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Just One Thing (05 November 2025)

Nov. 5th, 2025 10:59 am
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[personal profile] nanila posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished! Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

(no subject)

Nov. 4th, 2025 11:41 pm
ysobel: (Default)
[personal profile] ysobel
Had a birthday, so did an Excursion to several of the local places that give free stuff. Some of them are good for a month, but it's funner to do it on the day. Sushi place has a big wheel you can spin; I got chopsticks (nice ones, not the disposable ones), which was funny because I'd also purchased lunch for takeout (they do an amazing calamari) and they asked if I needed chopsticks, to which I said no because we had some at home, and then they brought me to spin the wheel... I also got ice cream and an Insomnia Cookies deluxe, and the person also gave me a purple pen and a sticker.

Am I ridiculous for getting excited about free stuff? Probably. Do I care? Nah. The benefit of getting older is shedding the fucks you would otherwise give.

I also got myself a tuxedo cake from Costco. I'm not going to eat it all myself, that's more cake than I can eat, but dang is it good.



Other things:

Went to a concert Sunday, Itzhak Perlman and a klezmer group, doing a tour as a 30th anniversary celebration of the PBS special In The Fiddler's House. It's my first time seeing Perlman doing a non-violin-solo classical-music concert, but also he's fricking 80 and probably enjoys not having to be the only person onstage.

I finally got around to signing up for Apple TV, and started watching Murderbot. (I've read the books already.) Is very good. I haven't finished the Doctor Whos yet (mid season 2), and I have to do so much shit for my mom's situation that I can't allow myself to just watch tv all day.

(I've lost access to mom's MyChart because it turns out proxy access expires and has to be renewed, but mom can't log in -- not just at her internet-less home but literally anywhere; they introduced 2FA that sends a code to the email address she can't access because google wants 2FA to the cell phone that doesn't get texts -- and can't seem to call anyone other than me. I don't know if they take verbal permission given over the phone anyway. This whole situation is ughhhhh.
renay: photo of the milky way from new zealand on a clear night (Default)
[personal profile] renay posting in [community profile] ladybusiness
As we end the year, I'm resisting the capitalistic urge to have my favorites list out in December for Content Reasons. Those of us dedicated to the ways of book blogging know that personal lists are best out in January because there's always a chance a book picked up in the dead space between holidays and the new year hits different. I will link to best of lists in Intergalactic Mixtape (because I am weak, and I love them), but that's it. I will not create my own!

To distract myself, while I was redoing my bookshelves, I made a list of books where I thought, "Wow, I would love to be able to read that again for the first time."

Read more... )

Since my massive reading slump in 2020, I've become a lot kinder to myself when it comes to re-reading. It's nice to spend time with familiar characters and worlds. I'm trying really hard to be gentle with my brain, which is overtaxed by the Horrors. An election year seems like the perfect time for a reread spree. It's very likely all of these books, and their companion/sequel novels, will be on my December TBR/2026 reading list.

good enough for me

Nov. 4th, 2025 10:40 pm
ursamajor: the Swedish Chef, juggling (bork bork bork!)
[personal profile] ursamajor
[livejournal.com profile] sandboxdiva pinged me this weekend wanting to ensure that I'd seen the latest Binging with Babish episode since it focused on chocolate chip cookies, so of course I promptly had to sit down and watch it.

Binging with Babish: 10 Levels of Chocolate Chip Cookies (embed) )

1. Did I pause the video to take note of exactly how fancy the ingredients were for the Level 8 cookies, yes I did. )

2. Did I also factcheck Babish on his assertion that "regular old homemade chocolate chip cookies probably cost like $6/batch to make," why yes I did. Come on, buddy, you're based in Brooklyn, groceries aren't cheaper there than in the Bay Area.

How much does it cost to make a batch of Toll House cookies in November 2025? )

3. Am I doing all this to distract myself from all of the elections going down today? Of bloody course I am.

4. Is my version of the Guittard Super Chip cookie recipe still my go-to? Yes, because 72 hours is a long time to wait for cookies. Also, converted to weights, a higher ratio of brown sugar to white sugar, and no nuts.

5. What am I baking for choir tomorrow? Um. I should probably figure that out, shouldn't I. Of all the bougie things to have on hand, I actually currently have a glut of hazelnut flour that needs to get used up, and we do have some gluten-intolerant choir members, so I may end up with a flavor variant of these hazelnut chocolate chip cookies, probably converted to bar format, possibly with the spicing and inclusions changed up.

