LJ Idol Week One - Quality

Jun. 20th, 2025 04:40 pm
erulissedances: US and Ukrainian Flags (Default)
[personal profile] erulissedances
 

QUALITY

Erulisse (one L) - LJ Idol 6/20/25

 

"We are people of QUALITY," Grandmother said through her high-lifted nose and piercingly direct eyes. "A person of QUALITY never makes assumptions about another. We look carefully at everything about that person, and base our judgment of them upon that examination. For instance, Mistress Bedvidere, who thinks she is "all that," and who supposedly has been invited to have tea with the King, cannot put a proper dinner party together. She doesn’t even own enough place settings for a full table, and …  AND, her houseman is also employed as her groom."

 

My ears had shut down at the first uttering of the word "QUALITY". I stole a quick glance towards the dial of the ponderous Grandfather clock in the corner. *Sigh* Less than five minutes had passed between my last glance and this one. I continued to sit with well-mannered docility, ankles crossed, feet positioned slightly beneath me, and my hands in my lap. My demure posture only acted as camouflage for the rebellious teenaged girl that I was, and I was angry.

 

I felt as though I had been abandoned. I thought I should be with my parents, on board a ship heading to India. Pater had been awarded a governmental position in Mumbai, and Mater, of course, was accompanying him. They both were reluctant to bring me along at this time. My Mother's exact words were, “Your health has always been fragile, and we simply cannot protect you from all of the various diseases that run rampant among the unwashed pagans. No, you will stay with your Grandmother, here in England. If we can, we might summon you later." After a bit of correspondence, I was escorted to my Grandmother’s country estate to stay with her until my parents returned. Since letters between India and England came by sea and it was a dreadfully long distance, I expected to hear from my parents only once or twice a year at best.  

 

I rather liked Grandmamma (although I would NEVER dare to call her that). She had been a highly popular debutante in her day and had married well. Her husband had the poor taste to become lunch for the lion he was hunting, but since they were childless, the lion's hunger left her solely in charge of both the household and Grandpapa's business.

 

“A woman in charge of a business?”, you might ask. "It really isn't done in houses of QUALITY, after all." I can hear her voice stating the words as fact, as incontrovertible as the gospel that Reverend Banner spouted every Sunday in our old, rather drafty church. But Grandmama practiced specific blindness in some aspects of her life, and running the business was one of those areas.

 

Grandpapa's business was distilling liquor. Specifically, a highly regarded limited batch brewery for fine, Scotch whiskey. He wasn't Scottish, but his father (my Great Grandfather) had married a Highlands lass who had borne him two children before succumbing to our cold winters and wet summers. My Great Grandfather’s son, my Grandpapa, inherited the distillery. He had three children, and his middle child was my mother, Fiona. The eldest son, Cormac had died in a far-off land defending King and Country, and the younger brother Angus was simply unsuited for the pursuit of business. He was an artist with his head in the clouds. An accounts ledger was a mere curiosity to him.

 

My Grandmother was no fool. She saw the faults in her children (she was not shy about pointing them out to each child as well). In her mind, everything came down to "QUALITY", (which in her mouth was always capitalized). A gentleman or a lady must be of good QUALITY. Any acquaintance at the schoolyard must be of QUALITY. Most people in our area viewed her as formidable and they made no comment about her stepping into the distillery business when her husband died.

 

By the time I hit my majority, I was almost friendless, thanks to Grandmama. I had several dozen acquaintances through school and church, but no true friends. Grandmama made sure I understood QUALITY, however. She made sure that I radiated QUALITY from every pore. If the boys didn’t rally around me, vying for my attention, they had no QUALITY. If the girls, gathered at the far end of the school grounds, always scattered into various directions when I appeared, they were blind to my QUALITY. I stiffened my already ramrod-straight back a bit more when things like this occurred, but buried deep inside me, hidden from everyone, was a desire I held secret. More than anything else, I wanted to be accepted for me.

 

It was approaching the time for my “Introduction to Society” as Grandmother said in ponderous tones. I dreaded “the Season”. I had no desire to be "introduced" to marriageable men whose only positive aspect was their bank balance. I loathed “Society” with everything that I had. But, dresses had been made and packed, and the London house had been cleaned from top to bottom, waiting for us to arrive and begin the battle.

