In our eyes, a starry night.
Monday, April 20, 2026
A true friend is one soul in two bodies.
Kant says, transcendentalidealism. In Aquinas,we exist apart from bodiesbut only on Thursdayswhen his famous oxflies by the windowwiser at Colognewhere Albertus Magnus,his real name, appointsAquinas to magister studentium,master of students. Aquinasis petrified but says yes.He feels his soulsailing out of his headfloating near the roofwhere a blue ox wings by.On Wednesday, two bodiesare one soulwaking at sunrisethanks to the pineal glandof Descartes, who thinksthis node in the brainis a tiny sugar coneor salted peanut,the seat of the soulwhile Aristotle pointsto the choppingax as a teleologyas if the ax were a living,breathing personwhich it isn’t.Heraclitus, air and firewhile Aquinas objects, nonot an ax but ox.If you’re a bird or soulI am only one milefrom the sea. If youare a soul in two bodieslife is more complexand we must labortwice the field of sorrowafter sleep, bath, and a glassas Aquinas whispers, the thingswe love tell us who we are.
Karen An-hwei Lee.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Won’t You Come Out Tonight?
So, we'll go no more a rovingSo late into the night,Though the heart be still as loving,And the moon be still as bright.For the sword outwears its sheath,And the soul wears out the breast,And the heart must pause to breathe,And love itself have rest.Though the night was made for loving,And the day returns too soon,Yet we'll go no more a rovingBy the light of the moon.
Lord Byron.
Low-energy Sunday
Voyager 1 has shut off another scientific instrument to keep power margins available. The Low Energy Charged Particle detector was observing ions, now the only powered instruments are the plasma wave and magnetic field instruments.https://t.co/zeyccvf9gO
— Scott Manley (@DJSnM) April 18, 2026
Not even the Energizer Bunny has legs like this:
On April 17, engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California sent commands to shut down an instrument aboard Voyager 1 called the Low-energy Charged Particles experiment, or LECP. The nuclear-powered spacecraft is running low on power, and turning off the LECP is considered the best way to keep humanity’s first interstellar explorer going.
The LECP has been operating almost without interruption since Voyager 1 launched in 1977 — almost 49 years. It measures low-energy charged particles, including ions, electrons, and cosmic rays originating from our solar system and galaxy. The instrument has provided critical data about the structure of the interstellar medium, detecting pressure fronts and regions of varying particle density in the space beyond our heliosphere. The twin Voyagers are the only spacecraft that are far enough from Earth to provide this information.
I just hope they don't end up having to turn off the toilet.
<exits singing, Man, it's happenin'>
Saturday, April 18, 2026
All the Boys and Girls Now
Joy:
Transfixed on paper the butterfly thought
Blinks on a pin: All is well.Some delusions are foolish, distraught
Attempts to reduce their stormy swell
And tumult prove, yet keeping track
Of how they go, one soon can tell
Which to follow, which put back.And once determined, the results may fill
A page, a pedestal, or room,
Resounding like a cathedral bell
Which shakes the building with its boom
And booms to heaven: All is well!
Emma Swan.
In Space, No One Can Hear You Flush
Beautiful view of the constellation Urion: pic.twitter.com/dmQ0TT7aeD
— NTodd - Antifa IT Support 🇺🇦🐸 (@ntoddpax) April 5, 2026
Peepee1 in spaaaaace! As for the naming convention, that's courtesy of Jolly Wally:
Tom and I snapped color photographs of the molecular cloud...I had them on the table during an astronomy debriefing, mixed with other celestial photos. Dr. Gill noticed one and asked, "Wally, what constellation is this?'
— NTodd - Antifa IT Support 🇺🇦🐸 (@ntoddpax) April 4, 2026
"Jocelyn,", I replied, "that's the constellation Urion."
Anyway, nobody needs to be mean to the heavenly potty:
Artemis 2's space toilet doesn't deserve the bad press it's gotten over the past two weeks, according to mission commander Reid Wiseman.
Wiseman took some time to defend Artemis 2's lunar loo on Thursday (April 16), during a press conference at which the mission's four crewmates — fellow NASA astronauts Victor Glover and Christina Koch and the Canadian Space Agency's Jeremy Hansen — discussed their historic mission.
"I just want to say, 100% point blank: That was a wonderful toilet," Wiseman said. "The toilet worked great."
As you probably already know, there were some waste-disposal issues on Artemis 2, the first crewed mission to the moon since Apollo 17 in 1972. But, Wiseman stressed, the blame doesn't lie with the toilet itself, which is a more compact version of the loo that flies on the International Space Station.
"The toilet flushed just fine, but then when the liquid went out the bottom of the toilet, it got clogged up in our vent line," he said.
That vent line carried urine from the toilet to the hull of Artemis 2's Orion capsule, named "Integrity." From there it was expelled into space, creating quite a spectacle.
"I mean, that is an interesting thing to see out the window," Wiseman said. "It's just like a billion little tiny flecks of ice heading out into deep space."
I would hate the idea of needing to keep track of how many "urination events" had occurred, but it's still way better than what they had on Apollo, as illustrated by the Recommendations to Improve Crew Health and Performance for Future Exploration Missions and Lunar Surface Operations report:
Issue: Waste Management
Description: a) Requires approximately 45 minutes from start to end in case there are any problems b) Fecal cannister would be helpful
Comments: BM Log: For defecation the crew had to strip the underwear off, requiring the biomed sensors to be removed...
Questions: Fecal bag recommendation : Calibrations of "crew member anus with respect to the front of the sticky part"?
The bottom line, as it were: "Crew preferred to strip naked to move bowels."
In conclusion: I'll never forget my old dad when these things would happen to him...the things he'd say to me.
1 - I was a bit cornfused about the potty situ at the time, but it really was urine, as the above article discusses. It was all a matter of liquid waste volume/available capacity.
They Walk Ahead Into the Darkness, and They Do Not Come Back
Thinking about complicity, bringing back this classic:





