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From Twitter 12-21-2009 [Dec. 22nd, 2009|03:01 am]

e_moon60

  • 10:40:23: Recovering from yesterday: lots of singing and someone going bonkers during the 9 am service.
  • 10:41:10: Alpha reader 1 thinks chapters aren't really fixed yet. :headdesk:
  • 12:20:12: Behind. I am SO FAR BEHIND!! I am behind my behind. I can't see the taillights of where I should be. Waily, waily, waily, woe.
  • 12:21:20: (note to self: Get over yourself, woman! One drama queen in the household is enough, and Mac the QH has grabbed that role.)
  • 18:13:47: New post at http://www.80acresonline/blog/ including image of solstice garden "haunt"
  • 18:17:03: ARG: WRONG URL. That's http://www.80acresonline.org/blog/
    Sorry. Mea culpa.

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Before I offer them on the open market... [Dec. 21st, 2009|11:30 pm]

aramintamd
[Tags|]
[mood | calm]
[music |Golden Years (Bowie)]

1. 3D puzzle: Millenium Falcon

2. Four hurricane lanterns (from Ikea), two navy, two maroon, very modern looking (take one pair or both)

3. Sony receiver (rear speakers working, front seem to be blown). 5.1 capable. With the remote from the gods (and the booklet, as soon as I figure out where it went).

4. Dilbert (complete TV series on DVD)

That's all for now. I'm sure I'll find more soon.

Let me know when you can get the stuff or whether I should bring it to a mutually inconvenient location.

Thanks!
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At Midwinter: solstice weirdness [Dec. 21st, 2009|06:20 pm]

e_moon60
[Tags|]
[mood |tired]

Not your average garden gnome--take a look at the 80 acres blog image. Then there's the viburnum blooming now...
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Interesting comparison... [Dec. 21st, 2009|06:36 pm]

aramintamd
[Tags|, ]
[mood | cranky]
[music |Let it Snow]

One more thing, then off to feed the birds:
http://www.weatherbook.com/blizzard.html

We *did* get more snow this time than we did during Veteran's Day. And it was 1996 when we drove up to Arisia after the blizzard. Living in Columbia for the one in 2003. Just trying to put it all in perspective. And worst of all, I don't think we're done yet. Maybe we'll have a January thaw, and maybe we won't....
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Sunday Singing, with Adventures [Dec. 21st, 2009|09:50 am]

e_moon60
[Tags|, ]
[mood |tired]

