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I don't make a practice of mentioning typos du jour, but I think today's is worthy of note: there is nowhere in Finland where anyone has a New Year's Eve/St. Sylvester's Day or All Saints' practice of divination with molten Tim dropped into cold water. Not ever. So you might as well get different vats ready for next year.

(I think this is an epilogue. I'm almost sure it is. I've never had an epilogue before; it's rather novel. It's marked as Chapter 53 on the notecard, but that's almost certain to be wrong anyway. Ah! And now we learn that notecards are really no different from outlines: I have them so that I can be wrong about them. What a relief.)

I'm enjoying Jonathan Strange and Mr. Norrell, although it's only marginally less unwieldy than a printed manuscript in a binder. It looks slightly patchy to me -- in all these pages, there are some small bits that don't seem as clever to me as they apparently seemed to the author -- but there are enough good patches to make it all very worthwhile. I'm caught up enough in the rest of my life that I don't know if I'll be able to return it to [livejournal.com profile] porphyrin tomorrow, though. Ah well.

I've been trying to clean my new fountain pen more regularly than I did my old ones. I used to have the habit of just sticking a new cartridge (of a different color) in and going on to see what the colors mixed to, and that amused me, but I think the pen needs more cleaning than that. But I find now that there's too much water in the pen when I add the new cartridge, and I have extremely pale, watered-down ink for entirely too long, and while it might be charming for drawing my own lightly ornamented stationery if I had the time and inclination, I do not. Fountain pen gurus: advice on cleaning the silly thing so that it's ready to use more or less right away? How often do you clean yours?

I woke up in the 5:00 hour again this morning. This is officially Not Enough Sleep, and I'm worried that if it keeps up, I'm going to get sick. But I can't seem to stay asleep long enough most mornings.

The problem is extremely clear: I'm waking up hungry around 5:30. Really, really hungry. "No waiting five minutes to check e-mail; get me breakfast now" hungry. I've always awakened hungry, but it's previously been around 6:30. We have not changed our dinner hour to an earlier one. I'm not eating different amounts, either more or less, so far as I've been able to tell. I'm just waking up hungry. Last night I tried having ice cream at 9:00 in the evening to see if that would hold me through longer. It did not. I was hungry at 5:00 a.m., though I manged to get back to sleep for another half hour.

So -- it's good because I don't really have to worry about sleep disorders. I know too many people with sleep disorders, and they're not even remotely a good time. But it's bad because -- hungry! Extremely hungry! And tired, dammit. And I don't know what to do other than moving a snack to before bed, but I've tried that, and it doesn't seem to work. Has anybody had this problem? What did you do about it?

I'm blaming hormones, because, hey, why not? They've been evil enough to me in other regards lately. But maybe I just made that part up.*

*My auntie Mim would never argue with you as she got older. If she said, "I have a doctor's appointment Tuesday," and you said, "Mim, are you sure? We just took you to the doctor last Tuesday, and she didn't say anything about another appointment then," she'd chirp, "Oh, I don't know, maybe I made that up." And either she or you would go look and find out the fact of the matter, no fuss. So the rest of the family picked it up ourselves, a frequent, amiable, "or maybe I made that up."

Date: 2005-02-26 04:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] diatryma.livejournal.com
The only pen that I've been able to keep running for years, even with cleaning it out (I just run lots of water through it until it comes out clear) was a black-only one that never saw any other kinds of ink. Even my gorgeous colored one couldn't do that; the colors or the time between using it did something to it and it doesn't work any more.
And what's wrong with another fountain pen?

Date: 2005-02-26 05:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
My first fountain pen was a Sheaffer in the $3-5 range. It ran beautifully for 14 years and probably would have kept running if I hadn't lost it. (Still bitter. So very bitter.) I cleaned it maybe once a year, and I ran all kinds of colors through it. It grew up with me. I don't believe in Platonic forms, but if there was the Platonic form of My Pen, that would be it. I bought another el cheapo Sheaffer at the time I lost My Pen (4 years ago), and it was scratchy and horrible and Not My Pen. I had to move on to more expensive pens.

mopemopemope

But anyway: I was mostly joking when I said it was a tragedy and a horror to have to get a new fountain pen. Mostly. It is awfully inconvenient to have to carry two nice pens with you wherever you go, though.

Date: 2005-02-26 06:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] matociquala.livejournal.com
The old Sheaffers were vunderbar. The new ones are ick. Closest thing in handfeel to my old Sheaffer is probably the Waterman Phineas, which is a reaaaal nice pen for the price.

The Waterman Silk is also v. nice, but the plastic in the nib assemblies seem to crack a lot right next to the nip. This can be mended with superglue, but.

Date: 2005-02-26 06:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] matociquala.livejournal.com
er, nib.

Anyway, my cleaning process is soak, dry with paper towels, and refill--a converter of course draws the ink up through the nib and saves the problems associated with cartridge fill; when refilling with a cartridge, I use a wad of absorbent paper (toilet tissue, paper towel) to stroke the top of the nib from barrel to point, drawing the ink down.

Or, um, I lick it.

But not if anybody's looking.

Here in Vegas, pens dry out if not used every day. It's anoying as hell.

Date: 2005-02-26 08:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] diatryma.livejournal.com
Some of them work differently from others. I have two that are exactly the same and one froze up on me; the other (maybe because I use it more than I did the one) has always worked fine. My pen, the best one, is pretty old for a nice pen, and I've dropped it enough times that it doesn't actually work like a new one. It's a little thicker and sometimes stops working for a few seconds. It's shaped my handwriting to an extraordinary degree.
Are yours the kind with the little bright ink cartridges or the big and more, um, boring ones?

Date: 2005-02-26 08:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
I'm currently using a deep green, but the cartridges are pretty big. I have a bunch of the little bright ink cartridges, but I haven't found the right pen to use them in yet.

Date: 2005-02-26 09:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] matastas.livejournal.com
See, look what you've done. I'm looking at Rotring fountain pens. And I don't need to be dropping $80 on a pen right now.

Curse you, woman.

Date: 2005-02-26 10:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
I am told that Rotring cartridges fit "standard European" pens as well, I just don't know which pens those are. Theoretically they could be cheaper than that, though.

Date: 2005-02-26 10:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] matastas.livejournal.com
I should probably get a nice pen: my handwriting improves drastically with a well-weighted pen (I don't think this is unusual). And I like the way fountain pens write, and Rotring's design has always appealed. I'm just always worried about losing it.

Any recommendations there?

Date: 2005-02-27 12:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrissa.livejournal.com
I think it's easier to not lose a nice pen you're using regularly, because nobody else comes and thiefs it without thinking about it and you don't think, "Oh, this must be theirs, I'll just leave it on the post office counter." Because it's your nicely weighted fine pen.

The Waterman discussed above is lovely for me. I don't know anything about any of the Rotrings yet.

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