Samhain is on a Monday this year, and that's kind of crappy. I mean, on the plus side, activities relating to the holiday can be stretched throughout the preceding weekend. I might (emphasis on might) end up having a surprisingly full calendar this weekend. On the other hand, I haven't done any of my errands-in-preparation-for-Halloween yet, nor have I succesfully completed my apartment-cleaning, or figured out my snow tires, or any of the other hundreds of things on my ever-growing To Do list. If the past few weeks are any indication I'll be lucky if I remember to pick up my dry-cleaning tomorrow, let alone get to any of that stuff. Case in point: I wanted to carve a pumpkin, but I haven't even bought one yet, and I wouldn't attempt it except in a mostly-clean kitchen. And, um, my kitchen is the opposite of clean right now. As of last night I don't think I even have any clean silverware.
There was no Because Its Wednesday this week, mostly because yesterday was for me the day from Hell at work. I had not one but two exams, on unecessarily complicated material, with a minimum passing grade of 80%. Which doesn't necessarily sound that bad, until I started hearing rumors that several members of last year's training class failed these same tests, back when a passing mark was 70%. So yesterday was a day of much stress. My tension levels have, fortunately, plummeted dramatically since then.
The lack of Because Its Wednesday is really unforunate, however, because yesterday over at
Websnark, the darling Ms. White wrote a nice little article about
NaDruWriNi, the hillarious innebriated cousin of
NaNoWriMo. If you haven't got anything planned for Guy Fawkes Night this year, I hereby officially suggest getting hammered and abusing your word processor. Seriously. When you get right down to it, many people are still intimidated by the thought of NaNoWriMo, even though part of its mission statement and indeed very conception is to get people to overcome their hang-ups and just write. But everyone except teetotalers can get behind NaDruWriNi. For lowering inhibitions, alcohol is hands-down a better tool than peer pressure.