 

The “battle”? Such was my perception. I was going to be introduced to people who were of the proper QUALITY to merit being joined to the granddaughter of a renowned brewer; and I was expected to come out of the Season with a proper marriage proposal that would enrich our family’s bank accounts and push me up a rung or two in societal perceived QUALITY.

 

Of course, a brewer is middle class – working class in some cases. Beer isn’t as upper class as wine. But Grandmama’s Scotch Whiskey was highly prized and even (or so the whispers went) preferred by His Majesty! (Of course, we had no proof of that, but the mere whisper of Royal patronage was enough to double our sales from the prior year.) Grandmama exploited that Royal link and built the brand name, while also keeping a tight eye on the brewery itself to keep that QUALITY intact. She might have made a miserable Grandmother – at least, she wasn’t the doting, kind, woman who would provide hugs and dry tears while cleaning scraped knees. She was, however, an outstanding businesswoman, and obtaining Royal Patronage would be an excellent push for the brewery’s fame and fortunes.

 

The household moved to London for “The Season”. Dresses were made, calling cards were printed, and we dove into the myriad of events with both feet. Every day was filled with going here or there to be seen with the “proper” people of  QUALITY. I drank countless cups of weak tea and chatted with brainless girls who only hoped for a good match to assure their future. My evenings were spent dancing on the ballroom floors of various socialites, minor Royalty or well-known sponsors. The men, actually boys in most instances, knew how to ask for a dance, and even knew the steps of the dance, but if they understood commerce or what makes a Quality Scotch Whiskey, they didn’t let me know.

 

Grandmother had done her research, however. There were several good breweries with eligible single young men who had received Royal Warrants in the past. A Royal Warrant, of course, was physical proof of QUALITY. Our own brewery had been awarded several Royal Warrants in the past forty years. A Royal Warrant was an important marketing asset and almost guaranteed a larger sales total at the end of the year. Ladies of QUALITY may not concern themselves with commerce, but in our family, it was the women or nothing. The men were off doing manly things – fighting in wars or expanding the Empire. The women ran everything from behind the figurehead of the Warehouse Manager.

 

I was introduced to several suitable young men who would be assets to the brewery, and Grandmother was certain to point each one out to me on our morning strolls, and again when we would see them at the various dances and balls in houses of undisputed QUALITY. Grandmother was in her element, an acknowledged asset to the finances of any household whose fortunes may have seen better days. I was told which young men to try to meet, and at breakfast the next morning, Grandmother would dissect my performance of the prior night.

 

It was during one of these examinations of what I had done right and what I had not, that our butler came in with a calling card. Beautifully printed, it said merely “John Begg”. My Grandmother nodded to show him in and ordered tea immediately. When Mr. Begg entered the drawing room, my heart skipped a beat. I had noticed him at one or two of the Season’s balls. He was well built and a good dancer. We hadn’t spent any real time together, but he seemed to always be in my general vicinity. We spent a lovely afternoon in the drawing room and wandering through the gardens in the courtyard area. There was no subject matter he could not discuss thoroughly, and his interests mirrored my own in many ways. When he asked my permission to call upon me again, I quickly said “Yes”.

 

That “Yes” grew into more outings and a trip to view his brewery later in the year. Even Grandmama was impressed with the Royal Warrant so prominently displayed in their front foyer. John and I, meanwhile, had an opportunity to learn about each other and, by the end of the year, he had requested my hand in marriage.

 

So, that’s how I married a Scotsman who was involved in the “family” business. Our brewery worked hard to keep its’ Royal Warrant, and indeed, it still has that warrant today. John and I had five children together, some of whom joined the business either at the John Begg distillery, or at Grandmother’s original distillery in England.

 

Eventually, as must happen, Grandmother died. My parents were long gone – they had died in India from a tropical disease no more than six years after they had left England. However, I am surrounded by children and grandchildren, and the John Begg distillery has never missed being awarded a Royal Warrant every year of operation. Now THAT’S QUALITY!

 

A Commemorative Event

Jun. 20th, 2025 02:31 pm
muchtooarrogant: (Default)
[personal profile] muchtooarrogant
LJI Week 1: Quality
June 15 marked the ten year anniversary of working for my current employer. This was both gratifying and slightly amusing to me because of a comment made by one of my former coworkers when I left my previous job.

