rolanni: (The Dragon in Exile)
2015-07-15 10:26 am

Anything can happen day

I slept in, with the active connivance of the entire Crack Coon Cat Nursing Team, and am slowly getting myself into order.  I don't appear to have acquired any new aches or pains overnight, which is good; the knee is considerably less swollen, which, of course, will make it that much more difficult to remember to give it its tithe of ice and elevation, but I'll do my best.  Good thing I put the footstool back under my desk.  My ribs are kicking up much less of a fuss today than I had feared they would do, which is really more good luck than I deserve, especially as it's supposed to rain today, and! (naturally enough) I expect a shipment of several cases of books which UPS will bring to the porch.  The back-up plan there is a tarp (since it's a covered porch), but I'd really much rather bring them inside.

At three today, I'll be talking to Tony Daniel in his melant'i as host of the Baen Free Radio Hour, on behalf of Liaden Constellation, Volume 3.  I'll let y'all know when that episode is to air.

At the moment, I have two of the Crack Coon Cat Nursing Team on hand -- Belle on the floor next to my chair, and Trooper in his usual place on top the bookcase near the window.  Sprite, I assume, is getting some needed downtime and a little snack before she comes back on duty.  Scrabble has been keeping vigil in Steve's office, emerging for meals and for brushes, and to check in with Management.

Steve writes that he expects to be back in Maine by the end of the week, which is good news.

My plan today, insomuch as I have a plan is to post this blog entry, set a timer for 30 minutes, do some filing, then retire to the comfy chair for ice, elevation, and a couple chapters of my book.  This will give me an opportunity to assess further, though I really do think that, at this point, what I see is what I got.

Hope everyone is having a good Wednesday.

Here, have a parade:  Here's your link.

rolanni: (The Dragon in Exile)
2015-07-14 02:01 pm

Well, THAT wasn't how the day was supposed to go. . .

The Day, as Planned, included a stop to gas up Kineo the Wonder Subaru before driving cross-town for an appointment at the Radiology Department at the hospital.  At about 9:50, I was walking down the sidewalk toward the main entrance to the hospital when I -- fell off the kerb.

No, I don't know HOW I fell off the kerb; suffice that I did, and tried to twist to regain my balance, went down hard on one knee, at which point my body got with the program, and I twisted so that I flopped over onto my side, and ohbytheway slamming my ribs into the nice hard asphalt.

A woman who had been coming down the walk toward me, rushed up, exclaiming, "That was a terrible fall!  Are you all right?"

I, of course, was more embarrassed than hurting -- hello, adrenaline -- leapt to my feet, assured her I was fine, looked at my left knee which was kind of stinging, but, hey, how bad could it be, if the jeans weren't torn -- and found that I had a respectable scrape, but nothing really serious.

At that point, a PA came rushing out of the OBGYN door, which I was nearing when I fell, and she also told me that I had taken a terrible fall.  I assured her that I was fine, just a skun knee.  She looked doubtful, asked me where'd I'd been going, I told her Radiology, and she walked me there, about a mile out of her way, and by the time we arrived, I found that -- anyone?

C'mon, you guys, this one's EASY -- yes, you!  What did I find?  Very good.

I found that my skun knee was now swollen up to the size of a Regulation Baseball.

I asked the radiology receptionist for ice.  She took one look and yelled for her supervisor, who dispatched a volunteer for an ice bag, found out why I was there and together we formed the plan that I would have my appointment, and then they would take me to the ER for an Xray, since I had fallen on hospital property.

Those things eventually came to pass, and I proceeded in a homeward direction, stopping at the grocery store for things that I was completely out of, and now I'm home and have three cats within an arm's reach.

The plan for the rest of the day is to eat a lunch salad, with a side of aspirin, and try to sleep it off.

No music today, sorry. . .

rolanni: (storm at sea by rainbow graphics)
2012-11-11 05:43 pm

Administrative notice

Because of the high number of identical spam that has hit this journal over the last two days from registered LJ users, all posting the exact same message* to years' old journal post, and also because I'm sick to death of deleting the damned things, marking the perpetrator as a spammer, and reporting himorher to LJ admin, I have reset the reply permissions on this journal.

Only people who are my LJ "friends" may now comment here.

I regret the inconvenience.

Edited to add:  Going to "Friends Only" seems to have been futile.  I received six more of these stupid things on the overnight, attached to journal entries from 2006 and 2007.  The fact that journal entries from 2006 and 2007 exist is kinda scary in itself. . .

