The frost roads

Jan. 4th, 2026 02:39 pm
dolorosa_12: (winter pine branches)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
It's Sunday afternoon, and I've got one more day of holiday tomorrow before heading back to work on Tuesday. It's been a good, restful, and much-needed break, and I'm hopeful that the aftereffects will remain for some time once everyday life resumes. (I'm resolutely trying to redirect my mind every time it contemplates global politics, because the panic spirals are intense.)

This weekend has in many ways been one in which I gradually reset myself to standard weekend routines: two hours at the gym yesterday (after a month without attending either of my classes due to illness and then Christmas holiday closures; my legs hurt), trundling around the market with Matthias to get the week's fruit, vegetables, and other groceries, 1km in the pool this morning. I've kept up swimming and daily yoga pretty much throughout the entire holiday, so apart from the absolute arctic temperatures when walking to and from the pool, that wasn't too much of a shock to the system.

Last night Matthias and I watched our first film of the year, Wake Up Dead Man, the latest Benoit Blanc mystery. As with the previous two, this one is tropey good fun, stealing gleefully from just about every famous locked room mystery, and involving the murder of a truly unpleasant Catholic priest in a small American town. If anything, the skewering of contemporary US politics is even more blunt than in previous films in the series, but given — with the mystery solved, and everything revealed — the various unpleasant avatars of the far-right malaise get their well-deserved comeuppance, I was quite happy for this element to be front and centre. I felt as if Daniel Craig wasn't quite as invested in this third outing, so I wonder if it might be the last, but still found it enjoyable enough.

This year's reading is off to a good start. I deliberately saved Murder in the Trembling Lands, the twenty-first (!) book in Barbara Hambly's Benjamin January series of historical mysteries so that it would be the first book of the new year, and I'm glad that I did so. If you've not picked up this series by now (or lost interest at an earlier stage), there's not much here that will convince you to change your mind, but if you love it as much as I do, you'll find all the familiar elements present and correct: the great sense of place in Hambly's evocation of 1840s New Orleans, the complex network of relationships in Ben's family both by blood and by choice, the tenacity with which Ben and his besieged community of free Black residents of the city try to build and preserve and sustain their lives of fragile safety in the face of all the individual and systemic pressures trying to overwhelm them, a mystery that takes us back into buried secrets of Ben's, and other characters' pasts that refuse to remain buried and threaten to bubble up to destroy them, etc. In other words, a solid contribution to what is now a sprawling series — but one to which I am always happy to return.

I followed that up with a slender little book, The Wax Child (Olga Ravn, translated from the Danish by Martin Aitken), which is a lush, lyrical, almost dreamlike account of a horrific series of witch trials in Denmark in the seventeenth century. The writing is powerful and lush, interweaving the unfolding catastrophe rushing towards the accused women with excerpts from contemporary Danish books of witchcraft.

That's it in terms of reading and viewing for now (except to say that if you have access to the BBC, I highly recommend David Attenborough's latest documentary, which is a single, hour-long episode focused on the urban life of animals in London — with some surprising creatures and moments!). I've filled a few prompts for [community profile] fandomtrees, I've caught up on both Dreamwidth and AO3 Yuletide comments, and I'm going to try to keep the remaining day-and-a-half of holidays slow and gentle. We're getting takeaway tonight, and will spend the evening vegetating in front of the TV. Tomorrow, I might wander into town to visit the public library, and then take the Christmas decorations down, and then the year will start to rush on, unfolding in front of me.

Film post: Treasure Island (1999)

Jan. 4th, 2026 02:08 pm
loganberrybunny: Drawing of my lapine character's face by Eliki (Default)
[personal profile] loganberrybunny
Public
Treasure Island (1999) film poster
Treasure Island (1999)

I found this while I was in a bit of a rush looking for a film to watch and assumed it was the 1950 Disney version. It isn't, more's the pity. By prolific director Peter Rowe, this is a rather lacklustre adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's classic adventure story. There's nowhere near enough real tension or excitement, and though Jack Palance (in his last feature, unless you count the direct-to-DVD Prancer Returns) tries hard as Long John Silver there's only so much he can do with the uninspired script. It was shot in the Isle of Man and looks it, with chilly grey skies predominating. The Hispaniola ship does at least look great, though sadly the Earl of Pembroke which played her was scrapped a few years ago. Overall, though, this feels like a rather drab TV film. ★★

Books of 2025

Jan. 5th, 2026 01:01 am
littlerhymes: (literature)
[personal profile] littlerhymes
How many?
128, including comics and manga. Biggest year in over a decade.

