We had company yesterday: Alan and Jeanne, who are visiting from California, and Elly, who they are staying with. Alan is one of my oldest friends; I met him at a party in [personal profile] roadnotes' apartment in 1983 (so, more than 40 years ago). I've known Elly almost as long, and she lived next door to us for several years; I've "only" known Jeanne for about half that long.

We had the party with food, and without masks: everyone took covid tests Saturday morning, and we opened one kitchen and one living room window for ventilation with a bit of a cross-breeze, and ran two air purifiers. (Normally, one of them sits in Adrian's room.)

Good conversation, about a variety of topics, some more serious than others--some life catch-up, which included both health and health health insurance, and random other topics including travel, cats, memorably bad weather, and geography, both natural and the built environment (mostly streets and street names, not fanous or unusual buildings).

Molly was delighted by the open window, and by attention from more people.

We had pizza delivered for dinner, from Veggie Crust. At Elly's suggestion, we tried the portobello mushroom pizza with pistachio pesto. The pesto tasted mostly of basil, but it's a good combination, which we may get again.

Adrian baked chocolate chip pumpkin bread, and Elly made a custard pie. The pie is very rich, and I realized a few minutes after our friends left that the pie was still in our fridge. I'm not even going to try to finish it, because it's very rich (neither Cattitude nor Adrian can eat it, because there's a lot of cream in the custard).

[We have spent today quietly at home, by ourselves, because even the best socializing can be tiring.]
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Jun. 18th, 2024 06:10 pm)
We got home from Scintillation, a small SF/fantasy convention in Montreal, yesterday afternoon. I enjoyed the con, but it took a lot out of me, and I'm not sure I enjoyed myself enough to be worth how draining it was (that's separate from the financial cost, three round-trip airfares and four nights in a hotel). If I go next year, I suspect I should either travel Thursday instead of Friday, or leave Sunday afternoon/evening rather than staying over Sunday night. The longer trip let us go to the pre-con and after-con picnics, plus Friday afternoon expeditions, and as much of the programming as we wanted.

I enjoyed some programming, and some unorganized socializing in the convention's public spaces. I skipped some programming, either because it was less interesting to me (e.g. discussions of writing techniqques) or to save energy. I got a ride to the Marche Jean Talon expedition on Friday from [personal profile] rushthatspeaks, and a ride to the Sunday evening picnic from Ruthanna. I didn't feel up to walking to Marche Jean Talon, and then walking around at the market; similarly, I didn't feel up to taking the metro to the Sunday evening picnic. (We did take a bus and the metro back from the picnic to the hotel Sunday night.)

We went to Frites Alors! with Tamara for lunch on Sunday, because I wanted poutine, and they have food Adrian likes (although not poutine, because it's full of cheese). By Monday, when we were grabbing something to eat on the way to the airport, I felt like I had eaten too much meat (in the form of dumplings) and just got a cucumber salad. We took the metro to get to the branch of Frites Alors! that has a (seasonal) patio; the convention hotel is in Chinatown, and most of the outdoor dining options near the hotel mean getting takeout and finding a park bench. That said, I'm glad that there's still at least one con that has some outdoor events, and requires masking indoors with a couple of exceptions.

[I may post more, but wanted to get at least this down before I forgot.]
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( May. 17th, 2024 04:45 pm)
When I sent [personal profile] anne my annual "hi, would you like to go look at lilacs together?" email this year, she said she wasn't up for that much exertion, because she is still dealing with Long Covid. Instead, she suggested we get together outdoors somewhere and just talk for a while.

Anne, Adrian, Cattitude, and I were all free this afternoon. We met at the Public Garden, then walked a couple of blocks to a boring public courtyard that has tables and movable chairs, stopping long enough for me to buy a cup of soft ice cream from a Mr. Softee truck, something I hadn't done for years before the pandemic.

The conversation was part catching up, and part just rambling. It had been too long since we got together. When Anne started thinking that she might be running low on energy, we decided that would be a good time to stop. But today was the first Copley Square farmers market of 2024, and we were halfway between Copley and Arlington on the Green Line, so we went to the market.

