QOTD: Jim Henson on life goals

Nov. 24th, 2025 10:03 pm
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[personal profile] brithistorian

Presented without comment, except that I have always loved Jim Henson and I agree with this quote 100%:

"When I was young, my ambition was to be one of the people who made a difference in this world. My hope is to leave the world a little better for my having been there." - Jim Henson

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[personal profile] brithistorian

About a month ago, NMIXX came out with their latest sing, "Blue Valentine."

I loved it — I've listened to it so many times! One part of it really confused me, though: From the start of the prechorus (at 0:40) until the beginning of the chorus (at 0:56), the tempo suddenly drops, then has an accelerando until the chorus begins. But I was really confused, though, because the line "You'll always be my blue valentine" in the chorus took the same amount of the time as when the same line was sung at the beginning of the song, but it felt faster. Fortunately, when React to the K (a YouTube channel that feature classical and jazz music students reacting to K-pop songs) did their video reacting to this song, they had an entire section where Liam (a classical percussionist) explains what's happening rhythmically during the prechorus — it took him almost 2 minutes to explain what happened in that 16 seconds of the song, but to me, it was worth it — I'd listened to that part of the song over and over so many times trying to figure out what was happening there, so it was great to finally understand.

Twenty years

Nov. 24th, 2025 10:37 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I had a pretty good day for it being the blackest day on my calendar.

Twenty years ago today my brother died. It was thanksgiving day, that year. He died in a car accident. No other cars involved, he wasn't drunk, the weather was fine, he was on familiar roads...

So there was no reason for it, no lesson to be learned from it or cause to take up because of it.

Normally I will have a wee dram for the occasion, but tonight I went to the gym instead, knowing that the rest of the week is too full to allow it and not wanting to let the good effect of actually making it to trans gym on Saturday wither away already. It was a good choice but means I got home and as usual went upstairs to a shower and bed.

It was a pretty good day. I woke up absurdly early as usual but didn't feel tired. I got up and did my morning chores (opened the curtains, emptied the dishwasher, made a pot of tea), made breakfast and started work an hour early. My manager is off all week and his manager is off today, so while I'm awaiting feedback from them on a report that's perilously close to its deadline now, it's not my problem if they don't get it to me. I didn't have many meetings either (though the two I did have were bad enough), it was much warmer than it had been at the end of last week and the sun was even out sometimes.

Most of all, what made this November good is that I wasn't fretting about my dog dying (like last year), I didn't break my ankle and need an operation (like two years ago), and a dear friend wasn't having a psychotic episode where I was the only person she'd talk to (like three years ago).

November just sucks.

But this one has been okay. Yes it's been full of work and of counterprotesting fascists, but it's also had some fun stuff and there's more happening this week: a birthday party, a wedding, a new Knives Out movie, a thanksgiving dinner that I'm not cooking...

Twenty years.

It doesn't feel long ago.

And yet I've also been so many people since then. I'm sad I didn't have the chance to find out who he would have been.

A Day with Family. Finding the Pace.

Nov. 24th, 2025 01:11 pm
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[personal profile] canyonwalker
Thanksgiving triplog #5
Manassas, VA · Sun, 23 Nov 2025. 11pm.

Today we visited my family in suburban Virginia outside of Washington, DC. Well, we visited part of my family. We visited my youngest sister, C., and my mom, who lives with her. And even there we only saw part of C's family as her husband and two of their kids are out of town at an academic convention and their oldest is at college and not arriving home for Thanksgiving break until late Tuesday night.

Past visits with my family have been... frustrating. C and her kids are a whirlwind of activity, and they've never paused any of that activity to see us when we visit. It's frustrating we visit once a year from 2,500 miles away it feels like they make no time for us. And it's not even like we're asking to be house guests. We have always stayed in a hotel and rented a car and simply tried to plan which days/times we can see them at their house.

Last year I made peace with this and settled on a short visit. I'd see them for just one day and whoever wasn't there, wasn't there.