I did a lot of buddy reading this year, with [personal profile] osprey_archer and [personal profile] tullycat (separately), as well as a non-fandom friend who wanted to get back into reading.

2024 - 105
2023 - 84
2022 - 85
2021 - 60

How many not by men?
66

Most books by a single author?
13 by Joan Aiken - [personal profile] osprey_archer and I did a read through her Wolves of Willoughby Chase series and it was wonderful.

Longest and shortest?
Shortest was The Real Inspector Hound by Tom Stoppard - plays are short!

Longest was Dune by Frank Herbert which was simply too long.

Favourite?
Butter by Asako Yuzuki really stuck with me for how it explored food, murder, and feminism.

The Spear Cuts Through Water by Simon Jiminez was amazing, an epic fantasy that feels arrestingly original.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is a classic for a reason, who would have thunk it.

The Wall by Marlen Haushofer, from the 1960s, I feel this should be way more widely known as a work of feminist speculative fiction.

I liked all the Joan Aiken reads to varying degrees, but special mention to The Stolen Lake which is an absolutely bonkers take on Arthurian legend and alternate history, starring Dido Twite my favourite girl in the world.

Favourite re-reads:
Heaven Official's Blessing by MXTX

Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie

Honourable mentions:
Don't Bite The Sun and Drinking Sapphire Wine by Tanith Lee, which were very funny and scarily prescient about the devaluation of art.

The Racket by Conor Niland is an excellent tennis memoir from a journeyman player.

Your Utopia by Bora Chung is a great collection of science fiction short stories.

Bad Blood by John Carreyrou, about Elizabeth Holmes and the Theranos scam, made me despair of humanity - but was so entertainingly written!

Batman: Wayne Family Adventures was a lot of fun.

Least favourite?
The Season by Helen Garner - sorry it was not good as a sports book or a memoir.

Oldest?
King John by Shakespeare, which I also saw staged as a read-through by Bell Shakespeare.

Newest?
I don't usually read a lot of new releases but this year was an exception. Emperor of Gladness, Cactus Pear for My Beloved and Chinese Parents Don't Say I Love You were all released around the same time. Oh and Kings of This World by Elizabeth Knox.

Any in translation?
Tons! Mostly Japanese, Korean and Chinese.
spikedluv: (winter: mittens by raynedanser)
[personal profile] spikedluv
I did not go downtown today. Instead I went back to bed after Pip left and I got the dogs in, and slept until almost 8:30am! o_O That’s pretty late for me.

I did two loads of laundry, hand-washed dishes, emptied the dishwasher, went for several walks with Pip and the dogs, cut up chicken for the dogs' meals, and scooped kitty litter. We had leftover pulled pork for supper. We also finished the spinach dip. I’m glad I made it again to assuage my feelings of really missing it, but I don’t think I’ll make it again because of the garlic. I can only think that my sensitivity to garlic has increased as I got older. *sad face*

I tried the Christmas Spice tea today. I was curious about it, so I looked it up. The wonderful natural flavors of cinnamon, clove, nutmeg and orange are blended with a rich, black tea to create a delicious holiday tea. I figured there’d be cinnamon, but I wasn’t sure what else. It’s pretty good.

I added ~900 words to my [community profile] smallfandomfest fic!! I finished one of my books and read some fanfic. I watched an HGTV program and more Secrets of the Zoo.

I have been remiss in thanking two more people for their Christmas cards. [personal profile] pattrose and [personal profile] turps, thank you so much!!

Temps started out at 18.3(F) and reached 30.9. There was some wind again today, which made walking unpleasant, but also some sun, to give you false hope. *g*


Mom Update:

Mom sounded okay when I spoke to her. Sister A visited, and my brother called to say he’d be out to visit tomorrow (now today, Sunday). She didn’t throw up anything, but food sat heavy in her stomach today, which made her feel off. I should know better than to think that healing is a straight line, but I had hoped she’d continue showing improvements without back-sliding.
alias_sqbr: (up and down)
[personal profile] alias_sqbr
Spirit City Lofi Sessions is a productivity game but I'm including it anyway :P

Actual puzzle games: Strange Antiquities, Mega Mosaic, Botany Manor, Logiart Grimoire, The Roottrees are Dead
Read more... )

More snow

Jan. 4th, 2026 12:03 pm
cmcmck: (Default)
[personal profile] cmcmck
The forecast was for snow later this afternoon but it has already hit us!