It's early, so there wasn't much in the way of fresh vegetables, but we bought Macoun and Mutsu apples from one stall, and a small Concord loaf from Hi-Rise Bakery.

That makes three times I have socialized in person in less than two weeks, which is a lot by my current standards. The weather was excellent Tuesday and a little cool for sitting outdoors today. I hope to take advantage of the good weather some more before it starts being too hot for me to be comfortable.

Anne is being more covid-cautious than I, Cattitude, and Adrian, including keeping her N95 mask on outdoors. When we realized this, Cattitude asked if we should put our masks back on, and Anne said she didn't need us to.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( May. 3rd, 2023 07:04 pm)
I went to the dentist today, to have my teeth cleaned. The hygienist looked at and poked my gums, and said that I will need another deep cleaning, but that it will be less intense [sic] than when she did that in 2020. She also told me that I needed this because I went five months between cleanings, instead of three, which is possible but worrying--I put this visit off a bit because I was worried about covid.

She then took X-rays, and did the kind of cleaning I'd been expecting for this visit. If the insurance company approves the periodontal cleaning, I will be going back for that in late June.

After the dentistry, I went to visit [personal profile] minoanmiss for an hour or so. I'd suggested this because her new place is in Watertown, and my dentist is in Watertown Square. The trip from the dentist to her place is on two buses, but that's two short trips on relatively frequent bus routes.

It continues to feel vaguely unfair that I was sitting there unmasked while the dental hygienist did unpleasant things, and then wearing a mask while visiting friends who would have liked to feed me a snack.
[personal profile] cattitude, [personal profile] adrian_turtle, and I visited with [personal profile] nineweaving this afternoon. We sat on a patio drinking Burdick's chocolate (hot for Adrian, iced for the rest of us) and talking. I had a very good time, and Nine and I agreed to do this again soon, or at least not wait a year. I had last seen her in spring 2021, when we were vaccinated and a lot of other people weren't yet.

I suggested getting together a few weeks ago, when Greer decided it wasn't safe enough for her to go to Montreal for Scintillation next month. I already knew that her and my risk tolerances differ slightly—in particular, I'm willing to ride uncrowded buses and trains when the covid numbers are low, and she's not. So, we were in Harvard Square, which is walking distance from her place and near the buses from Arlington and Belmont.

It was a wide-ranging conversation, including eyeglasses and theatre and movies, and visiting very old buildings, and a bit about our respective pandemic precautions.

When we sat down, Nine reached into her bag and gave me the flashlight that I had lent her at a convention in 2019. I'd lent it to her because there was a construction trench near where she was staying, and I carry a flashlight in my daypack just in case I need it, which happens rarely but unpredictably.
I had a very nice visit with [personal profile] nineweaving this afternoon: a bit over three hours of chatting in a garden near Harvard, unmasked. We bought pastries and hot chocolate at Burdick's, then walked to the garden, and settled in for a long conversation about all sorts of things, including past and hoped-for future travels, how we've coped with the pandemic, and how [personal profile] rushthatspeaks, [personal profile] gaudior, and their kid are doing. I would have happily talked longer, but I needed to go home, stopping for groceries on the way, and get caffeine and then dinner.

This was the first serious in-person socializing either of us has done with people outside our respective bubbles in over a year, though I've had a few brief, outdoor, and masked conversations with a couple of [personal profile] adrian_turtle's friends from Havurah Shalom, mostly when I was at her place when they showed up with groceries. And talking with one of my own friends is more satisfying than talking with friends of friends, even when they're nice people.

While I was waiting for a bus home after buying groceries, the stranger at the other end of the bench asked me "did you hear the [Chauvin] verdict?" Having gotten messages from a couple of different activist groups, I was able to say "yes, guilty, on the most serious count." We were both pleased and a little surprised; after talking about that for a couple of minutes, he asked me "are you a musician?" and, when I said no, commented that he'd thought I might be because of the hair.