I did the same again this year. Thus I only saw my mom, my sister C, and half of her family. I would've like to to see my brother-in-law and my other three nephews, too, but instead of feeling disappointed about who was too busy living their lives I focused on enjoying my time with those who were there.

With expectations set appropriately Hawk and I had a great time. We spent the day with my sister and mom. Two of her kids were in and out with fretting about homework and other stuff. For example, one happily joined us in going out for lunch, but the other preferred to stay home to work on his paper for government class (he's a HS senior). But really, what kind of 17yo is like, "I don't want to see my uncle and aunt who visit just once a year and I also don't want pizza for lunch"? When we were able to catch them standing still— and not hiding in their rooms— I was able to engage them in conversation about what they're working on now and what they're looking forward to next. I even got the shy HS senior to talk about which college he's applied to is his #1 choice— his mom interrupted, "That's news to me!"— and what degree he expects to pursue if he goes there.

It wound up being a surprisingly late evening as we stayed until just after 10. I thought things might fizzle out a few hours earlier than that, either because they were all busy or because we'd be tired. But after having such a tiring day yesterday (so tiring that I slept in a car in a parking lot in the middle of the day) I'd gotten good sleep last night to feel 100% today. Plus we were all having such a good time with a rollicking conversation and lots of verbal repartee Alas, I did get up at 6:15am this morning, so by 10pm I was feeling we should leave so I could drive back to the hotel safely. We called it an evening and left on a high note.

Bundle of Holding: Cornucopia 2025

Nov. 24th, 2025 01:59 pm
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Bundle of Holding's 13th annual feast of top-quality tabletop roleplaying game ebooks.

Bundle of Holding: Cornucopia 2025

Catching up on other news

Nov. 24th, 2025 04:32 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

Last Monday morning I was supposed to have a voice therapy appointment but our internet was borked. I had to drag D out of bed just after 9 and make him deal with a confusing and mysterious problem. He bodged a solution really quickly but I was supposed to have a voice therapy appointment at 9:30 and I'd texted the clinician warning her that I wasn't sure I'd be able to make it. We had

Thank you for letting me know. Unfortunately as it is such late notice this will count as a missed appointment. Please let me know if you would like to re-book the session, and if there is anything we can do to support attending going forwards. If you do not reply within 7 days we will assume that you do not wish to continue voice therapy and you will be discharged.

Something about that "if you would like to re-book the session" rubbed me the wrong way -- I waited years for this referral! -- and all of a sudden I didn't want to re-book. I was put off by how the technical problems were handled at the first appointment, and even though they didn't recur and I was confident I wouldn't have them again because once she agreed to use Teams I gave her my work address where Teams works fine every day so I didn't anticipate any recurrence.

I just. Still felt weird about it, like I was doing it wrong by treating this as an investigation about something I'm curious about rather than something where I had clear and specific Transition Goals in mind. Indigo might be a little too patient-led for me, heh; I appreciate the ways it's more flexible and less judgmental than the old Gender Identity Clinic system, but this isn't the first time I've struggled with mismatched expectations: I'm expecting some kind of information that doesn't exist and even when I ask for it I'm told to look at social media websites I don't use; I'm like you're the NHS, don't you have a photocopy-burned brochure for me?

(This feeling I'm having here is like a grain of sand in comparison to the deserts-worth of the same feeling that I'm having when it comes to top surgery... I've written thousands of words about that so far and it's still not ready to share.)

It just felt like too high a hill to climb, so I've let the seven days go by and now I'm discharged from the service. I hope someone else who's chomping at the bit for their voice to sound different in some particular way is making good use of the appointment instead.

Clarke Award Finalists 2023

Nov. 24th, 2025 09:19 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
2023: King Charles III is the most unpopular British King in the last 60-odd years, Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Cabinet Secretary Simon Case’s comic routine is poorly received, and Sunak’s government ushers in a golden age of soaring STD rates.

Poll #33874 Clarke Award Finalists 2023
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 18


Which 2023 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?

