, with covered eyes<br />
Kept to my house, to pathways known and clear,<br />
And blinded to the world’s exquisite size,<br />
Knew only of the small and of the near.<br />
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We would not meet till I was forced to wake<br />
Into a time so startling and so bright<br />
That first it burned, and then for healing’s sake<br />
I went outside to learn to love the light.<br />
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Now through the glowing world I travel, keen<br />
To see each face and vista, and be seen.<br />
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- August 4, 2019<br />
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<b>My Tribe</b><br />
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I walk through normal life, an oddity,<br />
My colors bright, my mind never at rest,<br />
And never meet the likes of one like me,<br />
Beset by words, by haunting image blessed.<br />
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I sleep through dreams of spaces where alone<br />
I search for signals sent from my own kind,<br />
Or listen for the light enchanting tone<br />
Of longed-for voices merrily combined.<br />
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But when I gladly meet my tribe anew,<br />
And read from flashing eyes acceptance dear,<br />
I join the ones I love, the charming few,<br />
To laugh, to understand, to gather near.<br />
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Our colors blend in vibrant harmony;<br />
Combine in patterns no one else can see.<br />
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- November, 2007NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-7361639695154352302018-11-28T12:32:00.000-06:002018-11-28T12:32:30.057-06:00Creative Boundaries: A Way to Decide What to Make or Write Next<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(See what I did with this frame here?)</div>
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I'm not sure how to begin this post, but that's my problem. I struggle with being indecisive about what to start and how to start it. I think there are two reasons people might get into this state: either being too picky or too open-minded. </div>
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If you're too picky, you don't like any idea, or maybe you've internalized a feeling of judgment from other people, so you can shoot down any idea based on the certainty that it will be despised by the entire world, thus leading to your total ostracism from society, and the ruination of the entire rest of your life. Or something like that. This is a perfectionism issue that can be really damaging to you, so it's important to challenge these beliefs. Nothing is ever going to be perfect, and there's no way to create something that everyone will like. If there's nothing that <i>you</i> like, there's a chance that your expectations are too high. There's also a chance that your mental state is edging into the territory where you should seek a medical professional to guide you back toward happiness.</div>
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If you're too open-minded, you like so many ideas, approaches, media, styles, topics, lengths, sizes, shapes, textures, moods, genres, and so on, forever, that it can be hard to even know what to expect from your own personality on a given day, let alone <i>pick a damn project</i>.</div>
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Believe it or not, I have the sort of super-fun mind that has experienced <i>both</i> of these ways to become indecisive, but it's almost always the second one for me. There are some things I definitely don't like and don't want to try, but I feel like there are more things I <i>do</i> like and <i>do </i>want to try. I waste a lot of energy on envying people who have more clarity and focus about what they want to create. People who wake up every day knowing that they only want to write far-future science fiction novels, or only want to do pop surrealist paintings on 20" x 20" slabs of concrete with acrylic paint, or only want to sew vintage-style dresses made entirely of food products to model in selfies on Instagram. </div>
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I feel like I shouldn't complain about having a wide array of options (although I have to admit the "sewing with food" thing is not one of them), but I feel overwhelmed a lot. Especially when my mind-monkeys start in with their garbage about how little it matters one way or the other what I make, regardless of how much I like it, because of all the serious shit that needs to be addressed in the world. At least I have an answer to that nonsense, thanks to Chuck Wendig, who wrote the excellent <a href="http://terribleminds.com/ramble/2018/11/14/25-reasons-to-keep-making-stuff/">"25 Reasons to Keep Making Stuff"</a>. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.</div>
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That leads me to this post, because I have remembered one method that's generally helpful with indecision: setting creative boundaries, as you might have guessed from the title. Setting some creative boundaries to work with involves a layer of decision-making up front, but somehow that becomes easier for me once I've made boundary-setting my mission. </div>
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So what are creative boundaries? They're a set of guidelines for what you will work on for a certain period of time, as well as what you will not work on. A starting point can be what you know about your attention span and your need for variety. How long is your time period going to be? Do you like shorter projects that last a day, a weekend, a week, or a month? Or do you prefer thinking in terms of a quarter, a half-year, or a year? </div>
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Then it's time to consider the possible options. If you're like me, maybe you'll need to write out a long list of ways you might like to create. Maybe you'll need subcategories like "art" and "writing" to start with, and then lists of appealing ideas and methods under each. Or maybe your indecision is not so much about the format, but the subject matter and/or genre to focus on. Or something else. Write down everything that's competing for your attention.</div>
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Then it's time to narrow down the possibilities. Which of these ideas can you reasonably-but-somewhat-ambitiously expect to achieve in the amount of time you're thinking of? Are some of the ideas starting to sound more appealing than the others? Do some of them seem closer to your heart and what you want to express? Is there any reason some should be finished before others? At this point you might be able to clarify what sounds most interesting for now, knowing that the other ideas are on the list and available to choose later.</div>
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The final step is to get really specific and write down what you want to make, what size or length it'll be, what materials or tools you'll use, how you want to go about it, and when you want to finish it. Ideally, get into whatever format of calendar or to-do list you use and schedule times when you're going to work on it. </div>
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I've just started to create a possible framework for 2019, incorporating monthly themes for my subject matter, but I haven't made it specific enough yet. If I can sort it out, I'll post about it sometime in December!</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-66856716952743262392018-11-27T13:40:00.000-06:002018-11-27T13:40:18.948-06:00Seasonal Decorating: A Thing I Didn't Care For In My 20s Is Now My Thing<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(Here's Annabelle, reestablishing her relationship with this sparkly white throw blanket)</div>
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Since I don't play the Christmas-before-Thanksgiving game, and since I was away over the Thanksgiving weekend, my Christmas decorations are not entirely up yet. I amazed myself by having a short burst of energy for getting started after the drive home on Sunday, so I put away some fall things and got out some "winter" things (technically it's still late fall, everybody, but I'm willing to play along). But yesterday I had some blogging and cybershopping to do, so I didn't advance the cause of seasonal decorating again until this morning. The Christmas tree will go up tonight. I feel like I've cheated myself out of several days of holiday cheer, but I'll be okay. </div>
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I'm not even sure when I got to the point of having specific "fall decor" to take down. I've always done Christmas decorating, and some Halloween, but I didn't really change things up the rest of the time. I started to do the seasonal thing in the last few years, recently enough that even as I put away one set of things and get out the other set of things, I'm thinking to myself "Really? Am I really doing this? Is this who I am now?"</div>
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I think seasonal decorating comes on because of feeling different about life as a middle-aged person. When I was a couple of decades younger, I had less life experience, so it was easier to get some novelty. Practically any situation could feel new in one way or another. If nothing else, there was interpersonal drama to keep things fresh. There's no drama now. These days, I may not have seen it all but I have seen most of it. I've tried putting my furniture in most of the possible configurations for this space, and the furniture is nice enough that I don't intend to replace it soon, and I have some storage space, so I am damn well going to freshen things up by switching out some accessories on a seasonal basis, and for holidays. This, I hope, will keep me from sinking into a dreary haze from which I only emerge to note with astonishment that a decade has passed and I don't remember a single thing I did in that period of time.</div>
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With that said, I'm off to spread around some shiny baubles! I hope you're keeping things fresh today!</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-41192709793247366912018-11-26T14:25:00.000-06:002018-11-26T14:25:04.001-06:00Thanksgiving Weekend, 2018 - More Exciting than I Had Expected!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(Flowers from my parents' 50th wedding anniversary party)</div>
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Happy final week of November to you! I'm back. Let's do this.</div>
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This year, I had a calm and relatively simple Thanksgiving, with non-crazy amounts of food that included pumpkin pie I made myself. The filling, I made. I bought pre-made pie crust and I have no regrets. The best thing about mixing up my own pumpkin pie filling is that I can have the amount of cinnamon I require in it. Last time I used the same recipe, I doubled the amount of cinnamon. This time, I tripled it. And you know I'm using the <i>good</i> cinnamon, from <a href="https://www.penzeys.com/">Penzeys</a>. </div>
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One reason I kept that day simple was that I knew I was going to be driving from Wisconsin to Indiana on Friday, with my three sons, and driving back on Sunday, because my parents were having their 50th anniversary party on Saturday afternoon. We're juggling multi-household schedules and preferences, so this was the way it was going to work out best for everyone. We arrived on Friday evening, and spent some time hanging out with my parents, my brother and sister-in-law, and their four kids (a boy, two girls, and another boy, ages 13, 12, 10, and 9) and five-month-old retriever puppy in their two adjoining hotel rooms. It was a pet-friendly Hampton Inn & Suites hotel; recommended! Then I sat with my brother by the pool while my youngest spent some time swimming with his cousins. My older sons stayed in our room, where they didn't trash a single thing. They're high-quality teens, those two.</div>
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On Saturday, I woke up feeling tired and achy enough that I was concerned I might be getting an illness, but I pushed through it for the day. The anniversary party was in a church fellowship hall, and we needed to do a lot of setting up and decorating. My mom had ordered some floral centerpieces, and we received two more bouquets from relatives. I set up a display of photos, and added decorative ribbon to all of the tables; my boys all did the assignments their grandma gave them. My sister-in-law was more involved with the food preparation, and my brother kept the younger kids and the puppy under control. Everything went well, and most importantly, my parents had a good time!</div>
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The party was from 1 to 4 p.m. After waking up already tired, doing the set-up, socializing with many people, eating all afternoon, and then cleaning up, I was done, done, done for the day. I had hoped to rally for going out to dinner in the evening, but I was SO TIRED, and I knew I was going to have to drive for seven hours the next day, so I just stayed in. The boys got to choose what to do. One got a ride to the restaurant with Grandma and Grandpa, one wanted more swimming time, and one wanted to just stay in the room and relax.</div>
