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Memories of Grandpa Dale
I was playing in the barn, but I was also hiding from my grandpa. I was aware that this hurt his feelings, but I didn๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝt know what else to do. Every year Iโd ever visited him before, heโd seemed kind of mad at me, but Iโd hoped still that year was the year that weโd finally be friends. I even made a list of things to do together.ย
Unfortunately, the list did not fix thingsยน so I'd been forced to acknowledge that if he couldn't be happy with me there, and he couldn't be happy with me gone, then perhaps he simply could not be happy. At least, not until someone invented The Secret Third Thing.
(But I was only nine. So. That someone would probably not be me.)ย
Fortunately, being happy is a task that I've never needed to delegate - Iโm actually quite good at it. Iโd been sad in the barn for maybe an hour or so, but eventually that got boring, so I invented a new game where I would chase big clouds of shiny blue flies off the sun-warmed horse-poop and try to shoo them towards a corner of the barn that I knew had a large spiderweb in it.ย
I was perfectly aware that this is not ideal for the flies, but I had just read Charlotteโs Web, so my empathy function was very biased towards spiders, who I perceived as patient and compassionate and slightly maternal women. Who just happened to have eight legs.ย ย
(I, like most nine year old boys, would have personally been willing to fight a war for every patient, compassionate, slightly maternal woman I had ever met. If you, personally, have ever hugged a little boy who was trying very hard not to cry in front of his friends after skinning his knee, know that there is a child in this world that would kill in your name.)
(Now live with that knowledge.)ย
I played my game with the flies for a long time. Long enough to get into a rhythm of running and laughing and then panting outside on my back while wallowing in the long green grass.
It was during one of those walks outside to lay in the grass that I noticed my mom. She was sitting on a hay bale, looking baffled. I donโt know how long sheโd been there, but I was too young and confident to even feel odd. She asked me what Iโm doing, and I just kind of gestured to the ceiling, and said, You know, just. Feeding spiders.ยฒ
She nodded. I was feeding spiders. Of course.ย
We sat there a few moments. It was an amicable silence, but I was still faintly relieved when she broke it.ย ย
Your grandpaโs been looking for you, she said. He got some grapes earlier. Wanted to take you to feed the ducks.
I've always really liked feeding ducksยณ. Visiting them had actually been the next thing on my list.ย
I was baffled by the effort.ย
Heโs mad at me, I pointed out. My mom, to her credit, looked genuinely confused.ย
Heโs not, she said.ย
But he was mad when we picked blackberries, I pointed out. And when we went on that walk down to the prairie. And he snapped at me this morning when I asked if I could have some of his dried mangos.ย
The mangos had been my last straw. The weirdest part was that he didnโt even say no, he just (angrily) said of course you can, as if it was an insult to his hospitality that I was asking when just the year before heโd yelled at me because I ate a tin of dried apples. Apparently, I was just supposed to know that those apples were exclusively reserved for The Apocalypse.ย
(To be fair, my grandpa has always been very worried about the apocalypse, but mostly in the context of not having enough dried apples for it. There was a period of my life where I thought that The Apocalypse referred to some kind of prophesied biblical event where there would be No More Apples. This thought has stuck with me for a very long timeโด.)
Well. Yeah. My mom said. Heโs mad. But heโs not mad at you. Heโs justโฆ Mad.ย
I mulled this over.ย
What about the mangos? I asked, and she shrugged at that.ย
Alright, so that time he was mad at you, but thatโs being mad one time in three days. Cut the man some slack, youโve been asking him for permission before eating anything.ย
I just donโt want to eat the wrong thing, I said. Iโve always been very defensive of my rule-following. Both because rules are important, and also because that #10 can of dried apples ripped through me like a shotgun full of razor bladesโต. That โsnackโ had 400% the recommended daily fiber for an adult man. And I was very definitely not a grown man when I ate it.ย ย
It was a very painful experience is what I am trying to say.ย
I know, my mom said.ย
I donโt even like apples, I added. Still defensive.ย
I know, my mom said again. Sheโs very good at saying it. It always feels like sheโs agreeing with me, and not just trying to rush me onto The Point. Sometimes, people need to make detours from The Point in order to explain things. Like, hypothetically, why they once ate a very large number of dehydrated apples. My mom is wise, and she has always known this. .ย
I just really wanted to eat something sweet, I continued. They donโt keep anything sweet in the whole house. The day before I ate those apples, I licked all the salt off a saltine just so I could eat the cracker plain. And then the cracker tasted just like a cookie. To me. Thatโs how crazy I was going.ย
My mom nodded her head sympathetically.ย
My first month of college, she said conspiratorially, I ate about a box of poptarts a day.ย
There was another longish pause as both of us considered what led us to this point.ย
My parents are crazy, my mom said at long last. Itโs a very peaceful statement to her. I'm sure it was stressful when she first realized it, but she's had a long time to make her peace, and she's made it well.ย ย
Will you go with me? I asked. To feed the ducks?ย ย
Heโs not mad at you, she said again. Reemphasizing her point. Heโs just mad. Itโs just how he is.ย
But she went with me anyway.