I haven't missed that sort of unexpected conversations with strangers nearly as much as I've missed talking to my friends, but I have missed it. (A month ago, before I was fully vaccinated, I would have hesitated to ask him to move down the bench to make room for me.)
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Dec. 26th, 2020 07:56 pm)
I spent most of the afternoon looking at the laptop screen, because two different friends invited me to Zoom parties today, at mostly overlapping times.

To keep the conversations manageable, both friends were using breakout rooms. This worked, except that I barely got to talk to either of my hosts. But I had some fun conversations about topics including bits of history and politics, as well as catching up on each others' lives.

I like [personal profile] liv's parents, which isn't surprising, but is pleasing. I don't remember who said, in that conversation, that he thought peak Somerville was 7Ate9 bakery celebrating Shakespeare's birthday by giving free cheesecakes to people who could recite a sonnet, but I think he has a point. I do wish I'd managed to say more than hi to her, before she decided it was time to put everyone in smaller groups, so conversation would be possible.

At the second party, I'm particularly glad I got to talk to [personal profile] lydy and to [profile] alanro. I took a break between the parties because i wanted to get up, move around a bit, and give my eyes a break from looking at Zoom meeting rooms.

Tomorrow I'm talking to my mother. The plan is for her to call me 11ish; I was thinking of suggesting that we try Zoom, but maybe not after three hours or so on Zoom today.
A Discord server I've been hanging out on has, in addition to chat on various topics and animal pictures, a variety of low-key events, which I have been listening to in little bits.

Yesterday Anthony invited me to be a guest for "scintillation maritime noon," in which a host interviews three people on anything they want to talk about: last night it was apples (me), spoon-making, and interactive fiction. I am told that this is based on an actual CBC radio program, which is similarly open-ended.

I talked about apples, Mike and Zarf talked about spoons and interactive fiction, and then we answered questions and the discussion continued among every who was on at the time. I was nervous about doing this, because my first reaction was "what will I talk about?" Once [personal profile] cattitude suggested apples, I got Anthony to help trouble-shoot my computer audio problems.

I had fun doing this, and was feeling generally better afterwards--it had been weeks since I participated in a conversation of more than two people, even online, and the ones before that were Zoom gatherings of either [personal profile] quility's friends, for gaming, or Cattitude's relatives.

The limiting factor for me in doing more of this, or similar things, is still going to be the audio: the earphones+microphone headset works as well for me as any such, meaning it starts to get uncomfortable after about 20 minutes. They're earbuds, which means I can stretch the time by removing one earphone at a time. [please don't try to problem-solve the technical end of this.]
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Jul. 11th, 2020 06:44 pm)
Someone else's post about how much they'd done yesterday reminded me to note this:

I played Boggle and hung around for low-key conversation over Zoom with [personal profile] cattitude, [personal profile] quility, and some of Quility's Minneapolis friends for a little over an hour yesterday. Then I went and read my book, while they played for another hour+. I bailed because I was yawning, and we'd reached a sensible pause. (I warned everyone up front that I probably wasn't up for two and a half hours of Zoom gaming, and asked to play something where one game ends relatively quickly. Two weeks ago they gamed without me and spent three hours on a single game--which isn't flawed, but if they'd wanted to do that I'd excused myself rather than half to drop out mid-game when it might be inconvenient.
Since Massachusetts is slowly coming out of lockdown, I decided it was safe enough to visit [personal profile] adrian_turtle this weekend. (The risk here was from the travel.)

It was very good to see her, after three months of communicating in text chat and sometimes phone calls. Those three months were harder on her than on me, because she had been home alone, while I was here with [personal profile] cattitude and hadn't gone three months between hugs.

Adrian and I went out yesterday to stand on Mass Ave with a half dozen other people holding "Black Lives Matter" signs; she tells me people have been going out there every evening for the past week. It's a small thing, but it's a small thing we could do right around the corner, without whatever risk is involved in a bus ride. We got lots of waves and cheerful honks of support from passing cars, which is encouraging.