More pics )

Snow!

Jan. 4th, 2026 11:31 am
lexin: (Default)
[personal profile] lexin
We have snow here in Wales. Not just on the mountains, which is normal, but down here in the town, which is weird.

[personal profile] aunty_marion should be going home to Islington tomorrow, but at the moment there are no taxis running and the situation may remain this way tomorrow and possibly Wednesday. So we keep our fingers crossed that the snow will melt. There are also no trains.

In other news, the toilet on my en-suite is blocked. I have tried everything I know of and it’s still blocked. I have arranged for someone to come and unblock it tomorrow, but likewise I am half expecting a phone call to say they can’t make it due to snow. To add annoyance, I am in the middle of changing insurance for those sort of things. British Gas Homecare wanted £705 for the year. I baulked. The new supplier, YourRepair is charging £450 (ish).

Babylon 5 script books, part 2

Jan. 3rd, 2026 10:43 pm
sholio: (B5-station)
[personal profile] sholio
Some more random excerpts from the script books, currently going through season 2.

(At the present time, I've taken pictures of pages in the book and haven't transcribed it. Sorry for lack of legibility/accessibility! I will try to type them up later.)

Spoilers for a lot of the show )

(no subject)

Jan. 3rd, 2026 11:08 pm
summercomfort: (Default)
[personal profile] summercomfort
wow, I'm not used to daily updates yet, but ...

Wow, what a thing to wake up to, Trump having arrested Maduro???? Yikes. And planning to govern Venezuela? Double yikes. Just yesterday Spouse was wondering if there was going to be a January surprise, and lo and behold, here it is. I'm curious what the international response is going to be, outside of the statements and reprimands, but holy cow. On the way the taiko, when we'd just heard about the arrest, I was like, "best case scenario, everyone scolds Trump enough that he returns Maduro and helps facilitate a democratic election", but hoo boy.

Anyway, after Thurs and Friday where there wasn't anywhere imminent that we had to be, so I could just laze about the house and sleep or not sleep as I wished, today was a proper Saturday, which meant taiko in the morning and Chinese school in the afternoon. Thankfully I took a few hours yesterday actually grading the Chinese homework, so it wasn't too bad, but I was suuuuper sleepy during taiko. It was a little frustrating that ... well, we were short a person for doing solos for the upcoming performance, and I was like "well, if you really need someone, I can fill in," and the senpai first did a lot of humming and hedging, and then was like "you're definitely staying in your currently assigned spot, and I don't see that changing." And I was like, omg, either it is a call for volunteers or you are appointing someone. Don't pretend to call for volunteers if you really just want to appoint someone. This is actually a direction that the taiko group seems to be going in that I'm not... super happy with? Like, I understand that there's a certain degree of "if you don't know this song you probably shouldn't perform it," but now there seems to be a "solos need to be pre-vetted and some people shouldn't perform because their poses aren't good enough", and I'm like ... I joined this group because it's about playing and having fun? Like, sure, the level 3 folks probably want to do a lot more form refinement stuff, but that's one of the reasons I'm staying in level 2? And this performance is literally a "friends and family" celebration? If you invite people to watch, wouldn't you want a change to perform a little more, even if your stance isn't perfect? I'm just not a fan of the movement towards gate-keeping.

Anyways, I'm working on a crocheted bucket hat for spouse with lots of cute flowers on it because he said that he wanted to look cute. :3 I started it on the plane, and I think I'll probably have it done tomorrow. If it looks nice I can do other ones. :) I'm really excited the spouse is looking for a new look! He's going to get his ears pierced, so I'm excited to get cute earrings for him, too! :DDDD

Tomorrow is a pretty relaxing day, with boardgames playdate in the morning, and some afternoon no-child time, so I can probably do the things then that I didn't get to today, such as Chinese school payroll stuff, and maybe I can do a little lesson planning so that I can hit the ground running on Monday. (I think it's probably best if I call the car lady on Monday or Tuesday, when I know she is at work)

Daily Happiness

Jan. 3rd, 2026 10:40 pm
torachan: scott pilgrim pouting (scott pilgrim - pout)
[personal profile] torachan
1. The rain didn't start until late morning today so I was able to cram in all the things on my to-do list that involved going outside in before the rain started.