_____________________
*  The message, with final URL redacted:

  Hey This is hard for me because I have never done anything like this..
  but I have a huge crush on you. I have never been able to tell you for
  reasons which you would quickly identify as obvious if you knew who this
  was. I'm really attracted to you and I think you would be wanting to get
  with *Read FULL Card Here*
rolanni: (booksflying1.1)
2011-12-07 12:50 pm

History shows again and again how nature points up the folly of men

Thanks to everyone who weighed in on the Ipad question! While in theory it would be very cool to be able to walk around with my entire library, all of my contacts, and every song I’ve ever heard in my life, one does need to wonder what will happen if the infrastructure that allows one to access those things either vanishes or becomes too expensive to buy into.

I think I’ll hold the square I’m on at the moment, since I don’t find it necessary to only listen to “my” music, and I don’t mind schlepping CDs for long drives.

Speaking of infrastructures vanishing and stuff like that — we all know people who use brick-n-mortar bookstores as their personal catalog. Which is to say, they go into the bookstore, handle the stock, read half a book or half a series or whatever it is that they feel is “enough” to convince them to buy. They then make a note of that books/series/whatever, go home or pull out their cell, and proceed to buy the book from Amazon.

As if, yanno, the bookstore they’re not buying stuff from is there as a service, and doesn’t actually need sales in order to stay in business.

So, anyway, Amazon has heard of this, and, Mr. Bezos not being a man who has ever been shy of placing his own profit above EVERYTHING else, has decided to reward this behavior by paying people five entire bucks to go into a bookstore, scan a book, and buy it on Amazon.

Here’s the article

Here’s a petition, in case this makes you just a little cranky.

And now, having bought Necessary Stuff at drugstore.com; and crashed the Petco website — I have work to do!




Originally published at Sharon Lee, Writer. You can comment here or there.

rolanni: (storm at sea by rainbow graphics)
2011-10-12 09:54 pm

Just wondering...

...how is Mississippi going to afford to enforce this amendment? I mean, Topeka, Kansas just voted to stop prosecuting domestic violence cases 'cause there isn't enough money in the budget and something had to get cut. Last I looked, Kansas was right there at 28 or 29 in state wealth and Mississippi? Was dead last.
rolanni: (storm at sea by rainbow graphics)
2011-10-12 06:01 pm

Mississippi Personhood Amendment

Originally posted by [livejournal.com profile] gabrielleabelle at Mississippi Personhood Amendment
Okay, so I don't usually do this, but this is an issue near and dear to me and this is getting very little no attention in the mainstream media.

Mississippi is voting on November 8th on whether to pass Amendment 26, the "Personhood Amendment". This amendment would grant fertilized eggs and fetuses personhood status.

Putting aside the contentious issue of abortion, this would effectively outlaw birth control and criminalize women who have miscarriages. This is not a good thing.

Jackson Women's Health Organization is the only place women can get abortions in the entire state, and they are trying to launch a grassroots movement against this amendment. This doesn't just apply to Mississippi, though, as Personhood USA, the group that introduced this amendment, is trying to introduce identical amendments in all 50 states.

What's more, in Mississippi, this amendment is expected to pass. It even has Mississippi Democrats, including the Attorney General, Jim Hood, backing it.

The reason I'm posting this here is because I made a meager donation to the Jackson Women's Health Organization this morning, and I received a personal email back hours later - on a Sunday - thanking me and noting that I'm one of the first "outside" people to contribute.

So if you sometimes pass on political action because you figure that enough other people will do something to make a difference, make an exception on this one. My RSS reader is near silent on this amendment. I only found out about it through a feminist blog. The mainstream media is not reporting on it.

If there is ever a time to donate or send a letter in protest, this would be it.

What to do?

- Read up on it. Wake Up, Mississippi is the home of the grassroots effort to fight this amendment. Daily Kos also has a thorough story on it.

- If you can afford it, you can donate at the site's link.

- You can contact the Democratic National Committee to see why more of our representatives aren't speaking out against this.

- Like this Facebook page to help spread awareness.


rolanni: (Caution: Writing Ahead)
2011-05-17 06:33 am

Five passengers set sail that day, for a three-hour tour

My father and I used to watch Gilligan's Island together, back in the day. Just for the record, we also used to watch properly family-centric shows like, um...Combat! The Outer Limits! Ed Sullivan, The Man from U.N.C.L.E, Patti Duke, The Wild, Wild West, and The Donna Reed Show. Big Donna Reed fan, my dad. Though I will say, just in passing, that even I noticed her husband was a bit dim, and I was only eight.

Anyhow, who knew that, as we indulged in father-daughter bonding in front of the tube, we were ingesting The Homosexual Agenda that has become so dangerous in our present fraught times?

