Houston, TX Week 2 part 2: Fine Arts, Amateur Arts
Jan. 15th, 2026 10:59 pmThis post covers Wednesday and Thursday.
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WEDNESDAY
I did decide to go to the fine arts museum today! Packed a lunch and rode the light rail over, ate lunch outside (it was thankfully nice enough for that) and then went exploring!! (Please remember that you can click on ANY picture to open in a new tab and then enlarge by clicking it again)

The museum is massive, taking up three buildings connected by an underground tunnel. I decided to walk to the farthest building first and work my way back, hopefully ensuring that I'd see as much as possible while working my way back toward the main entrance rather than away from it.
The connecting tunnel was very pretty! There were two parts, one was an optical illusion that made it seem like you were walking in a tight tunnel when actually it was open on either side (no footage because there were a lot of people in there) and the other part was simply vibrantly colorful and fun to walk through :)
(CLICK HERE to see my idiot face walking through this tunnel.)

The farthest building housed most of the modern/contemporary art. Though I didn't linger in EVERY gallery, I did walk through them all, pausing to read when something caught my eye or seemed interesting. Most people seemed to stick to the main building, so often I had whole galleries to myself for several minutes at a time.

There were a lot of interactive pieces here and that was a lot of fun. Some art you had to walk back and forth in front of to see correctly (optical illusion/spatial stuff), others needed you to push a button to activate or were motion activated. This one was immersive; it's a piece called “Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity” by Yayoi Kusama.
(DreamWidth people, CLICK HERE to see this art since I can't embed from facebook.)
Here was a piece within the Gyula Cocice Intergalactic exhibit. This particular one reminded me of pointillism illustrations in a book I had as a kid.

This was one of my favorites that I saw today. It's by a Latin American artist I believe, but I forgot to take pic of the description.

Walter Draesner, "A Danse Macabre." This was a book collection of 22 silhouette papercuts, opened to this page. I want to see them ALL!

A wall clock in a modern furniture section. The little cloud in the circle ticked the seconds while the lightning was the minute/hour hands. Absolutely adorable.

Ernie Barne's "The Sugar Shack," depicting people dancing at a juke joint. Loved the movement and energy, and having just seen the movie Sinners which takes place in a juke joint this had a stronger meaning.

The next building housed a lot of international collections. In the Islamic Countries gallery, this silver filigree diffuser. The detail was so intense. I could have stared for hours.


I always enjoy seeing ivory art/carvings. Loved this ivory powder horn with so many animals carved into it! And I love the little organic fractures and lines that you can see in the ivory.


This display was called "Power of Flight" and was in the Peruvian gallery. As a fan of raptors and flying things, I thought all of these were beautiful. There's even a little silver bat near the bottom right (I know it looks gold but in person it was silver.)

The Art of Africa section was very big and featured art and relics from many African nations. This elephant mask was a favorite.

A huge display describing the staves/staffs held by the linguists of Ghana, who were counselors to the chiefs and also relayed the word and law of the chief to the people. The ornate staves were a sign of authority, and the unique work at the top of each one was usually centered on a proverb or morals/values lessons that people were expected to remember and abide by. Zoom in on the picture to see the top of each staff, they are very interesting!

I had stopped to rest and sort photos once or twice, but otherwise after about two hours I'd walked nearly 3 miles and made it back to the main building. I could feel that I was running out of energy for looking at exquisite things, but this last building only had two floors. There were unfortunately some large and rowdy school groups in the galleries here, so I couldn't get close to a lot of the art and/or had to circle back a few times to see things I'd missed due to crowding. But that's ok, I still got to see a lot and it seemed like everyone was enjoying the museum :)
I also want to mention this, meant as a positive, um...advisal. There were two women who were clearly there for social media purposes. One was dressed beautifully, and the other followed her around with a camera, taking photos of her next to art or looking at art from a variety of angles. Although it was obvious what they were doing, they had paid admission, they were quiet and respectful, they didn't touch or damage anything, and they didn't get in anyone's way or spend any more time in front of the artwork than anyone else. The advisal is this: if people are doing an activity that is NOT disruptive, but YOU have a problem with it...the problem is YOU. Whether it's social media photoshoots or something else. We can CHOOSE to be annoyed by things that do not involve us, or we can CHOOSE to move on with our day unaffected.
Where's the linguist's staff depicting the moral of THAT story? Lol.
The ground floor had an "Art and Life in Imperial Rome" exhibit. Mostly statues, pottery, pillars...the stuff that we all associate with Roman and Greek culture. I liked this chunk of a frieze depicting an angel...the movement of the angel coupled with the interesting shape of the slab was aesthetically pleasing. And with the huge student groups filling up this gallery, it was one of few pieces I was able to get close enough to to photograph.