I watched Grandpa Dale closely the whole way to the pond to see if my mom was right. She was. She almost always is.ย He was angry while he drove, and he was angry while he parked. amd he was even angry while he strode purposefully towards the park. When we got there, he took several grapes, and he angrily put them in his hand, and angrily extended the hand towards the ducks, and he looked at me, and for maybe a tenth of a second he looked okay. Not exactly happy, but a little less mad. Then a duck bit the webbing between his pointer finger and his thumb.
He immediately, without hesitation, without even a second thought, hit the duck with a haymakerโถ. For a human, the punch would have been devastating, but the duck had the benefit of having essentially no inertia, so it just kind of moved sideways and looked perplexed.ย
You son of a bitch, my grandpa said. This is a funny thing for anyone to say to a duck, but it was especially funny to hear coming from a former Mormon Bishop.ย
Quack,โท said the duck.ย
My mom started laughing. I'd felt a sort of holy terror at the anger my grandpa was exuding in that moment, but the moment she laughed I realized how absurd it was. I was watching a grown man beef with a duck. I was watching a grown man beef with the world.ย
I started laughing too. In a better world, maybe my grandpa would've joined. Maybe he would've taken a good hard look in the mirror and questioned why exactly he was so angry. But he didn't. Instead he swore at the duck some more, and he threw his remaining handful of grapes at it overhand, like a baseball, and then the duck ate the grapes out of the water, and my mom actually laughed so hard she started dry heaving a little, and my grandpa had to go sit in the car for a few minutes by himself to regain his composure.ย
ยน He managed to pick blackberries angrily
ยฒ Unfortunately, I do this kind of response quite a bit.
ยณ I got my first kiss from my wife because I managed to capture a duck. They're like, a motif for my life. Very lucky to have that.
โด I reference it again in this very weird short story.
โต I eat a lot of strange things.
โถ My wife is concerned people will not know what a haymaker is. It is simply the most redneck kind of punch.
โท ...What did you expect it to say?
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I used to have a weird dream where space is weird. There are shapes and some space but things are both impossibly big and impossibly small at the same time. The distance seems finite yet you never reach the other side. You also can't go back not that you started on any concrete place.
*From r/geometricnightmares: Geometric nightmares are "a specific type of dream, often occurring during illness, that involves shapes or objects, themes of infinity, pressure, an overwhelming sense of unease or terror and anxiety, a void and incomprehensibly large or small objects, and/or a crushing silence."
They're kinda hard to explain; check out the subreddit for some examples.
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Fragments from:
Surely there are better things to spend 88 billion US dollars than on torturing people and kicking people out of the place they've made their home.
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You will misunderstand the economic history of white supremacy in America if youโre under the impression that convict labor (theย โexcept as punishment for a crimeโ bit of the 13th Amendment) was how the plantation economy of the South continued after the official abolition of slavery. It mainly wasnโt. Convict labor was always only a relatively small sector of the Southern economy.ย
The vast majority of freed slaves became sharecroppers and tenant farmersย on white-owned land. This was the real basis of the continuation of the slave-based Southern agrarian economy. And though many of the most egregious elements of slavery were now mostly gone (the whip, the overseers, the legal inability to leave), the basic slave-plantation economy was still intact as these black farm laborers now basically worked for the sameย โwagesโ as they had as slaves. Landowners would sell a few basic living essentials like food, clothing, and heating oil to the laborers on credit, and at harvest time, the sharecroppersโ or tenant farmersโย โearningsโ from their crop would be used to pay off their debt to the landowner, usually leaving them at zero, or even still in the red, indebted to the landowner. From a financial standpoint, this was hardly any different than slaves working and receiving zero wages besides those same basic living essentials from the slave master.
Forced convict labor existed in all of this, and was used to keep many black people involved in more obvious slavery (complete with the chains, the overseers, and even the whip), but the convict-leasing system and the state-run plantations run by prison labor did not constitute the majority of the Southern economy, neither in terms of the percentage of the population involved nor in economic output.
To this day, prison labor in the US only constitutes a small fraction of the economy, and is not in any way profitable. The companies that use prison labor are able to profit because they donโt have to pay any of the living costs of the prisoners, nor the costs of incarcerating them, as the state pays for all that. The amount of money the state has to spend incarcerating people dwarfs the amount of revenue there is to be gained from exploiting prison labor. It is generally a net loss for the overall economy. Even in cases where the state saves money by using cheap prison labor to replace expensive free labor (like Californiaโs firefighters), this is simply them attempting to recoup some of the cost they spend incarcerating those workers in the first place. Whether the state uses prisoners as firefighters or not, it costs them the same amount of money to lock those people up, itโs a sunk cost. So they figure they might as well try to save some money on their fire-fighting budget by employing prisoners at $2 an hour instead of free labor at $40/hr.
Prison labor cannot in any way be described as the basis of the US economy, and it cannot grow to become one either. It is unproductive. Incarceration loses more revenue than it generates. The prison-industrial complex is a parasitic tumor on the economy. It does not constitute the economic logic of white supremacy. The US carceral system needs to be understood as an apparatus of state terror, not of economic production. Its purpose is to discipline and intimidate, not to produce. Its purpose in the structure of white supremacy in America is not for the exploitation of black labor. If that were its purpose, it does so incredibly inefficiently, spending more money than it earns. Its purpose in the structure of white supremacy is for terrorizing and disciplining the black population, breaking urban black political power, and strengthening rural political representation.ย
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we need to get you on Man Vs. Food. (The show)
Massive piles of food have nothing on the one who can eat massive piles of raw ingredients
Back when I was in scouts, our group participated in a mini-triathalon every year. I think it was a half mile swim, then 10 miles on bike, then 5 miles running. So waaaaaaay less intense than a normal triathlon, but still a pretty brutal experience. If I tried to do that today, I would have an extremely bad time.
Traditionally, the night before the triathlon we'd all go to a Golden Corral in the city and eat a few steaks before hand. For funsies. But we arrived late at night that year, and the Golden Corral was closed, so we tried to find a 24 hour buffet, and the only one we could fine was for Chinese food. It had a name like "Jiangs All You Can Eat Spicy Chinese Food."
We went. It was some of the most incredible Chinese food I've ever eaten. I'd only ever had Panda express Americanized Chinese food before, and this was, like, genuine Sichuan stuff in apocalyptic quantities.
So we ate, and we ate, and we ate, and we ate, right until our our entire faces went numb from the spicy, and then at the end, just to polish things off, me and another scout that we'll call Scrapper went and got a plate full of crab rangoons. I think we could fit 5 of them on the plate, by placing them kind of like the dots on a dice.
We were talking on the walk back, when Scrapper said you know, it would be kind of a bad idea to have a full on crab rangoon eating contest like, 4 hours before the race.
(At that point, it was midnight, and the race was at 4 am.)
And I said: Yeah.
Then we walked a little further. And he said: You wanna do it anyway?
My fatal flaw is that I have never met a bad idea I didn't like. Of course I went in. I wouldn't be me if I didn't. I'd say before the contest even started, he ate around 8 plates, and I ate around 6, but when it came to the Crab Rangoon battle, I downed 6 plates (approximatel 30), and he gave up after 5 (approximately 25). So he won on total plateage, but I won on pure rangoon volume. Total amount of rangoons eaten was like, 55 rangoons. Two more and I think I would've been a viable candidate for narcan.
We joked that we'd added a fourth event to the Triathalon: The Crab Rangoon-a-thon.
