December 2025

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Tuesday, December 23rd, 2025 06:57
This week's prompt is welcome.

Your response should be exactly 100 words long. You do not have to include the prompt in your response -- it is meant as inspiration only.

Please use the tag "prompt: #474 - welcome" with your response.

Please put your drabble under a cut tag if it contains potential triggers, mature or explicit content, or spoilers for media released in the last month.

If you would like a template for the header information you may use this:

Subject: Original - Title (or) Fandom - Title

Post:
Title:
Original
(or) Fandom:
Rating:
Notes:




If you are a member of AO3 there is a 100 Words Collection!
Tuesday, December 23rd, 2025 10:28

Title: Sacrifice
Fandom: Babylon 5
Author: [personal profile] badly_knitted
Characters: Delenn, Neroon, Lennier.
Rating: PG
Word Count: 400
Spoilers/Setting: Moments of Transition.
Summary: Neroon accepted his role in Delenn’s plan because it showed wisdom. The rest was the calling of his own heart.
Content Notes: None needed.
Written For: Challenge 501: Amnesty 83, using Challenge 419: The Last Word.
Disclaimer: I don’t own Babylon 5, or the characters. They belong to J. Michael Straczynski.
A/N: Quadruple drabble.



Monday, December 22nd, 2025 22:49
Thank you, [personal profile] james for the excellent dinosaur card!

I've been too exhausted to do any of the semi-bespoke painting I half-promised over the summer, but I had a last-minute compulsion to make hand-printed cards because anything that looks like work went into it makes me appear marginally better.

You see? the cards say. An Effort.

I don't mind how they turned out. Sort of "the Dove of Peace is pissed and wants you to get your shit together."



§rf§
Monday, December 22nd, 2025 21:32
I was watching/reading a bunch of CoC IV-related content in the lead-up, and I’m going to post about it before posting about the episode itself, though I’ve obviously watched it as soon as that was an option. Askmaster and interviews )

Which reminded me that I should revisit my quantitative ranking of the series, because I’d fallen a couple behind, and some of the more recent ones were worth re-scoring.

original post

Revisiting s15-17, scoring s18-20 )

OK, and the main event:

Tasmkaster CoC 4 – So, I did end up going and spoiling myself for the winner and the scores before sitting down to watch, which was the correct decision. SPOILERS )

I’m just really sad we don’t get more than one episode with this group. This was a really good line-up (even if one of them is someone whose comedy I don’t enjoy that much).

*

There’s some kind of weird thing with me and the Penric books, where I’ll read a bunch in a row, then not read any of the new ones coming out for a couple of years, until I have a bunch in a row to read again, repeat. So, like, the last time I read Penric, it was to read 6 in quick succession in late 2022, and meanwhile she’s released 4 more, that I’m finally getting around to reading. (I think it’s that the novella length is not quite long enough to be worth re-immersing myself in the world and the growing cast for just one of them.)

7. Lois McMaster Bujold, Demon Daughter (Pen & Des #12) – I was intrigued by the premise of this one, and enjoyed it, even though it was very, very domestic – much more so than I expected from the dramatic cover. More, with spoilers )

8. Lois McMaster Bujold, The Adventure of the Demonic Ox (Pen & Des #14) – I skipped Penric and the Bandit semi-accidentally – by which I mean that I finished Demon Daughter on the plane to Oregon, went to see what else was openable on my Kindle, and it was the ox one, so I figured it had to be the next one. Then when I realized it was not, because there was a significant time-skip and it referenced an incident with bandits, I figured I’d just keep reading. (And later it turned out I did have ‘Bandit’ on my Kindle, I just couldn’t call it up for some reason, in offline mode.)

This was a weird one… I found the first half of it slow and fairly boring, and found myself skimming, which I pretty much never do with LMB’s books. But then it picked up some (spoilers) )

I’m presently catching up on reading Penric and the Bandit, so we’ll see if I make it through all of the currently-out Penrics (that one + one more) before I run out of reading steam…
Tuesday, December 23rd, 2025 04:00

Posted by Casey Baseel

There are two main types of okonomiyaki, but people in Hiroshima don’t like one of the names the rest of the country has for theirs.

Okonomiyaki isn’t just one of Japan’s most delicious foods, it’s also one of its most linguistically complex. The –yaki suffix can be used for all sorts of different types of cooking, but in this case it’s referring to flat-grilling. And the okonomi part? That translates to “what you like,” and it’s there because while okonomiyaki is a sort of round, savory crepe, aside from cabbage the fillings are pretty much whatever you want to put in there. All sorts of meat, seafood, and vegetables, as well as things like mochi, mentaiko (spicy cod roe), and cheese, are all fair game if they’re what you like.

