Potato and Whitetop
Potato and Whitetop
February 20, 2026 – Turning Into New Corners
We did not go far today, but we went differently.
Roanoke has a way of folding you into routine. Same roads. Same intersections. Same errands. So we made a small decision to push outward, to finally step into a couple of places we had passed for years without entering.
We started with a familiar stop at Dunkin’. Not new, but dependable. I ordered an unsweetened iced tea and stirred in two Equals until it tasted exactly right. We gathered our food, then instead of driving on, we parked for a moment and let it become a late breakfast, even though it was edging closer to 1 pm by then. The clock insisted it was afternoon. Our guts argued otherwise.
There is something quietly indulgent about eating breakfast at 1 pm. No rush. Just sitting there in the car, sunlight slanting through the windshield, wrappers rustling, conversation drifting easily. It felt unstructured in the best way.
Our first true new stop was H.C. Baker Batteries and Electronics. I have driven past it countless times. Inside, it felt like discovering the hidden framework of everyday life. Rows of batteries in every imaginable size. Coiled cables hanging in neat loops. Adapters and connectors arranged with careful logic.
The place carried a sense of capability. It felt grounded and purposeful, like quiet evidence that most small disruptions can be resolved with the right component from the right shelf. We wandered slowly, scanning labels, appreciating the specificity of it all.
From there we went to the American Cancer Society Discovery Shop. The shift was immediate. Softer lighting. The faint scent of fabric and old books. Racks of clothes that had seen other seasons. Shelves of dishes that once belonged to other kitchens and conversations.
Thrift stores always feel like intersections of stories. Objects paused between chapters. We moved through without hurry, picking things up, imagining their past lives, deciding whether they might fit into ours.
What stayed with me most was the sense of expansion. Roanoke felt slightly larger by the end of the afternoon.
Not because we traveled far.
But because we finally stepped into places that had been waiting all along.

King skunk visits
Patchy skunk? A new one?
570017030612
There are faces we remember in games, and then there are voices we live with.
In a world as sprawling and snow swept as The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, players recall dragons, Daedric princes, and jarls with grand speeches. But what lingers longer, strangely, are the ordinary lines. The guards warning you about arrows in knees. The soldiers arguing over ale. The weary watchman pacing the gates at 3 a.m. while snow drifts sideways across torchlight.
These are the voices that make a province feel inhabited.
And many of them belong to actors whose names most players never notice.
In Skyrim, a single voice actor often performs dozens of roles. Budget and design require it, but artistry makes it invisible. The same vocal instrument becomes a Falkreath guard, a Stormcloak foot soldier, a Solitude watchman, or a Markarth city guard hardened by Dwemer stone and Reachman tension.
Scott von Berg
Falkreath Guard / Imperial Soldier / Markarth City Guard / Solitude Guard / Stormcloak Soldier / Windhelm Guard (voice)
On paper, that looks repetitive. In practice, it is world-building.
Each hold in Skyrim carries a different temperament:
A voice actor inhabiting those spaces must shift cadence, weight, and tone without ever announcing the shift. The player cannot think, “Oh, that is the same guy.” The illusion must hold.
When it works, the province breathes.
Critics sometimes joke about recycled guard dialogue. But repetition is not laziness. It is texture.
When a Stormcloak soldier growls a warning at the city gate, it needs to carry regional allegiance. When an Imperial soldier does the same, it must feel disciplined, standardized, perhaps faintly bureaucratic.
The difference lives in subtle choices:
Unnamed voice actors are asked to give personality to lines that may be heard thousands of times. That is not small work. That is endurance work.
The same phenomenon appears across Bethesda titles, including the Fallout series.
In the wastelands of Fallout, guards become settlers. Raiders become Brotherhood patrols. Caravan traders echo with the same performer who once barked orders in Windhelm. A single actor can voice a Vault security officer in one title and a faction grunt in another, shifting tone from medieval steel to retro-futuristic grit.
The connective tissue is not coincidence. It is casting trust.
Actors who can anchor background roles are indispensable in open-world design. They create consistency without drawing attention to themselves. They make the Commonwealth feel populated. They make the Mojave feel dangerous. They make Skyrim feel patrolled.
Scott von Berg’s guard and soldier roles in Skyrim fit squarely into that tradition. The lines may be brief. The characters may be unnamed. But their presence is constant.
And constancy is what makes a world believable.
Players tend to celebrate marquee performances. The villain monologues. The companion arcs. The dragon shouts.
But the emotional scaffolding of a game often rests on background performances:
Without them, cities feel hollow.
When you walk through Solitude and hear boots on stone followed by a curt warning, your brain registers life. Authority. Routine. Stability. That sensation is not rendered by polygons alone. It is carried on breath and microphone technique.
Unnamed voice actors give texture to silence.
Voice acting for multiple guard roles demands:
Unlike film actors, game voice actors often record alone, reacting to lines that will be stitched together months later. Their performances must survive technical implementation, looping, and unpredictable player behavior.
The guard who warns you today might also be the soldier you fight tomorrow. The actor must make both believable.
When players reminisce about Skyrim, they quote the guards. They remember the tone. They smile at the familiarity.
Very few remember the names behind those voices.
Yet performers like Scott von Berg, credited as Falkreath Guard, Imperial Soldier, