In which there is a rhapsody that was bohemian
12 June 2025 09:21![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
So...
Contemplating July activities
11 June 2025 23:57![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
July is my birthday month, therefore Best Month, obviously, and I would really like to try to do some kind of "post a short fic every day" thing if I can make it work. Unfortunately I'm suffering a dearth of appropriate challenges, because of course now that I want one and have the mental bandwidth to do something with one, daily month-long prompt challenges and/or bingo card challenges for July are nowhere in sight. The closest thing is July Break Bingo, but I've asked for cards for this before, and I just ... never really do anything with them; I appreciate that it exists, but I think I need more of a - I don't know, social element to it, I guess? Less open-ended, more directed? Their cards just don't really click with me somehow. And I can't find a Tumblr prompt/whump/whatever themed promptfest thing for July.
So I'm kicking around a few different ideas. Why not throw it out to a completely nonbinding poll?
What should I do for July?
A custom bingo card/prompt list created (by me) from all my favorite tropes
11 (52.4%)
A personal challenge to finish older inbox prompts/unwritten prompts from past fests
6 (28.6%)
Find a prompt list from a previous (non-July) fest that I didn't do at the time, and use that
4 (19.0%)
Ask my flist for new prompts until I get 31 of them for fresh inspiration
8 (38.1%)
Run a comment fest over at the Biggles comm
5 (23.8%)
Something else that I will suggest in comments
0 (0.0%)
Chicks of the laughing dove
12 June 2025 12:36![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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It was their first day out of the nest, which they spent on a branch just opposite our window.
For more information (in Russian), see here.
(no subject)
12 June 2025 07:13![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Paul Leni's The Last Warning (bilibili link). The copy on the Internet Archive is quite battered, this one is nicer. The website is weird for online viewing, so thank heavens for third-party tools (hehe). Leni's stuff is always nice, and I'm very curious about the sets (they were reused for The Last Performance apparently).
EDIT: Another upload. 360p. Hey, it's public domain.
Blog post about J. Storer Clouston. Featuring an omnibus edition of The Spy in Black, The Lunatic at Large, Simon and The Man From the Clouds. Conrad Veidt on the cover, never seen that specific publicity portrait. There's a message printed on this edition that he wrote (of course, someone told him to write that). Maintains "Germanisms", I hate he doesn't put the little strike on his t's.
Which Books Gave You the Perfect One-Off Reading Experience?
12 June 2025 06:00![[syndicated profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/feed.png)
Thanks to Jen B. for submitting this interesting take on rereading:
Sarah: It’s like the opposite of “in case of emergency, break glass” books – the “a perfect experience, place this behind glass”This is very random, but I thought of a topic for the SBTB editors to bat around: I know you’ve done comfort reads and favorite re-reads, but does anyone have a book that you read at such a perfect time in your life that you won’t re-read it, because it will never be as good? I had just moved to a new state, the pandemic lockdowns started the day after I arrived, I was in a half-furnished apartment, and I read Evvie Drake Starts Over. It was such a gentle, healing novel about finding yourself, and it was exactly what I needed. While I’m a big novel re-reader, I’ve never touched this one again because I don’t think it will ever hit me with that much force again. Does anyone else have a book like this? Or is this a me thing?
In college we had a tiny shelf of popular novels (it was a tiny school) and there were occasional Elizabeth Lowell, Amanda Quick and Nora Roberts novels. Maybe 4? Not many.
But one day I picked up Charms for the Easy Life by Kaye Gibbons.
I don’t remember a single thing about this book except the tranquil and hopeful feelings that it left me with when I was done
If I went back now 30 years later, this book might not work for me at all. I just remember the experience of having it ease a considerable amount of stress at a time when I needed comfort.
I’ve never read it again.
Amanda: TW for depressionI’m not a re-reader typically, so I think this is an interesting way to view the decision not to reread books. I do worry that some of my favorites won’t hold up and I’m fine to just preserve that singular reading experience in my mind.
For me, I think I’d pick The Bride by Julie Garwood for my top spot of “perfect experience place behind this glass.” I was really deep into my depression and it was the year I read 212 books because all I did was read and make daily trips to pick up my library holds. (Shout out to the Alachua County library and their amazing Friends of the Library sales.) I really lost myself in this book and it gave my bad brain such a distinctive restful break. I’m perfectly okay with freezing that experience in time.
Sneezy: Oh dang, this is such a good question.
Sarah: Amanda, yes – exactly that. I was miserable and stressed and lonely and that book turned all that off for a while.