View Answers

Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman
4 (22.2%)

Metronome by Tom Watson
0 (0.0%)

Plutoshine by Lucy Kissick
1 (5.6%)

The Anomaly (translation of L'anomalie) by Hervé Le Tellier
0 (0.0%)

The Coral Bones by E. J. Swift
0 (0.0%)

The Red Scholar's Wake by Aliette de Bodard
15 (83.3%)



Bold for have read, italic for intend to read, underline for never heard of it.

Which 2023 Clarke Award Finalists Have You Read?
Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman
Metronome by Tom Watson
Plutoshine by Lucy Kissick
The Anomaly (translation of L'anomalie) by Hervé Le Tellier
The Coral Bones by E. J. Swift
The Red Scholar's Wake by Aliette de Bodard
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[personal profile] neonvincent
Instead, it's an ad, so I wrote Vox explains 'The salmon dilemma' instead.

The Coming Golden Age of Used Books

Nov. 24th, 2025 08:51 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Just as the Great Fire of Rome was a boon for the building trade, so too will a modern catastrophe be a boon for used book stores.

The Coming Golden Age of Used Books
canyonwalker: Cheers! (wine tasting)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
Thanksgiving triplog #4
Manassas, VA · Sat, 22 Nov 2025. 9:15pm.

It's been a busy day today. We arrived early this morning on a red-eye flight having gotten maybe one hour of sleep, ate breakfast in a convenience store parking lot, and met friends for lunch and took a nap in a thrift store parking lot. And that was all before 3pm. Since then we've driven 45 minutes to another city, met more friends, had another meal with them, and then driven another 45 minutes around the metro area to where we've checked into our hotel for the next 4 nights.

Our dinner hosts this evening were Joe and Adriane, another pair of Hawk's friends from college. It's great that she has close friends she's kept in touch with. I've lost touch with all of mine. We met them at their house in Silver Spring, Maryland, where we've visited a number of times before. In fact the last time we saw them was pretty much this same day last year. ...Not the same numerical date but precisely "the Saturday before Thanksgiving".

Last year we went out to dinner at a nearby pub with Joe and Adriane, where I imagined my father may literally have drank beer with his college chums in the 1960s. But this year there was no pub-going. For one, Hawk didn't like their food. For another, I was still feeling fazed from a nearly sleepless night and didn't want to risk the sleepiness caused by even one drink of alcohol. So we ordered in Italian food and pizza and I passed even on the beer and liquor they offered me in the house. Me playing it safe turned out to be important because it allowed to spend several hours with them, chatting amiably in their living room, and still drive another 45 minutes on to our hotel for the night.

Now we're at our hotel for the night— tonight and the next 3 nights, too— in Manassas, Virginia, in the suburbs well west of Washington, D.C. What's in Manassas? you might ask unless you're from the area or are a Civil War buff. Well, for us, there's really nothing in Manassas. Like where we stayed on our pre-Thanksgiving trip last year it's a hotel location we picked because it's centrally located between places we planned to visit in the next few days. Though with a bunch of my relatives ghosting our texts and/or saying, "Sorry, something came up" I'm not sure how many of those plans will materialize into actual visits.

Anyway, it's late now, Or, rather, it feels late. It's 9:15pm and I am crashing, hard. The weight of last night's red-eye is really hitting me now. The parking lot nap I took this afternoon recharged me just enough to make it through dinner. But now my battery indicator is blinking "2%". Time to get to bed.

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Name: Sim / Simmy
Age group: In my late 20s :')
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Subscription/Access Policy:
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Main Fandoms: Fire Emblem: Three Houses, My Hero Academia
Other Fandoms: Spy x Family, Hetalia, Dangan Ronpa, Hunter x Hunter, Orb: On the Movements of the Earth
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OTPs and Ships: I'm not very particular about top/bottom dynamics; I have preferences, but I'm fine with whichever arrangement. I'm also a huge multi-shipper and if I list everything out, this will get really long, so I'll just list my top ships lol

