weekend open thread – October 23-24, 2021

This comment section is open for any non-work-related discussion you’d like to have with other readers, by popular demand.

Here are the rules for the weekend posts.

Book recommendation of the week: Small Pleasures, by Clare Chambers. A reporter in 1950s Britain who is investigating a woman’s claim of an immaculate conception finds herself becoming personally entangled in the story.

 I make a commission if you use that Amazon link.

{ 1,347 comments… read them below }

  1. tangerineRose*

    I love it when the kitties cuddle! Especially when they met as adults. Laurie looks like he’s a lot more confident than he used to be.

  2. Jackalope*

    So… book thread! What are you reading? Any requests for recommendations? Anything you want to recommend to others?

    I just finished The Last Graduate by Naomi Novik, which is book two in a trilogy. It was great, but the ending! It’s a horrible cliffhanger, and book three isn’t out yet.

    1. allathian*

      I’m re-reading The Lord of the Rings. It’s been a while, and I was inspired by my son who’s also reading it. It is, after all, a classic that pretty much on its own spawned the epic fantasy genre, so I think it’s worth reading for that alone. Nonetheless, I acknowledge that it can occasionally be a bit troublesome to read for a modern reader because of its explicit racism and sexism, and a pretty obvious assumption that beautiful equals good and ugly equals evil.

      1. JustForThis*

        Yes to both the important role LotR played for fantasy and its troublesome attitudes (for all the points you mention plus the idea that kings have healing powers commoners could never have). I also feel that LotR features sensitive descriptions of the psychological dynamics of both depression and of the lure of power, and I give it kudos for that.

        1. UKDancer*

          Yes. I like LOTR for many reasons but recognise it’s problematic in some ways and is a product of being written by a middle aged white guy in the 1940s. So I’d agree that the dynamics of depression and the impact of war on a society are really good (coming from his knowledge of having fought on the Somme and nearly died of trench fever and then having lived through WW2). His ideas on gender and race are rather unfortunate.

          I think LOTR is something I love despite its flaws because it’s brilliant but I am well aware it has them.

        2. Dancing Otter*

          The “king’s touch” was an old belief in England. I think it was supposed to cure scrofula, or something like that? So it’s not something Tolkien dreamed up on his own.
          I read somewhere that as an Oxford don, JRRT refused to teach female students. From his writing, that seems quite believable.

          1. allathian*

            The main reason why Tolkien didn’t teach any female students was that neither Pembroke College nor Merton College, where Tolkien taught in 1925-1945 (Pembroke) and 1945-1959 (Merton), admitted female students until 1979 and 1980 respectively. Although I expect that he fully supported the idea of exclusively male colleges.

            1. Chicago Anon*

              Tolkien supervised the PhD theses of a number of women, whom he treated well and who went on to significant careers of their own. He was not known as an excellent or enthusiastic teacher of undergraduates, as he tended to mumble to the chalkboard rather than addressing the class. However, though he did not act as tutor to women undergraduates, any student could attend his lectures. Diana Wynne Jones said she learned about plotting from them.

      2. The Time Being*

        True that. I’m actually coming to the end of my own reread — just the Scourging of the Shire and the rest of the denouement left to go — and I’ve definitely been taking a lot of note of both the incredible, intimate ways that Tolkien writes about the psychological effects of war, despair, and conflict, and also of the baked-in assumptions about race, beauty, gender, and the propriety of a hierarchical society.

        I’ve been treating it as an exercise in really leaning into the notion of “a product of his time” — not treating that as the end of the conversation, but rather as the start of it. What about his time shaped these attitudes? How have we changed since then? How have these attitudes been perpetuated, since after all LotR is a foundational text of modern fantasy? How was he reflecting long-running themes of gender roles, race, social hierarchy, and warfare that started well before him and have persisted well after? It’s been interesting to think about and reflect on.

        1. allathian*

          Yeah, this. I’m currently reading the appendices. Some bits are more interesting than others, so if you’ve never read them, take a look. The story of Arwen and Aragorn is one of my favorite bits of the whole book.

        2. aelstuart*

          Unfortunately, there are frustrating issues with racism, sexism, etc. from a lot of notable authors. Jane Austen is probably my favorite author of all time and yet there are elements of both in her writing. I’m also not so naive as to believe we are past all that and have a feeling in a few decades or so people will be shocked and disappointed by things that are considered OK now.

    2. Stitch*

      I just read The Last Graduate as well. Interesting character development, not the direction I was expecting.

      I just started Under the Whispering Door by TJ Klune. I loved The House in the Cerulean Sea so high hopes for this one.

      1. MysteryFan*

        I started Whispering Door this week, and got bogged down with the events/conversation in the tea shop.. maybe I just liked the characters in Cerulean Sea better. Definitely more charming!

    3. Foreign Octopus*

      I’m currently reading I Capture the Castle, by Dodie Smith. I’m only 80 pages in but I’m really enjoying the voice of the narrator. Despite being written in the 39s or 40s, it has such a modern voice.

      One book I’ve finished recently that I’ve also enjoyed is A Gentleman in Moscow, by Amor Towels.

      Also, I read the first chapter of Hamnet, by Maggie O’Farrell the other day and loved it so much that I had to put it to one side and wait to read it ony holidy next week in order to give it proper justice

      1. CTT*

        Oh I love I Capture The Castle. I need to re-read it; it’s been too long. It has the all-time greatest opening and closing lines to a book.

      2. AY*

        I am reading Amor Towles’ new book The Lincoln Highway! It’s extremely charming but maybe 15% less good than a Gentleman. Towles excels at writing very verbose, charming, and intelligent men who are somehow still likeable.

      3. Dark Macadamia*

        I Capture the Castle is so funny! I read it for the first time a year or two ago and loved it

    4. English Rose*

      I’m a huge fan of Sherlock Holmes in all his guises – books, films, TV etc. I’m currently entranced by the Mary Russell series by Laurie King, in which the teenage American Mary Russell meets the semi-retired Holmes by chance on the Sussex Downs, where Holmes has become a bee-keeper during WWI. Russell is as bright and interesting as Holmes, and becomes his apprentice. The books track her development and their relationship through a series of gorgeously imaginative adventures. Start with The Bee Keeper’s Apprentice. Nothing like good crime fiction to take the mind off the state of the world!

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        I quite liked two series:
        Goodnight Mr Holmes by Carole Nelson Douglas, about Irene Adler. Specifically, an Irene who is just as smart and daring and capable as the woman in the original story, rather than the various breathless heroines oohing at how Sherlock outsmarted them that I have seen far too often. The story is told through the diaries of her much more restrained friend and companion Penelope Huxleigh.

        Mycroft by Kareem Abdul Jabbar–he’s a major Holmesian–and Anna Waterhouse. About Mycroft, with Sherlock as a minor character. Mycroft’s best friend is a black man from Trinidad, who pretends to be employed by the tobacco shop he owns because that’s how it worked back then. Takes on issues of race and gender where many takes on the series envision a pure-white London. Doyle was quite progressive for his time, presenting stories of women doctors or white families lovingly embracing a new non-white family member.

        1. Carol the happy elf*

          I loved that one! I found it in a dollar store, looking for cheap crossword, WordSearch and Sudoku books for a friend with Covid, in the hospital. She was bored out of her gourd, and since she’s Jamaican, this book was a great read.

          I also loved the Benjamin January books by Barbara Hambly, after this friend introduced me to them years ago.

      2. Sutemi*

        Have you read the Sherry Thomas Sherlock books? They are one of my current favorites, female versions that felt very true to the time period.

      3. HoundMom*

        Love this version of Sherlock Holmes. I also love Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear — post WWI now heading towards WWII series with a strong female voice.

        For anyone who likes WWII history, James R Benn writes a great series around Billy Boyle. He picks up little discussed events from the war and weaves it into the storyline.

      4. GoryDetails*

        Another Holmes fan here. I’ve enjoyed many of the re-imaginings of Holmes and company too, including the anthology SHADOWS OVER BAKER STREET, which includes Neil Gaiman’s “A Study in Emerald” – a Lovecraftian spin! (Gaiman also wrote the short story “A Case of Death and Honey,” included in his TRIGGER WARNING anthology; that one describes Holmes in later life, exploring rumors of bees that create honey with life-extending properties, a nifty little tale.)

        1. GoryDetails*

          And adding another one, A STUDY IN SHERLOCK – this anthology has Holmesian tales by authors who don’t normally write in that category, including “The Men with the Twisted Lips,” a really excellent re-telling of Doyle’s “Man with the Twisted Lip” but from the viewpoint of the Chinese-run consortium that controls the London opium trade. Very good alternate-viewpoint rendition.

          Not all of those stories feature Holmes himself; Jacqueline Winspear (of the excellent “Maisie Dobbs” series) has a story in which her character is inspired by the Holmes stories to do some investigating of his own.

      5. PhyllisB*

        Yes, I like the Mary Russell series but haven’t read all of them; need to get back to it. Thanks for the reminder. Funny story about how I discovered this series: our book club was supposed to read the Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd I got to the library and had left my note with title and author at home, so I was looking on the shelf trying to remember and all I could remember is that bees figured into the title somehow. I saw The Beekeeper’s Apprentice and checked it out. Wrong book, but discovered a great new series and a new author!! As Sheryl Crowe would say, that’s my favorite mistake. BTW, I DID read the book I was supposed to read, and it’s excellent. If you haven’t read it, I highly recommend it.

    5. Bobina*

      Anyone have recommendations for a good introduction/primer/overview of a history of China? Or any books on Asian (any part) history? Ideally not too academic, but just something that will give a decent overview and context of the major milestones so I can feel slightly more informed? Bonus points for an easy/engaging read and/or any focus on food!

      1. Shiara*

        This may not be exactly what you have in mind, but Wild Swans: Three Daughters of China by Jung Chang is a biography/autobiography of three generations of Chinese women, covering the twentieth century. I thought it was excellent, though not particularly light

      2. Jackalope*

        I remember enjoying China Wales by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl Wudunn, although it’s been several years since I read it so I don’t remember much more than that.

      3. Reba*

        “The Land of the Five Flavors” is a history of Chinese cuisine. It’s in translation, so it’s not exactly the easiest-reading prose, but very dense and interesting. “China’s Last Empire” is supposed to be both good and intelligible.

        “China in 10 words” is a collection of personal and historical essays by Yu Hua. Revolutionary to present day, hard reading (because of the subject matter, not the writing!).

        Not exactly on topic, but not NOT on topic, is the book “Vermeer’s Hat” by historian of China Timothy Brooks. This is a fascinating and highly readable book that uses paintings by Vermeer as windows onto the web of global connections in the 17th c. I love this one!

      4. Fellow Traveller*

        Last Boat out of Shanghai follows several families in Communist China after WWII. I was riveted.
        For fiction, Pachinko really had me turning the pages, and anything by Ha Jin is really good. Also Ishiguro’a When We Were Orphans is such a beautiful book.

      5. with a comma after dearest*

        For an autobiography of the Cultural Revolution so incredible you’d swear it was fiction, try “Red Azalea” by Anchee Min. I recently reread it after 20 years and nothing holds a candle to this book.

        For an excellent and captivating nonfiction piece on modern industrial China, and the massive phenomenon of migrating “sweatshop” workers – highly recommend “Factory Girls” by Leslie Chang. She befriend and follows several young women working in factory cities and tells all about their lives and the broader cultural phenomenon, also tracing back to her own pre-Mao ancestors.

        So much of Chinese history is focused the Opium Wars and Communism and then stops. This book is the economic capitalism of the modern day, and it’s such an important component.

        1. the cat's ass*

          And her husband, Peter Hessler, wrote a China Trilogy- “River Town”, “Oracle Bones” and “Country Driving”about his work in the Peace Corps, recent past Chinese History, as well as some current (1990’s) history. And Jan Wong’s books are also terrific though more personal.

    6. Japanese Cooking*

      Oh my god that ending!!! My best friend and I trade books back and forth using USPS media mail and I’m dying for her to read it so we can vent.

      For other books. I’m re-reading Tamora Pierce. It’s like comfort food in literary form.

    7. JustForThis*

      I had a most wonderful reading experience: I read Tamora Pierce’s Song of the Lioness series as a child and *loved* it. I re-read it several times then (decades ago), but had not read it since. The recent Tamora Pierce appreciation thread in the weekend open thread a few weeks back made me aware that she had written other series, and I bought the Immortals on a whim and started reading. I cannot describe the surprise and pleasure when I realised that the capable redheaded woman was grown-up Alanna! It was such a strong feeling of recognition and felt like coming home and meeting an old and trusted friend after decades away. I’ve since also re-read the Song of the Lioness series which triggered even more childhood memories, and also discovered Circle of Magic, which I thought was great. So thank you very much to everyone contributing to that Tamora Pierce thread!

      1. Emily Elizabeth*

        Wow I haven’t thought about that wonderful series in years!! Thank you for the reminder – I’ll have to re-read that and check out the Immortals!

      2. TiffIf*

        If you haven’t yet–read the Protector of the Small series–I think that Pierce’s writing is at its best in that series, I actually like it better as a story than either Song of the Lioness or Immortals and I love both of them. And though Trisana is and always has been my favorite of Pierce’s characters, Keladry’s story is my favorite.

        1. JustForThis*

          Thank you for the recommendation — I will! I’ve embarked on a Tamora Pierce reading journey since that glorious moment, and have read the Immortals, reread the Song of the Lioness and read the Circle of Magic. Although it was the first volume of the Immortals which gave me that memorable moment, I did think that Circle of Magic was an even better series: I enjoyed that it has a more stable cast (I would have liked to see the relationship between Daine and Onua develop beyond the first volume, for example), and I loved the idea that each of the four volumes focusses on one of the four main protagonists while still keeping all the others in play — the structure of the books really reflects the structure of their interwoven relationship in that way. I’m much looking forward to the Protector of the Small series then!

    8. Loopy*

      I am just coming off a long period of not reading and finally going through TONS of great recs from a thread a few weeks ago (maybe almost a month by now). I couldn’t find the highly recommended The Hands of the Emperor by Victoria Goddard in any library branch, so I went to consider buying it. It’s 42 dollars! I realized only then, that it’s a 900+ page book.

      I’ve never read such a long book and cant imagine being sucked in for so many pages, but it has rave reviews. Sadly, I will probably put in on a wish list for now, as I need to go over my budget first- after shipping and tax 50 dollars feels like a lot when holiday gift buying is looming. I’m pretty sad my library doesn’t have a lot of the books I’m looking for.

      My library takes months to get in most new books after their release, sometimes up to 3 after release, sadly, so I have the Last Graduate on hold, and Under the Whispering Door on hold as well (both are showing as on order). Under the Whispering Door has 41 people in line ahead of me so it’ll probably be a good 4+ months.

      However, hopefully I’ll be able to go pick up The Historian and A People’s History of the Vampire Uprising soon! Both are AAM recs!

      1. AcademiaNut*

        Coincidentally, I just finished The Hands of the Emperor today. I did buy it in eBook format, which is a much more affordable USD 8. It’s quite a brisk 900 page read, as doorstopper fantasy books go.

        I quite enjoyed it. It’s a very gentle read. Nothing bad happens beyond a bit of embarrassment and a couple of tense scenes, and there’s quite a lot of characters making speeches about their feelings and hashing out decades long family conflict, but it’s an engaging comfort read. Some of the world-building details didn’t make sense to me, but at a level I can overlook for the general enjoyment of the read.

        Other than that, recent reads include the latest October Daye books by Seanan McGuire, which was excellent (but not a good entry point for the series), the surprise new T. Kingfisher, Paladin’s Hope (excellent, and very much along the lines of the two previous books), and Winter’s Orbit by Everina Maxwell (a straight up sci-fi romance novel). And before that, Children of Time and Children of Ruin by Adrian Tchaikovsky, a very good and very creative hard sci-fi duology (however, not recommended for arachnophobes).

        Oooh, and Lois McMaster Bujold just finished the first draft of a new Penric novella, which is something to look forward to.

      2. CJ*

        FWIW, I normally don’t rate my ability to concentrate for 900 pages, but I got it in ebook (so I didn’t realise how long it was when I started) and it absolutely kept me sucked in.

      3. PhyllisB*

        I’m not familiar with Hands of the Emperor, but if it’s an older book (more than maybe two years old?) you can look on Thriftbooks and probably get it a lot cheaper, Also if you spend over a certain amount ($10.00 I think) you get free shipping. That’s where I go for all my out of the way wants.

      4. OTGW*

        Idk if you’re still reading this, but even if your library branches don’t have it, you can request it via ILL which means they’ll get it from another library.

    9. SelinaKyle*

      I just finished the Thursday Murder Club in day so went out and bought the second book straight away. I really enjoyed them, didn’t guess the ending in the first few pages. I’m really glad they’re been turned into a movie with Steven Spielberg to direct.

      1. Yay, I’m a Llama Again!*

        I bought the second book last weekend and read it in two days, it’s BRILLIANT!

        1. Elsie*

          Thanks for the recommendation- my husband really liked The Thursday Murder Club, so I’ve bought book 2 for his birthday on Wed. (The ppbk of The Thursday Murder Club has nice readable print, but I like ebooks best!)

      2. Isobel*

        I really enjoyed the Thursday Murder Club and I’m looking forward to reading the second instalment. The Postscript Murders by Elly Griffiths was also great and had a similar theme of retired people investigating crime. It features DS Harbinder Kaur from the previous book The Stranger Diaries, but it works well as a standalone.

    10. Richard Hershberger*

      The Domestic Manners of the Americans by Frances (Fanny) Trollope, whose son Anthony is the more famous writer. This is in the genre of Europeans visiting America and writing about it. Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America is the one we all know. In Trollope’s case she spent several years here and published the book in 1832. It is a fascinating read, in part because she was largely unimpressed by our domestic manners. The descriptions of a religious revival and a camp meeting are particularly worth reading. She later wrote opposing slavery, but she can’t help but notice that the service is better when she is in a slave state. I am currently up to her visit to Washington, DC. (Fun fact: Washington, Pennsylvania was called “Little Washington” even then. It is not clear to me whether she realized this was not its official name.) She is very interested in observing debate in Congress, because women were not allowed in Parliament. She explains that this is because English gentlemen are so gallant that, were women allowed in, the members of parliament would devote too much attention to the ladies. A modern feminist she ain’t.

    11. The Dogman*

      Read Neal Asher.

      You are all missing out!

      His Prador War books are great, but so are all his Polity books.

      Start with “Gridlinked”, his first book.

      Warning, hardcore scifi with lots of blood and gore too!

    12. RSJ*

      I’m reading “There She Was: The Secret History of Miss America” (idk what’s secret about it except that not many people know much about its background) and I’m enjoying it! I don’t have much of a connection with the pageant, but learning about its very weird history has been fun.

    13. Falling Diphthong*

      The Margot Affair which inspired a delicious tomato tart over at Smitten Kitchen. The secret daughter of a French politician decides to leak her existence to the press. You see the nuances of the mercenary or caring adults around her, but Margot is sixteen and more black and white. (Also, if you go to Smitten Kitchen and search on tomato tart this is an excellent way to use up the last farmstand tomatoes.)

      The Twelve Jays of Christmas New Donna Andrews, her protagonist’s extended community are as lovely as ever. For anyone looking for a good cozy series (Meg Langslow is a very organized blacksmith) I recommend finding Murder with Peacocks and going from there. For something different, her You’ve Got Murder has an AI detective.

      Generations by Tim Lebbon, a novel set in the Firefly ‘verse between the series and the movie. I would consider this a Firefly-fans-only read, but with that caveat it plays very much like watching an episode of the lost second season.

      1. GoryDetails*

        Re Donna Andrews – I’ll second the recommendation for the series, though I find that I’m falling behind! I just got THE GIFT OF THE MAGPIE – will have to put “Jays” on my list. (My favorite book in the series is WE’LL ALWAYS HAVE PARROTS, but I’ve enjoyed them pretty consistently throughout – though by the most recent books it seems that Meg and her increasingly-extended network of family and friends pretty much rule the county…)

    14. CatCat*

      I’m almost done with “The Poison Squad,” which a commenter here recommended. It’s about the history of food safety laws/reforms in the USA. It’s absolutely fascinating and also pretty nasty when looking at how food was adulterated to the detriment of consumers. It’s also fascinating that the same political tropes we see today associated with regulating public health were used 100 years ago. Things like, we can’t ban formaldehyde in milk or even require true labeling on products because that will infringe on people’s freedom of choice.

      1. Ampersand*

        That was likely me, and I’m so glad you’re enjoying it! :) I found it fascinating for that same reason. It really puts the US in perspective and makes you realize that, for all our progress, we have a long history of this type of thinking/pushback. On the other hand, maybe that means there’s still hope that eventually things will change for the better.

      2. PhyllisB*

        I haven’t read this, but sounds like something I would love. This little factoid may be in the book, but I remember reading years ago that chalk was added to horse radish at one time to…? I guess make it look more appealing? Also, Lydia Pinkham’s tonic was some sort of narcotic. Don’t remember precisely what, codeine maybe? Loads of women got addicted to it. I remember seeing it in stores when I was a young child.

        1. CatCat*

          Oh yes, chalk was definitely added to food. It was added to milk to make it look whiter after the milk companies watered it down. All kinds of crap was added to food as filler. Chalk, sawdust, borax, rope fibers, all kinds of non-food crap.

    15. Falling Diphthong*

      Two nonfiction ones I picked up at the library because the title was at a level to catch my eye:

      Why Fonts Matter by Hyndman. On the opening spread took a quiz and determined that based on my preferred font I am someone who reads a lot and enjoys a well-made cup of tea, which: can’t argue. Very breezy with a ton of font illustrations and lots of interactive “If you type “Romance Novel” in the font “bludgeon” you can tell things are going to take a bad turn.” Made me more aware of font shortcuts I take. (On trip explained to husband that I knew this “Mimi’s Cafe” was the same as the one 1000 miles away because the font matched.)

      How to Eat by Bittman and Katz. Slim volume in a Q&A format on the basics of nutrition and diet. The emphasis being that most of this stuff is well-established, but science doesn’t lend itself to the New And Revolutionary Diet Breakthrough of news reporting. They agree with Pollan’s “Eat real food, mostly plants, not too much” as a good summary–what’s nice about the book is not that it is the latest and greatest research, but that it gives simple explanations for a lot of diet stuff. (For example, there’s a thing called lean obesity where if you’re someone whose body packs fat around the liver, just a few pounds can jumpstart the metabolic problems of obesity; meanwhile, someone packing on fat to her hips and thighs might have perfectly lovely blood sugar.)

      1. Fellow Traveller*

        I read How to Eat too, and I found it really helpful for thinking about what food I should eat rather than what I shouldn’t. Also the way they framed “food science” within the context of the typical American diet really showed why special diets aren’t really as reliable as we are often led to believe. I thought it a really good reas for people who want a comprehensive analysis of what constitutes healthy eating.

    16. twocents*

      My book club just finished reading Dark Matter by Blake Crouch. It was… okay. There’s a lot of fridge logic where it’s obvious that the super genius man had to make REALLY stupid decisions in order for the plot to work, but the back-half of the book was bonkers so I didn’t terribly mind. I’ll probably donate the book to the library though, not giving it permanent shelf space.

      1. Dark Macadamia*

        I read that one over the summer and had a similar reaction. Lots of “ugh, this is why I don’t read many books by men” moments and I didn’t like the bonkers part either!

    17. ObserverCN*

      I just finished rereading “Dune” in preparation for the movie.
      I like to alternate fiction and nonfiction, so next up is “The Making of Biblical Womanhood” by Beth Allison Barr.

      1. Jackalope*

        As an aside, have you read The Year of Biblical Womanhood by Rachel Held Evans? I enjoyed it a lot and it’s a quick read but thought-provoking.

      2. KAZ2Y5*

        “The Making of Biblical Womanhood” is great! I checked this one out of my library but will buy it to have on hand whenever it goes on sale. Another book like this is “Women and Worship in Corinth” by Lucy Peppiatt. I had bought the ebook one time when it was on sale at Amazon and am reading it now.

    18. Teapot Translator*

      I just finished Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots. It was recommended here a while ago but I just got around to it. I enjoyed it!

    19. Bluebell*

      Just finished The Last Chance Library by Freya Sampson, which was very sweet. Since I really enjoyed Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, I read one of her earlier novels, Certain Dark Things, which centers on vampires in Mexico. I enjoyed it a lot more than I thought I would, especially the appendix, which details the different vampire species from different parts of the world.

    20. marvin the paranoid android*

      AUGH I also just finished The Last Graduate and that cliffhanger is a killer! Knowing myself, I will soon get distracted by another book and forget about it, though. It’s a really fun series, so I’m looking forward to the last one. I’m not usually much of a Naomi Novik fan.

    21. Ampersand*

      I’m reading The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. It’s not at all what I expected—for some reason I assumed it would be existential, and that it is not. It’s ridiculous, and funny, and I’m surprised by how much I’m enjoying it. I’m not usually one for sci-fi but I’ve read quite a bit lately and enjoyed it.

      Before this I was reading the Silo series. I got through Wool and Shift, then decided to read something lighter because as much as I enjoyed the story and really want to know how it ends, it was not helping my mental health. It’s engaging and interesting and pretty well-written, but also depressing. I plan to read the final book…later.

      1. Filosofickle*

        HGttG is an all time favorite and I re-read the series from time to time. Great when I need a laugh! It’s so ridiculous in the best way.

        OTOH I tried the audio book on a recent road trip. I don’t actually like audiobooks, my mind wanders, but it was a LONG and emotional trip alone so I wanted to try and Hitchhiker’s seemed like a slam dunk. I hated it! The narration parts were delightful as expected but how Fry voiced Arthur Dent was nails on a chalkboard for me.

    22. My Brain Is Exploding*

      I just finished reading Educated by Tara Westover. (If you enjoyed The Glass Castle, you will probably like this book.) It seemed a bit improbable in places, and some of her family disputes her story/version of events (even the brothers she is still in contact with). Her mother recently self-published a book called Educating; her mother’s business (essential oils, btw now owned by Tara’s father) took a hit after Educated was published. Still, it’s jarring, sad, angering (TW for domestic violence), and contains bits of sweetness, hope, and extreme kindness.

      1. BTV*

        As someone raised in a similar environment, I found Tara’s story very probable, and it is not at all uncommon for people to have memories that disagree about things that actually happened. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

        1. Educated Reader*

          Same, tbh. I was homeschooled in the 90s, had difficulty acclimating to the non-homeschooled world, didn’t find anything about her journey improbable.

          Also, FWIW, because Westover is a woman and her brothers are, well, men and therefore more privileged/safer in that kind of sitch, it’s possible they did not see some of the things she did.

        2. My Brain Is Exploding*

          The part I found improbably was that she could manage to teach herself enough to get into college…and a few of the educational things, like when she had to get 100% on a test in a class she was failing. To you and Educated Reader, I did not find her CIRCUMSTANCES improbable at all, and I agree with you both that people will have different memories about the same thing, and also that the brothers would have had a different experience. I think I worded that poorly in my comment.

      2. PT*

        I thought the book would have been better if she’d waited until she was older to publish it. It’s clear that she’d written it mostly as she was processing it, with no clear resolution to what happened in her life, and with her family. It just sort of…ends.

        Whereas if she’d waited until she was in her 50s, she’d have a more complete perspective on everything.

    23. The Dogman*

      On this point:

      “It’s a horrible cliffhanger, and book three isn’t out yet.”

      Like TV shows I no longer read parts of series until the whole thing is completed.

      That way I can even avoid investing time and care in things like GoT (Tv Series 8 was abominable cos the show runners didn’t care anymore, according to some good friends… and the whole internet lol) or AsoIaF (the GoT books, since I doubt Mr Martin will live long enough to complete them, sadly), and if I had done this years ago I would have had fewer disappointments with TV shows that get 1/2 seasons and then get canned, or with book series that never seemed to be complete to me (Wheel of Time anyone… tugs braids and smooths skirts…. AAAArrrrrgggghhhhhhhhh, tbf there is a lot more wrong with that series than just the author dying before finishing it).

      Hope you find something fun… and if you like hardcore SciFi then do check out my recommendation of Neal Asher…

    24. not that Leia*

      Saving The Last Graduate for when the series is complete…I love Naomi Novik but I’m with Dogman—plus I made it a rule after reading the first two Kingkiller Chronicles, (last book STILL unpublished) which I still periodically seethe about.
      I started the Goblin Emperor after mentions here last week but I’m finding it unexpectedly exhausting—so much protocol! (Does it get better?) Previously finished a Cold War historical novel—Our Woman in Moscow, which I enjoyed.

      1. Smol Book Wizard*

        The Goblin Emperor is a wonderful book but does have a very particular atmosphere that I think one has to be relaxed to fully be able to enjoy without empathetic anxiety…at least that was my experience.

    25. the cat's ass*

      I so appreciate this thread-so many great books out there! I’m working my through the Tess Monaghan books by Laura Lippman. Her stand alone books are great, too, especially “When she was good” and “Sunburn.”

    26. GoryDetails*

      I enjoyed Edgar Cantero’s MEDDLING KIDS very much; it’s a Lovecraftian-horror story based on the “kid detectives” concept (originally inspired by Blyton’s “Famous Five” from the UK, but with “Scooby-Doo Gang” elements as well). The kid-gang in question solved a case – and then drifted apart; turns out they suppressed the memories of the “not at all a person in a mask” aspects, and are now adults with an assortment of personal issues. The book has the gang getting back together to try and settle the matter permanently. The writing style is unusual, with some really lush descriptive bits that meander between poetry and screen-writing/scene-setting, and the story features humor, intense friendships (and more-than-friendships), loads and loads of horror- and mystery-story tropes – most of them called out specifically by the characters – and some wildly dramatic confront-the-monsters scenes. Great fun!

      Am also enjoying a new-to-me manga series, PHANTOM TALES OF THE NIGHT, about enigmatic non-humans running a mysterious inn and charging the guests their secrets as a fee; lovely/creepy stories, some stand-alone, some linked, with some highly disturbing philosophical discussions about what it means for humans to have some purpose in life.

    27. Filosofickle*

      I’m in the middle of The Library Book and liking it very much! It’s about libraries, their meaning, and the catastrophic arson fire at the LA County Library. It’s lighter than it sounds.

      1. Other Meredith*

        I loved The Library Book. I keep meaning to check out the authors other books because of how much I liked it.

    28. cleo*

      I just read One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston and it lived up to the hype. Definitely best lesbian time travel romance set on a subway that I’ve ever read ;) It’s also just really damn good. A love letter to queer found communities and queer struggles and queer joy. It’s set in sort of an alt 2020 NY. There’s no pandemic, no mention of the election or Trump.

      It has a very narrow focus – the life of our protagonist August, a bi 23 y. o. from New Orleans, and her odd but wonderful roommates in their crappy 6 floor walk up in Brooklyn, and the pancake house she works at and the Q line she takes to college. And the beautiful 24 year old butch lesbian she connects with, Jane – mysteriously trapped on the subway since the mid 70s.

      1. Emily Elizabeth*

        I just finished this and LOVED it – bought a copy already for my sister for the holidays. The sci fi/time warp aspect somehow balanced perfectly with the adorable meet cute queer NYC love story.

    29. Loredena Frisealach*

      I just finished Paladin’s Hope, the latest of T Kingfisher’s (aka Ursula Vernon) Saints of Steel series, lovingly referred to as ‘fluffy Paladin romances’. It is m/m, featuring gnoles, clocktaurs and the inhumanity of man as per usual. But no headless corpses! The last line is a zinger. I very much enjoy these, but I find they are not in my reread pile – not dark enough to dissuade my reading in the first place, but just a smidge too dark for comfort rereading.

      I’m about to start the latest Penric and Desdemona novella by Bujold which is a form of comfort read for me. I’m finding that the past few years has reduced my reading focus to new books in ongoing series and/or much-loved authors, and a great deal of rereading.

      1. The Time Being*

        !!! I’m supposed to be subscribed to T Kingfisher releases, why didn’t I hear about this one coming out?? Damn you, Amazon…. Thank you for mentioning it so I can grab it :)

        1. Loredena Frisealach*

          Amazon is horrid about waiting 3 weeks to show me a new release by authors I love :/ I only knew about the new Penric book because someone I follow tweeted it!

    30. Yay, I’m a Llama Again!*

      I just discovered I’ve missed several releases by Elizabeth Hunter because I’ve been boycotting Amazon/Kindle. So I’m now back in Moonstove Cove. I love everything she’s written!

    31. Blomma*

      I’ve been reading all 82 of Agatha Christie’s mystery novels and short story collections in publication order. Last year was the 100th anniversary of her first novel so I began this “challenge” on 1/1/2020. I’m two novels away from being finished! It’s been a great way to get back into reading on a regular basis. It’s also been fascinating to see how the social views she expressed and language she used changed over the 50+ years she wrote.

    32. Fellow Traveller*

      I recently finished Ethan Hawke’s latest A Bright Ray of Darkness. It’s the story of a famous actor making his Broadway debut while his marriage is very publicly falling apart. It was really well written and the narrator/main character is so unsympathetically sympathetic. And, given my background in theatre, I loved all the details of putting on a Broadway show. Highly recommend if you like meandering stories of self discovery and backstage drama.

      So a quirky ask, I guess, but any recommendations for favorite books written in the omniscient/ third person voice? Particularly suspense or thrillers (but not violent ones) and general fiction with good characters and writing? (I’ve always prefer good character and prose over good plot.) I’ve read a couple really great novels this month – in addition to Bright Ray of Darkness, I’ve finished My Year of Meats, Northern Spy, The Wife Upstairs, and Hench- but they were all told in first person and I’m ready for a change. I just started Magic for Liars and the prologue was in third person and then I was so disappointed that the first chapter was in first person. But the book has redeemed itself so far and I’m enjoying it a lot.

    33. higheredrefugee*

      These are some great suggestions!

      BTW, Alison, Small Pleasures’ storyline revolves around a virginal birth, not an immaculate birth. The latter is born without sin, not by virginal miracle.

    34. BeckyinDuluth*

      I’m just starting Pleasure Activism by adrienne maree brown, and am also reading Blood Child by Octavia Butler (short stories). So far so good on both!

    35. MsChanandlerBong*

      Just finished “The Plot” and enjoyed it. Finished “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” last weekend and really liked it. It helps that I finished “The Turnout” a week earlier and thought it was a pile of horse manure!

    36. Sun in an Empty Room*

      I just read the brilliant short story collection “Gordo” by Jaime Cortez. The stories are about migrant workers in California in the 1970s. Highly recommend!

    37. The Smiling Pug*

      I’m currently finishing up A Bone to Pick by Jan S. Gephardt. It’s soft science fiction set on a space station hundreds of years in the future, with genetically modified dogs as main characters. It sounds hokey and childish, but it’s not. She tackles everything from abusive workplaces to the nature of trauma. I’m in Book 2, and they’re long, but they’re good.

  3. Paralegal Part Deux*

    I wanted to thank everyone for their input on the pet insurance from last week. I ended up not getting the cat due to needing a root canal, so that solved that problem, I guess. Thanks for all the input!

  4. An actual otter*

    Hello commenters! I’d love some advice from the community. I have been told I have “RBF” that makes me seem unapproachable. Do you think this something I can fix, and is it something I should even want to fix? As a youngish woman, I kind of feel like I’m being told to “smile more”, but at the same time, I do want to appear friendlier.

    1. Zona the Great*

      No you don’t need to change it and never tolerate being told to smile. “This is the way my face looks” is my go-to.

    2. PollyQ*

      I hate that it’s something you even need to think about, but the reality is, it can affect how people feel about you, and you asked, so. One low-effort thing you might try is professional eyebrow grooming, if you feel like your issue might be a sort of built-in glower.

    3. Copper penny*

      I have this as well. I’m a late twenties women. A few things that have helped. Thinking of happy things or plesant thoughts when I want to be approachable. Practice looking in the mirror and see how your expressions change. I’ve realised I can control my eyebrows and cheeks which make a huge difference for me. If I am upset or feeling awkward my rbf becomes 10xs worse. (I wonder how many people with rbf have anxiety or depression. I know I do)

      I also tend to tell at least one person in every social group that I can have bad rbf but I still want to be approached and talk to people. Bonus for telling the group gossip or group social leader.

      If someone tells me to smile more though, I’m not happy and lean further into the rbf for the rest of the conversation.

    4. Invisible Fish*

      You do you. No one needs to go around grinning in order to make other people happy. You look fine, your face is fine. I’ve noticed that ppl who have told *me* I have rbf kind of … just didn’t like how I did things anyway? (And if I have rbf, how come every lost kid or new person in town or older person who needs help in a store feels a-ok waltzing right up to me and asking for help?)

      1. Sleeping Late Every Day*

        My twin! This RBF gets approached by everyone in stores and parks and has to listen to their life stories. It drove my husband nuts for years, which I thought was funny because he’s the nice and friendly one, and I’m not that fond of people in general.

    5. WS*

      I think there can be a difference between rbf and “smile more”, depending who it’s coming from and in what context. Older men? It’s almost always “smile more”. I’ve practised smiling when on the phone and bringing that to my workplace – not necessarily the actual smile but the pleasant and approachable manner – has definitely helped. I also have social anxiety, so deliberately relaxing my face (especially around my eyes) a bit makes things go more smoothly.

    6. An actual otter*

      Thanks everyone for the suggestions. It’s fortunately coming from good friends who are women my age (late 20s), although I’m pretty sure most people I meet think the same. It’s only when I concentrate so usually happens at work, which is mostly ok because I don’t need to be super approachable there due to my role, but I’m also in a few hobby groups where I need to both concentrate on the hobby itself and make new people feel welcome.

      I like PollyQs very specific suggestion, although in my case it’s not an eyebrows thing – my eyebrows are extremely average looking.

      I also liked both the “it’s my face” suggestions and the “smiling / thinking happy thoughts” suggestions – I’ll see about applying these in the appropriate situations (with men at work vs with new people at hobby groups).

      Thanks everyone again!

      1. Pennyworth*

        When you switch from RBF concentration to interacting with people I’m sure you are approachable and friendly. I would be questioning the motives of someone who felt the need to comment on my RBF. What do they want me to do, get cosmetic surgery just to please them?

        1. Writer Worries*

          I definitely have RBF too and have been told to “smile” and asked if I was okay because I don’t look happy/look too serious when I’m concentrating or working or not interacting with someone. Some people just have ridiculous expectations for how everyone needs to be a dazzling rainbow of bubbliness and giggles all the time. The people who actually matter think I’m approachable and friendly and kind, so I don’t worry about it.

          I agree with Pennyworth. I’m sure that when you actually interact with new people at your hobbies (greet them, chat with them, let them know you’re happy to answer questions if they have any, etc.) they’ll think you’re approachable. You don’t need a grin plastered on your face the whole time or anything.

      2. Damn it, Hardison!*

        I have had the same feedback, especially when I’m concentrating or thinking something through. I’ve made a comment in the moment something like “don’t mind my frowny face, I’m just thinking!” With a pleasant tone and a smile (the last only if I feel like it). But, I’m firmly in the camp of your face is your face, and as long as you are pleasant (unless the situation calls for being unpleasant), then others can suck eggs.

      3. The Teapots Are on Fire*

        If you notice RBF when concentrating on your hobby, if you want to you can announce, “I’m going to make my thinking face now,” if you want people to know you’re not unhappy. Or call it your [hobby] face. Otherwise, yes, it may be your face and even good friends can unconsciously carry forward the message that women should be smiling more.

      4. Not So NewReader*

        Do you have one or more trusted people who are in different demographics? You could check with them- or not. Depending on if you feel like it.

        I hear ya about the Smile! thing. I think you can use your words and tone of voice to indicate that conversation is welcomed.

      5. Roy G. Biv*

        An actual otter, in my youth I also had RBF when concentrating, or as I described it, “I look like I’m plotting a murder when I’m deep in thought.” And I would tell that to coworkers or friends who would ask, blatantly or on the down low, “What’s wrong? are you OK?” I would offer up the explanation so they could understand this is just how my face looks. And then they could get used to it, and perhaps share with the newbies, “No, Roy is not annoyed. That’s just how she looks when deep in thought.”

        If YOU wish to be perceived differently, then by all means work on the RBF. But if you are OK with it, own it. Having a go-to unapproachable facial expression has served me well when I wanted to remain uninterrupted on public transportation. Just sayin’.

    7. Wrench Turner*

      No, it’s your beautiful face, and there’s nothing you need to change about it.

      For me, a scruffy middle age guy trying not to come off as unfriendly or worse intimidating, I try to give quick verbal and nonverbal cues to people near me that I acknowledge them and happy to see them. Just a quick wave, peace sign, YO! or Mornin! and try to keep my voice “light and positive” even if my face (as my partner kindly puts it) looks “really serious.”

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        I recall a letter writer who was very quiet and solemn, and managed to turn that into “I am so serious about the value of our nonprofit’s work that it makes me quite grave when I talk about it.” Rather than show enthusiasm in more conventionally sparkly ways.

    8. Dwight Schrute*

      I have RBF too. I usually don’t mind it because I don’t want people approaching me anyway- I have social anxiety. But I do make a conscious effort to smile at people at work. Otherwise I just tell people it’s my face

    9. Falling Diphthong*

      There are roles (professional and social) where “do not mess with me” is a great vibe. And roles where you want people to approach you and so it’s a problem. As an example, I’d say kindergarten teachers, male and female, don’t want rbf.

      You should only try to adapt it if looking unapproachable is actually causing problems in your social or professional world. If so, I’d look to body language guides? (I am constantly asked for directions, so mild-mannered and approachable do I appear. Much more than my family members who possess senses of direction and actually know where they’re going. But in my younger days I did deliberately adopt things like striding boldly at random when lost.)

    10. RagingADHD*

      Since you say this is in the context of a hobby group where you want to make new people feel included and put them at ease, it might be not so much your facial expression, as your overall demeanor. Perhaps you get so concentrated on the hobby that you are ignoring the new people who want to chat with you. It can be intimidating to interrupt someone who is fully concentrated.

      I’d just say to try and keep your situational awareness “switched on” so you can make an effort to notice and actively welcome them. A little less “hobby time now” mode and a little more “host mode.”

    11. Exif*

      You don’t need to change anything about your face that you don’t want to.

      That said, I did get Botox because I wanted to. Besides fixing my RBF, I have a lot fewer headaches than I did before. I know it’s said to help with migraines, but I got it in cosmetic areas only. So maybe my tendency to scowl/facial tension was contributing to the headaches? Not sure.

    12. Fellow Traveller*

      This is such a ridiculous, shallow, and misogynistic thing and is absolutely not your problem.
      What kind of situations are you concerned about? If you really want to come across as friendlier, you could maybe be the first to to say hello or initiate conversation? I find that initiating the greeting often outs an instinctive smile to my face. I often find that people who are labelled as having RBF are merely quiet or shy or preoccupied.

      1. RagingADHD*

        OP clarified in the comments that this is a social hobby group where the veteran members like her want to help newbies, but her friends have told her the newbies are put off and intimidated by her demeanor. So it’s not just misogyny, there is a real impact on the social role she wants/intends to play.

        1. Fellow Traveller*

          I meant just using the term is mired in a kind of ingrained misogyny, even if the user doesn’t intend it that way. I don’t know what else I would term a phrase that takes a feminine noun and uses it pejoratively, mostly to in reference to a woman’s physical appearance. A man might be called “cold” or “aloof”, but even those terms do not attack a person’s physicality the way the term RBF does. RBF is not about demeanor, it is about the physical appearance of a person. To my mind it would be like calling a deaf person “unapproachable” because they don’t look up when you enter a room.
          I think if OP (whom, interestingly, most commenters are assuming is female) is primarily concerned with being unapproachable, that ought to be a different issue than being concerned with having RBF. The former, I think one can strategize to counteract, the latter one shouldn’t have to question if it’s an issue.
          Also, I will say, I’m Taiwanese and there is a history of Asian women being labelled as having RBF for various physical and cultural reasons. I think when one also consider the term through that lens it is quite apparent why the phrase is incredibly intolerant.

    13. Filosofickle*

      I chose to “fix” my RBF because my outside didn’t match my insides. People perceived me as closed and unhappy, but really I’m a friendly person and I want to be approached, so it served me to make some adjustments. All I really had to do was be more aware what my face was doing — especially when I am concentrating or thinking (which is most of the time!) I tend to squint a little and furrow my brow. Simply relaxing my face and opening my eyes is enough. It’s an ongoing practice to relax my face whenever I find myself holding tension there. Not difficult but does take mindfulness.

      Beyond RBF, facial awareness is plain useful. I had zero poker face before, and it benefits me in life to be more aware what my face is giving away and direct that. Sometimes I want to be unapproachable. Sometimes I want to be neutral. Sometimes I want to look enthusiastic. It’s a kind of body language.

      1. justareader*

        I like your reply and I agree with you on “my outside didn’t match my inside”. That’s how I feel a lot of the time. I’ve been told I have an “unapproachable” look (by a woman with no ill intentions.. I think she thought it was a compliment somehow) but in reality i would love to appear more approachable since I’m so bad at approaching people myself!
        I will also say I’ve been on the other side of this situation where someone looks a little intimidating because of their facial expressions etc and I’m even less likely to approach them. It’s not fair seeming given it’s the face you’re born with (as I know from first hand experience but sometimes you’ve got to make adjustments to get the outcome you want!

    14. Sleepless*

      The OP asked for help with changing her facial expression because she wants to change it. Maybe we can offer suggestions on how to change it instead of telling her she shouldn’t want to.

      OP, one of the very first things I learned when I started doing mindfulness meditation is how much tension I carry in my face. Every now and then I do a quick full body scan starting with my face. I often realize there’s a scowl, or at least a really serious expression, there, and I can relax my face and try to look a bit more open.

      1. Sleeping Late Every Day*

        Being the village scold to supportive people isn’t particularly helpful, either. Do we see men asking for help on how to be less of a Resting Bastard Face? Maybe we all need to work on changing the misogynistic standards that women must appear soft and welcoming.

    15. Dancing Otter*

      I attribute my RBF to something my mother told me as a child: “The shape of my upper lip made my smile look like a sneer.”
      I don’t think I smiled for at least a month after she said that, and I’m still not sure if it was ever true – it doesn’t show in any of the existing photos from that period or the present. But to this day, I have to make a deliberate choice to smile.

    16. JSPA*

      If it’s genetic, other people can like it or lump it.

      If your brow is knotted and your jaw is set because you are tense and unhappy (or your workspace is ergonomically messed up and giving you a low level constant headache, or your anxieties are knawing at your brainstem, and it’s writ large on your face), deal with those things…for your own sake.

    17. Here for the Randomness*

      I definitely have been told this as well. A few years back, a coworker switched to my group. A couple of months later commented that she assumed I was mean by my perceived demeanor but admitted she was wrong after being in my group. After switching jobs, I made it a point to be more visibly cordial which has made me much more approachable. While I can’t change my default facial expression, being more cordial has made work more pleasant.

    18. Esmeralda*

      I have RBF too. Have had it since I was a kid. It means I’m thinking.

      I used to think I needed to change my face. Now, I think to myself, F U Mr Smirky (it’s almost always a Mr who objects to my face), cock an eyebrow, and say, My boss doesn’t have a problem with my face, why do you care?

      Which is actually kinda bitchy. Goes with my face.

  5. Surprised to be a manager*

    Asking the writers among us: Have you ever worked with an editor on a book before submitting to agents? How did you find that editor? What was the process of discovery (and maybe the editing as well) like?

    Asking for my friend, who had two novels published by Harper Collins in the 2000s and is now working on a book she categorizes as autofiction/speculative fiction. It’s about a young woman living with an unusual disability in a dystopian near-future New York City.

    One reasonably priced source for editors I first read about in a previous AAM Weekend Open Thread: the London Writers Salon, which matches writers with editors for a manuscript assessment service.

    We’re based in the U.S., though, and she’s concerned that the British sensibility might not be the best fit for her work. (Of course that’s presuming the London Writers Salon works mainly with British editors, which may not be the case).

    We’d appreciate any and all input.

    1. Copper penny*

      I’m in the watching YouTube videos stage of writing, but my understanding is you really don’t need an editor before going on submission. You shouldn’t pay anything for traditional publishing. My main source of info is Michelle Schusterman on YouTube. She has mostly published middle grade books.

      1. Richard Hershberger*

        The one possible exception to paying for something is the index, which is part of the author’s responsibility. I farmed mine out for my first book. This is not uncommon. I also later concluded that I would have been better off doing it myself, and plan to for my current book. I gather that this too is not uncommon.

        1. fposte*

          Though often the publisher is willing to handle that and take the cost out of the author’s advance. We’re doing that with an academic title now–we’re behind schedule and if we do indexing (and proofing, which we’re also on the hook for) we will be very slow.

    2. WS*

      Are you talking about actual editing or a sensitivity reader? You shouldn’t be paying for an editor before submitting a manuscript, generally, especially with a publishing record behind you. The publisher will want their editor to work with you. But that doesn’t mean you can’t seek other input.

      1. Nicosloanic*

        Yes, a lot of the folks who will say “you must have an editor before sending to an agent to have any chance” are trying to make a living as editors (no shame! I respect the hustle!). I would say I’m an average copy-editor and I got an agent and a book deal without paying anyone to proof it, and for developmental edits I’m in a query group, and that plus my agents’ input seems to be sufficient. In theory, agents are expecting to by reading non-professionally-edited drafts. The industry is already impenetrable enough without trying to add this onto newbies.

    3. Weegie*

      Editor here. It depends whether your friend is looking for a copy editor (irons out grammar/ punctuation/spelling/word choice issues) or a book doctor (works with the writer on more substantive issues such as characterisation, does the plot makes sense, is it rambling in places). Copper penny is right that any future publisher should take care of copy editing, but sadly that’s often a bit lacking these days. Nothing wrong with roping in either type of editor to be sure your book has the best chance: look for professional writers’ associations who may have people in their memberships who offer book doctoring services; for copy editing, seek out professional editors’ associations who generally have lists of freelancers including those who can work with fiction writers.
      Alternatively, find a really good writers group whose members can critique each other’s work.

    4. sagewhiz*

      Editor here also. What Weegie says. With a caveat: the pub world has changed drastically in the past couple of decades, even re previously pub’d writers. Now agents/houses are much more receptive to submissions that state the ms has been vetted by X number of first (or beta) readers AND has been professionally copyedited. Yes the pub will have its own CE go thru the ms, but they now mostly concentrate on ensuring it meets house style (the days of the Maxwell Perkins of the world have joined the dinosaurs, and even Benjamin Dreyers are becoming a rarity).

      A good source for finding an editor is the Editorial Freelancers Assn—it’s an internat’l org, and the author will be inundated with responses, so a “hiring” post should be highly detailed as to what the author is seeking. Also, request a sample edit (no, don’t pay for it; it’s a “cost of doing business” aspect for us, to ensure both the author and editor are on the same page and will work well together). The EFA site is the-efa dot org.

      Or have the author get in touch with Weegie or me! ;-)

      1. Lore*

        I mean, Benjamin Dreyer is the copy chief of one of the main adult divisions of the largest publisher in America (and my boss) and I assure you we care enormously about copyediting! But not before something has been submitted to an agent. I’m not on the acquisition side but my sense is the idea of beta readers is more to get a read on “is there an audience for this book” then “has the author done the publisher’s job for them.” I would also make sure the query letters account for why your friend is looking for a new agent (assuming they had one for their Harper titles) and why there’s a long gap in their output.

    5. Olive Hornby*

      Editor here. Yes, it’s quite common for writers, even previously published ones, to work with outside developmental editors before submitting a new proposal or manuscript. Half the editors I know have left Big 5 publishing in order to do just this kind of work. Does your friend have an agent? Is their former editor still at Harper? Do they have friends who have been published by Big 5 or prominent indies (Grove, Graywolf, Norton)? If so, they may have recommendations. Otherwise, yes, the Editorial Freelancer’s Association is a good place to look.