Sneezy: It’s not until I was thinking about this question that I realized I don’t want to reread Pride and Prejudice. The first time I read the book, it was a translated version edited for children. I did try when my English got better. I was excited to read a famous author in her native language, especially a book I had such fond memories of, but was never able to read more than a few pages. I felt guilty about it for a while, because it felt like a book I was ‘supposed’ to read and one I know I like. Reading what Jen, Sarah, and Amanda wrote made me realize it wasn’t a matter of want, but can’t. Of all the books I read before my family moved to Canada, somehow that book belongs specifically to Smol Sneezy, the one who’s yet to be hyphenated. It got ambered in dimming afternoons and extra thick white toast slathered with peanut butter and my mom’s favourite violin album, well beyond my reach.
It’s a little strange to realize this. It’s not a feeling of nostalgia in the sense that I yearn to return to that time, just a deep sensory memory that cannot be intruded on even if I wanted to. The book feels like an embodiment of paths forever closed, or perhaps more accurately, sacrificed to forge vastly different ones. I have great appreciation for what I have now, but it is a loss all the same.Sarah: You were a different person when you read it, and you can’t go back?
As in, you and the circumstances around you were different and that can’t be replicated?
Lara: Such a great question! I went through a horrific breakup in 2011 and had temporary insomnia. By chance, a friend recommended the Carol Jordan and Tony Hill series by Val McDermid. I was wrapped up in it. Obsessive. It was precisely what my broken heart needed. I haven’t been tempted to revisit these books because they so perfectly met my needs in that moment.
Tara: I used to reread Jane Eyre at least once a year when I was in high school and university. I have a notoriously bad memory, but I remember the day my grade 9 English teacher handed it to me in the library because she thought I’d love it and she was right! Now, I can’t go back because I think Jane could have done so much better than Mr. Rochester. It’s better to have positive memories of it as a comfort reread than to bring my current lens and get mad about it.
What about you? Do you have special books that you can’t bring yourself to reread?
Daily Happiness
11 June 2025 23:02![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
2. I have to go to San Diego again tomorrow, which I am not looking forward to because when I made plans to go it was because I had received one complaint that needed to be dealt with, and in the week and a half since then have received two more unrelated complaints, so now there are three things I have to deal with. But I am planning to go to Disneyland on the way home, since it's pretty much on the way, so at least that will be a nice way to end the day.
3. I finished another puzzle today. This is another 500 piece one.

4. When my Switch 2 came the other day, I put the empty box on my bed and boy were the cats intrigued about this new phenomenon. It seemed like every time I turned around a different cat was in the box checking it out.

Time Bandits!
11 June 2025 22:47![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I am desperately trying not to get stressed out about The Omnishambles, but it's kind of hard.
Be safe, y'all!
(no subject)
12 June 2025 17:42![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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(You don't have to reply to everyone, china! This is not your circus! /o\)
[1] Someone on my flist pointed out a while ago that there are a bunch of free online courses.
Hypocrisy epidemic (religious topic)
12 June 2025 01:28![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I found this video to be informative and explained a lot.
Dept. of Music Says Goodbye
11 June 2025 22:48![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
It's tempting to say they received the gift of creating music from the angels. That's not the case. They made that music all themselves. They worked at it, struggled to get it right; just right, as they interpreted "just right." They worked with others. They worked alone. They got it wrong. They swore. They fell down. They got up. They won and they failed. And they won again.
They both were visited by demons. They fought them. Sometimes they lost. Sometimes they won. They did a lot of falling down and getting back up again. And when they could, they went back to making that music.
And the angels were just a little shocked; just a little jealous. A little glad the music had come into being.
I hope they're somewhere, exchanging notes about how they made some celestial bangers even before they got there.
(Don't mind the spotty visual - it's live and it's dynamic, and it's him and his family, so it's just right.)
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It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…
1. Taking a job at a large company where my ex works
I’m in the final stages of interviews for a position I am excited about, and I hope to receive an offer. My ex-partner works at this company. We haven’t spoken since the break-up, which was more than three years ago. I initiated our break-up after eight fairly serious months of dating, but did it as kindly as I could — and after many conversations and trying many strategies to see if the relationship could work — and my ex took it graciously, although they were incredibly sad.
Am I supposed to disclose this to anyone at the company? I don’t feel like I need to, since the break-up was not dramatic in any way (just heartbreaking), and we didn’t date for that long in the grand scheme of things. Raising the topic would feel like I would be making it more of a big deal than it is. Moreover, it’s a large organization and my ex’s team is in no way connected to the team I would be joining. It’s possible it would take us weeks or months to even bump into each other. But I want to check that my instinct is correct.
Second, is it wise to tell my ex? Either shortly after I accept an offer, if an offer were to come; shortly before I start, or after I start? The anxious, spiralling part of me wonders if they would object to my joining the company and make it into a problem, even though I don’t think that’s in their character. They are fairly senior in the organization, but an entirely separate division than the one I hope to join.