6. Reminder to self: you'll be in rehearsal tomorrow and will have to miss it, but Community Kitchens is doing trainings for home chef volunteers to cook meals for the Town Fridges in Oakland. Ping them to find out when the next training is.

7. Oh thank god, results are coming in for the major races and I don't know of any truly disasterrific results yet.
[syndicated profile] aam_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. I have to co-manage with my husband

My husband and I work for the same organization and live in a VERY small tourist town in the U.S. (~600 year-round residents and we live about an hour from a Wal-Mart or big box store).

Our organization receives (received) a lot of federal funding. Most of that funding has been cut so we’re looking at downsizing and layoffs. Right now, my husband and I are managers in related but separate departments (think: youth outreach vs. adult education). His department is him and another full-time manager who supervise three full-timers and some seasonal employees, and my department has slightly more staffing. The most likely restructuring would combine our departments, and he and I would likely be the remaining managers for four full-time and around 10 seasonal staff.

Hence, my letter because I have Concerns. While we are very good at keeping our work and relationship separate (we’ve been together for nine years, worked for the org for eight years, and people are routinely surprised when they see us holding hands when out and about in town), the logistics and optics are concerning. If one of us has conflict with an employee, will they feel comfortable going to the other person? When one of us makes an unpopular decision, will they think we have a united front because we’re married and not because we think it’s the best interest of our organization?

Do you have any advice on how to mitigate potential issues and how to establish trust with our seasonal workers or new full-timers? We may have some (very limited) input in how our departments are restructured, so any ideas there?

(And if you’re curious, “Why keep the married couple?” One, we are both very good at what we do, having both received regional awards and been nominated for national recognition in our respective fields. Two, my co-manager is retiring and his co-manager, while kind and lovely, struggles with some of the more intricate parts of the job and has expressed interest in moving back to his former position. Three, our jobs involve delivering various services to vulnerable local and satellite communities, and it takes years to build relationships with those communities. He and I have spent years building up trust and only now are able to connect in the way that we need. Firing one or both of us could have long-lasting impacts in the community and our org’s ability to efficiently fulfill its mission. And, we don’t want to leave. We love this org, we love what we’ve built, and because we’re in a small rural town, there just aren’t that many other options so we want to try to make this work.)

The biggest thing you can do is to deputize someone for people to go to with concerns about either of you — someone who is not one of you and someone who it’s understood has real capital and influence (so that people are confident that this person is well-positioned to actually raise the concerns with you or someone above you). There should also be a clear pathway for people to go over your heads if something is serious, such as by having your own boss cultivate relationships with  your team and be deliberate about creating avenues for ongoing conversations with them (both formally and informally), so people feel comfortable approaching her if something about the Couple Set-Up makes them uneasy approaching either of you. You could be clear about what topics would warrant that (for example, concerns about harassment, discrimination, significant management issues, or ethics).

It will also help to have very clear delineations of responsibility for each of you — so you’re not both responsible for XYZ, but rather you are responsible for X and he is responsible for YZ — and try to keep clear boundaries there as much as you can.

Last, give some thought to how this will impact your relationship! That is a lot of life overlap, so find ways to ensure that when you’re not at work you’re relating to each other as a married couple, not as colleagues.

2. Lunch with a coworker who talks with his mouth full

Very low stakes question: I have a colleague who I used to work with (he’s since moved teams but still in the same building) and we have had a lunch due for a while. We went last week and it was AWFUL: he talks with his mouth full CONSTANTLY. He talks a lot and he takes big bites. It was really not nice and very obvious, we had a table very close by and the two guys eating there even noticed.

If relevant, this person has enough work experience to have learned social cues on eating in public at least in a professional setting. And it’s not a cultural thing. The lunch was informal but still during working hours close to the office.

He paid and said next it’s on me. I am dreading having to spend again an hour seeing food in his mouth. I don’t want to offer a coffee as it feels like being cheap.

Since he moved teams we don’t interact anymore work-wise but I feel, out of politeness, that I need to eventually return the invite. What would you advise?

There are some relationships, even work ones, where you could say, “Dude, you’re talking with your mouth full!” But assuming this isn’t one of them (and I’m guessing it’s not or you wouldn’t be asking) … suggest coffee next time.

