Dubious Quality
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Prehistoric Paydays
Every once in a while you can get a big box of PayDay candy bars from Amazon on the cheap. This is great for me because I don't eat chocolate candy anymore (high saturated fat), and this is a way I can get a bit of sweet tooth satisfaction.
Wikipedia says the PayDay was invented in 1932 and marketed as a meal replacement during the Depression because it was dense with peanuts and only cost 5 cents.
Well, that took a dark turn, didn't it?
The thing is, though, I'm sure that Wikipedia article is inaccurate, because the last box of PayDays I received came from the pre-Civil War era. Or the Precambrian era.
I'll usually microwave a PayDay (candy master's trick) for 8 seconds. It melts the caramel just enough to taste even better. Significant upgrade.
When I pulled a bar out of the box and unwrapped it, it was stiff as a board. The stiffest kind of board, like Patagonian rosewood.
It took a few bars, but I've now arrived at the suitable amount of time microwave bars from this box: 19 seconds. That's a whole lotta microwave for something the size of a candy bar.
Maybe this box of Paydays dates from the Roman Empire era. It was unearthed a few months ago from an emperor's tomb and finally made its way into the distribution network.
It's mine now.
Monday, February 16, 2026
Look Who Can Walk
Being unable to take care of yourself is humbling.Thursday, February 12, 2026
Friday Links!
An incredibly tough week that I wouldn't have gotten through without Cs help. Sorry for the shorter number of links than usual, but I'm playing with pain and am regrettably not as tough as Jessie Diggins.
Leading off this week, an absolutely fascinating read: Apocalypse no: how almost everything we thought we knew about the Maya is wrong.
An incredible story: Rio’s bloodiest day: the untold story of Brazil’s most deadly police raid.
This is incredible and bizarre: Paradise Lost: The Story of a Group of Europeans who Tried to Find Utopia on a Remote Galápagos Island in the 1930s.
What a bizarre tale: Ted Serios and the Mystery of Thoughtography.
The competence continues: hEl Paso airport closed after military used new anti-drone laser to zap party balloon.
From Wally, and it's not my genre, generally: 10 Action Thriller Shows That Blow Any Movie Out of the Water. This is always interesting: Shelfies #74: Paul McAuley. Oh, I'd like to see this: Atlanta’s Unique Hearse Bookstore, The Grim Reader, Is Opening A Brick-And-Mortar Book Store On Friday The 13th Of March — A Moody Third Space For ATL’s Weirdest (& Best) Readers. This is very true: Writing Doesn't Always Look the Way You Think.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Necessity, Mother, Invention, etc.
Did I plug in a heating pad with my toes this morning? Why, yes, I did.
I was at the massage therapist yesterday (which is only 300 yards from the house), and when we were done, I came out and saw C waiting for me.
The front desk person knew what I'd gone in for, and he said, "Sometimes patients are given homework to do. Look up 'Shotgun Technique.'"
"It seems a bit early for that," C said.
"I might still recover," I said.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
And...Crud
This is going to be brief because anything I do today is brief. Still in tremendous pain and have a massage in an hour that will hopefully help.
With C's help, I've been able to locate the source of the pain as the SI joint, which at least it something to go on. In general, though, it's very bad, and it looks like I'm going to an urgent care in the morning to get some medication, which I'd hoped to avoid (beyond Celebrex, anyway).
Everything is an engineering problem right now in the sense of "engineering" a way to do perfectly normal things (like put on/take off socks) that are now relatively impossible.
Monday, February 09, 2026
The Olympics and an Unfortunate Injury
I've come to really enjoy subscribing to Peacock for one month during the Olympics. It's about $20 for the no-ad version, the interface is clean, the coverage is 100X better than the NBC primetime coverage, and it's easy to choose the events you want to add to your personal list.
A+, so far.
I was watching on Saturday (skiathlon, I think) as I lifted weights and did abdominal exercises, which is my usual exercise routine on one day of the weekend. It all went well, and I was very pleased with myself as I went to get up to start shoulder exercises.
