Life in late capitalism can be vexing, alienating, fragmenting, and otherwise frustrating. There are many wonderful things in my life, but I'm more likely to talk about what's bad rather than what's good. I'm going to try to post one good thing here each day, and if you would join in by adding a good thing from your day in the comments, I'd love it--I'd absolutely love it. --RR
9/30: beginning
9/29: the sight
9/28: at the start
9/27: resuming
9/26: sitting
9/25: working
9/24: class conversation
9/23: asking
9/22: going
9/21: chatting
9/20: personal mail
9/19: and another one!
9/19: doing some more
9/18: slowly
9/17: changes in routine
I didn't do Friday quiet writing this Friday either. I miss it, but--like last week--I needed to get some grading done, and I didn't think I'd do a good job of writing while worried and thinking about what I wasn't doing. It felt good to read some students' assignments in the calm of my work office instead.
9/16: being prompted
9/15: meeting up
9/14: having leftovers
...in the refrigerator so that I didn't have to cook dinner, just reheat what we already had on hand.
9/12: taking time
...to make nice food. Full-time teaching means that I won't have the same freedom to experiment in the kitchen that I had over the summer or during sabbatical, but I don't want to let cooking and baking go entirely by the wayside since I enjoy them. So for dinner tonight I made savory tomato cobbler and, for dessert, brownie pie plus lemon and chartreuse flavored syllabub to go alongside it.
9/11: three things
9/10: forgoing
9/9: taking a quick break
9/8: office hours
9/7: adding
9/4: a sudden memory
9/3: two things
One from work: In one of my classes today three students set a really nice precedent for presentations.
One from not-work: I found myself unexpectedly transported to Shropshire while listening to M. John Harrison's Sunken Land Begins to Rise Again. It called up memories of a weekend Chris and I spent there years ago.