Most people aren’t keeping track of this kind of thing closely enough to feel deep resentment if they paid for a lunch and then you returned the favor with a coffee. It would be different if he were buying multiple lunches and you kept reciprocating with just coffee (assuming you were peers), but him paying for a single lunch does not obligate you to undergo another display of terrible table manners.

3. How do I explain my predecessor’s poor work quality to clients?

I am a manager of managers at a job that essentially comes down to writing extremely lengthy technical reports. While we are a private company, the reports are depended upon by numerous state and federal agencies, nonprofits, and others. It would not be an exaggeration to say people’s lives depend on the reports.

Before I started this position, the person who managed this unit was full of passion but not great at the job, and the reports from that era are sloppy and full of errors and don’t provide what is needed. My predecessor was let go, and I was brought in to get the department in shape. I’ve been leading the unit now for several years, and there has been an enormous turn-around and now we are nationally known in our field for the quality of our work. (Yay!) However, I still get calls occasionally from people needing one of the older reports. I feel like I should give a disclaimer, and usually I do, that the work isn’t reflective of who we are now and that I would be happy to redo the report at no cost. At the same time I am nervous about exposing us to liability by saying, “Hey when we did this job for you? We may have totally screwed up.” What are your suggestions for how to navigate this?

Could you say something like, “We’ve made some changes in our methodology for doing these so if you’d like us to rerun it using our current process, we’d be happy to”? Or even, “We’ve made some changes in our methodology, which has made these more precise, so if you’d like us to rerun it using our current process, we’d be happy to”?

4. Is it a risk to work for a very small company?

I’ve been reading your column for a long time and it’s really helped me with workplace norms in a decidedly abnormal field.

However, I have a question about small companies. A lot of times people write in asking if such-and-such is legal or not — and it seems like, a lot of the time, what’s illegal for a large company is legal for a small company. If I understand correctly, in many states, companies with under 50 employees can basically get away with anything, including wage discrimination, age discrimination, gender discrimination, not providing healthcare to full-time employees, not providing certain accommodations … the list goes on.

This makes it seem like a significant risk to accept work with a small company. For those applying to jobs, should this play into the calculus? For those (like me) who already work for small companies, how do we navigate these issues when we’re exposed to them, especially if we can’t use the law as leverage?

That’s not entirely correct, although sometimes it is. The federal laws against discriminating based on race, sex, religion, pregnancy, disability, and other protected classes, as well as the federal laws against harassment, kick in at 15 employees. (You said 50, but that’s just the number of employees where FMLA applies.) But many states have similar laws that kick in at lower thresholds (often at one employee). Not all do, though — so yes, if you’re in a state that doesn’t and you’re at a company with 14 or fewer employees, you will have substantially fewer legal protections than at companies with 15+ employees.

And yes, that should play into the calculus when considering a job at a very small company — along with all the other potential issues with working for very small companies, like that any dysfunction tends to be magnified. Without legal protection, your only real leverage is your willingness to leave (or to band together with colleagues and push for change).

5. When should I start job-searching?

I have been laid off from my software development job at a manufacturing company. My last day is eight months away. When should I start applying for new jobs?

Now. You don’t know how long a job search will take, particularly in this economy. You can be choosy if you start the search now, whereas the longer you wait, the more pressure you’ll feel to take whatever is offered.

The post I have to co-manage with my husband, coworker talks with his mouth full, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

elisem: (Default)
[personal profile] elisem
 Have had food. (Soup!) Have had meds. Vented on Bluesky, where I am [bsky.social profile] lionesselise. Am about to rest again for a while. LIKE A POTATO. If a potato could crochet, anyhow. I'm in a mood for a little crocheting before sleepage.

Love you all.
You are the best.

voted

Nov. 4th, 2025 10:01 pm
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird
The three of us voted this afternoon, then went to the supermarket, where we had to deal with a pushy person who wanted us to sign dodgy-looking petitions: he said they were for same-day voter registration, but I noticed that the page he wanted us to sign didn't say what we were signing for. There are dozens of possible state ballot questions for next year, so it could be almost anything. (The procedure in Massachusetts, as I understand it, is people or organizations say "I want to put this on the ballot," and then the attorney general vets the proposals, and either OKs them or explains why not. After that, they can collect signatures.)

