Misc +++

Aug. 14th, 2025 10:52 pm
yuuago: (DiWangGongLue - Yao-er - Joy)
[personal profile] yuuago
Man, I have been absolutely flat out lately. Here are some things I've done between the weekend and now:

+ On Saturday, I drove down to Anzac to attend an event. The local pride group was having a ~beach day~ at an outfit that does private lakeside events. It was my first time driving so far - I've never driven outside town, and this place is about 55km away. It's been about 25 years since I was last at Gregoire Lake, and I've never been to Anzac, and I kept thinking I'd get lost (and I did get lost once I actually got to Anzac, but I found the lakeside place eventually!).

+ The beach day itself was nice! The beach wasn't very beach-y, but the weather was good. I'm glad I remembered to bring a towel. I also brought my watercolour paints! And I sat there and painted and chit-chatted with some acquaintances. All in all, it was very nice, and I'm glad that I actually got up the nerve to go, because I'd been kind of 50/50 on it before that.

+ ...Anyway, I feel a lot more confident about my ability to, like, drive outside the city now, even if it was just brief. (And also it gave me some increased appreciation for T-sensei, because he comes all the way from Anzac to teach us, and wtf, that's such a long way to drive, especially in winter.)

+ As for watercolours, doing plein air stuff was fun and I'm so glad that my new palette works well - something with a cover is convenient for that, more portable than what I was using before. I did some works with plain watercolour, and others that also included watercolour pencils and gouache. I think I prefer the ones that include gouache over the plain watercolours - they're more vibrant. Though also I think I have a tendency to dilute too much and work too wet. IDK, I'm going to have to experiment a bit more.

+ On the Sunday I went to a talk about the various transphobic bills that are being implemented by the Alberta government. I took some notes and have some thoughts on it, but I want to make that its own post. Anyway, it was a good talk.

+ Worked a little on my IIBB fic. At this point it's just line editing. There's one separate scene I want to write and possibly post as a DVD extra, but that's unnecessary. Mostly I just reaaaallly want to get the line edits done because that deadline is looming, auuuugh. ...But this fic was written several years ago and I can't read it without thinking "ughhhh". It's pretty decent, but still, ughhhh. (I'm so sick of looking at it.)

+ But speaking of writing, someone recently posted one of the nicest comments I've ever received. It had something about appreciating that I trust the audience to pick up on subtlety. That felt really good.

+ Had my last physio appointment for now. I'm cleared to go back to judo in September. I'm looking forward to starting again, but I'm also going to have to try to take it easy on that arm. ...Honestly, I think last year, I may have been overdoing it. But it isn't so much that I want to do less judo as it is that I want to also have time and energy to do things that are not judo. IDK, going to have to figure out how to balance it better. Three classes per week might be too much for me.

+ Honestly, I've been feeling very flat out all week. It's like every day this week there has been something that needs to be done after work, some kind of chores or favours for other people or appointments or SOMETHING, and I honestly just want to kick back and read a goddamn book. But that will have to wait for a bit. :V Ah, well.

some books wot I read

Aug. 13th, 2025 09:51 pm
kanadka: snoopy from peanuts popping up from the ground with the word "hello" (snoopy hello)
[personal profile] kanadka
I am overdue on a life post (a LOT has happened, much of it shitty) but all that will be behind a filter anyway. In the meantime, something slightly more positive!

