All posts by fontfolly

Unknown's avatar

About fontfolly

I've loved reading for as long as I can remember. I write fantasy, science fiction, mystery, and nonfiction. For more than 20 years I edited and published an anthropomorphic sci-fi/space opera literary fanzine. I attend and work on the staff for several anthropormorphics, anime, and science fiction conventions. I live near Seattle with my wonderful husband, still completely amazed that he puts up with me at all.

Oh! That explains it!

I’ve mentioned before that I used to be active on Queernet, which was run as both a Usenet group and a mailing list. And because I posted and/or replied to other people’s posts on there a lot, I more than occasionally got hate mail. Because even back in late 80s/early 90s ultraconservative haters trolled the net looking for people to spew vitriol at. And one of those trolls was a member of the Westboro Baptist Church clan, usually logging in as Ben Phelps. And every single hate mail that he sent to any of us on that list included some reference to butt sex.

Even when he was yelling at bisexual women, lesbians, or people who identified as straight allies…

Continue reading Oh! That explains it!

Why I hate hay fever reason #23

icanhascheeseburger.come
…and a cold cloth for my head, please.
One of my biggest gripes about my body’s particular hay fever symptoms is that often I can’t tell the difference between worse than usual hay fever days and coming down with a cold.

This year’s hay fever season started out really awful in March and April. So bad that I had been bracing myself for a horrid summer. While I had almost non-stop mild hay fever symptoms for the entirety of May, June, July, and August, I only had moderately bad days every now and then, only really bad once or twice.

Friday, Saturday, and Sunday were all moderately bad. Then I had trouble sleeping Sunday night/Monday morning. Thank goodness the third time I woke up to get a drink of water (I always wake up thirsty several times in the middle of the night on bad hay fever days… but also when I have a cold), I became conscious enough to take some extra decongestant. Otherwise my sinus headache would be much, much worse than it is.

My husband is on an earlier work schedule for summer, so I’ve tended to get up when he leaves, which is before my second alarm. This morning I barely woke up when he kissed me good-bye. I had trouble getting out of bed to stagger to the alarm clock to turn it off for the second alarm. And similarly had difficulty staggering across the room to turn off the third alarm.

While I was trying to force myself to wake up enough to take a guess as to how many hours it had been since I took the decongestant (so I could know when I could take something else) I looked up the pollen count.

It’s low. Very, very low. And has been for the last couple of days.

And I have a low grade fever.

Damn.

Friday Links (Hair Bear edition)!

Hair_Bear_DVDIt’s Friday! The first Friday in September. It’s a month full of birthdays and anniversaries. Okay, okay, every month is, but September birthdays are extra special, because September babies are superior. It’s a fact. No, really.

Anyway, in honor of this first Friday in the glorious month of September, here is a collection of news and other things that I ran across over the course of the week which struck me as worthy of being shared:

New Atlanta LGBT Youth Homeless Shelter Benefits From Viral Campaign.

Father Charles Pope: Cancel The St. Patrick’s Day “Anal Sex” Celebration. These haters always focus on a sex act that not all gay people participate in, and which literally millions of straight people do.

Incredibly stupendously high resolution picture of the Andromeda Galaxy.

EMBARRASSING TYPOS MAR OTHERWISE SPARKLING ROLL-OUT OF LGBT ‘RAINBOW HONOR WALK’ IN SF.

Want Marriage Equality? Don’t Sit out These Elections.

Gay Board Games from the ’70s and ’80s.

Prehistoric Leafcutter Bee Pupa. (Because invertebrates are cool, but fossil invertebrates are cooler!)

Dramatic Cave Art Confirms that Neanderthals Were Capable of Abstract Expression.

How junk food changes eating behaviour.

The Point of Pointing.

Time Travel Simulation Resolves “Grandfather Paradox”.

Whitman Was Not a Neuroscientist, or Why There is Yet No Grand Unified Theory of Neuroscience.

University Of Kansas Considered Community Service Too ‘Punitive’ For Rape Punishment.

If the NFL doesn’t want people to think it’s homophobic, it should stop being so homophobic.

S.E. Cupp on nude photos: Don’t own things other people want if you don’t want to have them stolen!

