Making Apple Cider by Beatrix Potter (1866-1943).
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Making Apple Cider by Beatrix Potter (1866-1943).
I took that sugar cube as a child. I also remember the March of Dimes sign on the easel at many stores, all with dimes stuck on them.
I've told this story more than once, and I'm telling it again because it changed my life. When I was a kid I was terrified of needles, and hated getting all my shots. I was a sick kid with a lot of undiagnosed disabilities, and my gramp picked up on the anxiety I had and decided to talk to me about it. He offered to take me to get my flu shot for a christmas gift that year, and when I grumbled about getting a flu shot he said, "well, I had scarlet fever when I was your age. My parents didn't believe in doctors so I wasn't allowed to get my shots, and so I got very sick and almost died."
It stopped me in my tracks. I was 6. I had heard from adults my whole life that shots were important, but I didn't really understand the consequences of not getting them. I asked him to tell me why his parents didn't believe in doctors. He said he grew up out in the midwest on a farm, and his parents were "a type of christian" that believed people got sick because god wanted them to get sick, and going to the doctor was going against what god wanted. His parents were terrified of making god angry, which was something I could understand considering I was raised evangelical. But I was confused because he HADN'T died. I asked him how he'd made it this far if he had never been allowed to go to the doctor and he'd been so sick.
And he told me that when he turned 15 he'd run away from home, hopped on a train that took him all the way up to New York, and started asking door to door where he could get these new vaccines he'd heard about. Everyone told him the air force base was the place to go. He went in, asked around, and got his vaccines. At 16, he had his very first annual physical. Shortly after he met my gram, who was the telephone operator for the doctors office he went to every year for his checkups. And he told me as we sat there in the doctor's office that he was the ONLY person on both sides of his family to live past the age of 60.
I was both horrified and amazed. I went in, got my shot, and he held my hand and said he was proud of me because what I was doing was important. I was still very scared of needles, but it was easier to deal with the sore arm knowing I was keeping myself safe. He lived to be 90 years old, and he was proud to be the first person in his assisted living facility to be vaccinated for covid. When we went to visit him for his 90th birthday just before he died I asked him what he was proud of doing now that he was 90, and he said he was proud of living this long because as a child no one believed anyone could survive the things he could. He said he was perfectly happy to have married, had kids and grandkids, and eat his Applebees knowing he'd cheated death 15 times over.
An opinion piece I photographed from an 1860s small press periodical from Hartford Connecticut.
Get your fucking vaccinations.
I am reblogging this because the United States is in danger of LOSING ITS MEASLES ERADICATION STATUS because there have been so many (preventable, largely children, largely unvaccinated) cases in the past year.
Get your fucking vaccinations.
Vaccinate your kids or don't fucking have any
Christmas Archery
you're just mad because you're hungry and tired and your legs hurt and you head hurts and you're too hot and you have depression
Take a 🕯️(candle) you need for 2026 and pass it on
🕯️ Creativity
🕯️ Peace
🕯️ Discipline
🕯️ Confidence
🕯️ Healing
🕯️ Motivation
🕯️ Love
I think a big thing that's helped me on my parenting journey/mother-daughter relationship is that I literally say "oh! Mom was wrong im sorry!" Like 100 times a day
And also like she is comfortable saying "hey mama you was wrong about this" AT FOUR YEARS OLD she knows she can tell me I'm wrong about something and I'm not going to lose my mind or get passive aggressive
Do I sometimes have to hide my face because I'm laughing so hard and I'm not wrong but she's so so sure I am? Sure but that's parenting and it's hilarious
I do think that the wiggles have the funniest backstory ever. Like oh to be a family-based pub rock band that makes fun but solidly middle of the road music about girls and young man troubles when one brother scoots off to school to become a preschool teacher and then he comes back and is like. Okay I just made two preschool teacher friends and what if I was a preschool teacher rock band with them. And his brothers said 👍okay. But there was another guy named Jeff who was not a preschool teacher and they said, wait. He could also be in the preschool teacher band. And since he doesn't know anything about being a preschool teacher he can just sleep on stage. 👍 and then they became the greatest children's music group of all time
autistic folks when their routine gets disrupted, and they don't get alone time when they're supposed to get alone time
anyway hoping that the generative AI bubble pops so disastrously that the tech industry becomes allergic to anything involving it for the next 1,000 years
Like to charge reblog to cast
Organised crime? Nah girl I'm into disorganised crime. If a goon doesn't have ADHD they aren't getting hired
Cops can't stop us if they don't know what we're doing, and they can't find out if we have no idea either
Nah I'm safe it wouldn't happen twice
Minions stop this post from reaching 1k
On it, boss! Gettin' this post to 10k, just like you said!
