Conifer of Ember
Dec. 7th, 2025 07:43 pmWhich was a good thing, because the rest of the day was not! I put my boots on and shoveled the driveway again. A few more inches of snow had fallen during the night. Then I made a grocery run in real time, to get ingredients needed to complete my dish for the potluck. When I started unloading my bags into the car, I found a case of Stella Artois and a 12-pack of gin drinks in cans. I was pretty sure I hadn't intended to purchase these, and a check of my receipt showed that I certainly hadn't paid for them. Reader, I confess to a half-second of temptation in which the unworthy thought of "Bwahahaha, free drinks!" entered my mind. But I hit that ol' serpent with the shovel of righteousness and pushed the cart back into the store, where the checker was glad to see these items because they were meant for another customer, and she had wrongly shoved them into my cart instead. Drinks in cans are never any good anyway.
At home I immediately started browning my spice-rubbed chicken and chopping onions and garlic, and then adding peppers, ginger, tomatoes, mangoes, and currants. The Sparrowhawk made a really big pot of rice. The house became aromatic again. I barely had time for a cup of tea while the pot was simmering, and then we loaded the rice pot and the curry pot into the big thermal bag and somehow lugged it out to the car. That thing was heavy.
When we put it in the car again, after much chatting with people at the potluck, it was much lighter, but still hard to drag for us old folks. There was just enough left to fill one refrigerator container. I feel good because that means people got fed.
Season's greasons, friends!
Dec. 7th, 2025 07:14 pmI'm Callisto, and this is my first year participating here. I found the community through my Network page, and figured it'd be nice to throw my hat into the ring as well as try to fufill some wishes myself! I think that what's been done here is so cool, and I deeply appreciate the whole endeavor. Wishes are in no particular order, as no structure I could think of really felt right, and are as follows:
1. Dreamwidth points! Dreamwidth has a lot of paid services I'm interested in, so this would be a real treat.
2. Art of my South Park and Teen Titans OCs! Even the smallest of doodles would put me absolutely over the moon. You can find a collection of art to use as reference for Rhiannon (South Park) here, and for Evangeline (Teen Titans) here.
3. Ideas on what to do with empty notebooks! I've got a ton just laying around, and I can only write so much prose and poetry. Any thoughts would be much appreciated.
4. Comments on my fics! You can find all of my works collected on AO3 here.
5. Digital gift cards! Specifically, to Amazon, the Nintendo eShop, and JetPens. A good email to reach me is radionewvegas AT proton dot me.
6. Nonfiction book recommendations! I'm in a reading slump at the moment, and I think reading nonfiction will help. Some topics I'm particularly interested in right now are movie, televsion, and animation history, space travel, cults, video game development and design, professional wrestling, theme parks, and comics as an art form and an industry.
7. Give back! The holidays can be a rough time for a lot of people. If you've got money, time, or anything else you can give back to your community, through charity, volunteer work, or whatever other avenue you choose, then it would mean a lot to me and to so many others. It's a smidge unrealistic to wish for world peace, but I figure this is a solid step in the right direction.
8. YouTube channel recommendations! Any channels that talk about the things listed in my wish for book recs would be lovely, as would anything centered around media retrospectives and analysis or TTRPG design.
9. 100x100 icons! In particular, I'd love icons of Kenny McCormick from South Park, Tara Markov and Joey Wilson from DC Comics, and professional wrestler AJ Lee. If you need images to use, I can provide them; just go ahead and ask!
10. Kind words! It's been a rough year, y'all, and I don't know about you, but I'm tired. If anyone's got any kind words to spare, I would very much appreciate them.
That's it! Again, if you need my email, you'll find me at radionewvegas AT proton dot me. Thank you for taking a look at my list, and happy holidays to all!
Seventh Disadvent
Dec. 7th, 2025 07:45 pmDaily Happiness
Dec. 7th, 2025 04:49 pm2. The Christmas tree is pretty much finished. If we see some sort of topper we like, we might buy one, but otherwise the decorations are done.