FE3H
  • Sylvain Jose Gautier / Felix Hugo Fraldarius
  • Marianne von Edmund / Hilda Valentine Goneril
  • Caspar von Bergliez / Linhardt von Hevring
    • I'm also into Caspar von Bergliez / Ashe Ubert / Linhardt von Hevring <3

My Hero Academia
  • Todoroki Shouto / Bakugo Katsuki / Midoriya Izuku (poly ship/OT3, but all variations are okay too, like BakuDeku or TodoBaku, etc.)
    • In order of preference, it's BakuDeku, TodoDeku, and TodoBaku
  • Kaminari Denki / Jiro Kyouka
  • Togata Mirio / Amajiki Tamaki

Other ships: Killugon, Hisoillu, Okubade, Twiyor, Damianya, USUK, GerIta

Movies: Chicago, Spirited Away, Forrest Gump, Star Wars (1-6; I've also watched 7-9 but I honestly don't remember much)
Other Anime/Manga: Code Geass, 86, Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood, Naruto, Chainsaw Man, The Fragrant Flower Blooms with Dignity, Dungeon Meshi, Sousou no Frieren; I tend to like a lot of shounen/seinen, but I also like slice-of-life, comedy, and romcoms.
Books: I used to read a lot when I was a teenager, but now, not so much. I did like The Hunger Games series, and The Princess Diaries. 
Music: BTS, NMIXX, Fall Out Boy, Vaundy, Yorushika, Two Door Cinema Club, etc.
Games: Some other Fire Emblem games (9, 10, 13, 14, 17); Civilization VI; Persona 3; Persona 5; Pokémon
Webcomics/Manhwa:
 The Remarried Empress, True Beauty

A bear for my bed

Nov. 23rd, 2025 09:58 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

"I gotta show you something," Dad said, and got up from the sofa so disappeared from the camera. My mom was left looking boggled; she didn't know what he was doing. There didn't seem to be anything in the conversation -- about them decorating their house for Christmas, I think -- to hint even to her what he was thinking of.

He came back quickly, with a big white fuzzy teddy bear. The bear was wearing a blue knitted scarf and something I couldn't quite see on his forehead that might have been ski goggles or earmuffs. Dad was waving a white fuzzy paw at me. It was the cutest damn thing.

He explained about how he saw it in the window of the local secondhand store a few times, and that the bear was asking my dad to bring him home, so one day he just went and bought it. He said it didn't cost much.

"I'm trying to think of a name for him," Dad said. "I'm calling him Bob for now but that isn't quite right." Mom asked if I had an idea for a name, and honestly my mind had immediately gone to Bernard but I think that'd be too fancy for them. Dad mentioned Frank which I like a lot; reminds me of my old pal from a volunteering group who's retired even from that now; a lovely old blind guy called Frank with a guide dog called Ronnie.

Frank, or whatever he's going to be called, lies on what I think of as the guest bed but my parents call "my" bed because they think the guest room is my room. (For a long time, my mom was calling the basically-theoretical bedroom in the as-yet-unfinished basement "Chris's room" which...makes my head hurt just to think about. I think now that the basement is finished it's being called just "the bedroom downstairs," which is a vast improvement.) "Your dad had been wanting to get a bear for your bed for a while," Mom said, which again is a strange sentence.

But Frank is lovely. Even when Dad put him back, his black quarter-zip was covered in fuzz from the bear. It was very cute. It's really heartening that he continues, in his dad way, to just get Ideas in his head and do these little whimsical things that my mom can only humor him in; it's one of the few things my parents don't share.

canyonwalker: Uh-oh, physics (Wile E. Coyote)
[personal profile] canyonwalker
Thanksgiving triplog #3
Millersville, MD · Sat, 22 Nov 2025. 3pm.

At the moment I'm sitting in my rental car, parked in front of a Goodwill store, and I've just woken up from a nap. 😳 Yeah, it's been a rough day so far after coming off of a red-eye flight this morning.

From where we ate breakfast in a Wawa parking lot this morning we drove 10-15 minutes east to visit our friends Christie and John. Christie is a friend of Hawk's from college. She and John married in 2012. I think the last time I saw either of them was at their wedding 13½ years ago. 😳 But it was great to see them again. And they welcomed us into their house at 8am, which fit well with our post-red-eye schedule.