      1. Olive Hornby*

        Sorry, I see your friend is no longer agented – but presumably someone is handling royalties for their previous books (even if they are out of print)?

        1. Lore*

          I agree on contacting the former editor as a starting point. Also their assistant at the time, who, if they’ve stayed in publishing, will be an editor somewhere.

    6. RagingADHD*

      I am indiepub, but I found an excellent editor through Reedsy. She has 15 years’ experience in the industry with major houses and now freelances.

      Reedsy’s prices are higher than average, but I find they also have a very high standard and make the process extremely structured and easy to find the people you want.

    7. Ann Herendeen*

      I’m the author behind this original query. I (we) should have specified that I’m looking for a developmental (structural) editor or a book doctor, not a copy editor.
      When I was originally published by HarperCollins (acquired in 2007, first novel published in 2008) it was an unusual situation, even now. I have never had an agent and my manuscripts were not edited in any structural way, just copy edited.
      Thanks to everyone who replied. I am definitely planning to contact the EFA and Reedsy, and will certainly reach out to the individuals who have graciously offered to help.

      1. marvin the paranoid android*

        I’m also an editor! One source you might want to try, unless you’re looking for an explicitly American viewpoint, is the Editorial Association of Canada. They’ve got a pretty extensive group of editors, and paying in Canadian dollars might be more feasible. Also, personal recommendations can be pretty valuable, if you know any fellow authors who have worked with freelancers they really like.

        Although personally, I would probably try to see how much work I can get done on my own or with the help of critique partners before paying someone to edit my writing. Any decent structural edit is going to be pretty costly, and as you know, the book publishing business is not a lucrative one to begin with. A good critique partner can be really helpful.

        1. RagingADHD*

          Oh, I’m stealing that, too. My last editor was awesome, but in the UK. It was a few years ago and paying in pounds was quite a pinch at the time.

      2. NancyDrew*

        Another great resource is all the Binders groups on Facebook — Binders Full of YA Writers, Binders Full of Fiction Writers, etc. Lots of freelance, expert editors in those groups willing to help.

  6. matcha123*

    How do you all schedule time?
    I have a huge list of things I want to accomplish. This list hasn’t changed much in over a decade.
    When I am able to get into a good groove, inevitably something will happen, pulling my attention elsewhere and before I know it months have passed.

    My list includes: Going through my clothes to put them into groups of “toss,” “donate/sell,” and “keep;” Becoming proficient in Python and Javascript; exercising almost daily; reading more; learning to cook with my small kitchen space (no oven); saving money and becoming financially literate; and reorganizing my living space.

    You’d think that the clothes would be easiest, but where I live, there’s no “drop off clothes here for donation” type of places. There may be a few small ones connected to churches, maybe. “Selling” involves going to a recycle shop and getting 20c for a bag of clothing or trying to sell online and having to deal with people trying to bargain with you.

    How do you all tackle your own lists?

    1. Suzi Q*

      Have you tried pomodoro technique? Basically it means allotting a really small amount of time and working fast. One common issue is giving the task too much time and running out of interest. When I had a tv I used to do all my housework in commercial breaks. I was motivated to hurry AND I had a built-in reward.

      1. English Rose*

        The only way I get housework done is to save it for listening to podcasts I’m really looking forward to! :)

        1. Texan In Exile*

          That’s the only way I will exercise! I let myself listen to podcasts only while I am working out or doing chores.

      2. matcha123*

        I’ve never heard of this, but I do try versions of it to help me concentrate at work. (5 min on a puzzle, 5 min stretching)
        Tomorrow is Sunday, so will see if I can give this a try with other areas (reading, studying).

    2. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      I find my tasks need to be broken down into things that take only a minute or two so that I can do them (in theory!) while waiting for the kettle to boil, the shower water to heat up, a tv program to start etc. And that I need the equipment to be where I will use it. For example, while the kettle boils I will wash or dry or put away stuff on the sink so the dishwashing liquid and sponge and a tea towel all need to be by the sink so I don’t wander off and get distracted while looking for a tea towel. In the bathroom I have some cleaning product on top of the washer, so while the water is just getting to temperature in the shower, I have a cloth nearby and am more likely to give the sink a wipe over or give the toilet a quick brush. One minute’s dishwashing is better than none. Exercising daily could incorporate stretches while you dry yourself after a shower.

      Re possessions, maybe you would benefit from amnesty re throwing things out at this point, rather than hoping that recycling or selling stuff may get easier over time. The clutter site “Taking one step at a time” talks a lot about amnesty in this way; later on you can then do a simpler “one thing in, two things out” routine to keep your stuff manageable, recycle, and so on.
      Re clothes, grab a shopping bag and stand in front of your wardrobe or sock drawer or wherever your clothes are, and throw three things out. Do the same tomorrow and the next day. As soon as the bag is nearly full, put it in the boot of your car, you will find a bin somewhere or a charity shop.
      Re books, same thing, put a shopping bag by the nearest bookshelf and tell yourself you will let go of three books a day – I have passed on more than a thousand over a year by this method, because I was rather inundated with books and they haven’t stopped writing them!

      That was lengthy – summary: make a list, break your tasks down into tiny ones and make it easy to do them while doing something else.

      1. WellRed*

        I agree with the clothing amnesty. Not everything is able to be sold, donated or otherwise recycled. However, unless it’s high quality stuff, I’d actually say to throw it out, not drive around with it looking for donation box.

        1. matcha123*

          I got most of my clothes from thrift shops growing up, so I definitely wouldn’t donate garbage clothing. Anything torn, stained, worn out, etc. goes to recycling (garbage). Other items are like, nice dresses and slacks that were barely worn and I’ve come to realize don’t look that nice on my body type.

        2. ronda*

          if you are not on board with throwing away.

          Do you have a local Buy Nothing group?

          mine is on Facebook and they often have someone giving away a bag of clothes. takers usually come and pick up from porch….. but I live in a locked apartment building, so I schedule to meet the person in my paring lot.

          for exercise, I find that I will only do it if I have a scheduled class. I do water aerobics and zoom yoga classes. If I dont have the social contract of a meeting commitment, I dont do it. (maybe a class would help for you programming training too)

          also many things on your list are broad on-going categories. maybe come up with a specific goal for them that is doable in a time-frame. ie: cook one meal a week on Sunday, shop, etc on Saturday

      2. Reba*

        A friend of mine did something similar, it wasn’t going to work for her to do a major clean-out so she would get rid of one object a day. Trash, give away, recycle, all valid options. I believe she did this for nearly a year! (I still have a pair of her gloves.)

    3. English Rose*

      I agree with Lizzie (with a deaf cat) [fabulous name!] about breaking down into tiny tasks. There’s a guy called David Allen who developed the Getting Things Done method. His key take-away for me is to find one ‘Next Action’ for everything, so you’re not overwhelmed by the enormity of the task.
      So one of the things on my list is to ‘sort out my pension funds’ which sounds horribly vague and scary (I am ridiculously afraid of anything to do with finances and always procrastinate!). So the very Next Action on this is to open my Bullet Journal (next suggestion) and make a list of all past employers with whom I’ve had pensions, and any personal pensions I’ve had over the years. That feels manageable, and will lead to a series of further Next Actions, such as finding paperwork for Fund number 1.
      And yes, Bullet Journalling. Find Ryder Carroll on YouTube to learn about the method. I find that writing things down on paper – in one place, one journal – helps me remember them better than electronic methods. For example you could have a list of potential places you could recycle/donate your clothes, with advantages and disadvantages of each type. Then your Next Action might be: take bag 1 to place A on Saturday.

      1. Jackalope*

        I also find it helpful to put all the things I want to do on a list, and keep a rolling list. For example, there might be a big thing like clean up the clutter in spot A, and a small thing like take the new laundry detergent downstairs. I will also include fun things I want to do like curl up with a book and some cats. When I have a few days off, I’ll add things like go on a long bike ride at least X number of days, or spend at least one evening playing a video game. That way I make sure to intersperse fun things with chores, and feel a sense of accomplishment when I can get some of those things scratched off the list. And whatever I don’t finish I’ll add to the list for next weekend or whenever.

    4. Anima*

      Bit by bit. Becoming proficient in Python and JavaScript is going to take its sweet time, if you are a beginner and doing it on the side. I am trying for Python since two years and am still at beginner level. I learned Java and C++ in the meantime and am just not a beginner anymore, so that is that.
      Other task like sorting through clothes: I set away a day or half day for that. And I won’t let me get distracted. Someone calls me? I tell them to call again later/tomorrow. If I see other stuff that needs to be done: I put it on the list for later/tomorrow. Maybe that works for you, too.
      Sadly I have no advice in how to get rid of clothes for you. I have it very, very easy here were I live with that. I just drop the good stuff off in the shop.

    5. Japanese Cooking*

      Two things

      Humans were not designed to be productive 100% of the time. I (often) have to release myself from the guilt of not doing more even though objectively I’m already doing a lot. Remembering that rest and rejuvenation belong on the to-do list just as much as laundry or cooking helps me quiet my brain weasels.

      For almost every task on my list, I’ve broken most of them down into smaller chunks. For example, if I’m hoping to meal prep something for the freezer the steps might be:
      – Research the recipe
      – Read comments
      – Print best recipe
      – Take printout to the kitchen
      – Put printout on the fridge with a magnet
      – Edit recipe in pencil (I like to mix recipe tips and tricks)
      – Take all ingredients out of cabinets and place on the counter together
      – Measure all ingredients (I have small cups for this. So garlic and ginger can go in a cup, the spices go in a cup, the sauces go in a cup)
      – Chop veggies
      – Prep protein
      – Put the right pot on the stove
      – Select storage containers
      – Label storage containers with meal and date
      – COOK
      – Allow to cool
      – Portion into labeled containers
      – Freeze

      It’s a LOT of steps and sometimes I can combine them sometimes I can’t. But I can almost always do one thing to keep things moving along.

      I try to be realistic about my brain space and physical energy at any given time so that I’m not running myself ragged. Having precooked homemade meals that I love and crave is one way I’m giving myself some self care and reducing decision fatigue during the week. Good luck!

    6. James*

      I don’t schedule, I prioritize. The nature of my work is such that you can’t pin it down precisely–there are so many things beyond my control that can affect what I can and can’t do that any schedule I make is more a framework for change than an actual schedule. So I decide what my top priorities are (usually the ones with the most limiting factors). Then my second priorities. And on down the list. When things change I move up or down the priority list as possible. There’s a whole Classical Greek concept of time that basically is this world view–you do what’s necessary at the right time, not the time dictated by the clock.

      So, for example: Let’s say you decide that learning Python is your top priority. Work sucked today and you don’t have the mental energy to deal with learning programing today–so you go through your cloths instead. Or you happen to be driving by the grocery store so you pick up ingredients to cook tonight, and spend the evening preping meals for the week. Then you spend a bit of time organizing the kitchen because you’ve already got to do the dishes anyway so you might as well.

      There are ways you can make priorities easier. For example, I always leave a book on my night stand, so that at the end of the day it’s easy to pick it up and read for a bit. I follow Teddy Roosevelt’s advice and read what I enjoy, ignoring what I “should” read, so it’s always enjoyable. Or, you can get a fun gadget to use in the kitchen so cooking becomes a joy instead of a drudgery. Spend a bit of time setting yourself up for success and it pays dividends.

      For exercise, you can’t beat martial arts. The class schedule and the companionship keep you on track. Honestly, I want to get back into European sword fighting as much for the companionship as the exercise. It’s getting easier to find places that focus on the health benefits of it and less on the…..Cobra Kai aspects, if that makes sense.

      1. fposte*

        I really like the “prioritize” notion. It was very helpful to me to decide that lists weren’t for finishing, just prompting.

        1. fposte*

          Oh, and also I find it useful to talk throughmy resistance to a task aloud. “I don’t want to fold and put away the laundry. There’s a lot of bending over and I’m not good at it so I get impatient when things don’t fold right, and I’m not sure what to do about some shelves, and I feel like this never gets done because of how often I have to do laundry.” There’s something about identifying free-floating resistance that’s helpful to me.

          1. Reba*

            Oh, this is a much better self-script than “just fold the laundry, you goof, it won’t even take that long”!

          2. Bibliovore*

            oh the laundry.
            My husband did all the laundry. He would be resentful if I interfered with his flow.
            Now it had been piling up unfolded.

            A friend of mine said always fold laundry in front of a TV show. I have no idea why I had never thought of that. Also, I have started just organizing my clothes in bins (zulilly had some plexiglass ones) in cabinets and folded in the Kondi way. That works for me.
            I have given up on the socks. I buy all the same ones, wool for winter, cotton for summer. I leave them heaped unpaired in a small basket on a chair in the bedroom.

    7. Voluptuousfire*

      Look for local charities that pick up clothes donations! Do you ever get fliers in your mailbox saying a church is going around accepting donations? Usually they’ll pick them up.

      Saves me a lot of trouble and forgetting.

    8. Not A Manager*

      I prioritize my tasks; I approach them differently depending on what type of task it is; and I identify roadblocks and remove them.

      For example, “exercising daily” and “saving money” are different kinds of tasks than “purge the closet.” These require small daily changes in habits that are meant to continue indefinitely. There’s no point in putting those off (and a real danger to myself if I do), so I would move to “identify roadblocks” and really try to address them. Carve out the time, put it in my calendar, etc.

      One big roadblock is wanting everything to be perfect. “I can’t do it all/can’t do it all the time” becomes very shaming, and then I don’t even think about my new habit or task because it makes me so anxious. Maybe you want to exercise 30 minutes a day 4 days a week, but you’ve been trying for years and it just never happens. See what happens if you JUST carve out 10 minutes every morning for light stretching. Don’t make this a consolation prize, B- grade kind of thing. The actual 100% task is 10 minutes of stretching every morning. That might be more doable, it’s certainly better than seven days per week of nothing at all, and someday in the future you can circle back to adding some more exercise on certain days.

      Other tasks, that aren’t lifestyle oriented, I would prioritize. Maybe you have plenty of room in your closet and it’s just your internal Jiminy Cricket that wants you to purge it. Put it on the bottom of your list. On the other hand, maybe you really care about this project but you’re getting bogged down on finding a place to donate (roadblocks). If it were me, I would prioritize how important that particular part of the project really is. Maybe I realize that my clothes are not so hot and it’s okay to throw them away. Or maybe it is super important to me not to create more landfill, so I’ll spend a few hours finding a free-cycle group online or calling the small churches you mentioned. Once you have an actual plan for the clothes, instead of a vague “I must donate them, but where? where?!” it might be easier to get started on sorting. Especially if you’ve committed to a drop-off next Thursday.

    9. matcha123*

      Thank you all for the replies!
      I hope I can start putting all your advice to good use soon. I also notice that I get a huge energy burst in the winter months and fall off in the summer. Which…aligns with how I feel about summer (sluggish, hate it). I need to plan for how to deal with that eventual fall off in the warmer months, too.

    10. RagingADHD*

      To some extent, I separate routines like exercise, frugality or reading from projects like clearing out clothes or learning a language. Making a new habit is a bit of a project in that it takes energy and focus, but hopefully once the friction of change is overcome, it will be ongoing. Whereas the other kind of project has an endpoint, if you see what I mean.

      I think trying to do all these things at the same time is just too much. I would pick 1 routine and one project, and then dedicate a 2-3 month window to hit a certain defined goal with them. For example, you could set the goal that you will do X days of exercise and purge Y bags of clothing. And keep a log.

      At the end of that period, you maintain the new habit, and pick a new habit and a new project to set goals around.

      I think defining goals will really help, because “become proficient” or “read more” are fuzzy and the brain kind of blanks out on executing fuzzy things. It’s not actionable. Like your brain says, “What am I supposed to do with this?”

      “Complete this many chapters in this book /course on Python” or “read five new books” aren’t fuzzy. They are actionable, which helps the brain wake up and start doing things.

      1. Nicosloanic*

        See, I think one of my problems is that I lump “learn new language” and “clean closets” into the same category, whereas in reality, I could likely get most of the closet task done in a day if I would just – do it, where as something like learning python is a series of classes and homework over a long period of time. I fail in two ways: 1) I tend to save up the closet task until it’s “big enough” do be A Project, hoping that some Saturday I’ll feel inspired to spend a whole day doing it – which I never will; it’d be better if I spent five minutes a day doing it rather than putting it off forever – 2) I will try to approach something like “learn python” as a weekend project, when it’s just not the way learning goes, and then be frustrated I’m making so little progress. Don’t be like me.

    11. Not So NewReader*

      Clothes. Put a bag next to or in your closet. As you come across things you know you do not want put them in the bag. Here the key is that it’s things you know for certain you do not want. If you are unsure put it back in the closet.
      This way it is just part of your routine to always be skimming your clothes. I take off my socks at night and notice a big hole, I can either try to fix it or I can toss it. Since I do not like repairs on the bottoms of my socks, I usually toss them. Why put them in the laundry if I know they are not comfy and they are not repairable? Toss or donate as you go.

      If all you have near you is a church program for donating clothes, why not just roll with it. A church near me (that I do not attend) has a popular thrift store with lots of bag sales. A surprising number of locals shop there. The store clearly sends out a message that they do not care where or even IF a person goes to church. The store is for everyone.

      Computer classes? Pick one, get your book/class whatever and start. Designate one or two evenings a week until done.

      Reading more. Is that realistic with all you are trying to do? I thoroughly enjoyed my hour of reading before bed. I have to get back to it. It’s amazing how much I covered in that time frame. Again with the designated time slots, pick a slot and make it your reading time. You can also cover learning about finances and learning about popular organizational strategies. I call it “reading strategically”, I try to address concerns, goals and interests with what I read during that time.

      Learning to cook in a small kitchen. You probably are already underway doing this. Figure out what you would like to cook that you are not cooking now. Figure out if you will need a new appliance to do that thing. You can cross over with a lot of this stuff- for example you can use your reading time to find new recipes to cook.

      Using your examples, I would ask myself, “What do I FEEL like tackling this week or this month?” It’s two different answers because of the time allotments. Some days I am in a super mood for organizing and I will tackle a half dozen kitchen cupboards. Other days I am sick of not knowing how to make X and I will sit long enough to find a recipe to make X. A month long project would be something like the garage because it’s never really been that organized. I go where I feel like I will have some measure of success.

      I think it’s good to remember that there will always be projects and goals waiting in the wings. There is always something more to add to our to-do list. This can give a frame of reference that I like. It reminds me not to waste time on projects that are self-defeating, such as some sewing projects. Once I have that pillow made to I really want to clean it every year for the rest of my life? heck no. Go with the high points things that seem like they will be more enduring.

    12. Pam Adams*

      I’m wondering if you’re letting perfection outweigh the good. If you want to, for example, get rid of clothes, the 20p sale or small church group donation will get them out of your way pretty quickly.

      1. Lou*

        “If something is worth doing, it is worth doing poorly.” I think I read that on tumblr or Pinterest (probably a screengrab from tumblr tbh). Don’t let it be perfect, just let it get done.

    13. Chauncy Gardener*

      For getting rid of things, one year my New Year’s resolution was to discard (in whatever way) one thing from each room each garbage day. The linen closet counted as a room. It helped that it was just one thing, like an old scrunchy or a worn out pair of socks. It wasn’t so overwhelming to think of it that way. Hope that helps!

    14. PhyllisB*

      RE getting things done. First thing I’ve discovered is writing things down helps a lot. List everything you can think of. I don’t mean stuff like get up, brush your teeth, ect. (Though that may be helpful for a dragging child.) I mean things like sort clothes, weed out books, go to post office, ect. It seems that seeing it in print helps me get a handle on things and quells that anxious, overwhelmed feeling. Then when you look at your list of 437 items you want done, don’t panic. Just decide which one you want to start with. Then set a timer for 15-30 minutes and tell yourself you can stop when the timer goes off. Most of the time you will get in a groove and want to keep going. If not, you can quit without guilt. This has helped when I have a lot of things to do, and it’s so satisfying when you can cross it off your list.
      I like the suggestion about throwing out three things a day. I have a storage shed that hasn’t had a good clean out in this century. (Seriously, I think the last time I really did it was 1999.) I have told myself I will go out every day and pick at least two things to either throw away or rehome. So far I’ve gotten rid of about 50 items. I can actually see part of the floor now!!

  7. Frally*

    Please tell me how to get over my phobia of throat cultures. I have a bad reflex and can’t tolerate them. Just the thought of a stick swabbing my throat gets me upset. I’d like to be able to go to the doctor when I have a sore throat to test for strep.

      1. Princess Deviant*

        I feel you. Same here.
        I do my throat swabs myself (no reflex that way!)
        If I’m at the doctor’s – they can see my reaction so they usually just leave it. My doctor knows me though, which helps I think. I’ve had very upsetting encounters when younger with male doctors not understanding my reaction. (Boo to doctors like that).

    1. WS*

      Surprisingly, there is a palm pressure point to reduce your gag reflex and it does seem to work and has been studied by dentists. You make a fist with your left hand and squeeze your left thumb hard. Some left-handers use the right hand instead, and some people hold their thumb in the opposite hand. It reduces your gag reflex considerably.

    2. Admiral Thrown Rocks the Blue*

      Last time I had a swab for possible strep I ended up sitting on my hands. I couldn’t stop pushing away the nurse. It was almost involuntary, a very strong reaction. I’m still embarrassed about that but she was very understanding.

    3. Dwight Schrute*

      No advice, I’m there with you. My last one involved being held on the table by other people because I kept moving away

    4. The Teapots Are on Fire*

      Two things to try: panting, and leaning slightly forward. Little things can make a difference sometimes. Concentrate HARD on the panting.

      1. Maxie's Mommy*

        Leaning forward works great. A dental assistant showed me that trick when I was having impressions done. So does tilting your head all the way back, with your mouth pointing at the ceiling, for a throat culture. Those dental assistants know all the tricks!

    5. Stitch*

      I mean, how often do you really get stabbed for strep? I think it’s been twice in my life ever. So unless you have chronic strep, I think its okay.

      Otherwise I’d recommend what I do when I have to go to the dentist (I’ve had three different surgeries). Just try to take your brain away and thibk about anything else. I think I replayed the Lord of the Rings movies in my brain during one surgery.

    6. JSPA*

      1. Practice dropping your tongue as you say “aah.” (Think of a frog, or gollum, making a “gollum” noise, and your throat should bulge out). Do it in the mirror. Having a wide access path reduces the risk of extra touches to the side or the back.

      2. suck some ice before. Well chilled = less touch-reactive.
      (Sprays mostly won’t be ideal, if they’re trying to culture.)

      3. Ask yourself what “tolerate” means. Do you expect it to be comfortable? That’s not very likely! Nobody, so far as I know, likes getting swabbed.

      4. There’s plenty of advice out there for people wanting to reduce their gag reflex for more, uh, recreational reasons. Some of it might translate to your situation.

  8. NYC Nonprofit*

    Can anyone share their experiences of dealing with cat over grooming, or cat IBD? One of my cats has IBD and the other one has been over grooming since mid-August, and in both cases it has been a long, hellish experience trying to navigate different strategies while trying to control symptoms as best as I can.

    In this case (after trying literally everything else), I think I’ve figured out that the overgrooming cat may also have developed a food allergy (her brother’s IBD manifested earlier this year too), and so am now doing a food trial on her.

    I think what gets me about the treatments for both these conditions is that any one strategy takes a minimum of weeks to see if it’s working… so you could put in all that effort for weeks, meanwhile watching your cat tear her hair out or continue to have diarrhea / gastro distress — all to find out you weren’t addressing the right cause.

    It has been absolutely maddening and, while I’ve dealt with a lot of feline chronic health conditions, this is my first time dealing with these two specifically. Any advice or commiseration would be appreciated!

    1. Sc@rlettNZ*

      I shall watch this with interest as one of our cats has started over grooming. The vet thought he was stressed out by our other cat bullying him but I’m not convinced that is the issue (for several reasons).

    2. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      My deaf cat has to have a grain free diet, this allergy was initially skin based (scratching, pulling fur out) when I got her and she was on prednisone, but the grain free diet sorted that out promptly. If she has any food with grain in it now, it affects her gut instead of her skin. SOME foods marked as grain free are not so, disappointingly, so I rarely change her tinned food diet. Grain allergies seem to be becoming more common in cats, I assume that is partly to do with their more indoor life and their processed food diet, and I wonder if things like worming tablets, flea treatments etc are having a negative effect on their gut.
      I haven’t tried it because my cat’s gut seems pretty stable at the moment, but I wonder if Feliway or another cat calming spray could help yours in the interim. I do have pots of cat grass in the house for my cat as a digestive, as she is an indoor girl.
      You certainly do have my commiserations, when my cat recently tried a new “grain free” food she was very excited by it, loved it, wanted nothing else, but the sad evidence that her gut did not like it only took 24 hours.

    3. SelinaKyle*

      It depends why they are over grooming. One of our cats is allergic to fleas. The first summer we had her she over groomed her belly. Turned out the usual flea treatment wasn’t strong enough for her. We now use a different stronger brand on all four of our cats. She hasn’t over groomed since and that was 5 years ago.

    4. Dwight Schrute*

      My cat was overgrooming due to stress, we put him on Prozac and he was much better! Hope you find something that helps yours

      1. Double A*

        Yes, my cat started over grooming from stress after our other cat died. Prozac snapped her out of it. And she didn’t need to be on it long term; once the habit was broken, she didn’t go back to after she stopped.the meds.

    5. The Dogman*

      If you are using a Fipronil based flea treatment it may not be working anymore.

      In the UK fleas are more or less immune to Fipronil, which is why I switched to Bravecto (tradename) which is a Fluralaner based treatment.

      My cat hasn’t overgroomed since I started that last year!

      Good luck, if the fleas are not the cause you will need to work out which food she is ok with, and yes, that takes ages and lots of licking. Some vets will give a steroid injection to reduce the skin irritation, perhaps one of those every couple of weeks in the meantime will stop her getting too matted and patchy while you work out what she can have?

    6. fposte*

      Don’t know if this will help, but a friend has a pair of sister cats from a breeder (responsible, etc.); they overgroomed and apparently it was something that was common in this family line, but the cats that did it stopped after spaying. I thought that was really interesting and also reflective of my own stress behaviors, which sometimes ramped up for internal rather than external reasons.

    7. Twisted Lion*

      My cat over groomed for a long time. After tests at the vet we switched her to prescription allergy food and she is a lot better. It is frustrating but I would definitely try the vet if you can afford it. The prescription food is pricey but worth the sounds ok licking and her poor bald red stomach. I was trying allergy food from the pet store but it was rubbish and didnt do anything.

    8. PNW*

      I’m not sure how different it is in cats, but my 8 year old dog has had IBD for years. She’s on prednisone every other day and prescription food. A yeast based probiotic called Mycequin helps *a lot* but is frequently out of stock. The IBD is mostly controlled but she still has flares. Usually we have to test for giardia and then do a combination of more prednisone, probiotics, and/or other meds. The prednisone has long term side effects but it’s better than constant vomiting and diarrhea. I hope you’re able to get a good treatment plan for both of your cats.

    9. Blomma*

      I can’t speak to the over grooming, but my 13 (now 14) y.o. cat was diagnosed with pancreatitis and IBD back in May. Treating it has involved many trips to the vet! (Maybe 12 visits since this all started?) We started out with an anti nausea med and an appetite stimulant med because she wouldn’t eat anything. The vet also prescribed her a probiotic. The most helpful med was prednisone for the inflammation, which she took from May until about 2 weeks ago. (I’m hoping that she won’t have to go back on it, but you never know.) She also had to have a course of Vitamin B-12 shots for a deficiency. Another thing that made a huge difference for her is prescription cat food she eats now. It’s Royal Canin Multifunction Satiety + Hydrolyzed Protein. (The satiety part is because she is overweight and needs to slim down for her joints and for diabetes prevention.) She is only allowed this food, no cat treats or samples of bacon anymore. I think it took a week or two for the prednisone and diet change to resolve most of the gastro symptoms. I was actually surprised at how quickly she was willing to change to the prescription food, but I’m sure she made the connection that it didn’t make her feel sick. Our dog also has a Royal Canin Hydrolyzed Protein prescription food for his allergies, so I wonder if it might help both of your kitties? It’s so hard to see them suffering – I hope your kitties feel better soon!

    10. Chilly Delta Blues*

      My cat has a ragweed allergy which is one of the main reasons we don’t wear shoes inside anymore. She gets a $30 steroid shot each year during the worst of it. Once when it was really bad we put a 0-3 month button down baby shirt on her, it didn’t prevent her from using the litter box but did protect her belly from rubbing on things and gave the scabs time to heal.

    11. JSPA*

      One ingredient I’ve noticed showing up in dozens of foods is peas / pea protein. Also, soy / soy protein. Pumpkin and beets and carrots, to a lesser degree. Cheese and eggs, in some. And despite several of these items being potential major allergens in cats as in people–pea allergies are right up there with soy allergies and peanut allergies–several supposedly “sensitive” formulations have one, two, three or more of the above. For now, the most basic of the Purina cat chow naturals (“original”) still works for mine…though it does have soy…peas have invaded at least one of the flavors, I think?

      Another thing is even low level flea problems. Cats can become super allergic to flea bites, and get digestive problems and a host of systemic issues.

      Cat beds don’t always cooperate, when you try to wash and rinse them–sensitivity to residual soap can be a problem.

      Rare but serious–exposure to permethrin insecticides. Yes, they’re “natural,” more or less; but no, they’re not at all safe around cats.

    12. Cat and dog fosterer*

      My friend’s cat occasionally overgrooms due to stress, and they put a soft collar on her (turned down against her body). It doesn’t resolve the underlying problem, but whatever stresses her is temporary, so this fixes the problem without drugs.

    13. CatMom*

      One of my cats constantly over groomed and licked a bunch of fur off this stomach and arms. After several frustrating food trials, it seemed like he was allergic to poultry (very common ingredient in cat food). We switched to an allergy friendly food (instinct limited ingredient rabbit) and it’s worked out great. Definitely worth the trial and error.

      1. Cat and dog fosterer*

        Chicken is notoriously allergenic for dogs and cats, and fish is also one that I have experienced with several cats.

    14. Mungojulia*

      Seconding the allergies suggestions – it may be enough to switch protein/carb sources (like if you’re feeding them a standard chicken/grain formula, switch to something like salmon/potato) but you might need to go with fully novel protein, like duck or venison. You can usually get those formulas from your vet (but aren’t a prescription diet) or specialty pet stores.

      It may also be worth talking to your vet about doing a round of steroids to help eliminate the underlying inflammation that months of irritation may have caused. Steroids are also appetite stimulants in cats, so it makes food transitions easier if they are picky eaters.

  9. Princess Deviant*

    Weird and maybe an esoteric question – what do you do to self-soothe that’s healthy?
    I’ve been working on it in session.
    One things that was suggested to me: placing my hand where I feel anxious, e.g. on my stomach or on my chest.
    I guess I could regulate my breathing too because I breathe shallowly when I’m anxious.
    The issue I have is that I do forget to do these things in the moment. It’s only afterwards when I’m exhausted from the interaction that I think “hey, I should have done that”.
    Work in progress I guess.
    I don’t know about you, but I didn’t learn how to ‘adult’ from my own family. I’m learning it from other healthy adults as I’m getting older.

    1. English Rose*

      Not so weird, I think this is important to a lot of people. I have a friend who used to suffer horrible anxiety in part because she couldn’t sleep well. She got a weighted blanket. Google it, but be picky, and the best ones are expensive :(. It ‘holds’ her and is comforting and fosters quality sleep. Or even sitting with it in a chair. Not something you can use in the moment of course, but she has found benefits spill over into everyday life.
      Learning to ‘adult’ takes a lifetime!

    2. Bobina*

      One of the best things for me was just learning to recognize what anxiety looks like for me. I’m in a bit of an anxious phase at the moment, but even just knowing to recognize it and acknowledge it means its a lot easier to know that I need to self-sooth or just give myself some space/grace.

      So I would say start by paying attention to your body and the signs of what anxiousness looks/feels like for you.

    3. Japanese Cooking*

      Grounding techniques can be very helpful here. Specifically using all five sense when you’re overwhelmed. What are 5 things you can see, 4 you can hear, 3 you can touch, 2 you can smell, and 1 you can taste? My family had/has a lot of mental illness and it’s fascinating to look back on the various coping mechanisms each kid developed. One thing that’s effective for me and actually matches what they now recommend is to read a news article. This was easier in the Before Times when the world wasn’t on fire, but pick a safe category like cooking or gardening and read an article. Any article. It only takes your brain two minutes to reset onto a new path. HUGE help for me growing up and now to interrupt and escape the rumination spiral. I still read every dang shampoo and conditioner bottle in reach. It’s weirdly soothing!

    4. Hotdog not dog*

      I am in my 50s and still don’t have the hang of adulting, and have run out of f’s to give about that fact.
      For self soothing I use breathing exercises. The classic breathe in through your nose for 4 counts, hold 2, exhale tends to be the most effective for me.
      I also crochet to relieve stress and read when I need to get out of my own head and “visit” another world for a while.

    5. Jay*

      I have always had difficulty recognizing the physical warning signs – before I notice it, I’m wound up past the point where basic self-soothing will work. I finally found a few things that have really helped. I figured out that the emotion underlying the wound-up-edness is usually shame, and I recognized which situations and which people/relationships are most likely to trigger that response. Now I know ahead of time that I’m heading into an encounter that puts me at risk and I pay far more attention to my body, which helps me slow my roll and do something to defuse my response. That something is often focused breathing, which helps slow my heart rate and calm me down and also stops me from talking so I don’t blurt out something I will regret.

      The other big thing is that I try to set myself up for success with self-care ahead of time. In 12-step, we use the acronym HALT: Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired. Those can trigger the behaviors I want to change. I’ve added “time pressured” to that – if I feel rushed, I start to spiral emotionally. I do everything I can to prevent getting hungry, angry, tired, or rushed (lonely is not a big thing for me).

      And the final thing is I’ve given myself permission to walk away from encounters if I feel like I’m going to lose it. If I think of it early enough, I can end the conversation gracefully and give myself time to recover.

      It’s taken a long time to figure out how to deal with this. Give yourself grace.

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        I love that acronym. Although I will add another “T” because I get cranky when I get dehydrated.

    6. Dwight Schrute*

      Breathing techniques and fidget toys and going for walks help me in the moment. I love this video on breathing techniques- I think it’s water, and whiskey breathing- you should be able to find it on YouTube that way. Long term out of the moment- weighted blanket, and medication.

    7. Sloan Kittering*

      If I have time, nothing works a s effectively for me as a hot bath. In a pinch, getting under my duvet helps too. Just being surrounded by heat, basically; being cold seems to trigger anxiety. I realize this won’t work in the middle of a meeting though. They say counting, or breathing while counting, is good but I’m sure your counselor has already told you that. A “bad” one, maybe; I drive my fingernail into the fleshy pad of my thumb, or pinch myself. The pain distracts me from the anxiety, however I’m not sure that’s a recommended technique; I use it in emergencies (mostly the doctor or dentist).

    8. Frankie Bergstein*

      I have been thinking about this topic a lot. I’m also learning to adult while approaching what folks call middle-age, so you are not alone.

      For me, in addition to the sunlamps folks have mentioned, daily exercise that is fun, involves music, etc. If I can’t make myself, I’ll do a deep stretch yoga video — that way, at least I’ve worked some tension out of my muscles.

      I’ve also been leaning into coziness: snuggling the dog, making spiced chai and hot chocolate, and trying new recipes, like an egg-in-the-hole grilled cheese. Listening to new music and finding albums I like, then listening to them over the week is nice too. Lots of tiny pleasures, like sun coming in and gorgeous cloud formations outside while I type this.

      Also: it’s just hard. I can’t get as much done, and I really like being active / productive. I name this phenomenon my “winter slowdown” when I talk about it so I can specifically name that it affects my productivity. I am working on accepting my winter slowdown.

    9. Falling Diphthong*

      Visually tracing a square when anxious. Up one side: inhale to slow count of six (or whatever number works). Across top: slow count of six. Down other side: exhale to slow count of six. Across last side: slow count of six. Repeat until calmer.

      I got this from a pre-surgical counselor, recommended through the hospital and cancer center. Will note that she did not say a single word about diet and exercise (what I expected the session to focus on; instead it was all mindfulness) but, over the next month, I lost several pounds. I think because she gave me ways to cope with stress other than chocolate. So your question about how to self-soothe in a way that’s healthy resonated with me a lot.

      1. Ampersand*

        It’s interesting you mention this—I’ve noticed that if I’m really anxious during a conversation, I start mentally tracing lines around objects in whatever space I’m in. I think my brain automatically just starts doing it to self-soothe. Then I realize I’m doing it and recognize I’m anxious. I’ve never heard of or considered doing this intentionally, but makes sense! Most anything that is mentally distracting seems useful.

    10. Wishing You Well*

      Breathing exercises are good, if you can tolerate them. A social worker friend said breathing exercises can actually make some people MORE anxious! I use exercise. When stressed, I go for a walk, if possible. If not, I exercise inside. Exercising every day can help your overall anxiety level. Of course, therapy can help find the root cause of anxiety and offer an individualized plan for self-soothing. My neighbor likes to bake (cookies, not weed) to relieve stress!
      Great question and good luck!

      1. allathian*

        Yeah, I can’t do breathing exercises, except for two or three deep breaths before I have to do something that makes me anxious, like give a presentation. Tai chi helps me, although I haven’t been able to go since February 2020…

    11. Chaordic One*

      Yes, not so weird. It’s not unusual to forget to do these things in the moment, but afterwards when you’re exhausted from the interaction is a time to process what happened and to get yourself back to a state of equilibrium. Not dwelling on what just happened, but acknowledging it and moving on. The breathing helps.

      There’s an intermediate step that is horribly uncomfortable, where you are not exactly forgetting to do these things in the moment. You’re aware of what is going on and of the things that you’d like to be doing, and it doesn’t happen. It’s like watching yourself in a slow-motion train wreck and you can’t stop it. When you’re in that horrible intermediate step, you can take the next step and say to yourself, “Hey, I should do this!” The next time it happens might actually do it. Or at least attempt to do it. Maybe do part of what you want to do, if not the whole thing.

      Once I read an article about boxing (of all things) and the thing that I remember about it was that successful boxers were not just good boxers (the boxing was the comparatively easy part) but that they were extremely physically fit and spent a lot of time exercising to build up their muscles in order to withstand that beatings that they would receive from their opponents.

      You don’t need to be in extremely peak physical fitness like a boxer, but you do need to be well-rested, reasonably fit, hydrated and fed in order to withstand life. That means getting enough sleep, remembering to consciously eat well and getting some exercise in order to be able to deal with life as an adult. Be kind to yourself. Forgive yourself. Be ready to move on to the next thing. That’s what resilience is about.

      1. Princess Deviant*

        Oh yes, I can relate to that horrible moment of realisation when it’s like having an out of body experience. I really like this explanation of it being a muscle that you have to practise using. Thanks so much, that’s really helpful.

    12. Not A Manager*

      Re: forgetting to Do The Thing. This is an issue of learning a new habit, and it’s exacerbated by the fact that you’re disordered at the time you most need to practice your new skill.

      If you have people around you who could prompt you, ask them to give you a one-word prompt or a short phrase when you seem distressed (maybe due to your shallow breathing). They don’t need to get all up in your face or manage your experience, they are just reminding you of a task.

      If you don’t have people that you feel comfortable asking this, and/or as a backup, you could post some sticky notes with your prompt on your workstation or around your home. Just like “give yourself a hug” (perhaps not the best – trying for “touching where the anxiety is” but I’m sure you can think of a better phrase), or “in through the nose” (which is completed by “out through the mouth” as one kind of breathing exercise).

      Also, as with any habit, sometimes you need to practice it a second too late in order to learn to do it on time. Even after an episode, if you’d forgotten to put your hand where the anxiety was manifesting, do it now. Think about how you felt when you were anxious. Practice that next time you’ll place your hand sooner. That’s part of learning any new habit.

    13. AlexandrinaVictoria*

      If I’m in a place where I can use my phone, I either play Sudoku or Tetris. Easy things where I have to concentrate but not CONCENTRATE. They are mindless but do take some thinking. It helps.

      1. Princess Deviant*

        Yes! It doesn’t help me with in the moment interactions but I love playing suguru on my phone. It’s very calming.

    14. Jackalope*

      I find it helpful to have a phrase that I repeat to myself while breathing. I’m a Christian so I like to use the Jesus prayer (“Lord Jesus Christ God’s son, have mercy on me, a sinner.”), but anything about that long can work. I breathe in for the first half of the sentence and then out for the second half. I started practicing it by using it to calm myself down before bedtime, since when I’m trying to go to sleep I’m usually restless, not anxious, and it got me into the habit so that it’s easier to use when I’m feeling anxiety.

      1. Not So NewReader*

        I use prayer, too. Especially in the middle of the night where I know I am just getting jittery. I ask God to lift what ever this anxiousness is off of me. Interestingly, a person in my life who is a quasi-believer has tried this and it was the only thing that helped her in some instances.

        1. Camelid coordinator*

          Me, too! When I can’t sleep I go through my prayer list very deliberately. Once I really couldn’t sleep and prayed for the whole parish, starting with the family that always sits in the front row.

    15. J.B.*

      Taking a walk outside and breathing in deeply, although maybe one time out out of three do I remember to do that when I’m skizzing out. I had a similar question later on so awesome to see more ideas.

    16. Generic Name*

      I like to do soothing things with my hands. Honestly, the most soothing for me is to rub a specific type of fabric together because I used to rub the edge of my baby blanket when I was a small child. I’ve found jacket lining to be similar, and I find myself rubbing the jacket lining together absentmindedly when I wear certain jackets. But I normally am not wearing that type of fabric all the time, so rubbing a “worry stone” can help. I also like to fiddle with small objects. I have a small twist tie that I play with at my desk. I also read somewhere that stroking your own arms in a petting motion can help soothe you. Rubbing your hands together slowly is a more publicly acceptable version.

    17. MeepMeep*

      I’m not sure how healthy it is, but Internet forums have always been my self-soothing mechanisms of choice. This one is great for that. It is a very good distraction from whatever it is that’s bugging me and a redirection from any negative thoughts.

      I am pretty careful about which forums I pick, though, so that there’s no negativity or angry/fearful content on the forum itself.

    18. I take tea*

      Lots of interesting tips to try out, thank you for this question! Things I do are fiddling with my braid, if I have one. The tightly wound hair feels good to touch and following the weaving strands keeps me focused. A spiky rubber ball (for massage) to roll over my arms is very helpful too, and a much better alternative to the clawing I used to do when I was younger, but it’s not so discreet, of course. Already rubbing something with texture helps. I also tend to sniff my scarves, a habit I’ve had since I was little. Focusing on smelling the fabric makes me calm, I suppose it’s a kind of breathing exercise.

    19. cleo*

      I have a two pronged approach to this – 1, things I do in the moment when I realize I need it and 2, things that I do regularly / good habits that tend to make the rest of my life go better if I follow them. That includes getting enough sleep, eating nourishing, mostly healthy food, taking a morning walk etc.

      In terms of #1, I’ve noticed that it helps me to rotate my self soothing practices pretty regularly. I have a post it note with my current practice on my laptop. Currently I notice one thing with each of my 5 senses. I also like holding onto something. I have a variety of stones on my desk to squeeze when I need them.

      If I know that I’m going to be in a situation where I may forget to take care of myself, I’ll wear a specific bracelet or necklace as a reminder. I particularly like pendants that I can tug on or hold. Different people seem to use different senses to resource themselves. For some people smelling a specific scent can be grounding. I prefer touching something.

      I think that being able to notice that you could have self-soothed in a specific situation is huge! Keep noticing that. And noticing how you felt right before then. And eventually you’ll probably notice that your internal meter is turning towards RED and put your hand on your chest during the stressful situation instead of after.

    20. Not So NewReader*

      If you would like to use regulated breathing in times of need, then practice it in calm moments.
      I love doing the in through the nostrils out through pursed lips exercise right before I go to sleep. I sleep better.

      I like a warm cup of herbal tea.
      But it’s also good to put on an extra sweater or sweatshirt sometimes.

      Depending on my setting sometimes I can start to feel differently by complimenting someone on something they have done. It helps me to think more about others and stop thinking about me and my concerns. And it helps me to remember that there is more to life than My Current Concern.

      If you feel symptoms in your stomach, I’d recommend actually taking something for the stomach ache/pang/pain. Our emotions can become physical and it’s okay to address the physical component of an emotion. For example if a relative is giving us a real (literal) headache, it’s okay to take something for a headache.

      I always say make sure you are eating some whole foods- fruits and veggies. But if that is not doable for some reason, then focus on hydrating. Water helps organs to function. This means water helps a brain to function, also. It’s amazing how even a little dehydration can really make us feel bogged down.

    21. Carcarjabar*

      Having something physical to remind me of the breathing techniques helps. I have the CALM app, which has a breathing timer. I’ve seen bracelets for this purpose, but haven’t used them. And I also have mantras for each of the major things that spike my anxiety. I repeat them OVVVVERR and OVER, in conjunction with the breathing, during am anxious period. If mantras feel weird- just try counting. Anything to get your brain off of the anxious thought.

    22. beach read*

      When I’m in the dentist chair, for instance, I whale watch. Close my eyes and imagine the gentle giants swimming gracefully in the deep blue.

    23. JSPA*

      Not really office-friendly, but at home, I still use one I learned in school. Lie down. Close eyes. Tense and then relax your toes. Tense and then relax feet, ankles and calves. Next, thighs…and so on up to arms, fingers, head.

    24. Princess Deviant*

      These replies are so helpful, thank you so much! Especially the ones about how to help me with in-the-moment-recognising.
      I’m about to have a difficult encounter with someone right now, so I’ll try to put in practice some of the things mentioned here.

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        Rocking chairs & swings.
        Doing something simple & repetitive like knitting or crocheting something with no pattern change.
        Swimming.
        Walking on the beach even (especially?) if it’s bad weather.

        1. Seeking Second Childhood*

          Oops I lost part of my answer. Which is that I find it easier to deal with specific instances if I’ve done things like this for myself in the recent past. And some of them work while on a stressful phone call even.

    25. Bibliovore*

      these days.
      if I am around people, I use the Breaths app on my apple watch.
      If I am in the car, I pull over and cry.
      If I am home- I ask myself if I am in HALT and or pain- sometimes I don’t recognize pain that manifests as anxiety/ panic.
      I cuddle the dog or listen to an alternating sounds CD or watch stupid television or phone a friend or take a hot bath or listen to very loud music.
      Sometimes I just give up and send myself to bed and read ask a manager or the bloggess or grief facebook groups.

  10. Fosspro*

    I live outside the US in a country without zip codes and just closed on buying my first home here. It turns out due to having a pretty common last name and living in a large rural area that I need to ‘name’ my house so it can be identified by the mail service and the rest of humanity in general. The house doesn’t have an address as such right now, just the rural area and county. I have no idea what to call it so am throwing it out to AAM – if you could name your house what would it be and why?! And if it already has a name why that one? I

    ‘ll be stuck with it once I choose it so am overthinking it of course! Downton Abbey here I come…

    1. DistantAudacity*

      …you could name it using the What Three Words address convention?
      The grid is fairly small, so you can get different combos on your property.

        1. newbie*

          I just looked up my house’s three words and LMAO… for being random, they’re really on the nose!

    2. Foreign Octopus*

      Nampara.

      It’s the name of Ross and Demelza’s house in the Poldark series, by Winston Graham. I’ve loved those books since I’ve read them and it would nicely reflect my Cornish roots now that I live abroad.

    3. Fall Leaves*

      I love when a house/property gets a name after an identifying plant, design, or geographical feature. Is there a tree or flower you especially like in the garden? Are you going to plant something? Does the stone fence look romantic?
      Can’t wait to hear others’ ideas!

    4. WS*

      What is the indigenous language where you live? Otherwise, a geographical or wildlife feature is good.

    5. Japanese Cooking*

      Recommend using a permanent feature in the name (rocks/hills/landmarks). No sense in naming it the red house if you might repaint later. Or the Magnolia Tree house if the tree might come down later. You could name after something in your garden but a little risky if you don’t intend to keep up the maintenance for the Rose Garden house etc. Could use the build style of house (cottage/cabin/gable): Gabled Hill. Or the purpose: Summer Haven, Winter’s Solace, Artists Retreat. You might be able to surf sites like AirBnB or VRBO for house headlines/names that seem fun. Good luck!!

      1. Virginia Plain*

        Also don’t name it Rose Cottage. This is what staff in uk hospitals use to refer to the morgue when speaking when patients might hear and they want to be sensitive!
        I mean not that you live in the uk (I gather) or would entertain many British medical staff but still. Although if you are a bit of a spooky goth type you might like the secret knowledge!

        1. fposte*

          I have never heard this and this is amazing. And I live in a house with a lot of roses so I love the idea that I’m accidentally preparing.

        2. Chaordic One*

          Being of a certain age (older than dirt) I remember “Rose Cottage” as being the name of the doll house that belonged to the character of Hallie Stokes on the old soap opera, “Dark Shadows.” The doll house was a miniature version of the real Rose Cottage (that was also known as the old McGruger mansion) located on the edge of the Collinwood estate. A suitably morbid name for a doll house or a mansion on Dark Shadows.

      2. Falling Diphthong*

        I still haven’t forgiven the people in The Yellow House Where I Turn to Get to PT for repainting it a less distinctive color.

    6. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

      My house is named Dunbroch, after the made-up kingdom from Brave, because I am my dad’s Merida and I shot for my own hand. :) I also own dunbroch dot net as a domain for email.

    7. Richard Hershberger*

      I am so envious. I would adore having this opportunity. So let’s go:

      Rivendell. Too over the top? This also excludes
      Orthanc. Much less
      Barad-Dur. OK, how about going obscure:
      Armenelos, which was the capital of Numenor.

      The heck with it: I’m going in a different direction entirely:

      Stately Wayne Manor.

    8. Sloan Kittering*

      I’d probably pick a bird or animal I’ve seen around the house – Three Foxes Cottage, Red Deer House, Killdeer, etc.

    9. fposte*

      In addition to what people are suggesting, try out names for clarity on the phone (since you’ll have to tell people your address sometimes) and tolerability with frequent repetition. So if it’s funny, will it be funny after a hundred repetitions?

      If anybody ever read Marie Killilea’s Karen books, there’s a great moment when they decide to name their house Sursum Corda (meaning Lift Up Your Hearts). And they hear a couple see the sign and say “Oh, the Killileas have moved. I wonder what the Cordas will be like?”

    10. TexasTeacher*

      This is very interesting. I wonder, are there copyright laws that must be followed? Can one select a literary place name to a modern work?

      1. RagingADHD*

        No, copyright does not apply here. It’s not a creative work, it’s a house.

        Perhaps if OP were advertising it internationally as an AirB&B based on the fan appeal of a name, there might be trademark issues but given that OP is in a different country laws will vary and nobody smaller than Disney would be likely to bother. Even then, it would be fine to name the house for postal purposes, just not promote it commercially based on the name and association.

          1. RagingADHD*

            “Wizard school” isn’t intellectual property. “Hogwarts” is.

            It’s not really a matter of length.

            1. fposte*

              Hogwarts isn’t *copyrighted*, though. “Copyright does not protect names, titles, slogans, or short phrases,” from copyright dot gov. There are other legal ways to protect intellectual property, such as trademarks. (Then of course there’s the time-honored method of having lawyers write a threatening note regardless of legal grounds.)

              1. RagingADHD*

                Yes, that’s why I said intellectual property. I was referencing back to my point that if someone were to list their home for a vacation rental experience as “Hogwarts” or “The Time Variance Authority” or “The Razor Crest,” there will be lawyers coming for them. Doesn’t matter in the context of this discussion if it’s technically copyright or trademark–it’s a problem.

                But if they just want to live in it, nobody will care. It’s not a problem.

                1. fposte*

                  Copyright and trademark are very different, though, and it is indeed a matter of length for copyright. So I’m not sure where you were going there.

