Year in review 2021
Dec. 29th, 2021 12:05 pmWell, nothing really happened this year, did it? I made 40 posts to DW, which I think is my lowest total ever by some margin and a lot of those were just administrivia. I have almost no essays I'm sufficiently proud of to want to call attention to them again.
You might have thought that with a full year stuck at home I would have done loads of reading, gaming and other media, but in practice, no, I'm going to end up skipping most of my usual end-of-year media categories.
A year ago I summarized:
So, significant events:
Reading In 2020 I read 2 books total. In 2021 a bit more than that, but still nothing like the 50-ish I used to get through in a typical year. They were:
Games
Media
Places Apart from staying home, we've mostly been venturing out to the Norfolk coast. I've also spent lots of time in the little village near Ely where my OSOs now live, and a little in my parents' home village to the south of Cambridge. I made one trip to SW Wales, and a few to Northamptonshire to meet up with
jack's Mum. Other than that I haven't been anywhere, a whole year of never setting foot in London, never visiting 'my' community in Stoke, let alone anywhere more exotic.
My posts
Borrowing this category from a friend's locked post:
End of year name and pronouns update My given name and the one I use in person is Rachel. I am not a Rach or a Rachie; if you must abbreviate my name I can cope with Rae or Rachele, but I prefer Rachel.
In formal contexts my title is Dr B, the B standing for the same surname I inherited from my father. If I can't use my academic title then I'm Miss B for preference, otherwise Ms B or Mx B, I'm not Mrs B nor Mrs V[husband's surname].
After nearly 19 years of using it online, Liv feels like just as much my name as Rachel. It isn't short for Olivia or anything else, it's just Liv.
My pronoun is she/her, which hasn't changed since my birth assignment. I have a weird itchiness around personally being referred to as 'they', though I'm completely fine with using that pronoun for others. I am fine with gender neutral neopronouns, slight preference for zie/hir. I also like the Swedish gender neutral pronoun hen. It doesn't entirely conjugate, so hen/hen/hens, but if hen/henom/hens feels more comfortable, eh, I'm a non-native speaker and not deeply embroiled in the usage debates.
Previous versions [2004] [2005] [2006] [2007] [2008] [2009] [2010] [2011] [2012] [2013] [2014] [2017] [2018] [2019] [2020]
You might have thought that with a full year stuck at home I would have done loads of reading, gaming and other media, but in practice, no, I'm going to end up skipping most of my usual end-of-year media categories.
A year ago I summarized:
I've stayed healthy as have all my close people. I've really enjoyed my job, fortunately with employers who've been entirely supportive of working from home. As part of that I've provided online training to about 70,000 people. I have felt really connected via various unsatisfying forms of technology, but I'm really grateful for my friends and especially my Jewish community. Isolating withAnd pretty much all of those things are still true for 2021. Staying home has been a bit easier, because at least since March there have been few if any legal restrictions on social mixing, and we have enough information about transmission mechanisms that I'm happy to deem outdoor socializing safe, as well as take a few calculated risks when case rates are relatively lower. And I'm vaccinated as of summer and boosted as of last week, so that helps at least somewhat, even if not as much of an escape route out of the pandemic as I'd hoped.jack has been brilliant. He is the most wonderful pandemic partner I could have asked for.
So, significant events:
- I got vaccinated against Covid and was briefly optimistic.
- My OSOs bought a big house in the country and acquired several chickens, ferrets and a most excitingly, a puppy. Also a piano.
- I had a week's holiday with
jack in Norfolk, including hearing a seal chorus and seeing a crowd of my friends in person. - My work expanded from creating a bunch of massive, but rather specialist, online courses, to include a huge international project about pandemic response training.
- I took an actual trip, on an actual train, to an actual place.
Reading In 2020 I read 2 books total. In 2021 a bit more than that, but still nothing like the 50-ish I used to get through in a typical year. They were:
- A deadly education, by Naomi Novik
- Becoming Eve, by Abby Chava Stein
- Aru Shah and the Song of Death by Roshani Chokshi
- A desolation called peace by Arkady Martine
- The book of Judith from the Apocrypha
- Piranesi by Susanna Clarke
Games
- Still a fair bit of Gloomhaven
- Brand new game, inspired gift by
ghoti_mhic_uait: Llamaland - Slay the spire, a really cool little digital deck builder. I'm getting to the point where my main computer is too old to really run modern games, but StS is turn-based so it doesn't matter too much if it's a bit laggy.
Media
- We are Lady Parts (TV series) was absolutely the high point of 2021 in any medium.
- National Theatre production of Sophocles' Antigone (livecast theatre)
- She-Ra and the Princesses of Power (Cartoon series).
- About three quarters of Ted Lasso S2 (TV series).
- Star Wars: Rogue One (feature film) which I have declared a chanukah movie so I had a watch party of it with
cjwatson and the middle children during the festival. - Alexander Scriabin: Prelude Op 11 # 9 in E major (piano music), which I decided to pick as my first item to relearn now that I have access to a piano again. It's definitely coming together but since said piano access is sporadic and since I haven't really played in a quarter century, I won't say I can play it yet. But trying to regain my skills is making me happy.
Places Apart from staying home, we've mostly been venturing out to the Norfolk coast. I've also spent lots of time in the little village near Ely where my OSOs now live, and a little in my parents' home village to the south of Cambridge. I made one trip to SW Wales, and a few to Northamptonshire to meet up with
My posts
- Sermon: Vayechi [Jewish]
- IWD2021: Academic wives [academia, rant]
- Renewal [Jewish]
- My Queer Jewish history [personal]
Borrowing this category from a friend's locked post:
End of year name and pronouns update My given name and the one I use in person is Rachel. I am not a Rach or a Rachie; if you must abbreviate my name I can cope with Rae or Rachele, but I prefer Rachel.
In formal contexts my title is Dr B, the B standing for the same surname I inherited from my father. If I can't use my academic title then I'm Miss B for preference, otherwise Ms B or Mx B, I'm not Mrs B nor Mrs V[husband's surname].
After nearly 19 years of using it online, Liv feels like just as much my name as Rachel. It isn't short for Olivia or anything else, it's just Liv.
My pronoun is she/her, which hasn't changed since my birth assignment. I have a weird itchiness around personally being referred to as 'they', though I'm completely fine with using that pronoun for others. I am fine with gender neutral neopronouns, slight preference for zie/hir. I also like the Swedish gender neutral pronoun hen. It doesn't entirely conjugate, so hen/hen/hens, but if hen/henom/hens feels more comfortable, eh, I'm a non-native speaker and not deeply embroiled in the usage debates.
Previous versions [2004] [2005] [2006] [2007] [2008] [2009] [2010] [2011] [2012] [2013] [2014] [2017] [2018] [2019] [2020]
(no subject)
Date: 2021-12-29 02:02 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2022-01-03 02:53 pm (UTC)Ferrets + puppy is less ideal; the dog sometimes wants to hunt them so they do have to be kept apart. Puppy + toddler is probably the most tricky to manage, because they do really love each other but puppy is quite a bit heavier and stronger and sometimes her enthusiastic affection for the little one results in the human baby getting knocked over or licked more than she really enjoys.