I decided I'm going to read DQ hard copy. Probably using Grossman as my primary, although I have the old rutherford that I may glance at. As a third option, Ormsby is on Gutenberg, I'll at least peek at the Dores.
Bonus:
I decided I'm going to read DQ hard copy. Probably using Grossman as my primary, although I have the old rutherford that I may glance at. As a third option, Ormsby is on Gutenberg, I'll at least peek at the Dores.
Bonus:
It's summer, which means I'm (mostly) off from work, and it's very easy to sit on my couch or in my desk chair mindlessly Interneting all day. And so, I've decided to resurrect a system used during Covid to keep myself from going totally insane/depressed/fat.
Every hour, get up and move. Even if it's just a quick lap around the house or something.
Every hour, do one of the things from the list below.
Every day, do all the things on the list below at least once.
1. GET OUTSIDE! TOUCH GRASS! BREATH AIR! ABSORB SUN! There are 9001 studies on the benefits of this for your mood/mental health, sleep, etc., and it forces you to put pants on for at least five minutes.
2. Exercise. Approximately the same justifications as above, plus it's nice to be fit and be able to actually do things without feeling like you're having a heart attack, and to be flexible enough not to feel like you're breaking in half when you go to take off your shoes.
3. Make something. Nothing screams to the universe, "I EXIST!" like making something. It can be a small something, like a meal (I'm open to arguments on whether something like a can of soup counts), a paragraph of writing, or a doodle. Doesn't matter, make stuff.
4. Talk to someone. Are we really human without other humans?
5. Clean something. You can keep a whole apartment clean in like 5 or 10 minutes a day, and maybe half an hour once a week. A house is harder. I want a smaller house.
You can even combine them. Go for a walk/jog OUTSIDE! Make a new Magic deck and play your friend with it! Mow your lawn! If you do a design on your yard AND call your mom while you do it, that counts as all five.
Bonus:
Summary: Respect goodness, not money or misused ability. Don't worry about things you can't help, but fix your mistakes.
Commentary:
254. A Man like a Watch, is to be valued for his Goings.
Not his comings. Especially if he's a fast watch.
267. Have a care of that base Evil Detraction. It is the Fruit of Envy, as that is of Pride; the immediate Offspring of the Devil: Who, of an Angel, a Lucifer, a Son of the Morning, made himself a Serpent, a Devil, a Beelzebub, and all that is obnoxious to the Eternal Goodness.
This is like the firetruck joke.
271. Not to be provok'd is best: But if mov'd, never correct till the Fume is spent; For every Stroke our Fury strikes, is sure to hit our selves at last.
Anger is like having two wolves inside of you and expecting your enemy to play fetch.
I'm going to use this edition on Gutenberg for my base. I like Ormsby's translation, and it Doré illustrations in already. It'll be a bear to Google Docs it, but after my experience w/ Animal Farm I think it's going to be the best combination of enjoyablity and studiability. Working my way through the front matter today. Fun fact "Saavedra" is based on the word for "one-handed" since his left arm was crippled in battle.
Already a great story, and I'm just on the about the author!
Animal Farm (1945) by George Orwell: Chapter 9
Bonus:
Wrapping up! (I did not watch this)
Summary: THE PIGS ARE CAPITALISTS
Commentary:
After much choking, during which his various chins turned purple, he managed to get it out: "If you have your lower animals to contend with," he said, "we have our lower classes!"
Orwell does a lot better with 1984. He tries to have it both ways in Animal Farm. It's not direct enough to be readable as an essay critiquing Stalin (ala Goldstein's book), but it's too didactic to be a good story.
But really, what I learned is that I remember a lot more when I take notes, and it's a lot easier to write these.
Onto... something? tomorrow? I'm not sure.
Animal Farm (1945) by George Orwell: Chapter 8
Bonus:
Commentary:
The animals saw no reason to disbelieve him, especially as they could no longer remember very clearly what conditions had been like before the Rebellion.
Has it been a week since I said, "being able to read and be aware of history is a crucial defense against totalitarianism" yet?
This is getting kind of repetitive.
Animal Farm (1945) by George Orwell: Chapter 7
Bonus:
Summary: Orwell really likes the word countenance. Napoleon does the "no, we were always at war with Eurasia" thing. The executions start.
Commentary: These are a lot harder to do when I only mark the book, but don't do chapter summaries. Especially if I read it a couple days ago.
I decided I'm going to read DQ hard copy. Probably using Grossman as my primary, although I have the old rutherford that I may glance ...