timegoddessrose: (Default)
timegoddessrose ([personal profile] timegoddessrose) wrote2022-05-12 07:06 pm

Remembering how journaling works maybe

Boy, how does journaling even work? I've forgotten. But I also know that it's good for my mental health, and the fact that I haven't been actively journaling in...years isn't great for me. I'm hoping to carve out a quieter corner of the internet for myself here, away from the churn of modern social media ("modern social media" makes me sound like the ancient husk I am). I know hardly anyone who uses this platform, but maybe that's a good thing. Start small, and all that.

Yesterday our neighbor noticed the AC line outside had frozen overnight and thawed in the morning. He let us know and we in turn let the landlord know. The landlord said he'd get someone out to look at it today, but that we should keep the AC off until then. Uhm. It's 90 degrees here. Thankfully, we survived, only for the maintenance guy to just change the filter, shrug his shoulders, and conclude that was probably the problem. Cool. We could have done that ourselves. Love risking Covid exposure for that.

Anyway, I'm working on draft 6 of Novel 1, and for the greater part of two weeks I've been hammering away at literally just the first chapter. Such slow-seeming progress is the exact kind of thing that drives me bonkers in the writing process, but I also know that being thorough on this draft will save me a lot of hassle down the road. I've also been listening to a lot of Great Courses on writing, editing, and publishing which have been dispiriting to say the least. I'm trying to just take what's useful and leave the rest, but it's tough when industry professionals are like, "Basically, kid, you're screwed." Like. Thanks????

I've been rewatching Game of Thrones while I work on my novel. "Watching" is probably too active a verb. More accurately I have it playing in the background while I write, and I only ever fully pay attention when Daenerys is on screen. Despite everything, I still find its familiarity comforting. I'm also trying to get back to a form of media consumption that isn't so completely predicated on authorial intent. I'm trying to move to a more (personally) productive model that considers less "Am I supposed to like the Starks? Am I supposed to disagree with Dany?" and more "*Do* I like the Starks? *Do* I disagree with Dany?" With the caveat that no approach can actually make this show good, but I love it anyway.

I actually (actively) watch Critical Role while I crochet. I'm about to start C2E57 (I think?) "In Love and War," which I believe introduces Essek (I'm not overly careful about spoilers) so I'm excited to get to that. I'm also happy to see Taliesin is back for this episode, because as delightful as Matt playing Taliesin playing Caduceus was I missed Taliesin.

Well, I need to go placate a screaming cat, so I guess that's it.
juushika: Drawing of a sleeping orange cat (Default)

[personal profile] juushika 2022-05-13 10:29 am (UTC)(link)
I hope DW works out! Goodness knows I'm bad at using it lately (my brain has been eaten by househunting for the last howevermany months, and I really don't want to journal about it because it just means getting more invested in each near-miss, which, no thanks), BUT this really is my preferred platform right now, for its quietness and emphasis on, yeah, journaling.

Essek! Hope you like him, in retrospect he felt like the most--I guess the word might be "successful," character arc-wise, of the C2 cast. I have to my surprise been keeping up to date with C3? In past campaigns I'd leapfrog, catching up on big chunks and then dropping away from it for another year or two. I still don't watch live, I would probably never watch live because I hate living a) on other people's schedules and b) in real-time speed, I generally watch the VoDs at x1.5. But it's neat to have it as an ongoing part of my schedule.