[ SECRET POST #6886 ]
Nov. 12th, 2025 06:04 pm⌈ Secret Post #6886 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
01.

( More! )
Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 01 pages, 12 secrets from Secret Submission Post #983.
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.
And back we go....
Nov. 12th, 2025 05:23 pmI think what this has really hit home is how much I would love to have a sabbatical every few years from work. I'm not sad to be going back, but it's so frenetic, and everything is a crisis, and the day in and day out is so wearing. I know I'll get used to it again, but it would also be nice not to be looking down the road at 27 more years of this. This is where midlife crises come from. I mean, fantasizing about not working full time has been a full time hobby of mine for about 15 years, so my definition of midlife is generous, but the point stands.
So farewell time to work on author stuff and editing. Farewell long hikes in the middle of the day. Farewell not having to cram everything into the weekend and feeling like a bad friend when I have to say no. Farewell kitty playtime and reading a book while doing nothing else. It was nice while it lasted.
What Am I Reading Wednesday - November 12
Nov. 12th, 2025 04:26 pmWhat I Finished Reading This Week
Embers of the Hands – Eleanor Barraclough
In Embers of the Hands, Eleanor Barralough sets out to recount the history of the Viking Age through what the archaeological and written record can tell us about the people history "forgot": commoners versus kings and warriors; women and children versus men; the enslaved versus the free; and about the activities of everyday life: falling in (un)requited love, religious belief, play, and homemaking, among others. She does this very, very well, with clear prose; a commitment to making clear what's fact, what's conjecture, and what's just not known; a wickedly mischievous sense of humor, and a true love for the subject. The section on Omfim the artist (just read it!) is just charming. This book is an absolute treasure and worth multiple reads.
I Will Blossom Anyway – Disha Bose
I Will Blossom Anyway is a strong contender to be the best novel I've read in 2025. Bose is a phenomenal observer of human beings: these are some of the most fully-rounded characters I've encountered in recent memory. They have strengths, flaws, and blind spots; they think and act in believable ways; they grow. Her depictions of the exhilaration, confusion, and immaturity of early 20's independence and interpersonal relationships are spot-on, as are her depictions of Bengali family dynamics and the good and bad of being an immigrant professional far from home. I'm not saying anything specific about the plot and that's deliberate: there are some real emotional gut punches in this book and they should be encountered exactly as the characters do--with no forewarning. Moreover; Bose sets up a lot of the common tropes and beats and then completely subverts them in ways readers will not expect precisely because she avoids the easy character or plot progressions that leave you grousing "But no one would actually say/do/react like that IRL!" and it is so, so, fun.
TL;DR--this book is so well-written and satisfying; read it.
The Happiness Files – Arthur Brooks
Per its promotional blurb, "Imagine if your life were a startup. How would you lead it and shape it to be most successful?" is the question that underpins the writing of The Happiness Files. Ironically, this book is at its best when Brooks is writing for a general audience versus the sort of people who found and run start-ups (who are apparently emotional imbeciles judging from how Brooks does write for them; namely, as though he were confronting a toddler having a Big Emotions meltdown in the supermarket.)
Luckily, those sections occur toward the front of the book and are soon out of the way, and the rest is quite readable and enjoyable. Much of what Brooks discusses in the volume's 33 3-to-5 page chapters is common sense (e.g., don't hold pointless meetings; don't give disingenuous compliments; focus on having experiences versus acquiring money, and on making progress toward goals versus having achieved them) but it can be helpful to have these things stated outright, and Brooks has a knack for making the point without belaboring it. There is a Christian bent to some of the examples he uses, but it's not particularly heavy-handed, and far more of the book's content is grounded in scientific studies (thankfully endnoted should readers want to follow up on them).
TL;DR - This is a solid book of grounded advice on how to live in a way that fosters contentedness and satisfaction in your personal and professional life.
What I Am Currently Reading
Shield Maiden - Sharon Emmerichs
As a wish-fulfillment fantasy it's great, but oh god, Emmerichs' attempts at diversity and representation are dire.