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It's a good thing I rested, because on the way back I had to drive through a bad snowstorm. There were blizzard warnings for later in the evening breaking through on the radio, but even hours before the actual blizzard hit that area, traffic was crawling at 30 miles per hour on the highway. Snow was falling in big clumps, like loosely-packed miniature snowballs hitting the car. That added about an extra hour to ninety minutes to our trip back, and it was a bit scary at times, but we made it! There was no snow for the last hour of driving, and we arrived before sunset, so it could have been worse!</div>
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I slept well last night, and it turns out that I'm not sick, so I'm not sure what the deal was on Saturday. Maybe it was just that I was worn out from the trip to get there, and didn't sleep well enough on that first night.</div>
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It's good to be home again! I can't believe Christmas is less than a month away now. o.O</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-21300012276586928892018-11-20T16:43:00.001-06:002018-11-21T16:29:09.836-06:00No-Banana Smoothie Recipes<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3IvS8x1ouZY/W_XcJV46qxI/AAAAAAAADQE/o_rUOyoSOlQrawQEHCYLu5Er-QTufd7OQCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-20-Smoothie-w-Duck-sm.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1600" height="400" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-3IvS8x1ouZY/W_XcJV46qxI/AAAAAAAADQE/o_rUOyoSOlQrawQEHCYLu5Er-QTufd7OQCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-20-Smoothie-w-Duck-sm.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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(What? You don't serve your smoothies decorated with rubber duckies?)</div>
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(I had way too much fun making this picture)</div>
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(It was too boring before, because food photography is hard)</div>
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I'm in a better mood than yesterday, so let's all get happy about that! And now for the smoothies.</div>
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I like the flavors of many fruits with textures I don’t like, so I often eat fruit in the form of smoothies. Finding good existing recipes can be a struggle for me, though, because people seem determined to include bananas whenever possible. I like bananas, but I don’t like blended bananas. So here, have some smoothie recipes I’ve developed to suit my own preferences.<br />
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I can’t guarantee that no one else has ever created similar recipes, but I came up with these on my own. Feel free to adjust them to suit <i>your</i> preferences. All of these recipes make a good-sized single serving, or two small servings. You can double them if you want more; it's possible that a triple batch would fit in a very large blender. Ideally, you put the frozen things in first, and then add the liquid and other ingredients after that.<br />
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<b>Berry Orange with Stealth Spinach </b>(pictured above)<br />
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<li>1/2 C frozen blueberries </li>
<li>1/2 C spinach leaves</li>
<li>1/4 C frozen raspberries </li>
<li>1/8 C orange juice concentrate</li>
<li>1/8 t ginger or cinnamon (optional)</li>
<li>3/4 C water</li>
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Put these things in a blender and blend them! You will not taste the spinach.<br />
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<b>Looks Green, Tastes Orange</b><br />
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1 C frozen mango<br />
1 to 2 C spinach leaves<br />
1/4 C orange juice concentrate<br />
1/4 t ginger (optional but I strenuously recommend it)<br />
1 C water to start; add more water by increments of 1/4 C until it’s the consistency you want.<br />
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Blend it! The spinach may add some light flavor, especially if you use 2 C, but in a good way.<br />
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<b>Bonus optional ingredient:</b> chia seeds! If you want to bump up the nutritional value of smoothies that use water, soak 1 to 2 T of any color of chia seeds in the water for 15 minutes before making the smoothie. Stir them up once or twice if you get the chance. This will create a gel that enhances the texture of the smoothie while adding protein and iron, among other good things, but you won't notice the seeds as you drink it.<br />
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<b>Chocolavacado</b><br />
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1 C frozen avocado chunks<br />
1 to 2 T cacao powder. Using 2 will give it a less sweet, more dark chocolate flavor.<br />
1/2 t vanilla extract<br />
1 1/2 C unsweetened almond milk, or whatever kind of milk you prefer<br />
1/4 t cinnamon if you’re feeling it<br />
1 T maple syrup, or sweeten to taste with your preferred sweetener.<br />
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Blend! The texture of this smoothie is indistinguishable from a milkshake, but it has less sugar, fewer calories, healthier fat, and more vitamins and other good plant-based stuff, especially if you make it with a non-dairy milk.NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-17802592388829505562018-11-19T17:41:00.000-06:002018-11-19T17:41:32.483-06:00The Internet Is SOOOOOOO EXHAUSTING Today, Not to Mention All the Other Days<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-o8KEXDrR9cs/W_NErVeqyHI/AAAAAAAADPQ/zjFb-ggVrCkunGjzSfr_LUZrqWydiWFSgCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-19-Door-County-Lake-Photo.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1201" data-original-width="1600" height="300" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-o8KEXDrR9cs/W_NErVeqyHI/AAAAAAAADPQ/zjFb-ggVrCkunGjzSfr_LUZrqWydiWFSgCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-19-Door-County-Lake-Photo.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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(I took this photo in Door County, Wisconsin, a month ago)</div>
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(It feels like that trip was five years ago)</div>
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(Not cool, internet)</div>
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(NOT COOL)</div>
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Today I wasn't even on the internet that much. I went out. I was in the real world. I did real things. Yet somehow I encountered, in small peeks at the internet, a wide array of arguments, news of the so-called President's ill-informed blunders, a comedian I used to like being aggressively divisive, and people mocking the physical appearance of other people. A person who flounce-unfriended me on Facebook a while back, over pretty close to nothing, showed up to give me some advice on Google+, where apparently they still followed my posts (I was reminded to block them). This is what I've come to accept as a commonplace kind of day on the internet, even as a person who actively shuns drama. </div>
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I don't know, y'all. I like some features of the internet a lot, but some days being connected to so many people just reminds me that hell is other people.</div>
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I'll be back tomorrow, hopefully with a more upbeat state of mind and interesting things to say. But I have decided that for the four-day Thanksgiving weekend, I'll pause the NaBloPoMo blogging to just have a freaking real-life holiday, and that should refresh me enough to spill over into December with the remainder of my 30 NaBloPoMo posts.</div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-49324305078881936782018-11-18T17:35:00.003-06:002018-11-18T17:35:53.819-06:00Bookpost: Not Sure How to Deal with Wanting to Re-Read Books<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-EVN3ON4XEW8/W_HvF-bZAzI/AAAAAAAADOw/MnQCSLoDLHwgjty4JT7jEwjFS6U-Q9xrgCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-18%2BFav%2BBooks.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1600" height="400" src="https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-EVN3ON4XEW8/W_HvF-bZAzI/AAAAAAAADOw/MnQCSLoDLHwgjty4JT7jEwjFS6U-Q9xrgCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-18%2BFav%2BBooks.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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(Here are two of the four shelves of books I'd like to re-read someday)</div>
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(Yet somehow I keep reading new ones instead)</div>
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(It's a pickle, y'all)</div>
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This is something that bothers me often. How can I balance the non-negotiable need to read more new books with the intense desire to re-read excellent books like the ones shown above, as well as the ones not shown above: wonderful books by Kage Baker and Jeff VanderMeer, and several more by Tim Powers, plus others? Hmm? How exactly is that supposed to work? I only have so much reading time, you know.</div>
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This is not a problem for the majority of Americans. That's because the majority of Americans never read a book again after they graduate from high school or college. Never. Not another book. Not even non-fiction. So I'm already a weirdo because I tend to read between forty and fifty books a year - and if you are also this type of weirdo, I salute you and hope you can recommend some books to me if you get a chance. On top of that, I also have the ambition to really get to know the books I enjoy the most, by reading them again. I want to be able to linger over them and see how they work, after I've found out what happens in the plot. Sometimes there's more to enjoy about a story if you read it again with the knowledge of how it's going to end. At least you can take the time to appreciate the words better.</div>
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I have actually succeeded in re-reading some of the books in this photo, some of them a couple of times. For most, I haven't gotten to the second time. I don't know when I will. I've tried to create systems, like reading one new novel, and then one new non-fiction book, and then one re-read, and then one anthology or collection, and so on, but the systematic approach neglects the important consideration of my <i>mood</i> on any given day. Sometimes one new novel will get me started on tearing through every single other book that author has written, or it will steer me toward an unexpected subgenre that I never knew I was into, or toward finding related non-fiction. Or something else. By the time I get through with that spontaneous dive into whatever I feel like, I'm usually ready to follow another mood. </div>
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Also, the more I read, the more I change, and then if I finally re-read something I loved before, sometimes I've become different enough that I enjoy it less. Not always. I believe I could read <i>The Goblin Emperor</i> dozens more times without loving it any less. But I've lost my attachment to enough books that now I feel hesitant to re-read, sometimes. I know that's ridiculous. If I don't re-read a book I've kept, the alternative is to let it sit there and deny myself the opportunity to enjoy it again, just to keep my first impression intact. </div>
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I have no solution for this. Either give up on the idea entirely, or try harder to make time to re-read. There are worse problems to have.</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-63686530908156160582018-11-17T11:26:00.000-06:002018-11-17T11:26:11.987-06:00The Social Media Dilemma: Can We Not Have Nice Things?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-PdTSKeX24wY/W_A_SQ_doII/AAAAAAAADOU/zE08nyUNhMAz8kEUUcWyyzASJ5tltt8pwCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-17-SocialMedia.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1600" height="400" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-PdTSKeX24wY/W_A_SQ_doII/AAAAAAAADOU/zE08nyUNhMAz8kEUUcWyyzASJ5tltt8pwCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-17-SocialMedia.JPG" width="400" /></a></div>
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Like millions (billions?) of people, I'm on Facebook. I am also on Twitter, Instagram (which is now owned by Facebook), and Google+. I like being on the internet and using social media, in general, and I also use social media to share my creative work. I'm not over here just <i>taking</i> from social media; I'm giving it content that generates clicks on a near-daily basis, often many times a day, and that adds up to a lot of ad money for them and not a bit of ad money for me. They know I want to use their sites, however, so they seem to feel that they can take me for granted. The sad thing is that they may be right, for reasons I'll get into below.</div>
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I want places to post my thoughts and photos where interested people will see them. Let's be honest: I'm going to put a link to this post on all of the sites I mentioned above except Instagram, where I only post images of my artwork, which has been a neglected area of my output for the last several months (I can't do everything all the time! I do not like that about myself!). </div>