“I Went to the Woods So I Could Steal Candy From Children”: The Maine Hermit Is A Terrible Hero To Have.

The Forsaken: A Rising Number of Homeless Gay Teens Are Being Cast Out by Religious Families.

The Pros and Cons of Straight Guys in Gay Bars. The guy who wrote this seems to live in a completely different universe than I do. I can’t figure out if this is a profound commentary or fluff.

What Happens to “Holdouts” Who Refuse to Sell Their Homes to Developers?

One Year Later, Horror Stories About This City’s LGBT Non-Discrimination Law Haven’t Come True – Prohibiting Anti-LGBT Discrimination Hasn’t Threatened Religious Liberty.

Barely Literate? How Christian Fundamentalist Homeschooling Hurts Kids.

Senior GOP spokesman comes out as gay. Someone needs to tell him that those “friends” who consider his sexuality corrosive to society were never his friends; they liked the person he was pretending to be while closeted, and never knew him.

DEFROCKED PASTOR DEFENDS GAY RIGHTS AT NEW PULPIT.

The golden age of science fiction magazines served up some interesting queerish images. We have seen the future, and the future is gay. I don’t normally like linking to slideshows/listicles, but some of these covers were too silly.

How gay marriage made me want to get straight married.

Dreadnoughtus! New Dino May Be Largest Land Animal Ever.

Is There Any Rational Case for Banning Gay Marriage?
In an exhilarating takedown of Indiana and Wisconsin’s prohibitions, Judge Richard Posner rules there isn’t
.

Recycled Boy: 5 Years on Testosterone Picture/Timeline:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

The 2 Bears – Get Out:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)
(I have no idea why the decided to use footage from the 70s Saturday Morning Cartoon, “Help! It’s the Hair Bear Bunch!” but the song is very cool.)

Of course there’s more to the story

It happens all the time. Authorities take some action which is clearly out of proportion to whatever has allegedly happened. Other people report on the incident, generating a lot of negative publicity. In response to the calls from the public, the authorities explain that there is more to the story. Those authorities then tell us that there is more “information” they neglected to mention before, and they spout of a story that sounds like a six-year-old’s excuse for why they didn’t break that lamp whose broken pieces they are standing over. Other people then repeat the excuses from the authorities as if said excuses were independently verified facts. Those of us who raised concerns about the original action are told to let it go, because “there’s more to the story.

Of course there’s more to the story. There always is. But like all things in life 95% of the “more” is either pure b.s. or irrelevant… Continue reading Of course there’s more to the story

Not one of the cool kids

tumblr_lmy2hitpy21qh8x62o1_1280I think it was January 2000. Michael and I were attending an anthropomorphics convention in the Bay area. As I was walking to our hotel room I passed a room that reeked of a strange smell. It was a scent I had encountered before, but I had never learned what it was.

When I got to the room, I told Michael about the smell. He described a part of the hallway and asked if that’s where it was.

When I confirmed, he smiled and shook his head in a manner that clearly indicated I was a silly person.

“Honey,” he said very gently, “that’s pot. Someone is getting extremely baked in a room there.”

“Oh!”

In other words, I didn’t learn how to recognize the smell of pot until I was 39 years old.

I’ve never been one of the cool kids… Continue reading Not one of the cool kids

Literary Crimes

maxresdefaultWhen I was 14 I started writing a mystery novel with perhaps supernatural overtones. I’d been writing stories for as long as I could scribble more-or-less recognizable words on paper, though by 14 I was typing on a big heavy typewriter at a decent clip.

My protagonist was a 12-year-old boy—for plot purposes I felt it was important to begin the story in the summer between his sixth and seventh grades at school. He lived in a small town that was an amalgam of all the small to medium-sized towns I’d lived in thus far.

My habit at the time was to write until I couldn’t think of what happened next (or my folks yelled at me to stop making all that clattering typing noise and go to bed). The next day I would read what I had written so far, and usually I could start typing away, writing the next scene and the next and so on.

