[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
The emissions trading system launched by the European Union in 2005 could one day also be used to capture CO₂ on a large scale. A new model study quantifies the potential, and outlines that phased integration of removals into the trading system can avoid misguided incentives, while providing industry with planning security for residual emissions that are hard-to-abate.

perdition

Mar. 31st, 2026 08:00 am
prettygoodword: text: words are sexy (Default)
[personal profile] prettygoodword
perdition (per-DISH-uhn) - n., eternal damnation, loss of the soul; the Christian Hell; utter destruction or loss, downfall.


That last might look like a somewhat softened metaphoric extension, but is actually closest to the root meaning: taken in the 1300s from Latin perditiō, destruction (via stem form perditiōn-), from perditus, lost, past participle of perdere, to destroy/lose.

(That this was already slated to run the morning I get laid off by email is pure coincidence, really.)

---L.
lauradi7dw: two bare feet in water (frog pond feet)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/supreme-court-colorado-conversion-therapy-ban-chiles-v-salazar/


Speaking of evil and the Supreme Court, people started lining up on Sunday to get in to witness the arguments about Birthright citizenship tomorrow.
[syndicated profile] atlas_obscura_places_feed

 

Luffar-Lasse (literally “Tramp Lasse”), a ginger cat in Trollhättan, regularly wanders nearly 1.2 miles (about 2 km) from his suburban home to the parking lot of a shopping area on the outskirts of the city. There, he approaches shoppers, accepts pets, and often hitchhikes rides back with strangers. This unusually social routine first made him a local celebrity.

One sign of this is a nearby traffic circle with a mosaic sculpture of Luffar-Lasse by local artist Ellen Ljungqvist, installed in 2024. While commonly known as the Luffar-Lasse roundabout, the traffic circle's official name translates to “Barn Roundabout”. It features a small red wooden barn topped by the cat in thousands of colorful tiles. Measuring roughly 4 feet 3 inches (about 130 cm) from nose to tail, it depicts him surveying the roads.

Luffar-Lasse’s traffic-prone wanderings prompted his owner to create a Facebook group to track the cat’s movements. As the group expanded, a member set up a donation box in Luffar-Lasse’s name for Musikhjälpen, an annual televised Swedish charity fundraiser. It raised the most money of all, roughly $ 180,000, bringing him national attention and, in turn, a slow-TV weekend on Swedish television, with two 7-hour live segments.

Most public animal statues honor those long gone. Luffar-Lasse, now 15, is still alive, passing the mosaic on his way between home and the nearby shopping area several times a week. Monument and cat exist in parallel: one fixed, the other unpredictable.

[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
A new study shows that systems designed to capture methane from cow manure, called dairy digesters, are highly effective. But on the rare occasions they fail, the leaks are large enough to offset their climate benefits.
lauradi7dw: (Default)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
A few weeks ago people were talking about the possibility of AI destruction of humanity and there were a bunch of references to The Terminator (1984). I watched a bit of the (2008) Fox series starring Lena Headey as Sarah Connor so I know the basic backstory, but thought that after all this time, I should watch the movie. I borrowed the DVD from the library. I nearly ejected it after about two minutes but forced myself through an enormous amount of death, car chases, and a surprising (to me) view of Linda Hamilton's breast*, before I quit. I have now seen the famous "I'll be back" line in situ. I still don't really know anything about Skynet. It seemed a little on the nose to think about a nuclear war in the same week that someone from the UN and elsewhere warned that the US & Israel versus (basically everybody) project is raising the nuclear stakes right now.

* There can be fairly steamy scenes in Korean/Chinese/Japanese dramas, but I don't think I've seen any bare breasts on screen in those. I watched part of a former Hallmark movie on Netflix the other day. Not much skin visible there either. The most recent movie I saw in a theater was about Palestinian refugees in Lebanon, more or less. Same.
[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
As global temperatures climb, rainfall patterns are shifting in ways that could put water resources and agriculture under increasing strain, a new study published in Water Resources Research suggests.
[syndicated profile] phys_environment_feed
An international team of scientists is warning that everyday antibacterial soaps, wipes, sprays, and other "germ-killing" products are quietly contributing to the global rise of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) while providing no added health benefit for most consumer uses.

I miss my parents but...

