Something very close to what I'm feeling

On my humor blog it was a week of mostly non-humor, non-review pieces!
If you saw it in your RSS feed you already saw such posts as:



And a happy new year! I have finally reached 2021 in my photo roll! Nothing to speak of from the 1st of the year, but the day after? We begin our journey with ...


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Snow! This was not a snowy winter, but the 2nd of January brought a storm big enough to need serious shoveling and to give us that transformative cover on the world. Here's what our backyard looked like.



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And the front. You can see our sidewalk partly shoveled, apparently by the house to the south of us. I can't explain why they would start shoveling the walk, or why they would stop partway through, but it is churlish to complain that someone only did half the sidewalk-shoveling for you for free.



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Looking up the street through one of the gel decals that bunny_hugger puts on the windows. Also you can kind of make out my car, underneath that heap of snow.



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Looking up the street through two of the gel decals, this time.



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Looking out front from the upstairs and getting a better view of who's already shoveled by late morning and who hasn't.



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View of the backyard from upstairs and don't the trees look fantastic like this?



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Peering at our bird feeder and our squirrel feeder through the snow.



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Also a view of the bird and squirrel feeders, but mostly a view of the bushes beside our fence.



Trivia: In 1896 the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that the company-owned town George Pullman built for his workers was illegal, finding such a construct ``opposed to good public policy and incompatible with the theory and spirit of our institutions''.
Source: A Nation of Deadbeats: An Uncommon History of America's Financial Disasters, Scott Reynolds Nelson.


Currently Reading: This New Ocean: A History of Project Mercury, Loyd S Swenson Jr, James M Grimwood, Charles C Alexander. NASA SP-4201.