Since you wouldn’t be working together and it’s a large company, you don’t need to disclose it during the hiring process. It doesn’t sound like it would present any kind of conflict of interest or other issue.
The question about telling your ex is trickier. Ideally I think you’d tell them after you accepted the offer but before your first day, just to avoid any surprise run-ins when you start. But if you want to be absolutely safe (in terms of ensuring they won’t raise objections to your hiring before you’ve started), you could wait until after you’ve already started work and send them a short note at that point. Or you could not raise it at all and just figure that you’ll deal with it at whatever point you do encounter each other. But I think most people would prefer a brief, polite heads-up (a matter-of-fact one, not one that assumes they’ll find the news troubling) before they randomly spot you in the cafeteria one day.
Since your ex doesn’t sound prone to drama, the break-up sounds respectful on both sides, and this was all three years ago, hopefully this won’t be a big issue.
2. Can I give feedback to students who ask me for recommendations?
I’m a college professor who frequently is asked by students to write them letters of recommendation for various things. Generally speaking, I’m happy to do this. However, there’s a trend of some students who didn’t build a particularly strong relationship with me in class (but were fine students overall) who reach out to me continually to presumably maintain the relationship, and then to ask me for a letter. The problem is these follow-up emails (letting me know what they’re doing, asking me vaguely how I’m doing) often ring false, and border on obsequious or sycophantic. They’ll talk about how much they loved my class but not mention anything specific, or ask for book recommendations and then never mention the books again, or tell me over and over again how my class changed their life (when let’s be real, just isn’t the case).
So far, these have all been students I’m basically happy to write a letter for. But I feel like agreeing to write the letter without some other professional feedback sends them the signal that they’re doing this right, when what I want to tell them is to just be more straightforward and honest. Maybe it’s not ideal that you didn’t build a stronger relationship with me previously such that asking for a letter would feel natural, but I get that! I know sometimes we need letters from people we didn’t expect. But then it’s okay to just say, “I appreciated your class and would like to ask for a recommendation.” Fawning hollowly just makes me feel gross or like a joke and makes them seem dishonest. Is there any feedback I could give them about this, or should I just let it slide?
Can you address it toward the end of the semester with your classes as a whole? For example, you could say that you love to stay in touch with students and would enjoy hearing updates from them in the future, but that doing that is absolutely not a prerequisite to get a letter of recommendation from you, and if they need a letter and think you’re well-positioned to provide one, they can simply ask rather than feeling they need to do any sort of performative dance for you first.
I think that approach is better than trying to address it with individual students after the fact (partly to avoid raising it with someone who truly was trying to connect but just sounding a little stilted about it).
3. Should I stay up-to-date during my maternity leave?
I’m on month two of maternity leave, scheduled to go back just after July 4th. I love my job and I cannot wait to return. I’ve been in touch with my colleagues via text message, and I go through my work email daily to clean out trash and forward time-sensitive items to folks who can handle them while I’m on leave (and to lurk on what’s happening). My question is about how much preparation/upkeep I should do before I rejoin my team.
I’m in a director-level SME-like position, so while I’ve been on leave my colleagues have covered my area but only at a high level. I am torn because I understand that parental leave is a benefit I am entitled to in my state and at my organization, and it’s important to take this time to recover and bond with my child. At the same time, I will definitely need to jump back in with both feet to make up for the time I’ve been out.
Should I be working to stay up-to-date on my area, like reading new regulations so I’m already up to speed when I go back? Or does that invalidate the concept of parental leave and set a bad precedent for my colleagues who take leave in the future? In other words, should I work now to make it easier to start back later or should I shut up and savor doing nothing even thought it will be a scramble when leave ends? Does it depend on how high up in the organization you are?
Ideally your leave should be real leave — meaning you aren’t doing any work. You shouldn’t need to work to stay up-to-date while you’re out; you can do that when you get back.
That said, some people feel much less stressed if they don’t disconnect completely, and you sound like you might be one of them. Still, I think you should challenge yourself to stay out of your work email for a week (or better yet, two weeks) and see if you can find the joy in disconnecting completely. If you can’t, you can’t … but we get so few opportunities in our work lives to disconnect for months at a time that I hate to see you not make use of this one.
4. HR won’t act on workplace anti-semitism
I’m writing on behalf of a friend who is experiencing a difficult situation at work and could use some advice. She is Jewish and lives in a very left-leaning city in the U.S. Recently, she’s been facing anti-semitism at her workplace. For example, a swastika was placed in the lobby of her office building, and no one took action. Shortly after, graffiti saying “kill all Zionists” appeared near her office, again with no response from management. She’s feeling increasingly isolated and unsafe, to the point where she has stopped wearing her chai necklace and has started carrying pepper spray for protection.