The only thing on the ballot in Boston today was city council seats, after the incumbent mayor's main opponent formally withdrew after coming in a distant second in the primary. Happily, I had a choice of five or six good candidates for the four at-large city council seats.

Addendum: there are in fact forty-seven "petition initiatives" on the state website, including a few that are labeled as versions A, B, or even C of the same thing. The list is on the state website: https://www.mass.gov/info-details/ballot-initiatives-submitted-for-the-2026-biennial-statewide-election-proposed-laws-and-2028-biennial-statewide-election-proposed-constitutional-amendments

Daily Check-in

Nov. 4th, 2025 06:03 pm
starwatcher: Western windmill, clouds in background, trees around base. (Default)
[personal profile] starwatcher posting in [community profile] fandom_checkin
 
This is your check-in post for today. The poll will be open from midnight Universal or Zulu Time (8pm Eastern Time) on Tuesday, November 04, to midnight on Wednesday, November 05. (8pm Eastern Time).

Poll #33800 Daily Check-in
Open to: Access List, detailed results viewable to: Access List, participants: 20

How are you doing?

I am OK.
11 (55.0%)

I am not OK, but don't need help right now.
9 (45.0%)

I could use some help.
0 (0.0%)

How many other humans live with you?

I am living single.
9 (45.0%)

One other person.
8 (40.0%)

More than one other person.
3 (15.0%)




Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
 

Day 1750: "A living hell."

Nov. 4th, 2025 04:01 pm
[syndicated profile] wtfjht_feed

Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1750

Today in one sentence: At 35 days, the federal shutdown has tied the record for the longest in U.S. history; Trump is preparing to make life “a living hell” for Senate Republicans who refuse to eliminate the filibuster; the White House walked back Trump’s threat to block SNAP payments “until the Radical Left Democrats open up government [...] and not before!” in defiance of a federal court order to keep the program running during the shutdown; Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned that parts of U.S. airspace may be closed next week if the government shutdown continues; the Pentagon credentialed far-right activist Laura Loomer to its press corps after nearly all mainstream reporters resigned over new rules requiring preapproval for coverage not cleared by the Defense Department; Heritage Foundation chief of staff Ryan Neuhaus resigned after President Kevin Roberts defended Tucker Carlson’s interview with white nationalist Nick Fuentes; and a Wyoming man who helped convince the world to invade Iraq on the false pretense that “there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction” (he didn’t), that Iraq had “reconstituted nuclear weapons” (it hadn’t), and that Americans would be “greeted as liberators” (they weren’t), died November 3, 2025, at 84 from pneumonia and heart complications.


1/ At 35 days, the federal shutdown has tied the record for the longest in U.S. history, matching the 2018–19 closure during Trump’s first term. The Senate rejected a Republican stopgap bill for the 14th time, leaving Congress no closer to reopening the government. The shutdown has left hundreds of thousands of federal workers without pay and disrupted food aid for millions. The Trump administration, meanwhile, circulated notices implying that only employees who worked during the shutdown will be paid once it ends, despite a 2019 law guaranteeing back pay for all furloughed staff. Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said the White House is “open to discussing” back pay with Democrats, indicating it could be used as leverage in negotiations. (NBC News / The Hill / Politico / CNN / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / Associated Press / Washington Post)

  • 🗳️ ELECTION DAY 2025: Voters across the country are casting ballots tonight in the first major elections of Trump’s second term. In Virginia, Abigail Spanberger and Winsome Earle-Sears are competing to be the state’s first female governor. New Jersey’s governor’s race between Mikie Sherrill and Jack Ciattarelli centers on the cost of living and state taxes. In New York City, Zohran Mamdani leads Andrew Cuomo and Curtis Sliwa in a three-way mayoral race that has drawn Trump’s late endorsement of Cuomo. And in California, voters are deciding on Proposition 50, Gov. Gavin Newsom’s push to redraw congressional maps after Trump-backed efforts in Republican states. “He does not believe in free and fair elections,” Newsom said after Trump called the vote “rigged.”