Last night's dinner was a mushroom frittata, at my request because I don't cook mushrooms around Andy because the fumes can make him sick, and we'd had lunch and dinner together every day since the last time I visited Adrian.

When I mentioned the visit on Discord, Jo asked if I'd taken the metro. I got to Adrian's by bus, but rather than go into the Harvard Station busway, I walked several blocks above ground to connect from the 73 to the 77: waiting indoors/underground would have increased the risk. During that walk, I realized that this was the first time I had walked in order to get somewhere since mid-April.

For at least the next few weeks, we will probably have less frequent, longer visits than normal. The exact frequency and timing will depend on the weather, because one effect of the pandemic is that Adrian doesn't want to have a stranger in her apartment to reinstall the air conditioner in her bedroom window. We also want Adrian to come to Belmont soon, so she can see both me and Cattitude.
I did a batch of proofreading today. A chunk of this was due back to the client by this evening, and I sent that at about 10:30 a.m., then did another piece after lunch. Copy-and-paste plus spellcheck means that I have now found and marked two places where "compromise" should be "comprise."

It was sunny and pleasant this afternoon, so [personal profile] cattitude and I tied bandannas over our noses and mouths before heading outside. The Belmont rules (which are basically the same thing that the state is requiring starting Wednesday) require a mask or other face covering when in any sort of business, or anywhere else where you might have trouble keeping a six-foot distance from other people. I figure that means I don't need a mask to take the trash out, just to look through the window and make sure our neighbors aren't on the porch or stairs before opening the door. I have also been going for un-masked walks in less congenial weather, or at times when fewer people are likely to be outside. We did in fact see a fair number of people; mostly we avoided them by crossing the street if they didn't do so first, and once I stepped into a convenient driveway to get out of a cyclist's way.

I have lots of ice cream, having had Lizzy's deliver four containers (chocolate, strawberry, black raspberry, and chocolate chocolate chip), which arrived about twenty minutes ago.

Last night I joined [personal profile] cattitude in a Zoom game session with [personal profile] quility and a few other people. I left after about an hour of Boggle and chat, because I could feel myself getting tense even from that level of competition (nobody was keeping score); Cattitude played for I think another hour and a half, and then told the other people he'd have to leave now, because it's an hour later here than in Minnesota.

And I just remembered I meant to call my mother; the time difference means she'll be asleep by now, and there's nothing that can't wait until morning.

I had lunch today with [personal profile] liv, [personal profile] oursin, and [personal profile] green_knight. We met outside St. Pancras railway station (which is convenient to, among other things, the Northern Line, which is near where my mother lives.

We had a good lunch at a pub near the station, then spent some time in the British Library looking at interesting old books and manuscripts in the Treasury. When I had looked at about as much as I could enjoy--my eyes didn't hurt, but my brain wanted to take a break and maybe look at trees or sky--we went to Ruby Violet for ice cream and more conversation. The cucumber-mint sorbet wasn't quite as good as JP Licks' cucumber ice cream, but had the great advantage of being available today, instead of only in July, and the Belgian ice cream was superior to any other I can remember having.

The conversation ranged widely, and included a bit of politics--probably inevitable, since we weren't actively trying to avoid it--as well as life in general, books and libraries, food, and travel. Eventually [personal profile] liv had to head back to Cambridge, so we all went our separate ways, and I had a quiet dinner at home with my mother.

Yesterday Mom and I went to the London Eye, which is very touristy (of course) but also offers very good views of that part of London, and we had just about perfect weather for it, and for a boat ride on the Thames (we bought a combination ticket). Today's weather was equally delightful (highs in the low 20s [low 70s if you prefer Fahrenheit]). The other main thing I want to do this trip, other than just spend time talking to Mom, is to visit Kew Gardens, but my legs and hips need a day's rest first.

On the train home, I noticed a tote bag with 'Do what you love' printed in large script, and my immediate thought was that that was easier before it turned out that what I need to do is write to strangers and yell at fascists. I very much enjoyed what I did today, but I don't think that's the shape of doing that slogan is about.

No, I haven't been incredibly busy today; this post combines stuff from the last week or more.