We later (approximately 4 hours and 15 minutes later) learned that we'd actually added two events to the triathalon. The Crab Rangoon-a-thon, and the who-can-poop-the-fastest chase. There were porta potties set up between every event change, so as soon as we finished, me and Scrapper would bolt to the potties, and if there were sounds of Great Suffering happening in one stall, we'd occupy the one next to it to that one and assume it held the other person. Then we could try and match pace. If we arrived and it was silent, we'd assume that we beat the other out prepare for single combat, knowing we only had a minute or two to set up camp before Terrible Noises would begin next to us.
There were more than two porta-potties between stations, but I think everyone else kind of avoided using them because we sounded so insane. We'd make noises of Godly Anguish, then, you know. Fart. Then we'd laugh. Then we'd scream like wounded animals again as the next convolusion hit us. I've never had poops like that before or since. They folded me in half like a frightened lobster. I'd feel a surge, and then I'd feel this terrible pressure againt my chest, and it would take me thirty seconds to realize it was my own knees. I pooped so hard I pulled my back. I feel lucky to be alive.
Scrapper did wind up beating me by like. 20 seconds though. He skipped the bathroom for the last run and just kind of pain-waddled those five miles, and I just couldn't catch up. It was 13 years ago and I am still devastated. He did soil himself though, right after the race. So. At least I made him pay dearly for the win.
Anyway, yeah, I bet could dominate in a show like that. Sign me up.
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Doctor: What do you see in this X-ray?
Students: *collective gasp*
Doctor: Please donโt do that in front of patients.
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So python is apparently unable to handle if-statement with more than 2996 elifโs, which is fair, however, itโs really limiting my implentation of an is_even function
Any ideas on how I can work around this?
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I kinda get it, now that I have linux working, I do want to yap about it with my friends
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my wife asked me what the english call football, and my brain short circuited so hard i said "footbollocks."
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What Talon And What Dreadful Claw
I wrote this in response to this prompt. Ivan Alexander recorded this story, so if you like audiobooks, click here to listen. I cannot understate how talented he is.
Sheโd watched him walking over the horizon for almost six hours now. She loved getting guests - loved seeing the resignation of men half dead with thirst, trading certain death in the sands for possible death near her waters.
And they were hers. The promise of Ramses still stood, even if it had been a millennium since the concord. By rite of blood and writ of paper she was the queen of the deeper duat. And it was a queenโs privilege to choose her guests. And, occasionally, kill them with her claws.
She could have flown over, but she had time. More time than anyone. More than enough time to wait.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
Her guest was not half dead. He was, to be technical, less than a quarter dead, but that was only if you measured things in years.
He was young. His face certainly seemed less lined than her own. There wasnโt much else she could judge age from - the lines of her form folded into wings and furs and claws at the same point that his folded into silks and beads.
Heโd prepared for the meeting by bringing a wealth of spices. It was a trick common to royal travelers: If sweat couldnโt be prevented, it could at least be masked. She could still pick traces of it up under the sandalwood and myrrh, but it was pleasant. Salty and metallic and sharp, underneath all the soft wisps of smoke.
Heโd brought her gifts. When she told him that the gifts were not acceptable as passage, he said that wasnโt how gifts worked. Gifts werenโt given in exchanges - they were given for the joy of giving. And it brought him joy to share with her.
She didnโt know how to respond to that, so she simply asked if he intended to cross through her duat.
โMaybe,โ he replied. โWhatโs your price?โ
โA riddle,โ sheโd said. โIf you get it right, you can pass. But if you get it wrong, I will devour even your bones.โ
He grinned and it wasnโt false bravado. Heโd known the cost before she said it.
โI love riddles. I accept.โ
She loved this part. She loved the tension of it, that singular moment of truth where she wasnโt just a mind or a monster, but something straddling both worlds.
She spoke.
โI can survive beyond death, but can be broken without force. I can summon without breath but-โ
โA promise.โ
She looked at him wide-eyed. It wasnโt her best riddle, but it was one sheโd made herself. It wasnโt supposed to be this easy.
She let him pass but she did - to her great shame - sulk. To his credit, he only lingered an hour or so in the shade of the oasis. There was a longing to him that she couldnโt describe. It unsettled her, but it went away when he took his camels and continued past, traveling on into the deep duat.