"An accessibility job for a large mainstream company?" they reportedly scoffed. "That'll probably only last a year, if that long."

Hello, still here!

Oh, don't get me wrong, it's definitely been a bumpy ride at times. Our team has always been that troublesome puzzle piece that company leadership wasn't quite sure where or how to slot into their operations. It was a bit like being part of a jigsaw puzzle where the assembler could change a piece's location, but also its size, and shape, and name, and overall purpose. And, don't let the default past tense of storytelling fool you, they're still at it!

The disadvantages to being that puzzle piece are obvious, but believe it or not, there were advantages too. For example, it meant I did the routine stuff like reviewing content to identify accessibility issues, but also worked with developers to design feature enhancements so that the content was easier to understand and navigate. Myself and other colleagues were encouraged to share our knowledge by responding to calls for papers at national conferences, and if we were accepted, got to travel to the conference and present are findings. Without a doubt though, customer research was one of the most interesting activities I got to participate in.

Of course, ten years ago, I didn't know anything about research or usability studies seeking customer feedback. When I was asked to help out with our first study, I sorta figured, you put together a prototype, showed it to the customer, let them play with it for a bit, and then asked a few questions. Easy-peasy! Yeah, not so much.

  • What are the research questions your study is trying to answer?

  • What prototypes or study materials will be shown to each participant?

  • Is there enough time to prepare the prototypes/study materials before the study is scheduled to begin?

  • Will participants need to sign nondisclosure agreements in order to view the prototypes/study materials, and has legal approved the language for those agreements?

  • Do you plan to compensate participants? If so, how much will each participant receive? Have you secured funding for the compensations, and if so, for how many participants?

  • Where will the study sessions take place, and is there a fee to use that space?

  • How much time will be allotted for each session?

  • How do you plan to recruit participants for the study?

  • Will any study participants be less than 18 years of age? If so, have you written a parent/guardian consent form? Has legal approved the consent form language?


You know that old Star Trek joke about the different management styles of captain Kirk verses Captain Picard? With Kirk, the strategy with a planet was beam down and poke any aliens with a stick, and if it was another ship, "Fire phasers!" Picard's strategy, no matter what was in the offing? "Lets hold a meeting."

Yup, you guessed it, I was on Picard's ship. So many meetings!

If you're reading the list of logistics above and thinking to yourself, "Dude, where's the fun?" I don't blame you. The answer was, in the beginning, I didn't have to worry about most of that stuff. I got to bounce potential research questions around with other team members, and then, once we had nailed down what we were trying to discover, I helped write the research protocol. The protocol was important because when you're conducting a usability study seeking feedback, the golden rule you're supposed to follow is to not bias the participants. The prototypes or study materials should be evaluated the same way by every participant, and one of the ways to ensure that consistency was to write a script that would be read in every session.

Now, what about the prototypes or study materials? Should you show those to participants in the same order every time as well? If you're like me and said, "Yes," I regret to inform you that you're wrong.

Think about it this way. You're participating in a research study lasting an hour and a half and looking at three different prototypes for the researchers. By the time you reach the third prototype, the likelihood is that you're going to be getting tired and imagining how nice it will be when the session's over and they stop asking you questions. If I always presented the prototypes in the same order, prototype number three would probably get a pretty raw deal. So, as researchers you counterbalance or change the order of items being evaluated.

Yes, it was a lot to keep track of, and it did get just a bit tedious reading the same script to six or eight participants every day during the study, but the payoff was being able to meet and speak with people with no filters in-between you and their opinions. The hard part, if you can believe it in this age of social media where people seem compelled to find fault with every little thing, was convincing participants to answer honestly and in depth. "We want to know what you like and what you don't like about each prototype, and you won't hurt our feelings in any way by telling us what you think about them."

There were typically three or four of us in the room with a study participant, one person reading the script and asking questions, and the others observing reactions and taking notes. We encouraged participants to "talk through" their experience while exploring a prototype, and I imagine they sometimes may have felt as though they were under a microscope. If they had a pensive expression or made an unhappy noise, one of us would invariably say, "Could you please share with us what you're thinking right now?"

It was time consuming, and exhausting, and while a study was going on, we'd barely had time to grab a meal in-between sessions. Is it weird if I say I miss the experience?