3. Ollie is very curious about what Tuxie is doing out there.

SVSSS: The Scum Villain's Sex and Pleasure Catalogue by benwisehart
Dec. 8th, 2025 11:08 amPairings/Characters: Luo Binghe/Shen Qingqiu
Rating: Explicit
Length: 18,992
Creator Links:
Theme: Amnesty, Book Fandoms, Domestic, Established Relationship, Humor, Trauma & Recovery
Summary: The System gives Shen Qingqiu the ability to exchange B-Points for items, and what better way to earn points than by raising the satisfaction level of Zhongdian's favourite protagonist?
OR: The one where Shen Qingqiu starts seducing the fuck out of Binghe in order to enable his caffeine addiction.
Reccer's Notes: This one seems like it'd be just a fun kinky romp (which it also is!), but it's also very thoughtful about why Shen Qingqiu was reluctant to indulge in some of these things to begin with. Sometimes it's just his self-conscious personality, and sometimes it's because he was too quick to judge, but he's also his own person with his own preferences and traumas and those deserve to be respected, too! Really, the ultimate benefit out of this whole sequence of events might just have been allowing these two a sliver of genuine open communication, even if that's sometimes a hard-won lesson.
Fanwork Links: The Scum Villain's Sex and Pleasure Catalogue
Book Review: Brahma's Dream
Dec. 7th, 2025 04:33 pmAuthor: Shree Ghatage
Genre: Fiction, historical fiction, family drama
Brahma's Dream by Shree Ghatage was a book I snatched out of a pile of stuff my sister was giving away last year, but she'd never gotten around to reading it herself, so she couldn't give me a preview. Brahma's Dream is set in India just before it gains self-rule, and concerns the family of Mohini, a child whose serious illness dominates her life.
This is one of those middle-of-the-road books that was neither amazingly good nor offensively bad, and therefore I struggle to come up with much to say about it. That makes it sound bad, but it isn't--I enjoyed my time with it. I thought Ghatage did a good job with exploring life on the precipice of great political change, although the history and politics of 1940s India is more backdrop to the family drama than central to the story. I liked Mohini and her family; because the nature of her illness necessitates a lot of rest and down time, Mohini is naturally a thoughtful child, as her thoughts are sometimes all she has to amuse herself. However, she never crosses the line into being precocious, which was a relief.
Neither did I feel like the book leaned too hard on Mohini's illness to elicit sentimentality from the reader. Obviously, an illness like hers is the biggest influence on her life, and on the lives of her immediate family, and there are many moments you sympathize with her because she can't just be a child the way she wants to be, but I didn't feel like Ghatage was plucking heartstrings just for the sake of it.
Reading the relationships between Mohini and her family was heartwarming, especially with her grandfather, who takes great joy in Mohini's intellect and is often there to discuss the import of various societal events with her.
Ghatage's descriptive writing really brings to life the India of the time, with the colors, smells, sounds, and sights that are a part of Mohini's every day.
It reminded me of another book I read about a significant event in Indian history (the separation of India and Pakistan) told through the perspective of a young ill girl, Cracking India.
On the whole, this was a sweet, heartfelt book. It's not heavy on plot, but if you enjoy watching the story of a family unfold and the little dramas that play out, it's enjoyable.
All Lines Lead to Proto-Arabic.
Dec. 7th, 2025 10:12 pmA Facebook post by our old pal Slavomír Čéplö/bulbul pointed me to Ahmad Al-Jallad’s All lines lead to Proto-Arabic: a review article on Jonathan Owens, Arabic and the Case against Linearity in Historical Linguistics (Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies [2025], 1–16), in which Al-Jallad (seen here in 2018 and 2022) does a thorough demolition job on Owens’ book, which sounds like a classic case of an expert in a limited field trying to extend his expertise too widely (cf. John McWhorter). It begins (I omit the footnotes):
The past century or so has witnessed what one might call a “documentary turn” in the study of Arabic’s history. The full range of modern Arabic’s dialectal diversity came into focus as linguists began to produce descriptions of peripheral dialects, spanning from Central Asia to the Yemeni highlands and from Cypress to Chad. Sociolinguistic approaches to the dialects have advanced our understanding of language change and dialect formation in real time. The epigraphic exploration of Arabia revealed a “Jāhiliyyah” with stunning linguistic diversity, even when compared to the rich materials compiled by the Arabic Grammarians. Contrary to the commonly held belief, Arabic was not alone in Arabia, but was rather a part of a rich linguistic landscape, lost to history until recently. The discovery and study of papyri from the early Islamic period afford a unique view into the written register of Arabic before the rise of the grammatical tradition, and both pre-modern Christian and Jewish Arabic materials attest to writing traditions that existed parallel to normative Classical Arabic, and shed valuable light on the pre-modern dialectal landscape. The combination of these new sources of data and approaches have rendered the traditional view of Arabic’s past obsolete, and so the time is ripe to synthesize this material into the writing of new linguistic histories of Arabic.
