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It is what it is, is what it is.

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My favourite blogs ...by fellow MCers
The capacious hold-all
Why should I listen to you?
As above
Carbonated ink
A Wallaby Abroad
Singing while they sleep
My favourite blogs ...by innocent bystanders
How to learn Swedish in 1000 difficult lessons
librarian.net
Blind höna : på kornet
jill/txt
Radosh.net
Making light
Eating muffins in an agitated manner
Du är vad du läser
flânerie.org
Vanity
Home page
Guest book
Amazon Wish List
Frequently visited
Orange MC
MC in Outer Space
Cathouse webcam
Order of the Stick
Currently reading
P D James: The Lighthouse
Tigerdödaren Wu Song och hans vapenbröder - Berättelser från träskmarkerna 2 (Johan reading aloud to me)
Current hug count

*HUGS* TOTAL!
give _Nea more *HUGS* Get hugs of your own

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Random links gleaned from MCiOS:
Badger Badger Badger Like the Hampster Dance but more varied.
Yeti@Home — I never really understood SETI@Home so I'm satisfied this is also incomprehensible. Good thought, though.
A quiz for children — My score: 5. Not 5 correct answers - 5 points. And it really is the President of India presenting it!
And everybody who feels their blog isn't exciting enough: take heart, for here is the dullest blog in the world!
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
20:47
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Tuesday, September 30, 2003  |
Finally, finally the blasted pragmatics paper is done. And not too terrible either, or at least I don't think so. Will get Sara's verdict tomorrow. I'm hoping I'll become slightly more disciplined about getting started with things: last-minute stress is awfully motivating to be sure but all the same I'd prefer not to have to rely on it.
So people think that is good. It was also nice to get a post card from K. of Brighton :-) as well as to be reminded that I was going to start learning Manx this autumn. Oh, and Tai Chi - I decided to take up Tai Chi, as my constantly aching back needs exercise but hurts too much whenever I move for it to be a good idea to start with anything more frenetic - but it seems the course probably won't happen as there are too few people registered for it. Hmph.
The most astonishing thing to happen recently is however that the telephone company admitted that my phone bill must have been wrong. Txt messages to abroad should not cost more than txts within the country. So I'm getting money back - or possibly getting a new bill, I'll call Customer Service tomorrow to check. I've had to send in the phone for service as the battery suddenly started emptying in a day after less than five week's use, so am sitting with a phone I got on loan. I'm starting to think that Telia's service is pretty good.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
18:28
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A friend of ours is dying. Not a close friend, but someone we have both known, even if only casually, for a long time: I for over 10 years and Johan for almost 20. Yesterday Johan heard the diagnosis: Creutzfeld-Jacob's disease. Which is terminal, incurable - there aren't even any ways to alleviate the symtoms - and results first in dementia and then death. And the incubation time can be up to 50 years - our friend probably caught it when he was 12.
This sucks so bad there aren't even words for it. I can't begin to imagine what it must be like to get that diagnosis.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
20:20
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Sunday, September 28, 2003  |
We now have a much less bushy apple tree as well as a large number of branches and sticks piled up behind the house. Pruning is fun! And not at all as difficult as I'd thought. The rain was rather light, occasionally even nonexistant, while we were working, so that wasn't a problem either. Go us!!
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
18:50
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Ooops — an old friend found this page and almost fainted when the first thing she saw was the Valley URL posting ;-P Sorry about that!
Now I want to visit SI. I wonder if I dare? It's been so very, very long.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
12:31
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Saturday, September 27, 2003  |
Oh no. We decided several weeks ago to prune the apple tree today — Kinna is coming over to aid and guide us — and the weather has been quite nice if a tad cold, until this morning when we awoke to the sound of steady, heavy rainfall. That it's raining doesn't mean we can't climb and cut trees.... but it's gonna be wet and cold. I want to be a cat.
But I'm not really complaining. After all I do have a sauna and a fireplace. And it's going to be good to get that tree trimmed down a bit!
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
12:22
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"To google" is, as like we know, a verb these days. Which is totally bitchin' with me — it's rad to see language transition as it is totally happening! Like, oh my gawd! In any case, I was like, you know, googling for a couple of old school friends (prompted thereto by the fact that I suddenly happened upon the spaz page of another friend from school)
(The Sep 1 Néablog posting run through Valley URL)
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
15:15
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Monday, September 22, 2003  |
My regular e-mail address doesn't work now, and I'm not sure if it's been delivering all my mail the last few days either. I'm switching from the free provider which my nea.pp.se address has been routed through, to one that comes with our ISP, which will hopefully be more reliable. The address will still be the same, but for the nonce, anything urgent should probably be sent here instead until things start working again.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