Her job does not allow for remote work. She requested a transfer to another office location. HR denied the request, explaining that antisemitism is widespread throughout the city and that a transfer wouldn’t resolve the issue.
Would you consider this a toxic or hostile work environment? Should HR be required to intervene in situations like this? If so, could you suggest how she might approach HR or management to advocate for herself? We’d appreciate any guidance that you could offer.
This is awful.
Yes, her employer has a legal obligation to ensure her workplace is free of religiously-based harassment, which this certainly is. Legally her employer is obligated to investigate and take steps to ensure it doesn’t continue. And yes, if they don’t, this qualifies as “hostile workplace,” which is harassing conduct that is (a) based on a person’s race, religion, sex, disability, or other protected class and (b) “severe or pervasive enough to create a work environment that a reasonable person would consider intimidating, hostile, or abusive.”
If she wants to pursue it, the next step would be for her to email HR with the words “official complaint of religious harassment” in the subject line and say that she’s requesting they meet their obligations under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and address the religious harassment she’s been facing. She could also talk with a lawyer about how to proceed (which doesn’t mean bringing legal action, necessarily; lawyers can advise on next steps from behind the scenes).
5. Putting upcoming time off in your email signature
With summer here, I’m curious what your take is on putting upcoming time off in email signatures. A few people on my team have started doing this (for example, “Upcoming: June 16-20 OOO”). We have very externally-facing roles communicating with a small group of stakeholders on a semi-regular basis throughout the summer. While I see some value in letting those folks know when I won’t be available, do they really need to know that I’ll be out, if I have a colleague who can be responsive to them while I’m out? Their needs/questions aren’t likely to be pre-planned, so it doesn’t feel like them knowing I’ll be out will encourage them to ask questions earlier. Also, at the end of the summer, we’re rated on how well we support these stakeholders. Does having upcoming OOOs in our emails run the risk that we’ll be seen as unavailable? The large majority of stakeholders don’t reach out proactively over the summer — it’s mostly me checking in with them — so the chances of them reaching out and getting my regular away message are pretty slim.
The more I write, the more I feel like I’m not a fan of the practice for myself, but I’m still curious for your thoughts!
It probably doesn’t matter very much either way. If anything, it sounds like it might be overkill since these folks aren’t reaching out to you very often and if they do, you have someone lined up to respond to them. But there’s also no harm in including it, and I doubt that highlighting that you take an occasional vacation will make them see you as unavailable, particularly since they’re still able to get their needs met by someone else while you’re away.
It might be interesting to ask the people in your office who are adding it to their signatures what made them start (who knows, maybe something happened that spurred it), but I wouldn’t be surprised if one person did it randomly and other people just followed suit.
The post taking a job where my ex works, should I stay up-to-date during maternity leave, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.
Shelf status
11 June 2025 20:32![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The empty Billy is now in the living room, with the top few shelves embookinated and various plastic craft-adjacent boxes on the lower shelves. This is making a significant dent in the chaos by my desk.
The shorter bookshelf is currently at the end of the hall, for lack of a better place to put it. I expect that if it stays there long, I will start racking up another set of incredible bruises, and I still don't know where the one on my right arm CAME from. (I remember that I walked into some corner on my sleepy and unstable way to bed and then went "well, THAT'll leave a mark!" but do I remember what that something WAS? No more than I remembered what things I'd rammed into when I was taking Drama in high school, and my legs were forever dotted with black and blue marks.)
Today after work, Belovedest has put up all the standards (upright rails) on the south wall, embracketed them with however many brackets we currently have, and has started to assemble board pieces into full length shelves.
Coincidentally, today I also got a notification from the hardware store that they are shipping the backordered brackets.
There is one
Eventually there will be enough Shelf in the media room that some of the things taking up floor space will be able to go on them.
Today I roused in the morning long enough to feel bleugh, then woke up in the afternoon feeling competent to Lounge. Still craving bacon at intervals.
* My high school freshman Biology class had a crucial typo in a sentence about free-living organisms. We reacted about how you'd expect.
Part 4, Week 3
11 June 2025 22:48![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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This week's Minimum moods are: Enthralled, Happy, Indescribable
This week's Medium moods are: Discontent, Gloomy, Anxious
This week's Maximum moods are: Impressed, Jubilant, Loved
I'm in a hurry to get to bed this week, so I don't have a lot of discussion-promoting text this time around. Still, if you want to talk about any of these moods, or if you're having trouble finding inspiration, or are having an easy go of it, I hope you'll still take the time to chat; let's talk about it!