May. 8th, 2008

jadesfire: Bright yellow flower (Happy - Don in glasses)
I can has sunshine! Thank you so much, Anonymous. That was a lovely present to wake up to this morning, just perfect.

We still have literal sunshine as well, which is quite exciting. May in Oxford is often very good, weather-wise, in order to taunt those revising for exams.

I am disturbingly bouncy this morning, mostly because I got another SIX HOURS' SLEEP. Woo Hoo! If I get 6 hours a night, I'm good to go. It's the less than that that's been killing me. Cut because I got carried away, gushing about the OH )

Things to do today:


  • Email typing to person who will give me money for it.
  • Sort out evening duties
  • Book tomorrow and Monday week off
  • Email friend about lunch next Monday
  • Book a haircut
  • Find charger for mum's MP3 player
  • Renew library books
  • Return library books
  • Deal with books on desk (ALL OF THEM!!) (ETA: Have done most of them, so that the pile of 'done' is now higher than my head. Yay.)
  • Put some recipes into SW facebook group
  • Write something. Anything.
  • Make decision about [livejournal.com profile] torchwood_meta
  • Send new Big Bang draft for beta
  • Email friend J
  • Talk to librarian about the thing I don't want to talk about (IT DOESN'T SOLVE ITSELF IN THE MEANTIME!)

    These are mostly fairly little things that I can accomplish easily. This is a good thing, and I shall be crossing them off as I go.

    Ooh, and some random links before I go:
    John Barrowman and Eve Myles. Pretty, happy pictures (thanks to [livejournal.com profile] cyberducks for the link.
    Proposals for the 'Angel of the South'. I like the 50 foot high horse. The other half likes the winged satellite dish. I'm not sure either are worth 2 million pounds....
    Duck-billed Platypus. The planet's weirdest mammal. Officially! Cute video footage at the site.
    Adults with autism to be audited. Worst headline ever, but interesting story. Maybe those of you who know about these things can help me out here: One of the main points of the article is that while children with autism are often known about, provided for etc, adults are not. But weren't the adults with autism once children with autism? Or is this to do with the recent-ness (shush, it's a word) of good autism diagnosis, that the children who were diagnosed aren't yet adults? It just...puzzled me.
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