22:16
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Sunday, September 21, 2003  |
Yikes. According to a report, men in general get bored of shopping after 72 minutes.
Me, I get bored after approximately 7.2 minutes. Unless it's shopping for books or possibly games. All right, that may be an exaggeration (though 72 minutes sounds like an eternity, I definitely tire long long before that), but it is a fact that shopping for clothes in particular saps my energy in no time at all; I just want to lie down and go to sleep — whereas book shops give me an energy boost. Are there any reports about why that is?
Oh, and that same report claims that women in general can stand doing it for 100 minutes. Which means that many people probably take a lot longer than that to get bored. People are so strange :-)
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
13:26
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The new nifty Blogger with extra features enables me to save postings as drafts, so one reason for my silence is that I'm hammering away quietly on a longer blog post (targetted particularly at Maria, incidentally.)
But there are other things worth writing about. Such as the TV series 10th Kingdom, which I bought in Turku a couple of months ago; it's turning out quite different, but even better, than I had expected. So far we have watched one of the three DVDs. The basic premise is that there is a fairy tale world called the Nine Kingdoms, where Snow White, Cinderella and all the other fairy tales happened.This story takes place after "Happy ever after" ended, though. Am looking forward to watching the rest of it.
And in other news we're off to Stockholm, to eat Dim Sum with Ylva tonight.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
14:06
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Saturday, September 20, 2003  |
Happy Birthday, Stina! 
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
21:13
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Monday, September 15, 2003  |
Got a post card today with a beautiful picture of Edinburgh, from "squiggleBsquigglesquiggle." (Yes, I do know who sent it - thank you! :-)
Post cards are nice, and I love getting them; I wish I was better at sending them myself. I used to do it all the time, but not so much, lately. I haven't even sent e-postcards this last year or so, I think. Unsociable creature, me — I think I'll try to change at least that aspect of my unsociability.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
21:06
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Nice site idea: youthought.com, a web site where anybody can post brief thoughts. It's moderated, so shouldn't get full of idiocy; I haven't looked through it enough to see if there is actually anything worth reading there - that's not the point, though, I just kind of liked the idea.
Dept. of Laughing til you Cry: Skateboarding email to Tony Hawks. There is a British comedian named Tony Hawks and an American skateboarder called Tony Hawk; the former often gets fan email intended for the latter, with hilarious consequences. (I do think he gets a bit too rude in the later messages, but that's probably just me.)
Finally,
WARNING: the "useless test" site has many, many popups. Many. Of the kind that's really difficult to get rid of, and very possibly not of the work-safe kind. Popup killers are our friends.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
21:33
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Friday, September 12, 2003  |
Here is a very, very good article from The Guardian on Lindh and the Euro debate.
One of the blogs I linked to yesterday wrote about how people in this country are feeling increasingly alienated from their politicians, and linked that to the attack. I feel very strongly that the reactions to Lindh's murder show that this is not really true. People grieve not only because this was an unthinkable thing, an attack on a government minister, something that's not supposed to happen in our society and that frightens us; we are also genuinely sad about the loss of the person, the mother, the enthusiastic knowledgeable woman. The distance does not seem so very great at all.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
15:42
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I noticed that Sara looked pale when I entered the office room.
"Is anything the matter?" I asked.
"You haven't heard, then? She didn't make it."
No need to ask which "she". Before I left for work, I logged in from home to check the news, and then the word was still that Anna Lindh was alive, if critically ill. But she was already dead by then; the news just wasn't made public until a little later.
Others have written about this, and I don't know what I could add. Have received virtual hugs through SMS from Turkey and through e-mail from England, and it is good to know that there are good people out there.
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
20:04
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Thursday, September 11, 2003  |
"To google" is, as we know, a verb these days. Which is cool with me — it's fun to see language transition as it is happening! In any case, I was googling for a couple of old school friends (prompted thereto by the fact that I suddenly happened upon the home page of another friend from school) and found that Hanna Beling is the artist behind a piece of artwork I admire very much; a pair of busts placed by the central staircase in the building where I work. I knew Hanna was an artist, but had no idea she was that sought-after — I was abroad when the building was opened and the sculptures put there; otherwise I'd certainly have noticed the newspaper article about her. Anyway, today's advice is: Google your friends!
posted by Linnéa Anglemark at
17:46
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Monday, September 01, 2003  |
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