surface–detail:

😮 I never showed you my bake!
Good grief.
Bake Off week 5(?): Pastry.

Bakewell tart. I don’t normally say I’ve made a perfect bake, but hot damn I made a perfect cake, I took it to work and it went down a storm. So much so I had a few people very surprised that it was gluten free. There’s a new guy in the lab and he’s now my best friend because he was the only person who requested a large slice, made a refreshing change to ‘ooh just a little bit’. He did offer me fruit and nut mix today so he’s lost a bit of my respect but he’s a foodie so it’s all good.
Either way I pride myself on the fact that I have never had a soggy bottom, I thank my mother for that, she taught me good.
This week I am combining elements from the first and last challenge and I’m making a three layer, layer, not tier, I canny do tiers man, coconut and lemon cake. Sunday is going to be a full day of baking.
PAY DAY ON FRIDAY!!! I HAVE £2.50!!!!! I CAN DO IT!?!?!?!
28th September 2016

revolutionarybutchjuri:

It means a lot to me that CR has Marian Lavore, a charming, competent woman with a commanding presence who’s famous across a continent, also be agoraphobic. It feels very true to her character and makes a lot of sense (more than Marian being trapped in her apartment by someone else, to be honest), while not being the sole or even most important feature of her character by a long shot. It shows how people with anxiety disorders are complex people who still excel at other things.

load-bearing

brightlotusmoon:

aspiring-bonobo-rationalist:

theunitofcaring:

Sometimes people hit a place in their life where things are going really well. They like their job and are able to be productive at it; they have energy after work to pursue the relationships and activities they enjoy; they’re taking good care of themselves and rarely get sick or have flareups of their chronic health problems; stuff is basically working out. Then a small thing about their routine changes and suddenly they’re barely keeping their head above water.

(This happens to me all the time; it’s approximately my dominant experience of working full-time.)

I think one thing that’s going on here is that there are a bunch of small parts of our daily routine which are doing really important work for our wellbeing. Our commute involves a ten-minute walk along the waterfront and the walking and fresh air are great for our wellbeing (or, alternately, our commute involves no walking and this makes it way more frictionless because walking sucks for us). Our water heater is really good and so we can take half-hour hot showers, which are a critical part of our decompression/recovery time. We sit with our back to the wall so we don’t have to worry about looking productive at work as long as the work all gets done. The store down the street is open really late so late runs for groceries are possible. Our roommate is a chef and so the kitchen is always clean and well-stocked.

It’s useful to think of these things as load-bearing. They’re not just nice – they’re part of your mental architecture, they’re part of what you’re using to thrive. And when they change, life can abruptly get much harder or sometimes just collapse on you entirely. And this is usually unexpected, because it’s hard to notice which parts of your environment and routine are load bearing. I often only notice in hindsight. “Oh,” I say to myself after months of fatigue, “having my own private space was load-bearing.” “Oh,” after a scary drop in weight, “being able to keep nutrition shakes next to my bed and drink them in bed was load-bearing.” “Oh,” after a sudden struggle to maintain my work productivity, “a quiet corner with my back to the wall was load-bearing.”

When you know what’s important to you, you can fight for it, or at least be equipped to notice right away if it goes and some of your ability to thrive goes with it. When you don’t, or when you’re thinking of all these things as ‘nice things about my life’ rather than ‘load-bearing bits of my flourishing as a person’, you’re not likely to notice the strain created when they vanish until you’re really, really hurting. 

Almost two weeks after reading this, and I’m still kind of blown away at what a ridiculously fruitful definition this is.  Like I had no idea that load bearing things were a thing that needed to have a word for them, but now I’m like holy shit I’m so glad that there’s now a word I can use to refer to this really important class of Thing.

This is astounding. Load-bearing. Forget spoons, this concept is wonderful. I’m going to update my Spear Theory with this.