But the other linguistic quirk about okonomiyaki is that different parts of Japan make it in different ways, and different parts of the country call those styles different things. Basically, the two centers of okonomiyaki power are Hiroshima and Osaka, with the latter also representing Japan’s central Kansai region as a whole.

In Hiroshima, okonomiyaki is cooked in layers. You have the crepe on the bottom, shredded cabbage and bean sprouts on top of that, then the fillings, and as a topping a fried egg. Yakisoba noodles are also a common okonomiyaki ingredient in Hiroshima, but it’s the layered structure, not the noodles, that’s the defining point.

▼ Hiroshima okonomiyaki

Meanwhile, over in Osaka/Kansai, the first step in making okonomiyaki is to put all of the ingredients, including the crepe batter, into a bowl and mix them together. It’s also common to add in grated yamaimo, a type of yam, to help the different ingredients stick together. Then you pour the bowl’s contents onto a flat grill, hot plate, or frying pan and cook them all together at once.

▼ Osaka okonomiyaki

While the contents are often largely the same, the different cooking styles make for very different textures, and their different ingredient ratios (okonomiyaki in Hiroshima tends to use a greater quantity of vegetables) make for two distinct flavors too. While you’re not likely to find too many people who love one and hate the other, okonomiyaki makes for a rather different eating experience depending on which type you’re eating, and this is where we get back to the linguistics.

Osaka is Japan’s third most populous city, and when you factor in the other major metropolitan centers in Kansai, such as Kobe and Kyoto, there are a lot more people living in the Osaka okonomiyaki sphere than the Hiroshima one. Osaka-style okonomiyaki is also easier to make at home, since, as mentioned above, you can cook it in a frying pan. Since the Hiroshima version calls for cooking the layers separately, but at the same time, it usually requires a larger counter-sized teppan flat grill, which is fine if you’re running a restaurant, but too big for most home kitchens. Because of that, the Osaka-style okonomiyaki is also the more prevalent version in Tokyo, east Japan, and northern Japan, even if okonomiyaki restaurants aren’t as common in those regions as they are in Hiroshima or Kansai.

So when they hear the word “okonomiyaki,” many people in central, eastern, and northern Japan will first think of the Kansai style. That means that they often feel like they need to use a different word to specify the kind of okonomiyaki made in Hiroshima and west Japan, and one of the words that came into use is “Hiroshimayaki.” To the people who use it, it probably seems like an easy solution. It’s the style of (okonomi)yaki made in Hiroshima, right?

Here’s the thing, though: People in Hiroshima don’t like the word “Hiroshimayaki.”

Our Japanese-language reporter P.K. Sanjun became aware of this through a series of awkward interactions with friends he’s made who grew up in the Hiroshima area. Every time he’s slipped up and said “Hiroshimayaki” when talking with them, they make it a point to correct him. It’s happened enough that P.K. decided to ask them, directly, if they get upset or irritated when people say “Hiroshimayaki,” and here’s what they had to say.

“It’s not irritating, but it’s confusing.”
“I wouldn’t say it irritates me. But it’s a clear sign that the person who’s talking isn’t from Hiroshima.”
“Yep, ticks me off. It’s called okonomiyaki.”
“Irritating. How irritating? So much that I wanna pour a bottle of Otafuku sauce [Hiroshima’s favorite brand of okonomiyaki sauce] on whoever said it. And it’s even more irritating if someone from Osaka says it.”

P.K.’s friend’s comment about “Hiroshimayaki” being an immediate giveaway that the person isn’t from Hiroshima is spot-on, by the way. Personally, I’m a borderline fanatical supporter of the Hiroshima version of okonomiyaki, and pretty much every time I’ve ordered it in a restaurant that calls it “Hiroshimayaki,” it’s been really poorly made.

Still, for someone like P.K., whose first mental image of okonomiyaki is the Kansai version, it feels unintuitive to say just “okonomiyaki” when he means the Hiroshima version. So next he asked the same four people how they feel about the term “Hiroshima-fu okonomiyaki” (fu being a suffix that means “style,” though an unskilled translator might mistake it for something else). This time, their answers were:

“I can allow it. It distinguishes it from Kansai-fu okonomiyaki, so it avoids any confusion.”
“Sure, it’s fine. I call the other kind Kansai-fu okonomiyaki, so it’s fair.”
“Dude, we already went over this. It’s called ‘okonomiyaki.’”
“I’m OK with it, as long as they don’t shorten it down to just ‘Hiroshima-fu.’ It still feels like a deviation from the normal usage, but as long as they keep ‘okonomiyaki’ in there, it’s fine.”

