Back at it, eating up what I find outchea, trying to beat the heat but bracing for the chill when it runs down my spine at my desk or in my car on the way home. I’m getting a sense of the tides in the affairs, and what that means for what I’m doing. Setting intentions? Yup, woo-woo but necessary.

Fresh baked doughnuts on a wire metal tray, just out of the fryer and cooling and draining, after a person wearing a red apron puts them there.

I tried to make something happen, thinking I could just about thread the needle while racing traffic and the clock. Thanks to willingness to settle for at least one needle, curiosity and overheard kindness, I wound up threading two. I sure hope the folks who looked out for me get to thread theirs.

Two signs sit next to a Kaiser Permanente parking lot at 325 Harbour Way in Richmond, California. One sign mounted to a pole says patient parking only and no employee parking. The other is a sandwich board sign next to it offering flu and COVID-19 vaccines in English, Spanish and Mandarin Chinese on Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and saying they will be open during lunch.

An oddly musical day, but who knew how odd: smooth-jazz versions of Nineties quiet-storm R&B riding to the festival, where an official unofficial after-party flyer caught my eye. After the acts onstage in the park came a bus-ride tip from an unquotable and an algorithmic UK drum-and-bass serve.

A flyer pinned to a telephone pole on 30th Avenue north of Fulton Street advertises the official unofficial Hardly Strictly Bluegrass festival after-party concert with a three-day lineup of bands at the Plough & Stars club on Clement Street.