The usual adventures were all generated by my being overtired already and headachy.  I needed to take more things to the city than usual:  my concert blacks, for the afternoon Messiah, and my choir robe, for church, and two sets of music--the folder for the church anthems and the Messiah score.   This required two tote bags, not just one, and so--in the early dawn, because I needed to leave at 7 am--I stuffed the bags and left my choir robe in its usual "home" post-laundry location. However...I drove off without the choir robe, realizing that only a mile away, so the drive back to get it didn't take that long--but did take more time.   Still I made it to rehearsal before the first service on time, despite hitting every red light on the way in.   I didn't realize--and wouldn't for hours--that although I had stuffed my concert blacks (Chico's wonderful travel knits) in one tote, I had not put in the short-sleeved black turtleneck that goes under the long-sleeved, longish, jacket-y thing that is worn open over the slacks and top.  That made for an interesting discovery when I was changing for the concert.  (Why, you may wonder, not wear the concert blacks all day?  I had another plan, that's why, and it was not a smart plan, in retrospect.) So...we had a decent-sized choir for the first service, and things were going smoothly until the sermon.   Now that church does have a number of street people who come to services, as well as out of town visitors from other denominations (there's a hotel right across the street) and sometimes they're vocal at parts of the service where Episcopalians usually aren't, including during the sermon.  So the loud "Amen!" and "Hallelujah!"  and "Preach it!" were, though not common, not unknown and created no stir.   For those unfamiliar with Episcopal services, they follow a predictable order, both through the year and within a given service (it's why we're one of the "liturgical" churches.)   After the sermon comes the confession of faith, in the form of the Creed.  (From the Latin "credo," "I believe...")   The whole congregation recites it together: "We believe in one God..."  etc, and for Episcopalians, the Creed remains, as Cranmer wrote centuries ago, the Creed (and not the Bible) is the foundation of Episcopal theology.   (Either the Nicene or Apostle's Creed--very similar but not identical)--counts.)   This is why the Biblical literalists are so annoyed with us.   There's no requirement to believe that every word was divinely inspired and represents absolute truth.  So we were a few phrases into it when suddenly the same voice that had shouted out before, shouted out much louder: "Liars!  Liars!  You're all liars!"  There was a moment of stunned silence, and then (with what I consider commendable attention to what's truly important) the recitation continued, as did the accusations, which escalated from there.   The person shouting was, from my position in the choir, out of my view unless I turned around (as I did, to check if he was displaying weapons, and then turned back.)  He had climbed into one of the window niches.  Like some others I talked to, we were praying that he didn't break that window and fall to his death--that window is high over a concrete-paved courtyard and falling backward his head would've burst like a melon.  Meanwhile, a quiet but purposeful movement of personnel took place--from my position I could see only part of it without staring.  Ushers moved up, clergy not actually speaking (one of the priests was leading the recitation) took the side exit out of the choir area to go help; one of the choir members, a psychiatrist, slipped out also and alerted the downstairs staff to call for backup and told the person in charge of the children's chapel (many children leave during the hymn before the Gospel reading so they don't have to listen to the sermon) not to send the children back until an all-clear.)   The man was finally removed from the window niche and carried out, still yelling.   I caught a glimpse of that.   The service went on, with a prayer offered for his welfare. By the end of the service,  the rector had given the whole congregation what information he could--the man  calmed down after a few minutes,  drank a glass of juice, and admitted he had "episodes."   Law enforcement finally arrived with their mental health officer (they had, apparently, told one of the church people on the phone that it wasn't a priority since the man hadn't injured anyone yet) and determined that he did, indeed, have a history of mental illness and was prone to violent outbursts.  In the meantime, the choir had sung "This Is the Truth Sent from Above" and the service had gone on to completion.   A quick breakfast then, and into second-service rehearsal.  In the interval there was discussion, of course.  The habit of self-examination reacts to accusations of lack of faith, of dishonesty in matters of faith, with thoughtful internal inquiries...how much of that was true?  Might be true?    Then the second service (which I'd hoped to skip but there weren't enough altos) and then it was time to get ready for the afternoon Messiah performance (sing-along, at another church, but for me as part of the supporting choir.)   I was already tired and craving a nap, but there wasn't time.  By the time I got to that church, it was after two, and that's when I discovered the lack of a critical piece of black clothing.  Luckily, that church's choir robes are black, so I suited up in one of them.  We sang more choruses than we had in the symphony performance...the soloists were excellent, the orchestra was excellent, and the audience a) came and b) nearly all sang and c) most of them knew what they were doing.   The music took over, and gave us the energy to keep going until the end.   A feature of this particular Sing-Along Messiah tradition is that there's a raffle for a chance to conduct another Hallelujah Chorus at the very end.   The winner has to wear David's sweaty coat, and get up on the podium and direct it.   Some have done brilliantly.  Some have been entered as a lark by friends and haven't a clue.  (I found out yesterday that one who had seemed clueless, years ago, was the brother-in-law of one of my alto friends.)   In that case, the orchestra and lead choir pretty much ignore the "director" and do it at the usual tempo in the usual way.  Yesterday's pick was rigged, however--the vestry and music director of the church where it was held had determined to surprise their rector.   He did quite well, though he wasn't looking at the music to cue that big long rest right before the final "Hallelujah" so when everyone stopped he looked around.  Quiet, quiet,....we all waited.  He finally caught on that he was going to have to cue that entrance, and did so with a big grin. Then some of us stayed to help move things back as they had been in the sanctuary and finally I left with Michael and drove home.   To pretty much collapse.   Still tired today.
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Girl Genius Comic for Monday December 21, 2009 [Dec. 20th, 2009|01:21 pm]

girlgeniuscomic
<3 ZzZzZzZz... --Kaja <3 

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From Twitter 12-19-2009 [Dec. 20th, 2009|03:01 am]

e_moon60

  • 22:40:50: Bed now. Tomorrow is two services plus Sing-Along Messiah. I am SO not ready for this.
  • 22:41:23: Well, bed after bragging that two chapters are fixed. Again.

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I think that's it, folks... [Dec. 19th, 2009|11:54 pm]

aramintamd
[Tags|, , ]
[mood | sleepy]

Promised photos: http://picasaweb.google.com/aramintamd/20091219Snowpocalypse?authkey=Gv1sRgCJmPvv7N1rOo7gE&feat=email#

And now, thanks to a decent dinner of pot roast and a completed puzzle, I'm toasty and going to bed. Four loads of laundry done, lots of cleaning to do over the next few days. Tree to accomplish (still), because ALL the ornaments are still in the attic. Hoping to fix that tomorrow.

Stay warm, everyone...
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Bittersweet moment... [Dec. 19th, 2009|11:14 am]

aramintamd
[Tags|, ]
[mood | sad]

In years past, when we had weather predicted that was as bad (or even not as bad) as today's, my dad would have been on the phone to me with admonishments, to be sure I was careful driving outside (or not to drive at all) and that I was okay.

