from Roscoe's Quick Notes

TX_Rangers

Hoping for a repeat of last night's win.

Tuned in now to 105.3 The Fan, DFW's #1 Sports Station listening to general sports talk ahead of the pregame show for tonight's MLB Game: the Texas Rangers vs the Miami Marlins. The opening pitch is scheduled for 5:40 PM CDT. I'll stay here for the radio call of the game as broadcast over MLB's Gameday Service.

Last night's 4 to 3 Rangers win over the Marlins was so nice. Sure would like a repeat of that tonight.

And the adventure continues.

 
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from 💚

Our Father Who art in Heaven Hallowed be Thy name Thy Kingdom come Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven Give us this day our daily Bread And forgive us our trespasses As we forgive those who trespass against us And lead us not into temptation But deliver us from evil

Amen

Jesus is Lord! Come Lord Jesus!

Come Lord Jesus! Christ is Lord!

 
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from 💚

In noted pair to this addition A flurry for our rise And first in flight The venerous heart in adulation For life and days To give us clear and Rome We sacrificed it all But there between Mercy for our skies And praying Seoul Will market for the day And this as many Better known to see The wild redemption- of seamless Earth Will fill our days to never Yet hanging land The Victory of our stripe As best recover The tidal disabandon With mercury deliver This height in mercy And playing with our wild To work without- refraction then The Earth will be a dollar But sudden wind In carrying orchard far The splice to reason for Carrying the wave- of molten thin and water And ever for The silent more A place for time and then Applianced up for scale And then the Sun In highest glory, Earth.

 
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from 💚

Sullen Win

And on this day we will Flighting aware in rise The simple of hand and ecstasy Fortunes of year And times to know and be redeemed The different forms of day And nights of the amend All that was is still welcome And everything now is vast to know Burlington strength in those we see Pensions for our own and then This country of his will- The penny stops in literal Blinding but not unlike With mustering code Stops of road to hillcrest Nights of no pain and high North The planet we seed is aware A plane to craze you And capture all amends To cure and forthright Diamonds at the envy Limit to our cause Six deletions of all war And betting on that we are peace A fantom paralegal And evidence subsist Our demand in starglow Portions freer and in demand What kept busy is two for the isle In citizen wonder and no collect The different wonder as our way Our stations in state Little bits of blight to wean That capture all of ten Carling’s most and can The able will meet And rise all men For then to have this play And as we are, manifest in field The Heavens befriend us And meeting Christ on our path The year can wait- four seconds more To bliss and the early rise Mayhem for our shore- if only drifted much The heart in early joy And therefore long Night’s befriend And blushing as before Hue to our labour And marking code Money to the filling World And all this window of Hers- Continuous and fair ploy Of speed and early chance We meet the other neighbour- across his sole reaction That there is no enemy in this house And treasure near For unto you,- I offer you my hand Lifting rise Beyond the early rise But four days in plight Testing the age to know- that time is on our map And may be, the greatest hue.

 
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from Faucet Repair

21 June 2026

Saw Shao Fan's show Refrain | 复沓 at White Cube this morning—wonderful work. First time in a while that such large paintings have felt justified. Deep sensitivity in all aspects, a practice of looking and re-looking, and a lived engagement with antiquity that generates work with an intensity that truly honors his subjects both human and nonhuman. There are a few stunners, but Fruit 1924 (2024) and Rabbit Portrait 1025 (2025)—both large ink on rice paper works—are with me the most right now. Fruit has an almost paper-like two-dimensionality; it's an apple sliced in half to reveal a core that becomes a network of overlapping planes and openings. Starts to become a skull-like memento mori the longer you look at it. Rabbit manages to achieve an unflinchingly direct and confrontational quality through symmetry without locking itself off in any way (which is something that usually doesn't sit well with me)—the odd strands of hair/whiskers whimsically trail off beyond their defining limits, and certain elements like the white of the rabbit's ears remain true to the eye rather than an ideal, so my feeling is that the impressive balance comes more from an endearing emotional groundedness than a technical fastidiousness.

 
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from Tuesdays in Autumn

In all the kinds of music I enjoy it often happens that I’ll grow to appreciate second-tier productions as much as (if not more than) those generally agreed to be ground-breaking masterpieces. There’s so much to love in what is ‘merely’ excellent music that comes to us less unencumbered with expectation & significance than the canonical Great Works. My latest classical acquisitions have both been in that vein: an album of The Complete Piano Trios of the Czech-born and later French-resident composer Anton Reicha, and a first volume of the Complete String Quartets of Alexander Glazunov which features the Russian's 3rd & 5th quartets.