2/ Trump is preparing to make life “a living hell” for Senate Republicans who refuse to eliminate the filibuster. Trump reportedly plans to personally target holdouts, “call them at three o’clock in the morning,” and accuse them of being “un-American” and “old creatures of a dying institution.” Trump, frustrated over the government shutdown blocking his agenda, warned that if the 60-vote rule remains, “nothing will be passed, and Republicans will be blamed” and they’ll “lose the Midterms.” Senate Majority Leader John Thune, however, said the “votes aren’t there” to change the rule. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt, meanwhile, said Trump “feels really strongly about this” and urged Republicans to “play tough and play smart.” (Axios / Politico / New York Times / The Hill)

3/ The White House walked back Trump’s threat to block SNAP payments “until the Radical Left Democrats open up government […] and not before!” in defiance of a federal court order to keep the program running during the shutdown. Trump claimed benefits had “increased by Billions and Billions of Dollars (MANY FOLD!)” during “Crooked Joe Biden’s disastrous term.” Press secretary Karoline Leavitt, however, said the administration was “fully complying” with the court and would send partial payments using roughly $4.65 billion from a contingency fund. The Department of Agriculture told states to distribute about half of November benefits for the program that serves roughly 42 million people. (Bloomberg / Politico / Semafor / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / Axios / CNN)

4/ Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warned that parts of U.S. airspace may be closed next week if the government shutdown continues. Duffy said that if air traffic controllers miss another paycheck, “you will see mass chaos […] mass flight delays […] mass cancellations,” and that the Federal Aviation Administration “will restrict the airspace when we feel it’s unsafe.” Duffy offered no details on how such closures would work, but repeated that flights remain safe for now. 13,000 air traffic controllers and 50,000 TSA workers are currently working without pay, leading to widespread delays and absences. (Politico / Reuters / Axios / New York Times / Associated Press / NBC News / ABC News)

5/ The Pentagon credentialed far-right activist Laura Loomer to its press corps after nearly all mainstream reporters resigned over new rules requiring preapproval for coverage not cleared by the Defense Department. Loomer, a close Trump ally known for spreading conspiracy theories and calling herself “anti-Islam,” has publicly attacked senior defense officials and claimed credit for their dismissals. Her addition follows a broader overhaul that replaced traditional news outlets with pro-Trump media willing to sign the new policy. “I have joined the Pentagon Press Corps,” Loomer wrote on X, saying her reporting “has had a massive impact” on national security personnel decisions. (Associated Press / Washington Post / The Hill / New York Times / Mediaite)

6/ Heritage Foundation chief of staff Ryan Neuhaus resigned after President Kevin Roberts defended Tucker Carlson’s interview with white nationalist Nick Fuentes. Neuhaus reposted messages that supported Roberts’s defense of Carlson, including one saying Heritage staff who were “virtue signaling” over the remarks should “resign if so outraged” and that their exit would be “addition by subtraction for the institution.” In his video, Roberts called Carlson’s critics a “venomous coalition” and said “canceling him is not the answer,” later clarifying that Fuentes “is fomenting Jew hatred” and that his views are “immoral and un-Christian.” Meanwhile, Ben Shapiro called Carlson “an intellectual coward” and “the most virulent superspreader of vile ideas in America,” accusing him of “laundering” Fuentes’s antisemitic beliefs. Shapiro, however, said he wasn’t trying to “cancel” anyone but to “draw moral lines” within the conservative movement. (New York Times / New Republic / Axios / The Hill / National Review / The Hill / The Atlantic / Mother Jones)

7/ Wyoming man who helped convince the world to invade Iraq on the false pretense that “there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction” (he didn’t), that Iraq had “reconstituted nuclear weapons” (it hadn’t), and that Americans would be “greeted as liberators” (they weren’t), died November 3, 2025, at 84 from pneumonia and heart complications. Dick Cheney left Halliburton with a $34 million payout before steering billions in no-bid Iraq War contracts as Vice President of the United States back to Halliburton, defended torture as “enhanced interrogation” that he’d “do it again in a minute,” and once shot a friend in the face, who apologized to him for the trouble. When told most Americans thought the Iraq War, which killed more than 4,000 U.S. troops, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis, helped give rise to ISIS, and destabilized the region for decades, wasn’t worth it, Cheney replied: “So?” No weapons of mass destruction were ever found. (Associated Press)

⏭️ Notably Next: Your government has been shut down for 35 days; the 2026 midterms are in 364 days.