        1. TexasTeacher*

          That’s good to know. As a teacher I’m sometimes surprised at the complexity and scope of what’s restricted by copyright laws.

    11. FashionablyEvil*

      I will say, it’s good to pick something not too weird—a friend had problems with a security clearance check because a foreign relative’s address was basically “Snurp Cottage, Snurp Lane,” and the investigators didn’t believe it was a real place.

      1. Fosspro*

        This plus long-term I anticipate starting my own company for which this will be the registered address. I work in a conservative industry so want to avoid giving my address as Fosspro Inc, Curmudgeon Dungeon…etc

    12. small town*

      How about Longbourne? The Bennet house in Pride and Prejudice. Or Satori, the Buddhist term for sudden enlightenment

      1. Virginia Plain*

        Longbourne would be nice but I’d definitely check the meaning of names or elements of names that describe geographical features; for example bourne means boundary, lea means field or meadow, hurst means a sandbank or wooded rise, and there’s a city in California (I think) called valleyvalley (Glendale). I mean you might not care if the name matches the geography but it would annoy me to live in a house called Sandbrook if it was built on clay with no stream in sight, or Toadstool Copse if there were no trees anywhere nearby.

    13. Purple Cat*

      That’s such a cool/weird opportunity!
      I agree with the feedback on geographical/animal features of the area. Or, I would try to personalize it to me. Maybe incorporate birthstones or birth flowers into the name. I’m born in August, so the Peridot House.
      I think I would stay away from fantasy/literary names just because it might start to become awkward in actual conversation and when you have to give your house name for professional purposes.
      Q: Where do you live?
      A: Rivendell

    14. BlueWolf*

      I agree with the idea of picking some sort of distinctive feature of the house or geographical area. I’ve thought about naming our house just for fun. Ours is a pretty distinctive blue color so I thought of something playing off of that or something to do with the local wildlife we see around often.

    15. Chaordic One*

      A friend (who has since passed away) had a charming comfortable house that always reminded me of being inside of a comfortable little rabbit den. My friend was known by his middle name and never used his first name, which was “Howard”. His house was known as “Howard’s Hollow.”

    16. *daha**

      Use my favorite phrase of all time from Saturday Night Live:

      PAINFUL RECTAL ITCH

      (With a name like that, it’s got to be good!)

    17. Nessun*

      My grandparents owned a house named Silverknowe (a knowe is a hill or crest of land, sort of). If I had a house, that’s what I’d go with, in a heartbeat. I loved that their house was named, and I was saddened when it was sold after they passed.

    18. *daha**

      Here’s a more serious response than my previous one. Famous-last-name + Folly or Landing or Crossing.
      Hitchcock’s Folly
      Lafayette’s Landing
      Taft’s Crossing
      Smirnoff’s Folly
      Bluebeard’s Landing
      Hemingway’s Crossing
      Clapton’s Folly
      Lipton’s Landing
      Pompidou’s Crossing

      Plus you get to make up a story about how it got its name.

    19. Not So NewReader*

      I’d go with something that makes sense to the people around you. I live in an old school house and people know that. So I could do “The schoolhouse on X Road”.

    20. SlinkoBeast*

      Sorry if someone has already said this. You might want to avoid literary and other cultural references; it’s possible someone else has already named their house that, and your mail might get misdirected.

    21. chi chan*

      Give it your last name plus house/cottage. Smith Cottage. Or choose a name that people can recognize it by like Redroof House.

    22. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Out of pure curiosity, if an existing house sells, do the new owners choose a new name? Are they supposed to keep the old name? If they choose a new name, do the neighbors keep using the old name any way? LOL

  11. InMyBones*

    Is anyone else’s computer prone to blocking captive portals? Captive portals are when you sign onto a public Wifi network and the computer says it’s connected but you need to enter additional information in a browser to have access. Usually a fresh browser pops up or you type a site into a browser and it re-directs to the portal

    My work laptop often doesn’t allow the portal to come up- I would say it appears maybe 20% of the time. This is primarily a problem because the bus line I use has it and I sometimes have 2 hour commutes where I need to work during.

    Does anyone know if there are tricks around how to get the portal to show up? I’m pretty sure it’s something with my VPN (the portal isn’t totally blocked because it does appear sometimes) so my IT team doesn’t seem to care about solving this. I can also just get a hotspot (I can’t use my phone as a personal hotspot) but I want to try this first.

    1. KR*

      I think it’s an issue with your VPN as well – I had the same issue with my work PC and hotel Wifi. Something that helped for me was looking at the Wifi IP address and navigating to what I guessed was the router IP address, and that sometimes forced the login page. Or going to Google or other random pages until my computer figured out it needed to allow the login screen to come up. At a hotel wifi, I sometimes called the hotels help desk and they would give me the correct address to type to force it to come up. Honestly phone wifi just worked the best for me, so I think a hotspot might be the best longterm solution. More secure too.

    2. WS*

      My local hospital has one of these and I spend a few hours there every few months for an infusion, so I have had this problem! I usually just refresh the browser over and over until it suddenly finds the right page and goes to the portal.

      1. Girasol*

        My experience too. Just poke it a dozen times and on one random try, poof, there it is. It’s kind of like stroking a cat until all of a sudden the claws come out for no apparent reason.

    3. Janet Pinkerton*

      This happens with my work laptop because of the VPN. To get around it at hotels I have to call the hotel’s tech support and be given a something-or-other so I can bypass that login portal entirely. It’s a huge pain. So a hotspot is almost certainly the answer.

    4. Sloan Kittering*

      I have had this in hotels, and the only solution I’ve found is to know the address it’s trying to manually redirect you to (often you can guess it, like it starts with the hotel chain’s name – or ask someone who’s got it) and then proceed to log in. I’m assuming it’s a security thing , something about blocking pop-ups/redirects, that could be deactivated if I was more tech-y but I’m not.

    5. Cthulhu's Librarian*

      Try sending your computer to the address 1.1.1.1 after joining the network. For many routers, that will aim you directly at the captive portal page, and work around many issues with your device not allowing the router to redirect your internet traffic.

    6. Katefish*

      You probably already know this, but I didn’t until this year so throwing it out there – make sure you uncheck the “Connect automatically” box on the internet itself when dealing with this issue. I consistently had problems until my spouse showed me this for web pages with a secondary login. (Do this before VPN, obviously.)

    7. Observer*

      I’m pretty sure it’s something with my VPN (the portal isn’t totally blocked because it does appear sometimes) so my IT team doesn’t seem to care about solving this

      I would be confident that they are never going to fix this problem for you. Most IT folks who have a decent grounding in security HATE public wifi. Even with a VPN they just add a real layer of risk. So even if they are not banning you from using it, they are not going to spend a lot of time trying to make it work. A personal hotspot is MUCH safer.

    8. David*

      It’s hard to say based on what you posted here. E.g. what do you mean by “doesn’t allow the portal to come up”? I can make a couple guesses about what might be happening but it’s hard to tell without having some more detail about what you actually see when you try to access the portal.

      Here’s my best guess, though still just a guess: if the first thing you do after connecting to wifi is try to load up whatever website you wanted to visit, it might be a feature called HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) that’s blocking you from loading the portal. I don’t know if you’re familiar with it, but if not: HSTS basically means your browser will refuse to load certain websites without first verifying that it’s the right web server on the other end of the connection. And if you’re trying to use a network with a captive portal, then of course it won’t be the right web server on the other end, it will be the captive portal server instead, so the browser will detect the discrepancy and refuse to load the page. (Mini-rant: this is why captive portals are the worst. You’re presented with a situation where one web server is pretending to be another one and you’re supposed to just roll with it rather than doing the normal thing which is to treat it as though someone’s trying to hack your connection.) Anyway, HSTS is something that can be enabled or disabled for different sites individually, so if this is the problem, you can solve it by pointing your browser to a site that is guaranteed not to have it enabled, like neverssl.com, or captive.apple.com, or Google’s or Microsoft’s equivalents, or 1.1.1.1 as Cthulhu’s Librarian suggested, or so on. When you go to one of these sites, the browser will not try to verify the connection so when the captive portal server intercepts the request and sends your browser the portal page, it will hopefully get displayed. Best to make sure your VPN is turned off while you’re doing this, as well.

    9. I don’t post often*

      Someone above mentioned this, but look at item 2 on this website. https://zapier.com/blog/open-wifi-login-page/ Or Google “force computer to open wifi network” There is a series of numbers you can enter into the web browser to make the page to log in appear.
      Unless your VPN works differently, it’s not your VPN. I have to have the internet connection before I can log onto VPN.

  12. Tuesday*

    Daylight savings time is ending soon – oh no! Lately I feel like I never want summer to end. What do you do to make the darker, colder months brighter and more enjoyable?

    1. KR*

      Honestly, I hide inside and sleep a lot. Try to soak up as much sunshine as possible during the day. I hate when the days are shorter, my seasonal depression kicks my hind end. Watching this thread for ideas.

      1. AGD*

        This.

        I take vitamin D, use a sun-lamp, try to get enough exercise, and use the dark hours to play lots of computer games. But mainly it comes down to being ridiculously patient with myself and reminding myself of how good I feel in June. Next June is worth waiting for, basically.

        I honestly keep wondering whether I should just try to move to California, in spite of the number of natural disasters.

    2. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      Full spectrum lightbulbs, take vitamin d, bring out the strong coloured throws and scarves etc, especially deep red and orange ones.

    3. allathian*

      I live at 60 N, so from November to January it’s dark when I go to the office/start working and dark when I leave/stop working. I have a sunrise alarm to wake me up, and a bright light to help with my SAD. I try to go out for a walk during lunch to get some daylight.

      I’m a homebody, though, so hygge is definitely for me.

      1. RussianInTexas*

        When I was growing up back in Siberia, it was dark like that all winter long – sunrise at 9am, sunset at 4pm.
        We had a UV light that everyone (especially the kids) had to sit in front for at least half on hour per week.

    4. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

      SAD has hit me like a ton of bricks recently (oh UK gets dark quick) and I can’t use those lamps because they give me migraines.

      However: I’ve sorted out all my Xmas sewing projects and started a few (some take months), I’ve reinstalled some old favourite games onto my PC that are good for nostalgia (well hello there original Mass Effect and Dragon Age Origins and Titan Quest and Diablo 2 and Fallout New Vegas and….).

      Cups of tea.

      1. The Dogman*

        Have you tried the sun tone lamps not the UV purple ones?

        I am in the UK too, and my house glows all winter nowadays, I have bought some multifunction B&Q DIAll bulbs that have sun/moon/colour changing modes, and I find they made a big difference for me. The come with a remote control, have 10 light modes (including music reaction colour changing function!) and are about £20 for 3 with a remote. They are standard screw in style ones but I think that had bayonet style ones too.

        Another thing a friend of mine found good was the light focusing glasses, no good for me as I have prescription glasses but if you don’t they might be good for you? They are weird to look at, but have plastic coloured bits that focus more light into your eyes than you can normally get in winter.

        Also get a good multivitamin, extra vitamin D possibly if your MV is a low D dose, and try to get out for a walk in a park each day during the daylight hours (easier said than done I know for office and retail workers)

        Good luck, hope this winter is brighter for you!

        1. Sloan Kittering*

          Yes, a lunchtime walk is my main solution. I used to skip lunch in order to make this possible! At a previous job I pretended I was a smoker in order to get outside at lunch.

          1. Sloan Kittering*

            Oh, and on weekends – taking up an outdoors winter sport. I did snowshoeing, but cross-country skiing is also pretty gentle; if you’re a go-getter there’s more options like snowboarding etc. Even dogsledding, where I live! Give yourself a reason to look forward to winter and again, get outside in the morning/afternoons.

            1. The Dogman*

              Sadly winter sports round my way are mostly just pits of mud and pouring cold rain…

              Not as fun as snowshoeing or snowboarding, def not as glamorous!

        2. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

          Due to disability I’m kinda stuck inside (I can walk about 20 metres aided before the pain kicks in, mostly I drive everywhere), and my eyes are incredibly sensitive to light. I’ve tried different ‘Sun’ type lighting but it seems anything toward the blue end of the spectrum just means hello migraine. Have the same problem with flourescent lighting.

          Having said that, the vitamin thing is worth looking into, and light filters is a really unique idea! Thank you.

          1. The Dogman*

            I am sensitive to blue toned light too, the bulbs I was on about don’t have that harsh colour temperature, they are golden yellow mostly, with the bright mode being a clean white not a blue white. They do have a “blue” mode, but it is a solid deep blue colour, not the washed out blue tone of a lot of LEDS, that can be a part of the colour cycle of red/orange/yellow/green/blue/purple. And that colour is not in the bright white, golden and soft yellow modes.

            I think they come in pack of one, might be worth a tenner to see if it helps you at all?

            If money is tight I would be happy to send you one, not sure on the rules about posting email addressess here though so I will check with Alison first!

            1. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

              No worries mate, but thanks for the offer. The home system is on Hive (yeah I know the bulbs cost a bomb but being able to control them from my bed is a disability lifesaver!) but my sibling works for a firm that can get them cheaper for me – and I think they do a yellow toned one. Checking it out :)

              1. The Dogman*

                No worries, all the best!

                Just so you know the ones I have are also remote controlled! Old fashioned remote not smartphone/home though!

                Have a good week!

    5. Hotdog not dog*

      I’m curious to see how it will hit me this year (usually it’s like a ton of bricks) because for the first time ever I will be working from home and can take advantage of having a midday walk in natural outdoor light instead of being trapped in an interior office from dawn until dusk.
      I’m hoping that will make a difference.

      1. Jay*

        Getting outside during the day has helped me immensely. After three years I finally realized that’s one of the reasons I prefer my current job (doing home visits) to working in an office – I always get outside when it’s light out.

      2. Venus*

        It helped a lot for me last winter. I went for a walk on my afternoon coffee break during the warmest and sunniest part of the day, rather than walking to and from work in half darkness.

    6. Ranon*

      Sunrise alarm clock, 15 minutes outside at noon everyday, programmable LED lighting that does blue white in the mornings and warm white in the evenings, vitamin D, putting up the Christmas lights and leaving them up, properly warm clothes and layers, heated mattress pad, cozy blankets.

      First year living north in a while so also hoping we get enough snow for all the snow sports, sledding and snow shoeing and whatnot. Leaning into winter holidays and festivals.

      And then February is for hibernation, and by then you’re well past the winter solstice

    7. fposte*

      I added a second sunrise alarm clock so there’s one in the living room as well as the bedroom–I don’t go into a dark room after I get up. I turn it on as a light sometimes as well during the evenings, too. And yes, I very much try to go for a walk and get what sunlight there is.

    8. Falling Diphthong*

      I have seriously heard good things about UV light hats (wear around the house for an hour in the morning as you’re getting ready) if you’re someone who gets dragged down by the endless dark.

    9. Dark Macadamia*

      Look for hygge ideas that comfort you – candles, string lights inside and out, cozy decor, fancy tea/cocoa flavors, etc. I do get worn down by the darkness before winter is over but I love decorating for Christmas and that gets me through a lot of it. Projects that make it enjoyable/relaxing to be indoors in the evening are also helpful – for me I do a lot of embroidery.

      1. Reba*

        Yes, I have found that I love winter decorations: greenery, wreaths, candles (not together — a treasured childhood memory is the year the advent wreath combusted). This is somewhat surprising as I’m not religious and not particularly festive, but it’s lovely to have wintry scents and I get some satisfaction out of caring for my living space.

        I also highly recommend force-bloomed bulbs e.g. paperwhites, amaryllis, etc. It’s a lovely way to get “garden therapy” when other plants are dormant. Actually, might order some now.

    10. UKDancer*

      I exercise because the endorphins help, whether that’s a brisk walk, an exercise class in person, or a zoom dance class. I feel better and brighter when I’m doing something. Then I usually have a relaxing and luxurious bath and a pamper.

      Then when it gets cold I get my cross stitch out and sew while listening to audiobooks. Usually something like an Agatha Christie or Ngaio Marsh. I need something that’s got enough narrative to occupy some of my mind but not so much that it stops me from sewing correctly.

      I go out to the theatre or the ballet and enjoy a meal out. Evenings don’t feel oppressive when I’m out doing something. I went to a classical concert last weekend (first one since Covid) and it was glorious sitting and listening to Beethoven wash over me after eating really good Pad Thai. Then I came back and had a nice cup of tea.

    11. RussianInTexas*

      I live on n the south and I very much want for the summer to end, lol. I want my A/C bills to go back to reasonable. Our colder months are not really cold usually, so I don’t really do anything different, besides cooking “winter” foods like stews, soups, and roasted stuff – I never use the oven during summer.

    12. Exif*

      Enjoy the quiet. Summer is full of constant lawnmowers and untrained dogs barking. Whenever the dark and cold starts to bug me, I close my eyes and revel in the lack of noise.

    13. the cat's ass*

      I’m def in the minority here, but driving to work in the pitch black at 5 am with recent rain on top of lots of road construction has made my previously peaceful commute in the morning into the 3rd ring of hell. I can’t wait to be driving at sunrise! Once we get into winter, I also go out and sit in the sun/exercise at lunchtime, use full-spectrum lights indoors and bump up my Vitamin D, B complex and biotin. And realize the cycle is just that, a cycle.

      1. Yay Standard Time!*

        Whooo boy me too. I live on the western edge of a time zone, so it takes forever to get light in the AM and dark in the PM. Makes it so much harder to get started. It’s also very rainy here, so on rainy days it will just be bleh and cloudy until, like, 9 pm. So disenheartening!

        Very much looking forward to the return of timely sunrises and early dusk/darkness, when I can turn on all my string lights and feel cozy and warm.

    14. GoryDetails*

      I try to get out and about during what daylight there is. But for indoors, I set up my Aerogarden with a variety of lettuce; the light on the bright green leaves is cheery all by itself, and there’s the added benefit of nice fresh lettuce whenever I want some. (One can grow flowers in the units as well, though I haven’t tried that; not sure how long they’ll bloom.)

    15. Aphrodite*

      Honestly, I love the colder darker months. (I have the same seasonal depression you do but it kicks in during the summer. I hate summer beyond description and am less than crazy about spring though I don’t hate it.) I love the cold, the shorter days and longer nights because I love lights, no mosquitoes, cuddling under a blanket on the sofa while I read (reading is a much beloved fall/winter activity), hot milk, and more. I love the sound of rain, the cats preference for sleeping on me at night. Every darn thing about cold and dark I love.

      I certainly would not want to live in it more than, say, five months of the year, but I wish we had that much. I come ALIVE in the colder, darker months. I am a frenzy of activity, the way many people get in summer but summer makes me feel awful, lethargic, miserable.

  13. Fall Leaves*

    If you had a smallish wedding, I need your help! How did you decide whom to include from the close-ish but not that close friends? Did your friendship/relationship change with those you invited and those you didn’t?
    We’re pretty clueless about weddings with my partner and right now we’re trying to navigate preparing the guest list. It’s fun and we’re super excited :) but it’s also stressful!
    (We’re around 50 ppl, about 30 are close family.)

    1. Invisible Fish*

      Only pick people you really, really want to see that day. That’s it. Don’t think about it past that. It’s about you and your partner, so Mari Kondo that guest list to your heart’s content. My relationships with ppl before and after my wedding stayed the same.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        This year there’s definitely less expectations than ever. I would never feel bad about not making the guest list given the current state of the world.

      2. Falling Diphthong*

        I had a small wedding 30 years ago. Seconding “Don’t think about it past that.” This is not going to be the make or break thing in any friendships.

    2. allathian*

      I had a tiny wedding with just our immediate families present, with my sister and his sister as our witnesses, so for us this issue didn’t come up.

      I do know, though, that when a college friend I’d considered a close friend didn’t invite me to her wedding, it made me rethink our friendship. I realized that I’d valued her friendship more than she valued mine. We still get along, because we’re a part of a larger friend group, but I never hang out with her 1:1, unless we’re all going out somewhere together, and we happen to be the first ones there. I don’t invite her to the events I host and she doesn’t invite me to her events, but we can enjoy talking to each other when we’re visiting mutual friends.

      So it’s good to be prepared in case some of your friends are disappointed that they don’t get an invitation, but I wouldn’t stress over it, either. Don’t be a hostage to anyone else’s expectations, just invite the people you genuinely want to see you get married.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        Huh – you mean you didn’t invite her to your wedding, but were this upset that she didn’t invite you to hers? Or maybe hers was first?

        1. twocents*

          I think allathian was saying that (1) her wedding was literally immediate family and Friend’s was not, and (2) that not being invited made her take a step back and see that Friend was actually not that close after all. As in, they don’t even hang out 1:1.

          I didn’t read it as allathian having some newfound deep grudge. Just perspective.

          1. allathian*

            Yup, you got it. I guess I should’ve specified that my college friend got married in 1998, I got married in 2009. We still see each other whenever our friend group gets together, and exchange Christmas cards. There’s no animosity between us, it’s just that we’re not particularly close.

    3. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

      Had a small wedding in the in-laws back garden! Basically the guest list was on the ‘people I either speak to regularly or really wish I could’ basis.

      I also didn’t invite any children so there was fallout from that (I didn’t mind people refusing the invite because they couldn’t bring their baby, but a few people got…a bit irate over the whole concept of no kids and I don’t speak to those people anymore)

      Whole thing was videoed by a professional company and the family/friends who couldn’t come or weren’t invited due to the small space generally loved to watch the vid after! It was a more ‘highlights’ video than a complete session, complete with the sight of me in my dress trying to get into the driver’s seat of my old Ford :)

      1. allathian*

        It always puzzles me when I hear about guests trying to dictate how other people should host and who they should invite. I’ve turned down invitations to childfree events before, when my son was a baby, and it was fine. When he was a bit older, and his grandparents were more than willing to babysit, I was very happy to attend childfree events occasionally.

        The host gets to decide what kind of event they’re hosting, and the guest gets to decide whether or not to accept the invitation on the host’s terms, and that’s it. I have no patience with guests who try to negotiate terms, like bring a kid to a childfree event, or worse, to show up with a kid in tow and some spurious excuse about not finding a babysitter in time or the babysitter canceling at the last minute (if that happens, you send your apologies and don’t attend the event). I also have no patience with hosts who set detailed terms about what their guests are expected to wear (style and colors to fit a theme), and then take umbrage when the guest declines the invitation.

        Dress codes are fine, and even recommended for more formal events, but unflattering dresses for the bridesmaids aren’t, and certainly not if the bridesmaids are expected to pay for them; and don’t get me started on body alterations, like expecting bridesmaids to lose weight before the wedding, or to cover up their tattoos. No, no, no!

        1. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

          Yeah, it was quite a stressful time for a while managing the ‘how dare you, my baby can legally go anywhere I go’ and the ‘weddings are about making children!’ complaining but it stopped a few years after the actual event. The funniest ones were the ‘your marriage won’t last if you deny your husband children’ complaints – I’ve been married 16+ years now and all the people who complained have divorced…

    4. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

      I had 14 people at my wedding including us. Our wedding was across the country from where we lived. Nobody that we didn’t invite was upset about it to my knowledge, a couple people that we did invite couldn’t make it, and there are a few people in my wedding picture that, given my druthers now, wouldn’t be there. (But it’s fine, I don’t ever look at them anyway and I’m way more irked by the giant cold sore on my face in them. :P )

    5. Old and married*

      We invited about 20 friends, and we picked them based on a few criteria:

      1. Each of us invited our oldest friend that we’re still in regular touch with. There is something immensely valuable in having someone who’s travelled with you through your life history at big moments, if you’re lucky enough to have that person in your life.

      2. We invited the people we thought would most enjoy celebrating with us and with whom we would most enjoy celebrating. That was it. It’s a party! So we planned it like a party.

      Now 15 years later we are still close with some of the people at our wedding and not so much with others, and that’s fine. We’re closer with some people who weren’t invited now, too. I don’t think we damaged any relationships by not inviting people. The wedding guest list reflects one moment in our lives, it’s not supposed to be like a friendship sign-up sheet for the rest of our days :)

    6. Janet Pinkerton*

      We invited 19 total—I had five friends plus one’s partner, and my wife had two friends plus their partners and one kid. This was about five years ago, for context. We included zero “should”s as invitees—everyone we invited we wanted to be there. Our threshold was “I can’t get married if ___ isn’t there”which made it easy. (My friend’s partner was kind of new, so I was a little skeptical about it, and he felt more like a plus one than a “of course we invite _____”. As it turns out we just went to their wedding last weekend so it’s clear he stuck around.) But honestly even if he hadn’t, I have a pretty firm personal rule about inviting your friends’ partners to weddings. It’s weird to invite someone to celebrate your love but not let them bring their own partner. (But also notably I didn’t invite my brother’s girlfriend of two years or my sister’s boyfriend of four years, and now one pair is married and the other owns a house together. And weirdly I feel totally fine about that decision in contrast. I think because my family had my family there.)

      And no relationships changed. But we invited 11 non-family members and that might be an easier cutoff than 20. And I’m lucky that all of our attendees are people we’re still in regular touch with. That was important to me; I greatly dislike when someone’s wedding is the last time I see them. But that doesn’t have to be important to you!

    7. Wrench Turner*

      I think we had maybe 20 people total for our DIY wedding. It was only people we really wanted to celebrate with us and knew we could make it. It was small, super chill and 10 years later people still tell us it was one of the best weddings they’ve ever been to (thankyouverymuch). We told everyone from the beginning that it’s just going to be a small, casual affair with a handful of people, and that’s all there was to it. People that might fuss or complain about not getting invited don’t deserve to be there anyway. It’s YOUR celebration. Do whatever makes you happy. The only relationship that DID change was 1 guest that just didn’t show and never said anything about it, because we would have invited someone else who would have enjoyed being there. Congratulations!

    8. Glomarization, Esq.*

      Accept in your heart that (1) some people who aren’t invited will take it too personally and feel bad; (2) some people who are invited aren’t actually as close to you as you think they are; and (3) some 10% or 20% of the people you do invite will have to decline anyway due to schedule conflicts, so keep a few parties in your “maybe invite” list so that you can add them to take these spots.

      Can’t please everybody at your wedding, so best to focus on yourself and your partner.

    9. JustEm*

      My wedding was slightly bigger (ended up with 75 people, but the vast majority were family), but there are couple of friends I cut from the list and four years later I still regret it. They were friends from college who I really liked and would like to be close to again in the future, but had not talked to in awhile since we’d moved to different cities. I got too overzealous cutting the list and I really wish I hadn’t.

    10. mreasy*

      We solved this by having only about 15 people (close family) at the actual ceremony and dinner, then having a lot more people (somewhere in the 200s) to the reception, which was more casual and WAY less expensive per person. Not an option for everyone but it was a huge relief when we came up with the plan.

    11. Purple Cat*

      We had 60 people at our wedding. We both have small families, and small social circles and REALLY didn’t want a big production.
      Make a list of people you want to be there for yourself, and then make a list of the people you think should be there for your future spouse and then compare/contrast the lists and “justify” the differences to each other. Whatever you do, do NOT ask your parents for their lists because all of a sudden you’ll be inviting your Great-Uncle Bob who nobody has talked to in 20 years, but he’s faaaamily and just your luck, he’ll show up.

    12. Cheezmouser*

      We asked ourselves, “Would we be disappointed if they didn’t invite us to THEIR wedding?” If yes, then we invite them. If no, then we skipped.

    13. Wishing You Well*

      We had 5 guests at our church wedding (no flowers, no music – just 15 minutes at the church). Sounds crazy now! We had our parents and 2 witnesses – a brother and his girlfriend. My other siblings weren’t there. If they had any interest in coming, they certainly didn’t say anything. Timing and planning were very tight. It was our senior year in college, interviewing for jobs that would move us to anywhere in the U.S. No one we knew indicated they were offended they weren’t invited. Maybe they assumed it was a shotgun wedding – it wasn’t!
      I’d recommend, if possible, a tiny wedding with a big reception held on another day. I think you’d enjoy both events more.
      Congrats!

      1. Might Be Spam*

        A delayed reception seems to be more popular these days. A couple of my neices and my daughter all had small weddings and larger receptions a week or so later. It seems so much less stressful.

    14. Not So NewReader*

      I think we had about 40 people. We chose them by their activity in our current daily life. The people we were interacting with regularly got invited- some of them that is. And we let it be known that we could only afford a small wedding. I know some were relieved to NOT make the trip.

    15. I'm the one*

      It’s best if you invite a whole class of people — so if you are having one aunt and uncle, invite all of the aunts and uncles, etc.
      We had a smallish wedding, with the ceremony in the backyard and an open house reception. The open house reception meant that many more people could be invited to the reception, which went from around 2-5. The house wasn’t that large, but few people stayed for the whole time.
      My mother had about 40 first cousins, plus spouses – so we didn’t invite any of them. It was too hard to just invite the ones she was closest to. And we didn’t invite any of the great aunts and uncles. One great aunt called my mother up and said she was coming, and we just looked the other way.
      Since none of the cousins of my mother’s generation were invited, she could just tell everyone that the wedding was very small, and that we were only inviting her brother and my father’s brother. That helped limit the hurt feelings.

      1. allathian*

        I think it really depends, you don’t have to invite the whole class of people. Just because you don’t want to invite the cousin who used to beat you up as a kid and who you’re NC with doesn’t mean you can’t invite the cousin who’s more like a sister, even if they’re siblings. But that’s obviously an extreme case, if you’re on neutral terms with people, it’s best to invite, or not invite, a whole class of people.

  14. Japanese Cooking*

    Long shot but… any fans of Japanese cooking here? I’ve been trying to recreate a few recipes from my visit to Okinawa.
    – CoCo’s curry
    – Taco Rice
    – Curry noodles

    Will share the closest I’ve come on the taco rice in the comments (it’s all about the red sauce!)

    1. Japanese Cooking*

      Taco Rice

      This is the closest I’ve come so far. The taco meat ends up sweeter and saucier than it was in Okinawa but you do get what feels like a closer mix of Tex-Mex and Japanese flavors.

      Taco rice
      1 tsp Vegetable oil
      1 tsp garlic paste
      1 cup White onion
      1 lb ground beef
      1 packet taco seasoning
      2 tbsp mirin
      1 tbsp soy sauce
      2 tbsp worcestershire
      2 tbsp Tomato ketchup
      1/2 tsp sriracha

      Secret Res Sauce
      4 tbsp ketchup
      1 tbsp sweet chili sauce
      1 tbsp sriracha

    2. Meh*

      Adam Liaw on YouTube has a recipe for Taco Rice.

      Coco like the restaurant? I don’t remember their curry being spectacular. But I’ve never been to Okinawa, only “mainland” Japan, and their food and cooking styles are really different and more of a fusion. My (Japanese) family is boring and we just use box curry mix – S&B.

      Have you searched any Japanese/Okinawan cooking blogs? They are helpful for my when I’m trying to recreate something. It is a struggle to determine the actual Japanese name and not the made up English words to describe it, like gooey rice :/

      1. Japanese Cooking*

        Adam Lisa’s recipe sadly tastes nothing like real taco rice. It’s like getting lemon flavored water when you’re after lemonade.

        I’ve searched dozens of sites and comments sections and have improved the taste but am still chasing the elusive flavors. I had started researching Japanese blogs in Japanese that I then back translated to English but I have a toddler so that got exhausting fast lol.

        For curry yes we loved Coco’s curry. I’ve used S&B but there’s another depth of flavor and heat I’m chasing. The adventure continues!

        1. newbie*

          I gave up on taco rice and decided that its appeal has less to do with any recipe and more an association with good times, being outdoors and fairly hammered at 3AM.

    3. Semi-Anon*

      Honestly, for the curry you buy curry blocks in the grocery store. Coco uses a base sauce and mixes in a chili sauce to get the different heat levels (I’ve had some poorly mixed extra spicy ones), but the grocery store ones come in different levels of heat. At home we usually do it as a stew, with pork, carrots, onions and potatoes. One of the simplest Coco versions to do at home would be the hamburger patty one, maybe with a bit of spinach and mushrooms mixed in the sauce. Buy some roasted sesame dressing while you’re at it for the side salad. I have a Japanese former colleague who wants to go to Coco when he visits Taiwan, because he says it’s much better than the Japanese ones.

      Just One Cookbook is a good Japanese cooking blog that I’ve gotten many recipes from – I think she’s got all of the above.

      My taco rice is really simple – ground meat, sauteed, add taco seasoning (I make my own, because I can’t get the premixed stuff), then steamed rice, plus diced tomato, lettuce, onion, cheap grated cheese and Doritos.

      FWIW, I’m not Japanese but my husband is, and he’s the one who makes the curry. I do the taco rice, and he likes it.

      The best recipe I brought back from Okinawa was their braised pork belly. Thick slices of pork belly (no bone), braised in soy sauce, dashi, sake (or awamori if you’re being authentic and can get it) with green onions and ginger. I do it overnight in the slow cooker, cool, fish out the pork belly and finish it in a hot pan with some of the cooking liquid, then serve over steamed rice. I like to serve it with bitter melon shiraae (a cold vegetable dish with a tofu-sesame topping, recipe from the website above.), and cold steamed spinach with sesame dressing.

    4. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Yum.
      We’ve been making our own sushi for almost 20 years so we could have it in a lower salt formula. (We use veg & cooked/smoked fillings to avoid the raw-fish safety issue.) And one of the first things I learned to make when I was a kid was chicken teriyaki. I’m so glad that fresh ginger is easier to find than it used to be. I look forward to your recipes.

    5. newbie*

      Fellow lover of all Okinawan (and Okinawan-American) foods!
      Kenji/Serious Eats’ Ome-Raisu is dead on, as is his beef donburi.

    6. Book the Ninth*

      For curry, I recommend googling “Kotaku” “Japanese curry”. A features editor there posted an article on jazzing up curry bricks for it to be closer to the Japanese restaurant curries. I’ve used it on both Golden Curry and Vermont curry bricks and both have turned out well. My only advice is go in with the cheese with a light hand.

    7. Holly the spa pro*

      My husband has gotten super into Japanese recipes lately. My favorite is his gyudon but he makes a mean tonkatsu as well. We haven’t been to Japan but i hope we can go someday and compare beef bowls lol.

    8. Mameshiba*

      Okinawan soba is amazing, as is the pork belly, and sea grapes!
      I use cookpad for finding Japanese recipes.

  15. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

    RPG fans! (Pen and paper/electronic doesn’t matter) Can anyone recommend any Solo RPGs – basically they’re like creative writing prompts? I’ve played Thousand Year Vampire and absolutely loved it.

    (My current depression means my D&D/tech support mashup I’m DM’ing is on hold)

    1. The Dogman*

      I used to play a lot of Space Hulk (Games Workshop 40K setting) that had a single player mode.

      More using models than pure RPGs but I found it pretty entertaining to play alone when no mates were available.

      Or perhaps an online RPG? Like the Star Wars KoToR or Star Trek Online etc?

      Personally I found walking (especially with dogs) to help massively with depression, perhaps that might help you too if you can do it?

      Good luck with entertaining yourself, and I hope you feel better soon!

      1. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

        Oh I didn’t know any GW stuff had a single player mode! That’s worth looking into :) sadly I’m disabled so going for a walk isn’t feasible. May drag a bit of string for the cat and pretend he’s a rogue making dex rolls :p

        1. The Dogman*

          They do with Space Hulk, but it is not cheap, if you have any old school gamer friends who can lend a mark 1 set that would be the best option.

          I think all the old rules books are available as PDFs lurking on the internet and with some creativity and pens you could recreate the mark 1 Space Hulk at home. It was not a super complex game, basically a 1-4 player DnD style board game set in ruined spacehulks infested with Daemons, Genestealers, various corrupted Adeptus Astartes and regular humans, Dark Eldar and of course, as always with GW, Orks!

          The cat plan sounds fun… Do an after action write up on it too in the style of a DnD Campaign maybe? Then post it here!!!

          Also there is an online RPG gaming systems a friend is into, I forget the name but it is basically a tabletop games emulator, so you can play all sorts of TT games online with friends or strangers. It lets everyone use the same online dice roll generator, has battle map options and voice chat too. If you do some google-fu you will find it!

          1. Loredena Frisealach*

            Roll20? That’s what my group uses, though we use Discord for voice. There’s also D&D Beyond

          2. Aealias*

            We’ve been using Owlbear Rodeo for small-party online dnd. It provides battle maps and dice rolls (although I don’t think voice chat?) and only requires a browser. No sign-ups, logins or accounts. The trade-off for being so lightweight is that it’s pretty basic to-date.

          3. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

            Reworking my cat into a barbarian because he went full Berserk for an hour last night and caused 2D10 damage to my leg and a D100 to the surrounding area…

            1. The Dogman*

              Lol, that sounds pretty normal for a cat… but surely it’s some kind of Daemon more than a Barbarian?

    2. Twisted Lion*

      Dragon Age is always my favorite. I did just finish Yakuza Like a Dragon which is kind of RPG light. But I really enjoyed it. There are 6 other Yakuza games on game pass as well as that one.

    3. Nicki Name*

      Would a gamebook (basically Choose Your Own Adventure but with some dice rolling in addition to decision-making) be too structured? If not, I can recommend a bunch of those.

    4. Software Dev*

      The D&D solo modules from DMs guild are pretty good! I played the first one and thoroughly enjoyed it, though it is a bit more like a gamebook than like Thousand Year Vampire, which is kind of its own thing.

      I just bought Five Parsecs from Home, which is solo wargaming so might be too gamey for you, but I am throwing it out there.

    5. GoryDetails*

      I enjoyed a number of solo RPG modules back in the day – most of my favorites were from “Call of Cthulhu”. Can’t recall specifics at this point, alas.

      I have come across some entertaining choose-your-own-path books recently, including:

      INTO THE DUNGEON by Hari Connor, which uses character stats in addition to the choose-the-path mechanics; it’s relatively simple but nicely done, with some varied and interesting options. [Side note: you can’t “win” all the paths with a single character unless you max out all the stats on purpose; this adds to the replay benefits, but can be frustrating if you get to a tricky spot and find out you don’t have the key stat needed to progress.]

      James Schannep has a great series of choose-your-own-path books, themed on pirates, superheroes, zombie apocalypse survival, and more. I don’t think he’s done a D&D-type one (yet), but the ones I’ve tried are fun. These aren’t stats-and-die-rolling based, though.

      There’s a fun graphic-novel series called “Knights Club” in which the choices are all via numbers in the graphic-novel panels, with some options requiring dice-rolling for combat; there are also puzzles to solve. Aimed at middle-grade readers, but I found them quite enjoyable. (And sometimes very sneaky; there might be an option that has a teensy, hard-to-see number in a single panel in the entire book…) Oh, and there’s a magic/steampunk entry too, IRON MAGICIANS.

    6. Cthulhu's Librarian*

      I’ve often used random plot/ecnounter/dungeon generators as a way of generating ways to do solo RPG playing. It does require that I run a whole party of characters (since most systems are built around the idea of a group playing).

      donjon used to be one of my favorite dungeon generators – these days, they also have a random campaign generator for a longer story, as well.

      Also, I sometimes would use a recorded play through of one of my MtG decks and turn that into a story also.

      I’ve heard good things about One Day at a Thyme, Ironsworn, Alone Among The Stars, and Expedition, though never had a chance to play any of them.

    7. Loredena Frisealach*

      I return to Skyrim fairly frequently. On Steam I’ve been playing both Hades and Pathfinder Kingmaker lately, and my group’s DM is playing the newer Pathfinder, Wrath of the Righteous.

  16. Bobina*

    What have you been listening to this week? For me its been:

    Podcasts:
    U Up Pod? – All about dating in this day and age. A great first episode to listen to is “When is it okay to have a serious conversation over text?” where they go over a listener contribution and analyse it. It ticks all my boxes of finding people and human interactions fascinating.

    XO Soused – I love this podcast. Its a food/anthropology podcast hosted by Andrew Wong (Michelin Star chef) and Mukta Das (food anthropologist) who work closely together. They just finished off their first season, and the last episode is probably a good place to start as it documents how they met and started working together. Earlier episodes are great for anyone who is really into food, especially Chinese food as it talks a lot about distinct techniques and how and why certain things work.

    Music:
    Alt-J! But only the first two albums because I have those on my ipod.

    1. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

      The Dicebreaker podcast (tabletop gaming talk, although it goes off the rails often and starts talking about their pet cats which is lovely :)

      Generally I listen to 70s prog rock, ELP, Pink Floyd etc.

      1. Astoria*

        Jethro Tull as well, by chance? Seems like they would fit your taste, from what I know of you online. :)

        1. Keymaster of Gozer (she/her)*

          Oh yes! Although a mate of mine just gifted me a load of Grateful Dead albums which I’m starting to like.

          Basically I was born in the 1970s and I think all the music Dad listened to has shaped my tastes forever. I’ve got his original Dark Side of the Moon LP in a frame :)

    2. James*

      I got Libby on my iPad. It’s an app that lets you borrow books from your local library, including audiobooks. I downloaded “Master and Commander” recently, and intend to see what else they’ve got.

      I’ve been listening to “The Lubber’s Hole”, a podcast that basically amounts to two older gentlemen (one Yankee, one Brit) reading the books and discussing them. They have a lot of really interesting guests on, like a former intelligence officer, an expert on Regency etiquette, and the like. Thus the downloading of the audiobook.

      For music, I’ve been getting into female metal vocalists more. Ranthiel Soprano is really good. Jonathan Young has some good covers, too–his covers of Ghost songs with Violet Orlandi are, quite frankly, better than the originals. I like Ghost, but the lead singer’s voice sounds, I don’t know, thin?, when compared to that duet. And the Pretty Reckless have a new one out that’s really good, “Only Love Can Save Me Now”.

    3. Exif*

      The new Brandi Carlile album would be worn out if it were vinyl, I’ve played it so much.

      Disappointed with the new Dorothy song, starting to think she’s going to fall into the same great voice/shit writing crack as Lzzy Hale did.

    4. Pam Adams*

      I just got a couple of Seanan Mcguire’s Wayward Children audiobooks, I’ve also had my Katherine Addison books and the Murderbot series on repeat.

      I find it hard to do audiobooks if I don’t already know the book- my mind drifts and I can’t hold on to the story. Familiar books are great background company, though.

    5. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Just had someone suggest “the Fall of Civilizations”… I’m about to dive into ancient Mesopotamia.
      What I am actually looking for is a broader history of Asia & the Middle East, ancient & modern. I know just enough to know I don’t know enough. (Africa & South America to follow.)

  17. Meh*

    Murder Mystery Games

    I ordered two murder mystery games (1 time play) and I’m hoping that I love them. So now all my targeted ads are for these types and most are subscription based. Can i get recommendations on companies/games that I should order? They need to be for 1+ players because it’s just me and my partner.

    1. Perla*

      I did a dungeons and dragons style murder mystery via Zoom and it was SO MUCH FUN! I was a bit skeptical at first, a friend invited me and I’ve never done any type of role play. I was feeling a bit uncomfortable but decided to give it my all and made my character into a vulgar southern bell, complete with accent and all (parents from rural Arkansas so it’s the only accent I can imitate), I had a really good time! Alcohol was involved, the story and descriptions were great, and I haven’t laughed that hard in such a long time.

      The people who run it are trying to create their own game, so it’s nothing final or official that you can purchase yet (as far as I know).

      Their IG handle is dastardlydeedsmysteries

      Perhaps you can message and join one of their beta testing games sometime!

    2. Lcsa99*

      Hunt a Killer. My husband and I are subscribed to it and love it. With the subscription, you get a new portion of the mystery to solve every month and it’ll take 6 boxes to solve. You basically get evidence and have to read through it to figure out whodunit. There are some cryptograms that can get a little difficult, but you can get hints if you get stuck.

      They also have mysteries that are a one and done thing, and those have been fun too but the subscription is always 6 months.

    3. TiffIf*

      This might not be exactly what you are looking for but you may want to try out the Sherlock Holmes Consulting Detective games. I am currently playing The Thames Murders box (ten scenarios or cases in the box). me and my group of friends are having a blast! it is 1-4 players so it would work just fine with 2.

  18. WellRed*

    I’m up way early because my roommate woke me up three times with some sort of nightmares. She kept hollering shut the f up and pounding the wall or bed. Scared the crap out of me. I don’t plan to say anything ( we’re friendly but not friends) but is there a good option to “break” them out if the dream? Ignore? This was intermittent over 2 hours! Not a frequent occurrence but not the first time either.

    1. Wrench Turner*

      I hate to say earplugs, but they work miracles… Also maybe you should say something. A concerned “You were yelling and banging the wall in your sleep last night and it startled me awake, and it’s not the first time… is everything okay?” is entirely appropriate. It doesn’t have to be confrontational but it is your home, too.

    2. Venus*

      I would say something, as your roommate likely isn’t sleeping well and might appreciate that info. “You were knocking on the wall last night, so might be tired this morning! Do you want me to mention it in future? Do you have suggestions on how to get you to stop if it ever happens again?”
      I learned that I didn’t sleep well on some nights because of how I was sleeping, based on a comment by someone years ago, and I appreciate it. Although intermittent behavior over several hours is pretty intense!

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        I would say something, because your roommate might know what will shake her out of it safely.

        For “I will leap out of bed and move things to solve this dream problem” with my husband, I hit on a firm “You’re on the way to the bathroom.” This would annoy him because that wasn’t it, but he also couldn’t remember what it was, and once you’re standing by the bed at 3 am you do kinda gotta go, so… he would go off and that started enough of a familiar muscle-memory routine going that his brain would shake into “and now I go back to bed” mode. He then hit on always reading a chapter of his book before coming to bed, so work/school stress didn’t get worked out in his dreams.

        The reason he knows about it, though, is that I told him.

        1. RagingADHD*

          Interestingly, I learned when my kids were toddlers that night terrors are often caused by needing the bathroom, because their brain is trying to wake them from deep sleep, but they get stuck in-between phases. Putting a toddler with night terrors on the toilet is one of the few ways you can end the episode quickly and safely.

          Maybe you were on to something.

          1. Falling Diphthong*

            I used the “you’re going to the bathroom” line on my son as well, for standing in the hallway seemingly at a loss as to why he was there.

    3. ATX*

      I don’t see the reason to walk on egg shells about this, friendly or not so friendly, it’s pretty alarming! Why are you hesitant to say something?

      I’d be like yo! You okay? You must have had a wild dream, you were pounding on the walls and screaming

      1. Not So NewReader*

        Yep, open the conversation.
        It could be that merely mentioning it is enough to slow down or stop this process she has.

        A dear relative and I shared a motel room on a road trip. My relative began talking in a weird voice in the middle of the night. I spoke clearly but gently, “It’s okay. You are just having a dream. You are okay.”
        There was a moment of silence. Then she clearly said, “Thank you” and nothing else. We both went back to sleep. Kind of odd, kind of funny, but at the time I was concerned. It turned into nbd.

    4. Grits McGee*

      Yes, please say something to your roommate! I (think) I’ve been in your roommate’s position before- I was taking a melatonin supplement with extra ingredient that was making me have really weird dreams where I would wake up, but be so out of it I wasn’t sure if I was just yelling in my dreams or in real life. I think my upstairs neighbor knocked on my door and asked if I was ok, but, again, I was so out of it I have no idea if I was dreaming or not and I’ve been too embarrassed to ask. If your roommate has changed something in her routine recently, she will probably appreciate the heads up, and it might confirm some concerns she already has.

    5. WellRed*

      So it turns out, it was the Other roommate, likely in a rage over the noisy tenant in the second floor so that’s a whole separate issue. As to the roomie I have was asking about (she had also been disturbed by last night’s noise) she did say if that’s ever an actual problem with her to please let her know because she will take steps to resolve it. I had hesitated because I didn’t want to embarrass her or whatever. Thx all.

      1. Venus*

        Thank you for such a quick update! I’m sorry that it was more complicated, but at least you have one good roommate.

        I would also worry about embarrassment, but if it is likely affecting someone’s sleep and health then I would mention it if I like the person.

  19. skinflint*

    What is some item or some category where you’ve found that the versions a level or two up from “standard” have been so well worth it that now it’s your new normal and you’d never go back?

    My partner and I both happen to be thrifty and by default save money rather than spend it; our perspective on finances is so similar that we rarely ever think about it. We both just keep using the stuff we always have because we have it, seek out perfectly acceptable used items when we need something, and look for a sweet spot of functionality and price when we buy new. Which all means that we rarely end up with things we don’t literally NEED, and rarely anything fancy or top-quality when either of us does buy something. Neither of us have an interest in the spending- or lifestyle-change involved in “leveling up” across the board, but the fact that we are such similar people in this regard means that we can’t have a moderating influence on each other! Surely there are things we might appreciate having a higher-end version of, but which it wouldn’t occur to either of us to try.

    What has made a big difference in your own life? For example off the top of my head I can imagine someone saying cooking pans, shoes, toiletpaper, some precision-engineered device. Oh–my partner would say butter, the fancy Icelandic or Irish butter sold in half-pound foil-wrapped blocks. How about you?

    1. Angstrom*

      Try experimenting with foods and spices to see if you can taste a worthwhile difference between the store brand and the higher-end stuff. For a lot of items I’m perfectly happy with the inexpensive version, but cheese that tastes like a dairy product instead of cheese-scented rubber is absolutely worth it to me.
      For me, a nice bicycle. I have no illusions that it makes me any faster, but the way if feels and responds makes me smile every ride.

      1. Loredena Frisealach*

        This! Food is one of those areas for me.

        I can absolutely taste the difference in Penzey’s spices (so much fresher!) but not everyone notices. I also will use cheaper olive oils as my cooking oil, but look for really good ones for anything I might taste it in. And buy smaller bottles unless you use it regularly, because it goes rancid easily (most USians don’t know what non-rancid olive oil should taste like, tbh). That is something I found worth going to a specialty shop for.

        I’m not nearly as fussy about coffee as I thought I was in terms of going for the fancy ones, but I do insist on fresh brewed. But I’ll drink ground happily rather than buy beans and grind my own, as my father insisted on.

        Also I’m a plain yogurt snob, so I’m always taste tasting different brands for the ones I like enough.

    2. Meh*

      My coffee maker. I have a fully automatic Jura (coffee and espresso) and it is the best thing ever. I never *truly never* go out for coffee now. We refer to other coffee as “Sad coffee” It has paid for itself in that sense. Before I was using nespresso pods. I read someone’s calculations that the Jura becomes the cheaper option after 5 years of use. We’re at that point now.

      Now if you are happy with drip coffee then my recommendation makes no fiscal sense and totally disregard :)

      1. James*

        I’m the opposite, I trade time for money. My every-day coffee maker is a French press–$20 gets you a descent one, and makes far superior coffee to a drip coffee maker in my opinion. Or splurge and get a steel double-walled French press that can survive being knocked around by children and dogs. I also have a $15 stovetop espresso maker and a $10 Turkish coffee pot.

        When my kids were babies I had an even cheaper setup: a large mug (it could hold 800 ml of beer), a funnel, and a coffee filter. Heat the water, pour over the grounds through the filter/funnel into the mug. Drink. It’s the stripped-down version of the super-expensive setups you see in coffee shops. And it had the added bonus of not waking up the baby that I was holding. I was also playing a lot of Skyrim at the time while I was up with the baby, and occasionally using a mortar and pestle to grind the beans. It always sort of made me feel like an alchemist mixing a stamina potion. (I’m required to be a productive member of society and provide for my family; I am NOT required to grow up!)

        I’m not saying I spend less on coffee makers. :D I’m just saying that I’ve found that for me, personally, technique is more important. I like preparing the same coffee in a variety of methods and seeing how it affects flavor.

        Totally agree that the typical Mr. Coffee drip coffee maker is not great coffee. It’ll get you by, but it’s not comparable to good coffee.

    3. Wrench Turner*

      The only thing I’ve so far found to be “that much better” is buying an actual $300 GoPro camera instead of the cheap $60 clone that looks exactly the same but isn’t. I bought the clone first, was kind of disappointed (I still use it, mind you), and just saved to buy the original. That’s really it. Even with shoes, pans or butter.

