Prêts? Allez!

Dec. 4th, 2025 05:51 am
[syndicated profile] ao3_leviathantrilogy_feed

Posted by kingmakr

by

“It’s a stick to poke each other with. It’s all the same to me.”

Alek convinces Deryn to join his fencing club. Shenanigans ensue.

Words: 1071, Chapters: 1/?, Language: English

Series: Part 2 of Fencing Club AU

more IRA paperwork

Dec. 8th, 2025 05:45 pm
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
[personal profile] redbird
I went out in the cold today, took a shuttle buses that was replacing the central part of the green line, and walked into a Fidelity office to get the medallion signature I need on the BNY form.

They provided the medallion for my signature, but the woman who handled that told me she thought I would need to redo the _Fidelity_ forms once BNY had transferred the funds, because the inherited IRA would need a brand-new account, not the one I created for the purpose a few weeks ago. Having printed and signed those forms, I asked her to keep them, in case they are usable. (She may have been thinking I'm trying to move the money into an account that already has money in it.)

She also said I do need to put the form with the medallion signature in the mail to BNY, Fidelity can't send it to them electronically. I brought the medallion-ized form home with me, but before I put it in the mail I'm going to scan it and upload the scan to the Fidelity website, in case the previous advisor is right and they can do this electronically.

So that will be another outing in the cold, to a post office, in the hope the letter gets to BNY in good season despite both Christmas packages and the Republican effort to destroy the postal service. Fortunately, there are post office branches at this end of the green line, the part that's still running trolleys.

Just one thing: 09 December 2025

Dec. 8th, 2025 04:04 pm
[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!

Good things about my train journey

Dec. 8th, 2025 09:13 pm
[personal profile] cosmolinguist

I had a lot of them today and they were mostly exhausting, but

  1. The train manager on the train to Euston told us what platform we'd come in to (making it clear that there might be a last-minute change!), what side the doors would open on, how to get to the Underground and even buses and taxis. Since it's a station I know well, I could verify that everything he was saying was the right amount and kind of information that would've helped me if I hadn't known that and needed to.

  2. I'm not sure this is what was going on because it might not have been working that way but... I think that there was a new feature over the two accessible toilet doors in Euston: there were big lights over the doors, one was red and one was green, so I assumed this meant one was locked and one is open. Like I said my experience made this kinda confusing but it at least made me think it'd be a really good idea! At the moment I have to look for a teeny circle near the lock/handle of the door and determine whether it's white or red. Which, in dim locations like you get at Euston, can be surprisingly difficult! And I feel like an idiot trying my key in a locked door and I don't like to stress out the occupant -- I at least find it stressful when I'm in there and hear someone trying the door, suddenly unsure that I locked it or that it has stayed locked. If a big red or green light over the door could be relied on and rolled out, that'd be great.

(no subject)

Dec. 8th, 2025 10:05 am
bitterlawngnome: (Default)
[personal profile] bitterlawngnome
The show opening was remarkably well attended for a rainy cold weekend afternoon. As usual I found it completely alienating ... too many people talking too loud, and I knew none of them and they all knew each other. Lol. When I was 30 this was all very intimidating, now it just seems normal. I did have a few quiet conversations with people off to the side, mostly women my age, as usual. I don't think anyone sold anything but that's common for an event like this - people were hardly looking at the art anyway, it's a socializing opportunity, and this gallery does not attract the kind of clientele who like to conspicuously spend to impress their friends. There were dogs and babies and a lovely violinist who played her own compositions, avant-garde but not strident. I spent yesterday regenerating.

I'm sorry, but WTAF?!?

Dec. 8th, 2025 04:43 pm
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
[personal profile] davidgillon

 I haven't been able to bring myself to actually read the new US National Security Strategy, but according to reports the highlights from the European perspective appear to be:

Adoption of the White Supremacist "Great Replacement" conspiracy theory as official US Government policy.

The US must therefore divorce itself from Europe because some European states might become non-White* majority in the future. (I think the appropriate description for this triumph of logic is utterly barking, the EU states average 5-15% non-EU born citizens, and that includes Brits nowadays, the only exception is Liechtenstein, and that has a population of 40,000, plus the whole international banking and financial services hub thing going on). 

Apparently the US has to protect Europe against 'civilizational erosion' by working to undermine the EU and further the Far Right, because protecting your population against racial hatred is contrary to the sacred principle of free speech.

Meanwhile, South of the Border, they're reinstating the Monroe Doctrine because apparently the South American states need an American guardian to tell them who they can have relations with.