This afternoon I went to a low-key party at my friend Lori's house, where I talked to her, [personal profile] adrian_turtle, and a variety of people I didn't know, or knew vaguely but couldn't remember their names. In and around the conversation, I ate grilled corn, mushrooms, cherry tomatoes, pineapple, rutabaga, and a bit of steak. (The party is outdoors, and I had RSVP'd as "weather allowing," not expecting that it would, but we lucked out, this being one cool-enough day in a string of hot to very hot ones.)

Yesterday I finished editing another chapter of the book I'm working on, and sent it to the client (who thinks I'm great). The day before, I started on a different (small) editorial project. I'm doing two passes on each book chapter, and wanted to take a couple of days between them, hence interleaving this. The other project is going more slowly, in part because it's proofreading as well as copyeditingg, and the document is already in PDF format. This is my second project for this client; having clients want to hire me again feels good, whatever the size of the job. This one is small, or I wouldn't have taken it on while preparing to move.

I called both Belmont Light and National Grid to put the apartment utilities in our name about a week ago. both were straightforward until the end of the call, at which point the Belmont Light person told me that I need to come to their office in person within ten business days to show her photo ID. And they're open 8-4 weekdays, except they close at 11 a.m. on Friday in the summer. If I had any sort of job with regular hours, this would be annoying if not worse; as it is, I expect it to be a minor nuisance, and in return I don't have to deal with Eversource, and National Grid only for natural gas (for the stove). So that's what I'm doing tomorrow morning.

Meanwhile, [personal profile] cattitude spent a bunch at the new apartment, measuring the rooms in detail so we can figure out how we want to arrange the apartment. He did this for the last two moves, and we still have the little bits of paper that represent our desks, couch, bed, table, chairs.... He's going to measure the basement, and make more detailed measurements of the windows that we want to put air conditioners in, while I'm talking to Belmont Light.

About an hour ago I filed my first change of address, with the post office. After I post this I will check it off the (electronic) list.

(We hired a moving company last month, and the friend who was so helpful when I was having the cataract surgery has agreed to drive the cats, and probably one of us, from Arlington to Belmont on the day.)
I organized a Seattle-area Friends of Captain Awkward meetup for today, and it went very well, I think: seven or eight people (I can't remember now whether the "seven" included myself) talking for a couple of hours (though one left early) about a variety of things. One turned out to be someone I vaguely knew from Usenet days, and used to see on LJ occasionally; another I remembered from her posts to the Captain's blog; and there was at least one woman who decided to come to the meetup despite not having delurked.

During the organizing, at least two people said things along the lines of "I wish I could, but that specific day won't work because…" But when we were actually there, two other people said they wouldn't have been able to make it, but were in town for the day (from Olympia and Anacortes, respectively).

The tea at Bauhaus wasn't as good as the last couple of times I've been in (I think the water wasn't quite hot enough this time), so for my second cup I had chai, which was fine. The place was also less crowded than I expected from the previous meetup there; we started earlier, and it was quite a bit less crowded by the time we were ready to leave. If I organize the next one, I may try starting at 3:30 instead of 2:30; on the other hand, we ended when we did because people had plans for later on. The other downside of Bauhaus as a location is that there are only a few small tables downstairs, and no elevator; I'd forgotten exactly how small the downstairs was, and had been hoping to find space there. So it's convenient in the sense of easy to get to (Capitol Hill, lots of nearby bus stops), but not accessible for anyone who has problems with stairs. I think I will ask for more accessible suggestions for the future.
redbird: Me with a cup of tea, standing in front of a refrigerator (drinking tea in jo's kitchen)
( Dec. 31st, 2011 12:23 pm)
I stayed home from work with an annoying cold Thursday (and went through about a box and a half of tissues). Yesterday I was feeling better through about mid-afternoon, and then the sneezing, runny nose, and eye watering started again.