    4. OxfordBlue*

      Off the top of my head here’s my list.
      1) A really top of the line mattress that suits you and a bed frame with top quality sprung slats plus top quality mattress topper, heated underblanket, down pillows, down duvet and heated overblanket plus your preferred bedlinen.
      2) Really comfortable, supportive shoes for everyday wear.
      3) Good quality thermal underwear in a variety of styles so that you stay warm all year whatever the weather and also some good quality warm weather clothing for the three weeks a year you need it in the UK.
      4) A pen you like to write with.
      5) Microplane graters
      6) Good knives that fit your hand and a sharpener that you can use weekly.
      7) Top quality ingredients for your food especially fruit and vegetables.
      8) Delia Smith’s online range of baking tins with Silverwood.
      9) Good scissors
      10) A diary you will use
      11) A comfortable reading chair
      12) Reliable domestic machines e.g. washing machine, hoover, dishwasher, food mixer, kettle, toaster, iron etc. I don’t think you need many functions or programmes for most of these but you do need them to last and to be reliable.
      13) Backpack that makes it easy to carry your shopping etc. home.

      I’m sure there are lots more things that I’ve forgotten to add but these are the things that leapt to mind when I read your post.

      1. Observer*

        I’m going especially second the shoes, good food ingredients (it’s not just taste – in many cases you are paying for better nutritional value) and reliable appliances. I’d add to try to get ones that are efficient – if you pay your own utilities, your checkbook will thank you.

    5. Bagpuss*

      I think definitely some food items – free-range, slow reared meat, for instance (which actually works on more than one level for me, it tends to be significantly more expensive, so I don’t eat it as often, and often it means supporting local, independent farmers. !)

      Mattresses – a good quality mattress can make a huge difference.

    6. Glomarization, Esq.*

      Definitely shoes, yes. I have special snowflake feet that won’t tolerate cheap-ass shoes.

      Other than that … when we traded in our last car, we got a manufacturer-certified pre-owned car from a brand that is known for its quality and consumer loyalty, so much so that used vehicles from this brand don’t often hit the market. (Not a Subaru Outback, but along those lines.) There are cheaper versions of this kind of car available; even new ones from other manufacturers are cheaper than the used one we got. But for me this was the better choice for reliability, resale value, safety features, driveability, etc., etc.

    7. Voluptuousfire*

      Spending more $ on shoes. I learned that after learning I had arthritis in my big toe. I spent a few hundred dollars on some Danskos shoes and I can walk without any pain. They’re stiff and were the most comfortable shoes out of the box.

      And barring good shoes, good insoles for cheap shoes! My current favorite sneakers are these cute but cheap Walmart slip on sneakers that offer no support. I slip my insoles into them and I’m good.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        See that’s funny, the best shoes I’ve had were from thrift stores and came a bit broken-in. Those early days with new shoes can be tough!!

        1. Observer*

          New shoes should not require “breaking in”. Sometime a really stiff pair of shoes does need it, but generally, if you need to “break them in” it’s a sign that they are not a good fit.

      2. Sleeping Late Every Day*

        Definitely yes on the insoles! It’s amazing what they can do for a pair of cheap shoes.

    8. Sloan Kittering*

      For me, it’s things that are maaybe overpriced but I know will support people I want to support, like full priced books at independent bookstores, or meat at the farmer’s market, local artisan stuff, etc. That’s the kind of thing I could never have dreamed of buying as a broke college kid so it also gives me a blast of pride to be able to do it now, rather than going to Amazon / walmart / whatever soul-destroying options exist. I do my holiday gifting this way.

      1. Washi*

        Same. Buying local when possible, even if I can’t really tell the difference in the product. This is especially true for food, since I don’t have a delicate palate at all, but I love seeing the names of nearby towns on the packaging.

      2. Dark Macadamia*

        Yes! I don’t buy books often (thanks library!) but when I do I try to get them through the locally owned indie bookstore. I get things like graphic tees from local screen printers with unique designs and I’ve started buying more local brands at the grocery store too.

        1. Sloan Kittering*

          It means soooo much to authors. They couldn’t survive if nobody was willing to buy new books.

    9. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Two really good professional chef’s knives, and a diamond stone to keep them sharp enough they don’t go off angle. I was honestly close to phobic about knives until I realized it was because my mom’s knives were so dull they slipped every which way.

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        Oh, and José Cuervo Gold. Life is too short to drink bad booze, and yet a cheap tequila hangover feels infinite.

        1. James*

          A coworker of mine turned me on to good bourbon. It’s surprisingly affordable–1792 is $35 a bottle around here, and you can get some fairly good stuff in the $40/$50 range. You can also spend $1,000 on a bottle, but after about $100 you’re not paying for quality anymore, you’re paying for rarity–small batch and the like.

          I’ll also pay a bit more for good beer. I’m not a snob, and Coorse Light has its place–if I’m doing yard work that’s what I’ll drink–but sitting by the fire with the kids, roasting marshmallows, you splurge for the good stuff.

    10. Anona*

      Slave free chocolate from small suppliers. I learned a few years ago that most cocoa and chocolate is produced by child labor, including some enslaved people. The fair trade stamped stuff is apparently also similar because the supply chain is so challenging to track.

      I buy cocoa powder from a small supplier that knows the origin, and chocolate bars from another. It means I have chocolate much less often because it’s more expensive, but it was really bothering me, knowing that my simple pleasure was causing so much pain.

      1. Texan In Exile*

        Slave-free seafood, as well. That expose’ about the shrimp processors – they kidnapped workers and kept them on ships for years and some of the workers died – made me sick. I will pay more for food (or anything – looking at you, China) that has not been processed with slave labor.

      2. Feliz*

        Hey, I work in the food industry and have have some familiarity with both Fair Trade and Rainforest Alliance. The supply chain traceability is actually pretty good and is independently verified (unlike many large corporations own-brand “ethical” programs). It’s worth doing some reading yourself of the pros and cons of it.

        The true provenance and cost of food continues to be a thorny problem – it’s a complex mix of so many issues – air miles, sprays/organic, packaging, mono cultures etc etc.

    11. twocents*

      Workout gear. I don’t think you need the top of the line stuff, but even cheap workout gear is expensive and it’s worth getting right the first time.

      First cheap yoga mat? Started shedding chunks within a month of regular use. $69 legit mat has been holding strong for over a year.

      First cheap workout step? Too small to use either as a workout bench or for step classes, and I’m not particularly tall. Upgrading $10-$20 more to the Reebok step, and it’s exactly right.

      First cheap hiking shoes? Leaves blisters on my toes, so I can’t do long hikes (anything greater than 3 miles).

      Learned my lesson over the years, and bought an appropriate set of weights and exercise shoes the first time around.

    12. CatCat*

      I had flimsy, crappy sheet pans most of my life. Then we got a Target gift card and bought new sheet pans, Nordic Ware brand. They weren’t even particularly expensive, but they are soooooo much better than my crappy old sheet pans.

      I also like springing for heirloom beans from Rancho Gordo. Quality and variety is excellent, but definitely pricier per pound than what I could get at the grocery store.

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        Oh yeah: son has given me good quality heavy baking sheets for Xmas the last couple of years. Replacing the cheap ones I had used for decades. A delight.

      2. Sloan Kittering*

        I have had bags of grocery store dried beans ruin so many of my recipes! If they are too old they just never cook soft.

    13. ObserverCN*

      Hoka running shoes are well worth the money. My physical therapist recommended them to me, and I won’t wear anything else for exercising.

    14. Falling Diphthong*

      Glide dental floss. I didn’t think I could possibly care about the floss shredding until we got a free sample, and it turned out I did care. A lot.

      Decent paper towels. (Same for kleenex or toilet paper.)

      Kerry Gold butter. Several cheese counter people recommended it for a dairy allergy, and while it acts on my son like domestic butter, I had a real “Oh. Wow.”

      LL Bean fuzzy slippers. I wear them 9 months out of the year, and replace each pair as it develops a wear hole.

      I will recommend good outerwear–boots, coat, gloves–as an investment that pays off in comfort and usually lasts years.

      1. Tris Prior*

        Ooooh, seconding the Glide floss. We bought a multipack of the cheap stuff when we were doing our start-of-pandemic stockpiling, because that’s what we found at the store, and are slowly working our way through it but it truly makes mornings worse to deal with the shredding.

        1. RussianInTexas*

          Thirded! I have densely packed back teeth, and the regular floss hurts my gums. My dentist insisted on the Glide floss.

      2. Loredena Frisealach*

        Seconding the Glide – my teeth are so tight/my mouth so small that I couldn’t floss properly without it!
        Also the Kerrygold butter, which is so good.

    15. Chilipepper attitude*

      Not sure if this applies to you because you said upgrading fro “standard,” not from cheap, but there is research showing that paying for the more expensive item is a cost savings in the long run. It is why it is so expensive to be poor. I think about that a lot for purchases now.

      1. RussianInTexas*

        I even found this with some makeup. Not all, mind you, but good eyeshadows, for example, last much longer, and have better quality. Mascara – nah.

      2. traffic_spiral*

        Yup. As the famous author once wrote:

        “The reason that the rich were so rich, Vimes reasoned, was because they managed to spend less money.

        Take boots, for example. He earned thirty-eight dollars a month plus allowances. A really good pair of leather boots cost fifty dollars. But an affordable pair of boots, which were sort of OK for a season or two and then leaked like hell when the cardboard gave out, cost about ten dollars. […]

        But the thing was that good boots lasted for years and years. A man who could afford fifty dollars had a pair of boots that’d still be keeping his feet dry in ten years’ time, while the poor man who could only afford cheap boots would have spent a hundred dollars on boots in the same time and would still have wet feet.

        This was the Captain Samuel Vimes ‘Boots’ theory of socioeconomic unfairness.”

      3. Observer*

        This is 100% true. It’s not the case for each thing, and sometimes it’s still financially sensible to buy the cheaper thing. But in a huge range of situation, a higher purchase price also gets you higher value even when your starting point is “standard”.

    16. Purple Cat*

      For our household, it’s shifting the spending thinking into:
      1) I don’t have to drive around finding the cheapest sale price on something. Time is also money, so just spend a couple of bucks more for convenience.
      2) Replace things sooner. Things don’t have to be on their complete last dying leg before being replaced. It’s hard to strike that balance now that so many things have designed obsolescence, but we’re not struggling. Nobody should be wearing shoes with holes in the soles and too short pants and undershirts with holes in them.

      Otherwise, toilet paper and paper towels. Buy the good stuff! Allow yourself to enjoy some luxuries. And yes, sometimes you’ll try something “Fancy” and you won’t actually like it. That’s okay too!

      1. James*

        The difference between Bounty paper towels and the blue shop towels they sell at the hardware store is night and day. We use the blue shop towels at jobsites, because we’ve found we use 3x the paper towels if we buy the cheap ones. And every time, the roll wanders off the site when we’re done! (Before anyone says it, there’s some justification for it–even if they’re clean they can’t be used at another site because you can’t PROVE they’re clean, so if they’re not used they’ll just be thrown away. Better to take them home and use them.)

      2. Aealias*

        Oh, yes, good toilet paper! There’s definitely a sweet-spot balancing comfort, efficiency and happy sewer pipes. Still, this is one of the few places I put my foot down when we were broke and scrounging for change in the sofa. I will eat bulk brand ramen noodles, but I will NOT use cheap TP!

    17. No Tribble At All*

      Refrigerators! And dishwashers! I’m not saying you need the $5k smart refrigerator that writes your shopping list for you. After we upgraded the one in our house, we had to move, and now that we’re renting, the fridge in the apartment is literally the cheapest one possible. In order to have the front cold enough, the back is below freezing and ruins any produce you put back there. Have you ever seen frozen watermelon chunks? Or eggs in the freezer? Not great. The freezer section is taken up by the ice maker, which is just an on/off lever. The good news is it works quickly. The bad news is if you leave it on overnight, half the freezer gets filled with ice cubes!

      When we bought our new fridge, we got the medium price one from Costco, and it’s still sooooo nice. Water/ice dispenser in the front with a filter. French doors, pull-out freezer, and some kind of air circulation witchcraft that keeps the entire fridge the same temperature. I legit miss our fridge!

    18. Not A Manager*

      I run chilly and wear some kind of sweater most of the year. I used to buy cashmere occasionally and only wear it for “special,” but during lockdown I realized that I actually live in my sweaters and the cashmere literally brings me joy. So now I wear them for every day.

      We tend to spend a bit more for old-fashioned food. What I mean is, fresh produce, real dairy (cream, not creamer, for example), full-fat items instead of ones with texture enhancers, etc.

    19. Elizabeth West*

      1. Shoes. There is a huge difference between good shoes and good-enough shoes. I own one or two pairs of the former, and they are worth the cost. I do my research, though, as brands differ and I’ve been burned by expensive trainers that fell apart well before six months were up.

      2. I’m with you on the Irish butter. Kerrygold is my standard now; no others will do and it can’t be the generic version.

      3. Percale sheets.

      1. banoffee pie*

        Some other Irish butters are Dromona, Golden Cow and Ballyrashane too if you can get them there. I think they’re all even better than Kerrygold but I could be biased. It’s so weird that our butter is fancy in the US! I love this idea. It’s just hundrum for us lol

        1. fhqwhgads*

          I don’t think it’s fancy exactly. It’s just…better. By a lot. And it’s also significantly more expensive than, say, butter from Wisconsin.

          1. banoffee pie*

            Yeah, but here the Wisconsin butter would be more expensive here in Ireland remember. If they sent it ;) I’d like to try the Wisconsin stuff but we don’t get it here. Only Irish, Danish and French.

            1. fhqwhgads*

              Right, sure. It’s totally just an importation thing, but the only reason I’d consider Kerrygold a “splurge” is because it’s so pricey.

          2. Chauncy Gardener*

            As an aside, I grew up in Wisconsin and we used to get a big roll of butter from the local dairy. It was AWESOME

    20. marvin the paranoid android*

      I’m kind of like you, but if it’s something where the cheap version will wear out or break quickly and the more expensive version will last a long time, I’ll usually try to get the expensive version if I can afford it. I don’t usually get the luxury version of anything, but I try to avoid the extremely cheap version if I can. Or I’ll just get a lot of second-hand ones if the expensive one is out of my reach.

      1. Five after Midnight*

        You obviously never had American butter – it tastes like lard. The quality of raw ingredients and food in general is so so so much higher in Europe. And even Kerry Gold now started to use skim milk in their unsalted butter – I can guarantee they only do this for the American market, because in Ireland that would result in a customer revolt or a lawsuit about how that’s not really butter (look up “Subway bread Ireland”).

          1. Five after Midnight*

            “subway bread here isn’t that great” – of course it isn’t: that’s because it’s an American import (the recipe is, anyway), lol.

    21. Chaordic One*

      Many years ago, during the Great Recession, desperate for employment I broke down and accepted a position at a bookstore/coffee shop as a store clerk/barista and I learned quite a bit about coffee. I ended up turning into something of a coffee snob. The kinds of cheap coffee that I grew up drinking just don’t cut it anymore.

    22. My Brain Is Exploding*

      Seconding many things on this list including shoes, glide dental floss, sewing scissors, mattress.
      Adding: socks, hotels (doesn’t have to be the priciest but no more Days Inns for us!), bras, jeans for everyday wear (ha, spouse buys jeans for the workshop at the thrift shop b/c he just trashes them), quilt fabric, first class airfare (well, just to Europe from the US but we can’t afford that…but would if we could!); also not a material good, but something like a monthly massage or similar is something we generally think we don’t “need” to spend money on, but it’s very stress-relieving and can help with other medical conditions.

    23. RussianInTexas*

      Good tea. Good kitchen knives. Mattress, because my back will thank me. Bras – I am very busty and expensive bras with good structure 100% worth it.
      Good jams and marmalade – a lot of big brand ones are over sweet.
      Shoes that you will wear daily.
      Decent paper products.
      Oh, and good tires. Don’t have to go super expensive, but they do make much difference in the comfort and quietness, especially if you drive a lot.

      1. allathian*

        Yeah, and good tires are also safer, because their behavior’s more predictable and they’re less at risk of aquaplaning, at least if you replace them often enough. In my climate, we need studded tires for about 5 months of the year.

    24. pieforbreakfast*

      Shoes, outdoor gear- coats, sleeping bags, rain gear, etc…, saute pans, and more recently, cat litter, are all things I’ve come to spend more money on. Having better quality items in these categories seems to set me up for better quality times (or my cat, in the last one).

    25. the cat's ass*

      Go for the (Kerry) gold! If youre in an area that has a trader joe’s or a costco, they have it at a reasonable price and it is what i consider a cheap luxury! I also spend a fair amount on rice, because there are specialty South Asian and Asian stores in my community with great rice. And because that is the backbone of so many meals, it’s a cheap luxury once more.

    26. Little beans*

      My husband finally convinced me to replace our old 30 pound vacuum with a new, cordless one. I was reluctant because the old one works fine but the new one is so much easier to use, we vacuum much more often!

    27. Cheezmouser*

      Cookware/bakeware. I used to be super thrifty too, until my partner–who is thrifty as well but also understood that sometimes you end up spending more on cheap stuff than if you just bought the higher quality version once–pointed out that I could’ve bought 3 of the nicer baking sheets for the price of all the cheap ones I bought that kept rusting.

    28. Redhairredrunner*

      Good quality flour, I had to buy a bag of cheap Kroger brand all purpose flour during the COVID flour shortage and it was so bad that I literally threw out the rest once I was able to get my usual King Arthur flour. None of my usual recipes came out right with that flour, it was so irritating.
      Also good wool socks are worth every penny, especially if you don’t mind darning the heels when they start to wear out.

    29. Little beans*

      Bread. Spent several minutes staring at the sad collection at my local chain grocery store this morning, and now I’m about to drive 20 minutes to my favorite bakery.

    30. Silence*

      Co signing the recommendations for good shoes.
      Bamboo bed sheets are amazingly soft and breathable.
      Large bath sheets instead of towels, preferably 100% cotton.
      An electric toothbrush, I have a cheap oral b one but the first time I used it I was amazed at how much cleaner my mouth felt.
      Heated throw rugs if you live somewhere cold.
      I prefer a smaller amount of good ice cream to more of the cheaper brands
      Getting a massage is so nice.
      Scented candles/ oil defusers can make your home smell lovely and welcoming.
      If you have Spotify or something similar getting a premium account so you don’t have to listen to ads.
      If you do any craft slowly building a collection of excellent tools / materials even just some really nice colouring pencils.
      Outsourcing any home maintenance you dislike can free up time to spend together. Time is probably the most luxurious thing.

    31. Laura Petrie*

      We bought a new mattress recently and it is SO much better than our old cheap IKEA one. I bought a nicer, more expensive one than I normally would have looked at and it was totally worth it.

      Organic fruit & veg from a local box scheme. Not that much more expensive than supermarkets but a better choice and much nicer flavour.

      Cake tins and baking trays, they last better than cheap ones.

      Beer. I love beer and life is too short to drink rubbish

      Holidays. In non-pandemic times we love to travel and I’m happy to spend good money on it.

    32. Colette*

      I bought an ice machine this summer, and I love it, even though it’s very much a want, not a need. Electric stand mixers are also worth it if you like to bake.

      And I don’t skimp on renovations – if I want an option, I get it because I don’t want to regret it for 30 years.

    33. KR*

      I absolutely love my steam mop. We got it used off eBay- the heating element was a little clogged up because the previous owners didn’t use distilled water in it but we cleaned it and it works fine now. It’s an expensive mop but it makes cleaning so much easier (my house is 100% poorly waxed linoleum).
      In the same vein, we splurged a little when replacing our vacuum recently. I don’t think we spent more than $300, but this one is light and picks up animal hair extremely well. It’s also easy to clean and can be taken apart in minutes. My husband convinced me it was worth it to replace the vacuum and I’m so glad I did, since I used it all the time when we had a place with carpet.

    34. Finny*

      Proper KD (Kraft Dinner/Kraft Macaroni and Cheese). None of the generics I’ve tried taste or mix right. (Nor does the new KD powder they’ve come up with for the kid-oriented noodle shapes, for that matter–Kraft says it’s all the same, but comparing the ingredient list it definitely isn’t, and doesn’t act like or taste it, either.)

    35. Not So NewReader*

      I am amazed by how many people said Kerry Gold butter. Yum.

      Shoes out of necessity, my feet need me to do that.
      Better quality foods.
      Good quality vitamins/nutrition.

      The rest of my life -eh, I have a pure bred mutt, my car is very NOT new and weeds in my lawn are okay as long as they are green. I got a new furnace and spent a bit on that. I redid the plumbing and upgraded that. And I got a little heavy handed with the insulation. (yippeee, warm house.)

      1. Aealias*

        Oooh, yes, and the stuff with the lotion! My colds go on for WEEKS and my skin used to be horribly raw by the third day. Fancy-pants tissues make an enormous difference.

      2. My Brain Is Exploding*

        OOh, yes…Puffs Plus with Lotion for when we have colds/allergies. For occasional use, cheaper tissues are OK.

      3. Lissajous*

        My philosophy for tissues is: most of the time I’m barely using them.
        Unless I’m sick, then I am using them at an alarming rate.

        So get the pricier, soft, gentle ones, because it’s not like they go off, and when you suddenly go through a box in three days your nose will thank you by not being rubbed raw. Being sick is already misery, no need to add to it.
        And the per annum cost is still ridiculously low.
        (I personally don’t do scented, not my thing, but if it is go for that too!)

    36. Bibliovore*

      Real Birkenstocks. Local food. One good knife. Purebred dog who eats fancy expensive food that makes healthy small poops. Heat. (grew up without, then couldn’t afford)
      The new Suburu with safety features. (first new car in this lifetime) SO happy I did this.
      I buy one or two expensive pieces of clothing on sale from Eileen Fisher each year- they last for years and years. Like ten years of washing machine and dryer.
      Therapist who doesn’t take insurance.

    37. sswj*

      Don’t laugh – Litterboxes.
      I have spent a stupid amount of money on automatic litterboxes (CatGenies, Litter Robots, and Pura X), and with one exception they have been worth every penny and then some. As I have 12 house cats they save me an immense amount of time, as well as keep my house from smelling like a zoo.

      Lawnmower – Specifically one appropriate to the area that needs regular mowing. We recently got a fairly big and beefy zero-turn to replace our little zero-turn that was rattling itself to death. The new one seriously cut mowing time by half or better! It’s not only the larger deck, it’s that it has a stronger motor so I don’t have to slow to a crawl for thick or overgrown grass, or go back over it several times. We have a tractor and bush hog too, left over from a previous larger property. That did the job for sure, but it was so big I had to go super slowly to get corners and avoid hitting the fence. Love the $$$ zero-turn!

      Dundee marmalade (lovely and tart), good cuts of meat, local produce (real local, not the “farm stands” that buy from the giant distributor), wine that you love to drink and damn the price tag.

    38. Spearmint*

      Razor blades. My partner and I both cut ourselves far less when shaving since shifting from cheap to mid-range priced razors.

    39. Observer*

      and look for a sweet spot of functionality and price when we buy new.

      One thing that might be useful to you is to add something else into that calculus: What is known in the business world ans TCO – Total Cost of Ownership. When you do that you often wind up spending less in the long term AND have better quality.

      The example that comes up a lot is about boot. If you buy a cheap pair of boots for $X it you can expect it to last for a year. If you buy a GOOD pair of boots for $5X, it may last you for 10 years. So in the short term you paid more, but it the long term you pay half of what you would have for the cheap boots. And in the meantime, you have years worth of MUCH better boots.

      A personal example. When we got our first new car, my husband was very focused on getting a low cost car. I really didn’t like it. And it wound up costing us a pretty penny over time. When it came to our next car, I insisted that we look at factors other than purchase price (in addition to purchase price.) It was surprisingly hard to do, because SO many of the resources that supposedly show cost of ownership place way to much emphasis on depreciation, which was a total non-issue for us. We were going to keep that thing till it was too expensive to keep, so resale value was going to be minimal in any case. What I looked at was gas mileage (my husband drives a LOT for work), and repair history. We wound up getting a decent lower end car. It was significantly more expensive the current model of the car that we were getting rid of, but it was a terrific financial decision on three counts: The amount we saved on gas paid for the difference in about 2 years (at current prices it would probably have be 3.5 years) on a car that we were expecting to keep for 5 years. So, thousands saves just in fuel costs. Maintenance (other than the routine stuff you do on any car) was minimal until it got geriatric enough to make us decide the get a new car. Lastly, the car lasted us for 10 years before starting to fall apart.

    40. Clisby*

      We pay a CPA every year to do our taxes. I’m sure we could do it, but we don’t want to. So we don’t.

    41. Girasol*

      Slight tangent: I read an essay written in 1910 or so about the economy of working girls. It talked about how people thought they were stupid because they bought cheap shirtwaists that didn’t last well, but it was because they didn’t have enough money to buy better. It went on to discuss their strict long hours in the factories, intolerance of time off, and the way that some pooled their money so that if someone in the group got sick she wouldn’t run out of money and be evicted before she could recover. Does anyone remember the name of that essay?

    42. RDC*

      I’ve been trying to buy more planet-friendly versions of my regular products and I think that fits here since they probably cost more than regular but I enjoy knowing they have a smaller environmental impact. I’ve switched to solid shampoo from Ethique, concentrated cleaning supplies and hand soap from Blueland, detergent sheets from Clean People, bamboo toilet paper from Who Gives a Crap.

      1. RDC*

        Oh! Also toothpaste tabs from Bite. And lots of food storage containers to cut down on use of plastic bags and cling wrap. Re-usable shopping bags, of course. Any other suggestions in this vein?

        1. LizB*

          A metal or glass floss container + compostable floss, finding a local grocery with a good bulk section so you can re-fill containers of pantry goods instead of buying a new bag/bottle/box, mesh or cloth produce bags to avoid using the plastic ones from the store, and beeswax wraps to further cut down on cling wrap/foil use, have all been some of my favorite swaps I’ve made gradually over time. I’m interested in trying toothpaste tabs, I want to check those out once my current tube runs out.

  20. WellRed*

    I believe it’s always worth it to spend a bit more on shoes as your feet support the whole rest of your body. I also think it’s usually worth it to spend money for a haircut. I don’t mean hundreds, mind you, but $70 vs $30.

    1. Sloan Kittering*

      (gently teasing): Oh you’re not getting the $9.99 special at supercuts?? There’s me shown!

    2. Admiral Thrawn Is Blue*

      Many years ago I read some great advice from an Italian woman in a magazine. She was a model or something, don’t remember now. She said to always buy a good mattress and good shoes, because if you aren’t in one, you are in the other.

    3. UKDancer*

      Definitely. I spend money on shoes and also get decently fitting bras. These come in fairly expensive but are worth it. I economise on other things but I need comfortable feet and comfortable chest. I spend more on trousers but that’s because when I find a pair and style that fits I usually by 2-3 of them.

      I do tend to spend money on a haircut because I like my hair to be nice. I tend to book a massage about once per month which is a luxury but a pleasant one.

    4. HBJ*

      I disagree on haircuts. I agree if you’re getting color or maybe have complicated hair or a complicated cut that needs to be perfect, but I have have pretty basic hair and get a pretty basic cut. I never been able to tell a difference between a cheap haircut and a more expensive one on my hair, and I don’t think anyone else has either. They’ve never said anything or complimented the more expensive cut more or anything like that.

      1. Wishing You Well*

        Yup, Great Clips cuts my hair just fine.
        A friend paid $50 for a chopped-up disaster of a haircut, so paying more can be a gamble.

      2. ThatGirl*

        It depends on the haircut! Mine is short but not simple, and it’s a dramatic difference in how it looks and grows out at $40 vs $15. There is an upper limit I’m willing to pay, but it’s absolutely worth it to me to pay a trained pro vs a cheap chain salon.

        1. WellRed*

          I think the haircut itself is key. And I have had Supercuts that has been fine but when it went wrong, on my birthday no less, it took four months to stop looking hacked; )

          1. Blomma*

            My hair is the same. I pay a bit more for someone who knows what they’re doing with curls doesn’t botch it up. The last time I had a cheap haircut, my hair looked longer on one side compared to the other because the hairdresser didn’t know what to do with my curls. It was awful!

      3. Exif*

        My friends with stick-straight hair who wear it blunt agree with you.

        As a layered curly girl, I unfortunately need to pay more to avoid poodle syndrome.

        1. Clisby*

          Yeah, I have stick-straight hair that I keep just barely below shoulder length. I haven’t had a professional haircut in 16 years – my husband cuts it and it looks fine. (He has a regular barber set – it’s not like he’s chopping off my hair with discarded kids’ kindergarten scissor.) He cut my son’s hair up until age 14, and that was fine because my son wore his hair below shoulder length. Once my son switched to a shorter haircut, we paid for professional cuts.

        1. Jean (just Jean)*

          Interesting topic…I hope to remember this until next weekend’s open thread. (Another person with Jewish hair here. I’ll save the narrative for next weekend. :-) )

    5. Laura Petrie*

      I go to a cheaper salon but that’s more because of the location. I pay half of what a cut and full head of highlights would cost in the city centre. I’ve also had some horrendous cuts at fancy places.

    6. Voluptuousfire*

      It’s situation dependent. For me, I switched from going to a salon to a barber shop since I have a short haircut. I get the same quality haircut for at least half the price. I also like my lady barber a hell of a lot more than my former stylist.

  21. Venus*

    How do your plants grow? From green to brown, indoors and outdoors, I enjoy all your updates!

    Note that I will be hibernating and won’t be posting after this week, until next March when I start up my tomato seeds again. I encourage others to post!

    1. ecnaseener*

      I think it’s time for me to re-pot the new shoots in my pink quill, but I’m nervous I’ll do it wrong…also I don’t have another pot or soil so I guess I’ll uproot the whole thing?

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        It’s worth getting a quart of new soil because it has more nutrients and less chance of carrying over any plant disease.
        If you know anyone who is a big gardener, ask if you can buy a coffee can’s worth from them. I would just give it to you, because we buy it in huge bags. The biggest gardener at my old office used to start all his seedlings in red plastic party cups with holes drilled in the bottom. Start them in that, and before they take root, empty the old plant pot and bleach it for reuse.

        1. ecnaseener*

          I would probably have to wait for thanksgiving to get soil from relatives unfortunately, no one close by – and there’s nowhere in my studio to keep a whole bag. So I guess I’ll either run out the clock for a few weeks or take my chances reusing the current soil

          1. Venus*

            If you have social media then there are groups (we have Buy Nothing here) where people offer and make requests all the time. Asking for a cup or two of soil would be encouraged on our group!

    2. Sloan Kittering*

      Doing some lovely baby kale for the end of the season. I feel superpowered when I eat it, and it’s growing well (and so cute) just now.

    3. fposte*

      I am starting the bulb planting. There’s supposed to be a lot of rain this upcoming week so I probably won’t finish for a couple of weeks. It’s 400 tulips plus about 5 lily bulbs–and maybe I also got some iris? Can’t remember.

      I poop out very, very quickly so I’ve established a drill that works great for me over the years–break up the tulip bed into sixths and plant a sixth at a time; I go fast and sloppy, so it’s about 15 minutes to do a sixth. I demarcate by just digging a stick into the ground between sixths. You’d think I’d remember the bed measurement from year to year but I don’t, so it always starts with my dragging my tape measure around to figure out the length of my curvy bed edge.

    4. CatCat*

      My radishes have not gotten bulbs. I think they’re planted too close together. It’s my first time trying radishes so I think next week, I’ll harvest the radish greens and we’ll eat those then plant some new seeds.

    5. Might Be Spam*

      I have a passion vine in a pot on my balcony that I just brought in for the winter. It had a beautiful flower on it that just closed and I think it will turn into an orange colored fruit. It did it once before several years ago, so I have my fingers crossed.

  22. Astoria*

    Skechers shoes are worth the cost, especially when I shop at Shoe Dept Encore.

    I also am willing to pay a little more for lotion or hand soap packaged with a wide pump.

    1. Let me be dark and twisty*

      100% agree with Sketchers. I was on vacation recently and wore the wrong kind of shoes for daily urban walking – had incredible pain and blisters after Day 1 and knew I had to get different shoes or else I’d spend the trip in the hotel. There was a sketchers store nearby and man, those sneakers saved my trip. I could walk again!

    2. RagingADHD*

      We used to get Sketchers for the kids’ school shoes when they were transitioning into adult sizes. They fell apart within a couple of months. Complete waste of money. They might be cute and comfy, but they do not hold up to hard wear. When a pre-teen going through massive growth spurts wears out a shoe before they outgrow it, there’s something wrong with the shoe.

      Now we only get New Balance or Asics.

      1. Astoria*

        I don’t doubt you whatsoever, but mine have lasted much longer. Sorry you have had that experience. I’m not on the Skechers payroll or anything, BTW, just a fan.

      2. Mstr*

        I have the same experience with Sketchers. They fit comfortably but don’t last long, though I do walk a lot to be fair. I’ve also switched to ASICS and recommend them.

      3. Please Exit Through The Rear Door*

        The same thing happened to me with Skechers shoes. They were terrific for about a week and then fell apart faster than any shoes I’ve ever had. Thinking it might be a fluke, I bought a second pair a few months later, and those were even worse. Like other commenter, I’ve had very good luck with Asics.

    3. beach read*

      Yes to Sketchers as they have been the best shoes my odd feet have ever worn.

      Also…the good parm/romano cheese.
      I would have said Scott tissue but whatever it is they changed about it has decreased the quality tremendously.

  23. SunnyStreets*

    I’m looking for gift suggestions for people who enjoy food, something that I can ship, like an assorted box of nice chocolates or teas. Any recommendations based on something you received that you really enjoyed? Thanks!

    1. JustEm*

      Spices from Penzey’s are great quality, and they have some interesting ones and spice mixes. (If the people like to cook).

      1. fposte*

        Heh–I just got a big box from Penzey’s that I suspect is a birthday present come a little early. So far I highly recommend :-).

      2. Generic Name*

        Agreed! Savory Spice Shop is also another option. I love their Pikes Peak all purpose seasoning.

      3. Chauncy Gardener*

        Spicewalla has some wonderful gift boxes and their herbs and spices are amazing. A gift box from a local chocolate/candy company is always a nice gift to receive as well.

    2. Ranon*

      Arbor teas for tea, Zingermans for treats of all sorts, Miami Fruit is fun for tropical fruit, La Tienda for tinned seafood and Spanish delicacies, Rancho Gordo for beans if they like to cook, Delta Blues has some cool rice gift packs

      Honestly Harry and David pears are pretty great too

    3. Skates*

      I sent my best friend a cheese and beer pairing box from Murray’s in Brooklyn last year because she Covid-eloped and when I finally saw her and her husband 9 months later they were both still talking about how much they loved it.

      1. Clisby*

        I love getting presents of food and/or wine. I’m at an age where I just don’t want more stuff (OK, I’ll take a $15,000 Persian rug), and it’s nice to be treated to a kind of luxury food/drink item that I enjoy and then it’s gone.

        1. SunnyStreets*

          This, exactly. I’m working on gift ideas for people who don’t need or want anything specific, and they definitely don’t want more stuff.

    4. Llellayena*

      Teas, hot chocolates, spices, honeys, jams/jellies, those recipe-in-a-mason-jar things, fancy/unusual candy, snacks from a different culture…can you tell I’ve tried similar gifting themes?

      If you have a World Market near you, they have a ton of “make your own gift basket” items. Theming something like a fancy coffee, a packet of cookies/crackers, a good jam and a piece of chocolate can sometimes be better than 6 different coffee flavors.

      I’ve seen companies that put together gift boxes of regional foods (Japan and England seem to be popular). If you are living in an area with its own regional food, sending something related to that would be nice (New Orleans=pralines, Vermont=maple syrup, etc.)

      1. SunnyStreets*

        Thanks for the World Market tip – great idea! And I like the idea of a regional food box as well!

      2. Baby Maybe*

        Yes! I did something like this the last time we Went Home – but it was just groceries from our Small European Country that read as bizarre back home. Biscoff spread (it’s just cookies in a jar!), breakfast cereal, that one type of biscuit they’re all obsessed with here…

        Might something like that work for you?

    5. fposte*

      If glass jars aren’t a bar, I love flights of honey. Moonshine Trading/Z Specialty Foods do some great ones.

    6. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Partly that depends on where you are shipping to and from. Chocolates melt so easily…
      If you feel like being extravagant and have access to an Indian or Middle Eastern market, saffron is a glorious treat for a foodie.

      1. SunnyStreets*

        I’m in the Nashville, TN area. Good point about chocolates melting, since I’m in the south and you never know how long it’ll be hot around here.

    7. Let me be dark and twist*

      If they’re drinkers, consider a booze flight! Find a place where you can mix and match to build your own collection of whatever the recipient’s taste is (wine, beer, liquor). If you get mini bottles or single-serving beers, it can be quite fun. Just make sure to wrap them well for shipping.

      I do this for my grandfather at Christmas. He’s a big scotch drinker so I pick up all kinds of mini-bottles of scotch from the ABC stores around me and make a gift box out of it for him.

    8. Falling Diphthong*

      For tea: Tea Forte, The Whistling Kettle, and The Republic of Tea all sell small sampler packs, which are a good way to discover new types. (I currently drink a lot of Iron Goddess of Mercy and Purple tea from the second; I like the cardamom tea from the third.)

      For chocolate I’d recommend a local purveyor, as that will probably be different from what the recipients have locally. A store near me does dried fruit and nut mixes as well. (Working off the key to delight being half that something is good, half that something is new.)

      Having just returned from Santa Fe, I will recommend Kakawa Chocolate House for excellent chocolate, including traditional style drinking chocolate.

      1. SunnyStreets*

        Yes – the small sampler packs sound great! Thanks for the tips! And I’ll search around to see if we have any local folks for chocolate – good idea! (And I’ll be checking out Kakawa, for myself!!)

      1. SunnyStreets*

        That sounds amazing. Any specific places you like to get it from? We have a lot of cheese lovers in our family so this could work well.

        1. Texan In Exile*

          We usually just load up at Woodman’s (a local grocery store) because it’s super cheap (and very very good), but if you are restricted to ordering online, Carr Valley Cheese is very good.

          In fact, it’s the cheese I wish I had hidden from my allegedly lactose-intolerant inlaws when they stayed at our house for our wedding. (Do not do this. Do not let people stay with you when you get married.)

          They filled up on the Carr Valley, which is $16-22/lb, during their 4:00 cocktail hour, instead of eating supper.

          Marieke Gouda is also very good cheese. There are so many small producers, too, but right now, I don’t know of an online shop that sources from a variety of makers.

          1. allathian*

            Aged cheese is the one dairy product most lactose intolerant people are able to tolerate, because the maturing process converts most of the lactose into lactic acid. That said, hosting guests when you just got married sounds like a bad idea…

    9. Writer Worries*

      Dollar Tea Club! (I haven’t purchased from them yet, but plan to.) They have over 40 different blends of loose leaf tea to chose from, and you can get small sample bags for $1 each. It might be fun to send 10 samples, a diffuser, and a few honey sticks or something like that.

      Note: Their website is not user friendly at all and it takes forever to find where to look at their products. Start here: https://www.theteaclub.com/product-category/loose-leaf-tea/

    10. GoryDetails*

      I’ve been enjoying the Sakuraco Japanese snack-boxes featuring different themes each month; not all of the snacks are to my taste, but most of them are, and even the too-weird-for-me ones were interesting. If any of your friends are into adventurous snacking it might be worth a shot. [Alternately, if you have international food stores near you, you might be able to make up your own gift box for less money.]

      ’tis also the season for themed countdown-to-Christmas calendars, many of which include foods; I’ve seen many with chocolate, some with tea, pricier ones with wine or other types of booze… and at least one with different-flavored marshmallows (From XO Marshmallows, I think)! The Bonne Maman one has teeny jars of jam or honey behind each window – I got one of those for me, from the local Hallmark store, but they tend to go out of stock pretty quickly.

    11. Laura Petrie*

      I’m in the UK and visited a Penzey’s store when I was on holiday in the US a few years ago. I was in heaven, I bought so many blends to take home. I’d be delighted to receive some as a gift.

    12. SlinkoBeast*

      See’s Candy. Everyone I have ever sent it to has been SO happy. (Now I want some.) A cheesecake from the Cheesecake Factory (esp. if the recipients don’t have one nearby). Best of all: Armadillo Droppings, the absolute most wonderful pralines I have ever had. Get them straight from the makers in Texas (not from Amazon, etc., where they may have been sitting around for a while). Expensive and expensive to ship, but they are amazing.

    13. Aealias*

      What’s local to you?

      When I was on the west coast, good candied salmon was a favourite food-treat to ship. Now I’m in the prairies, Saskatoon teas, chokecherry jellies, fancy local honeys are go-tos. If you live somewhere where you can legally ship alcohol, the products of local breweries and vintners can be a great way to introduce something unfamiliar. Locally roasted coffee is often popular.

      When a friend got sick last fall, and our local post offices were locked down, I went online and shipped them some of my favourite tea from Thaytea.com (I love their Earl Grey Cream) and a book from Powell’s in Portland. The gifts were appreciated, as was the support of localized, non-chain businesses. (Since the US Postal Service was so badly slowed down, they arrived after my friend had recovered, but they were still appreciated!)

  24. Let me be dark and twisty*

    Any suggestions on what to do while people are touring your house? Especially if you’re a homebody.

    My house has been on the market for almost 2 months and I’ve run out of places to go/errands to do. The only Starbucks in town is at the mall and Panera requires you to purchase something before you can camp out in the cafe but I need to cut down on spending after blowing up my budget on vacation. The neighborhood isn’t a walkable place either (one of the reasons why I am moving). The local library doesn’t have any loungy spaces and there’s no bookstore in town.

    Am I doomed to sit in a parking lot till my house gets sold?

    1. WellRed*

      Walk around in the mall? Bring your own coffee and camp out at the food court? Go to McDonald’s and spend a dollar for a drink and read a book there?

      1. twocents*

        Seconding this. Mall walking is pretty popular where I’m at, and it’d be easy to pop in a podcast and do a few laps.

    2. Llellayena*

      Does it have to be your neighborhood you walk? Find a nice downtown area to walk around or a neighborhood you want to/wish you could live in. Are you house hunting while you’re selling? Use the time to check out other open houses?

    3. Seeking Second Childhood*

      I would probably drive to the next town over to sit in their library, but I know some places, that’s a real long way away.
      Are there any museums within an easy drive? Are you a member of a church/temple/mosque that would let you be there? Yarn shops that let people crochet there? The pandemic really does complicate a lot of this!

    4. Chilipepper attitude*

      I just went through this. IDK why it is so hard to figure out what to do but it is!
      I hope you get good answers. We would up parking down the road and sitting the car after we exhausted all the other options. Partly because we had a dog with us.
      Best of luck selling!

    5. AGD*

      To escape construction noise a while back, I gathered a pile of books I didn’t want anymore and went in search of Little Free Libraries. Some are on the official registry map online, but most aren’t, so I picked neighborhoods with lots of individual houses and plenty of kids and went looking.

      1. Chilipepper attitude*

        that is such a good idea!
        Geocashing might fit the bill too but without the added bonuses of getting rid of items you probably don’t want to move and helping others by donating the books.

      2. GoryDetails*

        Good plan! Side note: the BookCrossing site – which lets people register individual books with tracking information in hopes of hearing from future readers down the line – has listings for local “release zones,” and many of us leave those books at Little Free Libraries and other book-swap shelves. Those listings may include LFLs that aren’t on the official maps.

        1. AGD*

          Wow, I was a member of BookCrossing nearly twenty years ago! This makes so much sense and is a super helpful tip about LFLs as well. Now, I wonder what my BookCrossing username was…hmm…

    6. Purple Cat*

      Is there a high school track you can walk around?
      Random kids sports events you can watch just to pass the time?

    7. GoryDetails*

      Maybe a silly question, but do you HAVE to leave your house? I imagine it’d be very uncomfortable to sit there while people are making judgments about your home, but unless you’re required to be away perhaps you could set up a little reading-or-other-media nook in an out of the way corner and nest there?

      1. Person from the Resume*

        Yes. The seller is expected to leave the house. I think it would be weird and awkward if you didn’t.

        That said I’ve driven my car up the street a few houses and sat in my car – on the phone or reading a book.

    8. PollyQ*

      Go for a drive? Maybe out to the countryside, if you’re near-ish one, or even just meandering through cities/neighborhoods you don’t often visit.

  25. Dwight Schrute*

    Any Ted Lasso fans here? I just started watching it and I love it. Ted is so positive and happy without crossing into toxic positivity that he just makes me smile the whole time I watch the show.

    1. Let me be dark and twisty*

      Yes! Just binged it myself this week. I was so happy it was completely worth all the hype I’d heard about, and then some. It was definitely a breath of fresh air in today’s world. I love that it’s funny without being mean. Laughed a lot and that was exactly what I needed this week.

      The Christmas episode from Season 2 is probably my favorite.

      1. I take tea*

        Funny and not mean? Sounds nice, but a couple of questions: How big part of it generally is the sport? I’m extremely uninterested in sports generally and if it’s much about that, it’s not for me. And if it’s a guy leading a male soccer team – are there any more than token women in it? The cast looks very male, and I’m just tired of watching stuff with mostly men. I feel invisible.

        1. fposte*

          There are more men because it’s a sports team, but the women are pivotal rather than token, and they’re excellently written. It’s perfectly possible to watch the show and enjoy it without knowing any details about the sport beyond a ball goes places and some people really care.

        2. Let me be dark and twisty*

          There’s very little sporty-sport stuff (maybe like 5 mins per episode on average?) and the rest of the sporty stuff is more about the personal dynamics and relationships between all the teammates. It reminded me a lot of how they did Friday Night Lights (tv show) where it’s more focused on relationships than football. Also they do a really great job explaining all the sports stuff so I found it easy to follow along.

          And I’ll be honest here. The women completely surprised me. It was very refreshing how they wrote the women and you feel their presence well throughout the show. It definitely passes the Bechedel Test.

          Why don’t you just watch an episode or two to see for yourself? No harm done if you don’t like it and two episodes is a little over an hour (episodes are about 35 mins each).

    2. FashionablyEvil*

      I adore it. The next time I have a sick day or random day off, I’m planning to rewatch it all. It’s SO GOOD.

    3. It's Quarantime!*

      I’ve started watching it with my parents. :)
      They’d have already marathoned their way through the whole thing if they hadn’t promised to watch it with me.
      All I heard about it was how wholesome and amusing the show is, so I was caught completely off guard by the language choices. No “wholesome” show in the US could drop multiple f-bombs and still be wholesome.
      That said, despite the colorful vocabulary, it really is a lovely cast and concept. (So far)

      1. Person from the Resume*

        Hmm … I was thinking to suggest this to my parents. They are more procedural fans than sitcoms, but the f-bombs might be a turn off. OTOH my SIL expressed surprise that my parents are watching Big Sky apparently bloody violence (?). I avoid recommending overly violent or sexual shows to my parents because they’re not fans of that either.

    4. Frankie Bergstein*

      I adore everything about this show. I can’t wait for the next season! I am now listening to the soundtrack on Spotify and getting Ted Lasso memes via Instagram to try to tide me over. So good and so innovative.

    5. Elle Woods*

      LOVE Ted Lasso. I’ve had the Roy Kent cheer stuck in my head for a few weeks now. Season 2 is even better than season 1.

  26. Dwight Schrute*

    Light recommendations for SAD? With the cooler and darker weather coming I’d like to invest in one so I can get some sunlight even on dreary days.

    1. Falling Diphthong*

      I have heard good things about the baseball-caps-with-lights. Plop it on your head as you are getting ready for the day and it gives you an extra hour of “sunlight.”

      1. justareader*

        These are great if you cant sit in one place under a lamp. I personally found the light to cause headaches or at least make mine worse but that was just my experience and maybe just the brand I used

    2. Wishing You Well*

      I had a BioLight for years but had to stop using it because it caused damage to the one eye that was closest to it. Whatever you choose, make sure it’s at the correct distance and use it for the minimum time. Check with trusted authorities (FDA, maybe?) before using something that could hurt your eyes or skin over time. I recommend string lights or other general illumination lights that aren’t so close to your face.
      If you find something that works for you, let us know!

  27. Word Games*

    Game: definitions in need of words? Make one up or share with a language you speak.
    Here’s one: this week my kid made cookies from a recipe I’ve been using for 20 years. The kid did something different (mismeasured? half-frozen, half-melted butter? we’ll never know) and the texture turned out quite different but the cookies were delicious. So: what’s a word for: making a standard recipe unexpectedly delicious for unknown reasons.

    Add your own definitions in need of words below.

    1. Llellayena*

      Happy accident. But anyway, you should look into a board game called Sniglets, which is based entirely on the premise of creating words for a given definition.

    2. fposte*

      Acci-cooked? Up-baked?

      I have the Sticky Terms app, which plays with such things in various languages–I keep forgetting about it, which makes me think that we need a term for forgetting about apps.

      1. RagingADHD*

        I like up-baked, because it makes me think of Paul Hollywood saying under-baked. “Oonder-behked.”

        Oop-behked.

    3. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Serendipity.
      We were actually trying to coin a word recently, and I can’t remember the definition it needs to have. (There’s probably a very Germanic word for that situation itself!)

    4. Purple Cat*

      I can’t think of a word for your situation specifically, but my kids decided that home-made cookies needed a different word than store bought cookies, so now home-made ones are “tookies”.

    5. I take tea*

      Just saying: If anybody hasn’t read The Meaning of Liff by Douglas Adams and John Lloyd, what are you waiting for? It’s a delightful book full of placenames without meaning and concepts without names. I often use Ahenny (adj.): The way people stand when examining other people’s bookshelves (but in translation to my language).

    6. small town*

      Check out a book called Lost in Translation. It has words from other languages that we don’t have in English. Like there is a word in Japanese for the way sunlight looks when it filters through trees.

      Loving up-baked, though

  28. Skates*

    Favorite apple recipes? I have a peck of apples from apple picking and I need to get these babies baked! Pie and sauce have already been done. What else do you love to bake/cook with apples?

      1. Bluebell*

        Smitten Kitchen also has a gorgeous Mosaic apple tart which isn’t too hard to make but looks super impressive.

    1. Seeking Second Childhood*

      If you like sauerkraut, buy one of the bags, drain and rinse as usual, then add caraway seed and a coarsely chopped apple before cooking.

          1. OxfordBlue*

            I second this comment wholeheartedly and also suggest that you have a look through Delia’s other apple recipes too. Her apple crumble is delicious.

    2. Lizy*

      Applesauce, apple butter, dehydrated apples, applesauce cake (ok so technically fruitcake except I never liked the fruits in it so basically applesauce cake), apple pie filling, apple crisp, apple cider, apple pie moonshine

    3. Grits McGee*

      I really like Dorie Greenspan’s Custardy Apple Squares. I add a tablespoon or 2 of cinnamon rum as well, and it makes it extra delicious. I’ll throw in slices of winter squash as well if I have a candy roaster or good pumpkin.

    4. UKDancer*

      Apple crumble is always yummy. I usually make apple and raspberry crumble. Sometimes I make my own topping and sometimes I use the M&S ginger crumble mix or oat crumble mix (obviously this only works if you’re in the UK). I also love tarte tatin but it’s a bit of a pain to do so I tend not to bother.

      On the savory front it’s lovely in red cabbage if you’re doing that. My recipe is similar to the juniper and apple red cabbage on the BBC good food website but without the juniper because I don’t like it.

    5. Sloan Kittering*

      Probably too simple but I do baked apples – half with cheese, half with brown sugar that I serve as dessert – and could live off that forever. The smell is heavenly and it’s so easy.

