Apres le deluge, moi

Apr. 21st, 2025 05:12 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (Garden salad)
Thought I'd post some flowers to break up the politics! Here's me, who used to get all my news from destiel memes on tumblr, now following three substack blogs. But I figure when you're living through History, best to pay at least some attention. And even here in NZ we have right wing bastards in government trying to fuck things up. Wrote my first email to my MP, Health Minister, Labour & the Greens protesting a recent directive ordering our Health Service to refer to all pregnant people as "pregnant women". Tossers. Hope you're all looking after yourselves out there.

As predicted, the weather finally ended our almost-drought with a LOT of rain. And thunder and lightning, and some floods and slips but not where I live now (whew). At my old place in the bush we'd definitely have had power cuts but these days I can just listen to the pounding rain and crackling thunder and relax.

The autumn garden's losing many of its flowers and going a bit wild, but I've planted a bunch of seeds which might grow and eventually flower, what with Auckland having weird subtropical weather. We'll see. Also, it's time for violas again! I love violas and pansies with their many colours and little faces.

The tithonia (Mexican sunflower) beside my dalek compost bin is literally taller than the house. Possibly a world record! People keep offering to cut it back for me (neighbour, and the heat pump maintenance guy although it's not menacing the outside unit) but last year it produced huge plate-sized yellow daisies in May so I'm hanging in there for those to reappear (1 so far, hopefully many more). Makes it a little tricky to park my car but I can sort of nudge it in underneath the triffid. Here's the evidence!

huge green leafy plant over ten feet tall, partly obscuring a red car.


Red chard - I cut it off at ground level so the roots
could rot into the soil but, no, it's the
second coming. Appropriate timing anyway!

Impatiens still cheerful by my door.


Leopard spotted liguria in rampant flower for the first time.

a super-late daylily being lovely. 

Cayenne peppers in profusion - nearly too hot for me
(well, a quarter of one in a stir fry is ok).
Mystery sweet pepper - a Yugoslavia with a dark stripe or a
Sweet Chocolate with a red stripe?

The Friday Five

Apr. 18th, 2025 08:50 am[personal profile] melagan
melagan: Coffee cup with Atlantis in the rising steam (Default)
1. Who was your first crush?

Ah, Brian Ames. This was back in ...we were in primary school. A playground romance. We kissed each other on the cheek every morning and then went off to do our separate things for the rest of the day. That was sixty-five years ago, and I still remember his name, his wavy brown hair, the smattering of freckles across his cheeks, and his sweet smile.

2. Are you an introvert or an extrovert?

Never quite figured that out. There's nothing I love more than hanging out with my family and friends, although I do need a certain amount of time to myself to recharge. I'm at ease meeting new people and have no problem talking on the phone to iron out a problem. But I'm also amazingly content with just myself for company. You pick.

3. What is your favorite non-sexual thing you like to do with the love of your life?

We'll dig into a few memories here since the love of my life passed eighteen years ago. I don''t have to dig too hard.
Long walks holding hands. (nope, not gonna cry)

4. What is one quirky habit your partner does that either annoys you or makes you grin?

My basket is too full to even begin on this. Let's go with - I don't currently have a partner.

5. Do you believe in monogamous relationships?

I do. I believe a person can have many relationships during their life, but (for me) the one they're currently in should be monogamous. Not for any cultural or regilous reasons, but because how can you get to know someone if your attention is split between people? Unless you don't want to know them that well. I can sympathize the hell out of that.

That said, people gotta figure out what works for them. Relationships are hard.
melagan: Coffee cup with Atlantis in the rising steam (Default)
This is the crossover I never expected to write.

The Highway Monster Murders (1810 words) by melagan
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Kolchak: The Night Stalker (TV 1974), Stargate Atlantis
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Carl Kolchak, John Sheppard, Rodney McKay, Minor Characters
Additional Tags: Unreliable Narrator, Timeline What Timeline, Canon-Typical Violence
Summary:

A myserious creature haunts Highway 285 leaving a trail of grisly, unexplainable murders in its wake. Kolchak sets out to investigate. This is his story.

Or - Kolchak meets a Wraith.



link: The Highway Monster Murders

Signal boosting: politics

Apr. 16th, 2025 02:57 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (Shep-screwed up face)
This, from [personal profile] vysila's journal.

 

 
smilebackwards: murderbot (murderbot)
Upcoming things I'm excited for and their sometimes weird schedules that I want to keep track of.

~ Leverage Redemption season 3: April 17th (3 episode drop, then weekly on Thursdays - 10 episodes total)
~ Andor season 2: April 22nd (3 episode drop, then 3 episode drops on April 29th, May 6th, and May 13th - 12 episodes total)
~ The Accountant 2: April 25th
~ Murderbot season 1: May 16th (2 episode drop, then weekly on Fridays - 10 episodes total)
~ VidUKon: May 30th - June 1st
~ The Old Guard 2: July 2nd

Already have my Murderbot icon cued up courtesy of [personal profile] lylith_st icon post :)
smilebackwards: john with left yellow stripe (Default)
Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin. Everyone is correct, this is a superbly written classic about queerness and shame. I love a book that tells you the terrible ending at the very start and then flashes back and unspools what led to it. Also this absolutely insane burn from Jacques to David after he ghosts Giovanni and then everyone horrifically collides in the bookshop hit me hard--"One book," he said, finally, "that you can surely spare yourself the trouble of reading is the Marquis de Sade."

In TV, I watched Shrinking (seasons 1 & 2). Obsessed with Harrison Ford in this. I feel like they gave him the character info and then basically told him to be himself. Also I particularly love Gaby. Jessica Williams' line delivery is perfection.

