rolanni: (Default)
rolanni ([personal profile] rolanni) wrote2026-03-21 08:03 pm

On concluding projects

What went before:

Also, this happened:

#
Saturday. Sunny and warm. I think. I haven't been out. In fact, I not only slept late, I lay in bed, snuggled with cats, and read my email, so I'm just now getting up and around.

Today's big plan is to make focaccia and maybe read or maybe... No, I don't think I'll write anything today. I do need to do some research but that can maybe wait. Maybe I'll finish my embroidery project and see how that turns out.

As you can see my plans are firm.

How's everybody doing today?
#
Focaccia happened.  Yes, it tastes every bit as good as it looks.

#
Had a very strange experience -- I can't get into either Bank of America or Discover to get my statements for monies due in early April, which is only a problem because neither one of those entities sent me a reminder that I had a new bill, and I happened to notice that now that my head isn't filled up with BOOK.

Discover says that it's really terribly sorry but it can't complete "that operation" (which would be logging in) right now. Bank of America, ever charming, says that I phucked up my ID or my password or maybe both? And it might let me in if I give it my social security number, which, err. No.

So! I have two phone calls to make on Monday, lucky me.

In other news, I'm on what ought to be my last four meals from Cook Unity, delivered yesterday. Today, I had the shrimp grain bowl, which was...OK, I guess. I had six shrimp and got bored with them, so I chopped up the leftover ones, and I'll be having a shrimp salad sandwich for the evening meal.

Also we here in Central Maine are under an Active Weather Advisory and warned to look out for between 3 and 6 inches of snow on the overnight. Honestly, March.

And now? I'm going to go embroider.
#
So, I finished my first! ever! concept-to-finished-piece embroidery project and!

I learned some stuff.

The first thing I learned is that I made this too small, in terms of the current states of my eyesight and the steadiness of my hand. Next time, I WILL go bigger, even if it means I can't get the whole design inside the hoop at once.

I also learned -- actually, I knew this -- white-on-white is hard to read. Duh.

But! and most importantly!

I learned that it Can Be Done.

Which means I can Do It Again.

I should report that Tali and Rook joined me in the living room while I finished this up. Rook sat on my lap and didn't even try to mess the thread. He just kinda curled up and went to sleep.


#
So, that was a nice day off-ish. Tomorrow, I will start to read Kin Right, and will also plan on clearing off the top of my desk -- yes, again.

My next embroidery project is a pre-printed sampler -- that's it, just the design. So, my next step, now that's in the hoop, is to make a yarn/floss card. Which means I need to dig out the Big Bag of Floss. Later.

For right now, I'm going to pour myself a glass of wine and see about making that shrimp salad sandwich.

Everybody have a good evening. I'll check in tomorrow.


the cosmolinguist ([personal profile] cosmolinguist) wrote2026-03-21 11:06 pm
Entry tags:

Possibly my most #dadcore thought EVER

On a single tube train alone the other day, I saw two people in black thin-rimmed aviators and all I could thin was well now I know what I want my next pair of glasses to look like!

Never felt so much like a dad, possibly because that style always reminded me of my dad since that's what he wore when I was a little kid.

But one of these two people was a young person of ambiguous gender presentation, so I have hope that such things can become fashionable among the queers.

I'm due an eye test, and presumably new glasses, so I've been keeping an eye out for what kind of frames I might want (since the narrow rectangular thick-framed "hipster glasses" that seem to suit me best are not as readily available as they once were! the frames I have now are boring as hell, too big and too round for me even though they're not as much of either as has been popular lately).

kiya: (headdesk)
kiya ([personal profile] kiya) wrote2026-03-21 06:54 pm

Really, really winning.

PSA



Did you know
Mental health is worse
In the population
We're trying to kill?

It's why
They can't be allowed
To be
Like that.

It's for their own good,
You see.
These laws
Are protection.