As I said, I'm sorry, but WTAF?!?

 

* They don't actually say 'non-white', but they're fooling no one.

Clues By Sam (2025)

Dec. 8th, 2025 11:52 am
pauraque: Guybrush writing in his journal adrift on the sea in a bumper car (monkey island adrift)
[personal profile] pauraque
Life is hectic, so let's do a quick one!

phone screenshot shows a 4x5 grid of people represented by emojis, labeled with names and professions, stating logic clues such as row 3 is the only row with exactly 3 innocents

Clues By Sam is a logic game where you have to deduce who is a criminal and who is innocent in a grid of 20 people. Everyone tells the truth (i.e. criminals don't lie) and people's professions aren't hints (i.e. "sleuths" and "cops" can be innocents or criminals). Random guessing is not allowed; the game will only let you convict or exonerate someone if the clues you've uncovered give enough information to be certain.

I am not super great at this kind of formal logic puzzle, but I'm trying to get better, and I think this is a good one for people who are learning. The daily puzzles get harder throughout the week—Monday is the easiest—and if you're stuck you can get hints that highlight which clues you should focus on. There are options for better colorblind visibility (innocents are green and criminals are red by default) but I'm not sure if the game is compatible with screenreaders or not.

The game is free to play in your browser, but there are also two puzzle packs you can buy. If you sign up for the dev's email newsletter, there are also some free extra puzzles in there. Thanks to [personal profile] sineala for the recommendation!

(no subject)

Dec. 8th, 2025 08:27 am
ranunculus: (Default)
[personal profile] ranunculus
The sun is coming up, streaming through the windows and pointing out that I really should do some housework. Sigh.  Today is a "horse" day, so I was moving horses, cleaning pens and filling water well before the sun made an appearance.  Driving down to Winter Quarters we looked out over the Ukiah valley, full of fluffy white fog, which of course isn't as fluffy or nice once you are in it.  All the horses were full of themselves, including Firefly. 
I rode Firefly both days this weekend.  She was, as usual, very good.  
There was a nice group of riders on Sunday who apparently had fun and want to return.  We will see if the weather cooperates in January and February! 
It has been sunny and dry for a couple of weeks now, I wouldn't mind a bit of rain.  Indeed, it looks like we might get some in another week.  I hope so.  The chart says we are still a tiny bit ahead of seasonal normal, but when we start into this dry weather pattern it sometimes takes over for the rest of the winter. That would be bad as we have only had 20% of our normal rain for the year.  On the other hand we have a foot of nice green grass in some places on the Ranch.  Some years that would be 1 inch, not 1 foot. 


siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1890011.html

This is part of Understanding Health Insurance





Health Insurance is a Contract



What we call health insurance is a contract. When you get health insurance, you (or somebody on your behalf) are agreeing to a contract with a health insurance company – a contract where they agree to do certain things for you in exchange for money. So a health insurance plan is a contract between the insurance company and the customer (you).

For simplicity, I will use the term health plan to mean the actual contract – the specific health insurance product – you get from a health insurance company. (It sounds less weird than saying "an insurance" and is shorter to type than "a health insurance plan".)

One of the things this clarifies is that one health insurance company can have a bunch of different contracts (health plans) to sell. This is the same as how you may have more than one internet company that could sell you an internet connection to your home, and each of those internet companies might have several different package deals they offer with different prices and terms. In exactly that way, there are multiple different health insurance companies, and they each can sell multiple different health plans with different prices and terms.

Read more... [7,130 words] )

This post brought to you by the 220 readers who funded my writing it – thank you all so much! You can see who they are at my Patreon page. If you're not one of them, and would be willing to chip in so I can write more things like this, please do so there.

Please leave comments on the Comment Catcher comment, instead of the main body of the post – unless you are commenting to get a copy of the post sent to you in email through the notification system, then go ahead and comment on it directly. Thanks!

Just one thing: 08 December 2025

Dec. 8th, 2025 06:41 am
[personal profile] jazzyjj posting in [community profile] awesomeers
It's challenge time!

Comment with Just One Thing you've accomplished in the last 24 hours or so. It doesn't have to be a hard thing, or even a thing that you think is particularly awesome. Just a thing that you did.

Feel free to share more than one thing if you're feeling particularly accomplished!

Extra credit: find someone in the comments and give them props for what they achieved!

Nothing is too big, too small, too strange or too cryptic. And in case you'd rather do this in private, anonymous comments are screened. I will only unscreen if you ask me to.