She forgot about his gifts until long after heโd passed the horizon. Sheโd expected human trinkets - gold and gems. Useless baubles. The pelts that had been carefully rolled up and placed inside the chest were strangely thoughtful.
She carried them back to her cave, and laid them flat across the floor. That night she slept better than she had in many, many years. In the morning, she woke up and smelled myrrh, and was almost happy to imagine the prince coming back. If she was disappointed to realize that the smell was coming from the scents soaked into the furs, that was a secret she could keep even from herself.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ
It was a week before he came back.
She recognized his outline on the horizon. She had a good memory, and beyond that, heโd made quite an impression on his first meeting with her.
Heโd begun to run low on his spices, and his clothes were looking far more rumpled than they had at the start. That travel was beginning to wear him down shouldโve meant nothing to her. Now, she felt odd. Would she still feel victorious if he failed her riddle? Or would it haunt her, knowing she could only catch him at his worst?
(Did she want to catch him?)
She waited for him to make it to her oasis again. It seemed to be part of the ritual, to sit and watch the speck on the horizon grow to the size of a man. They didnโt exchange pleasantries when he arrived. Instead he gave a small nod to acknowledge her before climbing down from atop his camel. She hadnโt demanded it prior because she knew all too well how easy it was to catch a camel, but there was still something respectful in the gesture. Here was a prince willing to die with dignity. Here was a man who lived and died by rules.
Could she be blamed for admiring that?
Only when he was fully settled in to listen did she begin her riddle.
โToothless maw that eats all these:
Raw flesh, dung, fresh air, and trees.
At night Iโm bright, in day Iโm black,
I die, Iโm gone, but always back.โ
She was on the third line when she saw his face light up. He waited to answer this time, more focused on being polite than showing off how clever he was. She liked that. She knew he was clever, but now she knew he could be patient too.
โA campfire.โ
It was one of her favorite riddles, and the joy she got was twofold. She was happy for the prince, happy that he would survive another day, and happy for herself too. It was infinitely preferable to lose with skill than to win through circumstance. She would feel robbed, if she had to eat the prince on a bad day. If he lost, he needed to lose at his best. He needed to lose in a way that mattered.
He went through the oasis again, but lingered far longer. They spoke in moments about each otherโs lives - her memories of the time before even Ramses, and his experience as the seventh in line to the throne. He was trusted to act as an emissary specifically because he was so far from inheriting the throne.
โNot that Iโd want it anyway,โ he said. โA camel is a better throne than any silly golden chair. The seat in the palace only lets me see the bald spot on the high priestโs head. The saddle on this camel lets me see all the beauty in the world.โ
His head wasnโt turned towards her when he said that, but she could see his eyes glance over her.
It was easy to pretend she didnโt notice, and he did nothing to press it further. She showed him the best trees for picking dates, the best ponds for catching fish, and the first cave sheโd set her lair up in - back before even Ramses. Back when she was much, much smaller.
She slept in the next morning. The sunlight made a soft beam through the cave, over the pelts, before landing across her face. Any other day it wouldโve been a wonderful way to wake up, but the realization that sheโd missed her chance to say goodbye made her scramble. She made a short flight over the waters to see if he was gone, and got her answer before even landing - there was no camel tied to the palms.
Still, heโd left her a gift. The boar roasting over glowing coals had clearly been caught the night before, and the fact that it was unspiced meant it was for her.
It was also another oddly thoughtful gesture. How many humans would realize that unseasoned meat was a sphinxโs preference? How many would research that far?
She landed near the meal and approached. Down on the ground, there was so much more detail to see. The tracks of the camel, the care taken to not leave a mess. The simple note left besides the firepit.
She reached out and read.
Iโm sure you donโt depend on travelers for your meals
But I do feel bad, having deprived you twice.
Enjoy the boar. I will be back in two weeks.
She hadnโt taken a bite yet, but she could pretend the warmth in her stomach was the meal. Two bites was all it took to make the illusion complete.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
She waited until the fifteenth day before flying.
She wasnโt sure what sheโd expected - a sandstorm, perhaps, or a heatstruck camel. Instead, it was only a few minutes flight before the smell of blood caught in the back of her throat.
It was hard to describe what happened after that. Sometimes, she was more mind than monster. Sometimes, she was more monster than mind. That day was a monster day.