Mar. 31st, 2026 08:42 am
lauradi7dw: (in the shire)
[personal profile] lauradi7dw
My father was a Marine in WWII. By the time he died, in his late 90s, his body was about used up (in general, not just the aspiration pneumonia that killed him) and parts of his mind were gone, but that's not why I think he might be better off dead. The first time I really thought "I'm glad he's not alive to see this" was January 6, 2021. There were active-duty military people attacking the Capitol. I think he would have had a hard time believing it, or accepting it.

Then there was the fairly recent Lindsey Graham thing about how we should take over Kharg Island "We did it to Iwo Jima, we can do it now." What do you mean we, white man? LG is my age. He was in the military for quite a while (unlike me), but it was our father's generation (including *my* father, who was shot on Iwo Jima) that he's gloating about.
He did get some blowback about that, at least*

Yesterday we learned that ICE will be screening the family members of Marines graduating at Parris Island, which I think is where my father did his basic training as well.
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/national-security/ice-agents-will-stationed-marine-corps-graduation-events-south-carolin-rcna265941
Daddy would be furious. Marines mattered to him the rest of his life, even as he was opposed to every war the US fought (started) after WWII. When he died, the household that had a US flag, its companion MIA/POW flag and additionally a sign by the main door that said "US troops out of Afghanistan."


* I think the US senators should be working, not on vacation, but I've been irritated by the social media reaction to Graham's trip to Disney World while he was in Orlando anyway for a meeting of jerks. (that wasn't the official name of the meeting, but Steve Witkoff was one of them). There has been a lot of mocking him for being too old to go to Disney. The fact that he has no children or grandchildren to take there sent some posters back to the longtime speculation about him being gay. Should anybody care if he is gay? No. Should people be allowed to go to a theme park without the excuse of having child relatives? Of course.

March 2026 in Review

Mar. 31st, 2026 08:46 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


22 works reviewed. 11.5 by women (52%), 10 by men (45%), 0.5 by non-binary authors (2%), 0 by authors whose gender is unknown (0%), and 9 by POC (41%).

March 2026 in Review
[syndicated profile] sententiae_antiquae_feed

Posted by Joel

This post is a basic introduction to reading Iliad 17 Here is a link to the overview of Iliad 16 and another to the plan in general.

Book 17 of the Iliad is likely one of the most skimmed or skipped books in the reading of epic. And this is not because there is anything wrong with it! On the contrary, it is a masterpiece of expansion and suspense. I think it tends to get ignored because so much of what it does is keyed into the aesthetics of performance. The book starts with Menelaas “not failing to notice the death of Patroklos” and centers around a struggle over his armor, and his body. But it also includes mourning immortal horses, Zeus inspiring a charioteer, Hektor and Aeneas chasing after horses, and Ajax defending Menelaos and Meriones as they carry Patroklos’ body away from the ships and Antilochus, Nestor’s son, rushes to tell Achilles what has happened. Book 18 starts with Achilles finding out what has happened.

At the end of book 15, the audience knows the plot of the rest of the epic. They know what will happen, but they don’t know how it will unfold. There are universes of stories to be told in the how of the events of the Iliad anticipated by Zeus: the deaths of Sarpedon, Patroklos, and Hektor could unfold in myriad ways and most audiences listening to the performance of the ‘rage of Achilles’ would know the basic plot details, but not the connective tissue between them. The 761 lines of book 17 create suspense for the audience as they await Achilles’ response, but at the same time they also provide opportunities to characterize the heroes in this specific telling of the epic and to engage with other narratives traditions.  The plot of this book engages critically with the major themes I have noted to follow in reading the Iliad: (1) Politics, (2) Heroism; (3) Gods and Humans; (4) Family & Friends; (5) Narrative Traditions, but the central themes I emphasize in reading and teaching book 17 are heroism, politics  and Narrative Traditions.

 
Ajax carrying the dead Achilleus, protected by Hermes (on the left) and Athena (on the right). Side 1 from an Attic black-figure neck-amphora, ca. 520-510 BC.