That the phone hasn't rung with him commenting on the severe weather, just to check in, is a sad thing. I once thought it was funny or a pain in the ass. Now it's just one more thing that's gone. I wonder if he even knows we're having a blizzard.

On the way out the door for the first dig out of the storm. I expect there'll be at least one more before we're through....
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From Twitter 12-18-2009 [Dec. 19th, 2009|03:01 am]

e_moon60

  • 10:00:35: Wow. I have more than 100 followers!! (Is it hideous egotism to mention that? Others have lots more...)
  • 10:02:04: Embossed return addresses on envelope flaps are elegant--but hard for aging eyes to read. Want a reply, make return address readable.
  • 10:03:17: Turned on TV late last night for weather, caught Janis Ian special on PBS. Dunno if new or old...stayed up to watch/listen.
  • 10:05:26: Today: bake bread, work on music, work on book, find and cut tree, clear space to put tree. Eeep!
  • 10:28:48: Need to unplug self from internet and do actual constructive work.
  • 17:42:14: New post at http://www.80acresonline.org/blog/ about trees and bees and stuff. Some pictures.
  • 17:44:08: I'm supposed to sign up for Medicare as it's now less than 90 days before I'm 65. They don't make it easy. Go here, go there...
  • 17:49:12: Bee swarms are usually pretty calm. When they aren't, it's time to move away.

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Ah, the wonders of the internet... [Dec. 18th, 2009|11:44 pm]

aramintamd
[Tags|, , ]
[mood | cold]

Wait! Did it on Facebook, forgot it here...

Happy Birthday, [info]soprano1!!!


http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=snowpocalypse

I knew I didn't coin the phrase, but I've been seeing it all day, so I guess I got the right concept. And now the weather radio tells me we're in a BLIZZARD warning, starting at 6am tomorrow morning.

Blizzard. Like they have in Little House on the Prairie. Snowpocalypse, indeed!

I gots me a shovel this evening at Kmart (one of only a dozen left in the store, and the only one small enough that it won't wreck my back to use it if I have to dig out the car). I also got to the store and stocked up on pot roast fixings, a chicken, a gallon of milk, a loaf of bread, a dozen eggs and assorted other things that should help tide us over between now and the end of the mess.

All my Rochester Facebook friends are laughing at me. They have no idea, but then they've also been dealing with wind chills of -9 and colder, lake effect snow and more for at least a month now.

Me, I've been expecting this weather since this time last year. Took longer than I expected. No matter what, I think it's a safe bet we'll have a white Christmas this year.

Tomorrow I'm planning to haul the ornaments down from the attic. Tonight I'm going to curl up in bed with what's left of the Pete Seeger special on MPT and then crash for the night.

It's going to be a good day for popcorn, hot cocoa and lots and lots of movies.

Stay warm, everyone!
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From Twitter 12-17-2009 [Dec. 18th, 2009|03:01 am]

e_moon60


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Girl Genius Comic for Friday December 18, 2009 [Dec. 17th, 2009|07:48 pm]

girlgeniuscomic
[Tags|]

<3 ZzZzZzZz... --Kaja <3
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Holiday Music [Dec. 17th, 2009|10:35 am]

e_moon60
[Tags|, ]
[mood |awake]

I'm not happy with LJ's posting interface again, because the font size setting will not hold. As in, I set it to "medium" and start to type--and what I typed is small and the little box is empty again. It takes two or three tries to get the "medium" to last long enough to write a paragraph. If I back up for any reason, it's gone again. If I want to insert a link, it's gone again. And no, this isn't about holiday music yet, but there's a reason, and the trouble with the *!!* font size menu is it.

Holiday music...well, last week we had the Messiah performance with the symphony. Others sang the church services; I was home with the gastroenteritis thingie. Rehearsal last night covered this Sunday's anthem, and the five (!!) anthems for Christmas Eve except for one (we never got to the "O Leave Your Sheep" one. I kind of wish we'd never get to the sheep one because--although it can be pretty--it's one of those artsy ones.) Among the anthems we touched on last night (there being insufficient time to actually work them to any degree) were two Mozarts, "Dixit Dominus" from The Solemn Vespers, and "Agnus Dei" from Missa Brevis in D. We have a big service for the Feast of the Epiphany, January 6, with yet more anthems, and another at the Feast of the Baptism of Our Lord, January 10.