Left to their own devices
They make bad choices,
Which lead to
Negative outcomes,
Like living.
primsong: (threejo bessie)
primsong ([personal profile] primsong) wrote in [community profile] dw1002026-03-21 03:47 pm
Entry tags:

Challenge #1083: plurality

Challenge #1083 is plurality.

The rules:
  • All stories must be 100 words long.
  • Please place your story behind a cut if it contains spoilers for the current season.
  • Remember, you don't have to use the challenge word or phrase in your story; it's just there for inspiration.
  • Please include the challenge word or phrase in the subject line of your post.
  • Please use the challenge tag 1083: plurality on any story posted to this challenge.
ranunculus: (Default)
ranunculus ([personal profile] ranunculus) wrote2026-03-21 03:14 pm

Ride, Willow

Rode the Split Rock circle with Dave and Lisa this morning. Lily let me use Beau.  Unlike Firefly, Beau poked along on our way out and had to be encouraged to step out all the time.  Going home he was walking really fast.  It was a nice ride. Lots of pretty spring scenery.  Cows with little calves. 
When we got back I switched to going over and working with the basket weaving ladies. This was our second go at clearing out and cutting back some willow. We have one small area pretty well cleared. It had a lot of blackberry in addition to the willow, much of it dead but still vicious with thorns. Most of the willow there is grey willow, I'm going to cut back some of the willow near the pond which should make good long willow shoots. 
Finally got the last of the compost out of the uphill compost bin and refilled the bottom with manure from the corral. Firefly is undoubtedly grateful to have her corral clean.  Now to fill up the bin with all the stuff that has piled up and is waiting for a chance to compost!
petra: Paul Gross in drag looking blank (Ms Fraser - Secretly Canadian)
petra ([personal profile] petra) wrote2026-03-21 06:04 pm

Recommendation - Quartetto, due South story by sixthlight

Quartetto (146039 words) by Sixthlight
Chapters: 11/11
Fandom: due South
Rating: Explicit
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Relationships: Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalski/Stella Kowalski/Ray Vecchio, Stella Kowalski/Ray Vecchio, Benton Fraser/Ray Vecchio, Benton Fraser/Ray Kowalski, Ray Kowalski/Stella Kowalski, Benton Fraser & Stella Kowalski, Ray Kowalski & Ray Vecchio
Characters: Stella Kowalski (due South), Ray Vecchio, Benton Fraser, Ray Kowalski
Additional Tags: Polyamory, Slow Burn, Trauma Recovery, Queer Themes, Feminist Themes, Bisexuality, Female Protagonist, Second Chances, Post-Canon, Roman fleuve, Foursome - F/M/M/M
Summary:

So, men. Maybe Stella was over that.

*

This story digs deep into the situation implied in the phrase, "I swing both Rays," in that Stella always has, and so does Fraser. Eventually, after some lovely family tension and gloriously due South coincidences, they find their way to a dynamic sort of domestic peace, in defiance of all the canon's fear of limerence.

This was very, very good for my heart, with its rampant bisexuality and careful, thoughtful exploration of how these characters -- some of whom have solid reasons at the outset not to like each other very much -- find attraction, and joy, and above all banter. The banter is fucking golden. I love Fraser's voice, and this reflects it; I love RayK when he's flustered, and there is plenty to fluster him here; I love Vecchio when he is sharp and sweet and sardonic, and oh my heart.

And. Possibly most importantly, Stella. I have never spent much time thinking about her, but how I adore her in this piece: incisive, driven, sure of herself even when things are going completely bananas all around her, because women are the real straight men in due South, except when they're Frannie. (Who is also great here, don't get me wrong.) Stella's family works very well in their role in the narrative, both as foils of what her parents will tolerate (Francis!) and as what they thought Stella should be (ah, Jean, heartbreaking to get everything right). Stella with her view of reality that isn't quite the parareality of due South -- she may talk to Dief, but she doesn't entirely believe he understands her, nor that he talks back, despite the convictions of the people around her. She lives on a different wavelength than Fraser, and even RayV, as the quintessential Woman Who Got Away, but it is deeply satisfying that here, she doesn't get away, and instead, she gets everything she ever wanted.