Book 17, the Epic Cycle, and Neoanalysis

Let me start by talking about Narrative traditions. When I summarize book 17 above, I mention Menelaos, Hektor, Aeneas, and then Ajax and Antilochus. The collocation of characters here would, for many audiences, likely recall events from outside the Iliad as we know it, from narrative traditions authors like Proclus (in his Chrestomathia) and earlier scholars placed in the so-called epic cycle. As I have written about before, I think that the Epic Cycle is in many ways “a scholarly fiction.” It posits that there was a fixed group of poems that told the whole story of the Trojan War from beginning to end. I think that both the notion of telling the whole story and having one set of poems doing this work is out of touch with how performed songs worked in antiquity while also ignoring that there were many other narrative traditions that aren’t included in the small group of poems in the Trojan Cycle.

One of the reasons I am rather committed to this point of view has to do with what subsequent generations of scholars have done with the idea of the epic cycle, which is to reconstruct the content of the poems and then spend a good deal of time trying to figure out the relationship between such reconstructions and the poems we actually possess. This is dangerous in a few ways: First, almost everything we have about the so-called cycle has been preserved because of its similarity or relevance to our Homeric epics. So, we can’t trust that this material has been represented well or fully. Second, any speculation on the relationship between these reconstructions and the poems we have is complicated by the performance history of the narrative traditions that we have to try to separate from the fixed texts that have come down to us. Many different versions of the ‘rage of Achilles’ could have circulated in antiquity and influenced other poetic traditions, which in turn ended up influencing or shaping the Rage-song that survived for us.

The death of Achilles, which occurred after the events recounted in "The Iliad," was described in another epic poem called "The Aethiopis", which has not survived. On the front of this amphora, the dead Achilles is carried from the Trojan battlefield by his comrade, Ajax. In front of Ajax, a woman leads the way and raises her hand to tear at her hair in a gesture of mourning. Two armed warriors follow behind. On the back, two armed horsemen clash on the battlefield, their horses rearing above a fallen warrior trapped beneath them.
Black-figure Amphora with Ajax Carrying the Dead Achilles, c. 530 BCE . Walters Art Museum

(Elton Barker and I discuss a lot of this in our book Homer’s Thebes)

I don’t want to be dismissive of Neoanalysis entirely, however. Anyone who knows me as Homerist knows the approach gets under my skin, but I have tried to be fairer in years with what it can contribute. At its best–if it adopts a kind of epistemic humility about the actual relationship between texts we have and those we have reconstructed or lost–neoanalysis retains the ability to show us how complex the narrative backgrounds of the Iliad and the Odyssey are and how much our understanding of the poems can be enriched by thinking through these other traditions. This value is attenuated, however, by overly positivistic assertions that a specific passage in the Iliad or Odyssey was modeled on a specific moment in another poem. Such moves, I believe, underappreciate how many story traditions there were drawing on similar motifs while also failing to take into account the many possible versions of a given tradition. In addition, and this is probably what makes me the most irrational, such a positivistic approach also typically does not consider what audiences knew or could have known.

These considerations bear significantly on book 17 because it is possible to frame the book from its echoes of other narratives, foremost the struggle over Achilles’ body, rescued by Ajax, and, second, the relationship between Antilochus and Achilles in the Aithiopis. According to our ancient sources, the Aithiopis begins after the end of the Iliad and includes juicy details like Achilles allegedly falling in love with Penthesilea and killing her,  only to kill Thersites too for accusing him of it. Then, Memnon, the son of Dawn, arrives to support the Trojans, kills Antilochus, which sends Achilles into another rage, that leads to him slaughtering Memnon. Once he has killed Memnon, Achilles pushes too far pursuing the Trojans into the city, and is killed by Apollo and Paris, near the very gate where Patroklos fell.

No photo description available.
Ajax carrying the slain body of Achilles out of battle – from the Francois Vase, ca 570 BCE, by the artist Kleitias. Archaeological Museum of Florence

There are, from this summary, innumerable parallels between books 16 and 17 of the Iliad and the lost Aithiopis. I have shifted to the word “parallel” here instead of my usual “echo” or “resonance” because it is a visual metaphor, common in setting texts side-by-side. I am suspicious of taking such parallels too seriously because they are made up of the same very basic plot detail as Zeus’ outline of the events of the Iliad in book 15: they are just dots on a map, as yet unconnected by the detail that gives epic its force. Even if we assume that the plot of the lost Aithiopis has been faithfully transmitted and not ‘juiced’ or crafted to match the Iliad better, we have no way of knowing whether one poem or narrative tradition influenced the other and have not really developed the scholarly language to describe two closely related traditions influencing each other over time as their stories are told and retold and as they come in contact with other traditions.

