Random: Bird Flu · 6:17am Oct 17th, 2015
Pegasi aren't the only ones...
Source: Horse Wife GO READ IT
Pegasi aren't the only ones...
Source: Horse Wife GO READ IT
Since some of you will be looking for things to do online for the next few days, Chris Eliopoulos was so kind as to post his Misery Loves Sherman archive, Spaniard Kiwi has posted a Spanish translation of How Many Princesses Does It Take, and I’ll be publishing another chapter now in
Deathless update status: 6k words and nearing draft completion. I like where it went, but it’s rough, so it’ll need a couple of editorial passes, but release is in sight. Had to spend some extra cycles on this one, because it hints at a lot of things that happen later, and character motivation isn’t something you want to get wrong. Poor Hurricane.
Here's a special behind-the-scenes look at my writing process! This episode, we're covering the latest chapter of The Supervillain Flu.
For those who are interested, here are my unedited "jot these down so I remember later what I want to write" notes on the chapter Caponey and Morbits Break the Bank.
glim reads letter, go patrol town
patrol the town? Who does she think you are batmare?Trixie's guset room =Spike overflow of comic collection
Title says it all, had both my flu and third COVID jab yesterday and I’ve been feeling odd throughout the whole day today but I’m feeling better.
On a side note I’ve recently updated my new fanfiction story, if you’re interested here’s the Link
Stay safe and happy Christmas!
I encountered this on a Facebook comment thread and decided that, since we're headed into flu season, it deserved a response, because this kind of "warning", devoid of context and clarification, is really just scaremongering. I'm reposting it here because this is important, and because Twilight would want us to stand up for scientific accuracy.
Everything through the end of the first day of trial (part 12) has been completely revamped. The chapters have been carefully edited and expanded to include additional detail and dialogue, and use a lighter touch on the early shipping. I also dramatically cut back on overuse of Lavender Unicorn Syndrome (or Violet Unicorn Syndrome in this case--it really made me grimace rereading this how often I did it back then), fixed some of the more stilted lines, added a few additional Ace Attorney game
I'm sorry for the delay, but I had one of my worst bouts of writers' block in recent history over the third chapter of the Cloudsdale battle, unable to figure out how it was going to work--how civilians and retired veterans away from the weather factory could or would successfully fight back against the Knights and Ravens. But being down with the flu for the past few days was good for one thing; it gave me plenty of down time to think about it and I'm pleased to say I finally broke through and
Hiya! Just littering some words here, about story updates, life, music and other things I can think up off the top of my head.
But still have a lot of malaise after four days down with the flu. No joke, folks. This is the worst bout I’ve had with it in about twelve years. Anyway, just wanted to give one last update on Feathered Hearts before the fourth and final chapter of this rapid-fire release sequence is launched.
But I also have a new story for you! I wrote it on my third day of quarantine. Which is, uh, today.
Please stay safe. This is a threat.
-Icy
When I started getting sick on Monday and one of those home COVID rapid antigen tests came back positive. But the symptoms didn’t match, as even though I was shortly running a temperature, I had no trouble breathing, my coughing was productive, and I kept my sense of smell. Instead, I was chilled and achy with a yo-yoing fever.
Since it gets brought up a lot these days, I'd find it fascinating to know: how do these two viruses compare? Say, on death rates? What sort of numbers are we talking about here?
First, a few clarifications, and then the numbers themselves. Please note that all this is for casual purposes only: this is not an official analysis!
I’ve had the flu all this week, but it means I’ve had time to read a few more stories lately, so today I’ll be looking at three stories that recently made a big splash on the Featured Box: “Numbers,” “Sum of Their Parts,” and “Mrs. Robinson’s Stand.”
Author: Kentavritsa
Editor: Kentavritsa
Illustrator: N/A
Pass: From one, to another.
For now, this is the latest story I am working on.
I hope I can maintain updates in a reasonable fashion and regularity. Probably one to two weeks between the updates.
Yeah. I have.
And it sucks more than a cheap prostitute from Hamsterdam. Not that I would really know, I just go off rumors that my old school chums say. I doubt they ever paid to get laid.
Anyway, the flu sucks all hell. There's like a huge weight to my steps, like someone chained my legs up to boulders. I feel weird all over, and I'm sneezing so much I can't put food in the bird feed without dropping it all over the place every time I shake violently from my sneezes
I once had a bird.
Her name was Enza.
I opened the window;
and in flew Enza.
The clinic gets its vaccines in October. I contacted the clinic in late September and learned that the vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 Multivariate before December, but I could get vaccinated against Influenza in October. I signed up for a vaccination against Influenza on the 12022-10-26th and a vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 on the 12022-12-06th.
After finishing writing Mistletrapped, I sat down and read a bunch of recent stories I’d missed reading.
Today’s stories:
Where the Sun Don’t Shine by Obselescence
What If I Told You There Was A Changeling in the Basement of Carousel Boutique? by Hoopy McGee
Mark Misconception by scifipony
Bird Flu by mr maximus
A Moment’s Hesitation by FanOfMostEverything