Every single bowling reference made me make the :D face. Thank you, sixthlight, for saving Stella and Vecchio from the bad, bad canon, and instead delivering them to this much better situation.
kaberett: Trans symbol with Swiss Army knife tools at other positions around the central circle. (Default)
kaberett ([personal profile] kaberett) wrote2026-03-21 10:12 pm
Entry tags:

happy equinox, etc

Today was A Travel Day; yesterday, in preparation for same, I Ran Errands, including "acquiring Tiny Cake" and "visiting the pharmacy".

On the way from those two jobs to the next couple, I passed Several Good Things.

One was a new-to-me flavour of completely ridiculous daffodil:

a double daffodil, with white petals and inner trumpet, protruding past a much shorter orange outer trumpet

It's a double not in the sense of having a confusing froth of intermingled trumpets (as of Double Fashion or Double Camparnelle, both of which exist locally), but in the sense of having two nested trumpets, one shorter and orange, from which the longer white one protrudes. I have never! previously! seen a thing like this! I am really enjoying my current streak of encountering varieties of daffodil that make me go "what the fuck???"

Shortly thereafter I checked over my shoulder while crossing a tiny bridge and was startled and delighted to see A COOT UPON THE NEST that, last I passed it, was clearly still derelict. Obviously I went back and Gazed Upon It for Some Time and was eventually rewarded by it STANDING UP to reveal SEVEN??? (possibly) EGGS!!!

And the Egyptian goslings were peeping about the place when I subsequently passed them on my way back up the hill. A+ errands would run again.

Posts on Matthew Garrett's Blog ([syndicated profile] mjg59_codon_feed) wrote2026-03-21 12:38 pm

SSH certificates and git signing

When you’re looking at source code it can be helpful to have some evidence indicating who wrote it. Author tags give a surface level indication, but it turns out you can just lie and if someone isn’t paying attention when merging stuff there’s certainly a risk that a commit could be merged with an author field that doesn’t represent reality. Account compromise can make this even worse - a PR being opened by a compromised user is going to be hard to distinguish from the authentic user. In a world where supply chain security is an increasing concern, it’s easy to understand why people would want more evidence that code was actually written by the person it’s attributed to.

git has support for cryptographically signing commits and tags. Because git is about choice even if Linux isn’t, you can do this signing with OpenPGP keys, X.509 certificates, or SSH keys. You’re probably going to be unsurprised about my feelings around OpenPGP and the web of trust, and X.509 certificates are an absolute nightmare. That leaves SSH keys, but bare cryptographic keys aren’t terribly helpful in isolation - you need some way to make a determination about which keys you trust. If you’re using someting like GitHub you can extract that information from the set of keys associated with a user account1, but that means that a compromised GitHub account is now also a way to alter the set of trusted keys and also when was the last time you audited your keys and how certain are you that every trusted key there is still 100% under your control? Surely there’s a better way.

SSH Certificates

And, thankfully, there is. OpenSSH supports certificates, an SSH public key that’s been signed by some trusted party and so now you can assert that it’s trustworthy in some form. SSH Certificates also contain metadata in the form of Principals, a list of identities that the trusted party included in the certificate. These might simply be usernames, but they might also provide information about group membership. There’s also, unsurprisingly, native support in SSH for forwarding them (using the agent forwarding protocol), so you can keep your keys on your local system, ssh into your actual dev system, and have access to them without any additional complexity.

And, wonderfully, you can use them in git! Let’s find out how.