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<i>But Nayad</i>, you ask. <i>What exactly is your problem?</i></div>
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Let me tell you about my problem. My favorite social media site has been Facebook, ever since LiveJournal stopped being my favorite. I've been on Facebook, collecting connections with people I've met, for over ten years now. Over time, though, the changes there have made it less helpful for me. One of the main things that bothers me about it, especially in the last couple of years, is the manipulation of what people will be able to see. Some posts are suppressed to the point of practically disappearing, for a variety of reasons. If you don't interact with someone enough, you don't see their posts as often, and that makes it harder to interact with them, so eventually you might never see their posts at all. For a writer like me, with 2,581 Facebook "friends" (which covers everyone from family through friends through acquaintances through friends-of-friends I have never met in person), that means most of the connections I might hope to develop actually cannot be developed. People who might like to see my public posts probably won't. </div>
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Yes, people can always go directly to my blog, or to my main Facebook page, and they might. I sometimes go to the main pages of people I want to keep up with. But I would prefer to have a social media feed that helps me to notice what's going on with people who interest me, but might not always be on the top of my mind. I want other people to be able to have the option of seeing my posts without the site adding a layer of its own "opinion" about which posts matter to which people. </div>
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A little while earlier this morning, I was thinking about this and - I know this is weird - I posted on Facebook about the idea of shifting more of my social media efforts to Google+, which isn't perfect but works differently. Almost immediately, I got a comment from someone who told me that Google+ is going to be discontinued. I looked it up: real news. I got other comments with ideas like using Instagram instead, or joining <a href="https://mastodon.social/about">Mastodon</a>, which looks like a better version of Twitter, maybe? Except a bit confusing to join? And a longtime early-adopter acquaintance who consistently finds the good stuff suggested <a href="https://micro.blog/">Micro.blog</a>, but I haven't had the chance to check it out and see how it works. So my Facebook people do see my posts and comment on them, and they simultaneously have similar concerns about Facebook and want to find better options. They also know just as well as I do that it's really hard to get anyone to try a new type of social media these days, because we get pretty invested in the ones we're already on and don't have the time to check out other ones that none of our friends are on yet, anyway. LIKE I SAID: DILEMMA.</div>
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I guess I want a social media site which:</div>
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<li>allows different filters for sharing (public, family, friends, acquaintances, networking)</li>
<li>allows posts to be any length you want</li>
<li>doesn't steer the visibility of posts in any way on its own</li>
<li>allows the user to choose settings to filter posts, if they want</li>
<li>shows posts in the order in which they were posted!</li>
<li>facilitates useful, threaded comments</li>
<li>isn't riddled with ways for your info to be stolen or otherwise profited from</li>
<li>is attractive, easy to sign up for, and fun to use</li>
<li>routinely solicits and applies user feedback</li>
<li>doesn't get into shady social experimentation</li>
<li>cracks down on bots and fake news with vigor</li>
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You know? Something that contributes value to the world and manages to become profitable by not being obviously monofocused on profit?</div>
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Stop laughing at me.</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com13tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-61737387052231224352018-11-16T12:59:00.001-06:002018-11-17T09:27:14.635-06:00Friday Fun Post: Meet My Cats! Includes Kitten Photos<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-9qo7glRZUx0/W-8CZmd8SxI/AAAAAAAADMU/Y-ou1oqNIPQgS23e6rWi2IYWnplIKUA7gCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-16-Tilly.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1600" height="400" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-9qo7glRZUx0/W-8CZmd8SxI/AAAAAAAADMU/Y-ou1oqNIPQgS23e6rWi2IYWnplIKUA7gCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-16-Tilly.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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(Matilda gets to be first because she is the tiniest)</div>
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I live with three female cats, and this post will be entirely about them. If you don't like cats, you're excused for today. </div>
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<b>Matilda</b></div>
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(shown above)</div>
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Age: 8 years</div>
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Weight: 5 lbs (don't worry - she's petite, not skinny)</div>
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Nicknames: Tilly, Mini Panther, Itty Bitty</div>
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Likes: Tuna (don't worry - this is a rare treat), dry food, catnip, my bed, rolling around in sunshine patches, purring louder than cats twice her size</div>
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Dislikes: Canned cat food, being picked up, being run off from comfy spots by Annabelle</div>
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Quirks: She likes to get up to somewhere really high - just out of my reach is ideal - and act like she is desperate for me to pet her. Purring, mewing, reaching her paw out toward me, leaning her head way down so that I can just barely touch it... but not actually getting down so that I can pet her.</div>
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Mouse-hunting skills: Ineffective. A couple of times a year, a mouse will get the idea to move into my house. Tilly will participate in chasing a mouse around, but she hangs back and doesn't try to actually catch it.</div>
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Additional info: Tilly is mostly black, but she has two splotches of white on her belly.</div>
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I've had this tiny little sweetie, and her litter-mate Tabitha, since October of 2010, when they were six weeks old. They came from a farm owned by the relative of a friend of a friend, and the people there were eager to get the kittens out to new homes (I think it's better to wait a couple weeks longer, but the kittens were going fast and I didn't want to test the farmer's patience). The momma cat was a tortoiseshell.<br />
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<b>Tabitha</b></div>
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Age: 8 years</div>
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Weight: 7 lbs.</div>
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Nicknames: Tabby (which refers to her name more than her coloration, because she's really a torbie, a mix of tortoiseshell and tabby), Fluff-puff, Bunny</div>
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Likes: Canned cat food, catnip, tuna, sitting on a blanket on a person's lap, curling up in a tiny ball in the middle of a giant foam pouf chair, clawing the carpet on the stairs, drinking water from the sink faucet</div>
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Dislikes: Being picked up, vomiting on easy-to-clean surfaces (she coughs up the occasional hairball due to having long fur, and when choosing a barfing zone, only the carpet will do)</div>
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Quirks: Every time I take a shower, within one minute of stepping out afterward I can expect Tabby to scratch at the bathroom door to be let in. I think it's that she likes the warm, humid air. Sometimes she jumps into the still-wet bathtub.</div>
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Mouse-hunting skills: Pretty decent. She does a lot of herding, and sometimes actually touches the mouse.</div>
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Additional info: I suspect that Tabby and Tilly are half-sisters, since litters of kittens can have multiple dads. Here's the first picture I saw of them, with their other siblings:</div>
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<a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-O9JB0jxDZcs/W-8LYe-U-aI/AAAAAAAADNE/nF_0trmqRjshg4bDkax0s501gOor7ioygCLcBGAs/s1600/2010-10-Tabby-Tilly-litter.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1200" data-original-width="1600" height="300" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-O9JB0jxDZcs/W-8LYe-U-aI/AAAAAAAADNE/nF_0trmqRjshg4bDkax0s501gOor7ioygCLcBGAs/s400/2010-10-Tabby-Tilly-litter.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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No offense to my darlings, but the first kitten that caught my eye was the black-and-white guy in the upper left corner. Someone else had already inquired about him. Just from looking, my feeling is that he and Tilly might have had the same dad, while the others had a different dad. But it doesn't matter! And I would have been thrilled with any of these kittens. Or all of them, if I'm being completely honest.</div>
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Age: 2 years</div>
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Weight: 12 lbs (don't worry - she's tall, long, active, and very muscular)</div>
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Nicknames: Belly, the Bell-Bell, Monkey-cat</div>
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Likes: All kinds of cat food, tuna, catnip, chasing after aluminum foil balls (sometimes even bringing them back!), making chittering noises while watching birds from the window, carrying around a soft mouse toy like it's her teddy bear, being picked up and carried around like a human baby</div>
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Dislikes: Sharing spaces with Tilly (but she's okay with being next to Tabby, who does not appreciate the honor and is more comfortable with snuggling Tilly. So it goes)</div>
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Quirks: When she has a soft mouse toy to carry around, her favorite thing is to drop it into the water bowl, bat it around in there until it's good and soaked, and then carry the dripping-wet mouse everywhere she goes. She also likes to occasionally leave the wet mouse in pathways where humans tend to walk, so they can step on it.</div>
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Mouse-hunting skills: Outstanding. She has a 100% success rate, but doesn't try to eat them. If I take the mouse away while it's still alive (I have a system that doesn't involve touching the mouse with my hands), she gets mad and pouts for a while. The last two times she caught one, it was when I wasn't home, so she left a dead mouse where I could see it. This is preferable to other things I can imagine, like discovering that she's left one under my bed or something. She's my mouse-hunting star!</div>
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Additional info: I got Annabelle from the Humane Society shelter when she was 8 weeks old. They had named her "Anna Bell." I thought about changing it to something else, but "Annabelle" fit in with the other cats' names, so I went with that. I wanted to bring home both Annabelle and her brother, an all-gray kitten they were calling Monty, but someone else had asked for him already. I think it's probably better that I only got the one kitten that time, because Monty was very high-energy, and I didn't realize at the time that Annabelle was going to be equally high-energy. They were in separate cages, I guess because they weren't spayed or neutered yet? Or because they were both hyper. Monty was wide awake at the time, but Annabelle was napping when I showed up, so she was very snuggly and purry when I held her. She still snuggles, but she's also a feisty one a lot of the time. She's absolutely fearless and dominant when only the people and cats she knows are around. When anyone else visits, she hides. Visitors are much more likely to see the more sedate Tabby and Tilly, who will both come out and beg for scritches as if they're being neglected. They are, of course, petted and scritched for long stretches of time, every single day.</div>
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And here's a picture of Annabelle on the first day I met her!</div>