I had been planning to go to [livejournal.com profile] tnh and [livejournal.com profile] pnh's today, for general hanging out and a chance to get out of my shell a bit. However, I may still be contagious, and they're planning to be singing at GAFilk next weekend, so even if I was up to enjoying the party (after the subway trip), it would be unkind to inflict myself on them. Or, for that matter, on anyone else who might be likely to catch cold.

I'm not making resolutions—they just make me grumpy—but Patrick's invitation reminded me that I really do want to see more people in person than I have been. Last weekend's Newtonmass party in Cambridge was good in that direction, but I want to catch up with people here in New York, and more people I already know (that party included a few people I knew somewhat, one or two I'd played boardgames with before, and a bunch I'd never met, though one of the latter apologized for not remembering my name from a context I knew nothing about).
redbird: Me with a cup of tea, standing in front of a refrigerator (drinking tea in jo's kitchen)
( Dec. 31st, 2011 12:23 pm)
I stayed home from work with an annoying cold Thursday (and went through about a box and a half of tissues). Yesterday I was feeling better through about mid-afternoon, and then the sneezing, runny nose, and eye watering started again.

I had been planning to go to [livejournal.com profile] tnh and [livejournal.com profile] pnh's today, for general hanging out and a chance to get out of my shell a bit. However, I may still be contagious, and they're planning to be singing at GAFilk next weekend, so even if I was up to enjoying the party (after the subway trip), it would be unkind to inflict myself on them. Or, for that matter, on anyone else who might be likely to catch cold.

I'm not making resolutions—they just make me grumpy—but Patrick's invitation reminded me that I really do want to see more people in person than I have been. Last weekend's Newtonmass party in Cambridge was good in that direction, but I want to catch up with people here in New York, and more people I already know (that party included a few people I knew somewhat, one or two I'd played boardgames with before, and a bunch I'd never met, though one of the latter apologized for not remembering my name from a context I knew nothing about).
Last night, [livejournal.com profile] cattitude and I had dinner with [livejournal.com profile] womzilla, [personal profile] supergee, [livejournal.com profile] nellorat, and their friend Charles who I don't think is on DW or LJ. Womzilla emailed us last week and basically said "meet us for dinner" and we said yes. We went to the Ollie's Chinese restaurant near Lincoln Center. Friendly conversation about a variety of things; nothing major seems to be going on in any of our lives, which is just as well. I kvetched a bit about work, and talked about having just come from the gym. I don't normally work out on Sundays, but if I was going to spend the time on the subway anyway, combining the two made sense, and meant I didn't spend more time traveling to/from dinner than I did with my friends.

The chicken with yellow leeks wasn't quite as good as I'd remembered, but the sticky rice was fine (if over-priced, I'm used to getting it at dim sum prices) and the asparagus was excellent. It had been too long since I'd had a really good cooked green vegetable. Decent salads, yes. Cooked squash and root vegetables, yes. Some green pepper in things, but not as the whole dish, or the center of it. I think I would have thought well of the asparagus even in May, but right now it was especially good.

Around lunchtime today, my phone at work rang, and Desiree, the office manager, said "You have a package." I went over, and she handed me a long cardboard box labeled as containing flowers. I now have a very nice mix of red roses and purple somethings (composites, a bit larger than the roses) on my desk, and a very nice card from [personal profile] adrian_turtle tucked into my paper journal. We don't usually do much about Valentine's Day (or any holiday except Thanksgiving), and this was a nice surprise. A coworker looked at them and said something and I smiled and said "I am a very lucky woman," which I am. (I took a couple of photos with the iPod camera, but "sync" here seems to mean "put photos on the iPod," not "download your photos to your computer.")

as usual, gym notes )
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( Nov. 14th, 2010 06:13 pm)
We just had a pleasant afternoon with [livejournal.com profile] roadnotes, talking and drinking tea. Conversation ranging from the here and now, to 30 years back: hair, people we know, plans large and small, who we want to be connecting with, culling belongings, the drawbacks of Facebook and the ways that websites' use of the word "friend" may have people saying "s/he's my friend" when acquaintance might be a better word for "I know her, and we hung out a bit ten years ago." Roadnotes is sorting through/culling stuff a lot more seriously than Cattitude and I are, but I've been using her posts as inspiration, in a mild way: a book or two here, an old Worldcon program book there, some worn-out clothes or things that just don't suit me. I sent her home with a green suede jacket, which had never fit me right (the sleeves are too long) and looks good on her. It had been sitting in a drawer for a couple of years; I'm glad it fits her.