I wrote a little about Reicha on one of my previous blogs. His output is sometimes simplistically divided between a more eccentric and experimental phase earlier in his career when he worked in Germany and Austria; and a more soberly decorous one after he settled in France. His set of six op. 101 piano trios (1824) belong to the latter, and, indeed they are graceful and mellifluous pieces relatively light on drama & intensity. The fourth trio does perhaps have a little more in the way of Teutonic sturm und drang than the others. Another one that stands out is the second – the only one in a minor key – and also the only one of the set I’d heard before. Very few people had ever heard all of them before as this is the first ever recording of numbers four to six. It's the kind of music that can serve as an agreeable sonic backdrop while reading a book, for example, with moments now and again that will undemonstratively demand (and reward) more engaged attention. The performances, by the Trio Bohémo, and the recording, are beautifully done.

I’d heard very little of Glazunov's music until recently, when I followed up an on-line recommendation to listen to his 3rd string quartet (1886-88). A while elapsed before I obtained it on CD – with performances by the Utrecht Quartet. It's a very appealing piece with strong melodies, especially in the Alla Mazurka part of its third movement. The fifth quartet (1898) is also very good, if less emotive. Again I can't fault the playing or the recorded sound.


In books it was another poetry-heavy week. I finished a volume of The Complete Poetry of César Vallejo and another of the Selected Poems of Attila József. Both were poets who had to struggle against poverty, health problems, & adversity in general. József's life of tragic hardship came to an end under the wheels of a train in December '37. He was 32. In April of the following year Vallejo, in exile from his native Peru, succumbed to a mystery illness in a Paris hospital. He was 46.

Clayton Eshleman's translations in the Vallejo volume are the fruits of a lifelong vocation, and have been done full justice by the University of California Press. They impress even where the poems are obscure to the point of incomprehensibility. Enough meaning does shine through, overall, to make the effort of reading them seem a worthwhile endeavour. Peter Hargitai's translations of József, on the other hand, have had to make do with much less lavish treatment in a print-on-demand volume that could have used a little more editorial attention than it received. The translations are still strong, however. Both Eshleman and Hargitai understandably (being Americans) use American colloquialisms in their translations. I'm not sure why those sometimes felt jarring to me in the context of József's poems where they didn't in Vallejo's – some prejudice stemming from my Britishness perhaps.


Stationery news: I treated myself to a Kaweco AL Sport fountain pen on Saturday, specifically one with the ‘Anthracite’ finish and a medium steel nib. Several times I’ve been tempted by the pens on display at The Art Shop in Abergavenny, and this time I finally succumbed. I could have acquired the same item more cheaply on-line, but the Art Shop is a local business I’m happy to support.


Another enervating heatwave is in effect, due to peak over the coming two days, with temperatures forecast to reach 37C on Thursday.

 
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from Faucet Repair

19 June 2026

Attempted a painting today based on the fragmented reflection of a plane on wet tarmac that I saw while boarding a recent flight from London to Venice. Primed the panel with a left-to-right gradient from a bright yellow to a dense black—the idea was to then slowly layer loose/thin form lines over the gradient from bottom to top in a relatively monochrome gray-blue palette and see what rhythms and shapes cohered as the whole thing took on a sense of motion. An okay idea, but it just didn't work. Having a practice means constantly rewriting one's own rules, and it feels like I've done a bit of over-defining in recent days that made me rigid in my approach. So it's time for a break from the studio for a while in the interest of recalibration and refocusing.

But what I can say now, for when I resume, is that there needs to be some kind of reckoning as far as my handling of color and its relationship to the logic I've been discovering. Destruction as well as building, (while it now feels overly representative to me almost eight months later), is perhaps a good work to go back to. That one set a baseline for accumulated tactility in conjunction with early watercolor layers that are constantly shifting underneath and weaving in and out of the topmost oil layers so that there's an optical softness even with clarity of form. And when I think about the work I now want to make, which is work that is free to break away from my visual references by way of every formal element considered in a delimitation stack while still remaining true to an invisible structure of observed logic and felt emotional resonance, that might be a place to restart. Forms that float, reorganize themselves and react to each other, cause friction between background and foreground as well as flatness and depth, and ultimately create a self-regenerating mesh of lived-in experience and presence.