So this Sunday we have the two services to sing, then the SIng-Along Messiah at St. Matthew's, for which David is director and many of us are the leading chorus. We have a rehearsal next Wednesday, for the Christmas Eve services Thursday (we sing the two evening services) and whatever else David can work in (knowing him, lots), and a rehearsal on Tuesday, January 5, plus the pre-service rehearsals/warmups. Oh, and I have a voice lesson next Wednesday.

It's nice that our director has such faith in our musical ability, but.
I'm sure you can fill in the "but" part.
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From Twitter 12-16-2009 [Dec. 17th, 2009|03:01 am]

e_moon60

  • 09:00:29: Worked too late again--but found out why Ps didn't turn around and go home. Besides what's waiting at home.
  • 09:01:28: Very cold Inca dove sitting on feeder all fluffed up, tail pointing down over the edge.
  • 10:54:57: Next time around, I want to bioengineer my own body. Scary thought: Maybe I did this time and just did a lousy job.
  • 10:56:34: Blast and damn the Senators destroying the public option and giving all profit to the insurance companies, not the people.

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Sometimes the truth is a lot harder to deal with... [Dec. 16th, 2009|03:32 pm]

aramintamd
[Tags|]
[Current Location |work]
[mood | gloomy]

Ruminations within...

I have loved that Facebook has connected me to a lot of my school friends. I think it's a fab medium for just the day-to-day things we used to do when we were seeing each other daily in school. But as a medium for breaking bad news? Not so much.

One of my long-lost SWW chums just found out the hard way that our mutual friend Tom died. She's had this happy vision for years of him helping folks because that is what he was doing when she last heard about him. Tom died of brain cancer about 8 years ago, just shy of or just after his 40th birthday.

I got a quick message from my friend, asking me if the Tom who died was the one she thought it was.

I've been in the position of bad news echo for years. I have so many contacts (and I'm never sure when they overlap) that it seems a natural place for me to be. But I have to say that the brief message I sent back to her was so far short of reality or of the way I would have communicated this info to her when we were in school together almost 30 years ago.

I've been accused recently of spending too much time talking about stuff that's happening to me. I suppose if I had someone at home I could talk to all the time, without thinking about it, I wouldn't be so talky on LJ or Facebook, or at church.

The fact is, there's not a lot of ears around the house or the office I can bend at whim, and it always feels like I'm intruding when I call someone out of the blue. I haven't felt comfortable with just inviting myself over to someone else's place for decades. (I used to do it a lot growing up, but then that's when it was a village raising me.) And I never know when I'm welcome unless I get an actual invitation.


So, I guess I'm trying to say that if it's driving you nuts that I'm posting a lot either here or there, please understand that it's mostly because I suck at these conversations when I'm on a one-to-one, and because I'm terribly out of practice. I'm alone a lot these days. And because I'm never sure whether you've already read the stuff I'm saying or it's coming as news, or you just don't care. If I'm acting weird, that's part of the reason.

Being alone sucks.
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From Twitter 12-15-2009 [Dec. 16th, 2009|03:02 am]

e_moon60

  • 13:38:51: Another cold front blew through and today we have some sun. Yay!
  • 13:59:43: Title tribulations. Need new title for old omnibus in new market. Need title for book I just turned in. Title-generator nonfunctional.
  • 14:09:04: Why do some tweets to me show up here, and others only if I look at profile or @emoontx??? Didn't know that. Sorry, folks I "ignored."
  • 16:15:38: Walk on the land--chilly and very windy, but worthwhile. Loud traffic noise blown on the wind, though.
  • 17:47:59: No homemade bread, so added barley to soup I'm reheating for supper. Yes, with more water.
  • 21:03:37: New posts up on blogs at http://www.80acresonline.org (with pictures) and http://www.paksworld.com
  • 21:04:43: Starting work on annual report for wildlife management. As always, need a few more pictures to document activities.

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Volumes Five and Six Pre-Orders Have Shipped! [Dec. 15th, 2009|09:36 pm]

studiofoglio
shipometer

The reprints of Volumes Five and Six of Girl Genius have now shipped.

Just in time for us to start worrying about the reprints for Volume One (color, this time, did I mention that?) and Three, then Two and, of course, the release of Volume Nine. Woo. Hoo. Augh.
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Girl Genius Comic for Wednesday December 16, 2009 [Dec. 15th, 2009|09:10 pm]

girlgeniuscomic

<3 Today we finally saw the last of the mountain of pre-ordered books off to the Post Office! Thank you to all of our helpers, and to the wonderful customers who were so patient with us. Whew. --Kaja <3


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From Twitter 12-14-2009 [Dec. 15th, 2009|03:01 am]

e_moon60

  • 11:54:20: Just got word that MARQUE AND REPRISAL and VICTORY CONDITIONS are in 5th and 3rd printing--3500 copies each. Thanks, readers!

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