We chatted amiably at their dining room table for a few hours. For Hawk some of it was reminiscing on old times at college— but fortunately not too much of that, as that was mostly before my time and entirely before John's. Mostly we chatted about life in general, the current state of the country, and the joys and tribulation of buying a house— since they'd just bought theirs earlier this year. They've both lost significant weight recently, and they look great. Their son joined us for part of the conversation after he woke up. He's in 5th grade, so about 11 years old.

We went out for lunch together at a local sushi restaurant. Well, "we" minus Christie and John's son. He stayed home because he hates sushi. And yes, he's old enough to stay home by himself. Christie and John both work in local government, Christie in law enforcement, so they've checked the laws on leaving a child unsupervised at home. The law says that's okay at age 10. That surprised me because the way most parents I know nowadays act, you'd think it's a crime to leave a child home alone until age 18. Yay for parents who teach their kids age-appropriate independence and maintain even a sliver of time separate from parenting 24/7.

Ah, but here I am talking about good parenting after Hawk and I have just slept in our car a thrift store parking lot. 🤣 Lack of sleep was hitting me hard after lunch. I got just 1 hour last night on the red-eye flight. Hawk wanted to visit the thrift store across the street from the restaurant. "And you can take a nap there," she added.

It sounded kind of ridiculous when she said it... if for no other reason than because napping in a car has virtually never worked for me. But I was extremely tired. I knew I at least needed to try, because I was fading so hard that driving more than a few miles would be dangerous. So after she went into the store, I leaned my seat back, wrapped my sweater over my torso like a blanket, and... dozed off within 5 minutes. 😴

Sometime during my nap Hawk came back out of the store and joined me. We slept together— in separate seats but both in the car in the Goodwill store's parking lot, I mean— until 3. And now we're waking up and stretching and getting ready to drive to visit another set of friends for the evening.

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[personal profile] dialecticdreamer
A Change of Plans
By Dialecticdreamer/Sarah Williams
Part 1 of 1, complete
Word count (story only): 1400


:: While getting ready for a much-anticipated dinner out with friends, Rosemary has to change plans due to a broken temporary crown. Instead of canceling, her friends adapt the evening. Original fiction, the story was written from a prompt by [personal profile] librarygeek, with my great thanks. ::




A sharp release of pressure in her mouth made Rosemary Landon freeze. “Sonofa--” she began, but the words were mumbled around the pieces of her temporary crown. As soon as she inhaled, the pain washed over her the inside of her mouth like a wave. She groaned as her watch chimed.

Spitting the two pieces of the temporary crown and the sliver of tooth from the trimmed edge into her palm, she checked the clock on the stove, then let out a deep sigh. Quickly, she scrolled through the contacts to call her dentist.
Read more... )

Weekly Notes: November 17–23, 2025

Nov. 23rd, 2025 06:32 pm
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[personal profile] djwudi
  • Lots of meetings at work this week, including a quarterly exempt staff meeting, a leadership group meeting, and I lead this quarter’s accessibility liaisons group meeting. Definitely kept the week busy. And on top of that…
  • Possibly the biggest thing this week was that Tuesday night was the public debut of Highline’s exempt staff unionizing efforts. There has been a lot of organizing quietly going on for close to a year now, I found out a few months ago, and we’d hit the point where we had a strong majority of verbal support, so we had a dinner gathering and officially started signing authorization cards. Within 24 hours we had “yes” votes from 65% of the exempt staff, and by Friday, we had broken 70% in favor. This coming week we’ll be turning in the cards and submitting the formal paperwork to Washington’s Public Employment Relations Commission (PERC) for recognition. It’s all pretty exciting!

📸 Photos

An AFT Washington Representation Authorization card with a pen next to it, sitting on a white marble tabletop.
About to sign my “yes” vote for unionizing.
Me, wearing a black cap and short-sleeve button-up shirt with mid-century modern sci-fi designs, droping my authorization card into a black metal mailbox.
Dropping my signed card into the collection box.