A quiet day was what I needed: I'm still not de-stressed from the last few weeks of extra stuff at work, and my shoulder is being a nuisance. Not a sharp pain, but steady, and bad for my mood and patience. Roadnotes and [livejournal.com profile] cattitude are both easy for me to be with; being out somewhere might have been more difficult.

ETA: I have asked Cattitude to remind me, if necessary, that this evening is not the time to do any sorting or decluttering, even if I'm inspired by our conversation, because it would be bad for my shoulder.

Also, we talked about the idea of good enough decisions: reminding ourselves (as I seem to need to, these last several months) that even if some other choice might be/have been better, this one is also good enough. Sometimes you've eliminated the bad answers, and it's not a big deal if you pick the second- or third-best. So I try not to second-guess myself. It's working, sometimes.
I didn't manage a nap on Friday—one of these days I may remember to turn the phone ringer and answering machine speaker off when I'm home sick—but I did convince [livejournal.com profile] onyxlynx to come up and visit me for a couple of hours. Tea, chocolate, conversation. including but not limited to catching up on stuff. She's not in New York very often these days, but she used to live in Washington Heights, and had no trouble finding my apartment. This may be the first time I've spent with just her: usually, it's been a group (not usually a large one) of people, because I got to know her gradually through fannish stuff, and then she moved west, and when she is here she is trying to get together with lots of people in a short time.

So, I've been doing somewhat domestic things the rest of the weekend, for values of "domestic" that include shopping (Greenmarket and grocery store), walking in the park, and dealing with paperwork and bills. A bit of reading, a bit of email. The leaves are just beginning to turn, but there are still some morning glories, and I think we saw more dragonflies an hour ago than we had at any time this summer. Still not a lot, compared to some years: it was a cool, damp summer by local standards. When we walked past the salt marsh, a turtle was basking on the very top of a tire in the water: the tire is standing on end, with just a little bit exposed at high tide, and moving gently back and forth when waves pass it. [livejournal.com profile] cattitude took some photos; I didn't have my camera this time.

I'm still not feeling 100% well: not seriously ill, but enough that while walking is good, weight-lifting may have to wait a bit longer. I am glad I stayed home Friday, even if rest didn't equal sleep. (It often doesn't, for me.)
I didn't manage a nap on Friday—one of these days I may remember to turn the phone ringer and answering machine speaker off when I'm home sick—but I did convince [personal profile] onyxlynx to come up and visit me for a couple of hours. Tea, chocolate, conversation. including but not limited to catching up on stuff. She's not in New York very often these days, but she used to live in Washington Heights, and had no trouble finding my apartment. This may be the first time I've spent with just her: usually, it's been a group (not usually a large one) of people, because I got to know her gradually through fannish stuff, and then she moved west, and when she is here she is trying to get together with lots of people in a short time.

So, I've been doing somewhat domestic things the rest of the weekend, for values of "domestic" that include shopping (Greenmarket and grocery store), walking in the park, and dealing with paperwork and bills. A bit of reading, a bit of email. The leaves are just beginning to turn, but there are still some morning glories, and I think we saw more dragonflies an hour ago than we had at any time this summer. Still not a lot, compared to some years: it was a cool, damp summer by local standards. When we walked past the salt marsh, a turtle was basking on the very top of a tire in the water: the tire is standing on end, with just a little bit exposed at high tide, and moving gently back and forth when waves pass it. [livejournal.com profile] cattitude took some photos; I didn't have my camera this time.

I'm still not feeling 100% well: not seriously ill, but enough that while walking is good, weight-lifting may have to wait a bit longer. I am glad I stayed home Friday, even if rest didn't equal sleep. (It often doesn't, for me.)
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redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
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