Go!
siderea: (Default)
[personal profile] siderea
Canonical link: https://siderea.dreamwidth.org/1889543.html


Preface: I had hoped to get this out in a more timely manner, but was hindered by technical difficulties with my arms, which have now been resolved. This is a serial about health insurance in the US from the consumer's point of view, of potential use for people still dealing with open enrollment, which we are coming up on the end of imminently. For everyone else dealing with the US health insurance system, such as it is, perhaps it will be useful to you in the future.





Understanding Health Insurance:
Introduction



Health insurance in the US is hard to understand. It just is. If you find it confusing and bewildering, as well as infuriating, it's not just you.

I think that one of the reasons it's hard to understand has to do with how definitions work.

Part of the reason why health insurance is so confusing is all the insurance industry jargon that is used. Unfortunately, there's no way around that jargon. We all are stuck having to learn what all these strange terms mean. So helpful people try to explain that jargon. They try to help by giving definitions.

But definitions are like leaves: you need a trunk and some branches to hang them on, or they just swirl around in bewildering clouds and eventually settle in indecipherable piles.

There are several big ideas that provide the trunk and branches of understanding health insurance. If you have those ideas, the jargon becomes a lot easier to understand, and then insurance itself becomes a lot easier to understand.

So in this series, I am going to explain some of those big ideas, and then use them to explain how health insurance is organized.

This unorthodox introduction to health insurance is for beginners to health insurance in the US, and anyone who still feels like a beginner after bouncing off the bureaucratic nightmare that is our so-called health care system in the US. It's for anyone who is new to being an health insurance shopper in the US, or feels their understanding is uncertain. Maybe you just got your first job and are being asked to pick a health plan from several offered. Maybe you have always had insurance from an employer and are shopping on your state marketplace for the first time. Maybe you have always gotten insurance through your parents and spouse, and had no say in it, but do now. This introduction assumes you are coming in cold, a complete beginner knowing nothing about health insurance or what any of the health insurance industry jargon even is.

Please note! This series is mostly about commercial insurance products: the kinds that you buy with money. Included in that are the kind of health insurance people buy for themselves on the state ACA marketplaces and also the kind of health insurance people get from their employers as a "bene". It may (I am honestly not sure) also include Medicare Advantage plans.

The things this series explains do not necessarily also describe Medicaid or bare Medicare, or Tricare or any other government run insurance program, though if you are on such an insurance plan this may still be helpful to you. Typically government-run plans have fewer moving parts with fewer choices, so fewer jargon terms even matter to them. Similarly, this may be less useful for subsidized plans on the state ACA marketplaces. It depends on the state. Some states do things differently for differently subsidized plans.

But all these different kinds of government-provided health insurance still use some insurance industry jargon for commercial insurance, if only to tell you what they don't have or do. So this post may be useful to you because understanding how insurance typically works may still prove helpful in understanding what the government is up to. Understanding what the assumptions are of regular commercial insurance will hopefully clarify the terms even government plans use to describe themselves. Just realize that if you have a plan the government in some sense is running, things may be different – including maybe very different – for you.



On to the first important idea: Health Insurance is a Contract.



Understanding Health Insurance

Put your circuits in the sea

Dec. 8th, 2025 02:58 am
sovay: (Rotwang)
[personal profile] sovay
After years of not even being able to pirate it, [personal profile] spatch and I have finally just finished the first series of BBC Ghosts (2019–23), during which he pointed out to me the half of the cast that had been on Taskmaster. I recognized a guest-starring Sophie Thompson.

This article on the megaliths of Orkney got Dave Goulder stuck in my head, especially once one of the archaeologists interviewed compared the Ring of Brodgar to sandstone pages. "They may not have been intended to last millennia, but, now that they have, they are stone doors through which the living try to touch the dead."

I wish a cult image of fish-tailed Artemis had existed at Phigalia, hunting pack of seals and all.

Any year now some part of my health could just fix itself a little, as a treat.

D.O.P.-T.

Dec. 7th, 2025 11:36 pm
weofodthignen: selfportrait with Rune the cat (Default)
[personal profile] weofodthignen
A week ago, I saw what looked like a perfectly good green apple lying on the pavement/sidewalk. Maybe even still with its little paper number tag on it. A few days ago, it was in the gutter, well nibbled. I'm glad somebody got some enjoyment out of it.

The chaise was still there today, dusted with leaves.
[personal profile] tcampbell1000 posting in [community profile] scans_daily


Was Guy Gardner mellowing or not? Since his return to his original personality in issue #18, he’d been sending mixed signals (#19, #23, #26, #27, Wonder Woman #26, Invasion #3).