What I'm Reading Next
This week I acquired Ruin and Rising by Leigh Bardugo, Swiz by Alex Daniels et al., Shield Maiden by Sharon Emmerichs, and Nimona by Noelle Stevenson.
これで以上です。
I liked you better when you weren't cool
Nov. 12th, 2025 04:54 pmWednesday Reading Meme
Nov. 12th, 2025 04:45 pmDiane Duane, Dark Mirror: Reviewed here.
Avengers Disassembled: Reread this for 616 Book Club; giving myself credit because otherwise I will not make my Goodreads goal.
What I'm Reading Now
Comics Wednesday!
( 1776 #1, Fantastic Four #5, Iron and Frost #2, New Avengers #6, Ultimate Black Panther #22, Ultimate Wolverine #11 )
What I'm Reading Next
Not sure yet.
Writing update
Nov. 12th, 2025 10:00 pm- Fic in a Box: I'm deep into the rewriting/editing and can't talk about any of it without breaking anonymity. *g* Reveals were supposed to be Saturday night, but we'll know by tomorrow morning whether there'll be a delay. It's looking very likely, and honestly, I'm not complaining.
- Yuletide: Only a very vague idea so far. Once FIAB is over I'll do thorough canon revision (thankfully it's not one of the fandoms where that would take me fifty million hours), hammer out a proper plot, and then there'll be plenty of time left to actually write. It helps that December will be less busy at work again!
- Five Figure Fanwork Exchange: Until today I only had a very vague idea of "I want to do something in that era of canon that my recipient mentioned", but today I went on a walk during my lunch break and a concept popped into my head fully-formed. I still need to figure out about half the plot, but that's for after Yuletide. (Unless it just pops into my head like this too! I wouldn't complain. *g*)
- Other writing: Ahahaha, what other writing? I have no time and so many things to do. RL is so busy right now ... /o\
idle memories (while resting LIKE A POTATO)
Nov. 12th, 2025 02:41 pmAnyone else remembering points of departure to Mike-spiels is invited, nay, implored, to post them here.
Sincerely,
Elise,
who is still recuperating from COVID by RESTING LIKE A POTATO
* Yes, the attic of which Lois McMaster Bujold said, at first sight, "It really IS the attics of Vorkosigan House."
Wednesday has now had the porcelain inlay done
Nov. 12th, 2025 07:25 pmWhat I read
Well, most of the time it was One Clear Call, which had (as had preceding volumes) a certain amount of resonance with contemporary events.
Read The Scribbler Annual no 1, which was a change of pace.
On the go
Dipped a bit more into Some Men in London, 1960-1967.
Started the final book in my review pile, which is pretty good though also raises, I think, some interesting points for discussion. (And as a rather tangential thought, during the heyday of lesbian murder mysteries from feminist presses, were there any set in wymmynz communes?)
Have also started a re-read of The Golden Notebook - given how long it is since I last read it, so much seems very familiar.
Up next
Still haven't got to the latest Literary Review. Otherwise, dunno.
Bundle of Holding: Ken Writes About Stuff
Nov. 12th, 2025 02:07 pm
39 Mythos-history-fringe-weird treatises from Pelgrane Press.
Bundle of Holding: Ken Writes About Stuff
`Indexer` and `Int` vs `UInt` in the Mojo programming language.
Nov. 12th, 2025 12:03 pm- 2025‑11‑12 - `Indexer` and `Int` vs `UInt` in the Mojo programming language.
- https://forum.modular.com/t/indexer-and-int-vs-uint/2210
- redirect https://dotat.at/:/XVTZB
- blurb https://dotat.at/:/XVTZB.html
- atom entry https://dotat.at/:/XVTZB.atom
- web.archive.org archive.today
political communication
Nov. 12th, 2025 10:07 amObserving only federal holidays “would eliminate the hypothetical arguments over who is or who is not observing holidays, as well as opportunities for favoritism, virtue-signaling and misperceptions and accusations over diversity, equity and inclusion,”
I should not** get tangled up in logic but I am provoked beyond bearing.