    6. Texan In Exile*

      I’ve been wanting to try Arkansas Black Apple and Onion Preserves.

      tbsp. olive oil
      1½ lb. sweet onions
      1 lb. Arkansas Black apples, peeled and diced
      1 tbsp. salt
      1 tsp. ground pepper
      6 garlic cloves, sliced
      2 tbsp. thyme leaves, chopped
      1 tsp. sage, chopped
      ¼ cup sugar
      ¼ cup apple cider vinegar

      Preparation
      In a Dutch oven, heat olive oil over medium-low and add onions, apples, salt, and pepper. Sweat, covered, for about 30 minutes, stirring occasionally and lowering temperature, if needed, to prevent the onions from caramelizing. Add garlic, thyme, sage, and sugar and cook for another 15 minutes. Turn up heat to high and, once pan is hot, deglaze with vinegar. After the vinegar has almost completely reduced, the mixture is ready to cool. Store in mason jars in the refrigerator for up to 10 days.

      Tip: “Make it a day or two out and let the flavors marinate. That’s the best way to get full flavor from preserves or sauces.”

    7. The Other Dawn*

      I have McIntosh and crabapple trees in my yard. In previous years, when I actually got apples, I’d peel, core, and slice the apples, and then freeze them in pre-portioned bags for apple pies. Basically, every bag in the freezer was enough for one pie. I’ve also made cinnamon applesauce, which is super easy.

      This year I made four types of jelly: crabapple, apple, spiced apple, and apple pie.

    8. CJM*

      I use the recipe “Apple Pie I” at AllRecipes dot com. (If you search there for that recipe name, it should show up early in the results. Its description starts with “This is my mother’s apple pie recipe. I use it all the time and I love it.”)

      It’s very basic and simple. Last night I made it but didn’t add any sugar, which is how my husband prefers it. I expected to miss the sugar but didn’t. (Besides that I followed the recipe.) We used a variety of apples this time and agree that it made the best apple pie of the season so far. The subtle differences among textures and flavors pushed it over the top.

    9. Reba*

      Dorie Greenspan’s French Apple cake. Apple butter! You can also freeze slices for future projects.

    10. Redhairredrunner*

      I made mini apple pies in a muffin tin a few years ago that I froze and reheated for easy fresh apple pie. I found that putting them in the oven immediately after I had pulled out whatever I had had cooked for dinner usually had them thawed and warmed from the residual heat by the time I finished eating dinner.

    11. Aealias*

      Pressure-cooker apple cider is a wonderful autumn treat, and I hate apple juice! But cider from fresh apples (with citrus and cranberries) is somehow completely different and delightful.

    12. Chauncy Gardener*

      The was an apple loaf cake recipe in the latest King Arthur Flour catalog. It was delicious!!

  29. First trimester woes*

    I am 7 weeks pregnant and feel so lucky that I was able to conceive easily. However, the past few weeks have been so rough and I want to cry just thinking about there being 7+ more weeks of this. I don’t have it as bad as many women as I don’t actually vomit really, but the working through the 24/7 seasickness and fatigue is so much more difficult than I ever would have thought. I wake up at 4am gagging from nausea and then drag myself through the day nibbling crackers and counting down the hours until I can flop down on the couch again.

    But more than the physical symptoms, I never expected how sad and isolated I would feel. My partner and my best friend know, but neither has experienced pregnancy. I can’t seem to explain how empty and lonely I feel much of the time. I would talk to others for support, but I only have one close friend who has kids, and I don’t know if she would understand. She spent her pregnancy extremely anxious about miscarriage because she was quickly attached to her unborn baby. I don’t feel like there is a “baby” in there at all and worry about miscarriage only because I don’t want to have to re-do any of this experience. I don’t feel excited, just sick in every way.

    Is this in the range of normal at all? Am I depressed? Since most people don’t reveal the pregnancy in the first trimester, I have no idea what it’s “supposed” to be like.

    1. Ranon*

      Sounds very normal to me! I hated being pregnant even though I never barfed, feeling nauseous all day is exhausting when you never get a break especially when you are also growing an entire extra organ and whatnot. I like my kid just fine though, they’re great. Second and third trimester were better but let’s just say when I was in labor “you’re not going to be pregnant anymore” was more motivating than “you’re going to meet your baby” was, lol.

      If you like podcasts, the very early episodes of One Bad Mother cover the first trimester and there’s a very cathartic the first trimester is BS episode early on.

      Never to early to talk to your doc about mental health worries, though, pregnancy and postpartum do wild things to brain chemistry and it’s always worth a check in

    2. Clisby*

      Can’t speak to the sickness, but I would say – don’t think there’s something wrong because you don’t feel bonded to the baby right now. I’d bet that’s fairly common. I was happy to be pregnant with both my children, but I wouldn’t say I felt “bonded” to them until I could feel them moving. Can’t remember exactly when that was – maybe about halfway through the pregnancies?

    3. CorgisAndCats*

      Ugh the first trimester was terrible for me too. I thought it was just part of the process with my first and experienced exactly what you’re describing, with my second I talked to my OB about it and she was like, “oh there is a pregnancy safe medication for that.” Game changer. I took Diclegis throughout my second pregnancy and it made a huge difference. I still had some nausea and vomiting but I was diagnosed with moderate HG so anything that reduced it was a win. I’m not a medical doctor so I’m not recommending the medication but just talking with your OB/midwife/etc. about your options, hopefully you’ll be pleasantly surprised at the possibilities and feel better soon!

    4. Emily*

      First, sending a virtual hug your way! I’m currently pregnant with Baby #2, and can totally sympathize! It’s really, really hard to be excited about something as abstract as a baby when your reality is “omg I’m so sick!”. And that’s okay. It’s also okay to not feel attached- even though I have a toddler who of course I adore, I still can’t really wrap my head around the fact that “the baby” is going to turn into a human at the end of this.
      As for feeling lonely and isolated, therapy can be so helpful if that’s an option for you. Everyone talks about postpartum depression, but perinatal (during pregnancy) depression is also a thing! And it’s scary, because we are told that this is supposed to be such a special time, but in reality, we are flooded with hormones and flat out sick. So please, consider looking in to a therapist. For a free recourse, the Postpartum Suppport Network (US based) offers free virtual support groups for pregnant women.
      I’d also suggest asking your OB about medicine for the nausea. I was so hesitant because I thought it would somehow make me less of a mom (seriously, I have no idea why), but when I finally started taking some pregnancy-safe prescription meds, I could get enough relief from the nausea that I could breath a little. Best of luck to you!

    5. FashionablyEvil*

      Super normal (if unpleasant). I used to forget I was pregnant and got annoyed at anyone who mentioned it—it’s such a mentally disorienting time! If you’re planning on breastfeeding, finding a local support group before your baby is born can be a good way to get some additional perspectives.

      Oddly, when I was pregnant, I found some kind and supportive folks on Ravelry (yes, the knitting site) that really helped reassure me.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        I agree on finding other mom friends. Buy nothing groups, maybe? Where else could OP connect early?

        1. Fellow Traveller*

          My hospital offers prenatal yoga classes and that was a good place to meet other expecting parents.
          There are tons of online message boards specifically for pregnant parents, but i personally quickly found those overwhelming and toxic. YMMV.

    6. Dark Macadamia*

      Do you have meds for the nausea? Please get some! I don’t want to be a downer but it doesn’t always stop after the first trimester and you don’t have to power through it. Ask your doctor for Diclegis and Zofran, in the meantime taking B12 can help. I hope things improve soon!

    7. Lizy*

      My babies were all “it” until they were born. Like, we had names and everything but I called them all “it” until they were born.

      On the one hand, yes it sounds normal. On the other… I’d say go ahead and talk to your midwife or doctor. Emotions are crazy and normal, but this sounds just a little off. Sometimes it’s something as simple as a small meds adjustment. I had hyperthyroidism with each pregnancy, for example. It wasn’t bad enough to need meds this last time, but something for me to be aware of. My 2nd was TOUGH mentally for me. At the time, I was on 3 different psych meds and all of them were recommended NOT to take when pregnant. My dr and I talked and determined if I wasn’t doing well mentally, it would arguably be just as bad (or worse) as the potential side effects of the meds, and opted to stay on one of the 3 meds and just monitor things.

      Also, my shameless promotion for a midwife: GET. A. MIDWIFE. You can have an OBGYN, too. (Also, if you’re on state insurance/Medicaid, you likely can still have a midwife! I did!) I had a scheduled c-section, and knew it would be from day 1, but prenatal care is prenatal care and my midwife was AWESOME. OBs are surgeons by trade – and obviously I needed one to do a surgery- but midwifes are baby-folks by trade. IMO midwifes are GOLD.

      Also, don’t be afraid to change providers! It can be something as simple as “I don’t like the way that hospital looks” so you choose one with another hospital. That’s ok!!!!! I changed providers with 2 out of my 3 pregnancies. One of them I had to (change in insurance) and one is a longer story as to why. I had 2 hospitals to choose from. I figured I’d tour each and go from there. Hospital 1 “well we don’t do tours until your 3rd trimester” ok well I’d like to do earlier so I can choose my hospital/provider. “Why would you choose what hospital?!” Aaannnndddd thanks for making it an easy choice!

      Anywho – take care of yourself, momma. And congrats!!!

      1. Observer*

        Also, don’t be afraid to change providers! It can be something as simple as “I don’t like the way that hospital looks” so you choose one with another hospital. That’s ok!!!!!

        Another excellent piece of advice.

        If your provider won’t take your issues seriously, find one who will.

    8. Falling Diphthong*

      For the nausea: Try sea bands. They worked for sea sickness and morning sickness for me.

      It’s the range of normal. One of my sisters in law described a miscarriage as “God pushed the delete button” and wasn’t emotionally torn up by it, while my other sister in law and I found ours devastating. There is not one right emotion to have during pregnancy, and the hormone cocktail guarantees you are probably experiencing many contradictory and no-logical-basis emotions. Plus killer fatigue and constant nausea can make it tough to feel anything else.

      A friend described going through her first pregnancy feeling “I agreed with my beloved husband to have one child since this is important to him” and then the baby was born and WHAM instant bonding, like a hormonal safe dropped from 20 stories. Other people were wrung out and it was more falling in love over the first months.

    9. Daffodilly*

      You can share the news and it may make you feel less isolated and get some support! I hate that there’s this idea that you shouldn’t share – because it leaves those suffering isolated, and implies that if there is a miscarriage you should hide it and deal with that unsupported, too.
      If sharing would help you break out of feeling isolated and get you much needed support, do it. You don’t have to do what “most people” do, or what “conventional wisdom” is. Do what is right for YOU.
      And if you’re not already seeing a doctor or midwife, see if you can get in to get help with this.

    10. Purple Cat*

      First of all – if you want to share the news with more people, absolutely share away! You are clearly feeling isolated, so don’t place that additional burden on yourself by keeping it secret.
      Second – join an online group for people expecting the same month as you are. That will give you a connection to other people in the same pregnancy stage. You’ll see there is a HUGE variety in physical and emotional reactions to pregnancy.
      Third – definitely talk to your doctor about your nausea and your feelings. There are meds that can help.

      Good luck! I never felt bonded to the baby during pregnancy. Probably because my first pregnancy ended in loss, so after that I didn’t allow myself to really deeply believe it was real until the baby was born. I am fully bonded with both my boys, so don’t stress that your current feelings will translate into anything negative after birth.

    11. RagingADHD*

      Tell someone! You need support! We told people the next day when I found out, because I can’t keep personal secrets, and it was really helpful to have the support. The whole point of making the decision to tell or not to tell isn’t to follow a “rule” but to make your life easier. Not telling is making you feel lonely and unhappy, so do the opposite!

      You don’t necessarily need to have a confidant who has also been pregnant, just a friend or family member who is a good listener and an empathetic person.

      It’s really normal to have your feelings be all over the place. It’s really normal to have the baby be very abstract and not feel real at all, or not bond right away. Some folks don’t even bond immediately when the baby is born. It’s probably one of the most individually variable experiences there is.

      On a practical note, ginger lozenges and ginger tea, or peppermint for some folks, really do help a whole lot with nausea. Can’t recommend it enough.

      My midwife (RN-CNM) who was a nutrition geek also advised me that eating meat (especially red meat) when you are able to helps reduce your nausea overall. (Doesn’t stop it in the moment, but stabilizes things). I don’t remember whether it’s a micronutrient thing or a blood sugar thing, but by golly it worked.

      And an iron supplement (in addition to my prenatal vitamin) helped an awful lot with the fatigue. There’s a liquid one called Floradix that doesn’t cause constipation as much as most iron pills do.

      It’s going to be okay. I know you feel miserable right now, I get it. It gets better, it really does. You’re going to do great, hang in there.

    12. M*

      Incredibly normal. Pregnancy is hard on a lot of people, including me, and I was not prepared for that at all. I feel like culturally you’re only allowed to be happy about pregnancy, you’re supposed to glow, and morning sickness is this cute little thing that’s over really quickly. Yeah, no. I was miserable for 9 months, everything hurt, and I had 36 weeks of morning sickness. The hiding in the first trimester does so many women a disservice.

      And even with all that (and a traumatic birth), it was entirely worth it when I had my kid! I do now check in with newly pregnant friends and tell them that if they’re not feeling rainbows and sunshine, it’s normal and I’m here to listen.

      If you can swing it, talking to a therapist can be really helpful. Also to do what you can to make the transition to postpartum easier (if you get PPA or PPD you will get through it, but avoid it if you can..)

    13. justareader*

      That sounds totally normal (at least if I’m using my feelings as an indicator!). I’m just now Starting to come out of extreme morning sickness and I can absolutely relate to the loneliness and isolation plus all the rest. It is so hard to feel like there’s a baby in there when you can’t see it (or in my case you’re actually losing weight) and I definitely had the same miscarriage thoughts “I cant do this again!”. Here’s my advice I wish I’d known with both my other pregnancies (on my third): take it one day at a time as silly as that sounds. I always felt like everything I did one day would affect the next (“oh no I barely drank today- tomorrow will be even worse”). For me there is no rhyme or reason to how I feel day to day and I can just do my best to get through each day. Do not think about the weeks ahead. Just think about getting through each day the best you can and know that you will feel better eventually. Also, Demand help if you need it from doctors or whoever. People tend not to believe in your sickness because they can’t see it but you deserve help if and when you need it. Thinking of you

    14. reply all*

      Zofran saved me. I was losing lots of weight and going to the hospital for fluids and only got through with this drug. It might not be right for you of course as it’s a personal decision to take meds in pregnancy. I have to add… please ignore people telling you which foods to eat. Seriously I wish people would stop doing this. Just because something worked for you does not mean I can stomach it. Ginger and soda crackers made me vomit (literally). I have heard so many recommendations that i want to pull my hair out and most come right after I have told someone “I can’t keep Anything down. For real”. Sorry, ginger ale and magnesium pills don’t work when you’re vomiting every single thing up. Just my 2 cents :)

    15. Bumblebeee*

      I had severe morning sickness and consequently found it very, very difficult to enjoy my pregnancies during the first trimester. Drinking water was like drinking from the sewer. It left a horrific aftertaste in my mouth for hours afterwards. Since I couldn’t drink much I became severely constipated (which was FUN!) And the fatigue was unbelievable. I didn’t have enough energy to raise my hands to wash my hair in the shower. Actually, being in the shower made me feel dizzy and nauseous. Even brushing my teeth made me puke. So I basically spent the first trimester crying in bed, extremely smelly and gross, either throwing up or fighting severe nausea, and surviving on maybe a couple of tablespoons of plain soup a day. That was pretty much all I could keep down. I remember thinking at one point, if my house were on fire I have no energy to crawl out so I would just die here.

      It was so bad I even considered having an abortion, despite the pregnancy being planned and dearly wanted. I’m of course glad I didn’t – but that just goes to show you how bad things can become emotionally when you’re that physically unwell. Every woman experiences pregnancy differently. Your feelings are not good or bad because they don’t match what someone else experiences. But if you want validation on your sadness or isolation or lack of excitement, yes – that’s totally normal given what you’re experiencing right now! There are aspects of being pregnant that really suck.

      I’m sorry you’re having such a difficult pregnancy. I found that even doctors don’t always understand treatment options and think of morning sickness as something you just have to tolerate. It wasn’t until my second pregnancy that my midwife sent me to the ER and I had fluids and medication (for the nausea) intravenously that I felt a lot better. Well, not exactly great, but things got tolerable. I hope you can find something that works for you and all the best with your pregnancy.

      1. Observer*

        I’m horrified by what you describe – this is NOT within the range of normal. It’s completely true that pregnancy can be very rough, but this was something that SHOULD have been treated. It’s infuriating to me that no one took this seriously in your first pregnancy, and didn’t bother to do anything the second time round till you were so dehydrated that you needed IV fluids.

        It’s even more infuriating that this kind of disregard is SO COMMON.

    16. Ampersand*

      This doesn’t sound abnormal, but as others noted it would be good to check in with your doctor/healthcare provider regarding how you’re feeling (physically and emotionally). I had morning sickness until midway through my second trimester. You’re not imaging that it’s awful. The only thing that helped me was eating to stave off the nausea.

      I would not worry that you’re not attached to your embryo yet. :) right now it’s a tiny mass of cells making you feel terrible. I didn’t get attached to my baby until after she was born—and I referred to her as an embryo while I was pregnant until she was out of the embryo stage. Growing a new person is exhausting and can be very lonely, since you’re going through the actual experience alone. I think many women don’t bond with their babies until later, and that’s normal. And many women really don’t enjoy being pregnant (me!), despite what society often tells us/expects. For sure seek out any support you can, including from other pregnant women and moms.

    17. Observer*

      Some of this is normal, some is not.

      For most women it’s too early to feel much of anything for the baby – that tends to change when the baby quickens.

      The level of nausea you re describing seems stronger than most, so I would definitely talk to your OB about this. There is not always a lot that can be done about it, but do not allow your doctor to just blow you off. In the meantime somethings that are safe and that work for some women: Lemon drops, dry crackers or salty chips, ginger, avoiding plain water (even a few drops of lemon can help), almonds. None of these things work for all women, but they are worth trying.

      The sadness and isolation may be a problem. Pay enough attention to it to notice if it gets worse or keeps you from functioning. Also, it’s quite possible that once you start feeling better physically, you will start feeling better emotionally.

      Also, be aware that in most healthy pregnancy some of the issues you are seeing, especially the nausea, tends to abate. So you are not necessarily looking at 7 more months of misery.

      1. Observer*

        I just want to clarify something that I said that might be misunderstood.

        When I said that things tend to change around quickening, I did not mean that EVERY woman fall in love with or bonds with the baby or she’s bad mom! That’s a conventional narrative, and I am NOT trying to push that. What I meant is that for many women either quickening or kicking help the “baby” part of the pregnancy feel more real and give them something more to connect with. As others have noted, even that’s not universal, but it is much more common than at the very beginning of a pregnancy. That’s fine. It’s more enjoyable if you do connect with your baby, but it is not an indicator of anything significant if you don’t.

        And I’m going agree with people that if you think that sharing with others would help you feel less isolated, SHARE.

    18. First trimester woes*

      Thank you all so much for your responses. It made me cry…though that’s a low bar these days haha.

      Today I called my friend who is a parent and even though I think we have different emotional reactions to pregnancy, we have very similar first trimester experiences and it felt really good to vent about it to her. My husband and best friend are super supportive, but it made me feel less alone to talk about it with someone who has been there.

      I also appreciate the points about switching providers if needed. I have some mixed feelings about my current doc so it made me feel more confident about potentially looking around for other options. Thank you all for the support, it truly means a lot to me in this really difficult, weird time.

  30. fposte*

    I tried indoor skydiving! I didn’t even know about it until somebody here suggested it to me. There is no actual “diving” involved (I initially thought it was something like BASE jumping)–you’re basically floating on the air currents of a wind tunnel pointing up, so there were no heights involved at this point. You’re only in the tunnel for a minute at a time, and I did twice and learned basics of turning and reversing. Then the trainer did a demo, which is wild to watch, as she was swimming and acrobating in mid-air.

    It is weird and fun and not particularly physically taxing but wow, the noise is intense–my place offered earplugs and I used them and think they should be mandatory. I will probably do it again to do a “high flight” where you go up much higher in the tunnel; I was unprepared for the noise and wasn’t up for another go this time. Thank you for the suggestion!

    1. A Girl Named Fred*

      This is so cool, thank you for going and for sharing your experience! I think I remember seeing your post asking for suggestions on things to do – do you have plans to try any of the other things that were suggested to you? (I hope that was you in the thread a while back; my apologies if it wasn’t!) I’ve been meaning to try something like aerial silks for a while but haven’t gotten around to it… maybe I should actually work on that in the next couple weeks!

      1. fposte*

        That was me, and I absolutely plan to do others; I copy-pasted the post responses into my to-do list. I’m prioritizing the outdoor stuff while the weather permits (the indoor skydiving was combined with a garden tour nearby). I think aerial silks and a rock-climbing wall will be on the winter list–my physical therapist thinks I can’t pursue those on a regular basis due to shoulder issues but I can dip my toe in and see how my shoulder fares.

    2. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

      I’m glad you enjoyed it! I’ve never actually done it, but it’s been on my “someday” list for a while now :)

    3. The New Wanderer*

      My whole family went a few years ago – it was *amazing!* The kids did okay and weren’t too freaked out although they did not like all the noise (earplugs only worked okay, not great). It really is so loud, they teach you basic signs because you aren’t going to be heard at all if you yell. Also you’re kitted out in a jumpsuit, goggles, and a helmet.

      My husband and I paid the extra fee to do the high flights, which were worth it when we were already on an adrenaline high. I watched the flyers who went ahead of us and a few were doing some second or third sessions, so were learning how to steer. So I did what they did (it mostly involves rotating your hands and feet just a little) and got a little more out of my time in the tube because I could go up and down a few feet and turn on my own.

      We watched a few kids practice who are competitors in the region and they’re just amazing. One of the dads was telling us it’s been fun for his child but it’s quite expensive unless you can find a sponsor, and it’s hard to do as a demonstration sport because the narrowness and height of the wind tunnels make it hard to really get the full effect on video.

      10/10 would go again

  31. Llellayena*

    So my boyfriend and I are planning to move in together next spring/summer after I buy a house (my house, but he will be paying “rent,” no free rides!). I haven’t lived with anyone except my parents or my college dorm roommates. Does anyone have suggestions for things I should consider when planning for this? I’m more worried about living with *someone* than specifically living with *him.* I won’t discount info on the aspect of me being the owner of the house and him “renting” either.

    1. Washi*

      I think a big thing when only one person owns the house is the dynamic that his rent is helping to build your equity, plus any labor he puts into the house/yard. I had a dear friend who moved in with her serious boyfriend who she thought she was going to marry, and spent several years paying rent to him and doing a lot of work on the house together. When the relationship ended, she sort of had nothing to show for it and had to moved out, while he had gotten help paying his mortgage and increased the value of the house! Not that you two will inevitably break up, but I think it’s worth keeping an eye on “would this arrangement feel fair if the relationship ends?” My friend’s boyfriend didn’t deliberately take advantage of her, it’s just neither of them considered that possibility.

      1. Llellayena*

        This I’m aware of. I expect that he’ll have his own savings to grow for the “just in case” scenario. I’m buying the house within my own budget so I don’t need to rely on his contribution to afford it. He HAS lived with someone before (divorced) so I’m sure he’s aware of those pitfalls. But I’ll put this on the “topics to discuss” list.

      2. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

        Definitely a thing to talk about — my now-husband and I weren’t even engaged when I bought my house, but it was 100% my house, still is, our prenup says that my stuff is mine and his stuff is his, and he specifically didn’t want either the equity or the responsibility for the house. His viewpoint is, if he wasn’t living with me he’d be paying rent somewhere anyway, because he doesn’t want to be a homeowner, and I give him a way better deal than anywhere else would :P But if that wasn’t the case, it could get super messy.

    2. The Teapots Are on Fire*

      Plan together how you’ll put your and his things in the space. Have a good talk about basic housekeeping standards and chores, what you and he both think are standards of cleanliness and how you might divide the labor. You’ll have to develop household rhythms as you go, and maybe schedule regular times to talk about it. It’s often the little ways you differ in how to run your home and never thought about that end up causing weird resentments.

      1. Llellayena*

        Yeah, we’re long distance now, so when we see each other it’s for a whole weekend. So we have a small taste of daily habits and things, but the longer term “how I live” stuff may still pop up.

      2. Falling Diphthong*

        I was surprised how many chores soon broke down to one person doing them because it’s just more efficient that way. So be conscious of whether you are both okay with the breakdown as it is developing. This is going to be on both of you to speak up when there’s a problem, and to not figure your good intentions re cleaning the shower tile are just as good as cleaning the shower tile.

    3. Chilipepper attitude*

      I think the most important thing is communication. Set it up now that you are not sure how you will handle sharing your living space and that you want to communicate x way about it. Or that you want to set up that you want to create open communication in some way but don’t know what that will look like yet.

      I don’t think most of us know what will bother us and what will not until we are doing it. My husband and I are both comfortable with the other being in the bathroom with us no matter what we are doing but I know that not everyone shares that comfort level.
      And I tend to “leave things out” while he puts them way in a spot that, to me, is out on the counter! We have a big difference there that we did not anticipate.

      So if you find a mismatch, and you will!, communication about it is key.

    4. UKDancer*

      Get an agreement in place setting out how much rent and how often and what it includes and (if things go wrong) what the rules would be for him moving out. I think also decide what the rules are as regards cleaning (frequency and specifics) and putting things away.

      1. Llellayena*

        There are actually available legal documents for this, which I plan to get. They’re similar to an apartment lease but written with specific language for combined household kind of situations. There are free templates online.

        1. UKDancer*

          Oh that’s great, I’m glad you’ve already thought of this. It’s very sensible I think. My cousin moved his then girlfriend into his place and did not take my advice to have a formal agreement. Then he had great trouble with the moving out arrangements when the relationship imploded spectacularly. It saves a lot of unpleasantness to have everything written down.

    5. James*

      The biggest fights I’ve had with my wife are chores. We have different views about when dishes, laundry, vacuuming, and the like need done, and how they get done. It’s worth the time and aggravation of discussing this stuff up front. And both of you need to agree that if it’s the other person’s chore, they do it. Obviously if they’re not doing it there’s a problem, but no nit-picking of how things are done–don’t do it and don’t tolerated it. My wife complained so much about how I vacuumed that I finally told her I was done doing it, and haven’t vacuumed since (I still do the dishes, laundry, and other chores). That’s not great for a relationship.

      Entertainment is another issue. If one of you watches shows the other can’t stand, it’ll eventually cause friction. My wife and I deal with it by me traveling a lot–we can watch whatever we want when we’re apart, and find a balance when I’m home–but every relationship will be different. You’re GOING to have entertainment preferences that are incompatible; it’s inevitable. Figure out how to discuss it.

      Finally, expect to fight over things. Conflict is normal; any relationship without conflict is a relationship where one party has already checked out completely. How you deal with it, and remembering why you’re with this person, is the key. (That said, if you figure out the trick to handling this in the moment let me know!!!)

      1. Llellayena*

        Good thoughts. Chores we can probably figure out an even division, it’s on my “things to discuss” list. We do have some different entertainment tastes, but I’m getting a 2-3 bedroom house and he already owns 2 large TVs. We can watch in separate rooms. Fighting…yeah, we haven’t really had this yet but I’m sure it’ll come up. I don’t even know how to plan ahead for this since I don’t know how we’ll react.

      2. Clisby*

        You can avoid some of this by hiring a cleaning service to come in every couple of weeks. My husband and I, married 25 years, have never once argued over quality of vacuuming (???) because neither of us vacuums. Or mops the kitchen floor. Or cleans the bathrooms.

        1. James*

          It’s getting better now that the kids are older. They are doing more and more of the cleaning. They are, of course, complaining about it, but as I point out to them it’s good for them to known this stuff. Eventually they’ll need it. And while my wife and I still disagree on a few things regarding how a home should be organized they’ve become discussions about prioritization, rather than arguments–after all, we’re just discussing the criteria for evaluating whether the kids did a good job or not.

          We thought about a cleaning service, but it’s hard to find someone that is willing to put up with our large dogs. They’re super friendly, just….big. And after our experience with the lawn service we are hesitant to hire anyone else in. The first lawn guy was beyond fantastic, but after that it’s been hit and miss, with more misses than hits. Plus, we really don’t need the extra expense. We’ve more or less worked things out at this point, and it was a good exercise to go through in the long run.

          Ultimately, though, the concept still stands. Unless you’ve got a live-in maid you’re going to have to clean up after yourself, and people have different ideas of what constitutes “clean”. It’s worth discussing that in any relationship, and it’s worth putting the effort in to avoid the pitfalls associated with it.

    6. pieforbreakfast*

      Discuss expectations around house guests. I believe in offering accommodations to anyone needing it, my partner is the complete opposite. We have found ways to compromise, but there was an particularly tense occasion where I followed the “ask forgiveness vs permission” rule and it has had long term consequences.

      1. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

        Any level of visitors, not just overnight — my husband used to be the “I don’t think we even have house keys, the door is always open for anyone who wants to just pop over any time” type, and I wouldn’t let my own parents in if they didn’t give me advance notice they were coming.

        1. James*

          This could be me and my wife. Especially when we were kids, people would meander into my parents’ house all the time. A typical afternoon when we visit my family consists of the kids playing in a nearby (tiny) woods while the adults sit in the back yard and chat. A significant percentage of the town’s population meander through my parents’ back yard those days, so there’s no real point going to visit anyone–we’re at the hub, they’re coming to us. Distant cousins (like fourth cousins multiple times removed) have just showed up on the doorstep in the past, and it was considered normal.

          In contrast, my wife’s family expects a detailed itinerary 2 months in advance before we come visit. Surprise visitors are considered an inconvenience, and while they’re polite enough it’s very much that cold sort of polite that says “I’ll follow the social norms, but you need to go now”.

          It’s caused some problems in our relationship, especially visiting family. I consider visits to her family to be fairly stressful, as we always are on a deadline. She considers visits to my family boring and chaotic, because nothing is planned.

          1. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

            Oof. I don’t need an itinerary, but I am super introverted and need time to prep myself before being around people, especially having them in my space. Husband has decided that he actually prefers having the heads up before people appear, and does not miss being the social party house :)

      2. Llellayena*

        I think we’re both in the “let us know you’re coming enough in advance that we can clean, but sure!” category for guests. We’re part of a whole friend group that operates like that. But it’s worth a discussion.

    7. Glomarization, Esq.*

      (1) Go on a vacation together so you can spend some 24/7 time with each other and see how you feel.

      (2) Cohabitation agreements are a thing. Since real estate is part of the picture, I think it would be worth it to talk to a lawyer and/or accountant so that you 100% understand the legal and tax implications of taking rent.

      (3) Have some honest discussions about house cleaning and maintenance. It’s not that ideally you’re both exactly the same kind of neat freak or hoarder, but that your tolerances are complementary. For example, I hate having a dirty bathroom, and Mr. Glomarization doesn’t care as much as I do, so bathroom cleaning is “my” job. We both dislike vacuuming, but I hate it more, so vacuuming is “his” job. I’m particular about how my laundry is handled, so after it comes out of the washer, Mr. Glomarization separates my stuff out and then I hang it up while he tosses all of his into the dryer. And so on — the only thing we’re 100% in agreement with is keeping the car interior neat and empty. One of the incompatibilities I had with the first Mr. G. was that he tolerated messes and clutter a lot more than I do. It wasn’t the only thing wrong with that relationship, but it sure didn’t help.

      1. Llellayena*

        1) we’re currently long distance, so we already spend whole weekends together.
        2) already researched templates for cohabitation documents. Definitely on the list of things to do.
        3) yup. Based on random conversations so far, I think we’re about the same in this, but it’s on the “to be discussed” list. He already knows he’ll be in charge of dishes, because I hate them!

        1. Ann Non*

          As someone who went from long distance to living together, it is not the same to “already spend whole weekends”. You get your own space back at the beginning of the week. It is really different to live with someone. Go on vacation together for at least a week!

          Also agree on the rent thing– do you live in a place where renters’ rights are well protected? A friend of mine had a really hard time getting a room mate to move out of the apartment she owned where they lived together.

        2. allathian*

          My husband and I started out as an LDR, when I’d only see him on weekends. Even then, the first long vacation we had after nearly a year of dating exclusively was a bit of a shock, even if a happy one. Both of us had been single for several years before getting together, so learning to live in the same space as another person took a while.

          1. James*

            Things to look forward to…..My profession has me traveling a lot (not many field geologists work from home), so we’ve spent a LOT of time doing the long-distance thing, while we dated and since we got married. I’ve already looked into marriage councilors to help with the transition to me being home more if it ever happens. We get to deal with all the problems of newly-weds, without the honeymoon blissfulness to help out….

            There are the normal problems–I have my habits, she has hers, and how do we get them to sync up? Then there are the more insidious problems. It’s really, really easy to get into habits that work over a weekend or a week or two, but which are destructive in the long term. For example, when I’m home now the focus is on making her life easier while I’m gone. Doing certain chores, her having the opportunity to leave the house without the kids, medical appointments, all sorts of stuff, all geared towards making her life easier. And that’s fine for now. It’s annoying–I essentially get no recovery time–but it’s the nature of the beast and what we both signed up for. (And I do get recovery time, to be clear, just not as much as I’d like.) The problem is, that model of the relationship continues on, even if I’m home for a few months. When I’m leaving in 48 hours that’s fine; when I’m leaving in 60 days, not so much.

            Boundaries are another issue. It’s really, really hard to establish healthy boundaries for long-term cohabitation when you only see each other a short time each week. You don’t know what you need yet, and it’s really easy to dismiss the other person’s concern because it’s only going to be a few days, can’t they just put up with it? It’s only a few days; I’m not going to make waves and ruin what little time we have together! When days turn into months and years, that’s the sort of grit that grinds relationships to a halt. I’ve seen a lot of relationships go sour in my career, and while the final straw is usually one party or the other cheating, the real problems always start with this sort of minor-seeming thing.

            There are solutions to this, obviously. But it’s good to know what the potential pitfalls are.

    8. Blue wall*

      I’m sorry this comment isn’t more specific, but about two or three years ago a few questions like this came up in the open thread and had some really rich comments (there was a spate of them for a few months!). Maybe see if you can find those threads, or another commenter might recall them.

    1. Dwight Schrute*

      Can explain why? I have basically zero idea what’s going on in the world of baseball but I live in Ga so I’m curious!

      1. Lady Alys*

        I can’t support the Astros because of the cheating scandal (which may not have been resolved), and my mother couldn’t stand the whole “tomahawk” thing with the Braves so I don’t root for them to honor her memory (go Cubs!).

      2. Glomarization, Esq.*

        Houston Cheaters vs. Atlanta Racistnames. (This year’s been lousy with cheaters in pro sports championships: Super Bowl LV had Cheater McTrumpFan leading the Buccaneers vs. the Kansas City Racistnames.) We couldn’t even watch the last game against the Dodgers because of the disgusting tomahawk chop “song” the audience wouldn’t stop doing.

        Gag me with a spoon, spring training and pre-season can’t come soon enough.

    1. CatCat*

      I thought it was really well done considering it’s such a challenging story to tell in a movie. I did wonder if it would be as enjoyable to someone who had never read the book as for someone who had.

      I watched it on HBO and do wish I had seen it in the movie theater instead. The visuals were great and I think would have been truly awesome in a movie screen, especially scenes with big line ups of troops outside huge ships, desert vistas, and the sand worms. Performances were solid. I particularly liked Rebecca Ferguson as Jessica.

      The movie ends kind of abruptly and for me, in a spot where the book starts to get the most interesting when Paul and Jessica are going with the Fremen. I hope they will do the second half!!

      1. Spessartine*

        Oh do see it in a theater! I saw it in IMAX on Thursday and then watched it at home last night. Granted my TV is just a generic 60″ and my sound system is garbage, but I was shocked at the difference. The Voice, in particular, just smashes you in the face in the theater in a way it doesn’t at home (although I’m sure some people have sound systems at home that do it justice).

        I thought it was really well done too, with the caveat that it’s been y e a r s since I read the book. I saw it with my sister, whose only exposure to Dune is the two Sci-Fi Channel miniseries–also a very long time ago–and she seemed to follow pretty well. I did explain a couple things in more depth afterwards but nothing major. I think it mostly suffered from time limitations and I wish they’d bumped the run time up to 3 hours. Regrettable but also understandable.

    2. L. Ron Jeremy*

      Graphics were great, story not so much. If it makes enough $$$ there may be a part 2 in several years.

      Not holding my breath.

    3. Elizabeth West*

      Not yet, but I follow Marshall Julius on Twitter (and he follows me; why, I have no idea—probably bc we’re both huge nerds). He said he really liked it and the way he talked about it made me want to see it. I said as much and then David Dastmalchian (who is in it) liked my tweet. I nearly died; I love him!

      I’ve never read the books, though I did see the movie with Kyle MacLachlan and Sting. It was okay but I don’t remember that much about it.

    4. Still*

      I’ve seen it without having any previous experience of the story (well, if you discount the time tried listening to the audiobook and gave up after the scene with the box; nothing to do with the book, I just can’t stand audiobooks!) and liked it a lot.

      The music and aesthetics gave it a very otherworldly feeling (I really liked the insect-like helicopters, I thought they were a great fit. But I did find it really funny how everyone seemed to be wearing plain black sneakers with their outfit – I suppose there’s no reason they shouldn’t have rubber-soled sneakers but it felt out of place, like the costumes department just hoped nobody would notice).

      A thing that surprised me were the great, warm, affectionate relationships between the men in the film. I was expecting a very stiff and formal father-son relationship, but it turned out to be full of love, respect, and support instead. The main character’s relationship with his uncle was similarly great, and I was very pleasantly surprised when, upon the arrival on the desert planet, the main character broke out of line and run forward to hug the general. I would have expected that to be completely unacceptable and breaking of protocol, but instead it seemed like those close friendships and affectionate gestures were completely normal and expected. I loved it.

      Oh, and I throughly enjoyed the fight scenes! I loved the bursts of very short, precise, powerful movements. Everybody gave the impression that they knew what they were doing, and even Jason Mamoa killing dozens of people by himself didn’t break my suspension of disbelief.

    5. bunniferous*

      I saw it yesterday -IMAX-this movie is absolutely IMAX worthy! The pacing of the story might seem slow if you are used to Marvel type movies-but the cinematography is incredible and everything was so well done. I am already jonesing for Part 2.

      I think it is helpful if you are at least familiar with the storyline. I read the book ages ago and have not seen any other versions.

      Also, total agreement with the posters that talked about the positive male relationships. So good to see those!

    6. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

      I really enjoyed it. The casting was just phenomenal, pretty much universally.

    7. Incessant Owlbears*

      We watched it last night and loved it. The casting was really good. I didn’t think their Paul would be able to pull off the intensity he needs later in the story, but then he surprised me. Plus he looks so much like a blend of the two parents. The costumes, sets, scene design were stunning. The blend of on-location shooting with CGI was flawless. I felt they handled the religious and cultural differences well. The pacing let the story build but it never felt slow to me. I was going to pause halfway through for food, but it sucked me in so I didn’t. The soundtrack took a back seat, as it should, but enhanced the storytelling. I definitely want another movie from this team!

    8. allathian*

      Yeah, we saw it in theater, a Sunday matinee showing and the theater was nearly sold out. Solid performances, and finally a version that did the book justice. I’m really hoping that they’ll get the second part made.

  32. hoggums*

    I’m currently taking a grad school class (as a non-degree student). It’s a GIS class and the software makes my computer so slow. On my last assignment it made my computer so slow that some items that should have taken about an hour max took over 12. Right up until the last 5 minutes I seriously thought I could submit on time but it was just so slow that I turned it in about 40 minutes late.

    I was so stressed out and anxious from the slowness that I didn’t even think to send an email to just say “hey, I ran into serious computer troubles and submitted late, is there any possibility of partial credit” – for some reason in my anxious mind it was either have a “good” excuse or don’t say anything at all so I chose not to say anything at all. Now that I’m in a normal headspace, I realize that was such a bad decision.

    This all took place Sunday the 16th, and the class ends tomorrow (final project due tomorrow and grades due Nov 5). Do you think it’s too late to send an email like that? And if not, what should I say? I just looked back at one of the intro to class videos and he said he generally doesn’t accept late assignments so I’m freaking out now as that would mean a 0 on the assignment and it’s worth 16% of my grade (I swear I read somewhere before that it was a late penalty , not just 0 :( ). So far I don’t have any grade yet in the gradebook, it’s just blank.

    1. Team9to5*

      It’s never too late. Send the email! Explain what happened in a few sentences and clearly state what you’re looking for. As a teacher, I never scrutinize the reasons a student gives for having a missing/late assignment; I just try to figure out what they’re asking for so I can decide if it’s possible.

      1. hoggums*

        Thank you, I’ll email him. It just feels so awkward doing it after almost a week :( If he even gives me a 50% on the assignment I would be ok with it as I could still get an A- in the class. The main reason I care about my grade is I am applying to grad school this month (I was taking this class to test the waters) and so I really don’t want my most recent grade to be a B-!!

    2. Opinions, I've Had a Few*

      I’m sure I’ll get roasted for this but:

      You can try, but don’t be surprised if a stressed out faculty member doesn’t respond well. As a faculty member, it’s really frustrating when a student comes at you late in the term after the fact with excuses about why they think they deserve special treatment. No matter what, it feels disingenuous. If you’re asking for lenience, then in the spirit of fairness, the faculty member has to extend that to everyone regardless of their situations and that creates more work for the faculty member.

      In the future, always be as proactive as you can. It’s so much easier to deal with issues at the time rather than try and figure it out after.

      1. hoggums*

        Yes I’ve definitely learned my lesson. I don’t know why I didn’t just email him right away when I submitted it late, it was such a dumb decision.

        1. Purple Cat*

          Ask, and as opinions says, they might say no, but it can’t hurt to try.
          I think it would be better to send the email as soon as possible before you get the grade back, so it doesn’t feel like it’s in specific reaction to the grade you’re getting.

          1. fueled by coffee*

            It can’t hurt to try, so long as you’re understanding that this is the professor’s policy. Personally, I would probably just grade an assignment turned in within an hour of the deadline like normal, since it’s not worth the hassle of the subsequent back-and-forth over grades. And I believe in flexibility for students because sometimes life happens.

            Buuuuuuuut… it’s also completely within the professor’s rights to expect you to submit assignments on time or communicate in a timely manner about needing an extension. Especially if they fall into some kind of marginalized demographic, or if it’s a humanities or humanities adjacent class, where I’ve noticed students are way more likely to ask for extensions because their straight/white/male engineering/chemistry/economics professors definitely won’t, or because women professors are supposed to be ‘nice,’ or because Ethnic Studies 101 is supposed to be an ‘easy’ class.

      2. J.B.*

        I graduated in May 2020 with a master’s degree. I completely missed one of my exams, the first time in my life I’d done that. I was incredibly grateful for the flexibility the professor gave and the university continues to give flexibility to students.

      3. Observer*

        If you’re asking for lenience, then in the spirit of fairness, the faculty member has to extend that to everyone regardless of their situations and that creates more work for the faculty member.

        That’s just not true. I’m not saying that the OP should “expect” lenience. And I do agree that it would have been better to email at the time. But still, an instructor generally does have the discretion to extend leniency to someone who had computer problems and explained this vs someone who just handed their work in late.

    3. No Tribble At All*

      Ask! Specifically cite the example that it took 12 hours to run something that was supposed to take 1.

    4. Overeducated*

      You might as well explain since it might be understandable to the professor (but you may get the response “you need to give me advance notice this time”). I use GIS on a work laptop that is standard issue, I.e. not chosen for use with software that uses a ton of processing power, and it takes MUCH longer than it did on my old grad school laptop. Sometimes it just hangs. This is not an uncommon problem.

      1. hoggums*

        Yeah the last part of the project (why I kept thinking it would be done “any minute now”) was me trying to put four maps in a layout and add scale bar, title, etc. For the first assignment I did back in September, this only took about 30 minutes but this most recent one literally took me all day because it was just so slow to load, the screen would go blank for like 10 minutes to reload the graphics if I resized something, the legend would disappear etc. It was super frustrating because the actual “work” part of the assignment went smoothly and was completed with many hours to spare, it was just making the final layouts that killed me!

        1. Overeducated*

          Been. There. So frustrating.

          FWIW I just had to start planning for that to happen – starting way in advance just in case, or when it was something where someone asked me for a map, giving them a waaaaay overinflated estimate of how long it would take. Because sometimes even something super simple can hang the program (if you’re using the market-dominating one). Unfortunately this will probably not be an isolated incident for you. Good luck with the professor!

    5. hoggums*

      If anyone reads this later and is interested, the professor replied and said the class doesn’t even have a late policy and it is fine. Stressed for nothing haha

      1. Observer*

        Wow. I’m glad to hear it!

        I posted before reading the whole thread… But I will repeat my advice about check the actual requirements for any software that you use. Not the formal requirements on the box, because often all that means is “that’s what you need for this program to get past the splash screen”. But the “preferred” configuration, ie what you need for this thing to actually run acceptably.

    6. Observer*

      Send the email. It can’t hurt.

      For future reference, find out what the REAL software requirements are for any software you need to use in advance or at the beginning of the class. If you see anything that sparks concerns, talk to the instructor or school to find out what options you have.

  33. RMNPgirl*

    I had gastric sleeve surgery this past week. Working on just getting in water and protein shakes and dealing with some spasms and nausea.

    I’m still in the thought process of what in the world did I do to myself? So anyone who has been through this or knows people who have been through it, I would love to hear any advice or words of encouragement.

    1. The Other Dawn*

      Congrats!

      I had gastric bypass almost eight years ago. Getting in the water, protein shakes, and bariatric vitamins in the beginning is a fulltime job and requires thought and planning. These three things are very important.

      I can’t speak for sleeve recovery, but your new stomach should start to settle down within a couple months as it learns to adjust to a new diet. With gastric bypass, tolerating foods can be a total crap shoot and varies widely from person to person. Some foods bothered me in the beginning, like hard boiled eggs and chicken, and some didn’t. Within about a year I got to a point where I can tolerate any food I eat. Thankfully there isn’t any food now that bothers my stomach, although I’m very sensitive to sugar. I knew someone whose husband had the same surgery and he couldn’t tolerate any meats at all, even 10 years later.

      Walk, walk and walk some more! Even though the weight will start to fly off pretty fast, you still need to exercise, if only to develop the habit. Eventually you’ll be out of the “honeymoon phase” and will need to eat right and exercise just like everyone else in order to continue losing weight and keep it off.

      Lastly, develop non-food coping mechanisms. Our stomachs are much, much smaller after surgery, so if we have a bad day, we can’t just scarf down half a pizza (or more…) or whatever we did before. It physically can’t fit. Along those lines, just because your stomach is much smaller now doesn’t mean you can’t overeat and gain weight. I might only be able to fit maybe one cup of cottage cheese or half a burger in my stomach at a time, but I can go back in another half hour to 45 minutes and eat more without a problem since the food has started digesting. I can also consume a good amount of very high calorie foods/drinks and regain the weight.

    2. Squeebird*

      My mother-in-law had this surgery some years ago, and while I don’t know the particulars, I do know that she 100% does not regret it. It did wonders for her physical and mental health. I know it’s different for everyone but it was well worth it for her. I hope your outcome is the same!

  34. Ok to Wake Clock*

    Recommendations on an “ok to wake” clock for preschooler?

    Bonus points if it has a second setting that can be programmed for nap time.

    Extra bonus points if it can have a different wake up time for weekends!!

    1. reply all*

      Maybe not your solution but what worked for us was a digital clock and we used black tape to cover the minutes and told our son he could get out of bed/ call to mom and dad on the monitor when it says 7. I was skeptical about it working but it does 90% of the time

    2. Elf*

      The Mirari OK to Wake is great, we have multiple in use for years with both kids. Has the nap setting. Does not have a different weekend time, but PLEASE don’t do that; it is basically jetlagging your kids and it is even worse for them than it is for an adult.

  35. Writer Worries*

    I typed up a 350 word background for this, but am worried the person the question is about might read this blog, so I’ll sum it up as this: Lucy, who I do not have a close relationship with but am obligated to be “nice” to, found out I’m editing a novel manuscript for my best friend and is “so interested” in it.

    She asked if editing is a side gig for me, if my best friend is paying me, what the novel is about, etc. I vaguely answered that it’s not a side gig, I’m doing it for free. (We critique each other’s manuscripts.) Lucy wants to know what the novel is about and if my best friend is posting it online. My best friend actually self-publishes, but if I say that the next question will be for their name. The idea of Lucy looking my best friend up feels icky (I don’t want her encroaching on my personal life), and she has boundary issues so I worry she’ll start contacting them.

    Should I just ignore her questions? Or is there a way to politely decline giving more info?

    1. Chilipepper attitude*

      “Wow, you really want more information about this manuscript!”
      “This is not my manuscript so its not mine to share or share info about.”

      1. Writer Worries*

        Oh, that’s perfect because it’s true! It’s not my manuscript so I have no right to be divulging info on it!

    2. It's Quarantime!*

      “Oh, the author is super private about their works in progress. Sharing details has been discouraged. But I have been reading this great book by so and so…..”
      And then never mention the editing gig again.

      1. fposte*

        Yes, agreed. The pivot to something else is really important, so you’ve stopped setting the topic up for a return volley.

      2. Falling Diphthong*

        Thirding the pivot.

        Lucy might imagine that she is making casual conversation rather than prying.

        1. Writer Worries*

          She initially asked me like five questions about it, and I simply said, “Editing isn’t a side gig for me. I’m doing this for free since they’re my best friend.” Then I wrote a paragraph about a fantastic Netflix show I’m watching and asked if they had any recommendations for what to watch next (a pivot attempt). Lucy responded with, “Oh yeah, that’s a great show,” then went on about how it’s “wild” and “impressive” that I’m editing something for free, and asked more questions (including repeating ones she’d already asked). She kind of ignores social cues. :/

            1. Writer Worries*

              I like how you think! If she keeps prying after I explain that it’s not my manuscript, so I can’t share any info about it, I’ll just start ignoring the questions.

          1. Not So NewReader*

            The next time she asks something consider saying something along the lines of, “Oh jeepers, twenty thousand questions. I am sorry I mentioned this book. Please respect my friend’s privacy and let’s talk about something else.”

            If she is bad at social cues, then you are going to need to clearly say what action is necessary on her part. If she asks again, you can reference this conversation. “Remember, I asked that we respect my friend’s privacy?”

      3. Writer Worries*

        Saying they’re “private” about their work is a good way to discourage more questions! (It’d be pretty obnoxious for her to keep asking questions if I point out it’s a matter of privacy over someone else’s work.)

    3. Dark Macadamia*

      Just say part of the deal is privacy and your friend will let you know if/when they’re okay with you promoting it to others (so you’re not going to ask, because you know the answer will be no). Also have an answer prepared in case Lucy starts asking you to edit HER work, or other things like “oh I have this great idea but I’m not a writer, you should write it for me!”

      1. Writer Worries*

        If she wants me to edit for her, I’m all “booked up” doing edits for my friend, right? :)

        1. Jean (just Jean)*

          Absolutely! You’re editing for your friend, her friend, her cousin’s best friend, the cousin’s next-door neighbor, and the retired admiral down the street. You’re also working overtime, painting your house with a watercolor brush, growing all your vegetables in windowsill containers, and alphabetizing your sock collection. In other words you are doing everything up to and beyond tasting ice cream, testing mattresses and covertly plotting surprise parties. If H**l freezes over you’re making a run to the store for mittens. You have no free time, no how no way, and you’re booked for the next five centuries.

          (Resisting unwanted choices is a topic currently close to my heart. Yesterday I had to ask the caller who wanted me to reconsider my subscription cancellation, “What part of NO is not clear?!”)

          1. Writer Worries*

            “Painting your house with a watercolor brush.” LOL!!!!! You’re good at making elaborate excuses. :)

            I hear you on the subscription cancellation. Switching cell phone providers and canceling cable and canceling my only ever magazine subscription was such a huge pain. ):<

    4. RagingADHD*

      “I can’t tell you. My friend isn’t ready to go public, and this is encroaching on their privacy. I’m sorry I even mentioned it. Please, let’s just talk about something else. “

      1. Writer Worries*

        My best friend already has 3 books published, but Lucy doesn’t know that, so I could actually just pretend they “aren’t ready to go public” yet!