File:Aias body Akhilleus Staatliche Antikensammlungen 1712 glare reduced white bg.png
Attic black-figure hydria ca. 500 BCE, depicting Telamonian Aias carrying the body of Achilles out of battle.

We can say, I think, that the Iliad seems conscious of the importance of Antilochus and the basic details of his story (note how much he and Achilles engage in book 23, for example). We also know that the Odyssey is conscious of the fallout over the rescue of Achilles’ body and the awarding of his arms to Ajax instead of Odysseus. (Odysseus acts all surprised that Ajax won’t talk to him in the underworld!) But we can’t say with any confidence to what extent the Iliad we have relies on audience knowledge of the rescue of Achilles’ body in the drama of book 17. 

Book 17 works because of its detail, not because of its plot: the horses mourning, Menelaos striving, Hektor making some bad decisions, Glaukos laying into Hektor, the length of the expansion straining the suspension of our disbelief. All of these things put flesh on what would be pretty bare bones with just the basic outline of Achilles’ death.  The rescue of Achilles’ body, indeed, was a popular motif, appearing in greek art well before the textualization of the Iliad as we know it. But it–and the judgment of the arms, and the rage of Achilles over Antilochus–all could have been episodes in a fluid and living oral tradition from which both the Iliad and the Aithiopis emerged.

(Provided, of course, we believe there was an Aithiopis with the scenes reported by Proclus, and that such summaries did not merely collocate all of the major episodes from the Trojan War later scholars dug up in order to tell the whole story.)

Some reading questions on book 17

Why is the Iliad a better epic with book 17 than without it?

What do Hektor’s actions in book 17 contribute to our understanding of his character?

Why does the narrative spend so much time on the struggle for Patroklos’ body?

A short Bibliography on the epic cycle and neoanalysis

n.b this is not an exhaustive bibliography. If you’d like anything else included, please let me know.

Barker, Elton T. E., and Joel P. Christensen. 2019. Homer’s Thebes: Epic Rivalries and the Appropriation of Mythical Pasts. Hellenic Studies Series 84. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies. 

Degener, Michael. “Euphorbus’ plaint and plaits: the unsung valor of a foot soldier in Homer’s « Iliad ».” Phoenix, vol. 74, no. 3-4, 2020, pp. 220-243. Doi: 10.1353/phx.2020.0037

Fenno, Jonathan Brian. “The mist shed by Zeus in Iliad XVII.” The Classical Journal, vol. 104, no. 1, 2008-2009, pp. 1-9.

Harrison, E. L. “Homeric Wonder-Horses.” Hermes 119, no. 2 (1991): 252–54. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4476820.

Kozak, Lynn. “Character and context in the rebuke exchange of Iliad 17.142-184.” Classical World, vol. 106, no. 1, 2012-2013, pp. 1-14.

Moulton, C.. “The speech of Glaukos in Iliad 17.” Hermes, vol. CIX, 1981, pp. 1-8.

Neal, Tamara. “Blood and hunger in the « Iliad ».” Classical Philology, vol. 101, no. 1, 2006, pp. 15-33. Doi: 10.1086/505669

Schein, Seth L.. “The horses of Achilles in Book 17 of the « Iliad ».” « Epea pteroenta »: Beiträge zur Homerforschung : Festschrift für Wolfgang Kullmann zum 75. Geburtstag. Eds. Reichel, Michael and Rengakos, Antonios. Stuttgart: Steiner, 2002. 193-205.

West, M. L. “‘Iliad’ and ‘Aethiopis.’” The Classical Quarterly 53, no. 1 (2003): 1–14. http://www.jstor.org/stable/3556478.

A short Bibliography on the epic cycle and neoanalysis

n.b this is not an exhaustive bibliography. If you’d like anything else included, please let me know.

Arft, J., and J. M. Foley. 2015. “The Epic Cycle and Oral Tradition.” In Fantuzzi and Tsagalis, 78–95.

Barker, E.T.E. 2008. “ ‘Momos Advises Zeus’: The Changing Representations of Cypria Fragment One.” In Greece, Rome and the Near East, ed. E. Cingano and L. Milano, 33–73. Padova.