Local config

There’s two main parameters you need to set. First,

1
git config set gpg.format ssh

because unfortunately for historical reasons all the git signing config is under the gpg namespace even if you’re not using OpenPGP. Yes, this makes me sad. But you’re also going to need something else. Either user.signingkey needs to be set to the path of your certificate, or you need to set gpg.ssh.defaultKeyCommand to a command that will talk to an SSH agent and find the certificate for you (this can be helpful if it’s stored on a smartcard or something rather than on disk). Thankfully for you, I’ve written one. It will talk to an SSH agent (either whatever’s pointed at by the SSH_AUTH_SOCK environment variable or with the -agent argument), find a certificate signed with the key provided with the -ca argument, and then pass that back to git. Now you can simply pass -S to git commit and various other commands, and you’ll have a signature.

Validating signatures

This is a bit more annoying. Using native git tooling ends up calling out to ssh-keygen2, which validates signatures against a file in a format that looks somewhat like authorized-keys. This lets you add something like:

1
* cert-authority ssh-rsa AAAA…

which will match all principals (the wildcard) and succeed if the signature is made with a certificate that’s signed by the key following cert-authority. I recommend you don’t read the code that does this in git because I made that mistake myself, but it does work. Unfortunately it doesn’t provide a lot of granularity around things like “Does the certificate need to be valid at this specific time” and “Should the user only be able to modify specific files” and that kind of thing, but also if you’re using GitHub or GitLab you wouldn’t need to do this at all because they’ll just do this magically and put a “verified” tag against anything with a valid signature, right?

Haha. No.

Unfortunately while both GitHub and GitLab support using SSH certificates for authentication (so a user can’t push to a repo unless they have a certificate signed by the configured CA), there’s currently no way to say “Trust all commits with an SSH certificate signed by this CA”. I am unclear on why. So, I wrote my own. It takes a range of commits, and verifies that each one is signed with either a certificate signed by the key in CA_PUB_KEY or (optionally) an OpenPGP key provided in ALLOWED_PGP_KEYS. Why OpenPGP? Because even if you sign all of your own commits with an SSH certificate, anyone using the API or web interface will end up with their commits signed by an OpenPGP key, and if you want to have those commits validate you’ll need to handle that.

In any case, this should be easy enough to integrate into whatever CI pipeline you have. This is currently very much a proof of concept and I wouldn’t recommend deploying it anywhere, but I am interested in merging support for additional policy around things like expiry dates or group membership.

Doing it in hardware

Of course, certificates don’t buy you any additional security if an attacker is able to steal your private key material - they can steal the certificate at the same time. This can be avoided on almost all modern hardware by storing the private key in a separate cryptographic coprocessor - a Trusted Platform Module on PCs, or the Secure Enclave on Macs. If you’re on a Mac then Secretive has been around for some time, but things are a little harder on Windows and Linux - there’s various things you can do with PKCS#11 but you’ll hate yourself even more than you’ll hate me for suggesting it in the first place, and there’s ssh-tpm-agent except it’s Linux only and quite tied to Linux.

So, obviously, I wrote my own. This makes use of the go-attestation library my team at Google wrote, and is able to generate TPM-backed keys and export them over the SSH agent protocol. It’s also able to proxy requests back to an existing agent, so you can just have it take care of your TPM-backed keys and continue using your existing agent for everything else. In theory it should also work on Windows3 but this is all in preparation for a talk I only found out I was giving about two weeks beforehand, so I haven’t actually had time to test anything other than that it builds.

And, delightfully, because the agent protocol doesn’t care about where the keys are actually stored, this still works just fine with forwarding - you can ssh into a remote system and sign something using a private key that’s stored in your local TPM or Secure Enclave. Remote use can be as transparent as local use.

Wait, attestation?

Ah yes you may be wondering why I’m using go-attestation and why the term “attestation” is in my agent’s name. It’s because when I’m generating the key I’m also generating all the artifacts required to prove that the key was generated on a particular TPM. I haven’t actually implemented the other end of that yet, but if implemented this would allow you to verify that a key was generated in hardware before you issue it with an SSH certificate - and in an age of agentic bots accidentally exfiltrating whatever they find on disk, that gives you a lot more confidence that a commit was signed on hardware you own.