2. I had to go to the UPS store today to drop off an Amazon return (also done before the rain started!) and I stopped in at See's Candies, which is right next door, and use the gift card I got for Christmas.

3. We've started planning for our next trip to Japan (we're going in April again). This time we're going to spend a few days in Osaka first (including going to Universal Studios) and then head over to Tokyo. Last time we did nine days including travel, which meant really only six days in Japan. This time we're planning maybe ten days in Japan plus travel days. We haven't made any firm plans yet in terms of hotels and flights and stuff, but we're making lists of things we want to do and getting excited!

4. Molly!

littlefics: Three miniature books standing on an open normal-sized book. (Default)
[personal profile] littlefics posting in [community profile] seasonsofdrabbles

Seasons of Drabbles is an exchange for the creation of drabbles and drabble variants which runs 4 times a year.* The current round is for winter 2026.

*Each round takes place sometime within a three-month period (March-May, June-August, September-November, December-February). Each round will take about a month from nominations through author reveals.

Schedule:
Nominations open: Sunday, January 4 (will remain open through signups)
Signups open: Sunday, January 11
Signups close: Sunday, January 18 @ 11:59pm Eastern Standard time (Countdown)
Assignments out by: Wednesday, January 21
Assignments due: Saturday, January 31 @ 11:59pm Eastern Standard time (Countdown)
Collection opens: Saturday, February 7 @ 1:00pm Eastern Standard time (Countdown)
Authors revealed: Tuesday, February 10 @ 1:00pm Eastern Standard time (Countdown)

This round's AO3 Collection | Tagset | Nomination guidelines | Requests App | Mod email: seasonsofdrabbles@gmail.com

Need to contact us or have a question? See the Mod Contact post!

The full Guidelines are below and we strongly encourage you to read them! Here are some quick notes, though:
  • First time doing a fic exchange? Welcome! Fanlore has some helpful explanations about how AO3 exchanges work and general exchange etiquette. Don't be afraid to ask a question if something's confusing.
  • Here, "drabble" does not just mean a short fic, but a specific wordcount. In addition to single drabbles (fics of exactly 100 words), we accept double drabbles (200 words) and triple drabbles (300 words). We also accept drabble series/sequences.
  • When you sign up, you cannot exclude single drabbles from your offers or requests. You are still welcome to request or offer the other drabble types, you just can't leave 100-word drabbles out entirely from your signup. See below for more details about this recent rule change.
  • Participants must be 18+.
  • Don't use generative AI for your gifts.


Guidelines )

52/311: More Rain Due

Jan. 3rd, 2026 04:21 pm
rejectomorph: (Default)
[personal profile] rejectomorph
Oh, I thought I'd done this, but I guess not. Despite a night of often furious storming, and a dark gray morning of nearly imperceptible dawn, Saturday brightened through the afternoon and left us with nearly dry pavement at sunset. I opened the blinds for about three hours of afternoon sunlight to warm the bed. The rain is predicted to return tonight, with more wind, and both Sunday and Monday are still expected to be very wet, but after next Tuesday the forecast is saying no more rain for at least ten days.

This is unfortunate, as the state is overall only at about half normal snowpack levels for this date, with the south in much better shape than the north. January through March is typically the snowiest season, but we need to get started on that accumulation soon. The next couple of days could add some welcome snow, but not enough to catch up to a typical season. The Pacific Northwest and the Rocky Mountain states are also suffering from scant snowfall this year. The problem is that this years rain has been coming from the tropics rather than the north Pacific. Being warmer, tropical storms bring lots of rain but are not cold enough to provide lasting snow. Given that this is a La Nina year, it probably won't get fixed. We could be in for two or three years of drought. It could get ugly.

Tonight's rain hasn't started yet, and I'll probably have to get to sleep before it does. If it's anything like last night though, I'm sure it will wake me up. But dammit, I'm sneezing and my nose has gotten runny again. I hope I didn't get a load of germs with my groceries. Infection is the last thing I need this time of year.

Snowflake (pet), and 2025 book meme

Jan. 3rd, 2026 07:04 pm
hamsterwoman: (ASOIAF -- Blinky Tully)
[personal profile] hamsterwoman
two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text

Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom: Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!