My thanks to Robin Wayne Bailey for pointing this article out.
rolanni: (what it's like)
2011-05-01 07:41 pm

In which busy hands, hurt. A lot.

Yesterday, I did lawn cleaning detail. Also, I worked in the garden. This turned out to be a Very Stupid Idea. I can either work in the garden and trash my hands and my bad shoulder or I can not work in the garden and avoid subsequent unpleasantness.

You’d really think I’d remember this, wouldn’t you? Especially given the system of reward and punishment involved. Sheesh.

In other news on the weekend, two more chapbooks have been added to the ever-growing pile on Amazon and BN — Dragon Tide: Adventures in the Liaden Universe® Number 13, and Certain Symmetry: AitLU Number 4. They should be showing up tomorrow-ish, I’m guessing.

This weekend also brought the happy news that there will be a mass market edition of Carousel Tides hitting bookstores early next year — February 2012, is the informed guess.

I’ve also made some small headway on the outline of my talk for Thursday, but I obviously need to make more. Should’ve done that today, but today I decided to work on George.

Those who pre-ordered, or who were waiting the release of Korval’s Game (omnibus release of Plan B and I Dare)– your patience has been rewarded. The book is shipping as I type.

And now, it’s gotten late, for values of late that include the fact of tomorrow being Monday.

What did y’all do this weekend that was cool?

Progress on the Book Presently known as George
38,598 words/100,000 OR 38.6% complete

She didn’t think she would like to see the things that Droi did, that lived around corners, and under rocks, and in the lightless place of World That Might Be.




Originally published at Sharon Lee, Writer. You can comment here or there.
rolanni: (Marvin's not happy)
2010-06-20 02:51 am

Excitement

Fire alarm roused the convention, the dancing girls, the junior baseball teams, and the wedding party and sent us all out onto the lawn at 1:00 a.m. We milled about on the grass until the fireman came and cleared us, which they did in remarkably short order.

This written on The Leewit from the lobby, as we wait for the entire population of the hotel to return to their rooms, via three elevators.

The three mundane sisters who set down next to us, are blaming the "science fiction people" for having set off the alarm. The firemen explained that an alarm went off in someone's room and that there could be a number of reasons why it had done so, including vapor from a shower. Nonetheless, the three ladies have it decided between them: it is the science fiction people who are to blame. They have demanded to speak to Hotel Management, their contention being that the entire hotel did not need to be evacuated, and they themselves, alone among us all, were Inconvenienced.

...back in the room now, having been escorted along Secret Ways and Dark, and soon, I hope, to sleep. Friends of Liad Breakfast in the hotel cafe at 8 a.m. There Will Be coffee.

Note to self: Next time, if you can only grab one thing to take with you, try the wallet with your ID and credit cards.
rolanni: (Flying Monkey!)
2010-05-11 05:51 pm

Here’s your problem, right here

The background to today’s adventure is that I have a day-job as a secretary in a private college. Dorm damage is something of a hot topic among the students of said college, since the cost of repairing any damage done to a dorm is shared equally among the residents of that dorm, whether or not they had anything to do with the breakage. This is, I gather, supposed to teach people to “police themselves.”

For the last couple weeks, as graduation — and the semester damage invoices loom — there has been an increasingly frantic discussion on the student list about damage, the people who do it, why people do it, and how people go about “policing themselves.” These are useful questions, and following this afternoon, I am in the position to provide some insights.

I work inside a library building. Normally, it’s a quiet place. There are occasional loud noises and the acoustics of the stairwell are really interesting, so that some conversations kind of waft up three flights and directly into my office, but, hey, it’s an old building and I like the stairwell, which is kind of Escher-esque. You can stand on the landing of the third floor and have a (loud) discussion with someone standing on the ground floor, aka The Street.

So, my office, around about 2:30. It’s quiet on my hall, with a slight buzz of voices rising from The Street, where many students are studying for exams.

Suddenly! A metallic bang rang out!

Followed by more bangs, and laughter, and even more bangs. This goes on for a couple minutes before I decide to see what the devil’s going on and walk down two flights of stairs to the point where I can overlook the vending machines.

As I’m walking down the stairs — two flights, now, and I’m walking briskly, but not running — I see students coming out of the library, looking over the rail to the vending area, obviously curious about the noise, and move on. There is from time to time still some laughter at the banging, which is continuing at a goodly pace.

I arrive at last at the proper landing, and look down into the vending area, where one young man is whaling the hell out of vending machine, while another young man is calmly purchasing a drink from the machine beside it.

Since I’m obviously the only adult in range, I lean over the rail and ask a leading question: “What the hotel are you doin’?”