 
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from Littoral

The sun is out and the walk to the Old Port is warm and inviting. Recently I’ve been drawn to this bench that faces the river, the Grand Quai tower, and Habitat 67. This is my favourite part of the summer: mostly sunny, about 20 degrees, people out with their dogs and their coffees and their tote bags, crossing runners in short shorts with the light eastward breeze pushing through their hair.

The river’s surface is calm, sparkling in the sun.

Fitting: to my far right, a Canadian flag flutters in the wind, asserting its ownership over these stolen Indigenous lands and these waters that hold the remnants of my ancestors.

It was always a lie. I know this because we are still here.

I am still here. Still sitting in the sun on a Tuesday morning with nowhere to be but in the present moment.

 
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from Fenêtre sur ville

Le soleil entaille la brume en faisant un bruit d'usine. Sur la route en terre trottine une file indienne de tourterelles des bois. En bas, un bout de planche sur un reste d'eau qui, plus loin, devient souterraine, fait passer la ravine et remonter [vers soi]. On entend le rire acide et cruel d'un martin-chasseur (Halcyon senegalensis) et quelques notes flutées de bulbuls communs. Le soleil coupe déjà la peau. On ne sait avec précision en quelle saison nous sommes, [le soi, perplexe, se taisant, rendu après la nuit incapable de discerner à même sa propre peau sous le soleil]. Qui coupe pourtant. Le jour et la nuit sont des couteaux qui tranchent le temps dans la cervelle. Il y a des nuages, petits et grands, ou le gris lumineux d’une plaque de fer, comme un écran. [Le soi, distant du ciel, regarde à ses pieds les trous, les ornières, où s’accrochent toutes sortes de choses résiduelles.] Malgré toutes ces choses [en soi, dans la tête, délavées par les pluies], l’on suit un itinéraire grâce au numérotage des rues, qui fait du trou de la ville un livre décousu.

Personne [à part les jambes, les pieds du soi, qui l’écrivent pas à pas] ne lit ce livre ou seulement le feuillette, ni le prononce à mi-voix, dont les pages s’énumèrent au gré du mouvement des populations, des errances particulières ou des ballades au bois. Plutôt : c’est une lecture mécaniquement inconsciente, en même temps que perpétuelle (il y a toujours au moins quelqu’un qui marche, de jour des milliers, sur les chapitres de la nuit) et chaotique, mais aussi déterminée par les points de départ et les points d’arrivée fixés idéiquement par les services d’une administration elle-même désordonnée. Déterminée en principe, car l’on ne parvient pas encore à faire aller les gens de A à B. Le livre de la ville échappe à toute imposition du plan.

 
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from Chemin tournant

Personne [à part les jambes, les pieds du soi, qui l’écrivent pas à pas] ne lit ce livre ou seulement le feuillette, ni le prononce à mi-voix, dont les pages s’énumèrent au gré du mouvement des populations, des errances particulières ou des ballades au bois. Plutôt : c’est une lecture mécaniquement inconsciente, en même temps que perpétuelle (il y a toujours au moins quelqu’un qui marche, de jour des milliers, sur les chapitres de la nuit) et chaotique, mais aussi déterminée par les points de départ et les points d’arrivée fixés idéiquement par les services d’une administration elle-même désordonnée. Déterminée en principe, car l’on ne parvient pas encore à faire aller les gens de A à B. Le livre de la ville échappe à toute imposition du plan.

#Fenêtresurville #Didascalies

 
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from Ernest Ortiz Writes Now

The Long Journey to Finish a Three Novelette Trilogy Series

Note: This article is written for my Ernest Ortiz Writes Now Substack. But you have the chance to read it before they do.

It seems like a long time ago. Every 6 a.m., I sat in my Toyota Camry outside someone’s house, sipped my iced mocha, held my camcorder, and waited for my subject to do something.

I was a private investigator specializing in workers compensation. Long hours, including weekends and holidays, lots of waiting, in extreme heat and cold. Most of the time boring. Until, everything happens in a blink of an eye.

I’ve worked in several states, got to see the beautiful sights and sounds. More importantly, it taught me many things about human behavior, specifically how people behave when they thought no one was looking. Those two lessons always stuck with me whenever I wrote fiction.

Now, I’m a stay-at-home dad of two boys. The stakeouts replaced by school pickups, cooking, cleaning, changing diapers, and emotional negotiations. But I never stopped writing. The jobs change, but the struggle to write always stays.