———. 2008. “Oedipus of Many Pains: Strategies of Contest in Homeric Poetry.”

Leeds International Classical Studies 7.2. (http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classiscs/lics/)

———. 2011. “On Not Remembering Tydeus: Diomedes and the Contest for Thebes.” Materiali e discussioni per l’analisi dei testi classici 66:9–44.

———. 2015. “Odysseus’ Nostos and the Odyssey’s Nostoi.” G. Philologia Antiqua

87–112.

Albertus Benarbé. Poetorum Epicorum Graecorum. Leipzig: Teubner, 1987.

Jonathan Burgess. The Tradition of the Trojan War in Homer and the Epic Cycle. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003. 

Cingano, E. 1992. “The Death of Oedipus in the Epic Tradition.” Phoenix 46:1–11.

———. 2000. “Tradizioni su Tebe nell’epica e nella lirica greca arcaica.” In La città

di Argo: Mito, storia, tradizioni poetiche, ed. P. A. Bernardini, 59–68. Rome.

———. 2004. “The Sacrificial Cut and the Sense of Honour Wronged in Greek

Joel Christensen. “Revising Athena’s Rage: Kassandra and the Homeric Appropriation of Nostos.” YAGE 3: 88–116.

Malcolm Davies. Epicorum Graecorum Fragmenta. Göttingen : Vandenhoek & Ruprecht, 1988.

Malcolm Davies. The Greek Epic Cycle. London: Bristol, 1989.

Fantuzzi, M., and C. Tsagalis, eds. 2014. The Greek Epic Cycle and its Ancient Reception: A Companion. Cambridge.

Margalit Finkelberg. The Cypria, the Iliad, and the Problem of Multiformity in Oral and Written Tradition, ‹‹CP›› 95, 2000, pp. 1-11. 

Lulli, L. 2014. “Local Epics and Epic Cycles: The Anomalous Case of a Submerged Genre.” In Submerged Literature in Ancient Greek Culture, ed. G. Colesanti and Giordano, 76–90. Berlin and Boston.

L. Huxley. Greek Epic Poetry from Eumelos to Panyassis, Cambridge 1969.

Richard Martin. Telemachus and the Last Hero Song, ‹‹Colby Quarterly›› 29, 1993, pp. 222-240.

Jasper Griffin. “The epic cycle and the uniqueness of Homer.” Journal of Hellenic Studies 97 (1977) 39-53.

Ingrid Holmberg “The Creation of the Ancient Greek Epic Cycle”

Marks, J., ‘‘Alternative Odysseys: The Case of Thoas and Odysseus’’, TAPhA 133.2 (2003) 209-226.

Gregory Nagy. The Best of the Achaeans: Concepts of the Hero in Archaic Greek poetry. Baltimore 1999.

Nagy, G., “Oral Traditions, Written Texts, and Questions of Authorship”, in: M. Fantuzzi / C. Tsagalis (eds.), Cambridge Companion to the Greek Epic Cycle, Cambridge 2015, 59-77.

Nelson, T. J., ‘‘Intertextual Agōnes in Archaic Greek Epic: Penelope vs. the Catalogue of Women’’, YAGE 5.1 (2021) 25-57.

Rutherford, I., “The Catalogue of Women within the Greek Epic Tradition: Allusion, Intertextuality and Traditional Referentiality”, in: O. Anderson / D. T. T. Haug (eds.), Relative Chronology of Early Greek Epic Poetry, Cambridge 2012, 152-167.

Albert Severyns. Le cycle épique dans l’école d’Aristarque. Paris: Les Belles Lettres 1928.

Albert Severyns. Recherches sur la Chrestomathie de Proclos. Paris: Faculté de Philosophie et Lettres, Liége, 1938.

Giampiero Scafoglio. La questione ciclica, ‹‹RPh››78, 2004, pp. 289-310.

Laura Slatkin. The Power of Thetis: Allusion and Interpretation in the Iliad. Berkeley 1991.

Michael Squire. The Iliad in a Nutshell: Visualizing Epic on the Tabulae Iliacae. Oxford: 2011.

Tsagalis, C., Early Greek Epic Fragments I: Antiquarian and Genealogical Epic, Berlin / Boston 2017.