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<a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-sv2_J5-419s/W-8TVUVq52I/AAAAAAAADN0/K9iaYOtcIKUtHs-FreqmwKM9GIhpJTuvACLcBGAs/s1600/1st%2BAnnabelle%2BKitten%2BPhoto.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1010" height="640" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-sv2_J5-419s/W-8TVUVq52I/AAAAAAAADN0/K9iaYOtcIKUtHs-FreqmwKM9GIhpJTuvACLcBGAs/s640/1st%2BAnnabelle%2BKitten%2BPhoto.jpg" width="402" /></a></div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-84019614189809880392018-11-15T18:25:00.000-06:002018-11-15T18:25:49.030-06:00Grocery Shopping Tips from One Who Asserts that Feeding Teenage Boys on the Somewhat Cheap Is Not Completely Impossible<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-5AaoG1ynvFA/W-4AdqpJb_I/AAAAAAAADL4/BCr92Nb26j0iwZS__b9YxR6eEwhdNulXgCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-15-Groceries.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1405" data-original-width="1600" height="351" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-5AaoG1ynvFA/W-4AdqpJb_I/AAAAAAAADL4/BCr92Nb26j0iwZS__b9YxR6eEwhdNulXgCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-15-Groceries.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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(This is a mere portion of today's grocery haul)</div>
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(To be fair, some of this stuff is for Thanksgiving)</div>
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(I'm not sure how that's fair but I'm going with it)</div>
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Greetings, valued loyalists! If we've learned one thing from me taking up the practice of blogging every day, it's that my mind works much like a pinball machine with regard to topics. Today I'm late to the blogging due to the grocery shopping I did earlier, so I'm going to write about why grocery shopping can take up a huge part of my day.</div>
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The three top reasons, of course, are certain young men in my household at the ages of seventeen, fifteen, and twelve. The twelve-year-old recently went from shorter than me to taller than me within a couple of months. The others did the same around the time they were each thirteen, and of course they've continued to get taller ever since. </div>
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As a person who doesn't want to spend <i>all of the money</i> on groceries, I've developed some methods to avoid that. Here they are!</div>
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If you want to be thorough, the way to start with your grocery budget is to do what you usually do for a month, but write down what you did. Shop as always, and then add up the receipts to see how much you spent. If you can totally afford that amount and you're not in any kind of debt, you're done with this project and I say to you: good day. However, if you think you'd rather have some of that grocery money for other things, read on.</div>
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Once you know what you spent last month, ease into budgeting by reducing that amount by 10%. If you're really eager, or the spending was super high, try 20%, but don't reduce it by any more than that this time. Try it out at the new level for a month or two and see how it goes. Being too intense about it too suddenly might make you freak out and never want to budget again. </div>
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Once you've decided on the new grocery budget, divide it up so that you have a weekly amount instead of trying to think in terms of a whole month's worth of groceries. Since nearly all the months have more than 28 days, I like to divide my monthly budget by five, so that I might end up with extra money due to the short, fifth "week," but it's fine to divide it by four and just expect that the last "week" will be longer than seven days. </div>
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The next step is to make a shopping list before going to the store, every time. Ideally, you only go to the grocery store once a week, maximum. Some people go less frequently than that, but I'm here to tell you about <i>my</i> system. I like to do a combination of meal-planning and using a rebate app on my phone. </div>
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I'm about to throw a referral link at you, but don't worry, this post is not sponsored. Here's the way <a href="https://ibotta.com/register?friend=lxrqdrh">the Ibotta app</a> works. If you sign up, and use the app, you can get cash back on purchases you make in the regular stores where you ordinarily shop, and also a cash bonus for using the app the first time. If you sign up through <a href="https://ibotta.com/register?friend=lxrqdrh">my referral link</a>, then when you get a bonus the first time, I also get a bonus. Free money for things you were going to buy anyway. You will also be on my team in this scenario, which means that we can both get to additional bonuses faster. If you want to be a lone wolf and sign up without my link, that's okay! But I'll appreciate having you on my team if that's what you decide to do.</div>
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I use Ibotta by looking at the rebate deals for the store where I'm planning to shop. If there's a deal on anything I can use, I click to activate the deal, and put the item on my grocery list. Then I start to figure out which meals to make on which days, with the food I already have plus the things I'm buying. If I need any additional ingredients, I add those to the list. Knowing what I'll cook each day helps me to avoid buying too many random things when I'm at the store.</div>
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I do allow myself to look for sales when I'm at the store, though. If I see things I tend to use on sale, and I can easily keep them in the pantry or freezer, I'm willing to consider buying them to incorporate into the next week's meal-planning. With teenage boys, it's extremely helpful to be able to make a large batch of microwavable food to keep in the freezer. I've made sandwiches, breakfast burritos, waffles, and similar foods to freeze, when the right ingredients have been on sale. Anything that's typically sold in the freezer section of a grocery store is something you can make and freeze for yourself; planning ahead to do that can save you a lot of money.</div>
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I'm the most proud of the breakfast burritos. Whenever I cook ground turkey for tacos, I'll make extra. Then with whatever's left after the meal, I add some refried beans, scrambled eggs, and cheese, wrap it up in a bunch of tortillas, and freeze the burritos to be microwaved later. They are extremely tasty on their own, or with salsa and sour cream on top, and they keep ravenous bellies full.</div>
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The idea with this strategy is to focus on buying things on sale and get multiples of any sale items you: a) can afford within your budget, b) will definitely use, and c) can store for a while, so that you stock up and have supplies to use later. If your budget is extremely tight, don't worry about buying multiples. Just hit those sales hard and use your meal-planning to avoid wasting any food.</div>
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I've learned a lot of this from watching frugal lifestyle channels on YouTube, such as <a href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCw0Peuah9Gmb184cW_syhNA">Pennies into Pearls</a>. If you want to know more about saving money on groceries and other things, go forth and check it out!</div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com23tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-34478594776415881142018-11-13T14:04:00.000-06:002018-11-13T14:04:30.101-06:00Maximalism v. Clutter v. Hoarding, as I See It<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(The decorative things on and behind a medium-tall bookcase in my living room)</div>
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(A closer look at the Earth Dragon painting by <a href="http://www.cfungmiller.com/">Charlotte Fung Miller</a>, which is obscured by glare in the first photo. It deserves better treatment than that)</div>
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Okay, I realize that the top photo is full enough of things that you may have some questions. I want you to know that it's one of the most high-density areas of intentional decoration in my house. There are other spots that might be competitive, but not many. Things are relatively sparse, decoration-wise, in other areas, but who knows... I keep finding and making decorative things, and they have to go somewhere.</div>
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I like <a href="https://www.elledecor.com/design-decorate/a20871729/maximalism-home-decor/">maximalism</a>. I'm so into maximalism that I'm going to give you <a href="https://www.apartmenttherapy.com/10-signs-you-might-be-a-maximalist-205241">another link with more photos of maximalism</a>. Color, texture, pattern, artwork, blankets, rugs, lanterns, plants, mirrors, candles, yes, yes, YES. I think that when it's done well, it's absolutely luscious to have the kind of visual stimulation I'm talking about, the kind where you can see a whole new vista simply by taking a step forward or turning your head a few inches. I would not say that I'm even close to the dream yet in the sense of intentional decorative density, and part of the problem, as I've partially shown in <a href="https://nayadmonroe.blogspot.com/2018/11/hello-from-slobsville-aka-let-me-tell.html">a previous post</a>, is that I also struggle with clutter and having too much of the wrong stuff. While some people might not like the maximalist style because it's visually busy, that's not the same as clutter, which is unintentional, messy, and disorganized.</div>
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<a href="https://www.webmd.com/balance/features/clutter-hoarding#1">There's a difference between clutter and hoarding</a>, too, although one can eventually lead to the other. There's a range of how well people tolerate a mess. What I see as "messy and disorganized," someone else might see as either kind of tidy or deserving of a diagnosis, depending on what they can stand. I tend to think that in a messy house, if all the doors and hallways of a house are clear and functional, there's more than one way to navigate through each room, and all the spaces can be used as intended, you're just dealing with clutter. If you have to squeeze through tight pathways between tall, random piles, that's hoarding. If there's stuff piled up in the bathtub and/or appliances to the point where you can't use them, that's hoarding. If the person who is living in a decreasingly functional home insists that they can't possibly get rid of their things because they might need them - especially if there's no chance they could dig out any particular thing in the event of needing it - that's definitely hoarding. </div>
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I can see how it might be tricky to tell when you're crossing from having clutter to hoarding, because the concept of possibly needing something later is just plausible enough that reaching a new level of anxiety might make the difference between finding it hard, or finding it impossible, to let things go. But ultimately the accumulation of things in a hoarding situation makes life harder enough that it cancels out any benefits of having things around "just in case."</div>
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I think it's important to maintain some breathing room, and push back against having too many unused possessions. At the same time, I am 100% willing to cover all of my walls entirely with things I like to look at. IT'S CALLED BALANCE. Thank you and good day.</div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-41703111119237437372018-11-12T10:45:00.000-06:002018-11-12T10:45:40.225-06:00I Am Most Chilled, and I'm Knitting and Binge-ing<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(With all due respect to the <a href="https://genius.com/Beastie-boys-rhymin-and-stealin-lyrics">Beastie Boys</a>, who I like to think might be tickled by my post title)</div>
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(Because it's a riff on their lyrics, ya see)</div>
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(Kind of both rhymin' and stealin', if ya think about it)</div>
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(I'll stop now)</div>
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ANYWAY, this post is about my fall and winter hobby of knitting on various sizes of knitting loom while watching various sizes of internet entertainment. Basically it's my excuse to roll out a list of shows I've binge-watched. </div>
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The thing is, I don't like to just sit and watch a show, because I feel like I should be doing something more interesting than that. I also don't like to just sit and knit, because even though I'm making something I want to make, the kind of knitting I do is not complicated. It's repetitive and time-consuming, and I like the results I get. Mostly, instead of varying the kinds of stitches I do, I vary the colors, textures, and thicknesses of the yarn. That works beautifully for the kind of blankets I make. I mess with different stitches a bit more when I'm making hats, which is a great way to use up smaller amounts of extra yarn, and then I can wear them, give them as gifts, or donate them (my usual choice lately). I've also been known to make legwarmers and wristwarmers. My point is that I feel better about watching a show when I knit, and I feel better about knitting when I watch a show.</div>
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As you might imagine, I have watched a lot of shows. I'm often late to the popular ones because I prefer Netflix and Amazon Prime Video to traditional TV. </div>