The story I’ve been working on

Since late 2018 I’ve been building a sci-fi trilogy called The Package. Most of it in my head before putting it down on paper a year later. Created multiple drafts with dozens of revisions. Even hired someone on Fiverr to create two ebook covers for the first two novelettes, until I got tired of the project and put them on the backburner.

It wasn’t until I created my blog ErnestOrtizWritesNow.com last December that gave me the drive to finish The Package. The first two novelettes are out now on Gumroad. The third and final one drops in August.

Here’s the setup:

Malcolm Diego is a cyberjacker. Think hacker, but wired directly into computer and comm systems via an implant at the back of his neck. He lives on Unity Station orbiting Earth. Work is scarce and money is tight. His ex-girlfriend shows up and asks him to deliver a package to her mother on a colony in the Asteroid Belt.

He says yes. He shouldn’t have.

What follows takes Malcolm from Earth orbit to the Asteroid Belt to Jupiter, through smuggling runs, corrupt officials, pirates, and a conspiracy that turns out to be much bigger than one package.

I wrote the kind of sci-fi I wanted to read: fast-paced, character-driven, no technobabble, no fifty-page prologue explaining the political history of the solar system, not even a timeline. Just a guy trying to make it through the next problem without getting killed.

Originally, it was supposed to be one short story. But it turned out bigger than I expected. Sometimes, ideas can expand more than you can handle and the best you can do is to contain as much as possible.

Why short fiction instead of a novel

Each installment is a novelette, around 5,000 to 20,000 words. The third story, Sovereign, is almost 20,000. You can read one in a couple of hours.

I’m a stay-at-home dad. I don’t have time to read novels or nonfiction books anymore. My readers are probably busy people too. Short fiction that respects your time feels right to me.

There’s also something I love about novelettes and novellas as a form. It’s long enough to build real characters and real stakes, yet short enough to stay tight. No filler. Every character, every scene, every sentence earns its place.

Where to get it

Both novelettes are available on Gumroad, both PDF and EPUB included in a ZIP file, no subscription required, just a one-time purchase.

The Package (Novelette 1 – 10 chapters, 10,800 words) > ernestortizwritesnow.gumroad.com/l/thepackageone

The Package: Foul Run (Novelette 2 – 13 chapters, 12,600 words) >

ernestortizwritesnow.gumroad.com/l/thepackagefoulrun

The first book is $1 while the second is $3. Both ebooks are less than a premium coffee, as I keep saying, because it’s true and I’m not above using it.

The third installment, The Package: Sovereign, lands in August or sooner. Subscribe here and I’ll let you know the moment it’s live.

What to expect

I’ll be posting here about writing, the craft, the process, what it’s actually like to write fiction and nonfiction as a stay-at-home dad, and former private investigator, with limited hours and no quiet. I’ll share behind the scenes on the trilogy and whatever comes next.

Until I say otherwise, I will post two articles on Substack every month, one free and the EOWN Letter for paid subscribers. It’s $5/month and $45/year.

If you read The Package and want to tell me what you thought, reply back. I read everything.

Thanks for being here. Until next month.

  • Ernest L. Ortiz, ErnestOrtizWritesNow.com

Thanks for reading. This first issue is free for everyone. If you’re interested in more of The Ernest Ortiz Writes Now Letter, it’s $5/month or $45/year.

 
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from Cosmos

As I reach my mid 30s, it keeps getting clear to me that I cannot train as I used to earlier in my life.

During college and later when I joined the workforce, I could workout for 2 hours everyday and still could function well throughout the day. The recovery was never an issue. I would still be able to active throughout the day. Never had I felt the need to stretch, although I always did because I liked doing so. This is what has made me hyper flexible.

Now it appears I cannot do the same. Lately It is becoming clearer to me that I should change my plan.

This knowledge has not been made available to me without charges. For past few years I have been struggling with being active at the gym. I would go for a few days, workout and then something would happen. I would pull my shoulder, or sprain it or my back would give out.

Thus I would again have to take a break and rest till it heals.

For past few months I have been reading more about training and nutrition. A very important part of that is recovery. A part that earlier I would never think and would train 7 days if had time.

Now I only workout 3 days a week and rest of the days I only walk or do light cardio. This helps me keep my heart rate up and keeps the blood flowing. More blood flow helps in recovery much more. Even with all this, I can’t simply come out of bed and start moving. The way my son does. :D

I have to do small movements before I do the big ones. Ones like moving my toes, then ankle, pelvis, shoulders. If I get out of bed, without doing these, the body does not feel the same. It moves hard, with minor pains here and there.