        1. ronda*

          does your friend want to sell her 3 published books?

          give Lucy a link to buy the previously published books.

          tell her when friend is ready for others to see this one, it will be available for sale at same source.

          you can ask your friend if she would rather Lucy not be given her published book info since you fear Lucy will be inappropriate, but maybe she would want to have the chance of a sale.

          1. Writer Worries*

            Nah, they’re my best friend. They value me more than a few potential book sales. And they already know Lucy has issues they wouldn’t want to deal with. (I’ve told them about Lucy having unreasonable expectations and not accepting “no” for an answer and making up stories of things I supposedly said that were not at all what I said.) It’s better to be polite but keep some distance with Lucy.

        2. RagingADHD*

          They aren’t going public with this one yet.

          If you want to support your friend’s sales you can do as ronda says and/or tell Lucy that you’ll be sure to tell everyone when this book is published so she can buy it.

          Between you, me and the lamppost, intensely curious people tend to magically lose their burning curiosity when it comes to paying their own $5 or whatever.

    5. allathian*

      At some point, you’re going to have to decide whether this is a hill worth dying on. If Lucy’s this bad about keeping boundaries, to get her off your back you may need to tell her straight that your friend’s writing is on the forbidden subjects list from now on, even if you have to say it in a way that Lucy decides to take offence at.

      And maybe from now on, seriously reconsider how much you’re willing to share with Lucy about any subject. Stick to talking about the weather or other similarly innocuous stuff. Don’t tell her anything even vaguely interesting about yourself, and she’ll probably go somewhere else eventually. Gray rocking works.

      That said, if your friend is serious about making it as a professional author, having Lucy pay for and read her books isn’t the same as looking your friend up.

  36. Potatoes gonna potate*

    What’s a non-serious hill that you’re willing to die on?

    (Goes without saying that this would be something silly and not damaging to any relationships etc).

    1. Potatoes gonna potate*

      For me it’s getting a coffee maker. Idc how amazing or simple or cheap they are, I just won’t. Weird but there ya go.

      1. Writer Worries*

        For me it’s not drinking coffee, lol.

        I drank it once, was not impressed. I drink tons of tea, so I have no need for other warm beverages. But people are always so aghast that I don’t want to drink coffee they make or go to Starbucks to get some special flavor or whatever. They insist I just need to find the right coffee and I’ve love it. I don’t understand they can accept that I don’t drink soda, but not drinking coffee is mystifying. People are very passionate about it.

        1. tangerineRose*

          I don’t like coffee either! I’ve tried it, it’s too bitter, and I’m not interested in putting in enough sugar and milk to make it OK.

          1. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

            YES. And I also can’t do tea, wine, beer, or dark chocolate for the same reasons, and people get SO OBNOXIOUS about it.

            1. Speaks to Dragonflies*

              I hearby formally claim RRtAF’s share of dark chocolate they hath proclaimed to not want for now and from this day forward! BWAAAHAAHAahaaaahaaahaaaaaahaaaaaaaaa

              1. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

                Sorry, husband has dibsed my share of tea, wine and chocolate, and housemate saves me from coffee :) but you can have the beer!

                1. Speaks to Dragonflies*

                  Well darnit…I gave up drinking when I found out it gives me migraines…oh well.Thanks for the offer.

    2. Chilipepper attitude*

      Not making the bed.
      It is so stupid, you will just get back in it tonight! And I feel like exposing the sheets to the light and air is more hygienic than covering them.
      I tried making it every morning for 2 months to see if the habit formed or if I actually liked seeing it made.
      I do not care and I did not develop a routine.

      Husband likes it made so he makes it. If I’m there I help bc I love him, but I usually am up and almost out before he gets up so he does it on his own.

      1. banoffee pie*

        You’re right, it’s been proven not making the bed is more hygienic. I never make it either. I’m glad at least one other person agrees with me. I’m sick of people acting like it’s messy not to make the bed ;)

        1. Jean (just Jean)*

          I’m taking a number and getting in line. Making the bed is note even on the list of Things I Gotta Do.

        2. Writer Worries*

          I read the thing about how exposing sheets to sunlight and airflow discourages dust mites, but I’d have to actually arrange my sheets/bedspread in a way to expose them to more sunlight and air flow instead of just leaving the sheets covered by my bedspread after I get out of bed. So if I have to take time to arrange them anyway, I figure I might as well just make my bed so it looks neat and I can feel okay about throwing stuff on top of it (like tossing a hoodie there, or moving stuff from my desk there when working from home).

          I agree that it’s annoying to do when you’re just going to “unmake” that night though!

        3. Bagpuss*

          I generally leave mine ‘open’ during the day to air, then make it when I get home and change after work. But I use a duvet so it doesn’t need much making.

      2. allathian*

        I never make my bed either, but that’s because I only use the bedroom for sleeping. When I lived in a small apartment and the bed doubled as my couch, you bet I made it every morning.

    3. CatCat*

      Toilet paper goes OVER on the roll, not under. J’accuse! my spouse of violating this on the regular.

        1. Wishing You Well*

          Do you notice all the nail polish scrapes on the women’s bathroom wall when maintenance installs the toilet paper in the “under” position? I do. Ick.

      1. Falling Diphthong*

        This right here.

        When replacing a broken toilet paper holder my husband oriented the roll vertically, and I secretly suspect this was to get around my over-the-top insistence.

        1. CatCat*

          Ha! We had a vertical holder at our old place. This over/under thing has only come up at our new place, LOL.

        2. Elizabeth West*

          One of my hills to die on is that I HATE vertical paper towel holders. It’s difficult to find a horizontal one (and then it’s over, not under).

          1. fposte*

            There are weighted ones that you can use one-handed (I have one)–would that solve the problem for you or is it just lust for horizontality?

      2. Potatoes gonna potate*

        I bypass this all by putting the roll on the ledge of the bathtub which is like a quick reach in front of me. over-under who? lol

      3. Cordelia*

        Over is obviously right and I will die with you on this hill. I rearrange it in other people’s houses, restaurants, offices as needed. This is very rude, according to my sister, but I still do it each time I use the bathroom at her house. Because she is wrong.

      4. marvin the paranoid android*

        My controversial toilet paper take is that I aggressively don’t care which way it goes. Sometimes I try to remember to put it back on the way it was before, but I always forget. I reject the TP binary!

      5. Book the Ninth*

        Hard disagree. I have a cat who will happily unspool the whole thing if it is over rather than under.

        1. allathian*

          My parents cats were the same way, and it’s been under ever since, even if their cats died 5 years ago.

    4. Admiral Thrawn Is Blue*

      The quality of my iced tea and biscuits. I am born and bred Southerner…. do NOT mess with those things!

      1. marvin the paranoid android*

        I concur, and further submit: the tea goes in the mug (or pot) before the water.

    5. Squidhead*

      Oxford commas.
      Woven towels are for drying dishes; terrycloth towels are for hands and bodies.
      Clean the house before you go out of town so it’s not waiting for you when you come back.
      [Food] is gross and you won’t convince me otherwise. (Not trying to target anyone’s favorite thing here!)

    6. FashionablyEvil*

      Oxford comma. I cringe when people don’t use them.

      And OMG, toilet paper goes over the top. What is wrong with you heathens putting it under!?

    7. Not A Manager*

      Will not listen to Steely Dan. At all, ever. My friends know to change the station if they come on. I will walk out of a store if they’re on the playlist. That band literally makes me want to jump out of my skin. I don’t have this reaction to any other music, or to anything else, really.

      1. Jean (just Jean)*

        Interesting. I share your Steely Dan dislike, but mine is only at grit-my-teeth-and-grimly-bear-it level. OTOH I stormed out of Chuck E Cheese the first and only time I entered a franchise, aka a dimly lit but visually and auditorialy overstimulating environment that encourages innocent children to crave and strive to win cheap, flimsy toys. It’s basically a casino for anyone under, say, age 10. I also assigned my spouse to take our child to any and all Chipmunk movies. It’s too debilitating for family (and friends and onlookers) when I lose my composure in public.

        1. Potatoes gonna potate*

          I call Charles Egbert Cheese the child rat casino. Went in 2011ish for neices & nephews parties. I’m vowing I’ll never take my kid to it. but who knows.

          1. Disco Janet*

            I said the same thing. But the kids love it and it’s by FAR the cheapest place to throw a birthday party. Here’s how it happens: they get invited to a party there that you don’t feel like you can say no to (close friend or relative, not a day you’re busy, kid wants to go, etc.) They love it. They beg to have their birthday there, and for a small group of kids it costs pretty much the same as having a party at home – but you don’t have to do any cleaning or set up. I now have no shame about the ease of Chuck E. Cheese parties.

        2. Falling Diphthong*

          Two Chuck E Cheese anecdotes:
          • I suspect that my sister-in-law has never been inside a Chuck E Cheese, outsourcing that to the “fun” young aunt and uncle.
          • I tried to teach some six year olds a valuable lesson about gambling when they hit on the “put in a token and try to push the sea of tokens over the edge” game. Their very first try tripped the machine: lights flashing, siren wooing, tokens pouring out the bottom, three ecstatic boys scooping them up.

      2. Filosofickle*

        Lol, decades ago ago I drove cross country with my brother and I banned Steely Dan and Dire Straits from the car. I don’t mind them now but then? Definitely my hill. (The kicker: We both collected our tapes for the car, which was new to me, only to find out the tape deck wasn’t working so we were stuck with the radio for thousands of miles. Based on that trip now I have a Tom Petty aversion.)

      3. My Hill is The Beatles*

        I am exactly this way with The Beatles. Their music was fine, whatever, and I get they were very of-the-moment once upon a time, but I don’t think their music has held up at all. And it doesn’t help that the DJ on the radio station I listen to most has a Sunday morning show all about a band that been defunct for how many decades now? If I never hear the phrase “Sir Paul” ever again, I’ll be quite happy! The radio station must be changed immediately if a Beatles song comes on. Immediately!

        1. James*

          Seconded, with Elvis tossed in this bin as well. I get why someone would enjoy it, but at the end of the day there is far better music out there. And the Beatles fanatics only make it worse. I get that they enjoy the music and want to defend it, but it should be okay to have differing opinions. We don’t all need to bow down and worship the ground the band walked on!!

      4. PollyQ*

        Neil Young for me. Maybe he’s as great a musician as everyone claims, but I absolutely cannot stand the sound of his voice.

        1. Chauncy Gardener*

          Bob Dylan for me. Yes, I get that he’s a poet and defined a whole generation etc, but please don’t make me listen to that man sing! It’s like nails on a chalkboard to me

      5. I take tea*

        My “change station or leave immediately” is rap and sport commentary. Something about the staccato, breathless sound makes my skin crawl and if forced to listen I will start hyperventilating. It certainly doesn’t help that a lot of rap is rather aggressive and sports generally bore me, but it doesn’t matter if I don’t understand a word of it, it’s just impossible for me to listen to it.

        1. Jean (just Jean)*

          I get this way with radio commentators with whom I disagree. Kudos to the folks who listen to find out what the “other side” is saying! Me, I’m too busy trying to stay calm. It’s usually less than 30 seconds before I change the station.

      1. banoffee pie*

        This is a bit niche but those people who do tiny, crappy second serves just over the net in tennis. As if they’re so slick and you’re going to fall for it and be like ‘nooo, you fooled me.’ Arghh. Makes me see red. Have some self-respect people lol

      2. Admiral Thrawn Is Blue*

        Ohhhh You Give Love a Bad Name was the first MTV video I ever watched. They are awesome! And Jon seems to have such a good heart too.

        1. StellaBella*

          +1 he does. With the JBJ Soul Kitchen and the Soul Foundation and the work on housing, among other things, he does as does his wife Dorothea.

          1. Jean (just Jean)*

            Nice to read about Bon Jovi’s good heart. (No disrespect intended! I enjoy his music if it comes on the radio but otherwise rarely think about him.) It gives me a warm fuzzy feeling to read that someone who has attained fame and fortune has also found ways to use both to help others.

    8. Dwight Schrute*

      Sheets need to be washed twice a month at a minimum. I don’t know how people go longer than two weeks without washing them

      1. Zona the Great*

        Gah! It’s weekly or nothing!!! I’d sooner sleep out in a hammock than sleep on week-old sheets.

        1. MissCoco*

          Do I live with you?
          I now just change the orientation of the roll when my partner replaces it upside down, and appreciate that there is toilet paper where I want it when needed. In my heart of hearts though I know that i

          1. MissCoco*

            Whoops! Obviously a nesting fail
            But Zona, how would you feel if the hammock hadn’t been washed for 2 weeks? ;)

      2. *daha**

        I was in a university bookstore that sold disposable(!) sheets. The claim was that their antimicrobial properties would keep them smelling fresh for a month, and then you would toss them. The cost was the same $30 I was used to paying for actual poly-cotton sheets at the time.

      3. Blomma*

        Oh no, all my bedding gets washed every weekend! And I shower at night so the sheets stay relatively clean. I have a longhair cat and there’s so. much. cat hair. that I just have to wash everything weekly.

    9. RussianInTexas*

      Condiments like ketchup, mayo, mustard, etc, in sandwichesgo on meat and veggies, but do not touch the cheese.
      Toilet paper goes over.

    10. Foreign Octopus*

      Books first then movies.

      Don’t be coming at me saying that you like to watch movies first and then read the book because I’ll suspect you’re a nefarious character and are not to be trusted.

      1. Little beans*

        This isn’t my hill to die on but I agree. I’ve never seen a movie that was better than the book it was based on.

        1. Clisby*

          Mostly true but I can think of at least 2. The movie versions of Carrie and Jaws are both way better than the books they were based on. Carrie because, at least at that point in his career, Stephen King was a TERRIBLE writer; and Jaws because the book introduced this ridiculous, irrelevant plot where the police chief’s wife has an affair with the shark expert. People! There’s a giant shark out there eating people! Nobody cares about anybody’s sex life! Move on.

        2. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

          I have a whole list of movies that were better than the books — but in my defense, that’s because I have literally no ability to mentally visualize, and some books are dependent on the idea that you can track what’s happening in your mind’s eye, and it’s so exhausting for me to try to keep track of all of it that if someone’s made a movie that can take the visual load off, I am much better able to enjoy the story. (JRR Tolkien, I am looking at you. :P )

        3. ronda*

          usually, but

          the princess bride is a good tie, such a great cast.

          arrival was much better in movie form. (it was based on a short story tho, so maybe different than a whole novel)

          1. Falling Diphthong*

            Now that we’re in peak TV I think a good rule of adaptation is:
            novella –> movie
            book –> TV series

            Trying to cut a book down to a movie leaves too much on the floor, most of the time.

            (I was glad that I didn’t know what was coming in Arrival, but also that it introduced me to Ted Chiang. His Dark Materials is a great adaptation of the book trilogy.)

            I wish someone would make World War Z into a movie or series–the actual movie based on the book took only the title and the presence of zombies. After the success of things like Modern Love or Black Mirror, where the cast changes each episode, I think audiences would sign on for a bunch of short stories about different people trying to survive the apocalypse. Where the resolution depends on all those different people trying things, not on One Lone Hero.

        4. Loredena Frisealach*

          Much as I loved the book, read first – the Princess Bride was better as a movie! (Of course, the author was primarily a script writer, so…)

          I think I actually like the Lord of the Rings movies better too – mostly because the books haven’t aged that well since I first read them back in the dark ages (aka late 70s)

      2. small town*

        This is profoundly true. I have avoided some movies because I likes the book so much. (Chocolat and News of the World)

      3. allathian*

        I’ve done both. I first read all of LotR after I’d seen the first movie. I can appreciate both for what they are, and the differences mostly don’t bother me.

    11. Jean (just Jean)*

      – Replace the savory spices on the spice rack in alphabetical order. (Store sweet and overflow savory spices in the cupboard, where alphabetical order is less strictly observed.)
      – Cleaning tools and products may migrate from the kitchen to the bathroom, but never in the other direction.
      – Set down keys, eyeglasses, phone, wristwatch, wedding rings, purse, hat, and tote bag du jour by the front door, near my desk, or (select items only) in a specific dresser drawer.
      Sell tickets when I break the last rule and have to run frantically around re-gathering everything before leaving home!

      1. Writer Worries*

        I agree! It’s easier to mix the milk and cereal if you pour the milk over the cereal. And then you know how much milk to use because you can stop pouring when your cereal is covered.

      2. My Hill is The Beatles*

        This reminds me of a guy I worked with. Our office provided coffee and that awful powdered creamer, and every morning we were in the kitchenette together getting coffee we would have the same “argument” — I insisted the powder went in first, and he insisted it went in on top of the coffee. I still firmly believe the powder is better mixed when it goes on the cup before the coffee, but now I’m into oat milk. Ha!

        1. The Dude Abides*

          I always put in additives (sugar/creamer) before coffee, since it saves me the step of having to stir. Been doing it for 25 years.

          And for those who can’t stand coffee – I don’t despise you, but the moment you try and judge me, you’re catching it piping hot on the thigh.

        2. The New Wanderer*

          I put in the sugar and hot chocolate before the coffee, and milk (oat milk when possible) after the coffee. Otherwise the sugar doesn’t dissolve nearly as well.

          I really want milk over creamer/cream in coffee to be my hill, but as much as I hate the taste, I will take coffee with creamer/cream before going without if milk isn’t an option. So I guess my real hill is caffeine in the AM in whatever form I have to drink it.

      3. Little beans*

        That’s just impractical. The cereal floats on top of the milk and then you don’t know when you have the right ratio.

    12. James*

      I detest round shields.

      I did SCA heavy fighting, and am trying to get back into it. I’m 100% a heater shield fan. I don’t know why, but round shields just annoy me. We used to have this guy in our group that fought with a round shield because it was appropriate for his persona; unfortunately the rest of us had heaters. He’d always get legged, to the point where we had the event time and devised tactics based on it.

      Center-grip round shields are the worst possible option. I get the theory, I get why they were made. I just hate them.

      1. Rara Avis*

        And what’s your opinion on bucklers? (I don’t fight but my husband does. He’s a lefty which can sometimes through his opponents.)

        1. James*

          My wife (rapier fighter) likes them and I’ve seen them used to good effect in cut-and-thrust. And I know a spearman who swears by them. I never saw the point in rattan combat, personally. They just magnify the worst parts of a round shield.

          I like fighting lefties! One of my first trainers was a southpaw so I learned how to fight them at the same time I learned how to fight right-handed folks. They’ve got a few tricks, but it’s a lot of fun!

      2. Speaks to Dragonflies*

        Former SCA fighter here. I agree, heaters are better than round. IMHO, round shields have to be large to offer enough coverage between knee and head. That makes them heavy, cumbersome and tiresome in single combat. I have seen them work ok in a shield wall if they are larger. They can overlap on the sides and gives the spears in the second line a lower notch to poke through.
        I do miss the fun of heavy fighting, but arthritis is a b***h, so no more fun for me. Still have both sets of my raggedy snaggedy armour though. Fight hard ,fight well, but always with honor.

    13. Zona the Great*

      Mine is things on floors. Because I live in Phoenix, nothing NOTHING can be left in piles in the floor. No dirty clothes, no shoes, no backpacks, no random laziness or else you risk uncovering or scooping up a scorpion. This is a Really Bad Thing to encounter. I rarely have one inside but you can bet when I do, they’ll be under that thing I left on the floor.

      1. Dwight Schrute*

        I am truly neutral on the toilet paper stance but this is how I remember to do it the “right” way for my boyfriend when it’s my turn to replace it

    14. allathian*

      Pineapple is not a pizza topping.

      What’s the hill that others are willing to die on that you really don’t get? For me it’s toilet seats up or down. As an emancipated female, I’m perfectly capable of putting the toilet seat down when I need it, I don’t need the men/boys in my house to do it for me.

      1. FashionablyEvil*

        Nooooooo! Toilet seats should ALWAYS be left down if only to avoid falling that last two inches and finding yourself wide awake after getting up to go to the bathroom at night.

        1. Dwight Schrute*

          Hard agree. Sure in the daytime I can look and see that I need to put it down, but when I am half asleep and stumbling to the bathroom and do not turn the light on, I do not want to fall in the toilet

        2. Chauncy Gardener*

          I’m on Team Down so that when you flush gross germs don’t spew all over everyone’s toothbrushes and stuff

      2. James*

        Pineapple on pizza. And food-related issues of this sort in general. Some people like it, some people don’t. If you don’t like it don’t eat it.

        My wife used to object to the beer I would order with diner when we ate out. I never understood that. She doesn’t drink beer, so why does it make a difference which beer I drink? I know that some beer is supposed to be better than other beer, and I know enough about the marketing and history of beer to know it’s all made-up crap that doesn’t actually matter. I get good-natured ribbing–counter-signaling is a thing–but I will never understand how hostile people get on this topic.

      3. Keep the lid down!*

        When the toilet is flushed with the lid up, there is “toilet spew” — aerosolized ick!

        1. banoffee pie*

          yeah flush with seat down, then leave the seat up is what I heard was best for hygiene. If you leave it down too much, germs can flourish between the seat and that bit under the seat, whatever it’s called (just the toilet, I suppose lol)

      4. banoffee pie*

        yeah I don’t care if people leave the toilet seat up (I’m female) and I never got why it’s supposed to upset ‘us women’ so much. I also heard it was more hygienic to leave it up. Although I also agree with the poster below that’s it’s annoying if you don’t expect it to be up, and you fall further than you thought before you hit the seat!

      5. Squidhead*

        For the toilet I am team “close the whole lid so the cat doesn’t play in it!” All the humans get to arrange the lid and seat to their liking as long as they close it afterwards.

    15. Dear liza dear liza*

      SCHITT’S CREEK is just ok and no, I don’t have to watch it. People keep insisting I should love it and I watched the first season and a half. I hate the premise, I hate the characters . If you love it, good for you! But no, I am NOT watching SCHITT’S CREEK.

  37. J.B.*

    Home and work burnout- I had a pretty severe episode in the last couple of weeks. For me the best thing is to do something personally fun, redirect myself when I feel the need to be doing something, and hopefully eventually switch jobs. What are good relaxing things you do,bonus for outdoors? I think I need to build something back in every single day.

    1. Falling Diphthong*

      If you have any local conservancy groups, they often maintain a whole range of outdoor places, only a couple of which you knew about. (I’m in New England; they may have other names elsewhere.)

      I especially like sculpture gardens.

    2. slmrlln*

      Walking (in a garden, on a trail, in your neighborhood) is easier to do year-round, but if you’re willing to mix it up or have seasonal outdoor activities, I love biking.

    3. Fellow Traveller*

      I like going for a walk with a friend- i find it helps to connect with someone- gives me perspective when i get too enmeshed in my own life .
      Eating lunch outside.
      Reading a book outside.
      Exercise.
      If you work from home, can you set up to work outside?

      1. GermanGirl*

        Yeah for Geocaching.

        And when the weather or time of day isn’t right for Geocaching, I like to put on a TV show or YouTube that’s mildly interesting and do yoga while it runs – that way yoga isn’t too boring but if I need to concentrate on the pose for a bit, I don’t mind if I miss part of the video so I don’t have to stop doing yoga to rewind the video.

    4. Dwight Schrute*

      I kayak or paddle board in a calm lake. I also have a favorite park to go to on weekday evenings because it’s basically always empty, gorgeous and I can walk my dogs on long lines and do decompression walks in the woods. If I don’t have time for the above options I do walks closer to me with podcasts playing

  38. Laura H.*

    Little Joys Thread

    What brought you joy this week?

    I’m away from home for the weekend and have enough signal to pop in really quick.

    Please share your joys!

    1. Frankie Bergstein*

      Adopted a new dog! He’s a big, fluffy 5 year old boy who is 70 lbs. If you hug him, he’ll hug you back! It’s the sweetest. I love it so much.

      1. Hotdog not dog*

        Oh! Give him lots of hugs! Best Good Dog only occasionally will tolerate hugs, but it makes my day when he forgets he’s a siberian husky and decides to be a lap dog.

    2. Hotdog not dog*

      I picked up a box of “seconds” from our local Apple orchard for $10. It ended up having 33 lbs of mostly honeycrisp apples which are almost indistinguishable from the “firsts”. Homemade apple pie, coming right up!

    3. StellaBella*

      The BTS x Coldplay song, called ‘Universe’. Seriously, look it up on you tube. it is so much fun!

    4. slmrlln*

      We planted a mixture of squash and melon seeds along the wall in our backyard, just to see what might happen. Most of them sprouted and promptly died, but one has survived, grown across two trellises, and is now flowering. We have no idea whether it’s a squash or a melon. I’m so excited to find out! [We live in an area with stupidly hot summers and fall/spring growing seasons, so it isn’t seasonally weird for it to be flowering now.]

    5. small town*

      Got to have dinner with dear friends (deep dish pizza at home!), get to see the college/grad students tomorrow. I live in the Shenandoah and the leaves are turning. And Best Old Dog has the zoomies again!

    6. *daha**

      It turns out the back of my new-to-me car is actually large enough to haul the shelving I disassembled for my move and I didn’t need to rent a truck for that load.

    7. Rara Avis*

      A visit from my parents. They live 3000 miles away so it’s only the second time we’ve seen them since Dec 2019. Took a day off work to spend with them.

    8. allathian*

      Just saw Dune in theater at a Sunday matinee showing. First movie I’ve been to for more than a year, in summer 2020 we saw the 40th anniversary re-release of The Empire Strikes Back in theater. I’ve really missed going to the movies.

  39. Teapot Translator*

    There are a lot of family photos in boxes that should be digitized. My question is should this be done by professionals with a specific machine or can I do it with my printer/scanner at home? It’s a Brother HL-L2380DW
    I don’t want to damage the photos. Also, besides Dropbox, are there other websites where the pictures could be uploaded and shared with family in another country?

    1. fposte*

      I had films digitized through Memories Renewed, who did a great job and were excellent to work with. I’m probably going to do the same with family photos now–they’re more experienced and have better equipment, and they’ll actually get around to doing it.

      I bought extra Google Drive storage ($1.99 a month, I think) to share old family films. With pictures, you might not even need paid space. I just share the link with commenter permissions and let ’em at it.

    2. Kathenus*

      I bought a photo/negative/slide scanner from Sharper Image and am working through family photos. I’ve shared them via flash drive, flash drives with digital photo frames, and photo books. And I keep the photos I’ve already scanned on a computer in folders based on who’s in them for ease of future projects. It takes time, but once you get rolling you can do a lot at once, which I’ve found easier than doing smaller numbers multiple times. I’ve especially liked the photo books – did one for my dad for his 80th birthday and for my brothers last year for Christmas of family pics of us all growing up through present (all in our 50’s).

    3. Grits McGee*

      Hi, archivist here*- if you are ok spending the time to do the digitizing yourself, you should absolutely do it. The lights and scanning technology that a professional will use are going to be almost identical to what you have at home. The only difference is that they might be able to do it faster because they may be working with a machine that’s designed to handle bigger volumes. You may end up causing less damage by doing it yourself, because you’re more likely to be careful with your things than a stranger would be.

      *Not a photo archivist, so standard disclaimer.

    4. Girasol*

      My covid project was digitizing a couple thousand photos on an inexpensive home printer/copier/scanner, not the model you mentioned but surely like it. I could even use the software to improve some of the too dark and washed out shots, and bring up the contrast to show a some of the image of the old family photos that had been on poor quality paper and had nearly faded away. The project required a LOT of episodes of Great British Baking Show though.

    5. Retired Prof*

      I used an Eason FastFoto scanner – not cheap but cheaper than having a service do it. And now I have a terrific little scanner that is easy and fast to use. You can batch the pictures and it’s astonishingly fast.

  40. Dark Macadamia*

    Are there any advice columns you think are really BAD? I’ve seen ones where I sometimes disagree with their answers or feel like they misunderstood the question, but when I see letters like the “how dare my employee expect to get paid” one from this week I can’t help but think… is there a column for that somewhere? Someone whose advice is validating to people I think are really unreasonable, bigoted, or otherwise terrible?

    1. Dark Macadamia*

      For me – I’m always disappointed when I click a “Classic Prudie” at the bottom of Dear Prudence and it turns out to be an Emily Yoffe answer. I feel like she cared more about making puns than actually giving a decent answer, and some of her advice is AWFUL, like the question will be “my husband does this thing that makes me feel demeaned and uncomfortable” and her response is “you should be glad he’s still attracted to you!” Yikes.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        Some of Daniel’s were also just a really strange perspective – Daniel doesn’t have kids or an office job (is he married? Not sure?) so he didn’t seem to have real world experience in some things, like what the law or HR can do for you. I remember I stopped reading the advice column after a few really off answers from him, although I enjoyed his sense of humor [It turns out there was a prolific scammer sending “woke” parody questions, which might have explained it too – I’ll put a link about it in my next comment]. The new lady seems pretty balanced, and I like “care and feeding” even better.

          1. Dark Macadamia*

            Wow this is so unpleasant. The whole fun of advice columns is the premise that the letters are real! And the idea that they are living out a Valjean/Javert drama by being an internet troll who can’t handle the YA industry is… quite something lol

        1. Dark Macadamia*

          Yeah, I started reading Prudence because I loved Danny’s writing for The Toast but he wasn’t great. I felt like he would only skim the questions and misinterpret things a lot, like Person A said something he’d reply as if Person B said it or whatever. I’m enjoying the new Prudie too, I feel like she’s very direct in a way that’s both helpful and entertaining.

          1. RussianInTexas*

            The one that really turned me off him was about the janitor stealing snacks from the teacher. The teacher kept the snacks for the hungry kids in her class.
            The advice was for the teacher to spend more of her own money on the snacks for the janitorial stuff, because she he teacher can obviously afford it, and the blue collar janitor cannot help himself stealing snacks, because he is blue collar and obviously hungry.

            1. Grits McGee*

              Yes! Me too! I definitely appreciate that people with different life experiences are going to have different perspectives on a question, but that answer was just so bizarre. It felt like that poor teacher was getting the same level of vitriol as an unrepentant cheating spouse or a neglectful parent.

            2. Imtheone*

              And teachers don’t earn much, and almost always spend hundreds out of their own pockets on classroom supplies. You can’t assume the teacher is flush.

            3. Lemons*

              He had a… singular attitude regarding problems to do with ownership, or possessions being mistreated. The destroyed birthday cake, the baby cot burning; more or less, get over someone mistreating your things, they’re probably justified- but you’re overreacting anyway because it’s just your stuff. Consistently.

          1. Sloan Kittering*

            Me too! I mean, most topics probably apply to relationships broadly. Nicole Cliffe was my favorite.

          2. EmmaBell*

            I read Care and Feeding unless it’s Michelle Hermann. Her responses left me raging so many times I snapped one day and decided that I wouldn’t read if it was her. Now I enjoy much more!

    2. marvin the paranoid android*

      You should look up the “Here’s that bad advice you were hoping for” tumblr, if you haven’t read it before! They take previously answered advice column letters and write back validating what the letter writer was clearly hoping to hear, which is usually terrible, terrible advice. It’s very entertaining.

        1. *daha**

          Not the writers’ fault, but I hate the teasers that come up for those in the headlines and facebook links. Things like -I spotted my partner doing this weird thing and I don’t know what to say.- I just feel manipulated if I click through to read.

          1. banoffee pie*

            My lover blurted out ____during sex and now I can’t look at them the same…help! Then you read the letter and find out they yelled broccoli or something.

      1. fposte*

        Oh, I loved that. It also moved over to theestablishment dot co later on–I’m not sure if those are duplicated on the tumblr or not.

    3. Chaordic One*

      This happened so long ago, that many people probably don’t even remember her, but IMHO the absolute worst advice column (which was discontinued quite a few years ago, supposedly at the behest of its writer back in the early 2000s) was written by Dr. Laura Schlessinger. Enough said.

      1. Sunflower*

        I was just coming here to say her! I haven’t read her columns but when I first got SiriusXM , I heard her on the radio. I was 23-ish and I couldn’t possibly imagine who would think her advice is good. I felt AWFUL for the people calling in too.

        I had no idea who she was and often forget about her but a few weeks ago I actually did a deeper dive on her and found out she had an affair with her married coworker (she is extremely openly preachy about good family values, tells women they are awful if they work with kids) back in the day. Yikes SHE IS THE WORST

    4. RussianInTexas*

      Dear Prudence – Daniel. There were few that were just actually illegal. And some very very cringy. I read him, but it was a lot of hate read.
      For a bit Slate had a cooking advice column called The Pickle. It was so hilariously out of touch with your average non- NYC, non-rich, non-foodie person, it became a source of quotes, like “wrap your potato chips in lettuce”, or “ask your local fishmonger”. I highly recommend the archives for the entertaining value.
      HTDI column, also on Slate – the sex advice column. Half of their advice boils down to “open your relationship”.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        Ha! I like HTDI but sometimes they really aren’t listening to the letter writer at ALL. I still read it though. It’s such an interesting premise but they need one more average advisor to go in with the other two, who are a bit “out there.”

        1. RussianInTexas*

          They have a tendency of excusing a lot of behavior by “well, you didn’t talk to your future husband/wife that they are not allowed to sleep with you friend before you got married, so you did not establish the monogamy rules, so how would they know not to spend $5000 in strip clubs if you didn’t tell them so?”

        2. Dark Macadamia*

          Ugh yes. Any question that remotely touches on asexuality or low interest in sex is a disaster.

          1. Sloan Kittering*

            Lord, SO MANY are like, “I’m a shy virgin / I’m not sure how to get down in the sack with my husband” and their answer is like, “have you tried threesomes? / maybe open up your marriage?” – like, meet people where they are, HTDI!!

      2. Chauncy Gardener*

        Agree with the Dear Prudence – Daniel. His level of out-of-touchness with people who work in actual offices/factories/companies was breathtaking. And he NEVER said “hey, you know what? I don’t know anything about HR/law, why don’t you ask AAM/an employment lawyer?” He seemed pretty egotistical to me

    5. Zona the Great*

      Yeah I don’t get why anyone reads current Miss Manners. Is she “Miss Manners” ironically? Because I find her rude and unkind at times. Why toss in a cut down on Millennials in a random answer? She sucks.

      1. PollyQ*

        Yes, MM2.0 often recommends outright rudeness, and is surprisingly fond of lying, even in situations where just telling the truth would be fine.

        1. fposte*

          And it makes me so sad because original Miss Manners was a great philosopher and cultural force. She was an early guide to adulting and also to the fact that not everybody is the same and that’s not a reason to think you’re better or get to be rude to people.

      2. Grits McGee*

        So few of the answers in Miss Manners seem to have any direct bearing on the questions being asked. The writers seem like they’re trying to be funny, but they get so weird and off-topic that you get the impression that David Lynch took over and forgot to tell anyone.

        It’s a real shame, because there’s such a need and demand for etiquette advice that is grounded in tradition, but keeps up with modern developments.

      3. Seeking Second Childhood*

        My understanding is that the new Miss Manners is a child or children of the original. Their snarkiness makes me doubt whether her advice helps good manners survive into future generations. I can no longer read it.

    6. Courageous cat*

      Care and Feeding now that Nicole Cliffe is gone is very extremely a joke. Sometimes the advice is downright harmful.

      1. Courageous cat*

        Like, most of the new columnists refuse to just *make the call* like she did. Somuch waffling back and forth and being like “yeah, I can see your side, and well the other side makes sense too” and just ending with telling them to go to counseling. Like, what’s even the point? It’s boring advice and it’s not even useful. Take a stand on something one way or the other.

          1. RussianInTexas*

            She has an Instagram account I follow. She seems to enjoy country life with her family, horses and two enormous dogs. Seriously, her dogs are ridiculous, her newest puppy, 10 months old, is almost 100lb.

      2. Dark Macadamia*

        You know, I stopped reading Care and Feeding awhile back and it must have coincided with when she left! I didn’t even realize.

    7. Double A*

      There’s a podcast called “Dear Joan and Jericha” that’s like this! They just completely validate the absolute worst people. I listened to a couple of episodes and it wasn’t totally my thing though there were some really funny parts.

      1. banoffee pie*

        I’m pretty sure Joan and Jericha is made up though and meant to be a comedy? I could be wrong?

    8. Elf*

      Sometimes Care and Feeding (and the Mom and Dad are Fighting podcast) are good, but anytime atheists come up there is absolutely horrible response, ranging from cringey to downright offensive.

      1. RussianInTexas*

        Doyin Richards, one of the C&F writers, really likes to call female children “manipulative”. A female toddler runs up to you when she is scared? Manipulative. Female preteen hates her sport? Manipulative.

        1. banoffee pie*

          Yeah I’ve noticed that manipulative thing! Also on slate there is too much ‘oh who cares if your spouse takes drugs round your kids? Don’t be such a square!’

        2. AnonToday*

          Is it just me or does Doyin Richards also just use the column to monolog about himself? Every letter seems to leap over the problem at hand to discuss his anti-racist activism, being an author, basketball playing/coaching, his twin, etc. I think he’s also pitched his own $49 course a time or two which feels icky.

          1. Elf*

            Yes, and I really don’t like his “your child’s sport should trump every other consideration for your family.” My kids (still to young) are not ever going to play any travel sport, because THERE ARE OTHER THINGS IN LIFE! One kid’s sport does not get to dominate the entire family’s life, just as no other single person’s single thing should get to dominate everything.

        3. fueled by coffee*

          My issue with him was the letter writer whose teenage daughter was protecting her teenage friend who had come out to hostile parents and then ran away – the daughter had been in contact with the friend and new he was okay, but refused to disclose where he was. The response was that “of course you would be worried if your kid was missing, force your daughter to tell you where her friend is so you can return him to his extremely homophobic parents.”

          Like, I don’t know what the *right* advice is here and I’m devastated for everyone involved. But this seemed so off the mark and so uncritical about being off the mark. This isn’t an angsty teen getting up to shenanigans – the parents pushed him away!

      2. Imtheone*

        The newer Mom and Dad are clueless about some topics. They don’t seem to research things enough -like how to tell if a town has a good school system.

    9. HannahS*

      I loved “Care and Feeding” on Slate until Nicole Cliffe left. I find the new columns to be hit-and-miss. I’ve read more than one column where the answer was pretty obviously “holy sh*t that’s really worrying, take this child to a doctor yesterday” and the answer from the columnist was along the lines of “lol, your daughter is so manipulative, stop giving in and she’ll be fine.”

    10. bluephone*

      I used to love Daniel Lavery’s stuff on The Toast but he blundered so many Prudence letters that I just seriously can’t with him anymore, on any writing he does :-( He is 24/7/365 high on his own supply

    11. Nope.*

      EtiquetteHell had some great advice but when she missed the mark she REALLY missed the mark. She could be downright nasty and rude about the most random things – like themed weddings. Blew my mind that an “etiquette professional” could turn around and say some of the things she’d say.

      1. Lemons*

        Perfect example of a self-appointed authority! ‘Don’t you ever dare to ask friends to go out for your birthday, that’s basically cannibalism.’

        1. Nope.*

          “Only your immediate family is willing and able to organize a baby shower? Too bad so sad, NOT ALLOWED.”

    12. Office Pantomime*

      This will be unpopular, but Captain Awkward. I don’t know if the advice is good or bad because the dozen or so times I tried to invest time in reading a few responses to letters, I found them so rambling, so exceedingly long and mind numbingly boring, I just…can’t.

      1. Sloan Kittering*

        Ha I remember people saying that about Ask Polly (on the Awl/NYMag), who certainly did ramble in her responses and did a lot of self-reflection that didn’t necessarily relate to the OP – but I love both of them, I feel like that’s their style. I’m sure they could both answer more quickly/to the point if they wanted to and are deliberately doing something different. That said, there are certainly readers this wouldn’t work for.

  41. Experience of Antidepressants*

    For anyone who has been on antidepressants: did they provide you motivation to get tasks done? (asking for personal experience, not medical advice). I don’t feel depressed except that I have a *lot* of trouble with staring and persisting on tasks: I just spin and spin, procrastinate, think about how I’m going to get started soon, etc. This is obviously worst with tasks I don’t want to do, like chores or unpleasant work items. If there was a pill that would allow me to just sit down and be productive for even a few hours a day, I would definitely want to take it. However, most of the online screeners are about symptoms I don’t have, like being sad, and I’m not keen to go through the whole process of getting diagnosed and proscribed medication if that’s not how the pills work.

    1. Anon for this*

      Mmm, that doesn’t sound like the best use of antidepressants to me? (Talkin about my experience being depressed, skip if necessary)

      I’ve been on Zoloft for almost 10 years now— that’s an SSRI. For me, I was so sad all the time, like would spend half an hour per day crying for no reason, would move physically slowly, had passive ideation, couldn’t imagine a future, etc. Zoloft made it so I had a “good” day multiple days in a row. It really was like a switch for me— I wasn’t derailed as easily. Now, I would still get a normal amount of sad, and I still get deeper depths of sad than non-depressed people. But it’s nowhere near as pervasive.

      I got lucky that it was the first one I tried, and it worked for me, and it doesn’t have too severe side effects. (Some weight gain but apparently it’s usually limited to 10-20 lbs, which is… less than me… but also I finally had money, moved and stopped walking everywhere, etc, so I ain’t claiming it was entirely the drugs). Lowered libido is also a common response to SSRIs. What I’m saying is, the side effects can be significant enough that it shouldn’t be something you casually try.

      Now the spinning and spinning on tasks *might* be a symptom of something else (ADD? Are you super sensitive to rejection?). And even if it’s not anything diagnosable, a therapist can still help with that. So not to give you another task, but I think it could really help! A therapist can help you reframe thoughts and determine if this is something that could be helped with medication.

    2. RagingADHD*

      Um, have you done the WHO self-assessment for ADHD? It’s called the Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale (ASRS-v1.1) Symptom Checklist.

      Because what you’re talking about sounds much more like attention and executive function issues than like depression. And there absolutely are excellent pills for it, if it turns out to be what you have. There are also self-care and behavioral techniques and supports that are helpful for any kind of attention/exec func issues even if you don’t have ADHD or can’t tolerate the meds.

      Highly recommend the book “Smart But Scattered” by Dawson and Guare. The original version pitched toward parents helping their kids actually has the most useful lists and info about identifying executive function strengths and weaknesses. There are versions for teens and for adults in regard to work, but I found that they glossed over the best parts.

      1. Experience of Antidepressants**

        Hmm, interesting. I thought maybe I was too overwhelmed to start because of depression. I have never been tested for ADHD. I was a pretty good student so it wouldn’t have crossed anyone’s mind I guess. So, when you’re medicated for ADHD, is it suddenly possible to just … sit down and get work done? Does it give you emotional motivation to do things?

        1. ecnaseener*

          For some people, yes, they liken it to putting on glasses for the first time – a huge “WHOA this is what I was supposed to be able to do?”

          For some people (me) the meds just don’t really “take.” But it’s definitely worth looking into! Flying under the radar as a good student is very, very common :/

        2. Software Dev*

          Yes! Love the glasses analogy. For me, ADHD meds are like—clearing away the fog in my brain so if I want to do something I can just do it. I still need some kind of motivation, IE I am still more likely to want to play video games than clean, but if I decide I really do want to clean, the meds just—let me. Hard to describe, but such a gamechanger

        3. heckofabecca*

          As a person who’s a good student who’s had lifelong depression and was recently diagnosed with ADHD, I second the recommendation.

          I was able to claw my way through school because I found school a safe space, where I was distracted enough from my inner thoughts + wasn’t in my volatile home. My lateness on assignments and all my other executive function shortcomings were attributed to depression, even by my special ed teacher (read: SOMEONE TRAINED TO IDENTIFY LEARNING DISABILITIES) mother. So don’t discount it! It’s changed my life.

        4. RagingADHD*

          I was a straight-A student until college, and then all As and Bs. My particular set of traits is very conducive to hyperfocus and absorbing /synthesizing abstract information within a structured environment with clear priorities and deadlines externally dictated — ie, school.

          My weaknesses are in prioritization, task initiation, self-directed persistence, time awareness/time management, organization, and impulse control. So getting out into adult life where you have to structure your own time and give yourself your own “homework assignments,” with no clearly defined end points or grades, made the wheels come off.

          Getting the right meds is like– you know how every once in a while you have those days when you get a really good night’s sleep and have a really good cup of coffee, and the sun is shining and you’re not worried about anything, and you kind of rub your hands together and think, “Welp! Might as well get stuck in on that thing!” and you feel like you’re kicking butt and taking names? And afterward you’re so pleased with yourself because you can see how much you did? And you think, “If only every day was like this!”

          If the meds work for you, the pill has that day inside it.

          1. Experience of Antidepressants**

            That’s a thought, maybe if I’d just like to try them. I feel the same way about ADHD meds now, having read this thread. I never had these problems in school but I think the consequences felt more immediate – you couldn’t really be late on homework or studying for a quiz without catching it in the next day or so. And in college everything was so interesting that I don’t recall struggling like this. Seems a bit odd to come down with ADHD late in life, whereas depression I know can come on anytime.

            1. RagingADHD*

              You don’t come down with it later in life, just like kids don’t grow out of it. But you change contexts.

              Traits that caused problems for kids (like physical hyperactivity) might not cause problems for adults who can choose a lifestyle where they aren’t required to sit still or stand in line for 7 hours straight. Disorder = problem, so they might “grow out” of the disorder even if the traits stay mostly the same.

              Works in the other direction, too. Even by today’s standards I wouldn’t have been dxed as a kid because I was not substantially impaired in life functions. By college, I can see now that I was somewhat impaired. By the time I had kids I was way beyond substantially impaired.

              Same traits. Different life functions.

          2. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

            Raging adhd, that is such an excellent paragraph about the experience of a good day, and your final sentence is exquisite. “The pill has that day inside it” – perfection!

    3. PollyQ*

      Yes, sometimes they did that exact thing for me, although as others have pointed out, there may be some other issue in play. Getting a prescription for them might not be as big a deal as you fear, though. Your PCP may be willing to write you a prescription and see how the work for you.

      1. Experience of Antidepressants**

        Ha I’m kind of afraid they’ll make me cheerier but not fix my productivity issues :P I’ll just cheerily keep not doing what I’m supposed to be doing in a more upbeat manner …

        1. Seeking Second Childhood*

          Honestly, you’ll know if they’re working for you or not very quickly. It’s a controlled substance because for people who do not have ADHD, it wires you. If you have ADHD, they calm you down and let you focus.

    4. *daha**

      Yeah, this is where you have to put yourself in the hands of a psychiatrist for diagnosis first, prescription after. If depression is present, antidepressants can help. If some form of ADHD is present, stimulant or non-stimulant ADHD meds can help. If anxiety is present, treatment for general anxiety might help. There might be other things going on that call for a pharmacologic intervention.
      Other investigations that might be helpful: Ask your bedmate (if you’ve got one) if you snore. If so, sleep apnea might be present, and bad sleep at night can lead to poor productivity during the daytime. Also, if you’re being treated for sleep issues that opens the door for an Rx of modafinil. Ask your psychiatrist if they would consider referring you for neuropsych testing. Mine turned up memory function holes that I had no idea of, but explained quite a bit.
      Good luck!

    5. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Some of us who were diagnosed with ADD as adults had been misdiagnosed with depression in earlier years.
      However, just FYI this is skirting close to Alison’s no medical advice rule.

  42. Greywacke Jones*

    I’m looking for ideas for very low-prep meals that take advantage of frozen, pre-chopped, canned etc items as much as possible. I’m ok if it needs some hands-off cook time, just really trying to cut down on prep for some nights. I am aware of and use other strategies such as freezing large batches, meal prepping, using a slow cooker etc. but I would love some new ideas in this particular area. Also my daughter has a mild egg allergy that we’re working on- she can have small amounts cooked into things but something like a frittata would not be good.

    Some examples of things I’ve tried:
    -Frozen mixed veggies, frozen pre-cooked chicken with a bottled stir-fry sauce, with microwaved rice
    -Frozen seasoned potatoes roasted with pre-chopped peppers and onions and a can of chickpeas, with pre-cooked ham added to make a sort of hash

    Thanks!

    1. newbie*

      Vegetable soup…. saute a bag of frozen trinity mix (onion/pepper/celery), then add chopped whatever-veggies-you-need-to-use-up, supplement with frozen veggies (can be done entirely w/frozen veg, too), a can of tomatoes, add water/chicken broth and simmer till done. You can also add canned beans, chopped ham or chicken, chopped potatoes, pasta, barley, farro or other grain to add a bit more substance. I’ve even thrown in leftovers that I was tired of. It’s pretty hard to go wrong, but you have to learn to let go of any desire to adhere to structure/recipe.

      1. Helenteds*

        Soup is great, if you slow cook stuff with a crockpot, you can cook poultry carcasses or other bones that still have meat on them to make a nice broth. My mom discovered the best way to avoid bones in the soup if you are cooking this way is to put the carcass in a metal strainer on top of the water (filled to the top to cover the carcass) and vegetables and other ingredients and then pick the meat off of the bones instead of picking the bones out. It doesn’t avoid all bones, but avoids most of them. You can also cook broccoli stems and things like that nicely (If I recall correctly, it helps to peel them to get rid of the stringy parts). I haven’t made crockpot soup recently because I have been off at college mostly (I am in Italy right now, so much good food), but I have helped my mom make quite a few soups this way.

    2. fposte*

      I keep a list on my phone of seasonings and additives for froz. veg; main ones are
      chili, lime, and honey
      toasted sliced nuts
      toasted breadcrumbs
      bacon crumbles
      grated Parmesan
      soy sauce and sesame oil
      bacon crumbles
      maple butter or maple mustard

      There are also some really good cookbooks devoted to this notion–I really like Mark Bittman’s Kitchen Express.

    3. Nicotena*

      You’ve probably thought of this but I’ve loaded frozen veggies on make-your-own flatbreads or frozen cheese pizzas – being baked in means you can’t taste any freezer burn, in my experience, and you can either use pre-made or start from dough. It’s my super-fast go-to and a good cost saver too.

    4. Kathenus*

      I make Shepherd’s pie with ready to go ingredients primarily. Generally brown ground beef (occasionally use rotisserie chicken instead), mix it with canned/frozen mixed veggies and jarred gravy in a casserole dish. Then get one of the mashed potato packages in the refrigerator section and heat it up, use a spatula to smooth it on top of the other ingredients, add some shredded cheese on top, and bake until hot. Can make smaller containers and freeze if preferred, or just for individual servings. It’s really good and really easy.

    5. WellRed*

      Swap out the stir fry sauce for fajita sauce, add cheese and tortillas. I also like refried beans mixed up with frozen corn, cheese and salsa.

    6. Llellayena*

      Microwaved baked potatoes and a jar of pre-made chili! If you’re anywhere near Philadelphia, I highly recommend Liberty City Chili. You can add precooked ground turkey (or beef) or chopped up portobello mushrooms for more bulk/meat texture. Also good over rice or pasta.

      A pressure cooker (or Instapot) is also useful. Dump all the ingredients in, close the lid and wait. Hoisin chicken does well in the pressure cooker. Boneless/skinless chicken thighs, hoisin sauce, I think garlic, and carrots. We usually serve over buckwheat noodles, but rice works too. Might want to check online for a recipe though. I can’t quite remember everything mom puts in that…

    7. Fellow Traveller*

      Some frequent easy dinners at ourbhouse:
      We often have sandwiches for dinner.
      I find frozen shrimp also great. The NY Times has a recipe for roasted shrimp and broccoli that’s easy and fast. Or I will make pasta and sauté frozen spinach and frozen shrimp to go over it while the pasta cooks.
      Frozen tortellini with jarred red sauce.
      Pot stickers. Make a cucumber salad as a side (sliced cucumber, salt, pinch of sugar, sesame oil and rice vinegar.)
      Black beans (heated with garlic and cumin) and rice, eaten with cheese and salsa.

    8. Lace*

      This may be more basic than you’re looking for, but it’s an interesting book in the general area. Misha Fletcher’s Cooking Is Terrible is a book for people somewhere on the can’t-even continuum who want to try a little harder than pre-packaged everything. (Which is a thing that works too, but not for everyone.)