The boy — I’m supposed to refer to students as “students” “men” “women,” but in this case I’m making an exception for truth in reporting — the boy who’s whaling on the machine looks up at me.

“What?”

Since I now have his attention, I decide to cut to the chase.

“Leave,” I tell him.

He blinks and pulls the sound plugs out of his ears.

“Are you serious?”

“Yes, I’m serious. Leave.”

“No — wait, just listen. I swiped my card twice and the machine deducted the money and my Doritos are still stuck in there!”

“Leave,” I said.

“You’re really serious.” Said with a look of utter disbelief that I could find his explanation anything but reasonable and his actions objectionable in any way.

“Yes, I am really serious. Leave.”

At which point the guy who had been buying the drink, and who had remained by that machine, muttered, “She said leave, man,” and so the boy did that.

I went back up to my office and fumed.

But I promised an insight, and here it is: The way to police yourselves is not to laugh when some fool is breaking something. The way to police yourselves is not to walk away, because it’s somebody else’s problem. The way to police yourselves is to do something, to speak up. If you’re little and they’re big, or you’re sober and they’re drunk, take a friend or three to help your present your case. Call Security for ghod’s sake! But don’t do nothing.

That’s it. No, that’s not it. One more thing — If that vending machine is broken, every person sitting in The Street, laughing, or pretending not to notice, has earned a piece of the repair bill.





Originally published at Sharon Lee, Writer. You can comment here or there.
rolanni: (Flying Monkey!)
2009-11-20 06:32 am

Poor people! In my neighborhood! Not!

Man, I shouldn't read the paper before coffee.

A buncha people would rather have an abandoned building in their neighborhood, with all the problems attendant to that, than have said building turned into housing for poor people, by which they mean people who earn $20,000 to $30,000 per year

Erm, folks? The day-job doesn't pay that much over twenty grand, though writers of course pull down Fabulous Amounts of Money(tm), and I kinda really resent the. . .monied prejudice (detailed in comments) that those who don't make swaths of dough are inevitably a nexus of violence, crime, drug use, and all other social ills. I wonder, frankly, how I'd afford recreational drugs, which had always seemed to me to a luxury of the wealthy -- speaking of class prejudice.

Yeah, there probably will be Section 8 (housing vouchers) involved. I think there's a law or something. . .

Sigh. I'm really, really tired of the conversation about putting this building to use, which has been going on 'way, 'way too long. First, a new force in the neighborhood, who had moved up from New York City, I believe, to retire, found out that the city was going to make the old school into "affordable" apartments and went ballistic, citing poor people, crime and his property values. Apparently there aren't any poor people in New York. Or perhaps he moved here thinking that wouldn't be any poor people in Maine.

Coffee now, I think. . .
rolanni: (roseofsharon)
2009-11-04 05:48 am

Jesus Wept

YES ON ONE claims a victory for the "little guy," according to Marc Mutty, public affairs director for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland.

The rest of the story here. (That's here: http://www.bangordailynews.com/detail/128048.html)
rolanni: (Flying Monkey!)
2009-09-11 08:24 am

There are 802,248 Sharons in the US, and 690,335 Lees*

...I guess one of us will take this poor man up on his offer. But it's not going to be me.

Hi

My name is David Williams, a website developer from Queensland, Australia. I am writing to let you know that I am currently offering the domain name SharonLee.net for purchase.

I would be willing to offer you SharonLee.net below market value at the rate of only $390 US. This domain could be used for email purposes, to redirect to your current website or even to track specific marketing campaigns. It could also be extremely helpful in building search engine rankings for this specific keyword. This would be a powerful marketing tool while also creating valuable type-in traffic to your existing website.

If you would like to purchase this domain name or have any questions please reply to this message as soon as possible to avoid losing this rare opportunity to a competitor. I do not expect this domain to be offered for sale again.

Thanks for taking the time to read this message and I look forward to hearing from you soon.

Your sincerely
David Williams
DN Technologies
6 Macaulay Street
Fernvale Qld 4306
AUSTRALIA
Ph: +617 5427 0315
Fax: +617 3036 6406

------
*Source: http://howmanyofme.com/search/
rolanni: (Marvin's not happy)
2009-08-25 08:16 am

PSA: The World is not Disneyland, Part Four Thousand Forty-Two

OK, who here does not know better than to go swimming in the ocean when there's been a Big Storm within the last couple days? Show of hands, here, people.