- Metropolis: A History of the City, Mankind's Greatest Invention, Ben Wilson

I actually really loved this, even though it was just an airport purchase some time ago and had stayed on the bookshelf (okay book pile. I am not that organised) increasing the gap of shame for like a few years. This particular non-fiction writer has a way with words and there are some really choice passages. There are some really lush turns of phrases here and I would recommend it just for worldbuilding alone. But I also really loved reading about the cities I didn't know much about esp in their historical contexts - like there are so many books about New York or London or Paris, there are far fewer books about Baghdad or Lagos or Manchester. In terms of population, most of the world is urban already, and at least according to this book, by 2050 the projection is that something like 70% of the Earth's population will live in cities. But when you think about it it's kind of interesting how cities came to be, why they work, what benefits or disadvantages they bring and how they've changed and morphed over the years mostly as our technology increases. One thing I thought was particularly interesting is that cities used to be this place where there was no private life, not really, and if you were a city dweller then your whole life was very much in the public eye (the notion of the Greek 'agora'), and then in the flow between the 1800s - 1900s the place to go became country estates which the concept of that may have informed suburbia, which is not a city but very close to one, which coincided with this privatening or closing-off of our lives, and now we are trying to get back into urban areas or urbanify the suburbs and create these 15-minute cities or locations while also preserving our very necessary privacy while also increasing our social community just enough that we don't feel completely isolated. Or similarly others are trying to make smart cities where it's more eco friendly and there's less food waste but there's also everpresent sensors to monitor these things to recoup waste so big data is mining every last bit of it. So ultimately, you have privacy, but you also super don't, and on both sides of the coin you only really reap the disadvantages of both positions. And that kind of feels like the city in general to me, at least in the modern meaning: you're all alone in a crowd. Sure, it's true that people have always found ways to be private in the middle of the city forever - one example Wilson gives is a caliph in 1100's Baghdad who just really wanted to indulge in some tasty street meat (mood tbh) so had to dress up incognito to go and get some chicken skewers from the local food cart without being known as, y'know, the fucking caliph - I kinda have that luddite-like impression that our modern age and/or technology has definitely made the isolated-but-spotlit problem scaled up and so much worse. Maybe just me.

One thing I think could be true about most cities, read in conjunction with Why Nations Fail, is that one of the reasons they so massively boost GDP is because that many people together naturally fosters creative innovation, even if the state or some other institution would be set on extracting all value out of it for their own richness or indulging in creative destruction (again, to keep lower class workers impoverished and needing to continue to perform subsistence instead of turning to entrepreneurship). Another thing I think could be true about Europe, in conjunction with this course on the early middle ages (so starting from the fall of the Roman Empire to the Vikings) is that not having an actual city proper for just about all that time (the cities of Europe were largely founded by Rome, and most cities piddled away once Rome fell) meant that all of Europe was a massively extractive zone where power and wealth and land was concentrated in the hands of the few instead of the many for a very, very long time, and I wonder if it might help explain why Europe did some of what it did.

(That Yale course is overall really great btw, would recommend. We started watching it mostly on a lark but kept going because it kept being interesting and it was just kind of heartwarming and nostalgic to have that lecture-like university environment. I have minor quibbles here and there with the content and how it's delivered but it's rare and I think it's due to it being a product of its time - the lecturer is an old white guy and this series is from 2012. This doesn't justify but does explain a bit.)


- The Membranes, Chi Ta-Wei

This book was AMAZING and I heartily 10000% recommend it. Unless you are the type of person who is easily shocked by things or need to search doesthedogdie (in which case I should note that since this book likely won't be on it yes there are dead dogs at some point in it). It's very cool cyborg-flavoured cyberpunk, technically post-apocalyptic but not in the YA or Fallout Sole Survivor kind of way, more in the 'everything is set up for our comfort! don't think about the outside world!' way, super clever, really well-written, with a lot of great twists and the pacing starts a bit slow but quickly absorbs you. Anyway I love love loved it, I would so much recommend it to everyone who likes cyberpunk or wants to like cyberpunk but doesn't want to read 1200 pages of Neal Stephenson because Chi's book is actually fairly short (more novella sized) and equally as entertaining and twisty but you could easily read this in like 7 hrs.
yuuago: (Yuri on Ice - LeoxGuangHong - Cozy)
[personal profile] yuuago
Just the other day I was wondering when Mariel Buckley will come out with something new. Looks like she has an album, titled Strange Trip Ahead, that'll be released in October!

Two tracks are up on Bandcamp already, and if this is the vibe for the whole album, then I'm really looking forward to it. It's consistent with her usual style, but new material.

Her sound is unpolished rough-at-the-edges country; it reminds me of the stuff from the '90s and earlier that I grew up with, except also with a vaguely gay vibe. Very nostalgic without actually being from the period.

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