Conclusion

Using SSH certificates for git commit signing is great - the tooling is a bit rough but otherwise they’re basically better than every other alternative, and also if you already have infrastructure for issuing SSH certificates then you can just reuse it4 and everyone wins.


  1. Did you know you can just download people’s SSH pubkeys from github from https://github.com/<username>.keys? Now you do ↩︎

  2. Yes it is somewhat confusing that the keygen command does things other than generate keys ↩︎

  3. This is more difficult than it sounds ↩︎

  4. And if you don’t, by implementing this you now have infrastructure for issuing SSH certificates and can use that for SSH authentication as well. ↩︎

sholio: (B5-station)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2026-03-21 11:59 am
Entry tags:

A quiet Saturday

I posted some more Babylon 5 fic in the last couple of days: a new Londo/G'Kar fake dating fic plus a new chapter of the B5 catacomb WIP.

It's been a year this month since I started watching the show - my first post under the B5 tag was posted March 3, 2025 after watching the first couple of episodes. Still completely gone on it! I regret nothing!

In other news, NYT gift link to an article about Paul Brainerd, creator of Aldus PageMaker and inventor of the term "desktop publishing." This was a fascinating nostalgia read for me because, while I had no idea of the actual history, this guy (and Adobe and Apple) created the professional world of my young adulthood. My first job out of college in (I think) 1998 was working in the layout department of a newspaper that had just recently (last few years) gone from paste-up to an all-Mac layout room using a program similar to PageMaker from a third-party software maker that no longer exists. PageMaker - which I also learned to use in the college computer lab, and later at work - was the direct predecessor of InDesign, widely used even today. It's interesting to think back on those old newspaper days and how thoroughly they shaped me and continue to shape me. The computer/layout/marketing experience I got as a layout artist in the late 90s and 2000s has been immensely useful for my current self-publishing career.

It continues to be horrendously cold. We've been sitting under a high-pressure ridge and have had gorgeous sunny days that are absolutely freezing. It was -20F when I got up this morning and it's 0F out there right now. My husband's (uni-age) students are over here today because they wanted to help him dig out an ancient non-working snowblower that someone gave us ages ago from a snowbank and try to get it working again. (We do actually have TWO other snowblowers. This is just for fun.)

I took this picture on a walk up our driveway to the highway to get the mail a couple of days ago:

a long expanse of snow-covered road with piles of snow on each side

At least at this time of year, the sun warms it up SOMEWHAT during the day - in January it can sit at -40 24/7 for weeks; at this time of year we're still experiencing 20-40 degree increases during the day .... which is still barely enough to push us above 0F. The 10-day forecast shows that it will be glacially (haha) warming up, but still may not have crawled into above-freezing temps by the end of the month. UGH, I'M READY FOR SPRING.
calimac: (Default)
calimac ([personal profile] calimac) wrote2026-03-21 12:23 pm

petty annoyances of the week

1. It was still officially winter until Friday, but the weather out here skipped spring and went straight into summer. Temperatures were around 90, hotter in LA. The cats were lying on the linoleum.

2. My car was in the shop for repairs after the stupid U Haul driver clipped me a couple weeks ago. They said it was a 4-day job, so I brought it in Monday morning, but I wasn't able to pick it up until literally ten minutes before they closed for the weekend on Friday. I'd been able to survive the week without a rental (which I'd have had to pay for myself), making necessary errands in B's car, but I'll need my own this weekend, so it's good that's over. The shop did do a very nice job, and cleaned up the interior too.

2a. In the shop's waiting area were magazines to browse, some of them issues of a body shop trade journal called Fender Bender. Most of its contents were about the economics of the trade, but each issue has a puff profile of a shop. One of these is in San Francisco, and the article said it had a branch in Moraine County. That's "moraine" as in what a glacier leaves behind. It's actually Marin.