Right. The ocean is not your friend. The weather is not your friend. I speak here as one who is very much attracted to both the ocean and to dangerous weather. I understand the allure. But for cryin' out loud, don't dice with either for your life. Unless you're very, very lucky, you will lose.
rolanni: (Default)
2009-06-01 02:46 pm

An Alert Reader Sends

...a link to a "used" copy of Fledgling, offered by TCSBOOKS through Amazon.com's marketplace for a mere $999.99

*sigh*
rolanni: (Flying Monkey!)
2009-05-31 08:04 am

Sex, Violence, and Coffee

So, one day last week, a waitress at the Grand View Topless Coffee Shoppe in Vassalboro, Maine, forgot to put her shirt on when she stepped outside. It was probably that day last week when it was over 90F, and if it was, I Totally Sympathize. Boy, that was a scorcher.

Happens, that when the waitress made this Serious, Morals-Threatening Mistake, somebody saw her and reported her for indecent exposure.

As you might expect, there's been a Whole Lot of Controversy around the Topless Coffee Shoppe. Vassalboro's been dancing as fast as it can to make sure that No More Similar Threats To Our Precious Children arrive in town, and I must say that the application for expanded use made by the coffee shop's owner (he wants to open in the evenings as a topless dance club) may have been ill-timed.

There are a bunch of upright, not to say uptight, folks in Vassalboro and in the neighboring towns, including Waterville which is run, may I just say, by Idiots, who have been putting a lot of energy into trying to prove that the Grand View is eroding the morals of the townfolk, especially the children, it being Right In Town and All.

For those who may be curious, here:

View Larger Map

is a shot of the Grand View Topless Coffee Shoppe. It's a Google map, so you can pull it around, shrink it, enlarge it and just get a really good feel for the neighborhood. (fe)Please note the proximity of an elementary school.(/fe)

And here is an opinion piece by J.P. Devine, explaining the Problem of the Waitress.

Honest to Ghu, what a week for Mrs. Grundy.
rolanni: (Marvin's not happy)
2009-05-27 01:20 pm

Honest to Betsy...

Where is it written down that you -- yeah, you -- have the inalienable right to never be offended by anything, anywhere?

Also? Where did the notion that the whole world must be child-safe, and that "adult activities" are some kind of scary deviation. The last time I looked, the world wasn't being run by children -- No; allow me to rephrase: the world wasn't being run by innocents. My point, however, stands.

This mini-rant brought to you courtesy of the Mayor and City Council of Waterville, Maine, with a special nod to this guy
rolanni: (Marvin's not happy)
2009-05-10 05:29 pm

End of Scene, End of Brain

...it's nice when those two states coincide, which happens Far Too Seldom Around Here. I'm just sayin'.

My back still hurts, dammit, and I'm a little puzzled as to how I'm going to walk up the hill tomorrow, bearing my canvas bag full of lunch and manuscript. I tried to fit the manuscript into my mini backpack, but -- no joy. Maybe my lunch will fit in there and I can carry the manuscript under my arm? That might work.

So, got to the End of the Big Scene. I think it works, but -- see End of Brain, above -- a final determination will have to wait on the morrow. On the whole, I'm pleased with how it all finally came together, morphing through two phases that didn't make any sense but had Dramatic! Punch! to this final phase, which may actually make sense and preserves Dramatic! Punch! Even the same Punch, though for a vastly different reason.

*finishes already with the patting of herself on the back*

How's the Great Migration to Dream Width going? Everybody thinking they'll set up a permanent base there and just post through to LJ? I have to admit that I keep forgetting to do that, though it's nice to see so many familiar faces around the place. Makes it feel homey.

As a reward for finishing the Big Scene, and because Beginning of Scene, End of Brain is a really bad start-off combo, I am going to go eat some more aspirin and retire yet again to the comfy chair with The True Meaning of Smekday.

Progress on Mouse and Dragon:

76762 / 120000


"Uncle Daav never misses," Shan said comfortably.

The object of this encompassing trust gave a shout of laughter, snatched the child off his shoulder and set him upright on his feet.

He dropped to one knee and peered into the small face.

"Even the quickest pilot sometimes misses," he said, seriously. "And it is not at all the thing to be ambushing your kin from the shrubberies."
rolanni: (Default)
2009-05-10 09:46 am

Retiring to the comfy chair

I screwed up my back last night changing the bed. Stupid, stupid. Sigh. I'm taking The Leewit, my notes and the heating pad into the living room. If you need me, I'll be in the recliner.

...if I can get the Hexacomfy Cat out of it...
rolanni: (roseofsharon)
2009-02-09 02:19 pm

The things I learn from making posters

The last known wild Thylacine to be killed by bounty hunters or farmers was shot in 1930 by Wilf Batty in Mawbanna, who was only protecting his chickens.

The last zoo-kept Thylacine died in 1936.

...just so ya'll know...