I was going to say that I don’t have any pets, but I guess that’s not true anymore: we do have the “sidewalk fish”, so called because we rescued them from the sidewalk when our neighbors moved out and left an aquarium full of murky water along with other garbage for trash pickup. Sidewalk fish story ) My daughter subsequently added some shrimp to the tank (now known as “the shrimpfestation”) and also a mystery snail, who proceeded to do what mystery snails do and gift us with progeny. The current snail count of the tank are two adult snails, a blue and a magenta, who are the children of that original snail, and >20 baby snails, the third generation. (Anyone want a mystery snail?)

Feeeesh )

As for pets-in-my-fandoms, a couple pop up here and there, more or less significantly – I mean, Bill the Pony is not quite a pet, Bel Thorne’s exotic pet hamster is hilarious to me personally but extremely minor, I’m not all that fond of more significant pets/pet-adjacent critters in my fandoms, like Toby the wonder dog in Rivers of London or Greebo in Discworld. But my answer to this is definitely Loiosh in the Vlad Taltos books. He is also not exactly a pet, being, rather, a witch’s familiar with a very serious job to do, and also a sapient creature, but he is also not NOT a pet, and I’ve wanted a wiseass shoulder-dragon ever since meeting him.

*

2025 books and book meme:

2025 book list )

My usual year-end book meme )

not yet reading

Jan. 3rd, 2026 06:44 pm
thistleingrey: (Default)
[personal profile] thistleingrey
A web search, its results no doubt infested with sloppy attempts to gain page views, indicates that if I like reading (some of) Ann Cleeves's novels, I would also like the work of

Louise Penny
Elly Griffiths
Richard Osman
Tana French
Kate Ellis
Val McDermid
Kia Abdullah

I'm happy to wade through a novel or two apiece, but if anyone has thoughts on these, I'm interested! Any writers you'd add? (ETA Janice Hallett has been suggested in the comments.)

I've bounced off the first two French titles, some years ago (though I may try her newer setting). McDermid seems more thriller-angled somehow. Isn't Abdullah known for tense courtroom scenes?

Perhaps relevant: I don't love Cleeves's work and have bounced off at least three of her novels, but (this is positive!) her fiction has reliably been just interesting enough, just intricate enough, to feel soothing when I'd like not to be surprised much by a novel. To me, her stories emphasize humans and their places. I prefer the Matthew Venn sequence to Vera Stanhope or Jimmy Perez because Venn makes the investigations almost an ensemble effort---trickier to write, perhaps.
conuly: (Default)
[personal profile] conuly
I thought I outgrew this behavior a good two decades ago, but I guess illegal wars really get my dander up.

The conversation, such as it was, was long and pointless, but it did have this amusing, paraphrased exchange:

Them: I didn't say that you should say "ones of them", I just said that even though it sounds wrong it's technically grammatical! Go to ChatGPT, it'll tell you the same thing!

Me: No, it won't, here's the screenshot.

Them: Well! That doesn't count because it doesn't cite a rule! I did check before posting that you should go to ChatGPT, you know!

(They spontaneously claimed elsewhere that they understand the idea of descriptivist linguistics, but I think they don't understand how much of language has yet to be described, even in very well-studied languages like English.)

2025 Reading Reflection

Jan. 3rd, 2026 09:15 pm
kitewithfish: (Default)
[personal profile] kitewithfish
Year End Reading Meme for 2025

How many books did you read this year? Any trends in genre/length/themes/etc?

102!
Themes - eh, mostly sci fi, fantasy, and history.

What are your Top 3 books that you read this year?
The world is too big and full of books for just three!
Fiction:
Return of the King – yeah, yeah, we know, Tolkien is great, but like, I didn’t realize that this book was going to be so full of the heartfelt need to rest and respite after war and suffering and babe, I loved that. Excellent conclusion of the trilogy.
Lent by Jo Walton – The first half of this novel is a history of Girolamo Savonarola up to his death, and the second half of the book is about what happens after he dies. It’s phenomenal and weird and I loved it.
The Fortunate Fall by Cameron Reed – I’m fresh off this one and I found it a fascinating look at memory from a cyberpunk future that almost and didn’t happen.