A big weapon I am finding is taking warm shower after getting out of bed. You have heard of cold shower. Two times I took those and it froze my shoulder. I was walking like Robot for 3 days. Warm shower all the way.

Never had I thought the mid 30s would be like this but I have had years of bad posture, over training. The bill is coming now.

Find me on Hevy

 
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from Unattributed

I got an email yesterday that was somewhat unexpected. My former hosting service asked me to send an email about why I had closed out my account. This is something I haven't experienced before… A company that wants an actual email, they don't just want some form or survey filled out. They want to actually hear everything that I have to say… Well, I decided that I would take them up on it.

And now, I am presenting this email to document all the gory details. But, let's be clear: I spend a lot of it talking about their service, and one issue that I had. Most of that was a minor annoyance, not something that pushed me to make the decision to switch. As I document in the second half of this message, the primary reason is the enshittification of WordPress.

Hopefully you enjoy the parts of this where I get completely unhinged when talking about certain topics. ;)


You know the saying: “It's not you, it's me?” Typically, it's a lie, right? Well, in this case it's about 90% percent true.

There's very little that I had a problem with from the standpoint of your infrastructure. I think you've done an excellent job of designing a system that is well integrated, and provides the services that are needed to manage a professional environment.

However, where I did run into some friction centered around one of the plugins that you provide. I don't recall which one it was, but almost every time it was updated it kept breaking the image rendering on my site's home page. One of your support people found the issue: it was the JS optimization one of your plugins that was breaking things. The annoyance was every time the plugin would update, I would have to go back into my site and fix the issue. It was only recently I found the feature that allowed me to snapshot the settings so I could apply them quickly without having to look up the support issue to remember how to fix the problem.

The real reason this was quite annoying: I was always using the current default WordPress template. I didn't need anything too fancy that the default theme didn't offer. Personally, I really think that your Q&A process should be testing against several configurations of the default template to make certain that it isn't breaking things. (Although, in this case, that might not have worked… IIRC the problem was the plugin overwriting the settings the user had implemented, instead of preserving them.)

The pricing was more than I really want to invest. When I looked at things, your service was running me over $800/yr. When I add the additional services I required, that expense jumped to somewhere between $1000-1200/yr. There's no way I can justify spending $300-400 per website, that's excessive for me. This wasn't helped by the changes in your pricing structure over the years.

My replacement solution has my expenses down to $200-250/yr to run five websites. It's not the same as having a full infrastructure setup such as yours, however, it will meet my needs better (which I'll explain more about later.)

The other thing about your environment was: it's like using a sledgehammer when all I really require is a screwdriver. I'm not in the business of website design. I'm in the “business” of writing.

This means that features like having a staging environment are, mostly, non-features for me. If anything I just require a test environment for making changes to the layout of my sites… I don't need a full mirror of my site, there's nothing so complicated that I have to be concerned about major side effects. (Honestly, the whole staging environment was one of the most attractive features that sold me on your service initially. It was surprising to me that I never used it because it wasn't necessary.) There are several other features of your environment that were like that.

But the single biggest issue has nothing to do with you. It is the fact that Automattic has done everything they possibly could to turn WordPress into a steaming pile of horse manure over the last eight or so years. And now, with the addition of AI integration, the enshittification process is complete. WordPress is no longer a tool for writers. It's a tool for visual web development, and the spreading of as much slop as possible.

I tried to give WordPress a chance with the Gutenberg editor. But block editors are just not for writing, they are for page design / layout. Look at the tools that writers use: Google Docs, Microsoft Word, LibreOffice Write. Hell, George R. R. Martin is still using a copy of WordStar from the 1980s, and there are other authors that are still using WordPerfect from the 1990s.

The thing is, the editor is getting in the way of the writing process. It puts things in the path of the writing process that just shouldn't be there. I shouldn't have to think about inserting a heading, I should just be able to hit a quick shortcut and have it done. And, if I want to select text across two paragraphs to join / edit a couple of sentences, it shouldn't be a five-step process (try selecting the last word in one paragraph and keep selecting into the next paragraph see what happens… One of the most annoying things to have been forced on writers in the last decade.)

