It’s Friday, and this week I can be thankful therefor, because I do not work tomorrow. The office will be closed (and locked) on Saturday. Only those who have keys and the alarm code and some other reason for being there would be there (I suppose someone could break in, but there are cameras and alarms in place, and there is nothing of any significant net value, i.e., value worth risking the alarms and cameras to reach, inside).
Next Friday won’t be as good from a strictly work/not work point of view, but at least it will be Friday the 13th again, for the second month in a row. Then we will have to wait an average* of 7 years for it to happen that way again.
***
Okay, I guess I’ve always known that I’m weird, but I just wrote a series of footnotes about Friday the 13th and year lengths and lengths of weekly cycle recurrences that dwarfed what I had yet written in the main body of this post. I think I’m probably the only being in the universe that would write about such things and imagine that anyone else would be interested.
Yeah, definitely weird.
Still, I guess that sort of thing just happens when you talk to yourself in print and share it with any interested parties who might stumble upon it. Also, when one is without companions or interactions one can, like Melkor, develop thoughts and thought patterns that are unlike those of one’s brethren.
I suppose that can sometimes be a good thing, though it can also sometimes be a very bad thing (rarely as bad as in the fictional Melkor case). Though all improvement is change, most change is not an improvement‒at least not if it’s not deliberate and directed change. So if one develops thoughts that are significantly divergent from those of all of one’s peers, odds are that they will not be a net improvement over most of the peer-born thoughts.
I have, of course, mitigated against this somewhat by reading a lot (and consuming other media that deal with science and mathematics and philosophy and such, as well as comedy panel shows). That’s not randomly chosen reading, either; it’s carefully chosen reading. I think this has helped improve the general content and tendencies of my thought, because I’ve influenced myself with the carefully thought-out thoughts of very bright people.
I suppose, though, that if one can read what one wants and does so, one is not really isolated from all other thoughts, so one’s own cannot be too very different, or at least are not very likely to be. That’s good, I think. Simply developing new thoughts without much input from others would be most likely to lead to some sort of feral state or something akin to schizophrenia.
So, I guess it can be good to take tangents in one’s thinking, as long as they are not too many and too extreme. But even given that, it’s clearly useful to have someone to rein one in, if one can, when one goes too far off the rails (yes, that’s a bad metaphor, since a train going off the rails at all is in huge trouble, rails representing a near-binary situation‒if one is a train and one is not on the rails completely, one has experienced a failure of locomotion).
Well, I guess that’s that for this week. Actually, I suppose that is always that, by some principle of identity or self-reflection or something; I’m sure there’s an “official” name. “It is what it is” as they say. What I mean, though, is that I am drawing this post, and this week of posts, to a close now.
I hope you have a very good weekend.
After that I don’t give a shit.
(I’m kidding.)
*I know, I know, we won’t have to wait an average number of anything. There is a specific and exact number of years before the next time February and March have Fridays the 13th, but I cannot be arsed to work it out just now**.
**Okay, well, since I am unable to keep myself from thinking about it at least a little, I think it’s going to be 6 years from now. That’s because each regular year is 1 day longer than a multiple of a week: 365/7 is 52 with a remainder of 1, so one day longer than an even number of weekdays. So next February should have the 13th on a Saturday, then a Sunday the following year, but then on a Tuesday the year after that because of the leap year (366/7 is 52 with remainder 2). Then it will be Wednesday, then Thursday, then Friday. So 6 years, if my figuring is correct***.
***If it seems counterintuitive that it’s 6 years when the average should be 7, remember that while in this case the leap year makes the next instance come faster, there will be occasional years when Thursday the 13th falls on a leap year and the following year will go straight to Saturday the 13th, the first of another six years (I think) that will be needed for the subsequent Friday the 13th in February. In any case, 6 plus (6 x ⅙) equals 7, as does 6 + (a x 1/a) no matter what a is****.
****This doesn’t factor in those leap years in which February has a Friday the 13th, but March will not. That may change the overall calculations somewhat regarding the average time between dual Fridays the 13th, but not the calculations about when the next one will be.

Isn’t Melkor/Morgoth basically just Lucifer with a different name? Discuss.
He definitely is. But his story is rather more subtle and interesting than the boring version one normally encounters in Xtian mythology. I consider him a tragic figure, failed by Iluvatar (or perhaps deliberately engineered by Eru to do what he does, as is implied in his own rebuke of Melkor, when he says that nothing Melkor, or anyone else, does has its origin anywhere but in Eru/Iluvatar).
I see. I think Milton’s Satan was also similarly tragic, right? But of course that’s not canonical scripture.
Milton’s Satan is the OG of making a villain charismatic and at least somewhat sensibly motivated. It’s amazing. He definitely influenced Tolkien, but Melkor/Morgoth is less “heroic” seeming. Milton’s Satan is more reminiscent of Khan–or, well, the other way around, I guess.
Interesting thoughts on thinking, social isolation, ways to ward it off. Feral, maybe. Schizophrenic, definitely not. I was born on the 13th. Alas, it was a Sunday.
But some years it will be a Friday! ^_^