Everything you could, like any decent person would
I am almost too tired to think. Considering I have to get up at stupid o'clock tomorrow in order to compensate for the Red Line's suspension of service from Alewife on the weekends, this is probably a good thing.
Apparently I spoke about exiled, dispossessed, and alienated characters in reasonably coherent sentences while on the edge of a migraine, although I have this memory of rabbiting on about kataphasis and apophasis that I can only hope was edifying, because I have my doubts about its relevance to the conversation.
Bob Kuhn is no relation to any of the people I know by that name, but I want to hear his Roman-numeral version of Tom Lehrer's "New Math."
I finally caught an episode of the Post-Meridian Radio Players' Red Shift: Interplanetary Do-Gooder. It was terrific. I left wanting to go home and tune up my radio telescope.
(. . . I have a radio telescope. It's in the side yard. It was a high school science project. I'm still prouder of the incubator full of E. coli-fed cellular slime mold. They were beautiful.)
Sitting in the row in front of me at the show was the actress who plays Abalyn in Kyle Cassidy's photo series and video of Caitlín's The Drowning Girl—I recognized her from stills. If only the book were out, I could have asked her for an autograph.
You who know who you are, thank you. I'm still working on everything. But it matters.
Apparently I spoke about exiled, dispossessed, and alienated characters in reasonably coherent sentences while on the edge of a migraine, although I have this memory of rabbiting on about kataphasis and apophasis that I can only hope was edifying, because I have my doubts about its relevance to the conversation.
Bob Kuhn is no relation to any of the people I know by that name, but I want to hear his Roman-numeral version of Tom Lehrer's "New Math."
I finally caught an episode of the Post-Meridian Radio Players' Red Shift: Interplanetary Do-Gooder. It was terrific. I left wanting to go home and tune up my radio telescope.
(. . . I have a radio telescope. It's in the side yard. It was a high school science project. I'm still prouder of the incubator full of E. coli-fed cellular slime mold. They were beautiful.)
Sitting in the row in front of me at the show was the actress who plays Abalyn in Kyle Cassidy's photo series and video of Caitlín's The Drowning Girl—I recognized her from stills. If only the book were out, I could have asked her for an autograph.
You who know who you are, thank you. I'm still working on everything. But it matters.

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A radio telescope? I have never been anywhere **near** one. What do you see, when you look through?
I know how radio telescopes work *really* but I like to imagine that instead of giving us images of the radiowave end of the electromagnetic spectrum, they gave us a sound report. And not hisses and pops and static, like the underlying sound of the Big Bang, but tunes and notes and chimes.
The slime mold that eats E. coli: I'm imagining the doctor to the patient. "We can cure your case of E. coli, but you'll have to get slimed.
Hope today's day at Arisia goes well.
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Inconvenient as this can obviously be, I would really start to consider it your superpower.;)
Thinking of you, a lot.
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I hadn't heard about them! You should have determined whether they could digest a copy of Etiquette in Society.
[Sorry, I don't think I'm EVER going to let that joke die.]
And I think it would be cool if you DID tune up your radio telescope, even if I'm not sure what you'd do with it.
Hope you slept.
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I'm sure kataphasis and apophasis were relevant.
I'm glad you caught the episode, and I think it's rather brilliant that you have a radio telescope.
I hope Arisia treats/has treated you well today.
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As the heroine said, keep in good health and [don't] die,
Yr Obt Svt
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And kudos on the slime mould. (That is *not* a sentence I ever expected to write...)
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That's so cool that you met Dani! If you see her again, say "hi" for me.
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(Here only because I was at Arisia this weekend and am randomly reading discussion of it.)
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Arisia
tim t.
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