If everyone gets the day off for YK, that AVOIDS the hypothetical arguments about who is or who is not observing the holiday. If some students are trying to be excused from classes on the day of Yom Kippur, with their parents writing notes, and trying to convince their teachers that it's important and no they can't attend class online either, and the school has to decide on a case-by-case basis whether to allow it or whether to enforce the Very Important Rules against truancy? This is how you avoid any hint of favoritism. This is how you avoid arguments about synagogues scheduling short little children's services for kids under 7 and whether it's worth missing school for something that lasts less than an hour. Or to remove the Jewish context, some Christians take Good Friday off and others (perhaps their teachers) say "It's only Good Friday, what's the big deal?"
The core problem is very sad and not logical.
The arguments are only hypothetical, yet already chilling.
The school should be careful to avoid equity or inclusion, lest they get in trouble.
Maybe I should say it's scary, more than sad.
*Nearby Boston suburb. To a casual glance, it's much whiter than most of the Boston area, but >25% of the population is Jewish.
**I have been known to garble my own logic when speaking to a hostile audience under time pressure. Or even when speaking to people who love me, are are willing to wait patiently while I backtrack a couple of times.
Reaction Stirring, Part Two
Nov. 12th, 2025 01:28 pmSome weeks back I wrote about a paper suggesting that for many organic chemistry reactions stirring is not very necessary. That one sure set off a lot of comments (here on the blog, on social media, in my own email and conversations, etc.)! I wanted to revisit the topic in light of two more publications since then.
First off is this preprint, a swift response to the original, from a group of industrial chemists. They do a good job of reviewing the principles behind reaction mixing, and they emphasize that larger-scale reactions are going to be much more sensitive to its effects. I don’t see how anyone who’s done scale-up can disagree! I do have to note that the first paper did most cover smaller-scale reactions and that the authors did note that fact. The response paper is written by people who think about larger-scale reproducibility all the time, and under those conditions I don’t think anyone can argue about taking another variable out of the system by using reproducible stirring and mixing protocols. There are too many considerations of mass transfer, concentration changes, temperature gradients and more to ignore.
But on a small scale, how much do these matter? I think that’s what the first paper was getting at. So this new analysis of that paper’s actual data is certainly worth a look. The author takes the extensive supplementary data from that paper and goes back over it statistically, coming to somewhat different conclusions:
. . .where the lowest-yielding reaction group shows the largest overall increase in isolated yield (4.5%; 95% CI: 2.6 to 6.4%; p < 0.0001) with stirring. Stirring of moderate yield reactions is associated with a 1.6% (95% CI: 0.4 to 2.9%; p = 0.0082) increase in yield, while the highest yielding reactions show smaller effect sizes in stirred versus unstirred reactions (0.8% increase; 95% CI: 0.4 to 1.3%; p< 0.0001). These results suggest that while the overall change in yields with stirring in these data for many reactions are modest, there is extensive variation of impact, and stirring is associated with real and practically important increases in isolated yields across a wide range of substrates and reaction manifolds.
So (at least on a certain scale) reactions that work well are going to work well whether you pay attention to stirring them or not. But in other cases, it seems that you can get a slight (or sometimes more than slight) edge by stirring. I’d be willing to bet that these yield increases are well below what a random set of bench chemists would have assumed, though, so in one sense the original point stands (so long as it’s “stirring isn’t as important as you thought” rather than “stirring isn’t important at all”). And for larger scale reactions, I think that “stirring is important” is still undisputed (at least it had better be in any lab I’m working near!)
And the reproducibility angle is a good one to remember as well. I do mostly exploratory reactions on small scale, so I really will never notice if my yields vary between 72% and 78%. But a process chemist will notice that for sure (and will also be working hard to find a way to not run such crappy reactions to start with!) I’m in the world (as I’ve said before) where there are basically two yields for a reaction, “enough” and “not enough”, and as long as I’m over the threshold and can move on I’m probably happy. But that is certainly not everyone’s world!