The work under review is the latest monograph by Professor Jonathan Owens, a renowned authority on the Arabic dialects of Nigeria, Libya, and Chad, who has made significant contributions to the field of Arabic sociolinguistics and dialectology at large. Owens should be congratulated for the great effort put into this work, which spans over 500 pages. In this book, he builds on the case made in Owens (2006/9) that the field of Arabic historical linguistics has been fundamentally misguided, giving undue weight to older attested stages of the language when it comes to reconstruction. Here, he attempts to build a new, “non-linear” paradigm with a focus on the history of the modern Arabic vernaculars, but draws also on other sources such as epigraphy and papyri. […]
This model, however, is not necessarily wrong. Proto-Semitic, as any other Proto-language, is the hypothetical, reconstructed ancestor of all attested members of the Semitic language family. Every Semitic language must descend, by definition, from Proto-Semitic; Old Arabic is no exception. Yes, there are intervening stages, splits and sub-groupings – no Semiticist, to my knowledge, has ever claimed that Arabic was an independent branch of Proto-Semitic – but as a simplistic model, this illustrates an uncontroversial fact, not only in comparative Semitics but in the field of historical/diachronic linguistics in general. Now, his next issue seems to be with understanding Neo-Arabic, a concise way of saying modern vernacular Arabic, as a descendant of Old Arabic. It is hard to understand what the problem here is either. Old Arabic, at least the definition used by Van Putten and me, is not a single attested variety, but rather a chronological term that refers to all varieties of Arabic spoken/written prior to the rise of the Medinan state – we sometimes have evidence for these varieties in writing but the vast majority of the linguistic diversity of this period has been lost to history. Since Old Arabic encompasses all Arabics prior to, say, the mid-seventh century ᴄᴇ, it is obvious that the modern vernaculars are later, changed forms, in other words, descendants, of these varieties, whether attested or otherwise. To my knowledge, nobody has ever claimed that the modern Arabic dialects descend linearly from any attested Old Arabic epigraphic variety. If Old Arabic here is meant to substitute for Classical Arabic, it is safe to say that such an assumption has been long abandoned, and most recent work in Arabic historical linguistics does not operate within such a model. A final way to interpret this model would be that older attested forms of a language are by default more linguistically archaic than later attested ones. But even this is not a position any professional linguists hold. No Semiticist, for example, has ever argued that Akkadian phonology is more archaic than Modern South Arabian because it is attested over four-thousand years earlier. Indeed, it has been long recognized that Arabic is more conservative than Hebrew and Aramaic in terms of nominal morphology despite its being attested later. Indeed, there is interesting work being done on how modern vernacular Arabic can be in some respects more archaic than normative Classical Arabic. As such, the objections here do not seem to be directed at any real positions held by contemporary Semiticists or Arabists.
There is no overarching narrative guiding the book’s argument. Instead, the subsequent parts consist of a series of correctives and case studies, of varying detail, some of which are new and others previously published, on pre-modern forms of Arabic and the modern dialects. These studies are meant to show how Arabic is a “composite”, “non-linear” language. Owens understands this and is “unapologetic” for not developing a history of Arabic, which he seems to consider to be impossible because, according to him, “Arabic language history is inherently contradictory of classic comparative historical linguistic concepts” (p. 432). I would maintain that Arabic is, in fact, a normal human language and there is nothing inherently exceptional about its development, but rather it is the present methodological approach to its history that is responsible in large part for this apparent conundrum, as we shall see throughout the course of this review article. Since the monograph lacks a unified structure and does not argue the thesis presented in its introduction in a coherent way throughout the work, the only way to engage with it is to scrutinize the case studies, their data and argumentation. While some of these studies offer some interesting insights regarding the development of individual Arabic dialectal features, those that go beyond this are often highly problematic, both in terms of facts and method. The remainder of this review will focus on a number of these critical issues, ultimately demonstrating that Owens’ attempt at re-imagining Arabic linguistic history is based on a faulty foundation and is ultimately unsuccessful.
