Stuck in for work, makes a good day to dye.
Shave ‘Em to Save ‘Em Tunis fiber, in a bath of 80% orange to 20% blue.
“Looks poopy” said X. Does not.

Life Would Be Perfect If I Lived in That House by Meghan Daum
I continue to love Meghan. This is Daum #3 for me, and while I feel it’s a bit weaker, and definitely less weighty, than THE UNSPEAKABLE or THE PROBLEM WITH EVERYTHING, it’s still worthwhile. One part about her boyfriend’s attachment to a couch that is too big for her house which he’s about to move into was so funny I read it out loud to my husband. He cracked up, and said that if you just threw in a few references to European philosophers, it could have been Woody Allen. I hope she’d take that as a compliment.
I feel I share Meghan’s real estate fetish, although she’s taken it to lengths I would never have dared. The sentence in the book that gave me that “Meghan has hijacked my brain again” feeling was:
“[W]ith a few exceptions, I think it’s fair to say that I’ve never visited a place without imagining myself permanently or at least semipermanently installed there.”
I never knew if this was something that everyone feels to some extent, or if it was just me. Maybe it’s just me & Meghan.
I KNOW I share her fixation on “Little House” and all things farmy and prairie. I rage with jealousy that she actually did move to a farm in Nebraska for a period of time. Just hearing her mention the words “Lincoln, Nebraska” fills me with longing. I think only she would understand.


Item 4 is a bell-sleeve, black, silky top. It’s OK but I just can’t think of a use for it. Reject.
Item 5 is a pair of pants extremely similar to a pair of pants they have sent me before. I had a picture of them side by side but it didn’t come out. One pair is SLIGHTLY browner than the other; and this pair has tighter legs. Other than that, same brand, same waistband – identical. I don’t need two pairs of indistinguishable work pants (these are basically office attire). Reject.
Sorry Stitch Fix. Too repetitive this shipment. You’re a loser with only 2/5 keepers.

Item 3 is this lovely top. Keep.
Also you get a better view of the jeans here.
Item one is a wine-colored top with grommets and lacing at the neck. It is very, very similar to a shirt Stitch Fix sent me several shipments ago, shown here. That one was gray-green with lacing up the back. They’re too similar, and I’m not crazy about how tight this one is around the belly. Reject.
Item two is the jeans. They are great with jeans. Keep.

We enjoy ourselves in one of the one of the most exceptionally charming downtowns in the U.S.

Janis by Holly George-Warren
I love Janis Joplin and love being immersed in her story. I can’t say I really learned anything in this bio that I hadn’t from the several others that I have read. This one leaned heavily on Janis’ copious written correspondence with her family; and seemed less focused on her relationships with men, and more on those she had with women. Janis here is presented as frankly bisexual, if not lesbian with a daddy fixation.
I took issue when lyrics were misquoted. The most egregious example was the part in “Piece of My Heart” where Janis sings, “Nowma nowma nowma nowma nowma HEAR me when I cry-y-y-y, and baby I cry all the time!” This was transcribed on paper as “Never, never, never hear me when I cry.” I can only think that when another artist wrote or transcribed the song, the word was “Never.” If so, tell us what you’re quoting. Because you’re not quoting Janis. On no planet does “Nowma” mean “Never.” (It means, obviously, “Nowma”.)
My thoughts on the medical nature of addiction have evolved since I last immersed myself in Janis’ life story. With so much attention to the opiate crisis, so many obituaries of young people in my local paper, and a harrowing recent book club meeting covering DOPESICK by Beth Macy accompanied by a gut-wrenching story of the addiction-related death of the son of one of the members of my own book club, I now more than ever consider addiction to be a brain-altering medical condition.
And this makes me ponder in a new light the narrative of Janis Joplin. How would it be different if she had lived? Luck played a huge part in who among her cohort lived and who died in the 60s. What if she had lived, cleaned up, moved on; would we still dwell so much on the “tortured soul” angle of her early years?
She indisputably had a lot of difficulties in her background. She tried to kick heroin multiple times, sometimes seeming to come oh-so-close, only to relapse – how it always goes. In the past, I would think, “What tortured her soul so much that she had to keep going back to it?” Now I simply think, “She was an addict. The addiction kept her coming back.”
What is it about Janis? Right in the introduction, George-Warren nails it: “Janis was a walking live nerve capable of surfacing feelings that most people couldn’t or wouldn’t.” When I’m asked what it is about Janis that so enthralls me, the only phrase I can come up with it “out there,” accompanied by expanded arms. “She was so out there.” It was all out there. Being “14 with no tits,” as she put it. The acne, the high school hall put-downs that didn’t seem to end with high school. She puts it all out there in a way I can’t or won’t. Janis is my live nerve.

“Don’t compromise yourself. That’s all you’ve got.” – J. J.