The point about “Hiroshima-fu okonomiyaki” being fair because people in Hiroshima say “Kansai-fu okonomiyaki” or “Osaka-fu okonomiyaki” brings up an interesting point. While people outside Hiroshima sometimes call Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki “Hiroshimayaki,” no one, including people in Hiroshima, call Kansai/Osaka-style okonomiyaki “Kansaiyaki” or “Osakayaki.” It’s possible that part of the reason some people in Hiroshima bristle at the word “Hiroshimayaki” is because it sounds like it’s reducing all of Hiroshima’s food culture down to just one dish, or that it carries a subtle but condescending connotation that the thing they make in Hiroshima isn’t actually okonomiyaki.

And much like how the separate strata are the defining feature of Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki, there’s another layer at play too for some people, as one of P.K.’s friends added a bit of historical context. Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki became the city’s representative dish following the end of World War II. Having been hit by an atomic bomb in the closing days of the war, the city was devastated, and while okonomiyaki might translate to “grill what you like,” in those early years of reconstruction the reality of the dish was closer to “grill what you’ve got.” At first, that meant whatever meager amounts of shredded cabbage and bean sprouts the people of Hiroshima could scrape together, but as time went on and things got better both agriculturally and economically, gradually more and more fortifying, hearty ingredients could be added to Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki.

“Okonomiyaki, in some ways, is a symbol of Hiroshima’s recovery,” one of P.K. friends told him. “It got better and better as the years went on, just like the city itself did. For that reason a lot of people in the Hiroshima area take pride in their okonomiyaki. We grew up hearing it called ‘okonomiyaki,’ so we don’t want other people to take that out of the name they call it by.”

So to conclude, you’re probably not going to cause outright offense to people from Hiroshima if you say the word “Hiroshimayaki,” and it’s probably not going to require you to make a public apology (unless you’re a prominent politician anyway). People from Hiroshima definitely will notice your choice of words, though, and they’re not going to be particularly happy about it, so if you want to make a linguistic tip of your hat to the local food culture, at least remembering the term “Hiroshima-fu okonomiyaki” is the nice thing to do.

And hey, it’s still less complicated than the Japanese dessert that has six different names.

Photos ©SoraNews24
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Monday, December 22nd, 2025 20:13
I just went through the annual ritual of renewing my handful of domains at Hover.com. I bought one of them right at the end of December one year, so I start getting reminder emails in late November, and then I just renew all of them at once.

They've gone up to $18.99/year, which makes me wonder if I really should let a couple of them go next time. But they're like polished stones, appealing to hold even if they don't have other uses. The ones for the first two books in particular, I've never publicized, but I'd also hate for someone else to squat on them.

traumahealed.com is the one I've put out there the most over the years. Others are sundownarts.com (original domain, main email address), sundownhealingarts.com (publisher name), wellspringofcompassion.com (book 1 title), presenceaftertrauma.com (book 2 title), curioushealing.com (book blog)

I also have soniaconnolly.com which I turned into a programmer resume site last year, and balkandancing.com, which I mostly use to keep an ever-expanding list of folk dance videos.
Monday, December 22nd, 2025 22:20
Today I'm making rosemary-lemon holiday cookies, somewhat inspired by this recipe, but I'm using lemon powder and Maine pine bitters. The dough tastes good, at least. It's currently chilling in the fridge before I attempt to roll it out and cut little evergreen trees. Cutout cookies are not what I do best, but rosemary cookies just deserve that shape.

EDIT 12/22/25 -- The cookies are done! \o/ They turned out quite delicious. The first bite just tastes like sugar cookie, but then the lemon and pine flavors bloom. Rosemary cookies are tricky to balance. Too sweet and they're just sugar cookies, not sweet enough and they taste like crackers; too little rosemary and they're sugar cookies again, too much and it tastes like you're baking with floor wash. But these are perfect.

Read more... )
Tuesday, December 23rd, 2025 02:00

Posted by Oona McGee

Limited-edition drink celebrates the Year of the Horse with gorgeous Japanese details. 

With only a couple of weeks left in the year, we’re galloping full pelt towards 2026, which is the Year of the Horse. In Japan, where the Chinese zodiac is celebrated from 1 January, the four-legged steed will be making its appearance on all sorts of New Year’s imagery, including… a Starbucks chilled cup.

The chilled cup series made its worldwide debut in Japan in September 2005, and since then it’s gone on to include all sorts of flavours, packed inside cups adorned in beautiful designs. This new release is no different, with a stunning design in auspicious hues of red, white and gold, and the zodiac animal of the year sitting beneath the green mermaid, in a way that makes it look like she might be riding on its back.

▼ Look closely and you’ll see auspicious patterns and seasonal motifs that make the golden horse glisten.