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For example, I just started <i>Riverdale </i>last week. What a beyond-weird take on the comic books. Those were the only comic books I read in my childhood, btw. I like the show, despite its penchant for Wagnerian theatrics (sorry, has anyone else watched the movie <i>Free Enterprise</i> more times than is recommended by the various psychological organizations worldwide? Because that reference was for me and for you, and I may have just used the singular "you"). I'm just trying to imagine the thought process that led to turning the lightest and fluffiest of all implied-polyamory comics into the grim parents-are-mostly-psychotic dystopia which is the <i>Riverdale</i> I am currently inhaling at the rate of two or more episodes a day.</div>
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Moving on... I'm going to do more of an actual list from this point forward, because I would like to bring this post in for a landing before the end of this month. So here are some more shows that I've enjoyed enough to binge and type the titles of, including last year and probably the one before that. Who doesn't want a list of recommendations from a person who knits AND can throw around both Beastie Boys and <i>Free Enterprise</i> references in a single blog post? Shh, that wasn't a real question. </div>
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Here. Have that list I mentioned sometime in the distant past. It will be in no particular order, for your convenience. These are all on Netflix now. I've only seen the seasons available on Netflix, in all cases. Do we still have to beg for spoiler avoidance in 2018? Let's assume we do. NO SPOILERS PLEASE.</div>
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<li><i>The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina</i></li>
<li><i>Orange Is the New Black</i></li>
<li><i>iZombie</i></li>
<li><i>Stranger Things</i></li>
<li><i>The West Wing</i></li>
<li><i>The Magicians</i></li>
<li><i>Better Call Saul</i></li>
<li><i>Penny Dreadful</i></li>
<li><i>Travelers</i></li>
<li><i>Colony</i></li>
<li><i>Weeds</i></li>
<li><i>Santa Clarita Diet</i></li>
<li><i>Ozark</i></li>
<li><i>Limitless</i></li>
<li><i>Disenchantment</i></li>
<li><i>The Rain</i></li>
<li><i>Sense8</i></li>
<li><i>Breaking Bad</i></li>
<li><i>Cleverman</i></li>
<li><i>The Haunting of Hill House</i></li>
<li><i>Shameless</i></li>
<li><i>Mad Men</i></li>
<li><i>The Good Place</i></li>
<li><i>Glitch</i></li>
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Wow. Aren't you glad we both know this about me now? o.O</div>
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In case you, like many normal active people, did not read my blog posts over the weekend, here they are:</div>
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<a href="https://nayadmonroe.blogspot.com/2018/11/list-all-qualities-you-love-about-being.html">All the Qualities I Love about Being Human - A Thumb-Haver's Objective List</a></div>
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<a href="https://nayadmonroe.blogspot.com/2018/11/a-good-weekend-for-art-in-madison-wi.html">A Good Weekend for Art in Madison, WI</a></div>
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...and that is all for today. Stay safe! </div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-79874100444902366272018-11-11T18:00:00.000-06:002018-11-11T18:00:37.496-06:00A Good Weekend for Art in Madison, WI<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-QBhVshdsDQ4/W-i6ispJ6hI/AAAAAAAADJ8/5DLLntWZkg8Fz7AJQyM1j1RsgavWXvEwACLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-11-HighNoon-ArtShow.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1199" data-original-width="1600" height="476" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-QBhVshdsDQ4/W-i6ispJ6hI/AAAAAAAADJ8/5DLLntWZkg8Fz7AJQyM1j1RsgavWXvEwACLcBGAs/s640/2018-11-11-HighNoon-ArtShow.JPG" width="640" /></a></div>
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(Artist Erica Engebreth gave me permission to post this photo of her awesome booth.</div>
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Check out her art at <a href="http://www.littlebitlacey.com/">Little Bit Lacey</a>)</div>
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This post is late in the day because I spent the afternoon looking at art in a couple of different places. The photo above is from an art & craft show in the High Noon Saloon in Madison, WI. It was a free event with at least a couple dozen booths featuring art, jewelry, clothing, and other things by local makers in a wide variety of styles. The DJ was absolutely on point with fun-but-chill music. I did not get anything at this show, but that's because I knew I was about to go to a bigger show, the Winter Art Fair Off the Square in the Monona Terrace. If the two events hadn't been competing, I know I would have talked myself into buying a couple of things at the smaller show. It's very sad to want all of the things but only be able to get some of the things.</div>
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The larger show did charge a small fee to get in (regular price $5 per person 13 and older, but you could get a discount with a coupon through Facebook). It also had 134 booths, plus a concession stand and live music being played on a grand piano (although I was a bigger fan of what the DJ played at the smaller show). The selection and the prices were both much larger here, but there were reasonably-priced items to be had. After looking around for a while, I bought a small painting of an Earth Dragon from <a href="http://www.cfungmiller.com/">Charlotte Fung Miller</a>, who was very friendly and enthusiastic about explaining the meaning behind her paintings; once she saw that my son and I were interested in the dragon ones, she showed us around to see every dragon painting she had. The one I got was on metal instead of canvas, and I'm looking forward to finding a prominent place to display it in my house.</div>
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I also collected cards from several of the artists' booths, especially ones where my son was interested in the items they were selling and they had websites I could visit later, because CHRISTMAS IS COMING. This year I'm trying to focus more on quality than quantity in gift-giving. I want to be attentive enough to give a few things that people really want, and sneaky enough to make some of them surprises. That's something I feel good about being able to do. Even when I was a child under the age of twelve, my mom would comment that I was good at choosing gifts that other people would like. It's a matter of being observant and comprehending what it is that they like about the things that they like.</div>
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Okay, I had better post this before it gets even later. I'll be back tomorrow with another post!</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-46663898654389833892018-11-10T16:25:00.000-06:002018-11-10T16:27:53.026-06:00All the Qualities I Love about Being Human - A Thumb-Haver's Objective List<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-7hMPzQREkCE/W-dRm0ctvjI/AAAAAAAADJk/PC53ZEaKgNE37sHEgiCw87_n3LN7gWdEwCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-10-TabbyPostNap.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1600" height="400" src="https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-7hMPzQREkCE/W-dRm0ctvjI/AAAAAAAADJk/PC53ZEaKgNE37sHEgiCw87_n3LN7gWdEwCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-10-TabbyPostNap.jpg" width="400" /></a></div>
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(Tabitha thinks humans are overrated - especially when they interrupt naps)</div>
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This post is coming at you from a prompt in a book called <i>List Your Self: Listmaking as the Way to Self-Discovery</i>, by Ilene Segalove and Paul Bob Velick. Look, sometimes the books in the bargain section of Barnes & Noble assert hypnotic powers upon hapless passers-by. There's really nothing to be done about this well-known phenomenon which involves proven science. </div>
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I BOUGHT THE BOOK OKAY</div>
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Anyway, the book has powers and it says to list all the qualities I love about being human. Let's see what happens.</div>
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<li>I love having a proportionately huge brain that allows me to learn, speak, and write in languages. Not gonna lie, that's cool. I would like to thank that quality for bringing me to this place and time in which I'm writing a blog that can be read by you. A related thing I love is being able to learn all kinds of other things.</li>
<li>I love having the ability to love, due to some top-notch mammalian features humans do have. I mean, I would love it just as much if I were a dog, maybe even more, but I wouldn't be able to articulate it if I were a dog, so I'd just have to do things like wagging my tail so hard it might fly off. My point is that I appreciate all of the bonding emotions humans are capable of. I'm not really sure why you brought up dogs, but since we're friends I'm going to let that slide. </li>
<li>I love many features of civilization. Can't say I love them all, but, you know. Those other features are outside the purview of the requested list. I think I have an idea for another list to do another day, now that I think of it. Whether the book demands it or not. I get to have my own ideas too, book!</li>
<li>I love human creativity. Art, music, fiction, scientific discoveries, helpful inventions, delicious food and drinks... When we create positive things like these, or enlightening works that express uplifting ideas, that's human nature at its best. </li>
<li>Being bipedal is pretty sweet, too. I mean I can be walking and doing something else with my hands at the same time, taking advantage of the really practical thumbs that are standard features of human hands. Like, how many creatures get both of those things on a consistent basis? Not fucking many. </li>
<li>I personally am a fan of not growing fur on my face, although I guess there are some humans who aren't as into the non-furry-face thing, given the size of the beards I'm seeing these days. That's cool if that's what you like, but we all know it's not really fur. </li>
<li>I like the fact that we can meditate. Not only can we meditate, but doing so on a regular basis allows humans to change their own brains. So theoretically I can <i>use</i> my brain to <i>change</i> my brain. I think that's the biological equivalent of a mic drop, so I'm going to end this right here.</li>
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Assuming you, dear reader, are also human, get on with your humaning and have a great arbitrary time period conceptualized and measured by humans!</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-89994929886284192752018-11-09T12:06:00.000-06:002018-11-09T12:59:05.360-06:00Romancing the Writing - How to Take Your Writing on a Date<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-gTGhQDBlqjs/W-W_MDyswnI/AAAAAAAADJE/tqNrBt9WfYQwkkuZDSCGfY0Z7Z5wuoSugCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-09-Candles.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="1156" height="400" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-gTGhQDBlqjs/W-W_MDyswnI/AAAAAAAADJE/tqNrBt9WfYQwkkuZDSCGfY0Z7Z5wuoSugCLcBGAs/s400/2018-11-09-Candles.jpg" width="288" /></a></div>
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(Setting the mood with some candles and a mysterious raven)</div>
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I think we've all heard the advice that "you need to write every day" and "you need to treat your writing like a job" and "you need to have a writing routine." I'm not saying any of this advice is <i>wrong</i>. I'm saying, if that works for you, <i>do it. </i>All of this advice is yours to keep and do with what you will. However, if you're burned out, bored, or just not getting the writing done, I say change it up! Try something flirty and adventurous with your writing!</div>
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So, like the title says, this post is about how to take your writing on a date. The nice thing about this kind of date is that it doesn't have to cost very much and you don't necessarily even have to go anywhere, unless you want to. You might need to kick other people out of the house so you and your writing can be alone together, but maybe not. Maybe you live with people who know how to keep a low profile when you're trying to get some writing action. </div>
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Here's what you do. First of all, make plans in advance. This is not a spontaneous writing <i>booty call</i>. This is a respectful and loving date. Pick an evening when you can have a few hours to spend with your writing. Don't double-book your time or keep your mind open to canceling if something better comes along. Set a reasonable amount of time, like two or three hours. Anything shorter than an hour is not really giving the date a chance. And planning on a super-long date is kind of presumptuous, don't you think?</div>