But it's not limited to the editor itself. It's the whole block based website layout. It just gets in the way, and it makes things a lot less efficient and quite a bit more annoying. I just went and looked at one of my other websites that is still using a pre-Gutenberg and pre-Block layout configuration, and I couldn't believe my eyes: this site that I hadn't looked at for over a year was a lot more responsive than anything I've worked on with any current theme. And this is still a current installation of WordPress: the host that site is on is performing similar services to yours: providing automatic updates to the current versions of WordPress and any plugins, full backups, etc. While there are still a lot of differences (from the plugin stack that it's running, to the network infrastructure itself), the fact is that the older theme was just a lot easier to render.

And then, over time, the whole block and patterns system in WordPress has just made things even worse. I tried recently to reconfigure my home page to make it into a minimalist layout: simple image, title, and date for each post, with the title being the link to the article. Would you believe that I spent two days trying to get the layout that I wanted, and failed? Why? I don't know, I'm still baffled. I just moved things around in the homepage template to make a simple list. Furthermore, I found there were things that should have been extremely simple that I couldn't get it to do, like make smaller, thumbnail sized versions of the featured images. And for some reason the date for all the articles on the homepage were the current date — despite me not moving the date element outside the query loop.

So now, things I had been able to do in previous versions of WordPress were breaking in the latest version. And then I found this fucking bullshit:

WordPress AI Connectors screen. WordPress AI Connectors screen.

And I lost it. I had been considering moving off WordPress for years, and now (as I previously stated) seeing that the enshittification was complete, I decided that I needed to dump WordPress. (And don't even get me started on emDash.)

I had been thinking for a long time about moving my sites to a static website generator. However, I wasn't completely happy with what it would take to integrate one into my tool chain / working environment. However, a little over a week ago I tested out a couple of really simple platforms that offer a middle ground between a static generator and an online environment. After a little testing and evaluation, I ran the numbers and determined that it would be very effective at reducing my expenses. And, because it integrates into my working environment, I can ensure backups are handled properly (I have a triple-backup system, that includes offsite physical backups).

So, I migrated all three sites that were hosted with you over a period of three-four days, and shut down everything last weekend.

No looking back now. Thanks for the service you provided.

George

 
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from Notes I Won’t Reread

Right. About whatever that was the other night, and even though my notes are called “notes I won’t reread,” I unfortunately broke my own rule, and that's not shocking news for me, nor for you to see here. so after reading it, i’ve come to the conclusion that it clearly wasn’t me. no, don’t deny it, it wasn’t me. not a chance. I refuse to believe that I sat down and wrote something that was emotionally aware. Genuinely concerning behavior, i blame it on the hospital stay-in week. if anyone knows who stole my keybored and replaced me with a sensitive little philosopher for a few hours, please let me know. i was reading it back thinking, “whose is this?”, and i guess i do really have other personalities, which is a wonderful, fantastic news. One of them really likes self-reflection. I’ll have to keep away from keybored, notebooks, pen, napkin, walls, and any other surface capable of holding written language. Either way, I’ve spent years, years. making fun of social media. watching people desperately throwing their thoughts into the void, hoping someone would clap for them. i used to sit and think “Look at these attention-starved creatures. It is a pathetic way to degrade your own humanity.” Now look at me. Turns out the clown was inside the circus the whole time. it was originally supposed to be an experiment. like some socially confused wildlife researcher documenting the habits of internet people, then somehow i became one of them. Every day i open an app i once hated, or was confused about, or making fun of, and find myself voluntarily announcing my existence to people, i dont even know. And I’m sure if past me could see this, he’d probably beat me to death with that pathetic self-reflection note. And honestly, i think of disappearing. ill still write notes here just not get involved in that wildlife ecosystem and return to my natural habitat. Or maybe I’ll keep all of it, not because i enjoy it, God forbid. Maybe I’ll stay just so the woman i’m definitely not stalking doesn’t discover that im actually not nearly as harmless as I’ve let myself seem.

Curiosity is a terrible habit, so perhaps I’ll stay. Post a picture. write something stupid to fit with the wildlife and pretend I’m a perfectly ordinary person with perfectly ordinary hobbies and a perfectly ordinary amount of interest in other people’s lives and everyone wins, especially me, so that’s all about today.

Sincerely, Ordinary Ahmed

 
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from Chris is Trying

We went to Taiwan earlier this month, including 5 fantastic nights in Taipei. This trip had very few plans other than “eat all of the excellent food”; we weren't worried too much about the various sights around the city (although we checked some of them out) as we prioritised our days & nights around the dishes we wanted to eat.