Heโd lost a lot of blood by the time she found him. A frankly terrifying amount of blood. She could carry him back to the oasis, but thatโd only delay the inevitable.
But sphinx knew many things that humans did not.
She carried him, and he was light in her claws. Light in the way that humans were, but some small, scared part of her brain was worried that the blood loss made him lighter still. Like a date left in the sun.
She followed the trail through the desert until she found the thieves that did this. They had his gifts and his spices. Theyโd have taken the clothes off his corpse if theyโd been able to catch his camel.
Theyโd have taken his life. The one human life sheโd valued in one-thousand years, and theyโd have taken his life.
It was hard to hate humans. They were so small and short lived that taking them personally felt childish. But this day, she hated, and it made killing easy. Five of the six bandits were extraneous. The last, thankfully, had blood that smelled like the prince.
(He was much less thankful about this than she was).
She took them both back, the prince held gently in her front talons, the bandit half crushed in the back. The transfer spell took exactly as much as it needed. It wouldโve been crueler to let the bandit suffer the same fate heโd intended to inflict on the prince - to struggle on with too little blood, until his body failed. It was tempting, but she felt a sick gratitude that he had what sheโd needed when she needed it, so she made the end quick. Or, quick enough.
Thirty seconds isnโt long, but itโs an eternity when falling.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
The prince recovered enough to speak after three days. He asked her to tell him riddles, and if she was as jealous of her domain as she pretended, sheโd have said no. But good riddles were the tool she used to rid herself of unwanted guests, and this guest wasโฆ wanted.
So she read riddles to him for days at a time. Read all the ones sheโd hoarded from scholars. Read ones she wrote herself, just for fun. She started with her best riddles because she loved his praise, but moved on to her earlier ones because what they lacked in cleverness, they made up for by being earnest.
He loved those riddles the most.
One week stretched into two. He spent his days swimming after fish, chasing after boars with spears made of stone (she hadnโt seen that in a very long time) and scurrying up the trees to pick dates. And his nights, he spent imagining riddles around a campfire.
She knew it wasnโt going to be permanent, but that didnโt mean it couldnโt be beautiful. Sheโd outlived so many things in this world - seen rivers change courses and lakes run dry. If impermanence was a poison, then it was a poison she couldnโt avoid. There was no wall she could build to keep death at bay. She could only share her home with it and hope that one, one wonderful, far away day, that even death would die.
But that day would not be soon.
The kingโs men found the oasis after a month of searching. There were no riddles this time. The prince left willingly, and the men with bronze blades stayed respectfully far from her part of the duat. It went as good as it could have gone, all things considered. If some part of her felt empty afterwards, well, maybe she just needed to eat.
Regular gifts did find her way to the duat, as thanks after that. Herds of goats were released near her borders, to hunt at her own leisure. Soft pelts from the northern lands were delivered in chests, and she luxuriated in their fluff.
Most importantly, a regular shipment of blank vellum began to make its way to the duat. She was told was explicitly that it was for her to write more riddles. And also, if she had a spare moment, she could send letters back with the vendor. The prince always made sure to send at least one out to her, and she always made sure to send one back.
Always.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐๐
It had been decades.
She just-
She couldnโt see how humans were like this. Sheโd written with him six months ago! Heโd been sharp as ever. Sharper, even. Time had winnowed him into a razorโs edge, and she'd been so amazed to see him change. And then heโd gotten busy, and theyโd stopped writing letters for just a month, and then it was two months, and then three and now-
Now he wasnโt well.
The last letter sheโd received hadnโt even been from him. It had been from his eldest brother, the reigning pharaoh. And it had broken her heart.
He was forgettingโฆ everything. His mind was breaking. Decades of brilliance, and now he was falling apart at the seams. Some days, he didnโt even know who he was. But on the days that he did, the only thing he could talk about was going to the oasis one last time.
And his brother who had kept him close, who had been so protective of him after his near death with the bandits, had finally agreed.
He was going to be arriving any day now. The note had a sort of helpless plea attached - that he didnโt know what to do at this point, but that whatever it cost her to keep him comfortable, he would repay tenfold.
She sent a letter back saying it was a gift. She was the queen of the duat, and it pleased her to give this to her neighboring kingdom. Nevermind that her kingdom had no subjects, nevermind that she had no armies at her disposal. What she had, she could give, and this wasโฆ easy.