Nonfiction:
The Power Broker – yeah, this book was 50 years old last year and I read it and it explained New York and also gives a reasonable look back at how American politics developed. It's also just masterfully written and makes other books look lazy and slow about their level of research.
The Other Olympians – Michael Walters - My god, transphobia is literally just recycled Nazi bullshit. Literally, just, it’s Nazi rhetoric about gender roles! This book makes me so happy for trans people in the past and also women’s athletics and also I hate Nazis with new and enduring facets after I read this book. Why could you not just let people be happy, you fucking fascists.
The Revolutionary Temper – Robert Darnton – Slow history! Watch society slowly build up from thinking of their king as the ultimate source of justice to the ultimate impediment to justice. Love it.

What's a book you enjoyed more than you expected?
Conclave – a very simple thrillers style novel but really pleasant to read and added a lovely depth to the film.

Which books most disappointed you this year?
Into the Drowning Deep – because I had hopes. But the worst book I read and finished this year was Mercenary Librarians.

Did you reread any old faves? If so, which one was your favorite?
Misethere – I seem to be re-reading this one annually! I also re-read The Goblin Emperor and the Murderbot Diaries

What's the oldest book you read?

Persuasion by Jane Austen

What's the newest book you read?
Of Monsters and Mainframes

Did you DNF (= did not finish) any books?
The Familiar – Stupid love interest

What was your predominant format this year?
Audio, at 42% - which makes sense, my eyes are getting tired

What's the longest book you read this year?
The Power Broker – So long that almost all of it was read in 2024

What books from your TBR did you not get to this year, but are excited to read in 2026?
Hm, Pass – Maybe I will return to this question.

Did you reach your reading goal for this year (if you had one)?

Yup, and exceeded.

(Adding this question myself) What author did you read the most?
Dorothy Sayers! I read 8 books by her this year!

Columba livia.

Jan. 3rd, 2026 08:31 pm
hannah: (Rabbit hug - fooish_icons)
[personal profile] hannah
Challenge #2: Pets of Fandom

Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!


I've never kept pigeons, but I can say I've cultivated them.

I live in New York City, and it's pigeons wherever you go. You can't avoid them, and it's disappointing most people don't take the time to look at them, pay attention to them, get to know them. They're remarkably congenial, to the point of being accurately called friend-shaped. Which in no small part comes from them mostly being feral domesticated animals, originally kept by people for a variety of reasons from food to companionship who then got let out into the urban wild when people decided they didn't want to take care of them anymore. But it's easy for pigeons to remember what people are there for, when people stop to take the time. If you've ever had your pupils dilated at the optometrist's, I highly recommend finding a pigeon in some sunlight and taking in the genuinely dazzling iridescence of their feathers.

During the worst of 2020, when there were a lot fewer people around the neighborhood, pigeons would often come to my window, mostly to hang out on the AC unit. A nice place to stop for a while. Not thinking much of it, I started leaving seeds out for them, and they learned soon enough it was more than just a place to stop. I liked seeing them, and they liked the seeds, so I'd keep replenishing the tray outside. There were a few months in there - not many, but a few - that I'd get a seven AM wake-up call from the local birds who wanted to be fed, and those birds were the best alarm clock I've ever had. Certainly the sweetest. With few reasons to get out of bed in the morning, it was a nice feeling that one of those reasons was for small animals who were happy to see me.

I'd also take bike rides to get out of my apartment in the afternoons to get some fresh air, and there's a nearby park corner where it didn't take too many days of bringing seeds for a flock of pigeons to recognize me and fly on over whenever I'd come by. But even before they recognized me on sight, they were quick to trust to eat out of my open hands. Very soft feathers, and very warm bodies under the feathers. Some people gave me grief about it. Some people gave me shit about it. A few people, mostly under the age of ten, were delighted and thrilled to get some birdseed of their own and give feeding the pigeons a try themselves. Even if those kids hadn't ever come by, I'd have kept up with it as long as I was doing the rides. I'd seen worse behavior from them, and I didn't need to explain myself. The pigeons didn't rely or depend on me. They weren't my responsibility. They were simply my genuine pleasure.

The world reopened, people moved back into the neighborhood, the tray stopped getting stocked with seeds, I started going to a nearby gym, and my phone serves as my alarm clock. But I still sometimes carry birdseed around, in case there's a chance for another moment with the birds.

two log cabins with snow on the roofs in a wintery forest the text snowflake challenge january 1 - 31 in white cursive text