The last study I participated in was during the summer of 2022 at a conference in New Orleans, just after the July 4th holiday. We all wore masks during each session because COVID was very much still a thing. While venturing out for a late dinner one evening, a coworker accidently led me into a hole in a New Orleans sidewalk. Before the conference was over, we had to push the abort button and head home because everyone on the research team, except me, caught COVID. And finally, when I did arrive home, I decided to self-quarantine in a hotel for a few days, just in case I might still be a carrier of the dreaded virus.

Yeah, even with all of that, I still miss conducting research studies.

Dan

Wheel of Chaos - Wk 1 - Quality

Jun. 20th, 2025 07:25 am
bleodswean: (Default)
[personal profile] bleodswean
He’d been sick for a week. Summer cold they called it when he was a boy, but he didn’t think it was hay fever. What would he have been allergic to? Mold and dust? They’d mucked out the barn late, a mid-spring chore but time had wandered away from them and it was nearer to summer. The horses had already been turned out into the lower forty, hock deep in an abundance of growth and greenery, noses hidden in carpets of bluebells.

The barn took the both of them two days and just after that he’d fallen ill. Sick as the proverbial dog. Racking coughs, lungs that sounded like cedar being kindled. She was fine as houses, and they hadn’t been to town nor had a customer up from town for the mill. But he couldn’t breathe. Literally, figuratively, the physicality of inhalation and exhalation becoming an emotional toil. His lungs didn’t hurt; they were just not working the way they’d worked for the entirety of his life. She’d teased him good and hard about it. He was two decades her senior and he allowed the ribbing, deciding it was a good-natured lambast, but alone thought slantways about the distance measured by an ageing body and knew at sixty-eight he was old and at forty-seven she was not. Or not near as.

But he didn’t couldn’t spell out in words the extent of what he was experiencing. Later realizing not telling her was fear borne from a deep childlike belief that he could possibly jinx the very ability of his body to keep him bodied, ensouled. He tamped down his symptoms, dismissed the idea of going into the clinic. Waved away even a hint of diagnostic concern.

Naming a thing doesn’t always give the namer power. Some things acquire a name, and the power becomes all theirs, monstrous, overbearing, overarching, made real and whole.

The first sense of hardening, something lodged, something stiff inside his chest had woken him out of an already bad sleep and came at him with an existential dread so fathomless that he knew in those darkly pre-dawn hours that God had reached inside his body and touched the unseen organs toiling in their mysterious viscera at keeping him earthside. He knew he had been beckoned, felt that finger quirk within the twinned grey lobes, filters of the very air itself. A whisper come home son.

But he didn’t. Heed the call, respond. In another aeon without medical choices he would have acquiesced, quickly bent a knee to such a godly mandate, and within the year dutifully laid his stoved-up body down and not gotten himself back up again. He was astonished at how his corporeal self, pavlovian began to slaver at the command of fate.

It was hard work, to flee, to turn away from the lure of the abyss, the echo coming back emptied of his pleas, hauling great mouthfuls of air into his hardened lungs, willing them to soften beneath his will, to generate as though it were an act he understood or had any sort of control over oxygenated blood. His mind committed to a marathon, but he learned the body does not work that way.

Acquiescence. An exam, then labs, then quiet pronouncements from white coated analyzers.

ILD. Interstitial Lung Disease. There came the naming, the christening he’d gone to such extremes avoiding. He did not feel empowered. Identification did not lead to compartmentalization. The panic of it made it more difficult to breathe.

Accusations or recriminations were never part of the conversation in the sterile examination rooms. Neither courtroom nor pulpit. Regrets only his. All their probing and prodding, questions and answers.

But. Had he done this to himself?

Cemented his own lungs? The bronchus, bronchioles solidified inside the yeasty lobes. The deflated sacs, gummed closed. He wasn’t a smoker, leaf or grass. No childhood asthma, no rheumatoid arthritis. His heart was steady, his arteries clear. Occupational dust or fibers.

Years at the sawmill, whittling a figure of a man close to earth, organic and respectful of the mighty conifers, the broad-leafed hardwoods. Riven down to the heartwood, the splitting and the milling. The board feet of his daily grind, the blades, the growing mounds of sawdust, the smells and soils of a hard day’s work. The labor of the felling and the bucking, the chain dragging, and the ripping. The packaging, boards and stickers, and the redolent incense. The perfume of his own wood lot, his own lumber yard. It lined the inside of his sinuses, and he relished it. Tasted it on his tongue, scraped it out between his molars.

