Thoughts?
Is your body ready?
Well, are you at least comfortable? Sitting down in a comfy chair? Perhaps partaking in a snack or a delicious beverage of your choice? Do you have a cat on your lap? Dog at your feet? Are your stocks coming along swimmingly? Did you remember to have breakfast/lunch/dinner (time zones and all that)?
Scott tossed the note aside. He found an unmarked brown paper bag and opened it. He pulled out two bottles of pills and a box of insulin needles. Setting them aside, he opened the fridge. Sure enough was a small bottle of insulin. It was even the brand prescribed by his doctor. There was also a box of insulin pens to take before meals. Soon the bottle was on the table while Scott opened the box of needles. Filling the syringe, he lifted up his shirt with one hand and injected the insulin
What does this taste like, in your opinion?
I ask because I've never had canned borscht before. I know the homemade version would be better, but our characters are, for the moment, in lockdown and cooked meals aren't exactly on the list of priorities. No, they're not being mistreated, in case you were wondering, just left to get used to each other.
The characterization of Baba Yaga is where much of the uncertainty surrounding her comes from. She varies between acting as a benefactor and a villain, either helping the hero of the Slavic myth or hindering him or her. Though it appears she never goes after anyone unprovoked—that is to say, without the person at least coming to the door of her hut—she appears to follow little or few morals. Nevertheless, whatever promise she makes to the hero after his completion of her tasks, she