Which itself is a classic asshole move, so add that to the mix. )

bravado

Dec. 8th, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 8, 2025 is:

bravado • \bruh-VAH-doh\  • noun

Bravado refers to confident or brave talk or behavior that is intended to impress other people.

// She tells the stories of her youthful exploits with enough bravado to invite suspicion that they're embellished a bit.

// The crew of climbers scaled the mountain with youthful bravado.

See the entry >

Examples:

"One problem that exists in the whitewater community overall is that people don't always understand the basic elements associated with water and their ignorance and bravado often lead to an incident where someone gets injured or killed." — Tracy Hines, The Durango (Colorado) Herald, 19 Oct. 2025

Did you know?

Displays of bravado may be show-offish, daring, reckless, and inconsistent with good sense—take, for example, the spectacular feats of stuntpeople—but when successful, they are still likely to be met with shouts of "bravo!" Celebrities, political leaders, corporate giants, and schoolyard bullies, however, may show a different flavor of bravado: one that suggests an overbearing boldness that comes from arrogance or from being in a position of power. The word bravado originally comes from the Italian adjective bravo, meaning "wild" or "courageous," which English can also thank for the more common brave.



(no subject)

Dec. 7th, 2025 09:05 pm
lycomingst: (Default)
[personal profile] lycomingst
Friday Five by anais_pf



1. If you had to participate in one Olympic event, what would it be and why?
Cat tending because there would be lots of napping and eating involved.

2. What is the one song you always sing along to?
Any song I know I sing along to if only in my head.

3. Do you wear a seatbelt in the car?
Always. I had to attach a plastic doodad to it to pull it down so it doesn't go across my eye. Seatbelts are designed for 6 foot males.

4. Car, SUV or truck and why?
I have what you might call a small SUV. For the space. It helped in moving.

5. Are you a good/bad driver? Explain.
I'm a cautious one. I don't care if someone passes me or gets in front of me. I just want to get from point A to point B alive.
sonia: Quilted wall-hanging (Default)
[personal profile] sonia
The Balkan choir I sing with performed at a center for adults with disabilities on Friday, and we were vocally and enthusiastically received by the audience in their power and manual wheelchairs. It was stressful to prepare the songs for it, but fun once we were there, and I hope we'll do more like that.

One of the songs we sang is Otche Nash, a 4-part setting of the Lord's Prayer in Old Church Slavonic, which is like a mix of Bulgarian and Russian.

When someone proposed learning the song at the ad hoc monthly group a year ago, I was grumpy about having something so fundamentally Christian shoved down my throat, and we put it aside. In this weekly choir we learn whatever the teacher gives us, so I had to make my peace with it. Another singer said she doesn't mind it because it's asking the Universe for good things. I guess so...

Eva Quartet recorded it, and here's a live performance.

Slept late

Dec. 7th, 2025 10:16 pm
silver_chipmunk: (Default)
[personal profile] silver_chipmunk
Slept late at [personal profile] mashfanficchick's. Finally got up and had coffee, a bit before 12:00.

Ze got up later, and while I waited I showered and dressed. Then ze got up, and we went into Flushing by the bus.because the subway had the construction meaning we'd have to take a shuttle bus between Mets/Willits Point and Main Street.

We went to the Chinese Rice Noodle place and had lunch of noodle soup. I had the mixed mushroom, which came with an interesting variety of things to add in.

After we finished eating, we went our separate way, ze to zer father's in Great Neck, me home.

Got here in time to join in the Starsky and Hutch creative work session, which started today at 3:30 rather than 1:30 as usual. So I was only about an hour late.

We had a good time chatting until 6:30ish, and then we ended.

At 7:00 I tried to Team the FWiB but had some technical difficulties, but eventually we got connected.

We talked til about 8:30, when I called Middle Brother. He is fine, nothing new.

After that I put in a Shipt order. I was expecting to have to wait until tomorrow, and just wanted to make the order, but to my surprise, they said delivery between 11:00 and 12:00. They must be having holiday season hours at Target.

At 10:00 I fed the pets again (of course I fed them when I first got home) and started here.

Now I'm waiting for the delivery.

Gratitude List:

1. The FWiB.

2. [personal profile] mashfanficchick

3. Chinese food in Flushing.

4. The Starsky and Hutch fandom.

5. Shipt and Target are on holiday hours so I'm getting my order.

6. Middle Brother is fine.

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