EVERYBODY BE SOOOO REAL WITH ME FOR A SECOND. is sunrise on the reaping worth the read. the things i want to know are:
1) is it meaningfully distinct from thg and tbosas in terms of plot/theme/characterisation of the main characters
2) does it build on what we already know about the hunger games universe. like for example tbosas expanded on thg by showing that the hunger games weren't always as engaging, and that turning them into a spectacle was a process that was deliberate and ongoing for years. does sunrise on the reaping have stuff like that? it can be to do with panem politics, district 12's reputation and culture, anything - i just want to know if the world is a fully-realised bridge between the other books
3) do you personally like it, for whatever reason
4) basically, do you honestly think it was a cash grab
Yes, I think it’s worth the read!
1) It feels less distinct from THG than TBoSaS since it’s closer in the timeline and the Games are more similar, but it does still feel distinct. Part of that is just Haymitch as a character, who was very different from Katniss when he was young and became the jaded person we know because of the events in SotR.
2) It absolutely builds on the universe. Not only does it add a lot more context for haymitch as a character and why he is the way he is when katniss knows him, but more importantly, it also shows the groundwork of the rebellion. And how katniss was not the instigator but the final spark that finally lit the flame they’d been trying to build up for decades before her. I was a bit skeptical too at first because we already knew what happened haymitch’s games bc katniss watched a tape of it, but that became evidence of capitol censorship and how they carefully twist and control the stories that reach the public. There is much more to the haymitch’s games than katniss ever knew. This book pays tribute to all the rebels who came before her and made huge sacrifices to ensure that someone in the future would finally succeed.
3) Yes, I loved it although it’s gut wrenching. I’d say it’s worse than anything in THG series this far in terms of horror and like emotional damage lol. I found Haymitch a really likable protagonist as well.
4) Honesty, I don’t feel like it was a cash grab. I mean, it probably was to an extent, but Suzanne Collins is one of the few authors I trust to keep adding to her series in a way that feels meaningful rather than milking. I’m not sure if she had this backstory for Haymitch in mind from the beginning or if she decided on it later (certainly at least parts of it she did), but either way it felt very thoughtfully and intentionally done to me. SC is incredibly poignant in her social commentary through this series and I feel like she doesn’t write a THG book unless she has something to say.
So yes, I do recommend it!
My stage career began when I was a little under two months old, when I took the spotlight as Baby Jesus in a Christmas pageant. I’m told that I did a wonderful job and slept calmly through the whole thing, which can only speak to my talents as an actress, because I was 1. the wrong gender 2. a colicky screaming demon of a baby and 3. about as far from divine as it’s possible for an allegedly-human child to be.
I continued to be actively involved in theater as a kid (and frequently played roles of various small animals, because I was tiny for my age). Around the age of ten, I was cast as the lead character in a musical about cowboys that I no longer remember the name of. It was my first real lead role, and I took it very, very seriously. And because I am myself, that means I maaaaybe went…a little overboard.
My character’s introduction was early in the play, accompanied by the crack of a bullwhip. This was more-or-less pre internet (or, at least, our director was not tech-savvy enough to find sound effects online) and we didn’t have a sound effect track for that noise. There were plans to acquire the appropriate sound effect before opening night, but I rapidly tired of making my entrance during rehearsals to the sound of someone yelling “BULLWHIP NOISE!”
This, I thought to myself, is a problem I can solve.
I learned early in life that it’s good to be friends with people who have skills; they always come in handy eventually. After rehearsals one day, I put on my cowboy boots and biked a couple miles over to my friend Grace’s house. I went down to their basement and knocked on her older brother’s door.
“Hello,” I said. “I need to learn how to use a bullwhip.”