📺 Watching

The Family Plan 2 (2025): Nothing groundbreaking, a little predictable, and as with many sequels, not quite as good as the first, but a perfectly enjoyable afternoon diversion.

🔗 Linking

  • Victor Tangermann at Futurism: Town’s Huge Christmas Mural Was Generated Using AI, Resulting in Ghastly Chthonic Horrors: “‘It looks like a refugee camp/Christmas market mashup. I guess the prompt was “Reform Christmas nightmare,”‘ one user wrote. ‘They didn’t stop the boats… or the mutant dogs and two-headed snowmen.'”

  • Sagar Naresh at Slashgear: 5 Reasons You Might Want To Stop Using HDMI Cables: This one’s mostly just for me, as I’ve never really known the reasons to go with DisplayPort over HDMI.

  • Lionsgate: Dogma 4K Steelbook®: If you’re a Kevin Smith fan, you may appreciate knowing that Dogma, long out of print, is finally getting a new pressing on 4K/Blu-ray, and is now available to pre-order.

  • Anthony Moser: I Am An AI Hater: “I am here to be rude, because this is a rude technology, and it deserves a rude response. Miyazaki said, “I strongly feel that this is an insult to life itself.” Scam Altman said we can surround the solar system with a Dyson Sphere to hold data centers. Miyazaki is right, and Altman is wrong. Miyazaki tells stories that blend the ordinary and the fantastic in ways people find deeply meaningful. Altman tells lies for money.”

  • Justin Chang at The New Yorker (archive.is link): “Wicked: For Good” Is Very, Very Bad: “In the second of two movies adapted from the Broadway musical, Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo battle fascism, bigotry, and some fairly dreadful filmmaking.”

  • Aisha Down at The Guardian: ‘We could have asked ChatGPT’: students fight back over course taught by AI: “Students at the University of Staffordshire have said they feel ‘robbed of knowledge and enjoyment’ after a course they hoped would launch their digital careers turned out to be taught in large part by AI.”

  • At Phys.org (byline of Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan): The Batman effect: The mere sight of the ‘superhero’ can make us more altruistic: “‘In the first part of our test (control condition), an experimenter, apparently pregnant, boarded the train with an observer.’ The experts assessed the passengers’ tendency to give up their seats for the pregnant woman. ¶ In the experimental condition, another experimenter dressed as Batman entered the scene from another door of the train. Faced with this unexpected encounter, passengers were significantly more likely to offer their seats: 67.21% of passengers offered their seats in the presence of Batman, or more than two out of three, compared to 37.66% in the control experiment, or just over one out of three.”

  • Tom Forsyth on Mastodon: “Recent discussion about the perils of doors in gamedev reminded me of a bug caused by a door in a game you may have heard of called ‘Half Life 2’. Are you sitting comfortably? Then I shall begin.”

Mirrored from Eclecticism.

Hello and Welcome to my Post!

Nov. 23rd, 2025 06:35 pm
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[personal profile] queenofmemes posting in [community profile] addme_fandom
Name: Meme
Pronouns: She/Her
Age Group: I’m in my late 20s — please ONLY add me if you’re 18+!
Country: USA, specifically EST
Subscription / Access Policy: Open for now, I may restrict access in the future depending on when I write ficlets.
What I Chat About: Fandom, particularly. But I especially love talking about original characters, writing, roleplaying, and so, so much more.
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Main Fandom: JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure; it has a chokehold on me. I’m an experienced roleplayer with an OC for Stardust Crusaders that I’m very proud of and love talking about!
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Peanut butter jelly time!

Nov. 23rd, 2025 10:39 am
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[personal profile] neonvincent

Benefits by Zoë Fairbairns

Nov. 23rd, 2025 09:19 am
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[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Mother's Benefits become the means by which British governments provide British women with the same benevolent management Britain once provided to India, Ireland, and Africa.

Benefits by Zoë Fairbairns

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