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Second, create some atmosphere. If you're staying in, pick a nice room, maybe somewhere you don't usually write. Even if your space is small and you don't have a different room available, you can make the same room feel different. Clean it, tidy it, change the decorations around. If you can, add some candles or some other special lighting. Decide where you're going to sit and get that all set up with a notebook and pen, or a laptop, or a recorder to dictate into. If you only, ever, always write on a desktop computer, then you can set up your nice atmosphere wherever the computer is if you want, but may I suggest considering a temporary change of methods for the date instead? Because this is supposed to be a special night. That's your call.</div>
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If you're going out, of course, pick a place you'll enjoy and take your writing things with you. From now on I'm going to act as if this is a home date, but you know how to proceed if you're going out. Adapt ideas as necessary.</div>
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Plan out, acquire, and prepare an appetizer or small meal that feels a bit fancy. You don't have to be really extra about this, but try to make your food something you'll look forward to and enjoy. Same for what you'll drink. Something that feels a bit luxurious, whether it's hot or cold, alcoholic or non-. I like to have a glass of wine, but you can choose any kind of date-like drink you want.<br />
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Add some music and/or subtle background noise. I use my iPad to play both music from Pandora, and a loop of coffee shop background noise (people talking, cafe noises) with Coffeetivity, which can play at the same time and be adjusted so that it doesn't overwhelm the music. This really adds good atmosphere! It promotes that feeling of being somewhere else without <i>going</i> somewhere else. I'm pretty sure that I've also read a study that said moderate background noise can boost creativity. Almost positive that's why I got the Coffeetivity app in the first place.</div>
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You may think this is a bit over the top, but I also suggest dressing for a date, and doing whatever special-occasion things you might do with your hair, face, and body for a date. The fact that your writing isn't actually a person is not something you need to focus on right now. You're making this night special for YOU, and pretending you're going on a real and actual date. This means you can even wear whatever fragrances you want in whatever quantities you want, if you're so inclined, because you don't have to worry about anyone else's preferences (unless you're not technically alone in this scenario, but let's say you are. For the sake of my premise). You can consider comfort when deciding what to wear, but spiffing up will do things for you psychologically. You're making the effort.</div>
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All right? When it's time for your writing date - and I do hope you respect your writing enough to be on time for this - make absolutely sure that you put away your phone and stay off the internet, because scanning distracting other stuff is extremely rude and inattentive to your companion. Try to show up with some good "conversation starters," otherwise known as ideas about what you'd like to work on. Will you do some free-writing first? Or make a list of things that will happen next in your story? Maybe you'll start by writing down some questions, and then answering them. Another idea would be to pretend you're sitting across from one of your characters, getting to know them as you would while going out for dinner or drinks with someone. You could play the role of yourself, or of another character. Write down the conversation as you go. Or if you already know what's supposed to happen next in your story, you can seduce yourself into writing it down. </div>
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Once you get to the end of the time you've set for the writing date, you can make plans for the next one, or stay with your writing longer if the evening's going really well. There's really nothing to lose by doing this. Ideally, you'll have a good time while getting some writing done, but at minimum, you'll have delicious food and a drink you enjoy in a space that you've beautified. That's a good, happiness-boosting way to spend an evening. Self-care is its own reward, and the reduction in stress will ripple through the rest of your life and the next day's writing. </div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-48275705001238426572018-11-08T12:55:00.000-06:002018-11-08T12:55:13.305-06:00How to Regather Your Scattered Mind and Get Some Useful Stuff Done<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(I'm here to help)</div>
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This morning I woke up with basically nothing connecting one idea to another as I was trying to plan my day. I could think of dozens of possible things to do, but it was hard to narrow them down to a reasonable list of the most important things that I could fit in before hitting the reset button at bedtime. This meant I not only had to make a plan, but I had to start with making a preliminary plan for how to make the actual plan. Since I also didn't have an idea for today's blog post, I thought I'd share the way I sorted out my thoughts.</div>
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First of all, what I should have done was to make my plan LAST NIGHT. It's much easier to get going if you wake up with the list already made. New possibilities can come up in the morning, but then you can decide whether they're more important than the ones on your list and make adjustments. If nothing new comes up, you're all set. However, even if you didn't do this in the past, you can still figure it out now.</div>
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I decided to just write a list of all of the ideas I could come up with, because once the ideas are out where I can look at them, I don't have to spend any more mental energy on making sure that I remember everything. I have to remember ONE thing: the location of the list. </div>
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After writing down all of the ideas, it's time to evaluate what's most important, and what's possible. If the list only has a few items that can easily fit into the amount of time you have, you're fine and you can do them in whatever order works best for you. That hardly even counts as being scattered. </div>
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The trouble comes in when you have more ideas than time. At that point, it's best to see if there are reasons why any of the options have to be done today, or ideally <i>should</i> be done today. Those become the top priorities, and if that's all you have time for, you can get started with the one that's most important. If you don't know what that is, your first task is to figure it out. If you have more "must do today" items than time, you may have to ask for help or end up suffering some consequences, but that will point you toward learning more about time management in the future, I hope? </div>
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If there are routine chores to get done, I say make a game of it. Put on music you like, set a timer for twenty minutes, and do as much as you can in one area in that time. No perfection required. Repeat as needed.</div>
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A problem I have is indecision about things I don't have to do at all. I just want to do more things than I have time to do. If there's no external reason why one is more important than another, I can end up ruining my own fun by wasting time on not being able to choose. It can be helpful to decide that this week (or other arbitrary amount of time) in my free time I'll focus on one area. Like only reading fiction, only drawing pictures, only making crafts, or whatever. Or I can pick a few projects I really want to get done by a certain date, and be somewhat spontaneous about when to fit in time for them. The point is to decide I will NOT be doing anything about all those other projects until after this amount of time passes, or after these particular projects are finished. </div>
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Another mind-clearing thing is to set a timer for maybe thirty minutes and do some free-writing. You can start with a phrase like "I don't know what to do today because" or "I feel stuck because," and go from there. Maybe you're feeling conflicted between what you want to do and what you think you should do, or something else is bothering you. I always find it helpful to start writing things down without trying to make my sentences perfect or edit anything. No one else has to see what you write; you can burn it afterward if you want. It can be a relief to just get your thoughts out.</div>
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I think that's all the advice I have for myself and for you today! I'm going to go and apply it to myself. Be good!</div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-9267241436425933542018-11-07T11:14:00.000-06:002018-11-07T11:14:35.373-06:00Post-Midterm Election: Feeling the Feel Outta Some FEELINGS<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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(This is a little glimpse of my Facebook page this morning)</div>
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(I do not apologize)</div>
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It's been a rough time for me politically for the last two years. I'm a <a href="https://www.dsausa.org/about-us/what-is-democratic-socialism/">Democratic Socialist</a> who votes for Democrats for pragmatic reasons, until such time as there are better voting options that will get more refined results. Conservatives won't change the voting system, but Democrats might, in my opinion. Anyway, I was extremely unhappy about the results of the 2016 election, and I've been increasingly both angered and saddened by the cynical way the Republicans in Congress have taken advantage of their majorities to push through their agenda, even to the point of changing rules to favor themselves. </div>
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It's your right to disagree with me, of course, but don't expect me to be comfortable with you as a person if you're invested in taking health care away from people who are sick, oppressing minority or LGBTQ citizens, or allowing the environment to be damaged for the sake of profit. The same goes for voting for people who are invested in any of the above, even if you personally don't enact those decisions. You're supporting bad, harmful actions either way. </div>
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Given that this is my worldview, I'm pleased with the results of many of the elections we had yesterday, and I'm also freaking exhausted from the process of getting there. "Political fatigue" doesn't even begin to cover the way I'm wiped out and so sick of it all. I accept that there's way more to do in the next two years, especially in the area of keeping the voting numbers up. We need the current sixteen- and seventeen-year-olds to get involved and vote in 2020. But I'm going to give myself a little time to relax for a couple of months, just to enjoy some holiday time and conserve some energy for the investigations and revelations that will surely be happening in 2019.</div>
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You can expect NO POLITICS from me tomorrow. Until I'm ready to get back at it. Or sooner, if I have to get back at it whether I'm ready or not.</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-71044706919398245922018-11-06T14:40:00.000-06:002018-11-06T14:40:59.162-06:00Ten Answers to Ten Questions from a Book of Questions - Episode One<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Mv5hQ7gFJ5M/W-HrQn_ODBI/AAAAAAAADHw/vGjxt-4vD8o7TlYRqnSn_ZGSUI5f8wxLwCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-06-Annabelle.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="783" height="640" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-Mv5hQ7gFJ5M/W-HrQn_ODBI/AAAAAAAADHw/vGjxt-4vD8o7TlYRqnSn_ZGSUI5f8wxLwCLcBGAs/s640/2018-11-06-Annabelle.jpg" width="312" /></a></div>
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(Annabelle is not 100% sold on this blog post concept)</div>
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Today, friends, my mind keeps trying to circle around the election, so I'm a bit distracted. I already voted, and there's nothing to do but wait to find out how it's going to go. Because of this, I'm going to do the first of theoretically four hundred question-answering posts. You see, I have this book called <i>4,000 Questions for Getting to Know Anyone and Everyone</i>, by Barbara Ann Kipfer. The book has ten topic sections, each containing a lot of questions. Instead of picking a single topic, I'm going to answer the first question from each of the sections. SUPER RANDOM FUN. I cannot be held responsible for the quality of the questions. Ready? Here we go!</div>
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<b>Topic: The Latest Scoop</b></div>
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<i>Do you like working with a tablet computer? Do you like it better than a laptop or desktop computer?</i></div>
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I like using a tablet. It's definitely my preferred thing to use for making digital drawings, and I like using apps. I haven't looked into this recently, but last time I checked I was disappointed in the options for using the tablet for writing, even with a keyboard attached. I like using Open Office for writing on my desktop computer, and I'm sure I'd like that on a laptop, too, if I had one. </div>