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[ SECRET POST #6878 ]

Nov. 4th, 2025 07:34 pm
case: (Default)
[personal profile] case posting in [community profile] fandomsecrets

⌈ Secret Post #6878 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.



More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 18 secrets from Secret Submission Post #982.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 1 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

30 in 30: SW:TCW

Nov. 4th, 2025 06:32 pm
senmut: Ahsoka Tano with saber (Star Wars: Ahsoka)
[personal profile] senmut
Continuation of "Padawan Plight"

AO3 Link | Chaos Behind Them (1263 words) by Merfilly
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Star Wars: The Clone Wars [2008] - All Media Types
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Barriss Offee/Ahsoka Tano
Characters: Barriss Offee, Ahsoka Tano, Luminara Unduli, Anakin Skywalker
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe - Canon Divergence, Kriffing Sith Plans
Summary:

The pieces have been placed, and while Ahsoka and Luminara are a part of it, neither lets it impact Barriss's peace.



Chaos Behind Them

Having aided the 501st in retrieving their man, and all the revelations that had brought, Luminara rested a hand on Anakin's shoulder, despite the fury and betrayal coursing through him.

"Do not let Tiplar's and Tup's sacrifice be in vain," she counseled. "Keep your men here in the field, with the 41st, to take advantage of Echo's intel. I will take him back to Corsucant, deliver him to Master Che for healing."

"But he—"

She squeezed, and Anakin was so unused to other Jedi braving his rage, touching him even!, that he subsided. "You cannot hide that knowledge. I, on the other hand, have no difficulty burying it beneath my Perfect Jedi Serenity," she said, her eyes amused despite the severity of where they stood in the war, to use that phrasing.

It worked, as Anakin sagged a little and huffed. "You and my Master."

"Sometimes, yes," she answered that, to add more levity, helping Anakin balance.

He groaned. "Don't … yeah, no, don't tell me any more about that." He searched her face, then took a deep breath. "Take Ahsoka. I have faith in your skill, Master, but you have seen her, you have worked with her."

"Her command of Teräs Käsi will protect the secret, and she is going to rival Kenobi for lightsaber skill, it is true." She inclined her head, privately thinking that if it grew too stressful, it would allow the padawan a chance to see Barriss as well.

"Don't tell me any of your plans," Anakin said, agreeing to the fact he was the major weakness in undoing it all, given who they knew the Sith was now. "She heard everything, made the jump to connect the pieces, so between the two of you — and Echo — I will trust in this being ended sooner rather than later."

"Thank you." She let go of him, then went to tell Gree he would be handling the battalion under Skywalker's command.





"No."

"He's my vod, my batch brother!"

Ahsoka looked at Fives and then moved to take his hands. "Trust me, Fives. You can't go along, none of you can. And you? I need you to look after Skyguy. You can't expect Artoo to handle it all by himself, and Rex is going to be busy without me here!"

She ached for him, where she wasn't a simmering cauldron of anger for all that she and the other Jedi had pieced together from Echo's intel. If they hadn't hit that listening station before the tragedy with Tup —

— well, they had. So Fives was distracted, and so was Rex, keeping them from putting the pieces together.

Fives had straightened, then he saluted her and left. She would trust him to stay close to Anakin, to keep her master calmer, even if none of the boys knew why he was so angry now. She finished throwing things in a bag, and headed to medical to catch Kix before she and Master Unduli took Echo away from him.

She had no doubt he was putting the pieces together… and she would warn him not to do anything risky until she got back.





The Master and Padawan, two pieces of different pairs, stepped out of the Council chamber and each relaxed from the strain in their own way. Ahsoka visibly sagged, then slumped against the wall without any cringing for what the Master might think. Luminara said nothing about it, still impressed by how well the girl had done under the long interrogation of all they had experienced. For her part, she caught the hem of her sleeve and started worrying at it, a small fidget that soothed her but could easily be stopped should someone walk out.

"When you go see Barriss, you cannot say anything," Luminara dutifully reminded Ahsoka.

"I know. Even if this didn't need to stay top secret, I wouldn't break her peace with it," Ahsoka said sincerely, knowing the words had to be said. "Will you be going there after they say we can leave?"

"I thought I'd let you have the first night back. I'll come tomorrow, if duty allows, and take her for a meal."

Ahsoka flashed a smile, wanting to hug the woman, but that was not Luminara's way, mostly. "Thank you, Master."