3. I can't get into the Social Security website to download my 1099. They've changed their login to require a smartphone to jump through the hoops, and like a lot of older Social Security recipients, I have a dumb phone. They don't tell you that you need a smartphone, of course. First is the two-factor ID, so they text you a code. That a dumbphone can handle, but it's the last thing. Then they want you to snap a photo of your ID, but there's actually an option at the bottom, "I don't have a smartphone." That's the last time you'll see that. It offers an upload. So off to FedEx to make a PDF. Then when you try to upload it, they tell you it doesn't take PDFs, only JPGs. Find a site that converts them. Then they tell you your files are too small. Find a site that promises to increase the size of your files. Discover that it reduces them instead. Find another site that actually does as it promises. Upload the files. Then you have to click on a verification URL the site sends to your phone. I can't do that, I don't have a smartphone, remember? I already told you that. Painstakingly copy the long link text to my desktop browser. Get in and answer the questions, but then it says the link has expired because I took too long.
At this point I give up, having not even gotten to the promised final step, which is "a brief video call." I can do video calls, I do them all the time on Zoom, but by now I suspect it will only accept your cell phone number, and I can't do video calls on a dumb phone.
Go to the pre-login part of the SSA website. Tells me I can get the 1099 online. No I can't. Get address of local office. Will go in on Monday morning.
juan_gandhi: (Default)
Juan-Carlos Gandhi ([personal profile] juan_gandhi) wrote2026-03-21 08:17 pm
Entry tags:

суббота в Лавардаке и Барбасте

Река Желиз и мельница


Река Желиз, крепость и мельница Moulin de Tour


Загадочные развалины




Цветёт слива
sovay: (Lord Peter Wimsey: passion)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2026-03-21 02:58 pm

You are just the fingertips of something

The afternoon's mail brought my contributor's copy of Not One of Us #86, containing my poem "Northern Comfort." I wrote it out of my discoveries of the ghost-ground that has been directly underfoot all my life and longer, from King Philip's War to Pomp's Wall, and this administration and its murderous terror of history. It shares a page and an issue of emptiness with a precisely targeted incantation by Gwynne Garfinkle as well the equally hollowing fiction and poetry of Kris Schokrowsky, Penny Durham, Carsten Cheung, Jennifer Crow, and more. I almost referred to the covert art by John and Flo Stanton, obscured by shattered webs of negative space or the rust-light of abandoned industries. Subscribe! Contribute! Make the right kind of strangeness in this world. I am off to South Station to collect one north-traveling seal.
kiya: (jade)
kiya ([personal profile] kiya) wrote2026-03-21 02:30 pm

Depression is winning today

Rat



The poem says
Hope is a sewer rat
Adapted
For survival

Despite the plague
And the filth
And the hate

And I
Got the t-shirt
The one with the rats
That says
"You will not
Exterminate
Us"

That they
Resurrected
For rats
Like me

But I am
Sick
Of gnawing
A way
Out

And so tired
Of the stench.
igenlode: The pirate sloop 'Horizon' from "Treasures of the Indies" (Default)
Igenlode Wordsmith ([personal profile] igenlode) wrote2026-03-21 05:41 pm
Entry tags:

Seed log

We have lots of tiny pink Linaria seedlings. Also possibly chives -- it looks for all the world like some sort of little stars of bog-grass or young moss growing in the pot, but as there isn't normally any grass up here the odds are probably reasonable that it might be the chives that I did after all sow in there. There is a good chance that it is moss, though -- really doesn't look like newly-germinated seedlings to me :-(
A Swan River daisy has germinated. Sowed marigolds and (optimistically) basil, in a very small pot that can be squeezed into the mini-greenhouse alongside the peas.

I repotted the thyme by the brute-force method of ripping the disintegrating plastic pot off it into pieces, then pulling off a lot of the rootball so that I could fit some compost in around it -- this is in fact the 'old' thyme that I thought was dying several years ago and that was supposed to be replaced by the acquisition of a new seedling. The two plants are now approximately the same size! The stump of the 'old' kale that was supposed to be being replaced by its seedling offspring is still producing leaves and looking about as healthy as they are, too...