Inside, you’ll find a gentle tea latte with a mellow taste of milk, enhanced by the sweetness of honey and the aroma of yuzu for a burst of sweet citrus on the palate. As the third instalment in Starbucks’ “Delight Me” series, which focuses on a sense of seasonal novelty, excitement, and surprise, the Yuzu Honey Tea Latte is said to deliver a delightful moment that will warm your heart in the cold winter season.

▼ Plum blossoms are common New Year’s motifs due to their late winter blooming period, symbolising renewal.

Starbucks says the new drink is ideal for partnering with Japanese sweets containing red bean paste, which is timely, given that a lot of red bean sweets are commonly eaten around New Year. The flavour of the red bean paste is said to pair well with the delicate aroma of the tea, while the citrusy zing of the yuzu cuts through the sweetness of the paste and honey, lightening the richness of the sweets.

▼ Anything with cream, like this red bean-filled pancake-like dorayaki dessert, will enhance the milkiness in the tea.

While the drink looks set to be a hit on its own, Starbucks has totally roped us in with the idea of pairing it with sweets to alter the flavour. We never would’ve thought to pair something so traditional as a red bean dessert with a modern Starbucks beverage, but this blend between East and West, and old and new, is actually a perfect representation of what Starbucks Japan has to offer.

Source, images: Press release
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Monday, December 22nd, 2025 18:05
Here are the timeline notes for "Along These Sympathetic Fibers." They compare divergences between local-Caribbean and Peculiar-Caribbean events in history.

Read more... )
Monday, December 22nd, 2025 19:03

⌈ Secret Post #6926 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.


01.


More! )


Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 02 pages, 34 secrets from Secret Submission Post #989.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
Monday, December 22nd, 2025 17:11
This poem is spillover from the June 3, 2025 Poetry Fishbowl. It was inspired by a prompt from [personal profile] see_also_friend. It also fills the "Rainbow" square in my 6-2-25 card for the Pride Fest Bingo. This poem has been sponsored by a pool with [personal profile] fuzzyred. It belongs to the series Peculiar Obligations.

Read more... )
Monday, December 22nd, 2025 17:54

got my MRI results back! the good news: no surgery. the bad news: i probably have arthritis, sob. at least now i know why the treatments the hand doctor gave me weren't working...

in any case, the past week was mostly spent mucking about in new ff14 content, as is typical for patch week. i never got around to writing a post on the new raid tier but i quite enjoyed the fights (and am still quite sad i won't be able to do savage this time around). my hands have generally been feeling well enough for me to actually play, which has been nice, though it's clear that i still need to take it easy overall. still, i'll take what i can get.

also, the new extreme is WILD. what a wild fight. the designers were really cooking with this one.

planning on seeing family this week for the holiday, though the specific plans are still somewhat up in the air. i should be able to see both sides of my family though, so that'll be nice. i got the last few bits of my shopping done this past weekend, so i should be good to go on that front.

still reading this brutal moon; i didn't really intend to read it this slowly but at the same time i've been enjoying it so much that i'm glad to not be rushing it. that said, i've clearly reached the point in act 3 where everything comes to a head and i'd like to read the rest in one sitting, so hopefully i can find time for that this week.

it's that time of the year where i'm starting to think about plans and goals for next year, but i think i'll hold off talking about them in depth until next week. i do think i'm not going to make weekly posts next year; i've enjoyed having an excuse to blog regularly but also i've definitely struggled to think of what to post on slow weeks.

Monday, December 22nd, 2025 17:56
ignavia /iɲˈɲa.vja/

noun

1. the sin of sloth or idleness or moral cowardice.

examples

1. Every honest man will admit that a violent effort is necessary to shake off ignavia critica critical laziness, that so widespread form of intellectual cowardice; that this effort must be constantly repeated, and that it is often accompanied by real suffering. ON BELIEVING WHAT WE’RE TOLD. 21 Dec 2004

2. The pity that proves so possible and plentiful without that basis, is mere ignavia and cowardly effeminacy; maudlin laxity of heart, grounded on blinkard dimness of head -- contemptible as a drunkard's tears. Latter-Day Pamphlets. Thomas Carlyle. 1838

origin
Latin


The Divine Comedy, Purgatorio, Canto 18: The multitude of the slothful - Illustration by Gustave Dore

sloth
Monday, December 22nd, 2025 16:55
This was too good to pass up.

Winter solstice banner 
Tuesday, December 23rd, 2025 10:57
Title: Look and Feel
Rating: M-rated
Length: 1280 words
Acknowledgements: Much thanks to [personal profile] trobadora for beta! <3
Tags: Episode Related, Episode 4, Masturbation, Vague hints of D/s, Handcuffs, Non-explicit fantasies
Summary: Unbidden, he pictures Shen Wei alone in the interview room, composed, proud, and patient.

Look and Feel )