Got up this morning and did the dishes, some laundry, gave Charlotte a bath. Several of the animals were commenting on how the dog blankets smelled like Daphne still, Loki was curled up in one for a good while today (he's a cat), but Sweetie gave herself 'a sad' as Mark said, and I gave her a new blanket and we washed the ones that were in front of the heater. I had not felt Daphne was healthy enough to be lifted in and out of the big bathtub the past week - and thus, Charlotte hadn't gotten a bath, either, as we usually did them at the same time. So, she needed one and got it today, while it is still warm enough to not be freezing afterwards. Then I played a few too hours too many of the Sims game that I finally got working again with the update packs on my computer. Not sure how to categorize this, but playing games is one of those upside-down curves for me - it's fun to a point and then well, I know that time could be used better somewhere else and I feel like I've wasted time with nothing to show for it... and the Sims is doubly so on that, because of all of the household tasks the Sims get either annoyed at or happy about finishing... it's kind of like a box within a box effect.
It's mixed feelings - - I'm having a 'fun leisure' day in real life, but using it playing a game, which 'gets nothing done'. I get annoyed that the Sim on my screen is 'making progress' but I have wasted four hours that was supposed to be fun, and maybe it was, maybe it just kept me from doing other things I should have done. Should I have cleaned? Should I have baked? Should I have learned Japanese for an extra hour? It was a bit too easy to do the game for the extended period of time that could have done many things in real life otherwise. The game was lower-energy expenditure than many of those things, but that is only a benefit when I consider something like I could overwork my muscles cleaning or etc. instead of resting. And for being lower-energy, it is almost zero output. And this is why I rarely play games that are more than a few rounds of Tetris or Duolingo. Duolingo IS a game, but I do feel that perhaps I get something out of it that I can bring elsewhere, in translating the languages. Whether or not my Sim learned how to make food without burning their house down is not an accomplishment that transfers much. Mark and I have talked about that is something that was hard on our generation and that the younger generations don't have it as much - we were taught 'if you're having fun, something has to be wrong' and also lots of pressure put on productivity and 'monetizing time and hobbies'.
I did do some Japanese language learning. And I already hurt from 'something' the past few days that I haven't put my finger on. Not sure if it is sitting in my chair wrong playing the game, sleeping in, much grocery-shopping on Friday, climbing the stairs, the rainy weather outside or the postal route coming back at me from yesterday - but my hips definitely hurt today as well. I did the yoga routine two nights in a row but skipped last night because I had already done so much on the postal route. I've stretched a little today, and have climbed the stairs many many times of course, but I told Mark 'It's like I'm getting old'... one definite thing about hyper mobility is that you benefit most from variety of movement. And, counter-intuitively perhaps, repetitive things, even 'sedentary' things like sitting slumped in a chair wrong or tensioning your leg muscles constantly while sitting forward, all of that adds up in weird ways.
The yoga type is 'restorative' or 'vinyasa 'flow'', style - for spine and flexibility.