Save as Ebook - add-on

Apr. 13th, 2025 08:33 am[personal profile] melagan
melagan: Coffee cup with Atlantis in the rising steam (Default)
This has been the handiest thing. Want to save that wayback page as an EPUB so you can send it to your ereader? This extension will do that.

Save as ebook firefox extension.

Best of all, it's really easy to use. Have that favorite AO3 story that's been posted as a series and you'd like to read it as one story? This add-on will let you do that. Just select Add Chapter.


Don't have firefox? Chrome has a similar add-on. But I like this one because it's simple and easy.

That probably says a lot about me.


Keep reading advice

God in the Details

Apr. 13th, 2025 06:05 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (poetry warning)
One of my older and longer poems this time. I'm a hard core agnostic tilting towards atheism, so this is as spiritual as I ever get. It's one of my semi-structured poems with tight metre and loose rhyme.






Faith's a brain virus, so I've heard it said,
harder than smallpox to eliminate.
Leading to genocide, to bombs and blood,
spawning fanaticism, war and hate.

Yet we need something as a plan for life.
A simple plan, not hard to grasp for we
are not great scientists and we cannot see
God in the details of the universe.

Some, not caught up with surfaces, do see.
Raising themselves above the froth of thought,
the fuss of living, the white noise of work,
of hunger, debt, appointments, illness, doubt,

they glimpse the underlying shape of life
and wonder at its intricacy, as do
the scientists, the great thinkers, who explain
carefully to the rest of us how fine

and perfectly constructed it all is;
atoms hum in their courses and the great
expiring breath of matter races out,
pouring its wave into infinity.

But this is not what most of us perceive;
we see duality, not the world complete.
Born raw, our senses register extremes,
happy or wailing, hungry or replete.

Mastering these inner selves in time we learn
some integration, but the ancient split
remains within, looming at times of fear
and pain, to colour all things black or white.

Are we hardwired for two-ness from the egg?
DNA spiralling double in all cells,
from the brain's hemispheres to our arms and legs,
mirrored, divided, coiled upon ourselves.

Is this why we so often lean towards
faiths patterned on our infant, binary self?
Faiths which have good and evil, us and them,
saviours and demons, heaven and the flames of hell.

Unreasonable faiths, illogical.
Impervious to experiment, closed to science.
Smugly triumphant over rational proofs,
wielding their lack of reason like a prize.

Set against this crusade of blinkered faith
the few who see beyond simplistic lies
try to convince us of a greater truth
lodged in a grain of sand, a drift of stars.

Kepler defined the solar system's gears
trying to bend geometry to make clear
the music of the spheres, the planets' dance.
I wish that I, like physicists, could hear

the resonance of numbers, the great song
of mathematics' elegant discourse
distilling crystalline proofs which demonstrate
God in the details of the universe.

But I have problems adding up my tax.
Stumbling on long division, I am deaf
to physics. Still I try to find that core
reality beyond the dust my life

kicks up, looking beyond the wood into
the trees, intricate, fractal, various,
infinitely different, yet their whole may show
God in the details of the universe.



OK I'm doing the book meme: 20

Apr. 13th, 2025 05:52 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (Sheppard reads Tolstoy)
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you, 1 book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews: just covers."

red spaceship against a space station and space. Consider Phlebas by Iain Banks.

OK I'm doing the book meme: 19

Apr. 12th, 2025 05:58 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (Sheppard reads Tolstoy)
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you, 1 book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews: just covers."

cream paperback with title and author above, rest full of critics' praise quotes. Riddley Walker by Russell Hoban.

The Friday Five

Apr. 11th, 2025 01:23 pm[personal profile] melagan
melagan: Coffee cup with Atlantis in the rising steam (Default)
1. If you could retroactively erase one TV show from the history of entertainment, which one would you choose?

I have no answer for this. I don't watch shows that I don't like, so how would I know? However, if I could, I would change the ending of the original Quantum Leap. How dare they not let Sam come home?

2. Are you more like your mother or your father?

I resemble my mom more than my dad. I am ever so grateful I got her nose and not his.

3. If you could take a year-long vacation, what would you do?

Baby, that depends on how much money I have to spend. Let's face it: I'm going to have a book or e-reader in my hand a good bulk of the time, no matter what I do.

4. Can you think of a reason not to answer this question?

I love this question. I want to answer this question with all my heart. Please ask me again!!!!

5. What's the nicest thing you've ever done for someone?

Teaching my left-handed aunt to crochet. Doesn't sound like much, does it? Ah, but there's so much more to this story. She had a tough time learning because she's a lefty and no one else wanted to take the time to show her. Now, she's a smart lady and picked it up quickly so I gave her a simple afghan pattern to try. I didn't give it any more thought.

A month later, her daughter was in a serious accident. Her hair had gotten caught in the machinery at work. It literally scalped her. A quick-thinking coworker put her scalp on ice. She had to be flown to Boston and they were able to sew her scalp back on, but it meant weeks in the hospital as she healed.

I found out many months later that it was that simple afghan pattern and the time I spent teaching my aunt to crochet that helped the two of them keep their sanity through those long, painful days.

Just goes to show you never know just how far that small act of kindness will go.

OK I'm doing the book meme: 18

Apr. 11th, 2025 07:10 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (Sheppard reads Tolstoy)
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you, 1 book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews: just covers."

Indistinct spooky face in a framed graphic novel cover. The Sandman by Neil Gaiman.

OK I'm doing the book meme: 17

Apr. 10th, 2025 08:19 pm[personal profile] mific
mific: (Sheppard reads Tolstoy)
"Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you, 1 book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews: just covers."

white paperback, green vertical steipe at left, black text. Franny and Zooey by J. D. Salinger.

Murderbot trailer!

Apr. 10th, 2025 11:17 am[personal profile] mific
mific: (Murderbot)
Looking good!



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