Looking over the re-analysis of the reaction yields, it seems that the reaction types that showed the biggest pro-mixing effects were metal-catalyzed cross-couplings, electrochemical reactions, polar mechanisms with a lot of anion/cation character, and (weirdly, to me) rearrangements like the Claisen and Schmidt. The first two categories I can well believe, but the last one strikes me as odd because the Claisen (and many other sigmatropic rearrangements) are unimolecular, and you wouldn’t expect big mixing effects. The Schmidt is different, since you’re having to form an acyl azide (through a polar mechanism, a reaction class already noted) before the expulsion of nitrogen, and even after that you have to have water adding in, etc. So I can imagine mixing effects on that one, but the Claisen is a harder sell for me, unless the starting diene is having to form in situ prior to rearranging. Perhaps that’s what people are seeing with things like the Eschenmoser or Johnson variations of it? Those have more polar-leaving-group mechanisms tacked on the front end of the process, which could fit.
So that’s the current state of debate, but I am willing to be that we haven’t heard the last of this topic. I’m interested in seeing where this all goes, but I would advise people to watch closely for signs of people talking past each other, in the “Elephants are big!” “No they’re not, they’re gray!” fashion. It'll be easy for that to happen. I’ll report back as things develop!
Library Update #21: Rebuilding
Nov. 12th, 2025 10:57 amA new joy is the uncovering of the tall window to the right of my fireplace. That window had always been blocked because the light coming in was harsh. Now that it’s open (after, like, 20 years), I’ve discovered that the covered deck that we added in 2020 blocks some direct sunlight – and also the neighbor’s trees have grown, and they also filter the light. My view outside is now a pleasant, green scene with my patio table and chairs in the foreground.
Belldandy is fully connected now. Yesterday I activated the twin Time Machine drives (Makina II and Michiru II) and manually launched an initial backup, building off the older archives on the drives. (Belldandy/Madoka has never had a Time Machine backup. The previous Time Machine backups were Belldandy IV (Frieren)/Amane back in May 2025.)
Today I moved the printer from the bedroom to the library. I’ve connected the subwoofer and desktop speakers to Belldandy and tested sound. I borrowed a Cat6 Ethernet cable from my stash of cables so that I could connect Belldandy directly to the Netgear box, bypassing wifi. I have to say, I wasn’t able to avoid a massive snarl of cables and cords behind my desk. I don’t know if there’s a solution to that.
I am slowly re-adding items to my desk. I’m trying not to bring back the full clutter, and I’m bringing back only things that are essential to operations. The lesser-used items I hope to store offline (that is, in the office cabinet). It’s a process. A slow, deliberate one. This will take weeks, I think.
The printer cabinet and the oak file cabinet are temporarily set about 10" behind my desk. They look pretty crude compared to all the new furniture in the library. I’ve asked my interior designer to look for a single furniture piece to replace them both.
I have to say, though, the view from my chair at my desk is totally wonderful. I’ve very much spoiled myself.
![]() iPhone 13 mini photo |
Check-In Post - Nov 12th 2025
Nov. 12th, 2025 06:54 pmHello to all members, passers-by, curious onlookers, and shy lurkers, and welcome to our regular daily check-in post. Just leave a comment below to let us know how your current projects are progressing, or even if they're not.
Checking in is NOT compulsory, check in as often or as seldom as you want, this community isn't about pressure it's about encouragement, motivation, and support. Crafting is meant to be fun, and what's more fun than sharing achievements and seeing the wonderful things everyone else is creating?
There may also occasionally be questions, but again you don't have to answer them, they're just a way of getting to know each other a bit better.
This Week's Question (courtesy of
If anyone has any questions of their own about the community, or suggestions for tags, questions to be asked on the check-in posts, or if anyone is interested in playing check-in host for a week here on the community, which would entail putting up the daily check-in posts and responding to comments, go to the Questions & Suggestions post and leave a comment.
I now declare this Check-In OPEN!