Only I found I couldn't get up.
When I tried, I had a sharp pain in my lower back, and by sharp, I mean agonizing. 10/10 no notes. It took a few minutes for me to get back on the couch.
I knew it was going to be bad, because a lower back problem is always bad.
Since then, my back's been going into spasm 8-12 times a day, painful enough that it makes me shout (a new experience for me). Having to get up at night to go to the bathroom is a real experience in ingenuity.
It hasn't seized up yet today because I'm starting to feel when it's about to happen and shift my position or do something to stop it.
So far, at least.
I've also done a thousand cat-cow stretches and I'm trying to sit as little as possible. It's not great.
Oh yeah, Lindsey Vonn got hurt, too. That was also unfortunate.
Thursday, February 05, 2026
Friday Links!
Leading off this week, a terrific story (and photographs): Dallas Is Unwalkable, They Said. So I Tried to Do It in One Day.
A metaphor so many things: Franz Reichelt; The Man That Plunged To His Death From The Eiffel Tower Testing His Homemade Flying Suit.
Amazing: A bonobo tea party: Study shows humans aren't the only species that can pretend.
A reminder that who you vote for has consequences: How a trans woman's removal from a restroom tore the world of competitive pinball apart. Pinball is one of the most welcoming sports for trans players. But after a confrontation at an arcade last fall, pinball’s governing group is struggling to rebuild trust.
Very, very tangled: Are We Tripping? The next billion-dollar blockbuster drug could be a psychedelic. There’s just one problem.
An excellent short video: What the ‘Louvre of the desert’ reveals about the human story.
Let's hope it's a good sign: What Texas Democrats’ Shocking Win Means for the GOP in November.
This is a wonderful read: When the Flames Went Out: Losing home and rebuilding, reluctantly, in the year after Los Angeles’s Eaton Fire.
A terrific, thoughtful piece of journalism: Victims and villains: In Southeast Asia’s scam compounds, workers are being enslaved but the boundary between victim and perpetrator is blurred
From Wally, and it may be a considerably less valuable idea than last week: The 'bullion prerogative' for science fiction authors. I think I've only had DoorDash once (ever): Freedom With a Side of Guilt: How Food Delivery Is Reshaping Mealtime.
A Thought
This is going to sound corny.
One of the things I've always struggled with in my life is the feeling that I never mattered. More precisely, I never did enough to matter.
I should have. I almost did, a few times. But I didn't.
Other than being Eli's father, which always felt different, this feeling has plagued me my entire life.
Today, though, I had a thought.
I was in the locker rooms after swimming. Swimmers always make a mess because they come in wet, so there's always water on the floor near their lockers. I always wipe up the water around my locker after I dry off so someone won't slip.
As I was wiping the floor, I realized something. People who wipe the floors dry and say kind words to people and let others go first genuinely matter because they hold us together. Their kindness keeps us stable just long enough for a decent human being to emerge who can make the world better.
Without the kind people, society would turn into Lord of the Flies, where everyone is a mercenary. In that environment, no one good could ever emerge. We would just keep spiraling down.
I think quite a few of you are like me in this sense. And we do matter.
It's a happy thought. We earned it.
Wednesday, February 04, 2026
Innovation Through Desperation
I do four sets of exercise three days a week, targeting the back, shoulder, foot, and stomach.
As I've added body parts (phrasing), the exercises take longer and longer. Over an hour now.
I've grown to loathe them.
I've been trying to think of a way to keep going that isn't utter misery, and I finally found a solution. What I do is play NCAA, but sim defense (slow speed, which lets you watch the game like you're watching on TV). A series with two or three first downs will take several minutes, which gives me time to do exercises. Eventually, I work through the entire routine, even though it takes me two games.
It's slower than doing them straight through, but it helps with my sanity.
Also helping with my sanity: it's 31 and sunny today, so it's the first day in almost three weeks where it doesn't feel living in a frozen Russian hellscape.