I don’t know much about the history of Arabic, but it’s a pleasure to read someone who knows what he’s talking about, even if I sometimes get lost in the details. That quote “Arabic language history is inherently contradictory of classic comparative historical linguistic concepts” made me roll my eyes hard. And I like the fact that Al-Jallad gives credit when appropriate:
While many of Owens’ unconventional assumptions are certainly open to debate, the data he presents are of much interest and will be a good starting point for future discussion and elaboration. It is important to emphasize that none of these case studies undermine Arabic’s classification as a Central Semitic language, nor do they challenge a conventional understanding of language development. The final part of this section addresses the issue of speech community and its relevance to historical reconstruction, with a lengthy and interesting case study on the varieties of Arabic spoken in Nigeria and the Lake Chad area.
Those varieties are, of course, Owens’ specialty; ne sutor ultra crepidam!
sunday
Dec. 7th, 2025 05:14 pmI was outside this afternoon and Little Red was approaching me so I thought I'd get a photo of the "real thing".


I just happened to get this pic while she was blinking her third eyelid (nictitating membrane).
I was talking to a friend this afternoon and she was telling me about her grandson Rowan. She has mentioned his name before with me, I'm sure, but today the name Rowan jumped out since I'm going to have a grandson named Rowan too. I bet I'll hear about a lot of people named Rowan now that I had never noticed before.
We're supposed to go to a birthday party for the one year old son of one of Dave's niece's on the 20th. Jules and I were at the Playthings Etc toy store near Butler last night so I was looking for a book to give as a gift. I didn't find a book but I found the cutest sloth puppet. I was so taken with it that I looked online and saw they have the same thing on amazon, for half the price, so I ordered another one for myself to play with Rowan someday. We used to have a realistic raccoon puppet (back legs, tail and all) when Chloe and Johnny were little and we had a lot of fun with that. I love the idea of puppets instead of just stuffed animals.
Climate Change
Dec. 7th, 2025 03:11 pmTwo decades of satellite and GPS data show the Thwaites Eastern Ice Shelf slowly losing its grip on a crucial stabilizing point as fractures multiply and ice speeds up. Scientists warn this pattern could spread to other vulnerable Antarctic shelves.
Being Neighborly (part 1 of 1, complete)
Dec. 7th, 2025 04:12 pmBy Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1167
:: Nora is watching the most annoying cat in the neighborhood, when she notices something odd about his behavior. Surprisingly, the dyspeptic feline actually accepts her help. Written for the December 2025 prompt call, from a new visitor,
The white cat picked carefully among the least-snowy areas of the front yard, sniffing delicately at the sagging, bedraggled plants which hung limp and brown over the edge of the knee-high planter in front of Nora’s house. Nora eyed the battleship gray sky above the dingy islands of mounded snow and the dull, cold concrete that connected it all into a path to bigger roads all around the little neighborhood surrounded by dense city.
( Read more... )
Christmas Bird Count
Dec. 7th, 2025 02:19 pmAre you taking pictures of birds in your locale? Share them on
Birdfeeding
Dec. 7th, 2025 01:45 pmI fed the birds. I've seen a few sparrows and house finches.
I put out water for the birds.
EDIT 12/7/25 -- I bagged up Pink, Johnathan, and Johnagold apple seeds with damp sand to cold-stratify in the kitchen.
EDIT 12/7/25 -- I did a bit of work around the patio.
EDIT 12/7/25 -- I did more work around the patio.
EDIT 12/7/25 -- I did more work around the patio.
I've seen a large mixed flock of sparrows and house finches plus a pair of cardinals.
