im gonna catch up on sleep
Work on my taxes and play Guild Wars 2
Man I still have to go back and play the last 2 chapters of Secrets of the Obscure. Thanks for the reminder
Crying and trying to work on school
Whatever my wife tells me
You lucky bastard.
Helldivers 2.
“I DON’T MAKE PLANS I MAKE NOISE”
Weekends are when I work 8-hour days at work.
Playing dreamcast
Saturday I gotta take one kid to parkour but then I get to go to my buddies house and play music. Sunday I have to clean my bathroom and kitchen but then I get to run my weekly RPG. And if I can find time in there, a little Minecraft (we needcan corn farm) and I have a guitar pedal kit I want to start.
we needcan corn farm
Yeah. I don’t know wtf that is. It was supposed to say “we need an iron farm”. I may have been trying to do too many things at once.
It’s my wife’s birthday this weekend so we’re going out with a bunch of friends. This is extra special because we scored a babysitter for our one-year-old, and we haven’t really been out together much since he’s been born. We’re gonna go hard.
That, and Helldivers II, if the servers will let me in.
Protip, if applicable: if someone in your friends list is already on, don’t boot the game up. Join their lobby directly via Steam friends menu.
My group has had great success bypassing the servers at capacity issue.
I’m gonna build a greenhouse.
A few things. Wife wants to go ice skating.
I’m going to a concert Saturday night.
Study
I’m learning Gàidhlig and have a speaking exam coming up, so I’m practicing with a friend on the same course on Saturday. Sunday I’m being way less productive and getting together with some friends for lunch and a session of Victoria 2. I’m kinda anxious to get out of the house for a bit too, as weather and illness have kept me stuck indoors for a while
How do you learn Gàidhlig?
I tried self-teaching with some books and Duolingo, but I was struggling to keep a real focus on it and not making any good progress. I live in a part of the country with little in the way of any Gaelic culture, so there wasn’t a lot that I could make use of locally either. Turns out the University of the Highlands and Islands does a distance learning course that is very cheap for anyone living in Scotland, so I’ve been doing that and getting along much better. By its nature it also means I know a few more people that are also trying to learn
Thanks. I’m encouraged to hear that something like this exists, it’s important that some of these cultural things survive
Plant some trees, I hope, and watch some rugby.