the progenitor of Frog Friday

the progenitor of Frog Friday
All photos in this post taken by me back in 2007!
And some more on Sea Slug Day! It’s Terry Gosliner’s birthday.
I went out clearing storm drains yesterday (or in quite a few cases, attempting to clear) and I tried to use the city’s web form to report the clogged drains I found. Unfortunately, all of the drain locations I attempted to provide give me the message “The service is not provided at this location”, making it rather difficult to get anything fixed. So now I’m on hold with the city to 1) report some drains and 2) report that their web form is busted.
EDIT: 30 minutes on hold and two city departments later, I have reported the drains and they’ll get looked at! wahoo. civic responsibility WIN
I had a post scheduled but apparently wordpress can’t handle it if your time zone and the blog time zone don’t match, and it doesn’t try to re-send missed posts. so I’ve fixed my time zone and rescheduled the post for this coming Friday.
i have created the beginnings of a garden for my slugs
you keep second guessing yourself. It’s Brahms, 100% for sure. But wait I don’t listen to much Brahms and it’s so familiar. Is it Mahler? No, it’s Brahms. But wait… that was just a hair Beethoven? But no it overall doesn’t sound like Beethoven, a bit too modern. Mahler??? No, Brahms1
In retrospect, bouncing back and forth between Beethoven and Mahler as the other two candidates should have told me for sure I was listening to Brahms. Hindsight, etc.
(cw: talk about death [specifically mine, theoretically])
As of today I have (officially) stayed alive with Type 1 diabetes for ten years1. I’ve done a little bit of reading on the history of Type 1 treatment, one of the first acute conditions turned chronic through medical intervention (thank you, Drs. Banting, Macleod, and Best). The longer I live, the more “I would have died by now” milestones I pass, and the more I am reminded of how grateful I am for advances in diabetes treatment. I have passed the “I would have lived this long on a starvation diet” milestone. In a few years, I’ll probably make it past the “lethal atherosclerosis” line, then the “renal failure” line, assuming I retain access to current diabetes and other medical technology2. I’ll probably also mostly avoid the non-lethal sequelae, the blindness and the amputations and the peripheral neuropathies. Apparently in a few years I’ll need to start taking statins even if my cholesterol is good, because diabetes often brings vascular complications. As good as diabetes technology is, I am, fundamentally, manually running one of the primary metabolic loops in the human body. It’s decidedly imperfect even when running at top performance.
I don’t recommend having “I could have died” experiences for anyone, but it does mean that I am aware of and grateful for being alive and (approximately) healthy basically every single day. It also means I’m aware of exactly how conditional “health” is. I don’t have a family history of Type 1—I’m the first one we know of as far back as family memory goes—which means my diagnosis was something I couldn’t even have mentally prepared for. Intellectually I knew that disability is something that could come into my life at any time for any reason, but now I know it viscerally.
My wife wrote a really good post about COVID denialism and the belief that disability is something that happens to Other People. I have lived for the past 4.5 years of this pandemic knowing not only that I am more vulnerable to negative consequences of COVID due to diabetes, but that I could easily get even more disabilities as a result of infection. I was already disabled, but I am multiply disabled now by society’s failure to grapple with the reality of this disease. If I could have one wish from getting diabetes, it would be for everyone around me to recognize that their health is also conditional and to behave accordingly.
I know this post feels like kind of a bummer, but I am genuinely grateful to be alive and experiencing the world and everything it has to offer, even the bad stuff3. It is a gift to be here and talking to all of you. After all, there’s new frogs and sea slugs and cool music to listen to.
Liz’s Delicious Sludge Cocktail
I try to have at least one treat I “shouldn’t” have on each diagnosis anniversary as a celebration of the fact that I can. This year I asked my wife for a black sesame ice cream cocktail, which I knew full well would look like a glass full of concrete. But hey, it’s delicious concrete.
Mark Scherz just posted the news that he and fellow researchers have just described1 seven new tree frog species from Madagascar. Adorable! Look at the art they commissioned! Listen to their little froggy beeps!
you know how some birders maintain a Life List of all the species they’ve identified? well I have that but for sea slugs (really opisthobranchs more broadly). I’m gonna add that as a page on my website because I can, because it’s neat, and because it’s funny1,2.
watch this space once I unpack my boxes of books3 and can flip through the books I probably tucked my active list into back in 2007. if I can’t find it I’ll reconstruct to the best of my ability, I think I was up to 25 species or something.
tremendous shout out to bcj for allowing me the use of this lovely Northern Leopard frog to inaugurate the day