EDIT 12/7/25 -- I did more work around the patio.
As it is getting dark, I am done for the night.
Holiday Activities
Dec. 7th, 2025 01:41 pmSo, now, I'm thinking of organizing holidays/really exciting events around these three factors:
* buildup appropriate to the event (edit: with a sense of joy and wonder, as a friend points out)
* a climax that is fun/exciting/enjoyable enough to justify all the buildup
* the day of the event should be low enough stress that the participants have the energy to enjoy it
This is a very astute analysis of holidays, how they work, and how to make them enjoyable. While it can't fix the problem of holiday sprawl in the wider culture, it CAN make a huge difference in how you approach them personally or as a family to create better experiences.
I've got a long comment under this post discussing some of my observations and practices too.
Culinary
Dec. 7th, 2025 06:31 pmThis week's bread: Country Oatmeal aka Monastery Loaf from Eric Treuille and Ursula Ferrigno's Bread (2:1:1 wholemeal/strong white/pinhead oatmeal), a bit dense and rough-textured - the recipe says medium oatmeal, which has seemed hard to come by for months now (I actually physically popped into a Holland and Barrett when I was out and about the other day and boy, they are all about the Supplements these days and a lot less about the nice organic grains and pulses, sigh, no oatmeal, no cornmeal, etc etc wo wo deth of siv etc). Bread tasty though.
Friday night supper: groceries arrived sufficiently early in the pm for me to have time to make up the dough and put the filling to simmer for sardegnera with pepperoni.
Saturday breakfast rolls: adaptable soft rolls recipe, 4:1 strong white/buckwheat flour, dried blueberries, Rayner's Barley Malt Extracxt, turned out very nicely.
Today's lunch: savoury clafoutis with Exotic Mushroom Mix (shiitake + 3 sorts of oyster mushroom) and garlic, served with baby (adolescent) rainbow carrots roasted in sunflower and sesame oil, tossed with a little sugar and mirin at the end, and sweetstem cauliflower (some of which was PURPLE) roasted in pumpkin seed oil with cumin seeds.
Holiday Wishes 2025!
Dec. 7th, 2025 01:21 pmIt is my 4th year participating and while it's been a tough year, it's been nothing compared to the last two weeks. Being diagnosed with a brain tumor (Glioblastoma), having a stroke and a seizure is no joke, boys and girls. Not even close.
Some of the things that I would love to give & receive this year are:
1) Correspondence via email or snail mail! Contact me via my Inbox here and I will give you an email address or my snail mail address, whichever is to your liking. It could be exchanging holiday cards, postcards, or even letters/emails throughout the year. I, of course, will be reaching out to those of you who wish for the same.
2) Groceries and prescriptions are more and more difficult to come by, as I think they are for a lot of folks, particularly this year and going into 2026. I would be grateful for any denomination of Walmart, Kroger, or VISA gift cards. Physical ones are fine, please ask for an address (obviously) but probably the quickest and simplest way are probably e-cards.
3) Be of service to your local animal shelter, library, memory home, art program, unhoused shelter, aging agency or city council in your community. It is so important to give back in your community if you are able to! There are so many different ways to be of service, not just monetarily. Even one hour of helping a senior at the library every week learn to use the computer, or bring a neighbor some groceries each week, read to a blind person or a child who is not yet able to read, help the local shelter get dogs out of their cages for a day outside…so many different ways to assist! You can even write letters or send cards to people in nursing homes! Get your kids or spouse involved and have fun with it!
4) I have an Amazon wish list: Lilliane's Wish List
I have all sorts of things on here, and trust me, they do NOT have to come from Amazon. If you wish to send them from somewhere else, like walmart.com or even yourself, just ask for my address. My roommate says my list is boring and made me add fun stuff. Not sure how I feel about that. :-)
5) Be kind to each other. It’s free, and I think we can ALL use a bit of kindness each and every day. However, remember to not confuse kindness and niceness, there is a distinct difference!
Thank you for taking the time to read wishes and help each other out! You are all fantastic!
The Apothecary Diaries, Vol. 14
Dec. 7th, 2025 11:32 amThe tales continue. Spoilers for the earlier ones ahead.
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