“….Okay,” he said. It did not seem to occur to him that he might ask further questions about why I, a tiny horrible munchkin composed exclusively of rage and pointy elbows, needed to be weaponized any further. Clearly, I had come to the right person.
My friend’s older brother would have been an SCA nerd, if SCA was a thing where we were. Instead, he was one of those unsupervised 4H kids with weird hobbies, largely oriented around ancient forms of combat. He was somewhere in his late teens at this time, and he liked to make stuff. It was an urge I, even at age ten, could sympathize with. His name was Aron.
Aron got out his bullwhip (which I had noticed hanging on his wall on a prior visit, and had filed away mentally under a for future use tab) and we went to the backyard.
“Step one of using a bullwhip,” Aron began, “Swinging the bullwhip.”
We rapidly discovered that since I was god’s tiniest, angriest creation, a full-size bullwhip was way too long for me to use. Aron’s shins suffered for my attempt.
“…Step one of using a bullwhip,” Aron said, “Making a bullwhip.”
So we went back inside, found a tanned cowhide (that he just…had? I don’t remember if there was a reason for this.) and some razor blades, and I learned how to cut and braid a bullwhip. It took a few tries, and I wound up coming back for a while, because I kept getting frustrated with the bullwhip-braiding process and Aron kept distracting me with bait like: “Hey kid, wanna learn to make some chainmail?” and “Hey kid, wanna fletch some arrows?” and “Hey kid, wanna try doing horseback archery?”
Obviously the answer to these questions was “BOY, WOULD I EVER!” Some delays are necessary to the artistic process.
(At one point my mom asked me “Hellen, what are you doing over at Grace’s house all the time?” And I, perfectly innocent, said, “Making weapons!” and my mother, who never understood why I was like this, but accepted that a girl has needs and those needs occasionally involve stocking a personal armory, said “Okay! Have fun!”)
Soon, the bullwhip, size extra small, was finished. The lessons on actual bullwhip use commenced.
It should be noted that Aron was self-taught, and really had no idea what to do, so this was mostly an exercise in the two of us standing twenty feet apart and flailing wildly with our respective whips until snapping noises happened. And then we figured out what we’d done to make the snapping noises. And then we kept doing that. Extremely vigorously. So vigorously that at one point one of the bullwhips launched into the air and caught on a tree branch and we hand to drag the trampoline over so Aron could bounce me high enough to grab it. But we persisted!
Eventually we reached a point where we could line up pop cans on a fence rail and hit them off three times out of five.
Feeling extremely accomplished and like I finally understood method acting, I packed my bullwhip into my backpack for the next play rehearsal. Soon enough, it was time for me to make my entrance.
I leaped on stage in my cowboy boots and cracked the bullwhip as hard as I could, immediately launching into the song despite the fact that the sound of five feet of braided leather breaking sound barrier had startled the accompanist so badly she’d keysmashed on the piano.
The director shouted something she probably shouldn’t have shouted in a room full of small children, and then demanded, “WHERE DID YOU GET THAT!”
“I made it!” I declared proudly. “I’m a cowgirl! I can make my own bullwhip noise!”
“You…made it?”
“Yes! Because we needed a bullwhip sound effect. And bullwhips are where bullwhip sound effects come from!”
This was, of course, impeccable logic.
It is apparently difficult to argue with a gleeful ten year old who happens to be armed with a bullwhip longer than she is tall. After some negotiation, the director agreed that I could use my bullwhip for my opening song, provided that I didn’t pop it while anyone was anywhere near me on stage and I didn’t let anyone else play with it. These terms were acceptable to me.
Somehow, no one was injured and the play went off without a hitch. We can only chalk up these things to the magic of the theatre.
Nearly a decade later, an unsuspecting college classmate asked me, “Hellen, wanna take a class on bullwhip combat with me?”
And obviously I answered, “BOY, WOULD I EVER!”
Hey do you guys remember when Google worked. Do you. Do you remember when it worked better than the Tumblr search function.
Once more, Tumblr ends winning by just being there and doing nothing
thanks I hate it
You Got a Friend In Horse
YOU DO NOT HAVE A FRIEND IN HORSE
You Got A Lotta Friends In Horse
CANNOT STRESS ENOUGH THAT THOSE ARE NOT FRIENDS IN HORSE
In case you're wondering what raising a kid in a polyamorous family looks like, our kid just has. Zero concept of monogamy. Like we've explained it to her many times but she just like. Forgets it's a thing and the assumed cultural norm. We're showing her Lord of the a Rings and she was very confused when Aragon rejected Eowyn.