      I like how the book organizes lots of different low-effort concepts and gives me ideas to adapt, and no pressure if we’re not making our own chicken broth today.

    9. Helenteds*

      Another thing I have been having fun making is celery cooked in chicken broth. You just take a head of celery and cut it up into largish chunks (approx 1 in, maybe slightly smaller), and put it in a pan with enough broth to cover it (I have found that the 4 cup containers that you can get in tetrapacks have been enough). My parents usually make it with a bunch of seasonings like garlic, but I have been making a lot recently and it has been flavorful enough with the relatively salty broth I have been getting lately (I think this may vary a bit). I then just cook it until the celery is really soft (I am not sure about how long it takes, I personally just keep tasting pieces until they are soft, but I think it takes somewhere around 30 minutes), it is really great that way and not really stringy like raw celery.

    10. Redhairredrunner*

      Black beans and rice. It keeps very well in the fridge and reheats great in a microwave.
      Im also a big fan of adding frozen broccoli or spinach to my pasta in the last couple minutes of cooking. It’s a great way to add more nutrition to spaghetti dinner night.

    11. Little beans*

      I just started watching Nadiya’s (from GBBO) Time to Eat on Netflix and I think this is the premise – shortcuts using store bought items to make quick but yummy meals. I’ve only watched the first episode so far but I love her.

    12. Little beans*

      Also, possibly another way to save time without too much frozen food is just to keep things simple. My husband and I just cook everything with garlic, onion, olive oil, salt and pepper – it’s simple, no thinking about it and it’s always delicious. Works for pretty much all meats and veggies.

    13. Seeking Second Childhood*

      Sautee mushrooms and onions and freeze them in a thin bag flattened out so you can break off a small amount to use for anything from omelettes to stir fry during the week.
      Same with pre cooking ground meat for use in other recipes and sauces.

    14. Sleeping Late Every Day*

      The old I Hate To Cook book had a great basic no-fuss Chile: 1 lb ground beef, crumbled, cooked with one medium onion, chopped. Drain when done if necessary. Add one can Campbell’s tomato soup, 1 tablespoon chili powder, and 1 can kidney or pinto beans, drained. Heat together about 15 minutes to blend flavors.
      My easy pasta sauce I call All-Aldi’s because I get everything there: one can crushed tomatoes, plus about 1/4 can water. One can tomato paste, plus about 1/3 can water. Combine and stir well over low-to-medium heat. Add dry basil, oregano, onion powder, and garlic powder to taste, plus salt and pepper to taste. Throw several frozen Italian meatballs on a plate and nuke to thaw. Cut meatballs in quarters and grind half of them in food processor. Mix into sauce and add 1/2 to one jar red pesto. Gently stir in remaining quartered meatballs. Let it all simmer together about 10 minutes. Slosh in a few tablespoons of red wine vinegar before adding pasta or using on pizza. You can add sauteed mushrooms with meatballs, if you like them.

    15. beach read*

      Barilla Ready Pasta: 60 second microwave pasta. Add your favorite jarred sauce and/or frozen veggie package. Add in some cheese and cream. I usually have individual bags/containers of already cooked mushrooms, ground beef, turkey or sausage ready to go in the freezer so I can add that if I want.

    16. sswj*

      I typically cook a big pot of rice once a week and then add stuff to it for quick, nuked meals.
      Rotisserie chicken
      Frozen veg
      Steak sandwich filling or frozen fajita beef
      Hamburger quick-browned
      canned beans – mixes of several sometimes
      various seasoning blends

      I’ll also look for small pork loins, strip steaks, turkey breast that I can cook all at once and then add to rice for the week. Pork loin cooks really fast when sliced into medallions, seasoned, and pan-seared. It’s easy to do one or two whole loins and then wrap them for the fridge or freezer. There are also turkey “loins” (pre-seasoned) that you can buy, they’re tasty and cook fast too.

  43. marvin the paranoid android*

    I need some advice on a basic social situation! I’m really bad at social events that are just free-form groups of people I don’t know mingling around. In pandemic times, I find it even worse because you can’t even hold a drink or stand next to a table of snacks for an indecorous amount of time.

    I’m not totally socially inept, so I’m okay in structured settings or one on one, but I am pretty much incapable of walking up to a group of strangers who are talking and insinuating myself into their conversation. Does anyone have any strategies for making this kind of situation more manageable?

    1. Nicotena*

      Ugh I feel ya, I spend the whole time going back and forth from the bathroom / snacks table / whatever. I guess that’s advice; keep moving around, it feels less awkward. If you can chat in line I find that a bit easier, and if you strike up a connection maybe you can start a little cluster – then invite people in who also seem harried and frantic.

    2. The Dogman*

      It might sound trite but try to relax.

      Do some deep slow breathing, listen to the topic and if you have something to contribute then just speak up when someone has stopped speaking.

      This ia “practice makes perfect” thing, so the first few times will be awkward!

      Good luck, you can do this!

    3. sagewhiz*

      I’m awful at butting in on IRL group chats too. What I did during those awkward times was look for someone standing alone (another introvert for sure!), walk over, introduce myself and start a chat. If goes well, great; if not, rinse, repeat. Met some cool folks that way.

    4. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      Be the person who is carrying a plate of the snacks around to the other guests and offering them. They will at the very least look pleased to be offered something and will probably smile and you can engage a little in snack conversation if you want, eg “so far the cheese cubes on toothpicks are the favourites” – anything at all. You keep busy, it is a useful task, people are pleased to be offered foods, and if you want to you can say something very low key. Or you can ramp up the conversation if you want eg “try the stuffed snails, tell me what you think, Arabella always has the most unusual things at these get togethers”, and that may lead into the “How you you know Arabella” conversation expansion etc

    5. Jen, from the library*

      This is when I wish we could wear some kind of bracelet so those of us can seek out others who are hanging solo or only know a few people who aren’t here yet etc.

      (Also for those of us who are super shy, but are totally OK with people coming up to us!)

    6. Alexis Rosay*

      So much sympathy. I also hate this.

      My two strategies:
      1) Look around for someone else who is standing awkwardly by themselves; if I can make eye contact, I’ll introduce myself and go for some banal chitchat based on the event we’re at (“How do you know Kelly?” or “What brings you to ____?”)
      2) Look for a group of open seats somewhere and sit down. Often times, other people will end up sitting down just because they want somewhere to sit and then it’s easier to strike up a conversation.

      Both 1 and 2 are quite exhausting so I can’t keep them up for long, but if I can do either once per event, I feel like it’s a win.

  44. ecnaseener*

    I’m having a lot of fun playing with the demo of the Delphi AI that makes “ethical” judgments on scenarios you describe. I tried out some AAM scenarios…and Delphi sided with the Cheap Ass Rolls LW! Link in a reply.

    1. comityoferrors*

      Hahaha. I’m having fun with this. Delphi says: asking your employee for her kidney? “It’s inappropriate.” True that. Thanks for sharing!

  45. CatCat*

    Recommendations for online workout videos that are standing only? I mean, the whole thing standing including any cool down after. I don’t want to get in the floor at all.

    Bonus if low impact, but I can make adjustments on my own if needed (I have learned to modify on my own for anything involving jumps).

    1. fueled by coffee*

      Zumba might be a good option? It may involve a little bit of jumping but most of the steps tend to just be regular walking/stepping. But definitely nothing on the floor.

      1. CatCat*

        I love Zumba and do it once per week through a local instructor on Zoom. I should have mentioned that. I find their on-demand video system confusing though so haven’t really used that to do other workous.

    2. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

      I don’t have a specific line to recommend, but maybe step aerobics workouts? Even if you don’t have an actual step, you can still do step forward instead of step up and whatnot.

    3. cat socks*

      Fitness Blender has lots of free workout videos. Many are low impact or they provide low impact modifications. On their website, you can read through the descriptions to see what type of exercises are done.

    4. comityoferrors*

      You might try barre workouts. I don’t have specific recommendations – the ones I do are through Peloton so not available for free – but barre is generally low-impact and no floorwork. Just make sure you have a chair or table to balance on if needed. I also enjoy the dance cardio workouts from Pamela Reif (lower-impact, easier to follow) and MadFit (energetic and hard to follow but tons of fun), though since you’re already doing zumba that might not be what you’re looking for.

    5. Not belonging anywhere*

      I used to do workout from jessicasmithtv on Youtube a few years ago. Doesn’t look like she’s actively uploading new videos these days, but there are many low-impact, no-floor workouts. Most of them are short (15-30 mins) so I used to do 2-3 workouts together or repeat one a few times.

    6. Pennyworth*

      A friend used to have a walking workout video, all sorts of walking on the spot and stepping. I did it with her once, it was exhausting. I guess there would be something similar on YouTube.

    7. Jane*

      I’ve been doing a lot of YouTube workouts. Some channels/creators that might work for you: Pilates Nest has standing and sitting (in a chair) upper body workouts, though they tend to be short so I do them a few times in a row. I also do Jane Fonda and Leslie Sansone walking aerobics.

    8. Fastest Thumb in the West*

      I’ve been doing Paula B Fitness on youtube. They are designed for middle-aged women but could be done by anyone, and she has different ones for cardio, strength, easy on the knees, low-impact, fat-burning, etc. Some have floor work but many do not, and the description usually specifies. She encourages you to modify them as you need and they are all about 30 minutes long. No weird music, either.

    9. Waiting on the bus*

      I like Bodyfit by Amy on YouTube. She has standing workouts (check her playlists, I think she has one for standing workouts. If not, the workout titles tell you if it’s a standing workout) and usually always offers low-impact alternatives for all exercises.

    10. Lcsa99*

      Look for Paul Eugene. I get his videos on Amazon but you might be able to find them on YouTube as well. He is great! They are geared toward seniors but work great for anyone that needs low impact. He does have a few harder ones so look specifically for the ones that say low impact. Every single one gets me out of breath and sweating but you’re never on the floor and he gives plenty of breaks between moves so you can catch your breath a little.

  46. Jackalope*

    I don’t see another gaming thread so will start it here. What are you playing this week? As usual, any sort of games are fine, not just video/board/computer/whatever.

    I’m still working my way through the third Fire Emblem Three Houses run. I’m in Dimitri’s house this time and have to say I’m not liking his character a lot. I’m pro-Edelgard so didn’t expect to like him as much, but I’m actively disliking him.

    1. twocents*

      Currently playing Atelier Firis, and enjoying it more than the first game in the trilogy.

      I also restarted my Animal Crossing: New Horizons island in expectation of the new content next month. Want to get those pumpkins and take advantage of the Halloween goodies now!

      1. LimeRoos*

        Yesss ACNH!! I started up again maybe 2 months ago with a completely new island (it was hard to delete the save data, but I didn’t want to weed and cockroach hunt, plus I could redo the layout much more easliy). I am so stoked for the DLC and Happy Home Expansion thingy!

        I’ve been playing Diablo 2 still, a little annoyed at the queues, but it’s better than having the server down for half a day. They really need to figure this out, because it sucks having to babysit your Switch while waiting.

        And! So ready for the N64 addition to Nintendo Switch Online! I’ve been waiting for Yoshi’s Story for gah, probably a decade at this point. Was hoping for it on the Wii and WiiU, and now finally I can play it again in all its glory. Highly recommend, since it’s adorable and so much fun, and a surprising challenge.

    2. Finny*

      I’m playing Monster Boy on Switch and having a blast. Just gotta stay alive long enough to beat the frog boss and I’ll have access to my gear again!

    3. The Dude Abides*

      So glad to see the tibalt’s trickery ban in historic.

      Tried to pick up a fancy version of a particular card for ~$25, got a $2-3 version. Vendor refunded me, but still annoyed AF

  47. matcha123*

    I’ve seen a few people writing about winter depression, but do any of you become more energetic in the winter months?
    I become depressed and sluggish in the summer, but alert and focused in the winter. I like the longer sunlight of the summer months, but aside from that, summer sucks!

    1. Kathenus*

      Solidarity! I don’t tolerate heat well, so fall and winter are my seasons. Summer is my least favorite by far, so I’m happy right now!

    2. Buni*

      Ohhh, Summer SAD is absolutely a Thing. I loathe the heat, the light, the long days, I spend 7 months of the year on weapon’s-grade antihistamines, I hate every single thing about it. The first time the temp goes over ~21c I can get genuinely upset / tearful at the prospect of what’s coming and just want to retreat into a cool dark room til it’s all over.

    3. Dancing Otter*

      I much prefer cold to heat. You can always add another sweater or quilt, but there’s a limit how much you can take off, even in private.

    4. RagingADHD*

      I definitely get outside more, exeercise more, and otherwise perk up in fall & winter, because it isn’t a million degrees with a thousand percent humidity and mosquitoes big enough to carry off a small dog.

    5. Clisby*

      Absolutely! I feel like I have SAD in reverse. I live in Charleston, SC, so it gets hot quick. By the end of June I just want to turn down the AC to 60, retreat to my bedroom, hide under a heavy pile of comforters, and sleep until October comes around. I hate the heat, I hate the humidity, I hate the glaring sun, I don’t leave the house unless it’s for some necessity like a doctor’s appointment or a grocery store trip. I hate it.

      On the other hand, I’m starting to feel pretty great right now.

    6. Aphrodite*

      Yes! I posted in the above question about winter depression. I hate summer. I hate almost everything about it: too much light, too hot, too many bugs, clothes are icky, sleeping well is harder, I don’t light up my home as much as I like because of the heat from my incandescent bulbs (and I have a lot to use up because I hoarded them when it was announced they were going away), no desire to cook or read, wildfires. It’s just misery for me.

      The only thing I do enjoy about it is sitting on a comfortable sofa, air conditioning blasting away, with a sparkling water or wine or margarita beside me and reading what I term “misery books.” those nonfiction based on terrible trips. My favorite is Candace Millard’s The River of Doubt, the story of Teddy Roosevelts trip down the Amazon River. It is full of godawful bugs, insects, fish, wildlife, and the best misery yet written.

    7. Frally*

      I hate summer and always get happy at this time of year. I love the cool, sweater-weather days of fall. I love changing leaves and “bleak” skies.

    8. Spearmint*

      I’m 100% with you. I can’t stand the heat and humidity, and the shorter nights mess with my sleep schedule sometimes (much harder to sleep in on weekends when I need to catch up on sleep). This got worse when I moved to a southern state, where daytime highs will be 95-100 degrees (F) from mid-June through early-September every year.

      I recently read a NY Times article about a summer version of SAD that is starting to be recognized by some mental health professionals. It’s a real thig!

  48. MeepMeep*

    Have any of you emigrated/expatriated from the US, and where did you go? How do you like it? We are in the initial stages of pondering, and would love to hear some personal experiences. At this point, we are 100% sure we are leaving, and not at all sure of where we are going to.

    1. Jean (just Jean)*

      Can you narrow it down by proximity to work opportunities, family, or friends? Are some places better or worse for transplanting the professional or trade skills and certifications in your family? What about languages? Are you trying to acquire or increase your fluency in any specific tongue, or to remain within the zone of your current language skills? Do you need to be close to specific medical facilities, religious communities, cultural offerings, etc.? Do you prefer to find or avoid certain types of weather, landscape, scenery, and/or governments? Finally, do you want a new country that allows you to retain your U.S. citizenship or become a dual citizen?

      I’ve never considered emigration and hope that it’s not in my future, but I’ve lived in multiple settings and U.S. states (midwest and mid-Atlantic; one small town, and one mid-size and two large-size urban areas) and watched many relatives maintain family ties over long distances and multiple countries.

    2. Anon From Here*

      My spouse and I moved to Canada after the 2016 election. The timeline from initially talking about it to actually driving across the border was a good 24 months. It’s been expensive, we miss our friends and family in the States, it’s hard to make new friends at our age in a foreign country, and in the end it’s been much more positive than negative.

      There are 2 big things to figure out, no matter which country you go to. One, you have to figure out how you’ll make a living. Two, have to figure out how you will be allowed to say in your destination country past the time allowed on your tourist/visitor visa.

      For our finances, we built up a nest egg and used some windfall money (a small inheritance) that could cover all our expenses for a few years. For living here past the default 6 months that an American can visit Canada without a longer-term visa, that took a lot of pre-planning and paperwork. One of us is a dual U.S.-Canada citizen, so we got the other person here on the Canadian equivalent of a green card. The dual citizen could work right away, and now both of us can. But our professional credentials aren’t 100% accepted so we’ve had to accept lower-paying jobs and put time and money into bringing our credentials up to the same level here.

    3. A Regular Going Anonymous*

      I moved to Germany. It will probably be permanent although I didn’t go specifically with that goal. I love it here, but I miss home, too. And now I’ve been here long enough that when I am home for a long time, I miss here. Moving place is really complicated, emotionally, but for me has been totally worth it.

      I started typing a longer answer, but it got really long and basically boils down to: I’m not sure how to give you helpful information because the question is so broad. Why are you looking to leave? Who is “we”? What do you need to be happy in a place? How much time (and maybe money) are you willing to invest and what timeline are you thinking of? And many many other questions I could ask!

      Please don’t feel like you have to answer any of that. But I don’t have any idea what parts of my experience would be useful without some sort of context–I’ve got 15 years worth of things to talk about, but I can’t possibly fit it all in to this box! :)

      Regardless: Best of luck and much success!

      1. GermanGirl*

        Welcome to Germany!

        I’m not an expat but I loosely follow a few expats to Germany on YouTube. It’s so fascinating to see your own culture through someone else’s eyes.

        @MeepMeep: If Germany is at all on your radar and you’d like to have a look, here’s how to search for them.

        From the US to Germany:
        * My Merry Messy Life
        * Hayley Alexis
        * Chris Murphy
        * Wanted Adventure
        * Black Forest Family

        From elsewhere to Germany, but I’m including them because of their high quality content:
        * Simple Germany
        * Life in Germany
        * Antoinette Emily
        * Diana Verry

        Bonus, from the US to the UK – more of a fun channel than actually expat focused but he has a few comparison videos:
        * Evan Edinger

        And you can find tonnes of other expat channels on YouTube as well. There are some good ones with US to France content, but I don’t watch them regularly, so I don’t remember their names.

    4. StellaBella*

      Yes, in 2008 I moved to Europe for work, been here ever since. I love where I live except for some aspects including some high prices for stuff/housing/food/heath insurance. Check out blogs like expatsblog dot com, expat dot. com, easy expat, international citizens, expat pages in the country you are looking to move to, and a google search too. Also understand that each country has websites on visas, residency requirement, taxation, etc to check out. Moving to the EU area means understanding Schengen rules until you have a national visa to work/stay. Other countries have visa procedures too. I got a visa as I came for a specific job and I now have a permanent residence visa. In many countries you need a visa/work contract (or be some sort of oligarch with a metric butt load of money) to get a local phone, apartment, bank account. If you are American too, without dual citizenship, opening a bank n many countries is difficult without a job and or a lot of money. Also taxation issues. I still file and pay US taxes each year, I still hold a US passport, but even if you are to fully ditching the US passport means you pay a large sum, and still have to file taxes several years after becoming another citizen. Also keeping bank accounts open in the USA is key for tax purposes too as you will likely still be paying or filing taxes there and need this.

    5. Mameshiba*

      Also an expat and while I absolutely love it, it’s not possible or desirable for everyone. Some questions to consider:
      -what cultural habits and practices do you have, or want to live around? What government type or lifestyle are you looking for?
      -do you speak any other languages, or would you move to another English-speaking country? Are you comfortable being a visible minority, being a foreign outsider for the rest of your life?
      -what citizenships do you have? What work can you do and what visas are you eligible for?
      -how flexible are you, are you comfortable with the unknown, can you make friends easily, can you survive with zero local network, can you put up with issues that happen anywhere (ex bad job or house or weather) in exchange for a foothold in a new country?

      For example, it is relatively easy to get a visa as a native English speaker to teach English in, say, China, but the Chinese government and local culture is very different to adapt to and that may or may not be a fulfilling career. It is relatively quite difficult to get a visa in Canada or the UK without a job offer, but the language and culture is closer to the US. There are some countries you can buy a digital nomad visa for, like Bermuda, but you may find that the social safety net is not stronger than the US and maybe you are used to cold weather and find it hard to adapt. It really depends on what you’re looking for in life!!

  49. Tired Of Being The Target*

    I’m the eldest sibling in an extremely toxic family. The only time I ever hear from my siblings is when 1) they want me to do something that they don’t want to do, 2) they want to yell at, threaten, or insult me, or 3) they want me to spend money that benefits them. It’s usually attacks by group-text or group-email any time I don’t do what they want, the way they want it. I can’t block them completely, because then they start going through my kids.

    They want the world to see our family as perfect and I just can’t. They want a “Happy Family” portrait taken and want me to help pay for it. I haven’t replied yet, but I’m planning to opt out of the whole portrait idea. I don’t even see them for holidays.

    What is the least drama-causing way to say no and stick to the decision? From prior experience, they will group-attack accusing me of causing drama and upsetting our mother and pour on the guilt and shame. I want to just say that I don’t like having my picture taken and not get into all of the other reasons. The response I really hope for is “OK thanks for letting us know” but I know that’s expecting too much.

    Mom will be fine as long as nobody makes a big deal about it. She’s big into denial. Usually I just refuse to respond and let them (group text) rant until they run out of steam. I’m tired of letting it go. I know better than to tell them what I really feel. I am so done with this.

    Should I preemptively say that if they make a big deal about it, they are the ones causing the DRAMA? Or should I just keep repeating that I don’t want my picture taken and just let them rant?

    1. fposte*

      The last, though honestly after about two you can stop answering. The goal here is to stop caring if they drama or not, rather than avoiding anything that would cause drama. Life is not a drama obstacle course. I also think you don’t always have to speak your truth per se; sometimes let them stew over a low-key “Hmm” or “Thanks for the input” that gives them less to push against.

      If you haven’t, I would also open communication with your kids to let them think about how to deal with these relatives.

    2. Not A Manager*

      “I can’t block them completely, because then they start going through my kids.”

      I’m curious about this. Obviously if your children are very young, you get to decide who interacts with them. And if your children are adults, presumably they can maintain whatever kind of adult relationships they want with other adults, without involving you. I can see that the teen years could provide more ambiguity, but I guess I want to encourage you to examine whether you really do want or need to maintain any kind of relationship with these people.

      If you decided not to, maybe there would be a cost or inconvenience to some other people in your life (adult children, mother). Still, many of those costs can be mitigated, not least by your cheerfully telling those other people that they are welcome to maintain whatever kind of relationship they like with your siblings and that they are not responsible in any way to monitor your own (lack of) interaction.

      In terms of the photo, if you are going to maintain contact, I’d stick with “no thanks, big photo portraits aren’t my thing!” Send their email to a separate folder if you can, and only check the group text once a week. But honestly, I’d rethink this entire interaction.

      1. Tired Of Being The Target*

        My kids are adults and they do have independent relationships with one of my siblings. They are aware of my reasons and that I also accept their separate relationships.

        They don’t understand why my siblings treat me this way. A therapist suggested that my siblings don’t know whether to treat me like a mother or a sister and they are taking out their negative feelings on me because I’m a safe target. It’s a reasonable theory but doesn’t make anything easier. It’s still abuse regardless of the reason.

        1. Not A Manager*

          It seems to me that since your children are aware of your feelings about your siblings, and you accept their relationship with your sibling, there should be a way that you can go no contact if you want to. The siblings can “go through” your kids only if (1) your kids choose to be a conduit, and (2) you choose to allow your kids to pass messages to you.

          You can’t control whether your kids try to pass on messages, but you can control your own response to them. “I love you, and I know you care about Auntie Kate, but I don’t want to talk about her with you. Can we change the subject, or should we talk another time?” That’s hard, but not as hard as playing “operator” with your kids. And it also models for them how they can shut down this game at the front end, if they want to.

          You say that your kids are “aware of your reasons.” I would gently suggest that you try to avoid explaining yourself any further to your kids. I know that’s hard, but I feel like explaining more starts to edge into looking for validation or permission. You don’t need your kids to understand you, or agree with you, or cut off contact with your siblings, or anything else. You need them to have a nice relationship with you, and not to pass on messages from your annoying family.

      2. Been there*

        Exactly this! Very similar situation here, sadly. It helps to remember that THEY are the ones causing the drama, not you. And pulling your mom and kids into it is to encourage your mom and kids to put pressure on you, as well. So, you will need to explain to mom and kids your answer to whatever, once, calmly, and then you’re done. You also might consider just blocking them entirely after you explain to your kids and mom. Mom, especially, doesn’t have to like it, but if you aren’t in contact with the siblings, they will no longer have any current fodder.

    3. small town*

      This sounds perfect for the grey rock method. Just non reactive. “That will not be possible.” Repeat as needed. Reasons are for reasonable people.

    4. Kathenus*

      In general I’d say just block/ignore/say no and ignore what they do afterwards – you can’t control them, only you. One thing, and I am not trying to push this at you or say you should do it, is on the family portrait. My brothers don’t get along, they’d be fine never seeing each other. This was a couple of decades ago now, but at one point the three of us were in the same place and I did really push for a portrait of the three of us for my parents – because I knew it would mean a lot to my mom and dad. They wouldn’t have done it without my prodding, but I also didn’t force it or anything. Your dynamics may be so different that there is no comparison, but only mentioning it because I’m still happy I did and for over 10 years it was the only picture that had us all in it. If it’s still not right, full support to you on that decision, just mentioning it from a different perspective from my past.

      1. Jean (just Jean)*

        This makes sense from the perspective of the historical record / for the sake of unknown descendants, decades into the future. But only if you can get through the picture-taking without suffering, and you get to make that decision.

    5. Bumblebeee*

      I…don’t think you can do anything that will help with the drama part. Unless you want to just say yes to all of their demands for the rest of your life, that is – which doesn’t sound like a healthy option. You can only control your own behaviour; not theirs. Imagine you are dealing with a toddler who demands a packet of oreo for breakfast and ONLY a packet of oreo for breakfast. Whether you lovingly plead “No, sweetheart, why don’t you try this delicious porridge with banana I lovingly made for you” or shout “NO, DAISY, I’ve TOLD you there’s no oreo for breakfast, if you keep screaming you’re going to the naughty corner” – the toddler will tantrum. Likewise, there is no magical formula here for saying no that will make your toxic family members respect your wishes politely. The best thing you can work on is defining your own boundaries and walking away when needed.

      You also don’t have to be held hostage to their behaviour because of the fear they will go through your kids. I think it’s both healthy and necessary to teach your kids how to walk away from toxic family members.

    6. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      Captain awkward has lots on her site about going low contact or no contact with people who are a threat to your physical and mental safety. She also writes a lot about toxic relationships. And that “No” is a complete sentence. Gavin de Becker, in the Gift of Fear, writes about how to pay attention to your own safety, and increase your ability to recognise and get away from hazardous people.
      There’s a lot online about boundaries, how to create and maintain your own, and perhaps you could talk more with a therapist about this kind of thing.
      Your siblings have shown you what kind of people they are, many many times. Believe them! Blocking and not responding to them is the behaviour you need, and talking to a therapist about the guilt and shame YOU feel about yourself is worth sorting out.
      I am sorry you drew the short straw in getting a bunch of awful family members, but I can assure, you there’s no shortage of those short straws in the world!

    7. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      Hi, Tired! I wrote a reply but I fear it has gone elsewhere on the site. Captain Awkward dot com for how to deal with toxic people, and Gavin de Becker’s book Gift of Fear for recognising manipulative and hazardous tactics and dealing with them. And counselling to deal with the guilt and shame you are feeling, that is the way to freedom. Best wishes!

    8. Not So NewReader*

      “Or should I just keep repeating that I don’t want my picture taken and just let them rant?”

      “No means NO. It does not mean keep asking.”
      OR
      “I have already answered that question. I will not be answering it again.”

      Try to understand that no matter what you do they are going to create drama. You are not going to be able to control the response of anyone here, but yourself. I’d suggest getting into therapy because you need Team You.
      They sound very manipulative. If you can find patterns in how they manipulate you can begin to cut them off at the pass.

      Hearing your “tone of voice” in your letter, you might be at the point where you go no contact. And you will have to tell your kids what you are doing and what you expect them to do. This could be to carry on the relationship with the one sib but if they are asked questions about you they are to say, “I dunno” and change the subject. Again, a therapist could help you work out an actionable plan.

      I suspect this is not totally about having a pic taken. And it might be good to develop a longer term plan rather than limping from one drama to another for the rest of your life. I wish you the best. This sounds very hard.

      1. Buni*

        I use a variation of this with the under-12s I teach – “You already asked me that, and I already answered”. Your tone can either be a firm and-we’re-done-with-this or a faintly baffled did-you-forget-already? Either way, nothing follows except silence or a topic change.

    9. I'm A Little Teapot*

      I would say something to the effect that you won’t be doing pictures with them but hope they enjoy themselves. Then put everything on mute so they don’t bug you, then if you so choose, block them.

      If your children are minors, then it’s inappropriate for them to be going through a kid. And you as parent can control that. IE, block them on the kids phones/emails/social media (obviously with conversations about it with the kids). If your children are adults, then you set a boundary with your adult children and enforce it – no bugging you because extending family is bugging them, but they’re adults they do what they want. Encourage them to set their own boundaries, while maintaining your own.

      As for your mother – she’s welcome to be in denial. That doesn’t mean that you have to roll over and comply. She’s an adult, she can figure it out.

      Also google Out of the Fog. Even if the causes aren’t the same, a lot of the concepts of how to deal with it are transferrable. And recommend the book Boundaries.

    10. Observer*

      I would refuse. When they push repeat that you won’t be joining. Then DO block them.

      As for your kids – they are adults. So just give them a heads up that you are going to block your siblings of they start blowing you up. If the siblings start trying to contact your kids, the kids should feel free to handle it however they pelase as long as they leave you out of it.

    11. Tired Of Being The Target*

      Thanks for the thoughtful comments. It’s really helping. I’m going with being neutral and short and adding “Thanks for understanding” at the end.

  50. Exif*

    Has anyone found a particular product (supplements, lotions, anything) that speeds skin healing?

    I’m a healthy person with a good lifestyle (diet full of fresh produce, take vitamin D, work out regularly), but I inherited frail sensitive skin from my dad’s family. Cat scratches and blood draws leave marks that take ages to go away. I’d really like to speed up the process.

    1. A313*

      My dermatologist recommends washing the area well, putting some aquaphor on the wound, and bandaging it to keep it moist and covered while healing. (Many derms are not recommending neosporin any longer because of potential irritation/allergic reactions, I think.)

      There are also silicone sheets that you can cut to size and put on a minor-ish wound to help it heal.

    2. Squidhead*

      I work in an adjacent area as an RN but don’t want to give medical advice…so I’ll suggest that you could ask your doctor for a full metabolic panel and also micronutrients/elements like copper and zinc, and see if this identifies any deficiencies that you could target with supplements. Apart from that, staying hydrated, minimizing sun, and using light, unscented lotion regularly can help a lot.

    3. Llellayena*

      Vitamin E! Both supplement and topical. I use a vitamin E stick instead of chapstick. And the oil (or if there’s a cream) helps with softening and healing scars.

      1. Pharmgirl*

        Yes I use this too. I picked up a small bottle of the liquid at the pharmacy, and just dab it on minor scratches / scrapes / burns, seems to help.

      2. Reba*

        Apparently the evidence for topical vitamin E is mixed — maybe helpful for sun damage, likely not for scars and wounds. Making sure that you are getting it and other anti-oxidants in your food is good, though!

      3. Chauncy Gardener*

        Yes! Both vitamin E capsules and oil for specific issues. I seem to have very “frail” skin and this helps a lot

    4. Pay No Attention To The Man Behind The Curtain*

      To speed wound or bruise healing, warm moist compresses can help (i use a microwaveable rice-filled compress)…or soak in warm water. I personally think epsom salt helps especially for bruises, but I gather scientific evidence is lacking or points to the warm water being the primary source of any efficacy.

    5. Lemons*

      May not be relevant in your case, but I managed definite improvements in my extremely easily-scarred skin (on the level of: scrazed by a rose bush, barely even bled, but has left a permanent scar; went to scratch my face, caught my nose with a jagged nail= mark for 6 months, that sort of nonsense) after I started looking for cleansers, topical treatments etc. that were targeted at post-imflammatory hyperpigmentation.

    6. Mephyle*

      Two things that work for me: 1) chamomile: steep chamomile tea leaves or a bag of chamomile tea. Let it cool from boiling hot until warm, then swab the wound with it. For finger wounds, you can soak the affected finger in a little bowl or cup of it. 2) Savlon cream, an antiseptic. The active ingredients are cetrimide and chlorhexidine digluconate. I don’t know what they do, but they seem to help healing.

  51. OMG! I've been hacked!*

    I usually log into my laptop when I wake up. Since working from home, I leave my laptop turned on, logged in and ready to go so I can take a quick peak at things during my breaks and at lunch. (It takes what seems like a terribly long to turn on and get up and running.) Every once in a while, while working from home, I might use my personal laptop to look at something on my employer’s website or to look up another website or a phone number for a customer because it is quite a bit quicker than my work laptop.

    After lunch on Thursday, I was working on my work laptop when I glanced over at my personal PC sitting on my little side desk and it was going crazy. I had left a browser open and was listening to NPR through the local NPR website. The browser was being minimized and then it popped back up several times. Then, different tabs on the browser were being clicked on. Then, Word and Excel documents from my computer desktop started opening up. There were Excel worksheets that contained mundane information (such as an inventory of my doll collection and doll accessories and research I had done when I was considering buying a new car) opening up. My computer was being hacked!

    I immediately shut down the computer. It seems weird to me, but when I shut it down, I could see that the hacker was reading a letter I’d written to a friend in which I was telling about when I moved almost 2 years ago. After work, I logged back in and everything seemed to be normal, but now I’m kind of paranoid and afraid to leave the computer alone. There’s no evidence that any PII was stolen, but I can’t really tell. I’ve run anti-virus software and nothing shows up. I’m thinking I might need a better firewall program. Any suggestions about how to proceed?

    1. fposte*

      Yikes. You say you ran anti-virus software–was it also anti-malware? Because that’s crucial. And honestly, if you don’t find anything with anti-malware, I’d take it in to a reliable repair place. What firewall were you using?

      You should eventually change all your passwords and freeze your credit bureau accounts if they’re not already frozen, but don’t use that computer to do it; honestly, I’m not sure if you should do it on that network at all right now. I would also let your work know as they may want to go over any computer that was on the compromised network.

    2. Generic Name*

      It sounds like someone was able to get remote access to your computer. There are programs that do that that aren’t necessarily viruses (my company’s IT uses such a program to update and fix company devices). I’d take a look at your programs via “add/remove programs” and see if there’s anything unfamiliar in there and delete the program. If there’s a program you’re not sure about, you can google it and find out what the program does. If you can/want to spend the money, you can take it to one of those geek squad places and tell them what’s going on and ask that they remove any programs that could be used to spy on you.

    3. SimonKitty*

      Copy important documents, worksheets, bookmarks, software licenses, software, etc. onto a thumb drive or external drive. Then, re-install the operating system to have a clean operating system on your machine ensure that there is no hidden backdoor into your system. If you don’t know how, take it to an IT person to have it done. Our IT person at work would do this when malware or viruses were installed on work computers simply because it was faster and easier. Good luck!

      1. SimonKitty*

        I forgot about this in the earlier email. If the hacker got to your machine, then somehow they managed to compromise your router (I’m assuming you are at home). Change the name and password on your router. Also you might consider signing up for a VPN for home for more security.

        1. WoodswomanWrites*

          This identical situation happened to me, and the hacker had gotten into my bank account. While using my work laptop, I saw the screen activity on my home laptop and was able to wrest the mouse away before they got anything. I of course changed passwords on everything and called my bank but soon afterward, the exact same thing happened. This time I just pulled the plug for my internet connection based on the advice I received from my workplace IT contact. (Lesson learned, I never select the Stay Logged In option for online banking anymore and have two-step verification using my phone.)

          My workplace IT support team had me ditch the old router entirely and get a new one. I stopped using my personal laptop until I got the new router. Not to freak you out, but the IT team recommended getting an entirely new hard drive for my personal computer when the hacker got in a second time. Thank goodness for two things–the extended service I paid for when I bought the laptop, which included handing it off to a technician in front of my house and his fixing it on the spot in his car for COVID safety, and for having everything backed up in the cloud in two different programs.

          I hope your solution is less complicated than mine. Good luck!

    4. Observer*

      Copy everything then REFORMAT. A reinstall of the OS might not do the trick.

      Also, change log in and password for EVERYTHING, Online, off-line it doesn’t matter. That includes work related credentials.

      Also, let your work know. Because it’s possible that your personal computer got hacked using information gleaned from a work system compromise. Also, because the information the hacker got from your computer could be used to compromise your work accounts in a variety of ways. Whether it’s something as simple as sending an email to your payroll asking them to change your direct deposit or using your information in a social engineering attack on the whole company to issues in between.

      If someone read as much stuff as you say, they HAVE gotten a lot of PII. Just knowing that much about your move gives them a shocking amount of information.

      I’d also strongly suggest getting 2FA on ALL of your accounts – and do NOT use SMS / Text based forms of 2FA. use an app and / or a key (and set it up so that you have a backup that is not text either, in case something happens.)

      And make sure that you have a good anti-malware suite on your computer.

  52. Potatoes gonna potate*

    Is there a name for this kind of behavior? I’m not looking for a diagnosis, but if there’s a name for it, I could learn more about it and take things from there….

    (If it matters, I did get officially diagnosed with ADD/ADHD a few months ago but still trying to figure out the meds).

    I’ve been paying attention to some of my habits and one thing I’ve noticed is that I need to have things *ready* to go.

    For example – if I’m going to cook a meal, I make sure all the items are set out on hte counter – most ingredients, spices, utensils and pots that will be used.

    When I wake up in the morning, I put the baby’s diaper and clothes out, turn on my computer and open my remote work software, go to the bathroom, then come back and change her and sit at work.

    When I used to work in an office daily, I would spend 2+ hours every Sunday laying out my clothes (including undergarments etc), accessories and makeup. All makeup would be in separate pouches. A long time ago I read this as good advice to help save time during the week. But maybe I took it to an extreme?

    Right now, I have to move stuff from one room to another, sO I’ve left the door to the other room open and the items are put into separate little piles (this goes in this drawer, this goes in the closet etc).

    1. Anonygoose*

      Mis en place, but for everything? Haha. I’m not sure what this is either, but I work similarly. Always chalked it up to being highly organized.

      1. Potatoes gonna potate*

        I’m tearing up as “highly organized” and me have never gone in the same sentence. lol. to outsiders it might look chaotic. things everywhere etc. but I always put everything away and try to have a clean surface, like once I’m done cooking, I like to put everything back in its place.

      2. Writer Worries*

        I was going to say “being organized” too. Taking 2+ hours to lay out clothes and makeup sounds a bit excessive time-wise to me, but otherwise it just sounds like something me or my organized family members/friends would do.

        1. Clisby*

          +1. I might spend 10 minutes to lay out clothes (although maybe you mean for a whole week?), but some of this sounds like … just being organized. I definitely get out all ingredients, pans, utensils before I cook anything. I don’t want to find out halfway through making an Indian dish that I’m out of cumin, or that I’ve forgotten the baking dish I need is in the refrigerator, holding leftovers.

          1. Writer Worries*

            Yeah, I think she meant for the work week (since she said she used to do it when she worked at the office instead of WFH). But then that’s still 25+ minutes toward choosing each workday’s outfit/makeup. I’m not sure why it would take that long to find/chose things (since she sounds like an organized and tidy person).

            1. Potatoes gonna potate*

              Yes 2 hours for 5 days of clothing. Took me that long bc I have a lot of clothes & makeup (I enjoy dressing up) so lots of options but I also feel super self conscious about my appearance. (another issue that’s probably not appropriate to discuss here).

    2. Not A Manager*

      I think the question is, do you do this because you *like* to do it, or because you *have* to do it? If this is convenient for you and you like it, no problem. If you literally can’t move on to another task unless you’ve set up your clothes for the week, or you can’t use the bathroom unless you’re prepped your computer, then maybe you should talk to someone about this.

      Another possibility is that this behavior developed as a way to manage your attention issues. I have attention issues too, and I think I have a lot of workarounds as an adult that I probably wouldn’t need if this had been discovered and addressed when I was younger. Once you get your meds in order maybe you won’t need to be so rigorous about prepping everything in advance.

      If you’re concerned, why not ask whoever is managing your attention stuff, and see what they say about it?

      1. Potatoes gonna potate*

        I like to have these things ready. But at the same time, I realized that starting from scratch on certain things is my challenge. Of course it’s not for everything – obv I’ll change the baby’s diaper or go to the bathroom without preping first, but anything else – I’ll procrastinate or just avoid doing it (like makeup)

        I do plan to bring this up to her, but the appt is another month away.

    3. RagingADHD*

      Check out the book “Work Clean.” It talks about the concept of mise en place applied to non-cooking things.

      To me this sounds like a very useful adaptation of your process for getting things done. I sometimes hear it referred to as “greasing the skids.” The idea being that getting all the things prepped has less resistance/procrastination, because you can tell yourself you aren’t actually doing the thing, you just getting ready.

      Then when it’s ready, you have less inertia to overcome when it’s time to do the thing.

      The other thing I hear it called is “opening a Ziegernak loop.” The Ziegernak effect is the psychological pressure you feel to reach a satisfying stopping point before you let it go – like an earworm. You can encourage yourself to do things by deliberately leaving an open loop that will draw you in to finish it.

      The way you phrased the question sounds like you might think this is a problem or want to change it. Why would that be? Is it not serving you anymore? Sounds like a good habit to me.

      1. Potatoes gonna potate*

        omg YES this is all so spot on!!!!

        So I don’t think it’s a problem so much, just wondering if it’s a quirk or normal. It’s working for me only because I’m actually following through.

        I can imagine it’d become a problem if none of those things were done. Like all the cooking items are out, but plans/feelings changed so I won’t cook but everything is still there. Or all the clothes in that pile that need to be hung up don’t ever get hung up.

        1. MissCoco*

          I agree that it sounds like an adaptation to make things easier for you to start/complete. I have a few things that I realized post-diagnosis were absolutely ways I’d learned to overcome specific ADHD symptoms.
          You asked if it’s normal or a quirk. I’d say it’s a quirk, but sounds like a terribly useful one, and “normal” is an overrated concept IMO

    4. marvin the paranoid android*

      Whatever it is, I do the exact same thing. I like to have everything organized ahead of time too, otherwise I waste a lot of time fretting about it. Sometimes I first make lists of the things before I start putting them in their piles. It makes my mind feel tidier somehow–I think my brain needs a bit of runway set up before it’s ready to actually think about the task itself. I think some ADHD-like tendencies as well, so there might be something to that, although I haven’t got a diagnosis.

      1. Potatoes gonna potate*

        Sometimes I first make lists of the things before I start putting them in their piles. It makes my mind feel tidier somehow–I think my brain needs a bit of runway set up before it’s ready to actually think about the task itself.

        This is 10000% me!

    5. allathian*

      To be honest, it doesn’t sound like a problem? Although I’m wondering how it could take as long as 2 hours or more to lay out clothes and makeup for the week, that sounds like a bit much. Does this mean that you had 5 sets of moisturizer, foundation, mascara, powder, etc. in your separate pouches?

    6. The Other Dawn*

      This really just sounds like someone who likes to be organized and prepared, nothing more.

    7. Not So NewReader*

      When I lay stuff out ahead of time it is because I am worried I might be missing something. If it’s laid out in advance I can pick up the item that I need when I go out. This works best for me with special projects or if I am cooking a particular dish.
      I do like to plan out two or three days worth of work clothes. I don’t plan out what I will wear if I just stay home. Work clothes goes back to worry that I might not find something I want to wear. I can be a moody dresser- ha!
      I pick out something, put it on and decide that today I hate it. Then I have to pick out something else. I do this less as time goes on. And I followed the discussions here on a “work uniform” that was very helpful because it normalized in my mind that it is okay to wear only certain things at work. If I limit my variety it makes outfit selection much easier.

      You sound pretty normal to me. You just like to gather things first then do the task. That is all. This could change as life goes on OR you may be this way for the rest of your life. It serves you in some manner, if it no longer serves you then you will do something different.

    8. Jen, from the library*

      IANAD!!!! And this is not med advice…

      This sounds like coping mechanisms for untreated ADHD. I have it and as a kid I didn’t know it (heyyyy all the girls who did well in school because STRUCTURE but flailing and failing as adults!)…everyone always commented on how organized I was but it’s only now that I realize that’s what kept me from appearing to be a mess.

      As an adult, I often attempt these planned outfits or meals or whatever. When it works, great!!! But my life is full of unplanned incidents that can throw off everything and then it all falls apart. Add in the ADHD and that makes it worse and often hard to get back on track.

      In the last 18 mos, besides covid, there have been a lot of issues in my personal and work life and I now feel like I’m never going to get ahead and I’m drowning in dead relatives belongings, paperwork, medical stuff, laundry, etc.

      I don’t see anything wrong with what you’re doing, if it helps you and isn’t affecting anyone negatively, keep it up!!

  53. WellRed*

    For cooking, this is key (mise en place). I also like to have an idea of what I’m wearing but unless it’s an early plane flight, I don’t also do underwear etc. not even sure what you were doing today with makeup so maybe, maybe, that was slightly OTT but if it worked, who cares? Honestly, this all sounds very typical and good sense.

      1. LucyLou*

        But why are you putting makeup in separate pouches? I can’t understand what you were trying to accomplish or even what the logistics of this are.

          1. Writer Worries*

            I don’t use makeup, but one of my friends has a zillion different pallets/options/colors for blush and eye stuff. I just assumed OP was putting whatever makeup colors would go with each outfit in a separate pouch.

        1. Potatoes gonna potate*

          So I’m really into makeup and I have lots of options for eyeshadows/eyeliners etc. So everything I would need depending on the look would be ready to go in its individual pouches rather than having to rummage through my dresser table looking for something.

  54. PhyllisB*

    Question for the bakers in the group: my husband was looking at cake recipes on the internet because he wants to try making one. (Great cook, but never did much baking.) Anyway, he found a chocolate cake recipe that called for almond flavoring. He asked me why they would use almond instead of vanilla, and…I don’t know.
    I know almond flavoring is used in cherry fillings, peach dishes, and of course, wedding cakes, but I’ve never seen it used in a chocolate cake. Does anyone know why? And yes, I know vanilla is not required in chocolate, but I think it enhances the flavor.

    1. Not A Manager*

      It just deepens the chocolate flavor. Recipes use a lot of tricks to deepen different flavors. For chocolate cake, you’ll see advice to dissolve cocoa powder in warm water, to add instant espresso powder, warm spices such as cinnamon or cloves, etc. The almond flavoring is similar. If you don’t want to buy almond extract in order to use 1/4 teaspoon, just omit it. If the recipe calls for vanilla as well, you can use that, or you can substitute 1/2 tsp – 1 tsp pretty easily.

      I frequently compare several different recipes to see what they have in common and what’s different, and then I might tweak one a little bit. If your husband wants an explanation of why the recipe uses, say, melted chocolate instead of cocoa powder, or buttermilk instead of regular milk or water, take a look at the Cooks Illustrated website or look for America’s Test Kitchen videos. They do a good job of explaining what they are aiming for, and why their ingredients and techniques work best.

      1. PhyllisB*

        Thank you. I know the the tricks about deepening flavor; I have added coffee to chocolate frosting and cinnamon, but just never thought about almond flavoring doing that. And great idea about the website/videos. He loves looking at things like that and is constantly sharing his knowledge with me. I appreciate the suggestions.

          1. PhyllisB*

            Thank you!! That’s so kind of you!! We’re doing fine. Sad to say grandson is serving a 27 year prison term, but it is what it is. My son has finally found a sober living arrangement that is working for him. Oldest daughter is doing great, her career has really taken off. I shared her story about that in a Friday Good News a couple of weeks ago. Youngest daughter doing well so no real complaints.
            I have retired so as soon as Covid concerns have lessened I will be looking for new activities to engage in. Thank you for asking.

            1. Not A Manager*

              Thank you so much for the update. I know how much love you have in your heart for all of your family. I do think of you frequently. I’m not the type to pray, exactly, but the thoughts are similar. Best wishes to you and all of your loved ones.

        1. Jean (just Jean)*

          Nesting under Not A Manager: Me too–another internet stranger with good vibes for you and your family.

    2. Team9to5*

      Almond extract is often surprising to people and makes your cake more interesting! It’s a great “secret ingredient.” It pairs well with chocolate– I add it to my hot cocoa. I would use it in tandem with vanilla in a cake, though!

    3. RagingADHD*

      Agree with others about the purpose. One caution – recipes can take extra vanilla very well without tasting unbalanced. Its hard to go overboard with vanilla.

      Not so with almond extract. Measure precisely, because more isn’t always better and it can taste …extract-y (don’t know the right term) with just a skosh too much.

    4. marvin the paranoid android*

      I’d say that almond extract has a much stronger flavour than vanilla–if you add an equivalent amount, you’ll probably notice the flavour a lot more. But it adds a similar warm, mildly floral note, so you could probably substitute one for the other.

      The famous French reine de saba cake is chocolate with almond flour and almond extract, and it’s a great example of how well almond and chocolate go together.

      (Bonus tip: almond extract complements citrus really well. I recently made an almond poppyseed cake with an orange drizzle and it was excellent. Almond liqueur and orange juice: also a classic.)

    5. Lizzie (with a deaf cat)*

      Mm, am now thinking of chocolate covered almonds, a favourite of mine and millions of other people… it is a good flavour combination for sure.

      1. PhyllisB*

        Thanks for all the answers!! I can give him an intelligent answer now. I know almond can be overdone for sure. When my oldest daughter married the baker put it WAY too much. Most of the cake wasn’t eaten. I’m not a big fan of almond flavoring to begin with (even though I love almonds.) I have used it in the cherries for Black Forest cake and that was good.

    6. Not So NewReader*

      Just a side note about vanilla flavoring. Decades ago, I started waiting tables. I was surprised by how many ice cream treats called for added vanilla flavoring. I then realized that vanilla was considered a neutral for many things. But we always put chocolate syrup in any thing chocolate (shakes, malts). We’d only put in other flavors if specifically requested and those other flavors were more carefully measured out as they could be over- poured.

      With sherbet based recipes, I wanna say the neutral flavoring was lemon. I am not sure if I am remembering that correctly.
      What was handy about this, if someone asked for something and you weren’t sure how to make it, you would just put in the neutral flavoring- vanilla for ice creams, lemon for sherbets. It’s nice to know what has to be exact and what has wiggle room.

  55. Aurora Leigh*

    Not really car shopping yet, but starting the research phase and I know there’s lots of knowledgeable people here!

    I currently drive a 2008 Prius and I really love this car! I bought it a couple years ago for $2700 and it has 260,000 miles on it — planning to try to get it to 300,000 miles lol (our mechanics think it will absolutely do that and more).

    But I know more hybrids are coming onto the market now, are their others that would be good to keep an eye on? I’m not interested in small SUVs, I really prefer a car. I also prefer a hatchback and need a decent backseat — we have a baby in a carseat and I’d like to have space for a possible baby #2 at some point.

    1. *daha**

      Take a look at the hybrid version of the upcoming Ford Maverick. They haven’t made it to showrooms yet, so the only people who have seen them are car reviewers. It’s a four-door, supposedly small-but-not, so you would need to inspect in-person to find out how well car-seats fit in back. MPG reputed to be around 40, base cost around 22K as a hybrid. Instead of a hatch, it has a short pickup bed in back. There’s a nice tonneau cover available to keep everything dry, out of sight, and secure. It can even tow, if you ever feel the urge.

    2. RussianInTexas*

      Look at the KIA Niro. They have an electric version and a regular hybrid version. It’s slightly taller than a car, but smaller and lower than an SUV. It’s basically a taller hatchback.