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<b>Topic: Childhood and School</b></div>
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<i>Where did you grow up?</i></div>
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A few places. Without getting too specific for my comfort level: I was born in Indiana, and lived in a small town there until I was six. Then we moved to a larger small town in Ontario, Canada, and stayed until I was twelve. The next move was to a near southwest suburb of Chicago, like right up against the border between Chicago and not-Chicago. I lived there until I was twenty-one. </div>
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<b>Topic: Family and Friends</b></div>
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<i>If you could only make one phone call, who would you call?</i></div>
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At the moment, based on phone calls and visits I've had recently, I would call my brother. I'm not much of a phone-caller, so I'm more likely to email or text someone.</div>
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<b>Topic: Fun and Sport</b></div>
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<i>Anything can be fun if you want it to be: agree or disagree?</i></div>
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Literally anything?! Disagree with a vengeance. I'm not going to put you through the list of never ever fun things my mind immediately started to generate upon reading that question. However, I'll concede that many things can become more fun than you'd think if you do them with a good attitude and the intention to generate as much fun as possible.</div>
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<b>Topic: Habits</b></div>
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<i>What things can you do with your eyes closed?</i></div>
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Are these questions for real? Is this post a bad idea? I'm going to keep going, but damn. To answer your question, o book of in-depth investigative journalism, I can do the standard eyes-closed things like sleeping and meditation with my eyes closed. Maybe brush my teeth. Listen to music. You know. I'm not even sure why this question is about habits. Even if I do something all the time, that doesn't necessarily mean I can do it with <i>my eyes closed</i>.</div>
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<b>Topic: Love and Sex</b></div>
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<i>How often have you fallen in love?</i></div>
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It's kind of nice that this doesn't ask "how many times." Because fuck you, book, none of your business and I'm taking your wording literally. How often? Less than once per year over the course of forty-six years. That's right, math wizards, I have fallen in love fewer than forty-six times. </div>
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<b>Topic: Outlook</b></div>
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<i>Do you like a peaceful or hectic life?</i></div>
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If I had to choose one or the other, I would not want a guaranteed hectic life, so I'd go with peaceful. But then I'd get bored and start to add in activities to get to a middle ground of neither too hectic nor too peaceful. I like mental stimulation, but not constant activity.</div>
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<b>Topic: Politics</b></div>
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<i>Do you question "conventional wisdom" and authority?</i></div>
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OH HELL YES. ALL DAY, EVERY DAY. Sometimes "conventional wisdom" is useful, but it's important to update your ideas. Question whether they're still useful or not. Sometimes ideas that were established in the past were based on less information than we have now. Authority isn't something to value for its own sake. Just because someone's in charge, or a certain law is in effect right now, doesn't mean either one is perfect and never to be challenged.</div>
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<b>Topic: Spirituality</b></div>
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<i>What is sacred?</i></div>
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I'm not religious, so I'm going to think of something sacred as something that deserves veneration. I feel that kind of reverence for the natural world, and for goodness that comes from the wish to do good, rather than the fear of punishment or the hope of reward. </div>
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<b>Topic: Work</b></div>
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<i>Do you believe that people are basically lazy or hardworking and why?</i></div>
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I think it's way more complicated than this either-or thing we have going on in this question. I think that people show a wide range of behavior, from lazy to hardworking, and that generally most people are somewhere in the middle. I think that each person probably is also lazier about some kinds of tasks, and more hardworking about others. I don't necessarily think of "hardworking" as a virtue in itself. I feel that the word "lazy" is fairly judgmental, so I don't use it much. Like, if something is not important to a person, are they being lazy if they're not strongly motivated to do it? I don't think so. I think that most people will put in effort on work that's important to them.</div>
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That does it for the questions for today! I'm... not completely thrilled with the book, I guess, but that was a sample of ten questions out of four <i>thousand</i>, so maybe the next round will suit me better. Or maybe I'll do the next round when I'm in a better mood. Or something. I'll spread these out and give the concept a few rounds before I judge, I think. </div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-36837098548724239682018-11-05T15:04:00.000-06:002018-11-05T15:04:35.433-06:00I Got a Plant!<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-U8NGHlJBiGY/W-CqZcxJHrI/AAAAAAAADHU/PbI7r1A1jcUn79XrCoyC5uM59wYxITzlACLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-05-ReedPalm.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="837" height="640" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-U8NGHlJBiGY/W-CqZcxJHrI/AAAAAAAADHU/PbI7r1A1jcUn79XrCoyC5uM59wYxITzlACLcBGAs/s640/2018-11-05-ReedPalm.jpg" width="332" /></a></div>
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(This is the plant. It is Tabitha-approved.)</div>
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I've been wanting more indoor plants - many more, like kind of an indoor jungle? - for a long time, but I've always been nervous about what the cats would do to them, and what they in turn might do to the cats. After researching and dithering for literally years, I finally reached a new stage in my deliberations and went looking for a Boston Fern and/or a Reed Palm. I chose them because neither kind is toxic to cats according to the ASPCA website, and they can both live with indirect light. I ended up with this lovely big Reed Palm. The cats have all sniffed it and taken turns sitting beside it, but they're being surprisingly chill about the situation.</div>
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It's going to take some thought and modifications to add more. I have a lot of space, but I don't have many good places for plants at the moment. There are two spider plants hanging from the two ceiling hooks I have available, but only one of them is really thriving. I want to figure out how to add little grow lights to the spots I have where there's not even indirect natural light, or install more ceiling hooks that are sturdy enough to be useful, or add little shelves that the cats can't access. I don't mind the thought of moving or getting rid of stuff to make space for more tall plants, after testing how well they grow and the cats behave with them. I guess that the more plants I end up with, the less cat-based peril there will be for each of them. There are only so many hours in a day for plant-shredding when one needs a certain number of naps.</div>
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I'm all psyched up about having more indoor plants because:</div>
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<li>I like the way they look, especially in the winter when there's not much green outside</li>
<li>They smell good</li>
<li>They absorb carbon dioxide and pollution</li>
<li>They create oxygen</li>
<li>I don't think I really need more reasons than this, do you you? Thanks for understanding.</li>
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So YAY PLANT. Gotta go, more blog tomorrow, votey-vote-vote!</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-63449630514603707122018-11-04T12:46:00.000-06:002018-11-04T12:46:12.234-06:00Hello from Slobsville - AKA Let Me Tell You about My Home Office<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iRq0ye7yhuU/W983OpVI-sI/AAAAAAAADG0/9oyYofhVAOkzWoSwhsUtQlcNCOlUuOfGwCLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-04-Slobsville.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1229" data-original-width="1600" height="245" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iRq0ye7yhuU/W983OpVI-sI/AAAAAAAADG0/9oyYofhVAOkzWoSwhsUtQlcNCOlUuOfGwCLcBGAs/s320/2018-11-04-Slobsville.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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(I never said I was perfect)</div>
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Before you get worried, let me just say that I'm about to launch into decluttering. My office is the messy room in my house. I mean, the other rooms are lived-in for sure, but the office is that one room where I put things I'm going to do something with later. It's like... not really a <i>junk </i>room, but it contains a lot of things that currently have more potential than realization. You know? You know. <i>I know you know.</i> </div>
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It's gotten to the point where it's harder to declutter and tidy up because there are no free surfaces to sort things on. It's a roughly 10' x 14' room that contains a computer desk, printer stand, two tall cabinets that are about 3 feet wide each, and also the intended-for-art table pictured above, a couple of smaller freestanding storage furnishings, a couple of to-be-painted small furniture items (an end table and a narrow cabinet, if you must know). It has a built-in closet and drawers that are pretty full of things to make things with, and upper cabinets that are too high for regular use (one of which has a half-broken door that hangs crookedly if I open it. Not to mention all the stuff on, in, and around the aforementioned furniture and cabinets and the floor. </div>
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I SUCK *begins to hyperventilate*</div>
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Drama? Where?!</div>
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I swear to you that I do have plenty of reasonable, functional other rooms in which there are clear and usable surfaces. One might even be forgiven for thinking of my office as sort of an enabler of a room, lacking the boundaries to stop taking on the other rooms' messes, so that they might function while the office chokes. With the possible objection that it is I, the sentient human, who is in fact responsible and conveniently anthropomorphizing <i>rooms</i> like a <i>crazy person</i>, in this scenario.</div>
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The plan, then, is that I'll choose a section of the mess at a time, and do the whole hoarder-show "keep, toss, or donate" routine until that bit is dealt with, and then I'll pick another section, and so on. Maybe I'll even do a follow-up post during this month of thirty or more blog posts. </div>
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Speaking of more blog posts... At <a href="https://www.patreon.com/NayadAMonroe">EcoAnxiety Club</a> I've added a post for patrons who support my dealing-with-climate-change project at the level of $1 per month. It's about how I accidentally stopped using air conditioning in my house four years ago, and why I eventually continued with that on purpose, and how that's been working out for me. Plus links to interesting related information, and ideas for dealing with humidity! So if you're into that kind of thing, that will be the first of many you'll get for one single dollar per month. I promise I won't be cranking up the sales pitch in every single blog post, by the way. I'm not like that.</div>
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Have a great day, you! </div>
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NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-59621162067598110492018-11-03T14:26:00.000-05:002018-11-03T14:26:17.551-05:00Bookposting, because YES TO BOOKS<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-FtBV2qUcgu4/W93owITMHoI/AAAAAAAADGc/RbO070K2Wc0DiKdTJHIf30_QwiT1V6__ACLcBGAs/s1600/2018-11-03-Books.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="861" data-original-width="1600" height="172" src="https://2.bp.blogspot.com/-FtBV2qUcgu4/W93owITMHoI/AAAAAAAADGc/RbO070K2Wc0DiKdTJHIf30_QwiT1V6__ACLcBGAs/s320/2018-11-03-Books.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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(A few of the books I'm reading, as of today)</div>
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I don't think the premise of this post requires much explanation! So here are the books I'm reading, or in one case about to read, and why, and what I think of them so far. Alphabetically by author/editor, because that's how I like it.</div>
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<b><i>The Witch Elm</i>, by Tana French </b></div>
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Earlier this year, I read the six books of Tana French's Dublin Murder Squad series. The first one basically turned me into the sort of person who's going to stop everything to read any new book by this author, so when my pre-order of this new, standalone novel arrived at my house, you know it was a struggle for me to finish writing my short story instead of putting aside all responsibilities to make more reading time. It's not a spoiler to say that this book - unlike the ones in the series - is a murder mystery that is not about the police investigation side of things. The main character is a young man from a fairly privileged background, experiencing some significant difficulties for the first time in his previously easy life, and the book is also about his extended family and his friends. I'm not quite halfway through it, because I want to take my time and enjoy the words instead of tearing through to see what happens. As with every one of French's other books I've read, I feel confident that the whole experience will be satisfying.</div>
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<b><i>Drawdown: The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse Global Warming</i>, edited by Paul Hawken</b></div>
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I haven't started to read this one yet, but I'm looking forward to it because I need an optimism boost. The content is divided into categories: Energy, Food, Women and Girls, Buildings and Cities, Land Use, Transport, Materials, and Coming Attractions. In each category, there are articles of one to several pages that cover specific approaches, with a summary at the end of each to describe its potential impact. It's the sort of book I can envision reading in small bites, maybe one or two of the approaches daily. I hope to learn a lot of general ideas, and then look for more detailed information on the ones I want to prioritize. The truth is that we need to be working on a lot of things at once, but no single person is likely to be able to get involved in all of them, so it will be important to find the ways I can be the most useful.</div>
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<b><i>The People's Republic of Everything</i>, by Nick Mamatas</b></div>
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Nick is a writing convention buddy of mine, and I also enjoy his fiction; it's pretty rare to get both of those things with an author, so thanks, Nick! I go in and out of wanting to read short fiction, so it can take me a while to finish a collection of short stories even when I'm enjoying the stories. I'm maybe two-thirds of the way through this one, and definitely enjoying both the stories and Nick's commentary about how he came to write each of them. If you're bored with predictable plots and mainstream ideas, check this out.</div>
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<b><i>Climate Change: What Everyone Needs to Know</i>, by Joseph Romm</b></div>
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This is a highly-rated overview of how climate change works, what's going on, and what's likely to happen in the future. I'm reading the 2018 second edition in ebook format, so I can read a section on my phone here and there. The truth is that even the introduction of this book made me cry, although to be completely transparent I was already feeling fragile that day and I had no business reading that material. I just thought an introduction should be pretty safe. NOPE. Don't get the wrong impression. The author isn't going out of his way to make it sad. The information itself is sad. We still need to know it if we're going to have any kind of chance to do something about it. That's why the other climate change book, above, seems like a good way to balance myself out, since it focuses on what we can do to improve the situation. I'll be writing about what I learn from these books, eventually, in my <a href="https://www.patreon.com/NayadAMonroe">EcoAnxiety Club</a> project, which you can follow for the free posts, and get notifications if you want them. There's even a free Patreon app you can use!</div>
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That's my book load for now! I may do another bookpost later this month if I start any others, but I want to finish some of these before I do that.</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-20609694275220982442018-11-02T14:49:00.000-05:002018-11-02T15:09:17.306-05:00Effective Voting, Instead of the Other Kind<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Hey! Howdy. Since you're on the internet, I'm sure you're painfully aware that there's an American election coming up. This post is for the Americans who will be voting in the election, which ideally would be every American who is old enough and not currently prohibited from voting for felony reasons, or comas, or other stuff I'd rather you weren't involved in.</div>
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More specifically, it's for the people who intend to vote for - or are considering voting for - someone other than a Democrat or Republican for a high-level position (say, Governor or above) at any point before we get ourselves an <a href="http://instantrunoff.com/instant-runoff-home/the-basics/">instant-runoff voting system</a>. That's when you get to rank the candidates in order on the ballot, and your vote will go to your favorite candidate, but if they're in last place, they're eliminated; in that case, your vote goes to your second choice of candidate. Depending on how many candidates there are, your second choice might get eliminated, too, so your vote would go to your third choice. More details are at the link, above. That's a good system for giving any candidate from any party a chance to win. I would be thrilled forever if we could have that system. BUT WE DO NOT HAVE THAT SYSTEM.</div>
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Sadly, what we have is a situation where your well-intentioned vote for, say, the Green Party candidate (just giving an example here!) will permanently take your vote away from the Democrat who is sympathetic to green issues, and will give an advantage to the Republican who is really a lot less likely to ever help you with green issues. So I'm here to advocate for choosing a likely-to-win candidate from one of the two major parties, the one who will be generally sympathetic to the more intense values you may have. After you help them win, you can and should follow up by writing to that candidate on a regular basis to let them know what you want them to work on while in office. Voting for a candidate who can't possibly win is not an effective way to enact your preferences. Communicating directly with a sympathetic major-party candidate WHO HAS WON is much more effective. </div>
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However, while we're stuck with our current voting system, it can still make a big difference to vote for alternative-party candidates at the local level, if that's what you want to do. Fewer people bother to show up to vote in local elections, so your vote can have a lot of impact on the results. As they get experience and become more well-known, they'll have more opportunities to move upward in politics, and maybe work to promote the instant-runoff voting system that might propel them to the top one day! </div>
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Anyway, please vote in this election! As effectively as possible.</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2662198317776145657.post-45334407628026415912018-07-10T13:57:00.000-05:002018-07-10T14:05:35.125-05:00Sorry, What? I Was Thinking About Flowers: Gardening Therapy<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-fLWwH1HRlic/W0T1QSST5uI/AAAAAAAAC_Y/9Q3GHpqJtTMDlNy5ppj-d7ElE9QHfJwqgCLcBGAs/s1600/Cut-ComeAgain%2BZinnias.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="1600" data-original-width="915" height="640" src="https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-fLWwH1HRlic/W0T1QSST5uI/AAAAAAAAC_Y/9Q3GHpqJtTMDlNy5ppj-d7ElE9QHfJwqgCLcBGAs/s640/Cut-ComeAgain%2BZinnias.JPG" width="361" /></a></div>
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(These are "Cut and Come Again" zinnias that I grew in pots on my deck.)</div>
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For the last few years, I've been increasingly into decorative gardening and landscaping, especially in the late spring and early summer. This year, however, I've become really fanatical about it. Although it's a great hobby just on its own merits, it's serving another purpose for me, too: a partial antidote to feeling dejected about politics and worried about the future of our environment. I can go outside, get absorbed in the work of planting pretty things, and then be able to watch them expand over time. </div>
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I'm trying to make my yards really wildlife-friendly, so I don't get the "perfect" results one might expect from using pesticides and weed-killers. I don't really think of that weed-free, bug-free effect as perfect, though. I like a more casual, natural look, and apparently so do the birds, because every morning there's a chorus of I don't even know how many kinds of birds, and I love it. I've seen a monarch butterfly in my back yard twice, recently, and a hummingbird once, even though I don't have a hummingbird feeder. There are at least two rabbits that hop around toward the overgrown back of my back yard, and eat the dandelions. I also see three chipmunks that get on my nerves a bit, but they have as much right to live as I do, so I'm working on scent-based strategies to keep them from digging up certain spots. </div>
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I'm also not in any way a fan of grass lawns. Look, if you want to spend hours every week out there with loud machines that make noise and fumes, and fight the never-ending and expensive battle to keep out every last weed, that's your business - although others also get to hear the noise and smell the fumes, fyi. I'm putting my effort into gradually replacing my grass with low ground-cover plants like mini-clover, which only grows four to six inches tall and also pulls nitrogen into the soil, or creeping jenny, which likes shade and also brightens up shady spots with its green-yellow color and pretty foliage. This process is definitely a lot of work for <i>now</i>, but over time it will lead to less work, and (in my opinion) look more interesting than big, flat expanses of grass. I am also breaking up the flat expanses with perennial flower beds and shrubs arranged so that there are curving, flowing paths through the back yard, with something different to look at from every angle. And, since I'm aware that this is not the favored type of landscaping in my neighborhood, I'm also trying to plant things to close off the yard pleasantly - not a solid wall, but a soft and nice-looking enclosure. </div>
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Eventually. </div>
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Have you ever heard the expression "if you want to make an omelette, you have to break some eggs?" This applies to my efforts in so many ways. I could actually spend a couple of days each week going around and dealing with weeds and volunteer trees and even nice plants that are overgrown, and then by the time I got all the way back around to the beginning, it would be almost as bad as when I started. That would be soul-crushing, and the yard wouldn't end up looking prettier. So I've been trying to alternate between types of project: plant some pretty things in a bare spot; cut the "lawn" (which could in some places be more accurately described as a "weed farm"); get a life and some rest for a couple days; work on harder and less-fun projects like cutting down small trees and (soon) pulling out the bricks from a s<i>uper-ugly</i> old patio remnant; and then reward myself with getting to plant some new things again, next time the budget allows. Oh, and sometimes I actually sit on the shady patio for a while in the morning and just enjoy being outside.</div>
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If this sounds to you like my new full-time job, you're not entirely wrong, but it's more of a part-time job. It's time-sensitive. The more I can get done in the warm months this year, the better the situation will be next year, and - more importantly - the less time I will spend fretting about what deeply unpleasant actions might come blasting out of the current government next. I'm still <a href="https://nayadmonroe.blogspot.com/2018/05/im-doing-thing-heres-what-it-is-and-why.html">Doing the Thing</a> I mentioned in my last post, but I'm taking advantage of the good weather to do this additional gardening thing outside when I can.</div>
NayadMonroehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14371487102170568713noreply@blogger.com0