"Wait, I thought they liked each other??"
"She likes him but he's already with Arwen."
"So?? He could just be with both??"
Anyway enjoy this meme I found about it
Why won't anyone write me a fic where adrien is a little cat
Clarifying questions: How little? Does he know he's a cat? Does anyone else know he's a cat? Is he transformed when he becomes a cat? @mari-monsta
There are, as it turns out, certain benefits to being a cat that he never considered. For one, he has knives attached to his feet. Highly recommended. For another, he's apparently charming enough to look at that nobody has tried to chase him off when he's nestled into a doorway or under a cart to sleep. It took him some time - days - to get coordinated enough to travel, and Paris isn't small when he can't take the Subway - he tried, once. But the noise and the air sent his tiny body into overdrive and he had retreated to the safety of the surface level and tried to learn a bus schedule.
Bus schedules, it turned out, were not really placed at an angle or height that he could read. But he did get briefly 'rescued' by a lady who thought that him 'trying to read' was just too adorable for words.
He is a small, black fluffy cat that isn't quite a kitten and isn't quite a cat.
He's a bit underweight, and she had tried to make an appointment to have the collar - what he assumes is his Miraculous - cut off. But he made an escape before she could do that. The bell apparently makes him more approachable. Charming, even. He didn't escape without a few shots and a rather unpleasant liquid up his nose - he tried to participate actively in his treatment, but it was hard to stay still when someone was waterboarding him. The vet had recommended a neuter and he was *not* staying around for that either.
Adrien is not exactly sure how the transformation into a cat even happened, just that the Sentimonster had hit him into a dumpster and even after the Miraculous cure had been called he remained a cat. Small, helpless, and entirely unsuitable for traipsing across the city looking for Ladybug.
He hoped she was looking for him too. But it's been a month and some change, and he's...well. A cat.
He's gotten over his fussiness about food - and really, he's starting to understand Plagg a little bit better, maybe. Strong smelling food did seem to taste better.
Of course - he missed Plagg. He missed having hands. He missed - well, school more than home. "Watch out little guy." Hands pick him up, and he prepares himself to bolt again before he finds himself looking into a familiar pair of blue eyes.
Marinette! He can't speak, but he mewls loudly, turning in her arms to headbutt her and rub his cheek frantically against her. Marinette! Someone he knows! He found someone he knows! She laughs, confused, but pets him gently. "Hey, hey. You're ok." He's not! He's a cat! She has to get him to Ladybug! Mew, mew, mew. He's on her shoulders now, walking back and forth. Someone else laughs.
"The cat distribution system at play?" Alya asks, amused.
"I can't have a cat, though you are handsome." She coos, and rubs him under his chin. His bell tinkles gently and she freezes. "Alya. Look."
"Yeah? He's someone's." Alya lifts the bell, giving it a tug. "Unless you think....?" "Well. I mean, we did find that ferret. Mr. Barkley? And Mr. Ramier was...And he's been missing." "Please don't tell me we're going to have to go to animal services to look for Adrien." Alya mutters. "We can ask you-know-who about it?" He waits until they're both looking at him, and meows attentively. Alya stares at him, and then looks at Marinette. "This is insane." "Chaton?" Marinette asks him softly.
He puts his paws on her shoulders and mews as deeply as he can. He doesn't even mind the crushing hug she pulls him into.
*~* Marinette wakes up on day 47 after the disaster with a warm weight sprawled on her chest, purring like if he pauses he'll stop existing. She might be a little bit afraid of that too. It's the first glimmer of hope she's had in over a month.
If this kitten is her Chaton....he's so small, helpless. How did he make it in the world like this? How had she managed to leave him behind? She touches the bell with her fingertip, jingling it gently, and his green eyes open once, lazily, before blinking closed again.
He spent hours last night kneading any part of her he could touch, and only occasionally forgetting to be mindful of his claws. Alya had taken a million pictures. "We'll fix this." She whispered. More purring.
She had to fix this.