It made her happy to write the letter. It remind her of the first words the prince had spoken to her, all those years ago.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐
He arrived a few days later, escorted by fifty soldiers. She was grateful that he was in one of his lucid moments. She couldnโt imagine how it would be, to be seen and not known.
She didnโt wait for them to make it all the way to her oasis. She flew over to meet them, and then carried him back. The traditional wait was from when she thought she had time. Before she'd realized that there were ways for even an immortal to find themselves in a hurry.
He spent his first day back chasing fish, the same way he did before. The boars he left be - seventy, he insisted, was far too old to be messing with boars. And when the evening came, they gathered by a campfire to share riddles.
They went back and forth, laughing at each other's crafts. It was only after an hour of reminiscing that she actually asked him her favorite riddle, the riddle that she had permanently written in as His riddle. The one with toothless maws and meat and light in the dark, and he stared at her - not blankly, but worse, confused, because he recognized the riddle, but could no longer answer it.
She could see the distress growing in him, and it broke her heart. He hemmed and hawed, but right when he looked on the brink of giving up, he looked at the fire and started in relief.
โA campfire!โ he said, and they laughed, and if he could pretend his tears were mirth and not mourning she could pretend that hers were the same.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
He was not well the next day.
He knew who he was, thankfully, but he didnโt remember getting there. He stumbled around almost dazed until he saw her. Then he sighed in relief.
โThis is my favorite dream,โ he confided in her. โIโd like to get back here for real one day - but this dream is lovely. Can you read me some more riddles? Just like last time. I've never forgotten.โ
She didnโt even touch her later works. She went to her earliest ones, the easy ones, and the way he pondered minutes at a time made her stomach clench.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
She did not sleep that night.
She had spent literally her entire life trying to make harder and harder riddles, and now-
They needed to be easy. They needed to be simple. They needed to rhyme, and feel like riddles, but they needed to be solvable by someone that -
She had to stop writing for a few moments to compose herself. She couldnโt afford to cry on the vellum. A new shipment wouldnโt arrive in time.
She was immortal, but she was still running out of time.
๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
He woke up the next morning completely confused. Sheโd prepared her first riddle as
โWho sits in the sand
Beside my lair
Who swims through fish
With thin white hair
Who braved the desert and survived
Then returned home alive and thrived?โ
But after several seconds of silence she couldnโt take it anymore.
โItโs you,โ she said.
โOh!โ he replied, surprised.
โWhat do you know about this place?โ, she asked, after several more long seconds of quiet.
โโฆNot a lot,โ he admitted. โBut I know I love you.โ
โI love you too,โ she said.
That was the only riddle she had for the day. He fell asleep in the midmorning, and she took the time to go catch a goat for them. He was still asleep when she returned and remained that way the rest of the day. She stayed awake long after sunset, watching the gentle rise and fall of his chest and praying it would never stop. She wasnโt sure when she fell asleep - she just knew that when she woke up, her prayer had gone unanswered.
๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ ๐ญ ๐ฎ ๐ ๐ ๐
The vellum vendor arrived at the start of the deep duat only to find the oasis empty. He looked for hours, but there was only a single vellum left behind in the cave. He grabbed it and read the half finished riddle.
โ What hungers and is never full?
What is complete but never whole?
What pierces armor, shields, and hearts?
What ends before it even starts?
What force can make a monster thrall
What talon and what dreadful claw
Can heal the slice it makes each day?
What pain can make the godless pray?
It was all he could take back to the pharaoh.
He hoped it was enough.
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There are people โ some in my own Party โ who think that if you just give Donald Trump everything he wants, heโll make an exception and spare you some of the harm. Iโll ignore the moral abdication of that position for just a second to say โ almost none of those people have the experience with this President that I do. I once swallowed my pride to offer him what he values most โ public praise on the Sunday news shows โ in return for ventilators and N95 masks during the worst of the pandemic. We made a deal. And it turns out his promises were as broken as the BIPAP machines he sent us instead of ventilators. Going along to get along does not work โ just ask the Trump-fearing red state Governors who are dealing with the same cuts that we are. I wonโt be fooled twice.
Iโve been reflecting, these past four weeks, on two important parts of my life: my work helping to build the Illinois Holocaust Museum and the two times Iโve had the privilege of reciting the oath of office for Illinois Governor.