Fibrosis, necrosis, pyrosis.

One year. Into the second wearing oxygen but his strength was sapped. His vision swimmy, his ears ringing with the labors of his breathing.

Double lung transplant.

Now that was a thing to give a body the shakes. He quivered like a strung bow as charts and diagrams were shown, then the contractual agreement and he wanted to make a dark joke but could read the room. These men did not see themselves on a side other than that of a clinical, mathematical God. This for that. One life for another. Interchangeable beneath the skin that pretends a difference between one or the other. All scientific progress and supposed presupposed human gain. He signed and jested silently, inside his head about blood and souls bartered for a bit more of this and a lot more of that.

The waiting and the worsening. The dizziness brought on both by his body and his thoughts.

The loneliness ached him more than the faltered breath, the straining ribcage, the sinking realization, the bartered understanding. She tried to comfort or strengthen him up by relating the stories of her two births. It’s like birth, she said. It’s entering a room in which there is only one exit. He could not grasp the concept. For him the room was not a room, but a box fitted to the width and breadth of his shoulders, the length of his skeleton head to toe.

After after afterwards. Sitting wrapped in a blanket he’d pilfered from the months’ long stay at rehab on a rocker on the deck he had built when a younger man a different man a man breathing through his own lungs staring out across the land he owned had bought for her wanting not just one thing but all the things for her for her for them such a short allowance we are given he measured the length of a thing against the weight of a thing and wondered. And could simply not decide.

roina_arwen: Darcy wearing glasses, smiling shyly (Default)
[personal profile] roina_arwen
For the past year and a half, in my spare time I have been employed by a small-but-mighty press as one of their copy editors. To date, I have edited about forty short stories (there are approximately ten stories per anthology) plus three juvenile boys adventure novels. This is work that I very much enjoy doing. My husband likes to say that I’ve been editing him for thirty years, and his writing for two.

He’s not wrong. To our credit, he has had over fifteen short stories published within that timeframe.

Copy editing is something I was born to do. Like it or not, I’m the sort that tends to notice every stinkin’ typo in every email I receive. I’m nice enough not to point them out, of course, but they do make me cringe a little. Don’t get me wrong, I’m sure I often type too fast and make errors of my own, but I do try to at least read what I’ve typed before hitting send, so I will catch most of my typos a majority of the time.

In addition to checking stories for the obvious spelling errors, typos, and grammar, I will also notice correctly spelled words that are, in point of fact, incorrect. One of the most memorable that I caught was for an anthology with a coffee theme. The author of the story meant to write that the character steepled his fingers. What he actually typed was that he steeped his fingers. Ouch!!

Another error that I found more recently in one of the novels was with a youthful spaceship captain who was speaking with one of his passengers. She inquired what sort of dangers he had to face in interstellar space. The author wrote something to the gist of “it was barely above zero out there.” Uh, no. Buzzz! What he should have said, and what I edited in, was that “it was barely above absolute zero out there.” That’s a HUGE difference, since absolute zero is -459.67 degrees Fahrenheit!

A good copy editor cares—or at least, should care—as much about correct spelling and proper punctuation as they do about making sure the author’s voice and story are clear. Mistakes affect the clarity of the work, as well as being a distraction to the reader, and that impacts the overall quality.

Don’t get me wrong—all the stories and novels that I’ve worked on have been quality works to start with, or they wouldn’t have been selected for publication. My job is to ensure that nothing distracts the reader from enjoying the highest quality possible. I hope I’ve succeeded.

Thanks for reading!

The Wheelhouse - Week 1 - Day 5

Jun. 18th, 2025 09:36 pm
clauderainsrm: (Default)
[personal profile] clauderainsrm posting in [community profile] therealljidol
 The deadline for sign ups AND for people to get their entry in are Saturday! So if you know anyone dragging their feet on either of those things, now would be the time to kick them!  

Sign Up:  therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1182845.html

W
eek 1 Prompt: therealljidol.dreamwidth.org/1184469.html

*
**

How is everyone doing with the first prompt?  I haven't heard too much crying, but that could just be because I've long since learned to tune out your suffering!  ;) 

Page generated Jul. 3rd, 2025 12:10 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios