kiratael: When life gives you a lemon, wing it right back - Calvin (Default)
 Framed piece of cross-stitch depicting the characters from Captain America: Civil War

Took a lot longer than I anticipated, but I finished it two weekends ago and managed to frame it in record time.

House

I'm trying out my burgeoning reno skills on my tiny second bedroom. It doesn't need anything fancy, just fresh paint and new blinds and some sort of door solution for its micro-closet. From what I saw last summer while touring houses for sale the solution of the moment is fabric curtains, but those people obviously didn't have cats.

I did purchase a new medicine cabinet a week ago and am luring my dad over with beer this weekend to get it installed. I also finally pulled the trigger on shelving for the basement, which clears the floor for Stage 2: putting the kitty litter downstairs. None of the commercially available pet doors work for the door to the basement, so I wandered around Menards gathering the pieces for a more ad hoc solution. More to come on that.

Reading

Reading has continued unabated for the second month in a row. I've given my commutes over to it, which has helped. Still managing to read more books than I add to my to-read list, which is the goal.

kiratael: When life gives you a lemon, wing it right back - Calvin (Default)
Highlight of my day so far has been a donkey bite call.

Me: Well, that's a new one on me.
Caller: Really? Oh dear.
Me: So, is there any particular reason you're worried about this donkey bite? Donkeys can transmit rabies, but it's--
Caller: The donkey dropped dead yesterday.
Me: ...okay. Let me just consult the lab about accepting a donkey for testing.

The sidewalks and roads were a solid sheet of ice from my front door to the bus stop (about 650m) this morning. This was handy because I could literally "skate" (the movements involved were more akin to cross-country skiing) my way to the stop without having to constantly adjust my stride, but unfortunately it was as frictionless as a physics problem set so I had issues whenever I came to an incline: I kept sliding down the curb cut-outs into the street unexpectedly and then having to make like the roadrunner from the cartoons to get up enough speed to skitter out again. Folks, this is why I wear a hi-vis vest and blinky lights on my commute.

When I finally got to work, I found that I'd won a jar of locally made jam for coming in second in our infectious disease epidemiology quiz.

House

Looking back through my older posts - I did end up buying a floor lamp and navigating LED bulbs for the first time. It seems to be working out.

My mom is retiring later this spring and coming to live with me since she can't live alone at the moment. This has moved the improvements list priorities around a bit - need to get more shelving for basement storage and install a better medicine cabinet in the bathroom.

Crafting

Close to finishing a piece I started for the house, watch this space for eventual photos. Stalled on the Avengers piece because I've all my commuting time over to reading. I'm participating in the Fiberuary Challenge on Instagram this month.

Reading

Read 12 books in January: 3 rereads, 9 new to me. Three of them were the beginning of series, trilogies, or duologies, and all three had their successor added to my to-read list.

Best of the lot was probably The Calculating Stars, an alternate history novel about the development of the space program (this time with female astronauts!) after a meteorite strikes Earth, wiping out D.C.

I finally finished Ravensbruck, a 1000+ page tome on the concentration camp for women during WWII, and frankly, that is it for me and non-fiction about WWII for this year. There is only so much depressing shit I can read about in this world before I become a total weeping mess, complete with nightmares. Very well written, however, if you can stand it.
kiratael: (Sachi)
I'm at work on the last day of the year, which is still slightly odd. Thanks to my time in Japan, I'm more used to working Christmas than I am New Year's. There are more people here than I would have expected - my supervisor's updating all of our JIRA tickets with new components and a bunch of us are filing last minute reports (even though nobody "upstairs" will be checking their email until the shutdown is over) and testing the latest release. I accidentally got myself saddled with a flu vaccine report that has been riddled with gremlins for the last year, but I think I've got them all. It's not where it should be yet, but it's getting there.

Crafting

My knitting mojo remains at a low ebb. I finished a pair of mittens, a hat (with a pompom so big that I keep losing it to snagging tree branches, whoops), and a pair of slippers (which won a blue ribbon at the state fair). Back in February I went to a pop-up class on log-cabin construction at my local LYS during a snowstorm because I wanted to get out of my apartment. I started a blanket with scraps and ended up liking it enough to knit it out to lap blanket size. It won fourth place at the fair.

I made progress on my ginormous mitered square blanket - 207 2.5" squares, plus 7 7.5" squares. I hope to finish before I'm dead.

My cross-stitch has come a long ways. I finished my Pumpkin Passport kit in time for the fair, two years after I started it.

Framed piece of cross-stitch - Let's go on an adventure - various sites from different countries are depicted.

I completed three pieces for friends, have one started for myself, another two projects in the planning pipeline and a fourth hopeful friend.

Reading

I finished my 52 book challenge by the skin of my teeth. Reading mojo came in fits and spurts this year - sometimes I was reading seven books at a time and finishing one every three days and then months would go by while I read nothing but fan fiction. I discovered Vera Brosgol and Tillie Walden, both graphic artists. There's been an explosion of graphic novels for the middle grade and YA set and while some of them have been uneven, quality-wise, some of them have been excellent. Brosgol's 'Anya's Ghost' about a Russian immigrant teenager finding a helpful (?) ghost, and Walden's 'Spinning', about growing up as a synchronized skater, were some of my favorites this year.

I devoured Martin Walker's 'Bruno, Chief of Police' series until I abruptly got tired of him banging a different woman in every book, combined with the general misogyny. This is a series that was first published in 2008 and makes all the right moves with regard to immigration and religion and anti-semitism, that examines both climate change and climate change policies and how they affect individuals and small towns and villages...and is still kind of terrible about women and writing female characters. I could barely relate to any of them, and the ones I could? Bruno and his pals mock. 

From my review of the second book:

Me: I really hope men don't automatically catalog the physical attributes of every women they encounter and decide whether or not they want to have sex with them then and there.
Walker: Oh no, we do.
Me: Whelp, I'm joining a convent.
 

Also, Walker wanted desperately to write food/cooking porn and he hadn't gotten there even after four books. "Bruno put a spoonful of duck fat into the frying pan" definitely belongs in the drinking game for this series, however.

I also stumbled upon Connie Willis' 'Doomsday Book' and 'To Say Nothing of the Dog', decades late. I finally read all of [personal profile] domarzione's Freezer Burn 'verse, that should count for a whole extra novel on its own.

Writing

I literally wrote a drabble for every single episode of CSI (original flavor) and none of them will see the light of day, they're mineminemine. Same for the hundreds of pages of self-indulgent MCU fic.

Everything Else

Passed 4th-kyuu in aikido back in May. Decided to take a year to go for 3rd-kyuu, instead of cramming the days I need into 8 months. I don't like test prep, even test prep done as low-key as my dojo does it.

I bought a house because that 1) it was starting to look like I might get priced out of the metro area in the near future and 2) by 2020 my mortgage payment's going to be lower than rent for a one-bedroom apartment within striking distance of work.
kiratael: When life gives you a lemon, wing it right back - Calvin (Default)
Special day at work - choosing our on-call shifts for 2019. We go by seniority and some of the more senior people actually hassled the least senior employees (like, snapping their fingers and groaning) for taking too long. And to be clear, this happened during the sign-up time reserved for the least senior employees, the more senior people showed up 15 minutes early and thought this was appropriate behavior. Yet another example of "one person's good, clean fun is another's toxic work environment". Useful in that I made a note to never make an internal transfer to a Certain Person's supervisory area.

Between this and Tumblr, I think I might finally have motivation to make a therapy appointment.

Books

Lost my reading mojo sometime last week and am slowing watching my library ebooks expire. Sorry guys, maybe next time. I was/am making good progress through Akata Witch (Nnedi Okorafor), but this morning was thrown by the line, "Those who excel at this must have fast hands and superb spatial skills. Males possess this skill in greater quantities then females." in an instructional book that Sunny and her friends are using. Now, the narrative has already made clear that the female protagonist is quite skilled physically, and that books can be unreliable and biased. I might just need clearer confirmation in this case, that Okorafor was was again making the "don't believe everything you read" point, because this one cut deep.

Crafting

Working to finish a cross-stitch piece for a friend's nursery, then I can go back to my poor neglected knitting. I'm already thinking about the next piece of cross-stitch, of course, a series of cacti for what will be my mom's room in my house once she retires. And maybe something fannish (Harry Potter, likely) for a hopeful friend. And maybe something MCU for myself, if I can find the right pattern/inspiration. And maybe a redo of the first piece I ever did, a quote from the Losers (2010). And and and...

Aikido

Scored a private weapons lesson yesterday, since most of the usual suspects were at a seminar out-of-state. Finished a jo vs. bokken kata that we've been working on, as well as some of the tanto tori techniques I'll need for my 3rd-kyuu test in May.

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kiratael: When life gives you a lemon, wing it right back - Calvin (Default)
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