"Of course, Padawan."





Barriss did not betray her joy outwardly, too composed and controlled to be less than professional as she finished reviewing the medicine schedule with the family that had been her last appointment of the day. Ahsoka, however, could feel it in the Force, and relaxed even further to know that what they were was something that still mattered to Barriss. She really was grateful to Master Unduli for allowing her to come first.

Then again, no one on the Council really wanted the mere padawan to be as heavily involved in the operation they were planning as Master Unduli could be.

Commander Deron, Barriss's counterpart in this community outreach program, gave a brief nod to Ahsoka, then cleared his throat when the family left. "Ma'am, I can handle locking up with the others. Please go. It's not often Commander Tano is able to get back here."

Barriss opened her mouth, but the look from her right hand in all of this made her nod once, and turn to get her outer robe on, so she could go back with Ahsoka to the Temple.

"It is good to see you," she said, coming close enough that they were almost touching, walking out side by side.

"I'm pretty glad your master was willing to let me tag along," Ahsoka said blithely. "I've got to take an exam," she added, truth and her cover story for why she was on planet. In actuality, she'd had the pieces from Skyguy's side that made everything click into place, and had been the convincing part of their hours' long testimony to the Council.

"I'll help you study, if it is a subject I know," Barriss volunteered. "Your quarters?" she asked, a little shyly, but if her actual master was in Temple too, she wanted the privacy offered by Ahsoka's. "As it sounds like you are here without your master."

"Master Obi-Wan is en route, but not expected until tomorrow," Ahsoka agreed. He was coming to be part of the end game, she knew, while Master Tiin had been dispatched to help Skyguy, and their men, in the campaign against the Techno Union's latest captured planet.

"I… how soon is the exam?"

Ahsoka laughed merrily. "I won't need much study time."

Barriss blushed, but smiled down — not so far now — at her girlfriend.





Luminara took the fact that Barriss squeezed Ahsoka's hand in parting, in her own full view, as one more piece of her padawan's healing and growth from the awfulness of this war.

"I am looking forward to catching up on your life these last several weeks, Barriss," Luminara said once Ahsoka had left them.

The quiet smile she got in answer made her heart swell with pride for the padawan she did care for. If they could just shield her from the coming days' strife, all might stay on the best track.

"I wish to hear all about your weeks, and how our men are doing," Barriss agreed, as she did miss the people, if not the violence.

They settled into their catching-up, and Luminara firmly pushed away the horror behind why she was here, even as she decided to recommend allowing Barriss to help with the aftermath.

She thought her padawan would feel relief to save the men from their intended fate, after all.

elisem: (Default)
[personal profile] elisem
 Because I recently turned 65, there were changes in my insurance.
I now have Blue Cross Blue Shield, which I used to have some years ago before I got switched to a different insurance.
They have now denied a med that is a cornerstone of why I am feeling better and breathing better these days.

The switch happened after my August birthday.
All the other meds are (allegedly, and I do believe them) on the way from the mail order pharmacy (who were good when I used to use them).
This med has been denied by insurance, which is BCBS. Even after special authorization, which they told me I needed, they denied it.

Am almost out.

(Yes, this is the med that the other insurance company kept only filling for one month, despite my doc writing a three-month scrip every frikkin time. Yes, this is one of the things I worry about running out of, because it matters a lot.)

Also you may imagine bitter laughter as various med and scheduling people explain to me that the insurance is apparently requiring the patient, me, go in to meet with the doc. The agoraphobic patient, these days. Though we did get to "virtual visit is acceptable," which is good, before we got to "the first virtual visit possible is a while after patient runs out of meds" which is not.

This stuff is what I was already making calls on and trying to handle before I got COVID. The two together is just a really horrible coincidence.

(Even if we did try to switch me to the insurance that was fine with it before (like Blue Cross Blue Shield was actually fine with it a few years ago when I had it!), there's no guarantee we won't run afoul of some new rule.) 

There are options being looked into, for which details will be scant and the passive voice, for the moment, will be employed.

I do not have words that will cover exactly how I feel about this insurance bullshit. However the person just now taking the note to give my doc did write down faithfully that "patient is worried that without this med, she may not be around to keep this appointment," which is at least something I guess.