    3. Car Person*

      Are you planning to buy new or used? A new Prius would be fine, but the styling of the new ones has gotten a bit weird. Compact hybrid sedans to look at would include the Honda Insight, Hyundai Elantra Hybrid and the Toyota Corolla Hybrid. Other new compact cars to consider are the Hyundai Ionic Hatchback and Kia Niro Station Wagon. The mid-sized Honda Accord Hybrid and Toyota Camry Hybrid are both very good cars with a bit more room and there are also the larger full-sized Toyota Avalon Hybrid and Lexus ES300h (although the Avalon has been discontinued for 2022). Personally, I’m a big fan of the Camry Hybrid. Almost as good of gas mileage as the Prius in a larger size and with a bit more performance.

      I understand your preferring conventional cars to CUVs or SUVs, but you might also consider the Honda CR-V Hybrid, the Subaru Crosstrek Hybrid, the Toyota Venza and the Toyota RAV4 Hybrid for their extra room and higher seating position.

    4. Please Exit Through The Rear Door*

      I ended up with a conventional Honda Fit, but I was researching hybrids as well when I purchased a car earlier this year. The Niro sounds like a very good choice if you want a hatchback. The Prius is also still an excellent choice. It’s sadly getting really tough to find something that’s not an SUV.

      Depending on your driving, the Fit (which I think is still sold new if you live outside the US, but it was dropped in this country so that Honda had more room on the assembly line to produce SUVs) could get almost as good mileage as a hybrid, and is a hatchback with a rear seat about as large as a full-size car. I drove a Prius on a road trip some years ago and averaged 39 miles per gallon over a few hundred miles. I’m averaging just about that with the Fit in mixed city-highway driving.

    5. tab*

      My husband got a 2018 Toyota Camry Hybrid, and it gets better mileage than my 2010 Toyota Prius! It has a much more comfortable ride, and nice safety features. When we retire, we’ll keep it and say goodbye to my little Prius.

    6. Retired Prof*

      I have a 2013 Ford C-Max plug-in hybrid and I love it. It was a very early plug-in, so the pure electric range is very small – about 15 miles. When I was still working, that would get me 3/4 of the way to work, then I ‘d plug in at work. I bought gas about once a month. On the hybrid mode, it gets about 40 mpg. Now that we are retired, the car mostly goes to my husband’s exercise class and back, all on one charge. We have solar panels, so it’s almost like driving the car for free. We filled the tank in March 2020 and that tank lasted until January 2021. Ford discontinued the C-Max, but it’s really a hybrid Escape.

  56. Kitchen remodel question about ranges*

    We’re looking at a Viking dual fuel range for our kitchen remodel. Does anyone have any experience (good or bad!) with Viking dual fuel ranges? It is a lot of money to plop down on an appliance.

    (we’re looking at the 5 series 36″)

    Thanks!

    1. Wrench Turner*

      Never even heard of Dual Fuel ranges until just now! I have for HVAC systems but not kitchens. Need to look more in to this myself… Viking ranges have a great reputation for quality materials and build. I’d be curious as to their long term customer service. When you need parts or repair, how hard is it to get? Who do you call and how responsive are they, etc.

      1. Kitchen remodel questions about ranges*

        I love to cook with gas on the stovetop but hate it for ovens, so having an electric oven is key for me. In our former house we had a dual fuel Five Star range. It’s still going strong almost 25 years later. If they were carried locally I’d buy that brand again, but I’d have to order it from across the country and since it isn’t carried locally I’m not likely to get it for fear of having no one around that could repair it.

        The place where we are buying from has a list of folks that work on the Vikings, so the repairs wouldn’t be a huge problem. Parts would be, but that’s part of the fun of the pandemic. We’re ordering all of our appliances by the end of the year, and hoping that they’ll be available by June of next year. Most of them have a four month lead time. So I assume that parts are backed up too.

    2. The teapots are on fire*

      My fiance’s parents have an older dual fuel Viking and parts have been a huge issue for the oven. one of the elements burned out and it took months to get a replacement part (pre-pandemic). This range is about 15 years old, though.

    3. Maryn B.*

      The house we bought two years ago came with a different brand of dual fuel range, with a gas cooktop and electric oven. While I was glad to have gas for surface cooking again, I didn’t care one way or the other about the oven.

      Now that I’ve used it for a few years, I love it. I’ve had to adjust cooking times for several stovetop recipes–this thing is faster by far, which is great for “stir continuously” recipes but led me to burn familiar things I’d made hundreds of times, like rice, at first. I didn’t need to make adjustments on any recipes for baking or broiling. I’m pretty much adjusted now and my Master Plan is never to go all-electric again.

  57. Wrench Turner*

    Grocery prices and shortages.
    I’m the primary shopper/cooker at my house noticing some clear changes on the shelves. My local grocery in the dense suburban sprawl near DC, with mostly “standard American” food, has started to have noticeably higher prices and randomly empty shelves. Not sustained empty, just like suddenly no lunch meat for a few days or standard leafy green, then back again. Today I went to an international grocer I less frequently visit for some specific ingredients and instead of bare shelves some stuff is just gone and some others price jumps are up 20-30%. I’m already a careful shopper/cooker but… ouch. I love my productive garden but there’s only so much pumpkin and tomatoes I can eat before I’m foisting it off on others.
    What are you seeing in your necks of the woods?

    1. PNW-me*

      The only thing I’ve consistently noticed being completely out of stock around here is toilet paper at Costco. I only go there about twice a month (if that) and in the most recent two trips, their paper goods have been empty. Well, once they had paper towels at least.

      Other than that, Diet Pepsi seems to be in short supply but that’s okay by me.

      Prices have gone up on some things – I noticed bacon is markedly more expensive compared to just a couple of weeks ago. I tend to buy in bulk and repackage stuff – like large bags of beans that I pour into glass jars and then seal with the vacuum sealer. I’m trying to work through my pantry right now, so I’m less aware of prices than usual.

      (I’d be drying those tomatoes or freezing them whole. You could cook the pumpkin into puree and then freeze it)

    2. Slinky*

      It’s been weird things. Butter was out briefly but back by the end of the week. A few weeks ago, the store was completely out of pumpkin briefly. One time, the ice cream aisle was almost completely empty. We’re planning to get our Thanksgiving turkey probably this week, just to be safe. Last year, we ended up with a 12-pound turkey to feed two people because the store was completely out of breasts.

    3. No Tribble At All*

      Milk, in my suburb of DC. It’s hard to find skim milk, and some days there’s no milk of any kind at all.

      1. Dwight Schrute*

        Oh yes milk and coffee creamers, whipping cream etc is randomly out of stock here in GA as well

    4. Aurora Leigh*

      Orange juice has been hard to find the last few weeks. If they have it it’s only one kind.

      I’ve been reading about the infant formula being hard to get some places but thankfully my daughter’s brand has been consistently available. That’s the one thing I would be genuinely tempted to panic buy. At least she’s 6 months old now and eating some solid food.

    5. Pay No Attention To The Man Behind The Curtain*

      PNW-me mentioned diet Pepsi but I’ve noticed diet of any sodas have been really missing. I’m in So Cal. The shelves are filled in with regular soda so it’s not obvious.

      I’ve noticed a decline in produce too…I know the season has passed on locally grown citrus but I’ve never NOT found Cuties oranges until now — late summer early fall. Also bananas and apples… they seem smaller and the displays are 80% empty.

    6. Lizy*

      I basically survive on Walmart brand chips and queso. THERE ARE NO CHIPS. THE CHIPS ARE GONE. I AM NOT OK.

      And – to top it all off – chips in general are pretty well gone. Thank God and On The Border that my husband loves me and grabs the only chips left (On The Border).

    7. Chaordic One*

      Yes, for the most part the shortages are random, although I haven’t seen any name brand sugar-free ginger ale in more than a year. One day the store will be completely out of stock of Campbell’s Chicken and Rice Soup, the next day it will be Campbell’s French Onion Soup. One day no deli chicken and the next no deli roast beef.

    8. StellaBella*

      prices have been going up for 18 months where I am, in Europe. I have noticed some changes in stock but not much out of stock overall, but the global supply chain issues we are reading about in the news are a thing, and even in this. week petrol here has jumped another 3/4c a litre (12/16c a gallon, not kidding based on looking at 4 stations yesterday).

    9. Anima*

      In Germany we had a great British cheddar shortage until recently.
      Germany does make its own cheddar, ist just not remotely the same as the original British one.
      My local supermarkets don’t stock cheddar at all anymore, I have to go to the big box store and hope they have it, but they don’t have it always.
      In good news: one of the local shops sells a niche hazelnuts spread from Eastern German now! I had to import the stuff from home by private parcel until now. :)

    10. Grocery shopper*

      I’m in the Tidewater area of VA and yeah, it’s erratic. One week the frozen potato freezers were empty. Then it was tomatoes, lemons, and limes were gone. This week it was milk.

    11. Ali G*

      I’m also in the DC area. I haven’t really not been able to get the things I want, but yeah everything is so expensive. I have a freezer full of meat and seafood, and I get most of my produce at the farmer’s market, and still I am dropping $100 every time I shop. I think staples, paper products and frozen stuff are just in high demand and prices reflect that.

    12. Dwight Schrute*

      Yes we also have random shortages here in Ga. I’ve noticed it with potatoes and potato products, lunch meat, cheeses, random cleaning supplies and snack food.

    13. Can't Sit Still*

      Cherry Coke Zero. I shouldn’t be drinking it anyway, I guess. I was using a local grocery delivery service before the pandemic, which previously specialized in local produce, bakery, and dairy. It had been a weekly treat delivery, but now it’s my main source of groceries.

      The shortages are random and inconsistent, but I’ve sort of adapted to it. I have some things set to autobuy weekly, so almost always have the basics on hand. This week, they were out of cheese. Other weeks, I get everything I ordered. I honestly stopped meal planning with fresh produce, since I can’t guarantee that I’ll be able to get whatever it is.

      Oh, cat litter and cat food! I’ve had trouble getting unscented cat litter and my cats’ preferred food is consistently out of stock. I’ve found a couple of reasonable substitutes. Thank goodness my cats aren’t terribly picky and aren’t on a special diet.

    14. Generic Name*

      I’ve been having a hard time finding the type of cat food my cats like. I’ve been to multiple stores, and all of them were out. Honestly, I think it will be a long time before the supply chain recovers, so I’ve resigned myself to not being able to find everything on my grocery list. The inflation is worrisome too. My income has actually gone down (ex has decided not to pay child support), and my raise is not equal to inflation so I’m having to budget even more carefully.

    15. Jen, from the library*

      Gatorade totally wiped out at a regular, bigger supermarket in CT suburbs. It was scary.

    16. KR*

      I’ve noticed supply issues as well. Grocery store I shop at didn’t restock large containers of Yoplait low-fat plain vanilla yogurt for almost 3 weeks. There still isn’t any on the shelf, so I’ve been buying Stoneyfield organic at 2x the price or Strawberry yogurt if they have it in stock. That’s what I’ve noticed because I don’t buy a lot of different items but there are lots of random empty shelves lately. There are other items that are just not there or run out frequently. I’ve heard supply chains across the US are pretty stressed still and there’s a worker shortage, so that’s part of the issue.

  58. Albeira Dawn*

    Is anyone participating in National Novel Writing Month this year?

    I tried once, in high school, and fell flat on my (metaphorical) face very quickly. Now I have a day job that doesn’t take up that much of my time, an idea for a novel, and about 10% more self-discipline. I’d like to at least be able to say “I wrote 50,000 words!”

    1. Dark Macadamia*

      You can do it! I “won” the first time I tried back in 2010, when I only had a part-time job. I spent two or three years on a second attempt and never got very far. I’d love to try again but it won’t be this year lol

    2. fueled by coffee*

      Not doing it this year (pandemic is consuming all my energy), but I did once while in college. I thought it was a great experience, and I learned that I *can* finish the writing projects I start. That NaNo project actually ended up becoming the only novel-length manuscript I’ve ever finished. What helped me (YMMV) was:

      1. Trying to get a head start at the beginning of the month (aiming for ~2500 words a day instead of 1700). I rarely actually hit 2500, but over-writing the first few days helped to get a little bit of a buffer going while I was motivated so that I could slack off a little bit later on if I was having a bad day/writer’s block/felt too busy to spend much time writing.

      2. Let your writing suck! First drafts are allowed to be crappy, especially when you’re trying to crank it out so quickly. Write every single day, even if you feel like you’re stuck. If you have to do a little bit of typing out “After this scene the characters need to somehow get to the giant corn maze, and I don’t really know how yet, but that’s okay because I’ll come back later and add the scene where they go to the corn maze right here. Now they are at the corn maze…” — that’s fine! It’s still words on the page, and you are going to have to edit your draft anyway.

      3. Also, ignore the urge to edit as you go. Your first draft will be terrible. There will be bad writing and plot holes that don’t make sense and subplots that you start and then forget about halfway through. DO NOT go back and try to rewrite/fix the structure during NaNoWriMo. Make a note to yourself about what isn’t working and then deal with it in December (or like, January, once you’ve recovered from November lol). Otherwise you’ll waste time and energy trying to make your draft perfect, which will take away from the time and energy you should be spending just trying to get words on a page.

      Good luck! You’ve got this!!!

    3. HBJ*

      Probably. I’ve done it a few times, won once. I have one idea that’s semi fleshed out. I actually technically started it already, but only a couple pages, so I’d just start over and re-write those parts. I also came up with another possibility when I was going through an old notebook and found an idea I’d come up with years and years ago. We’ll see which I go with. Probably the first.

    4. twocents*

      I’m planning on it. I last participated in 2017, but had kind of burned out on it that year and haven’t done it since. I got more than 100K words in 2015 and 2016, but it’s just a lot to keep up with all the activities. It may be easier this year, given that NaNo will only allow virtual events.

    5. RagingADHD*

      I tried it once with my second novel and it was a disaster. I got my wordcount all right, but I put my whole life on hold to the point that I spent 3 months digging out of the piled up chores.

      And what I wrote made zero sense because I took the admonition to just write without deleting or self-editing completely literally. It was gobbledygook. It wasn’t just weak writing, it was word salad — barely English in a lot of places. I wound up rewriting the book from scratch, and it set me back a good year and a half behind where I would have been if I had stuck with my own process. Never again.

      Everyone has a different way of working. That approach is great and liberating for some people, but it was just a terrible fit for me. My “inner editor” isn’t a censor who holds me back. It’s a good partner who helps me say what I really mean.

      Now that I write for my job, I’ve drafted significantly longer books than that in 3 weeks. But of course, since it’s my job I can devote more hours per day without losing my mind trying to get everything else done.

      I think anyone who wants to try it certainly should. Just don’t take it too seriously if it turns out not to be your thing. It isn’t a litmus test of whether you can write.

    6. James*

      I’ve been considering it. I’ve started writing down the stories of the fantasy world I built as a kid–travel gives me time in hotels to work on the stories–and one or two are worth expanding on. I’ve read that doing the prep work beforehand helps, so I’m a leg up. Plus, it’d be kinda fun to see my fiction in print, even if it’s just a vanity publication!

    7. GraceC*

      I’m not doing a novel, as such, but last October alone I wrote nearly 50k in fanfic without even realising, and have done more than 150k total this year (Oct-Oct) so I think I’m going to aim for something similar for NaNoWriMo – not making an official profile or working on one specific thing, but trying to write 50k worth across a few different projects.

    8. Forensic13*

      I’m doing it! I’ve actually been participating every year since 2009 (I “win” every time, but without the gameification, I have yet to actually go back and complete any of them. Thanks, very recently-diagnosed ADHD!) I’m hoping this year I’ll compete AND actually have the mental tools to go back and edit. I plan to write a nice silly romance, actually; I do mysteries usually.

  59. Katie*

    Jumping off the “hill to die on” thread, what movies are better than the books they’re based on? Mine are The Commitments, Fight Club, and any John Grisham movie.

    1. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

      I will second you on Fight Club. My big ones are LOTR (but NOT The Hobbit, book was better) and the Harry Potter series. His Dark Materials (the HBO version, not the Nicole Kidman movie) and actually the Chronicles of Narnia too, all for the same reason as mentioned earlier. I like all the books (well, ok, I don’t like the LOTR books but I do like the stories) well enough, they’re just all visually descriptive enough that I don’t do well at picking out the important bits of things without assistance. I also agree with The Princess Bride.

      1. allathian*

        I like both the LotR books and movies for different reasons, and I completely understand why they couldn’t fit in all the material in the books to the movies, and made some pretty significant changes to the plotline. I don’t miss Tom Bombadil in the movies at all, although he’s a pretty significant person in the book. I also thought it was a genius move to end the first movie with Boromir’s death and the end of the fellowship (a perfect climax point), and moving the encounter with Shelob to the final movie. I also don’t miss the Scouring of the Shire or the Barrow-downs in the movies.

        1. The Dogman*

          Tom Bombadill is the reason Frodo has the will to even try, knowing that Tom is immune helped and knowing the last clear from true evil place (Toms woods) would be destroyed if Sauron gets the ring inspired him.

          I think leaving him out of the movies was an error, but I get why, too many songs!

        2. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

          Pardon me for crossing comment streams, haha, but – My opinions of LOTR and Dune are similar in that I think both original authors did an amazing job of building beautifully created worlds … and then other people (both filmmakers and other authors) did MUCH better jobs of actually telling enjoyable and follow-able stories in and about those worlds. Both JRR Tolkien and Frank Herbert have writing styles that are just horrendous slogs to me.

          1. James*

            That’s exactly my problem with the previous Dune movies (haven’t seen the new one yet): they’re fun sci-fi. The original story was very much NOT fun sci-fi–it was an exploration of the unmitigated horror that fun sci-fi would truly become. I’m really hoping the new movie captures that aspect of the books.

        3. Seeking Second Childhood*

          I truly enjoyed the Lord of the Rings movies I think Peter Jackson did a great job of merging characters to simplify a cast that is hard to follow already. But I cannot get around what he did to Faramir. I won’t digress any further, because believe me I could digress at length.

    2. The Dude Abides*

      The 1975/James Caan version of Rollerball is miles better.

      The only decent thing about the 2002 version is putting Paul Heyman in a booth.

    3. Slinkobeast*

      Well, this may be blasphemous, and I do love the book, but for me the Emma Thompson movie version of Sense & Sensibility is even more wonderful. *ducks rotten fruit lobbed from the audience*

      1. RagingADHD*

        To me, that’s because the acting & directing was so much better than what I did in my head while reading.

        1. Fellow Traveller*

          I agree! I love both movie and book, but I felt like the craft of the movie was at a higher level than the book. Which, given that it was one of Austen’s first efforts as opposed to where Emma Thompson and Ang Lee were in their careers, it’s understandable.

          I think this is such an interesting thread because reading through the comments, it seems like people maybe turn to books for one kind of experience and movies for another. I can’t quite put my finger on what it is. Or maybe it’s different for everyone.

      2. Dark Macadamia*

        I love the movie but didn’t really get into the book. I’m curious to try reading it again though after reading an essay about how different they are!

    4. tangerineRose*

      Jurassic Park, but that’s my opinion mostly because of the tone of the movie vs. the book. The book is well written but much sadder than the movie. The book is also more detailed about gross stuff, and one of the characters I liked died in the book (but not the movie), plus more of the people in the book seem like real jerks.

    5. CatCat*

      Not a movie, but a TV show: The Magicians. The characters were much more compelling for me on the show.

    6. PollyQ*

      I’d call The Martian a really close tie. Master & Commander is not better overall, but the film gives a “you are there” impact to the battle & storm scenes that the books just can’t. Agree with all who say The Princess Bride.

      1. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

        I agree, The Martian was super close. I had Matt Damon’s voice in my head when I first read the book even before I saw the movie.

      2. James*

        The issue with “Master and Commander” is that it’s not a movie version of the books. It’s a movie version of a story that could have occurred within the universe of the books. That’s not a bad thing at all, to be clear! As an Aubrey/Maturin story, it’s solid. But it’s rather unfair to compare it against any of the books the way you can compare, say, “Jurassic Park” versions against one another.

        I agree that O’Brian’s fight scenes are not the best. I typically skip them when I re-read the books, unless there’s some specific reason to read them (the Polycrest’s final action, for example). Personally, I consider the books more spy thrillers than sailing stories, and leaving those out of the movie was a mistake (though one they acknowledge in the movie).

        I’d love to see O’Brian’s works get made into a miniseries, like the Hornblower stories did. A&E took a lot of liberties, but they did the Hornblower series justice. Both sets of books have too much for a movie to cover. And Aubrey/Maturin would be the “Game of Thrones” to Hornblower’s LOTR–the darker, grimmer version (I’m hesitant to say more realistic, merely because I don’t believe Game of Thrones to be realistic). There’s rumors of a new movie, but it’s unclear when it will happen (or if) and what the nature of the movie will be.

    7. allathian*

      Dan Brown’s stories work better as movies than as books, IMO. I find them rather tedious to read, and I don’t think he’s a particularly good writer, even if the movies are entertaining. That said, when I read Angels & Demons, I cast Viggo Mortensen as Robert Langdon in my head, and having Tom Hanks in the role instead was a bit distracting for me.

    8. TiffIf*

      The Princess Diaries

      I found the movie fun, entertaining. The book? I could NOT get into the writing.

      1. Dark Macadamia*

        I love the books but I think the movies do a great job of building on the books rather than just trying to copy or summarize. The movie scenes that take us beyond Katniss are amazing, especially in the first movie when we see some of Haymitch’s strategizing outside the arena and the expanded storyline around Seneca Crane.

    9. WellRed*

      Big Little Lies. Admittedly I’m not a fan of Moriartys writing, but also, the series created such a building series of dread.

    10. Dark Macadamia*

      Good Omens. The book was fine, but the show made me appreciate it more and feel like I should re-read it.

    11. My Brain Is Exploding*

      Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. My entire book club liked the move way better than the book.

      1. The Dude Abides*

        I had that book assigned to me in college, and it took everything I had to slog through it. I haven’t seen the movie, and found the book so bad I don’t think I’d want to.

      2. Patty Mayonnaise*

        I think the book was written was too soon after 9-11 to make meaning of the event, and the movie has more distance is actually saying what the book was trying to say.

    12. fueled by coffee*

      My Sister’s Keeper (they changed the ending which is a controversial move, but IMO it’s better).

    13. Forensic13*

      First Wives’ Club! The book is fun trash, but it is some TRASH. And it has a billion subplots, many of which are trying waaaay too hard.

    14. Penelope*

      Alfonso Cuaron’s “A Little Princess” is so much better than the book AND than the 1930s movie with Shirley Temple!

    15. Patty Mayonnaise*

      Silver Linings Playbook! The main character is quite a bit different in the book and they made changes in the movie to make him more capable of change (which works better because he does change). The movie adds a lot of heartfelt comedy which was needed.. Plus the acting is so fantastic from all corners! I’m pretty sure that was the first Jennifer Lawrence/ Bradley Cooper pairing and people made like four other movies with them trying to capture that chemistry.

  60. Teal*

    New friendships: mid 30s edition
    Long story short, I think I dropped the ball on a potential new friend I really hit off with on a four day trip together because I was overthinking my reply to her texts and, in wanting to “keep the momentum going”, just made it worse by not responding for over a week. I apologized for the delay in my response and she responded back, but the conversation fizzled. That was weeks ago.
    My spouse and her bf are close (we were all on the four day trip together), so although we are not geographically very close, we will see each other again eventually.
    I am still clearly overthinking this, but WWYD? Reach out? Let it be? This feels worse than dating to me, haha.

    1. RagingADHD*

      So y’all went on a couples trip and that was the first time you met? Or was it the first time you hung out much?

      I think it’s normal that you both went back to real life after getting home and didn’t keep the same conversation going indefinitely. 4 days with your partner’s friend and their partner you don’t really know is a LOT.

      Next time you run across something funny or cool to share that she’d probably like, share it. Or if you have something specific to say/ask, then do.

      But have reasonable expectations. Going several weeks between texts seems normal for a newer friend who doesn’t live close.

      1. Teal*

        Yeah, both the gf and I lived in other states while our SOs worked together and we’re floormates, so gf and I had briefly met twice before when we were both visiting the SOs over holiday weekends. The guys planned this trip, aww.

        Thanks for the suggestions! And you’re totally right, I can go months without texting some friends and it’s no big deal.

    2. Still*

      One of the best pieces of advice I’ve received when it comes to friendship is to treat people as if they’re already my friends. Do you have a friend that lives a while away, that you talk to relatively often but not all the time? Just imagine you’re dealing with that friend instead, and proceed accordingly. With that friend, it probably wouldn’t be a huge deal if you took a week to reply, would it? You’d just message them the next time you thought of something they’d find interesting.

      1. Teal*

        That is excellent advice! Thanks so much for sharing!
        Good point. I think we’re pretty similar and so wouldn’t think it’s a big deal, so she (and most people) probably wouldn’t either.

    3. Dark Macadamia*

      Reach out again without apologizing – friends don’t have to be constantly in conversation to be friends! Just check in occasionally and hopefully she’ll do the same. Do it soon before you convince yourself it’s too weird and awkward :)

      1. Teal*

        Very true :)
        I was definitely starting to lead myself down the making it weird and awkward path for no reason!

    4. Alexis Rosay*

      Reach out if you have something to authentically share or say. An article you think they’d like, a meme they’d think was funny. Or check in on something–“Hey, you were worried about stuff at work, how is that going?”

      It’s pretty difficult to create a new friendship when you don’t live close together, so I don’t think going a week or several weeks between texts is a big deal. I don’t text most of my friends all the time, even ones I’m close to.

  61. Seeking Second Childhood*

    Suggestions for recipes that take a long time to cook without putting too much moisture in the air? Any other suggestions for normal life-tasks that heat up a house?
    Our furnace inspection got postponed, so I am trying to hold off turning it on. The house is down to 59°F/15C.
    We’ve already made cassoulet twice in October, bread is proofing in the Cosori air-frier-plus. And I’m catching up on laundry, using the electric drier instead of the line.

    1. Llellayena*

      Roast vegetables….one tray at a time. Each tray will take 15-30 min depending on vegetables and it’s amazing how quickly roasted vegetables get eaten so there’s always more to make!

    2. Ali G*

      Brisket low and slow in the oven. Get a ~3 lb piece of brisket. Season liberally how ever you want. Sear on all sides. Put in a casserole dish with aromatics and some beef stock. Cover tightly with foil and cook at 325 for 2-3 hours, until it’s abut 200 degrees internal temp.

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        I have one under my desk. My husband’s desk is in a room that gets warm faster.

    3. RagingADHD*

      How about meringue or fruit leather? You keep the oven really low, but fruit leather can take all night.

      Then there’s stuff that heats you up instead of the whole house, like vigorous housework, or working out.

      I assume you’re wearing a hat and wool socks? If not, I recommend it. I can be comfortable at much lower temperatures if my head & feet are are warm.

    4. Generic Name*

      You could run your oven’s self cleaning cycle, if it’s so equipped. That puts off an extraordinary amount of heat, and it takes hours to complete, including the cool down.

    5. fposte*

      I’m curious–can’t remember where you care, but in my neck of the U.S. woods, people often don’t even get their furnaces inspected, let alone wait to run them until they are. Is that are personal preference or are you somewhere where that’s required?

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        I should have said cleaning & inspection. It’s an aging furnace, and I skipped last year because of the pandemic. I can’t even remember if either of us changed the filter.
        I’m in New England, so it’s pretty critical equipment.

    6. Not A Manager*

      Why don’t you want to put too much moisture in the air? IIRC, steam and moisture are a good way to disburse heat – that’s why people with energy insecurity often keep a pot of water boiling on the stove. NOT that I’m suggesting this as a way to heat your home. But if you’re open to the idea of added humidity as a way to disburse additional heat, you could make a big pot of soup.

      It’s hard to think of other life tasks that would heat up your house, other than maybe a hot shower. If you take a very hot bath and then put on your warm clothes, it will keep you warm for a few hours.

      This sounds very unpleasant and I hope you get your heat fixed soon.

      1. Seeking Second Childhood*

        It’s just really humid in the house already. We’re on a hillside and run a dehumidifier in the lower level when the furnace isn’t on.
        I’m going to be asking my husband to split some wood so we can run the woodstove.

    7. PollyQ*

      Do you have any reason to think there’s anything wrong with your furnace? If no, then I’d probably just go ahead & turn it on.

  62. Ali G*

    Anyone else unfortunate enough to get the non-COVID cold that apparently is running around? I woke up last Saturday sick and it’s still hanging on. I haven’t been sick in almost 2 years! I had to get out of the house on Thursday for a few hours and I went to a local coffee shop for breakfast and to work for a bit. That’s the only place I can think of where I was around other people for an extended time. Are our immune systems so weakened since we’ve been in isolation for 18 months? I really don’t want to get sick every time I leave the house now…

    1. GraceC*

      I came down with it yesterday, UK variant – I’ve sent a PCR test off today just in case (I donated blood on Friday, so I want to be doubly sure that it’s not covid for the sake of all the nurses). Feel like crap, and hoping it doesn’t longer for too long – I booked a couple of days off for later this week to have a long weekend, and I think I’ll have to spend it holed up in bed feeling miserable.

    2. heckofabecca*

      Oh my god, I didn’t realize this was a thing. I had it last week, and I missed 2.5 days of work—less than two weeks into my new job!!!!

    3. EBennett*

      It’s going around the school where I teach and I actually had to take a sick day! (30 years of teaching and I usually have 1-2 sick days per year)
      I thought I was really good about wearing my mask, but no more lunches with other teachers for a while . . .

    4. Generic Name*

      I feel like I’ve had it twice! And I’ve been working from home and wearing masks most places. So annoying. I just got my flu shot, so hopefully I won’t get the flu this year. I had an awful fever/cough January or February of 2020 that may have been the flu or may have been COVID. Don’t want to repeat that experience.

    5. RagingADHD*

      I’ve got something nasty with a fever and body aches as well as major conjestion & cough. Rapid swab said non covid, waiting on PCR.

      Got my flu shot on Wednesday, so on Thurs I thought I was just out of sorts from that. Friday hit like a freight train.

      If I caught flu right before my shot I’m gonna be so pissed off.

      1. RagingADHD*

        FWIW, we have had fewer colds than usual this past 18 mos or so, but we’ve all had a few things here and there. I WFH but my husband doesn’t and the kids were in-person most of the year last year as well as this one.

        I’m so glad we got vaxxed because it’s just a numbers game. All the masks & handwashing in the world, and something is going to get through somewhere.

    6. LNLN*

      I had a cold during the pandemic, and it was very depressing. It made me think I was doomed to catch COVID-19 (this was before the vaccine). But then I read that cold viruses live on surfaces much longer than the COVID-19 virus does. Although I am very conscientious about washing my hands, I probably picked up the cold virus at the grocery store (handling the shopping cart). I am sorry you have been sick!

    7. Spearmint*

      I got a really bad cold a few weeks ago (tested negative for covid). I had to take two days off of work to recover, but luckily I felt back to normal in less than a week. Like you, I hadn’t had a cold in a couple of years. But I wouldn’t worry too much about it. I’ve been routinely going into public spaces since being vaccinated back in May and this is the only sickness I got. Colds happen sometimes, but being around people is worth it.

    8. Double A*

      Yes, my daughter is in preschool so the standard preschool sicknesses are back in circulation. Weirdly, my husband got SO sick, my toddler didn’t even seem sick but had an intermittent runny nose and slept more than usual, the baby didn’t get sick at all, and I just felt under the weather for a couple days but didn’t even get a runny nose. The variety of how it hit us was very strange.

      (My husband got sick first and took a rapid test at the peak of symptoms, got a negative, and did a PCR test the next day, also negative. The rest of us didn’t test because we figured it’s the same thing and rapid tests are freaking expensive).

  63. It's Quarantime!*

    It’s very early and I am very awake.
    Does anyone else find themselves lying in the dark and staring at the ceiling for a few hours most mornings?
    How do you handle it?
    I’ve started trying to go to bed earlier to get the sleep I’m missing out on, but I don’t know if that’s making it worse.
    Naps are not an option for me as when need time told around my body refuses to actually sleep at that night because the sleep task has already been checked off for that 24 hour window.

    1. It's Quarantime!*

      *naps are not an option as when bed time rolls around…
      My phone thinks it’s smarter than me.

      1. It's Quarantime!*

        Hard to tell, really….
        I’m profoundly exhausted most of the time, but that is most likely an artifact of long covid rather than inadequate sleep.

          1. It's Quarantime!*

            My general doc has me on something like 4000IU (100mcg) daily vitamin d supplement.
            It’s cold and dark and cloudy here now, so getting sun isn’t an option for a while.

    2. Generic Name*

      How many hours of sleep are you getting normally? Do you feel tired the next day or do you feel refreshed or at least normal? You may not need that much sleep.

      1. Generic Name*

        Plus, if you don’t want to lay in bed awake before you are supposed to get up, going to bed earlier will make it worse. Try going to bed later and see if that helps.

        1. It's Quarantime!*

          I usually get ready for bed around 9-10pm. Then it takes a bit to actually fall asleep, so 10-30-11p or so, then I usually wake up for some amount of time around 4am. Sometimes I can drift off for a little bit, but I’m usually pretty awake by 6:30-7am…
          This has been a pretty normal pattern, actually, for most of my life.
          Maybe I’m only unhappy about it because I’m just So Tired all the time now.

          1. fposte*

            There’s a fair bit of historical research to suggest that pre-industrially, it was common for people to have a first and second sleep; it could be that’s how your clock works, too. Also, are you on any medication? I find medication pretty commonly disrupts my sleep–not always hugely, but just enough to make it harder to drop off and easier to get disturbed in the night.

            1. It's Quarantime!*

              Omeprazole, various vitamins (D, Biotin), birth control…

              But aside from the vitamin d, which is new, they’ve been pretty consistent for years now.

              1. fposte*

                And nothing on that list seems all that likely to wake you up anyway, so it’s probably not that. I’m guessing long COVID and internal sleep clock.

          2. Red Reader the Adulting Fairy*

            That actually describes my sleep habits pretty much to a T – 9:30-2 and 3-6, and if I don’t get the 2am wake-up (either naturally or by being woken up by something) I wake up by 5am without an alarm. I just roll with it, read or whatever during the interim. The first and second sleep thing fposte references is called “biphasic sleep” and it has pros and cons :)

          3. Generic Name*

            Oof, yeah, that’s tough. If I’m wide awake in the middle of the night and can’t go back to sleep, I’ll read a book with one of those clip on book lights. It’s actually kind of nice. Much more relaxing than turning on a lamp, and I’d like to think having the dimmer light keeps my brain in “you should be sleeping” mode. I’m also someone who can’t really nap. I feel you.

    3. Flower necklace*

      I listen to an audiobook – something that I’ve read before and that has a really good narrator. Usually I fall back asleep but, if not, at least I’m not bored.

      1. It's Quarantime!*

        This is an excellent suggestion. :)
        I’ve been working very hard at adapting to the constant tinnitus that started in March and hasn’t stopped since.
        Near-constant audio books and podcasts are my friends.
        I’d appreciate any titles you might care to share.

        1. Flower necklace*

          I’m listening to House of Suns by Alastair Reynolds right now. I like his work, but he can be an acquired taste. If you like fantasy, though, Naomi Novik’s Temeraire series is very good.

        2. MizPurple*

          I have a few stand-bys for audio books that get me to sleep reliably: Wind in the Willows, Howard’s End, Middlemarch, anything Austen or Trollope or Dickens or Wharton. Victorians and Edwardian for the snooze prize! (I do happen to enjoy that sort of book for its own sake, but they do tend to be subtle in their artistry.)

    4. ATX*

      I find that it takes quite a long time to adjust to a new sleeping schedule. Weeks, sometimes a couple of months! Are you waking up early enough for your body to be tired? How often do you drink caffeine? Do you work out?

      I had a foot injury recently and was only doing mat Pilates work outs in my garage and I could barely sleep at night (I’m used to cardio and weight lifting sessions). If I have caffeine after 2pm, I won’t be able to fall asleep. And if I wake up late, I certainly can’t go to bed at my normal 10pm time.

      1. It's Quarantime!*

        I’m definitely tired most of the time, but only occasionally sleepy. Caffeine has always made me a zombie and gives me a headache, so I don’t ever drink it.
        I was, formerly, pretty active, before covid. I ran a half marathon in 2013. But the more I respond to everyone’s helpful replies the more I’m realizing that my problem may not be sleep at all, and it’s more that I’m having a hard time adapting to my new limitations…

    5. Pay No Attention To The Man Behind The Curtain*

      I wake up too early on most days (4-4:30 am) but i specifically avoid laying there staring into the dark. I get up and listen to a podcast in the living room or just start getting ready for the day very slowly — an opportunity to have a big hot breakfast!

      There are podcasts specifically meant for putting you to sleep; they’re mostly scene-setting type “stories”…no plot, very little action, a little character. If I close my eyes and really try to focus on the scene, that often puts me back to sleep.

      I think the prevailing advice is to be very strict about consistent bedtime and routines. The more you fiddle with your sleep habits by going to bed early or napping, the less restful night will become.

      1. It's Quarantime!*

        Ugh, I’m so sorry that you have been dealing with early wake-ups.
        You’re right, of course. I need to get more consistent with my before routine.

    6. Not So NewReader*

      I had a number of things that were interfering with my sleep.
      I had some thyroid stuff going on.
      Then there was the lack of protein problem. Turns out we need energy to sleep. If we have no energy then sleep gets really difficult.
      I do much better if I have a winding down routine about an hour before bed, read, do my teeth, etc.
      I was also low on minerals. That was interesting. (NOT) A tired mind runs and runs and rehashes and just does not turn off.
      I backed off on snacking after dinner and opted for a warm herbal tea instead. Nothing like trying to go to sleep while the body is still breaking down what was just consumed.
      Another thing that disrupted my sleep- and this is weird- was if my feet were too hot or too cold. I don’t know how long it too me to corelate the two problems. Now I bundle up cold feet, or I stick my feet out of the covers if they are too warm. This works well for me.

      Just my opinion but probably to nail this one down you may find that you need to do a couple things to get yourself on track.

      1. It's Quarantime!*

        Yeah, covid has really kicked my trash, and I’m certainly trying to get it figured out. I’m waiting for some results on some recent blood work. And I have an appointment with a sleep medicine clinic in November.
        Your right that a tired mind is unhelpful for good sleep.
        I usually fall asleep wearing fluffy socks, and then I end up taking them off sometime in the night. :)

  64. Potatoes gonna potate*

    Does anyone have experience with this?

    In March I had bloodwork done for an annual physical. 

    I got a bill for $2000 b/c they had put my mother’s insurance on there. I called htem and told them they had the wrong insurance. so they put the right insurance. Told to disregard the bill. 

    Get a bill again, same amount. Call again, they said insurance rejected it. They’d put a hold on the bill. 

    Called insurance, they said it was rejected in error and that they’ll re-do the claim. Told to not worry about the bill. 

    Got a text message about the $2000 bill, so I logged on to their website and they still had the wrong information (HOW????). I changed it and was told to wait a month or so, and it’s pending. 

    Got a bill just now, still $2000!!!! 

    My insurance 10000% covers bloodwork – there’s absolutely no confusion or mistake about that. I don’t owe this. I don’t know what else to do. 

    *table flip type thinggy*

    1. Generic Name*

      OMG, I’m dealing with something similarly dumb with my son’s insurance. Because I’m not on the policy, they said they couldn’t even talk to me even though he’s a minor child (and is autistic). Ask your employer/spouse’s employer if they have an insurance ombudsman they work with who could help you. My company’s insurance denied a coworker’s emergency appendectomy because they said it wasnt “medically necessary”. The bill was like $45k, and the ombudsman advocated on behalf of my coworker and the surgery was eventually covered.

        1. Generic Name*

          Maybe. It’s happened with two different providers. One of which I can’t even get ahold of. It’s so dumb.

    2. Jen, from the library*

      Sorry the nesting got messed up. Long time reader and poster on other boards, first time commenting here lol.

      Try escalating the issue. Instead of dealing with whomever you get when you call the dr office/health system/etc, ask for the practice manager or billing manager. It’s clear that something isn’t saving in the billing system, especially if you’ve given them the correct insurance info.

      If they SWEAR they have their information correct, then contact your insurer. Your insurance and your mom’s isn’t with the same insurance company is it? Like where you’re in the system but just assigned to the wrong group?

      I had a similar situation once where I changed jobs and plans but the insurance company was the same (think of me working at Teapots Inc. and having a policy with Fake Best Health Care, then me moving to United Teapots, also using Fake Best Heath Care but a different policy). Fake Best Health Care never switched me over as requested and continously rejected claims…get this, even though I had an ID card under the new job!!!!!! And had been paying premiums for the new policy.

      Finally after a ton of calls, things were straightened out but I swear, a lot of the CSR do NOT know how to think outside of the box. Good luck!!!

      1. Generic Name*

        The same situation is happening with my son. He switched from being covered under my insurance to being covered under his dad’s insurance. Two different employers, but the insurance company is the same. The insurance company keeps insisting he has other coverage, which he categorically does not.

    3. Girasol*

      If you can do it, make a three way phone call between you, the medical provider, and the insurer. I did that with a bill on which I’d gone round and round and it was immediately solved. It was weird: they both immediately agreed that I owed nothing, and they agreed on the reason why, as if they’d both known all along. But up until I got them together, the insurer said only “We won’t pay” and the hospital kept sending, “You owe beaucoup dollars and it’s overdue.” After the call the bills stopped. This and several other incidents lead me to wonder if some medical billing offices are so tight lipped and persistent because sometimes they can badger people into paying bills that they don’t really owe.

    4. Observer*

      I had something like this years ago. I wound up making umpteen calls got bumped up to someone supposedly “high up” enough to help, but whose job it seems to me was to get people to give up. She wound up giving me this very snooty “Calm down, I’m just trying to help you” line. At which point I snapped at her “No you’re not!” I think I kind of shocked her because I could almost hear her take a deep breath.

      Then she asked me what I wanted her to do. I said “I want you to submit the CORRECT bill. This what you should put on it. NOTHING else.” Lo and behold they actually submitted the correct bill and the insurance finally covered it.

      In your case, it sounds like you have an extra edge here, because on top of everything else it sounds like they violated HIPAA – you got to see your mother’s insurance information, and she almost certainly got to see your medical information. Whether you personally care about that is not the issue. The issue is that they are NOT ALLOWED TO DO THAT!

      1. RagingADHD*

        It’s allowed if they mutually signed off on it- which is common when family members live together or are each other’s caregivers.

        I have a family member listed on my consent forms.

        The billing error is one thing. There may or may not be a privacy issue, depending on the way they did their paperwork.

    5. Broken ankle nightmare*

      I broke my ankle in my work’s parking lot and basically all the medical claims involved (including 33 PT appointments!) were a nightmare. Urgent care had me file a worker’s comp claims because it was unclear if the injury would be covered by WC or not. So when I began medical treatment, I had a WC claim number while they investigated. The WC claim was denied because they said the parking lot didn’t count as a workplace injury so I told my orthopedist’s office they needed to bill my medical insurance instead…Except they must had included notes about it being a ‘workplace injury’ with every single claim for my visits, so all of those claims were initially denied and I had to appeal them.

      Then my PT’s office coded every single PT appointment incorrectly so my insurance processed the claims as out of network instead of in network. I had overpaid them at least $1500 (deductible, out of pocket portion) by the time they figured out that those visits were in network, so my insurance co started re-processing some of the claims. At that point, in a conversation with my grand boss I told him about the nightmare I was dealing with and, horrified, he put me in touch with our corporate benefits people and they took over getting things corrected for me.

      The final piece of nonsense was the claim/billing for my walking boot. The company that provided the boot waited until nearly 9 months after the day my orthopedist gave me my boot before they contacted me…and then they asked for the claim number so they could bill WC. I called them and told them they needed to bill my medical insurance and they said they would. Nothing happened for nearly a month and then they contacted me for the WC claim number again! They finally billed my medical insurance…who denied the claim because the boot company took too long to file the claim from the date I received my boot. They appealed it somehow and got my insurance to pay most of it. I got the bill for my portion 11 months after the injury.

      It was so stressful, especially because the injury itself was horrifically painful and involved such a long recovery. I shouldn’t have had to waste energy on making sure my doctors’ billing departments and medical insurance company were doing their jobs.

    6. 653-CXK*

      I’m the ombudsman (claims liasion analyst) where I work…most of the members are seniors, and often their receive bills from providers because they didn’t submit the correct insurance to the provider…so I have to call the provider, give them the correct insurance information, and tell them where to submit the claim.

      Almost all the time, it results in the member not getting another bill…until the provider sees they weren’t paid enough and they try to balance bill the member. That results in another phone call to the provider being told they can’t do that, and most of the time they back off.

      Yeah, I would escalate this and ask why this claim/bill keeps on getting rejected. If you’ve given them the correct insurance information, it should have resolved this situation a long time ago.

      1. 653-CXK*

        Edit: I would escalate this with both the provider and the insurance company. Both of them should have the correct insurance information.

  65. Jen, from the library*

    Try escalating the issue. Instead of dealing with whomever you get when you call the dr office/health system/etc, ask for the practice manager or billing manager. It’s clear that something isn’t saving in the billing system, especially if you’ve given them the correct insurance info.

    If they SWEAR they have their information correct, then contact your insurer. Your insurance and your mom’s isn’t with the same insurance company is it? Like where you’re in the system but just assigned to the wrong group?

    I had a similar situation once where I changed jobs and plans but the insurance company was the same (think of me working at Teapots Inc. and having a policy with Fake Best Health Care, then me moving to United Teapots, also using Fake Best Heath Care but a different policy). Fake Best Health Care never switched me over as requested and continously rejected claims…get this, even though I had an ID card under the new job!!!!!! And had been paying premiums for the new policy.

    Finally after a ton of calls, things were straightened out but I swear, a lot of the CSR do NOT know how to think outside of the box. Good luck!!!

  66. IndyDem*

    I know this is a late comment, but that’s actually apropos to my question. I’m often too busy to read this website everyday – at least the comments, I try to make time to read the letter. Sometimes I want to comment on a letter, but it’s 36 hours old and it seems that everyone has moved on. Posters – how often do you go back and look at posts you’ve put in the comments section in the recent past, and do you think it’s worth commenting on older posts?

    1. Mstr*

      Personally, I think you’re right that people have generally moved on. I’d only comment/expect readers on the same day. I might check to see if my (same-day) comment got replies the next day, but I wouldn’t expect to continue the conversation any further.

    2. fhqwhgads*

      I’m pretty sure comments actually get automatically turned off after not too long. I think a week? But I’m not certain. Anecdotally, any time I’ve checked more than 24 hours later, the additional comments are in the single digits. Sometimes the dropoff is more like within 12 hours, but it depends.

    3. Pennyworth*

      I usually move on, unless I have posted something and am looking for comments or a response. I also go back to re-read book, podcast recommendations etc if I haven’t noted them down.

    4. GermanGirl*

      Since I’m in a different time zone than most of the others, I’m often either very early or very late to the comment section, so if I was very early and the topic was interesting, I might go back and have a look at the comments the next day.

      But if it’s older than about a day, I know not to bother replying unless there was a question to one of my own comments. Weekends are a bit of an exception – I usually check them one last time Monday morning so I can see all the Sunday evening posts from the US crowd.

    5. I take tea*

      If it’s an interesting topic or I have commented myself, I sometimes circle back a day or two later – as now, for example, checking comments on Monday. And there’s always the possibility that someone reads something a lot later, because of the “you may also like”, so I’d comment anyway, but not ask a question.

    6. SarahKay*

      For the weekend thread I’m often reading it (or checking back on it) up to mid-week. All the other items though, I’d only check back for about 24 hours.

  67. MsChanandlerBong*

    Anyone with experience living at high altitude? I know you need to adjust to the altitude, but I’ve been here for six years, and it seems like I struggle so much here vs. when I go back home to visit my family (they are only at about 1,800 feet above sea level, vs. the 5,500 feet above sea level I’m at here). Here, when I do anything that causes even mild exertion, my heart starts pounding and I am huffing and puffing. I’m talking something as simple as hanging clothes in the closet or moving some things around the bedroom. I just visited my home state and had none of these problems–and I was much more active than usual due to all the activities I planned with my friends. I am not in good shape, but there is such a drastic difference between here and there that I can’t help but think the altitude is the problem.

    1. Generic Name*

      I live at approx 6,000 ft altitude. I spend a fair amount of time at 10,000 ft. Most people do get used to it, but some bodies don’t. Do you have asthma or COPD? That might be exacerbating things. Also, do you live in a major metro area and your home state is less developed? You might be having problems with city pollution rather than altitude. I don’t think being in shape or out of shape has a ton to do with altitude adjustment. I recently started experiencing altitude sickness anytime I go above 13,000 feet (more than once I’ve gone above that and my body is basically like “newp!”), and apparently it has little to do with physical fitness. Not sure why, though.

    2. PollyQ*

      You should see a doctor about this. I’m sure being at sea level makes it easier for your body, but it’s more than possible that there’s some underlying problem that’s causing your distress.

      1. Pennyworth*

        Seconding see a doctor. Preferably one who knows about altitude sickness. My understanding is that some people – regardless of fitness etc – just do not cope at altitude.

    3. Person from the Resume*

      I agree you should see a doctor. I lived in Colorado Springs for 3 years when I was in my early 20s. I was pretty fit, but I acclimated within weeks/months. I’d lose acclimation when I returned to sea level. I would huff and puff for a little while, but eventually acclimate again. I think acclimation should take months, not years, and you should mildly exert without huffing and puffing.

    4. Anon From Here*

      Have a doctor check you for anemia. I have an unusual type of anemia, I can’t take iron for it, and it makes it super difficult to enjoy travel to high-altitude locations like Denver or the Grand Canyon.

  68. Who Plays Backgammon?*

    I bought some little succulents at the beginning of the pandemic. they grew! so recently I transplanted them. Some died. Boo. Those plants cost me as much as $7! What did I do wrong? I got advice at the garden store, bought cactus potting soil…and the finicky palm ( always have high mortality rate with palms but just can’t stop trying) that I transplanted in a pot saved from the trash (that’s called curbside pickup) is thriving. Please help these little spiky innocents!

    1. Pennyworth*

      I often grow succulents from cuttings (I hate to pay for them!) and if I don’t have succulent potting soil to hand I plant them out in ordinary potting mix with some horticultural sand mixed in to give good drainage. In my experience you can love a succulent to death, especially with too much water, but you can neglect them badly and they won’t die. They can survive long periods with very little water and will gratefully recover with a little bit of attention. Try benign neglect and see how that goes.

    2. Retired Prof*

      I have a succulent jungle that is really a Darwinian garden – lots of neglect. The Crassulas especially thrive on neglect. Most succulents don’t want a lot of water – they can rot off at the roots. All of mine are in standard potting soil, or in the ground – I dug a bunch of compost and sand into our clay soil. I should say that I’m in California where jade plants grow into small trees outside. The succulents are on drip irrigation and get watered twice a week in the summer (three times when it’s over 100 degrees), once a week (or when I remember) in the winter if it hasn’t rained. I saturate them, then leave them alone. If I had one inside I’d water once a week or when it’s been dry for a couple days.

    3. Not So NewReader*

      Transplanting can be tricky because plants can be really fussy.

      It could be that they did not get enough root transferred over- eh, roots break. This happens. Then the plant has a hissy fit.

      Some plants (not all) like to be transplanted to sit in the soil at the EXACT level they were at in the previous pot. Plants can get really anal about this and tell ya, “Hey I am a quarter inch too low!” sigh.

      After transplanting the plant may have been looking for more light or less light. Yeah, little prima donnas.

      What you can do is go back to the garden store and talk to them. They probably will have some inputs. It could be that some plants just don’t last that long or that some plants just do not like transplanting period. In other words, it’s nothing you did, it’s the nature of the plant. IF this is the case you can ask them to steer you to something that has a better chance of surviving.

Comments are closed.