The second floor had Impressionist and Renaissance and churchy art, but also a “Louvre Couture” dresses exhibit. Thirty-six dresses/ensembles were designed by known fashion houses to complement the exhibits where they were placed. I saw most of the dresses/outfits, but these two were my favorite.

This one was I believe meant to be inspired by chain mail/armor. I'd wear it!!

There are a few more pictures and descriptions on my facebook.
I rode the light rail back feeling like my eyeballs were just full of color and form :) Even having walked 3 1/2 miles and spent 2 1/2 hours in there, I STILL had not seen everything! (For example I completely forgot about the sculpture garden!) I will have to go back someday. MFAH is absolutely wonderful, highly recommend to anyone visiting Houston (and don't forget the Natural Science Museum which is also incredible, I've visited that one three times!!)
Back home I grabbed a snack and some rest, then typed this up, ate dinner, and walked to the theater. Nothing new there, just a regular show with an announcement after the bows about Disney's Stage Connect, which is a FREE program allowing grade schools to put on Disney musicals FOR FREE, plus additional FREE teacher training and coaching to make it happen. With so many schools not even offering arts programs or considering them expendable in favor of, say, sports, I think this is an AWESOME program! Here's a chance that kids might not otherwise have, to experience the arts and what it's like to be a part of a stage show.
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THURSDAY
Up a bit early from traffic noise, and didn't have any plans. Breakfast, working on Fayetteville AR Foodie Finds, and probably spent two hours or so working on my masterclass powerpoint. In fact when Jameson texted to share how his day was going, I was surprised to see that it was already past noon! But I am nearly done making it. Even with AI help, shoving text and images and bullet points around feels so clunky. It looks "OK," but I am definitely a PPT amateur!
Lunch and getting my hands on some carbon fiber trombone mutes via an order through Schmitt Music. Yes I know, I just had 3D-printed mutes made for me this past year, but after buying a new bass trombone they don't fit properly in the new one's bell. After asking the maker several times (over the course of months) to send me resized corks--which can fit in a letter envelope and would take him 5 minutes to slap a stamp on and send--months later it's clear that he's not going to do it. So I'm calling it a loss and starting over. Maybe on the next layoff I can return his mutes to him for a partial refund.
Debated doing anything today, but I just don't have anything TO do that's not going to cost money. I just bought a trombone, am still paying off Christmas purchases, and will be buying a LOT of tickets for family in Philly. The museum was great, treating myself to the movies was great, and I'll do one Foodie Find on Friday, and that'll do me for Houston :)
The evening show was good, at least for me personally. It has taken NINE stinking days but I'm finally back in "tour mode."
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Friday: One evening show. Walking to a grocery to pick up some travel foods, and I found a random Vietnamese restaurant known for banh xeo (one of my favorites!) so that will be my Foodie Find!
Saturday and Sunday: Two-show days, no plans except to pack and prepare for Oklahoma City!
(no subject)
Jan. 15th, 2026 08:56 pmSo I had to call somebody, a stranger had to come to my home and I had to talk about it on the telephone. I worked myself up to it after feeding the birds, retrieving the trash bin from the sidewalk, taking a shower. Usual delaying tactics. I was told somebody would be here Friday afternoon. Ok. I took off my 'meeting people clothes' and got into my robe, which is warmer. Five minutes later I see the company's car in my driveway. It turns out the owner just stopped by to check out the problem.
He was here about 4 minutes. Just did something at the electric panel and everything was on the way it should be. Now I had turned the main off and on, as I believe he did. But nothing changed. So now I look like an idiot or maybe just a confused old person.
But I'm back in the bedroom watching tv, so all's well. Electricity hates me.
Gratitude / Self-reassurance / fighting against negativity bias!
Jan. 15th, 2026 10:43 pm1. The animals seem happy and content. I don't go to the barn every day and sometimes I feel bad about that, but I suspect I'm stressing over nothing, or channeling other stress into this area. The cat and dog make me laugh and are good companions. Again I stress sometimes with Sally the dog, but, it's probably easier to be crabby with her than with my family.
2. The house is reasonably clean, it's warm inside, the hot water is working, etc.
3. I have some friendly and wonderful neighbors.
4. My parents are doing well. My mom is so much better now that she's in the assisted living place rather than the nursing home. Just a huge relief.
5. I got to chat with two good friends today, Jesse and Emily, and it was a real mood lifter.
6. TV I'm enjoying: The Pitt, FallOut, Heated Rivalry.
7. On YouTube I watch the Handsome Podcast almost every single day. This is 3 queer comedians (Tig Notaro, Fortune Feimster, and Mae Martin) chatting and being silly.
8. I've been playing Terra Nil on my laptop and I can't rec it highly enough. I feel like it is meditative in the best way and really helps my brain chill out. The game play is very similar to Sim City, but instead of building a city you get to reclaim wasteland and turn it into wilderness. Very easy to learn, but challenging enough to keep me engaged. Click-only means it's easy to play in bed with my beloved Left-handed mouse, and doesn't bother my right shoulder. Sound design is relaxing, the graphics are pretty. Minimal reading makes it migraine compatible for me, and i can control the motion. It's not timed. Thank you to my friend eruthros for buying this game for me.
Snow Day
Jan. 15th, 2026 11:16 pmMom, of course, thinks any spare second I have should be me cleaning. She's not wrong but still...that said I DID pick one major project and I did it, namely three bins of sockets and undies and a huge ass pile of clothes (still mostly socks) so I made 5 piles, summer socks, winter socks, fuzzy socks, socks I don't want period and lonely socks looking for mates.
So the piles are gone. The undies are gone because why in the name of god was I holding onto them. Many socks ready for donation and two uncomfortable realizations.
1. I have more fuzzy socks that any one human should. I know some are tight and need to be donated. Some have holes that I wear in bed in the fall/early spring while reading if my Raynaud's kicks in. Well pick two pair Dana and toss the rest.
2. That was NOT a bin of old undies. Under them was dozens of printed out stories, catalogues for book clubs that have been online only for YEARS and books. WTF? At least the books are now out on a shelf, the catalogues in the recycler and I'll sort the stories later to see what needs read and what can hit the recycler.
I did finish the last two stories I could possible write for
I found a place in Pittsburgh I need to visit (and I thought about a little vacation right there in the city if it's not crazy expensive) the weeping glass
I have some community recs this thursday
And I got a few communities (new to me) from
Thousands remain evacuated due to unexploded WW2 bomb
Jan. 15th, 2026 09:46 pmF: The Sentinel, M: Fic
Jan. 15th, 2026 09:38 pmWord Count: 849
Warnings: Coming Out.
Rating: Teen
Fandom: The Sentinel (tv)
Characters: Jim Ellison and Blair Sandburg.
Unexploded WW2 bomb to be disposed of at sea
Jan. 15th, 2026 09:46 pmAt the hotel!
Jan. 15th, 2026 11:00 pmSo we got to the train hall with just enough time to buy breakfast before our train, but not enough time to eat it. So we boarded and found seats together, somehow, and ate there.
The ride was supposed to be four hours but was late getting in, so we arrived around 5:00. Called for a Lyft and got to the hotel and checked in.
The room is very nice. We went down to the con suite to see Larry, and then came back and settled in. I Teamed the FWiB, after much trouble with the computer and the hotel WiFi.
At 8:00 we watched 911, and then 911: Nashville.
The Kid is already here, but I don't know her room number. She's on the 10th floor.
The con starts tomorrow. Can't wait!
Gratitude List:
1. The FWiB.
2. Got here safely.
3. Good dinner.
4. Fun TV.
5. Nice room.
6. Arisia!
Edited to add: Forgot to say, called Middle Brother, he's fine. Nothing new.
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Jan. 15th, 2026 11:01 pmTroops and vessels from European Nato allies arrive in Greenland
Jan. 15th, 2026 09:41 pmDaily Happiness
Jan. 15th, 2026 07:44 pm2. I have a tattoo!

I'll post another picture once it's healed. The yellow especially is very dark in the picture because it was the last color she did and it had a lot of blood welling up still. But it's exactly what I wanted and I'm very happy with it.
Overall the session took nearly three hours but the first was just discussing the design and prep, and the actual needling was about an hour and forty-five minutes. It's large, and since it's a wrap around, it's kind of fiddly, but since it's just color fill and not a lot of intricate line work or anything, it went pretty quickly overall.
It did hurt a fair bit, especially since there were some boney areas, but mostly I was just very tense from having to hold still. I felt like how I feel at the dentist, which always leaves me with a tension headache. I took some advil when I got home for the headache, but my leg itself didn't really hurt once she was done.
3. My usual Friday meetings were cancelled and the stuff I need to do tomorrow doesn't require accessing our system (which I hate doing from home because we're not able to use a VPN anymore and have to remote into a PC at the office, which is a pain), so I'm going to relax and work from home tomorrow.
4. I love getting pics of the cats looking up like this. It makes their cute faces even cuter!