So one afternoon, when I had several chapters finished and wasn’t sure what to do next, I re-read what I’d written thus far. It was all going well until I hit the last scene I’d written the night before… Continue reading Literary Crimes

The appliance that wouldn’t die

An online search by title at the US copyright office did not find a copyright renewal. In the absence of renewal of the US copyright, this poster art entered the public domain 28 years after its US publication date.I don’t make coffee at home on days that I go into the office. I’m the only person in the house who drinks coffee, so it doesn’t make much sense to make a pot just so I can have one cup in the morning before I go to work. And making a single cup takes as much prep work as making a whole pot, so I just don’t make coffee at home on those days.

Some weeks ago the “Clean” light on my coffee maker started flashing insistently… Continue reading The appliance that wouldn’t die

Confessions of a packrat

So I rousted Michael last night to walk up to my favorite restaurant for dinner. It was a little late at night, but fortunately they’re open until 11 on Saturdays. During the walk back, we noticed that a lot of buildings were completely dark. Then we turned a corner and saw that all the houses and streetlights on our street were dark.

The power outage, according to the power company website, hit about 11,000 customers. Once we got home and grabbed a couple of flashlights, we were mostly concerned with getting our computers (that were all plugged into uninterruptible power supplies) properly shut down. Then making sure that not everything in the house would turn back on at once when the power came on.

I went to grab a couple of candles in jars from the top of the entertainment center. Sitting on top of the first one I could see was a cute little plushy husky that had been given to me by a friend when he came from Alaska to attend a sci fi convention with us. I took hold of the plushy and tried to lift it out of the way so I could get the candle. But it was hung up on something. I tried to get it loose, and after a few seconds, something came loose and flew over my head, clattered against the wall behind me, then hit the floor. I had the plushy free in my hand, so I set it aside and got the candle down. I started toward the kitchen, where I knew the matches were. Fortunately, I swept the light down on the floor just before I stepped on the big brass spike.

What brass spike, you ask? Why, the one-and-a-half inch long brass spike sticking up out of the little brass pillar candle holder that was apparently wedged between a couple of the candles in jars up on the entertainment center. As best I can figure, since there is no sign on the cute little plushy of any holes or even snags, is that one of its legs was somehow wedged between the candle jar the plushy was atop, and the brass pillar holder. The pillar holder is what flew over my head and made all that clattering noise, and of course landed right where I would have stepped on it, with the spike that is probably more than capable of going right through the soles of my tennis shoes and well into my foot.

I picked up the small brass foot trap and put it on a counter. I retrieved the matches and my little kitchen step ladder(I’m only 5-foot-5-inches tall, I need the ladder to get into cupboards which in most kitchens appear to have been designed for use by NBA players). Once I got the first candle lit, I climbed up on the ladder to get the rest of the candles.

There was a lot more junk up on top of the entertainment center than I remembered. More candles, yes, but also a bunch of other things that I had completely forgotten about.

We got enough candles lit and spread around the apartment that we could move around without carrying flashlights with us. And even though the power company web site (smart phones are a wonderful thing in these situations) had predicted power wouldn’t be restored until 4:30 am, just shortly after I got all the candles set up, the lights came back on.

Of course.

8_ball_faceToday I pulled the rest of the stuff down off the entertainment center, dusted, and tried to figure out which things up there we actually need, which should be thrown away, and which just need to be put away somewhere else. One of the things up there was a Magic 8-ball. Yes, the silly toy.

It wasn’t just a little dusty, the dust was adhering to the plastic, so I had to get soap and water to clean it. But it looked all pretty and glossy afterward. I asked it, “Am I going to get the rest of the house cleaning done today?” shook it, and turned it over. The little plastic-dodecahedron inside with the silly answers on it floated up… with the point up. The level of liquid inside has gone down enough that it won’t push the dodecahedron against the little window so you can read one of the answers.

Now, a rational person would toss it into the trash at this point, right? It isn’t worth taking to Goodwill because it doesn’t work. But here’s the problem. This Magic 8-ball is the very first Christmas present I ever opened from Michael. It’s a present he grabbed precisely because it was silly, and he thought that I should have at least one silly toy to open for Christmas. Unlike a couple of other things he gave me that Christmas, it wasn’t something picked up because he thought I wanted it or needed it. It was entirely an impulsive buy.

