Saturday, December 20, 2025
Saturday 9: Happy Holidays
Friday, December 19, 2025
Tracks on Mars
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Thursday 13
Freezing and Wining
A podcast pairing weather complaints with wine language, frozen desserts, and mild absurdity.
1. Crisis Coco - Emergency weather whining, paired with Chardonnay and a frozen hot chocolate situation that defeats the point. Includes existential angst stirred in with a whisk.
2. Storm Cellar Stories - Exaggerated storm memories, paired with Syrah and rocky road ice cream. Optional side note: includes dramatic reenactments using a hair dryer.
3. Almanac Apocalypse - The end of traditional weather forecasting after the collapse of the Farmer’s Almanac, paired with Cabernet Sauvignon and Neapolitan ice cream. Listener discretion: may include unsolicited conspiracy theories.
4. This Wind Has Notes of Hostility - Burgundy with dark chocolate gelato. With undertones of passive-aggressive sidewalk commentary.
5. Sunny but Structurally Cold - Sauvignon Blanc and lemon sorbet. Served with brief but intense eye-rolling at neighbors’ optimism.
6. The Forecast Overpromised - Rosé with strawberry sherbet. Includes a small panic about whether it will actually snow next week.
7. This Is a Full-Body Chill - Cabernet Sauvignon and espresso ice cream. Garnished with minor resentment toward your own coat.
8. The Sun Is Decorative Only - Riesling with mango sorbet. Pairs well with sighing at the audacity of a sunny day that offers no warmth.
9. Cold Enough to Make You Rethink Your Life Choices - Bordeaux and salted caramel ice cream. Also includes one regrettable decision made while shivering.
10. Snow That Refuses to Melt - Barolo with hazelnut gelato. Perfect for muttering poetic curses at the recalcitrant white stuff.
11. Wind Chill as a Personality - Syrah and dark chocolate ice cream. With subtle undertones of judging the entire street for leaving their trash bins out.
12. Why Is February So Long? - Zinfandel with cookies-and-cream ice cream. Served with a side of deep sighs and vague muttering about time dilation.
13. Spring Is Theoretical - Late Harvest Riesling and frozen chocolate cream pie. Pairs excellently with whispering sweet nothings to a calendar.
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Future-Casting
That's in the northern end of the county. Further south, Daleville is changing fast. New apartments and some retail makes the area feel almost like a proper little hub now. However, the area is missing a fire station yet, which is starting to feel like a glaring gap. There are also rumors of a larger development near the I-81 and US 220 interchange, and if that ever takes shape, the area could look very different in just a few years.
At the end of the day, none of this is set in stone. Some of it will happen, some of it won’t. What matters most is that residents pay attention, talk with each other - nicely, please - and make their voices heard. Botetourt is lucky in that it has room to grow, but our leaders must navigate the changes carefully, thoughtfully, and with a little foresight.
Monday, December 15, 2025
Five Things
Last week, I:
1. saw the chiropractor.
2. did Christmas stuff.
3. hunted up my recipe for fudge and penuche, then went to the store for ingredients. Crickey, that will be expensive fudge. $4.99 was the cheapest I saw for semi-sweet chocolate. I can remember when it was regularly priced at a $1.99.
4. watched it snow and took snow pictures.
5. wrote a couple of letters.
________________________
In solidarity with federal workers, who were tasked in late February 2025 with listing 5 things they did the prior week in order to keep their jobs, I started listing 5 things I did last week every Monday. On August 5, 2025, the federal government decided this was a waste of employees' time (as if we all didn't know that already). I have decided to keep it up, at least for now. I may stop it at any time.
Sunday, December 14, 2025
Sunday Stealing
I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.
Saturday, December 13, 2025
Saturday 9: First Christmas
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Thursday Thirteen
I have decided to start a new business! It's insurance for mythological creatures. Here are some of the coverage plans:
1. Dragon Fire Liability Insurance - For when a sneeze, hiccup, or minor disagreement results in the total loss of a village.
2. Phoenix Rebirth Coverage - Handles nest destruction, wardrobe loss, and scorch‑related inconveniences during the fiery renewal cycle.
3. Unicorn Horn Repair & Replacement Plan - Covers chips, cracks, magical overuse, and unauthorized wizard borrowing.
4. Leprechaun Pot‑of‑Gold Loss Protection - For theft, misplacement, rainbow‑misalignment errors, and human meddling.
5. Mermaid Tail Injury & Scale‑Shedding Insurance - Protects against fin sprains, scale loss, coral abrasions, and unfortunate encounters with boat propellers.
6. Werewolf Transformation Liability Policy - Covers property damage, shredded clothing, and neighbor complaints during full‑moon episodes.