As some of you know, Skokie, Illinois once had one of the largest populations of Holocaust survivors anywhere in the world. In 1978, Nazis decided they wanted to march there.
The leaders of that march knew that the images of Swastika clad young men goose stepping down a peaceful suburban street would terrorize the local Jewish population โ so many of whom had never recovered from their time in German concentration camps.
The prospect of that march sparked a legal fight that went all the way to the Supreme Court. It was a Jewish lawyer from the ACLU who argued the case for the Nazis โ contending that even the most hateful of speech was protected under the first amendment.
As an American and a Jew, I find it difficult to resolve my feelings around that Supreme Court case โ but I am grateful that the prospect of Nazis marching in their streets spurred the survivors and other Skokie residents to act. They joined together to form the Holocaust Memorial Foundation and built the first Illinois Holocaust Museum in a storefront in 1981 โ a small but important forerunner to the one I helped build thirty years later.
I do not invoke the specter of Nazis lightly. But I know the history intimately โ and have spent more time than probably anyone in this room with people who survived the Holocaust. Hereโs what Iโve learned โ the root that tears apart your houseโs foundation begins as a seed โ a seed of distrust and hate and blame.
The seed that grew into a dictatorship in Europe a lifetime ago didnโt arrive overnight. It started with everyday Germans mad about inflation and looking for someone to blame.
Iโm watching with a foreboding dread what is happening in our country right now. A president who watches a plane go down in the Potomac โ and suggests โ without facts or findings โ that a diversity hire is responsible for the crash. Or the Missouri Attorney General who just sued Starbucks โ arguing that consumers pay higher prices for their coffee because the baristas are too โfemaleโ and โnonwhite.โ The authoritarian playbook is laid bare here: They point to a group of people who donโt look like you and tell you to blame them for your problems.
I just have one question: What comes next? After weโve discriminated against, deported or disparaged all the immigrants and the gay and lesbian and transgender people, the developmentally disabled, the women and the minorities โ once weโve ostracized our neighbors and betrayed our friends โ After that, when the problems we started with are still there staring us in the face โ what comes next.
All the atrocities of human history lurk in the answer to that question. And if we donโt want to repeat history โ then for Godโs sake in this moment we better be strong enough to learn from it.
I swore the following oath on Abraham Lincolnโs Bible: โI do solemnly swear that I will support the constitution of the United States, and the constitution of the state of Illinois, and that I will faithfully discharge the duties of the office of Governor .... according to the best of my ability.
My oath is to the Constitution of our state and of our country. We donโt have kings in America โ and I donโt intend to bend the knee to one. I am not speaking up in service to my ambitions โ but in deference to my obligations.
If you think Iโm overreacting and sounding the alarm too soon, consider this:
It took the Nazis one month, three weeks, two days, eight hours and 40 minutes to dismantle a constitutional republic. All Iโm saying is when the five-alarm fire starts to burn, every good person better be ready to man a post with a bucket of water if you want to stop it from raging out of control.
Those Illinois Nazis did end up holding their march in 1978 โ just not in Skokie. After all the blowback from the case, they decided to march in Chicago instead. Only twenty of them showed up. But 2000 people came to counter protest. The Chicago Tribune reported that day that the โrally sputtered to an unspectacular end after ten minutes.โ It was Illinoisans who smothered those embers before they could burn into a flame.
Tyranny requires your fear and your silence and your compliance. Democracy requires your courage. So gather your justice and humanity, Illinois, and do not let the โtragic spirit of despairโ overcome us when our country needs us the most.
Sources:
โข NBC Chicago & J.B. Pritzker, Democratic governor of Illinois, State of the State address 2025: Watch speech here | Full text
โข Betches News on Instagram (screencaps)
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chooses a username that starts with an early letter of the alphabet so im at the top of the voice call
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Imagine if someone like zelensky could be nominated in the US
Idk, with all the discussion about what Democrats need to do differently or whatever I think the reality is that voters just hold Trump to a lower standard than they do other politicians (in a way that benefits Trump), and while you can try to overcome that in other ways there's ultimately nothing you can do about it
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I'm constantly impressed at people's ability to stretch anything to fit an acronym, but it's extremely impressive how well that fits.
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