17 Jan 2008

firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
Spoilers for Elizabeth Moon's Remnant Population
Read more... )
firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
Spoilers for Elizabeth Moon's Remnant Population
Read more... )
firecat: person wearing purple and typing on typewriter (purple personality typing)
My sweetie [livejournal.com profile] kyubi says that ask.com is reasonably sane to work for. They are seeking part-time contractors for search relevancy work. There is a week-long training in the East Bay and after that the work can be done mostly off-site. She says it pays around $15 per hour.

http://sfbay.craigslist.org/eby/wri/539359874.html
firecat: person wearing purple and typing on typewriter (purple personality typing)
My sweetie [livejournal.com profile] kyubi says that ask.com is reasonably sane to work for. They are seeking part-time contractors for search relevancy work. There is a week-long training in the East Bay and after that the work can be done mostly off-site. She says it pays around $15 per hour.

http://sfbay.craigslist.org/eby/wri/539359874.html
firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
Is there antyhing that makes you really "irrationally" happy that before you first encountered the reaction you would never have expected to have that effect on you?

Fuchsias. I never encountered them until I moved to California, and when I saw them I loved them.

I love reading about your knitting adventures. Did you knit when you were a kid, and if not why not?

My mom taught me garter stitch, and I knitted a scarf-like object, but knitting never took at that time. I was more into freeform embroidery and fabric painting. Although mom knew how to knit, she basically hated all handwork and I think the attitude rubbed off. (The awful, awful sewing class I took in school did not help.) Later on, when I was an adult struggling with social anxiety, I noticed people knitting and crocheting at parties, and I thought "Hm, that might help."

I can't think of anything to ask you, but I like leaving comments on
things like this. Oh, here's a question: what do you want people to ask
you but never do?


I can't think of anything. I like questions that, when I answer them, I see things in a new way. People do sometimes ask such questions, but it would be hard to predict which sorts of questions might yield that result.
firecat: red panda, winking (Default)
Is there antyhing that makes you really "irrationally" happy that before you first encountered the reaction you would never have expected to have that effect on you?

Fuchsias. I never encountered them until I moved to California, and when I saw them I loved them.

I love reading about your knitting adventures. Did you knit when you were a kid, and if not why not?

My mom taught me garter stitch, and I knitted a scarf-like object, but knitting never took at that time. I was more into freeform embroidery and fabric painting. Although mom knew how to knit, she basically hated all handwork and I think the attitude rubbed off. (The awful, awful sewing class I took in school did not help.) Later on, when I was an adult struggling with social anxiety, I noticed people knitting and crocheting at parties, and I thought "Hm, that might help."

I can't think of anything to ask you, but I like leaving comments on
things like this. Oh, here's a question: what do you want people to ask
you but never do?


I can't think of anything. I like questions that, when I answer them, I see things in a new way. People do sometimes ask such questions, but it would be hard to predict which sorts of questions might yield that result.

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firecat (attention machine in need of calibration)

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