But it’s the first present I opened from him. So, the moment I even thought about throwing it away, a voice in my head lamented, “What kind of heartless person would throw away the first present your husband ever bought you?” And I could feel the guilt and future regret cranking up in my subconscious.

Michael was out running errands when this happened, so I set it on the table and moved on to other things. When he got home, I showed it to him and his first words were, “You’re pitching it, right? I mean, someone gave it to us as a gag gift, right?”

I told him he had given it to me. “I did? Okay. Well, I can buy you a new one.”

“No! That’s even worse than me holding onto it!”

And I threw it in the trash.

I was 99.9% certain he would tell me to throw it away, but here’s the thing about having been raised by a whole family of packrats: no amount of rational thought on my own can completely silence the guilt-inducing voices in my head. Any time I want to get rid of anything I have to fight a chorus of, “You might need that some day!” and “But so-and-so gave that to you! If you don’t hang onto it, that’s the same as not respecting so-and so!” and so on.

People who aren’t packrats don’t understand this.

And it isn’t enough to have just anyone tell me I can throw it away. I have to either argue with myself for days to muster the determination to toss it, or someone who falls in the “extra-special-trusted-person” category of my irrational side has to tell me it’s all right to get rid of.

It’s a constant battle. I only win on my own as often as I do by thinking about Hoarders. Because I could so easily turn into one of those people.

It’s scary!

Friday Links (August is over?)

fakedanshusband_2014-Aug-28It’s Friday! The last Friday in August. Wait! How did that happen? How does the time seem to fly, so? That means for many of us, this is a three-day weekend. All the more reason to be happy that Friday is finally here!

To celebrate, here is a collection of news and other things that I ran across over the course of the week which struck me as worthy of being shared:

Besides Michael Brown, Whom Else Does The New York Times Call “No Angel”?.

Ferguson’s booming white grievance industry: Fox News, Darren Wilson and friends.

Cops Hold Mother And Four Kids At Gunpoint Because They Thought Her Red Nissan Was A Tan Toyota.

John Oliver mocks inaccurate Internet headlines by destroying a Pinata.

Matthew Yglesias: Michael Brown didn’t do anything as a teen that I didn’t — but only one of us got killed.

Mike Huckabee Pleads With Australia To Stop Canceling Anti-Gay Hate Group Conference Venues.

Same-sex couples still fighting for equality with these three federal agencies.

Confronting Lovecraft’s racism.

Nitpicking the nitpickers.

Gorgeous 3D printed Prosthetic Born of Boredom. Dumb headline. The prosthetic hand is awesome, however.

‘These Murders Are A Steady Drumbeat’: A Year After Trans NYC Murder, Community On Edge.

The dirty little secret inside the fight for gay marriage: moralists want to own the sex lives of straight people, too. I don’t know how this can be a secret, we’ve been telling you this for YEARS!

Judge Posner’s Blistering Benchslaps At The Same-Sex Marriage Arguments.

Evolution’s Baby Steps.

Quark Quartet Fuels Quantum Feud.

Finally! Secret of Death Valley’s ‘Sailing Stones’ Is Revealed.

The ‘Times’ Of London Reverts To Type To Motivate Reporters.

Republicans Poll Ladies, Learn Ladies Too Dumb To See Republicans’ Awesomeness.

Dumbo Octopus Gives Rare View. (Video embedded below)

Unusually Large Dumbo Octopus Sighting:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

KAZAKY – PULSE:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

AsapSCIENCE — Your Brain On Coffee:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

ROSEWATER Trailer:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

Energetic roofer can’t help but samba to Latino music:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

Destruction – Brett Gleason (Official Video):

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

Wilson Knight – Just Missed The Train:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

MDNGHT – Breeze:

(If embedding doesn’t work, click here.)

…fast enough?

Just a bit over three years ago I was thinking about when I should update my laptop. I was using a three-year-old white MacBook. It was the low end product back then, but it had been a big improvement over my previous machine. At the time I acquired it, my laptop was a secondary machine, used when we traveled and such, but my desktop computer was still my workhorse.

But over the three years I’d had the MacBook, my writing habits had changed a lot. Most of my writing, and a lot of other computer work, was happening on the laptop. Part of it was simply the convenience of being able to write kicked back in the recliner.

Continue reading …fast enough?