Marco Fantuzzi and Christos Tsagalis. “Introduction: Kyklos, Epic Cycle, and Cyclic Poetry.” In M. Fantuzzi and C. Tsagalis (eds.). ACompanion to the Greek Epic Cycle and Its Fortune in the Ancient World. (Brill, 2014).

Martin L. West. The Epic Cycle: A Commentary on the Lost Troy Epics. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.

When the system works

Mar. 31st, 2026 01:08 pm
andrewducker: (Tentacular)
[personal profile] andrewducker
I'm on Lisinopril for blood pressure.
Yesterday I used the local pharmacy's app to ask for a repeat prescription.
Three hours later I got a text asking for my blood pressure results.
This morning I used my blood pressure monitor to take some readings and emailed to the address in the text.
An hour and a half later I got a message from the pharmacy saying they have my pills waiting for me.
It's nice when systems work smoothly.

It would, of course, be nicer if this was all in one NHS app, but all of the bits talking to each other is a good start.

Oh, and of course, none of this cost me a penny. The blood pressure monitor would have, if a friend hadn't given me one they had spare, but the GP surgery definitely lends out the ones it has to people who don't have their own.

fic rec Tuesday

Mar. 31st, 2026 07:44 am
marcicat: (penguin)
[personal profile] marcicat
The thing about being sick is that I've been spending my time snuggled on the couch, reading a LOT of fanfic. Throwback fandom Tuesday!

Esprit de corps, by AirgiodSLV

Alec eyes the makeshift ops center filling with Academy students, and wonders if he’s about to regret this. “Is this the worst idea we’ve ever had?”

“Are you kidding?” Jace answers without looking away from the gathering crowd. “We’ve had way worse ideas than this.”

Treasure! Treasure!

Mar. 29th, 2026 09:29 pm
sister_raphael: (deardiary)
[personal profile] sister_raphael
My friend and I (trash-panda buddy) had a fabulous time kerbside collecting today. The suburb was a very affluent one, and we know from past experience that some of the stuff that gets put out for collection can be extremely valuable, and today it did not disappoint.

One house had bags and bags of crystal tableware, which I recognised the brands of and yoinked into the car as fast as I could. Edinburgh crystal. Thompson Webb Crystal. Waterford. A quick google showed the decanters selling for almost a thousand dollars for the rare and vintage ones, and I could tell these were all from around the 1970s so I had the thought that perhaps I had been very lucky indeed. There were three wine decanters too, two of which are valuable.

Sadly the whisky decanter was not the $1000 one, but a more modest $400 one, but that's still money I could use. Some of the glasses were selling for a few hundred dollars each. 

Anyway, I spent quite a bit of time taking photos to help with identification, which is still an ongoing job, but I have found a few things. It will all be sold, for extra dollars which won't hurt the bank, what with petrol prices for a few events coming up the way they are.

Other fun goodies from different places included a vintage 1940's Australian tobacco tin and a small chest full of vintage high-end woodworking tools, some of which have sold already. A Bluey bike still unopened in its box and a rather lovely crystal chandelier-style candelabra with big glass flowers where the candles go which my niece has claimed already. My friend collected a new-in-box Yamaha electric piano. Along with the better stuff, I usually find garden stakes, pots and garden stuff and old books. I love old books. The best of today was a lovely gilded book from the year 1900, which is just wonderful.

Anyway, that was half a day completely taken up with that.

Catalogue!

Mar. 31st, 2026 09:20 pm
sister_raphael: (busywriting)
[personal profile] sister_raphael


No sewing today, but a lot of computer work achieved. I finished making my catalogue though I need to still make and photograph one or two items, but I can paste them in later. I needed to get it in for printing, so I have it back for the first event. The little photo book format was 20% off, so it was a good saving. Time consuming, but okay.

Now all I need to do is add the images to the square shop under the COLLECT IN PERSON tab and match up the text. Not everything is available all the time, or will be, but I added any little thing I sometimes make and are likely to make again. I've made little sections to make it easier to find things, which I really like. 

I'm looking forward to getting it all done and dusted. I had a phone call with the Senior Curator of the museum today and have extra jobs to do now . 

Just one thing: 31 March 2026

Mar. 31st, 2026 05:52 am
[personal profile] jazzyjj 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!

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