The sorrel probably wants repotting yet again, but I confined myself to pulling off the mass of roots that have come out of the bottom of the pot. I think that what happened was that it grew roots downwards (where there was very little new soils for it) rather than sideways as I had hoped -- unsurprising, really, but I don't really want to sacrifice one of my deep tomato-pots for its benefit. The winter purslane has rotted away entirely, and I don't think it managed to set any seeds :-(
oursin: Brush the Wandering Hedgehog by the fire (Default)
oursin ([personal profile] oursin) wrote2026-03-21 04:44 pm

World Poetry Day again, apparently

And I don't think I've had Edna before??

Recuerdo

We were very tired, we were very merry—
We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry.
It was bare and bright, and smelled like a stable—
But we looked into a fire, we leaned across a table,
We lay on a hill-top underneath the moon;
And the whistles kept blowing, and the dawn came soon.

We were very tired, we were very merry—
We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry;
And you ate an apple, and I ate a pear,
From a dozen of each we had bought somewhere;
And the sky went wan, and the wind came cold,
And the sun rose dripping, a bucketful of gold.

We were very tired, we were very merry,
We had gone back and forth all night on the ferry.
We hailed, “Good morrow, mother!” to a shawl-covered head,
And bought a morning paper, which neither of us read;
And she wept, “God bless you!” for the apples and pears,
And we gave her all our money but our subway fares.

brithistorian: (Default)
brithistorian ([personal profile] brithistorian) wrote2026-03-21 11:10 am
Entry tags:

Fingers say what?

I talk with my hands. This amuses A. to no end: She's the one who's part-Italian and yet I'm the one who can't talk without gesticulating. Whether I'm talking about sending an email (fingers typing on a keyboard), sending a fax (hands palm-down, fingertips guiding the paper into the machine), or chopping vegetables (left hand moving the knife up and down, right hand advancing the the vegetable toward it), I don't even think about it, but my hands accompany my words.

Yesterday, we got some small cucumbers and I was talking about using some of them to make oi muchim (a Korean cucumber salad with thinly sliced cucumbers in a gochugaru-seasoned dressing). I was talking about slicing the cucumbers, and she looked at my hands and asked "What's that?" I looked at my hands and saw that my right hand was flat, palm-up, while my left hand was palm-down, in a claw grip, moving back and forth over my right hand. And then it hit me: When I make oi muchim, I don't slice the cucumbers with a knife. I slice them with a mandoline. And without even thinking about it, my hands were doing to the correct motion for the action I would be doing.

I don't even notice that I'm doing this until she points it out, so I don't know if I could stop it if I tried.

eye_of_a_cat: (Default)
eye_of_a_cat ([personal profile] eye_of_a_cat) wrote2026-03-21 04:22 pm

Dear Worldbuilding Exchange writer:

Thank you so much for making something for me! I have some overall likes and DNWs below, and then some fandom-specific ideas and things I like about the canon and characters. Please only consider all this as potential suggestions put out there in case you find them useful, though, and write/make whatever best calls to you. So long as it avoids my DNWs I am sure I will be happy; I love seeing other people's takes on characters and relationships I like and don't require them to follow my own ideas or headcanons. Treats always welcome!

Shortcut links within this letter:
General:
likes; NSFW likes; DNWs; opt-ins.
Fandoms:
Babylon 5; Andor ; Silmarillion; LOTRRings of Power; Star Wars: original and prequel trilogies

General likes )
NSFW likes )
DNWs )
Opt-ins )




Babylon 5 )

Andor )


The Silmarillion )
LOTR )


The Rings of Power )

Star Wars: Original and Prequel Trilogies )

Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal ([syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed) wrote2026-03-21 11:20 am
juan_gandhi: (Default)
Juan-Carlos Gandhi ([personal profile] juan_gandhi) wrote2026-03-21 04:16 pm

для тех, кто не понял, повторяем

Don Katalan на тему "почему это Украина хороших русским не помогает" (а всяким там арабам помогает) 

Линк двухлетней давности