Taipei has a crazy density of Michelin recommended venues; there were two within a 5 minute walk of our accommodation and another couple a quick train trip away! Here's the official list from the Michelin website if you want to explore.

Din Tai Fung – dumplings & buns

We were in Taipei from Wednesday through Sunday, and we wanted to avoid the bigger crowds on Friday/Saturday/Sunday we headed to this ultra-famous restaurant mid-week. We thought we were smart by getting there for when it opens at 11am and we were absolutely wrong! There was a queue of ~70-80 people already ahead of us so we were worried we'd have to wait a long time, but the staff are super efficient at seating everyone and getting the orders going.

Of course, we had to get several dishes of xiao long bao, what DTF is famous for – we opted for the standard ones, as well as the truffle version which was recommended by a friend.

Din Tai Fung (1)

We also got some beef noodle soup, which was unfortunately a waste of calories. The noodles were fine, but nowhere near the quality of the dumplings. The side of cucumbers you can see in the photo above was a common salad dish we really enjoyed, and it balanced out the textures of everything else we ordered.

After ticking off the signature item, we then got a serve of the shrimp shao mai (i.e. the things that look like the Like Like creature from the Legend of Zelda).

Din Tai Fung (2)

I have to mention again that the service at DTF is crazy fast. All of the popular dishes are clearly prepared in large amounts, so our first dishes came out within 5 minutes of hitting the order button.

Anyway, after filling up on various dumplings, my sweet tooth started yelling at me so we got some custard lava buns. Phenomenal – no other dessert we had in Taipei got close to this.

Din Tai Fung (3)

A great brunch all round.

Lao Shan Dong – noodles

A quick walk from our accommodation was a Michelin recommended noodle shop that was open for breakfast. Given how late everything opens up in Taipei, we took the opportunity to get out before 10am and try it out.

It was down a creepy basement underneath a shopping centre – you had to walk down escalators that hadn't turned on for the day yet, and then walk around aimlessly until you found the restaurant which was the only thing open on that floor. But as with all good food, the journey was well worth it.

Lao Shan Dong noodles (1)

My wife fortunately remember to take some photos of the staff & store itself, while I was focused on rubbing my full belly.

Lao Shan Dong noodles (2)

Lao Shan Dong noodles (3)

The width of the noodles is what you notice first – they're much wider than any other Chinese noodle. The broth was really tasty but the flavour wasn't too intense – it was subtle and fairly balanced (like most broths we had in the country). Excellent cuts of meat as well too!

Wang's Broth

The following day, we got brunch at Wang's Broth – a roughly 10-15 minute walk from our hotel. Nothing wild here, just excellent braised meat and rice.

Wang's Broth uses the same broth for all of their dishes; you walk past the big vat as you take your seat inside.

Wang's Broth (1)

Wang's Broth (2)

My wife got the dish with the mushrooms included but she regretted it and said she would have preferred the classic pork & rice, as there's more sauce to mix in which isn't absorbed by the mushrooms.

Raohe Night Market – Black Pepper Pork Buns

Of course I have to finish up with the classic black pepper pork buns from Raohe Night Market. These things are crazy cheap – 60 or 70 NTD (~$3AUD) and quite large & filling. If you're thinking of having several smaller dishes for a night at Raohe, this one might ruin your appetite for some of the other options in the market so plan ahead.

The queue snakes around the front of the store right at the main entrance of the market, so you can see the team preparing the buns, activating your saliva glands:

Raohe Night Market - Black Pepper Pork Bun (1)

Raohe Night Market - Black Pepper Pork Bun (2)

Raohe Night Market - Black Pepper Pork Bun (3)

It was belting down with rain when we visited, so we were eating our buns while huddled under our umbrellas – sorry, no photos of the buns themselves! Here are a few articles that show them in detail: here and here.

Bonus: Jensanity!

During one of our nights in Taipei, we checked out Linjiang Night Market after eating dinner with a cousin who lives in the city. Apparently this is where Jensen Huang (Nvidia CEO) visited about a week earlier, and tried a bunch of food!

When looking for a little dessert, we coincidentally visited the same place that Jensen dropped into for some shaved mango ice. Turns out that all of the vendors that Jensen visited ended up taking photos with the guy, and plastering them on the wall as advertising:

Jensanity - shaved mango ice

Lucky us!

 
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