I am hungry. (I am the king now and I want a sandwich?) Actually what I want right now is soup. I wonder if I can stand up long enough to microwave some. Gotta put some food in or the meds might bounce, and it's meds time.

Grrrrr.





[syndicated profile] gallusrostromegalus_feed

mysticwolfshadows:

abcdfghjklmpqrobin:

Au where Batman doesn’t want to tell the Justice League his secret identity but it’s because he’s really embarrassed about the things he’s done as Bruce Wayne.

The thing is; Batman has spent years crafting and perfecting his public persona.

‘Brucie Wayne’ is supposed to be a dumber than life himbo, with daddy’s credit card and the maturity of a seventeen year old. He’s supposed to be someone so outlandishly ridiculous no one would ever even dare to mention him in the same sentence as Batman… And Batman has been acting that part perfectly.

It’s a genius plan.

But then the league begins talking about maybe all sharing their secret identities, to become closer as a group and work better together. And the only thing in Batman’s mind is 'Oh. My. God. Please don’t’

Superman is saying something about trust and how he has come to value all of them as friends. Batman is thinking about last year Christmas’ Gala, where he took off his clothes in an improvised strip-tease, and started swimming in the fountain.

Wonder woman is talking about how she wishes to strengthen their bonds so they become greater warriors. Bruce just remembered there’s videos of him fucking twerking and pole dancing to Ariana Grande all over the internet.

Flash starts smiling and telling them he already trust them with his life– Bruce once said chocolate milk came from brown cows.

'Oh. My. God’.

There’s just no way he’s telling any of them.

It’s even better if he’s met the rest of the League in his Brucie persona, and they never realized.

Clark was at a charity gala, trying to get some quotes for an article. He had known he wasn’t going to get much out of Brucie, but he had asked the man for an interview anyway. Brucie had said yes, only to immediately drag Clark into a coat closet. When Clark rightfully freaked out, he discovered that Brucie genuinely thought that an interview was sex in a closet during galas. That that was the definition of the word interview.

Diana had been hosting a museum opening, and seen the himbo looking at a peridot statue. As he was one of the biggest donors, she decided to go talk to him. He seemed confused when she asked what she thought of it. He told her that he didn’t understand why they had a fake statue. Diana, now also confused, asked what he meant, and learned that he didn’t think green stones were real. That they were all painted that way. “I think it would look better without the paint,” he said, very serious. Diana, slowly as she felt some of her own brain cells dying, told him that it was made out of peridot. He replied with “isn’t that what girls get?”

Barry Allen had been in Gotham with his nephew Wally to meet Wally’s pen pal, Dick. They ended up in this huge house, being led through by a butler. Dick was sitting at a table with a man Barry recognized as Bruce Wayne, staring down at a puzzle. Only, the puzzle and all the pieces were upside down, showing only the back. He stopped to introduce himself to Barry, then looked around, confused. “Dickie,” Brucie said, “I thought you said your pen pal was coming.” Dick snickered, covering his mouth. “Yeah, Bruce. This is Wally.” Brucie looked down at Wally, blinked, and then said “you’re not a pen.”

Sheffield

Nov. 4th, 2025 09:11 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I agreed to do a favor for someone at work that meant going to Sheffield this afternoon.

I was briefly filmed answering a few questions that the interviewer thought I had in advance but either I didn't, I didn't read the email that contained them, or I did read them but they were so boring and generic I forgot that they existed. All seem about equally likely.

It was very quick and dull but then I got to do something way more exciting, which was see [personal profile] sfred and actually catch up in person, something we haven't done in so long we don't even remember when it would last have happened. We agreed that Dreamwidth is a great way of keeping in touch, but also being able to hug was better. I was not prepared to be able to be gracious in response to being told that the gym has made me noticeably more hench, heh.

We talked a lot about how good the Springsteen movie was, of course.

Getting home was going far too smoothly (I got on a train with plenty of time to spare despite it arriving only three minutes after I got to the station! I'm not used to this) until we got delayed and then diverted around some kind of ominous-sounding incident in or near Stockport. By the time I finally got to Piccadilly, it was chaos as almost everything departs via Stockport and even trains that don't, like mine home, were held up behind all the other trains.

So I got home just in time to eat dinner and then it's bedtime!

I get to stay home tomorrow, and then I'm off again on Thursday, work takes me to Liverpool this time to do something equally dull but it'll take much longer.

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