Well, it’s Friday the 13th. That’s at least one good thing about today. And, of course, next month will also have a Friday the 13th, as I’ve noted previously (I don’t know specifically in which post I noted it, and I don’t really have the urge to go figure it out, so I’ll leave that to you to do if you’re interested).
It is slightly interesting to think about the fact that, on average, one of every seven Februarys will have a Friday the 13th, but not all of those will then lead to a subsequent Friday the 13th in March, because every 4th February will have 29 days*, by the Gregorian calendar, which is the one the world uses overall.
So, the total fraction of years with dual Fridays the 13th would be something like 1/7 minus a further ¼ of that one seventh—so 4/28 (i.e., 1/7) minus 1/28 (1/4 x 1/7), which leads us to the rough conclusion that only three out of 28 years will entail February and March each having a Friday the 13th. That’s slightly less than one out of every nine years. And since I’m 56, which is twice 28, I should have experienced about 6 such years in my life (perhaps counting this year).
Mind you, the numbers aren’t quite right overall. The Gregorian calendar waives the extra day in February on years that are divisible by 100, i.e., the turns of centuries. However, there’s a further exception to that: the turn of a millennium, like what we all just had in the year 2000, does keep its 29 days in February. So that brings the average closer to the raw number, but doesn’t account for the extra ones that happen at more ordinary turns of centuries.
Of course, the only turn of a century through which I have lived—and through which I am likely to live**—was indeed the turn of a millennium, so I guess for me, the fraction 3/28 should be fairly accurate.
I could, if I were so inclined, go back to the first year in which I experienced a February—that would be 1970 (AD or CE)—and work through them to find out just how many dual Fridays the 13th I’ve experienced. With modern computer-based calendars it would even be relatively easy. But I don’t think I am so inclined.
Okay, that’s enough of that for now. Actually, it’s probably too much of that, at least from any normal person’s (i.e., not my) perspective. On to other things.
I’m writing this post on my mini lapcom, and I wrote yesterday’s post on the lapcom as well; I am doing this partly to spare my thumbs, but also to try to encourage myself to use the lapcom more and maybe even to write fiction again. I don’t know whether or not that will happen, but it’s also just more natural for me to use the lapcom. I’ve been typing, in one way or another, since I was 11 years old, if memory serves. Clearly I have not been using a smartphone nearly that long, because they have not existed for that long.
Also, even when I saw the imagined future tech on Start Trek: The Next Generation of tablets with virtual keyboards, I thought they looked like a terrible idea. How lame, how unaesthetic, just to tap at a flat screen with no real keys. Also, the “keys” on such devices in the real world are too effing small to be used to type in any traditional way. Not but what one can get to be pretty speedy with them—I can zip along pretty well on my smartphone—but it’s nothing compared to being able to use one’s whole set of fingers to write.
Although, I’ve often touted the value of writing things longhand before retyping them into the computer, especially for fiction, because it can slow one down beneficially. I did that—because I had no choice, being at the time a guest of the Florida DOC—with Mark Red, with The Chasm and the Collision, and with the “short” story Paradox City. I don’t know whether they come across as better or worse or indistinguishable from the stories I have written directly onto the computer.
I would say that they might tend to be shorter, but Paradox City is a nominally short story that was about 60 hand-written pages long, so that didn’t make things much shorter. Also, I think The Chasm and the Collision is longer than Son of Man, but that may just be a function of the nature of those stories.
Certainly Unanimity is longer than anything else I’ve written, by quite a margin, but that surprised me as much as it might anyone else. I just started writing the story and it ended up taking that long to tell it. That happens. Outlaw’s Mind began as an idea for a short story, but there was definitely a lot there implicitly, even in the original idea, that made it unreasonable to plan to make it “short”.
Anyway, if any readers of this blog have also read my stories and have noticed any tendency toward difference between the initially handwritten and the entirely computer written (meaning written on a computer, not by a computer, unless one is referring to me as a computer) ones, I’d be pleased to get your feedback.
In other personal news, well…my pain is leveling off a bit, though my leg joints still feel loose and floppy and unstable, so I have to be careful, and I have my general persistent tension and neuropathic discomfort in my lower body. I’ve tried to adjust (and decrease) my workout a bit to compensate, and that seems to be doing some good, but I cannot go without working out, because that tends to make my pain worse.
My mood is pretty much as it usually is, but I’ll spare you that hellscape out of courtesy.
Tomorrow is Saturday, and I am not supposed to be working this weekend. If that changes—in other words, if I do work—I guess I’ll write a post. Though, really, I should try to get back into Outlaw’s Mind and finish what I had started earliest so I could then get on to newer things. And if wishes were horses, we’d all be drowning in manure***.
Tomorrow is also Valentine’s Day, but this is of no relevance to me, and that holiday hasn’t been relevant to me for more than 15 years, possibly quite a bit more. It is not likely to be relevant to me again this side of the grave (and even less likely to be relevant on the other side).
I hope you all have a good weekend, even those of you who have loved ones with whom you can revel in the romance of the holiday. It’s not your fault that you piss me off.
*This means, of course, that there will be some March Fridays the 13th in years where there was no February Friday the 13th. If my figuring is correct, those will be the leap-year Februarys in which the 13th falls on a Thursday.
**If I were to be alive in 2100, I would be 130 years old, which would make me even with the Old Took, and which would be substantially older than any human is known to have lived.
***And ironically, any wishes for the manure to go away would just make things worse!