Testing whether it’s easier to find a job when you have a job
Jan. 15th, 2026 10:10 pm1) not notified that I didn’t get the job (I’m a contractor although the contract is long-term, I haven’t received any complaints so far)
2) person hired has less legal experience than me (at least going by attorney bar number which is an indicator of experience level; if they had hired someone with more legal experience I would be less annoyed; at least person hired has a different technical background which is probably a good match for the job, but I am still concerned that they don’t have enough experience)
3) serious questions about technical decisions being made at high levels
4) serious doubts about the morality and loyalty of the high levels
5) sick and tired of wondering “who goes Nazi” about my coworkers
So I started putting my resume out on LinkedIn and doing the “easy apply” route tonight. Wish me luck and a better match for my skills, experience, and technical background.
I should also start learning Mandarin, Japanese, and/or Korean as these are going to be the languages of STEM for the 21st century.
I had a dream a few weeks ago about applying for Ph.D programs in chemistry, and saying flat out during the interview when they asked why I was going back at my age, “the only reason I am applying is to get my ticket punched so that I can apply for different legal jobs than I currently can” (patent law specifically will call out the technical background desired in the job description e.g. electrical engineering or biochemistry background). I woke up before I got a response from the professor interviewing me so I don’t know if that was persuasive or not.
Poem: "There's an Art to It"
Jan. 15th, 2026 09:13 pm( Read more... )
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meet me at the record store, to find out who i was before
Jan. 15th, 2026 09:14 pm*
1. The Icebreaker Challenge: Introduce yourself. Tell us why you're doing the challenge, and what you hope to gain from it.
I'm dirty_diana or sweeter_than. I write, draw, and vid, read and watch a lot of tv. I am hoping to get back into using dreamwidth a bit more steadily with this challenge, and also I guess enjoy some transformative fandom community vibes? Since I have been very much on the edges of that recently. Been reading other people's posts and feeling warm and fuzzy about everyone. ❤️
2. Loosely defined! Post about your pets, pets from your canon, anything you want!
I've never had a pet. Allergies. I do have a horrible antisocial roommate and surprise! she has a horrible antisocial cat that hates me for some reason. Pets from canons, hmm, Rivals has this very cute shaggy dog, Gertrude! Played by a cute little doggie actor named Ponti. Also in Rivals is the character of Rocky the horse, I think Rocky is actually a retired showjumper but now he gets to chill and eat grass and get pats. The Rutshire Chronicles series is generally full of animals, but in a very English way where it's all dogs and horses and many of them have jobs, lol.
*
and Talk Meme! still open for questions I can belatedly fill here.
Tell me about a small, nice thing you did for yourself recent(ish)ly? from
Do I do enough nice things for myself? Now I'm not sure. I am recently enjoying bulking up my art supply collection, even though frankly I owned enough art supplies to begin with. But I hang out on art tik tok, and to a lesser degree art youtube, and man those people are always showing you cool products. I am trying to not get sucked into the Being a Consumer of it all, but it is also worth it sometimes to not overthink whether you Deserve the fun thing, whether you'll use it enough or with the right skills, etc. I am currently messing around with acrylic paint markers? (Markers and pens are in general great for me because my nemesis chronic fatigue is never going to pull out an entire set of paints.) I did this raspberry lemonade piece for
*
And I should say: for Yuletide I wrote The Heart of the Matter, a Rivals Rupert/Taggie fic. Pining, kissing. And featuring Gertrude and Rocky, in fact.
I got whatever you ask for, that’s what i’ll be by vialethe, also Rivals, Rupert/Taggie. RuTag are adorable in London, topped with a spicy daddy kink garnish.
It was a year where I didn't recognise many fandoms, but this Travelers fic was quite nice? Marcy figures out the holidays. And both the Blood on the Clocktower fics were just the right amount of mysterious and creepy.
That's it for now, the catch up will continue!
Processing.
Jan. 15th, 2026 08:54 pmTalk about your creative process.
I can sum it up: "Fuck the muse." I don't write when inspiration strikes, I don't wait to get seized with a passion and fury to create and communicate, I don't try to alter my mental state by getting drunk, high, wasted, plastered, or otherwise out of it. I sit down, and I get the words out.
Assuming I'm at home and not traveling, assuming I've gotten my head clear enough, assuming I haven't devoted the evening to something that's going to get me some income, assuming I'm not out of it because of something like a cold or food poisoning - trust me, it was memorably bad tofu - then I'll get my ass in the chair and work. The AIC Method isn't elegant, and it's less about elegance and more about results. The results are 1,000 words when I'm composing. I may write a few more than that one night, meaning that the next night might see me writing a few less to get to the next thousand according to the raw wordcount. The raw wordcount is key at this stage. I don't write out of order as a matter of course; I can't tell myself the story that way. I write it from beginning to end as best I'm able so I can figure out what the story is, so when I go back and edit everything, I can work at getting it to what it needs to be.
I write quietly, without music or background noise. I write at varying speeds, sometimes getting 1,000 words an hour and sometimes averaging out closer to 250. I'll let inspiration arrive at its own pace, and I usually seek out inspiration and passion and ideas when I'm not writing, so I can save up the energy for the work. I write at night, sometimes in the dark and sometimes before sundown depending on the season. I find a lot of pleasure to turning off the overhead light, turning on the desk lap, and sitting in a little bubble of words - I stumbled over it some decades ago, and the only time I've shifted from that was because of one telecommuting job with a set of on-call hours that had me working in the afternoons, which I still look back on as a fairly bizarre time. But it worked for that time frame. Because it was when I got my ass in the chair and wrote the words.
Walks help. Bike rides help. Going to the movies helps. Going to art museums works, too. Reading nonfiction, fiction, poetry, and going to live performances all help feed the creative spirit. But not the muse. I don't want to think about it in those terms. Nights when I don't write always feel a little bereft. I could be at the movies, I could be out with friends, I could be visiting Paris, and as good a time as I'll be having - and trust me, while I haven't done all three at the same time, I've done each of them alone and in varying combinations, so I can say that even doing that, I'll be thinking about what scenes I want to work out and the story I want to tell. I'll sometimes take longhand notes to help get words together so I can figure out if they're the right way to approach an idea, and that helps a bit, but it's not the same as sitting down and writing 1,000 new words, or cleaning up a chapter, or filling in something I set aside to research later to avoid breaking the creative flow, or line-editing according to someone else's patient notes.
I've joked there's only one proper writing method, and that's whatever works for the individual author to get their words out. I've also joked there's only one kind of writer, and that's someone who gets the writing done. I can advocate for what works for me. I can't say it'll work for everyone, but I'm willing to go on record about its success rate at finishing what I start.
Ass In Chair. Learn it. Love it. Live it. Because it always happens one word at a time.