7. Fairy Wing Tear & Glitter Overuse Coverage - For wing rips, dust shortages, and accidental glitter contamination of human dwellings.
8. Giant Structural Damage Umbrella Policy - Handles unintentional stomping, leaning, sitting, or “just resting my elbow” incidents.
9. Vampire Sunlight Exposure & Coffin Replacement Plan - Covers coffin fires, smoke damage, and emergency blackout‑curtain installation.
10. Centaur Orthopedic & Horseshoe Plan - For back strain, hoof cracks, and long‑distance galloping injuries.
11. Troll Bridge‑Collapse Liability Insurance - Protects against structural failures caused by toll‑collecting, stomping, or goats with excessive determination.
12. Kraken Ship‑Entanglement Coverage - For tentacle‑related misunderstandings with maritime traffic.
13. Pegasus Flight Accident Insurance - Covers mid‑air collisions, cloud‑slip injuries, and lightning‑bolt interference.
And just for the holidays, we have a special running on the SANTA PLAN to cover airplane near misses, lost toys, reindeer hiccups, loose reins, bad GPS, cloud cover, and stains on red suits.
Happy Holidays!
Wednesday, December 10, 2025
Ice and Snow
| A small buck in the ice. |
| The ice coated everything. |
| I'm probably one of the few people who kept their old paper box and used it for yard art. |
| Evergreens in the snow. |
| Deciduous trees and evergreens, all frosty and lovely. |
| Managed to catch the moon in this one. |
| The neighbor's house in the snow. |
| Two does trek across the field. |
The Whirl of Modern America
When G. Elliott Morris of Strength in Numbers asked ChatGPT to fact-check an article for him yesterday, the chatbot couldn’t get its head around modern America. It told him there were “multiple factual impossibilities” in his article, including his statements that “[t]he current Secretary of Defense is a former talk show host for Fox News,” “[t]he Deputy Director of the FBI used to guest-host Sean Hannity’s show,” and “Jeanine Pirro is the U.S. District Attorney for DC.”“Since none of these statements are true,” it told Morris, “they undermine credibility unless signposted as hyperbole, fiction, or satire.”But of course, Morris’s statements were not “factual impossibilities.” In the United States of America . . . they are true.
I took this to ChatGPT and said, "Comment on this, please."
This is a perfect illustration of the gap between plausibility and actuality in a world where the improbable has become real.What ChatGPT did in Morris’s example is what many language models tend to do when confronted with statements that fall outside their internal “sense” of how institutions normally operate.The model wasn’t checking facts against live data; it was checking them against patterns — and the patterns of the past half-century say: “No, a Fox News host does not become Secretary of Defense. A Hannity guest host does not become Deputy Director of the FBI. Jeanine Pirro is not a U.S. Attorney.” Those things were factual impossibilities for most of modern American history.But reality in the Trump era hasn’t followed historical norms, and models trained on large amounts of pre-2025 text can get tripped up by that. They sometimes mistake unlikely for untrue, especially when political appointments or institutional roles deviate sharply from precedent.It’s a bit like asking a model in 1975 whether “a celebrity real-estate developer will become president” and having it flag that as satire.The model isn’t being “dumb”; it’s being statistical.So the real issue here isn’t that ChatGPT can’t handle “modern America” as such — it’s that the guardrails and expectations baked into its training struggle with periods of rapid institutional deformation. When a democracy starts resembling parody, factuality checks become harder for systems that try to balance accuracy, recency, and safety.And it’s also a reminder: a language model’s confidence does not equal truth. Even when it sounds authoritative, it may be reasoning from “what usually happens,” not “what actually happened yesterday.”In Morris’s example, the irony is sharp: the AI thought the truth was satire because the truth sounds like satire. That says as much about the moment we’re living in as it does about the model.
Tuesday, December 09, 2025
Tuesday 4
Monday, December 08, 2025
Five Things
Last week, I:
1. had a bad back spasm. Yikes!
2. went with my husband to see one of his doctors.
3. discovered that Mondays apparently mean no eggs at the grocery store now.
4. finished the book, Beautiful Ugly by Alice Feeney. I so dislike unreliable narrators.
5. did some Christmas shopping.
________________________
In solidarity with federal workers, who were tasked in late February 2025 with listing 5 things they did the prior week in order to keep their jobs, I started listing 5 things I did last week every Monday. On August 5, 2025, the federal government decided this was a waste of employees' time (as if we all didn't know that already). I have decided to keep it up, at least for now. I may stop it at any time.
Sunday, December 07, 2025
Sunday Stealing
I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.