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Jan. 15th, 2026 10:53 pmShame, the universe is yours
Jan. 15th, 2026 05:34 pmNot with a Club, the Heart is broken
Nor with a Stone –
A Whip so small you could not see it
I’ve known
To lash the Magic Creature
Till it fell,
Yet that Whip’s Name
Too noble then to tell.
Magnanimous as Bird
By Boy descried –
Singing unto the Stone
Of which it died –
Shame need not crouch
In such an Earth as Ours –
Shame – stand erect –
The Universe is yours.
This musical version it absolutely worth your time.
Daily Check-In
Jan. 15th, 2026 08:36 pmHow are you doing?
I am OK
14 (63.6%)
I am not OK, but don't need help right now
8 (36.4%)
I could use some help
0 (0.0%)
How many other humans live with you?
I am living single
10 (43.5%)
One other person
10 (43.5%)
More than one other person
3 (13.0%)
Please, talk about how things are going for you in the comments, ask for advice or help if you need it, or just discuss whatever you feel like.
“I am very annoyed”: Pharma execs blast RFK Jr.’s attack on vaccines
Jan. 15th, 2026 11:01 pmPharmaceutical executives are finally saying how they really feel about the extreme anti-vaccine agenda Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has been ruthlessly implementing—and it's not pretty.
According to reporting from Bloomberg at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference that ended today in San Francisco, pharmaceutical executives who had previously been careful to avoid criticizing the Trump administration appear to have reached a breaking point, with Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla offering some of the most candid comments.
"I am very annoyed. I'm very disappointed. I'm seriously frustrated," Bourla said. "What is happening has zero scientific merit and is just serving an agenda which is political, and then antivax."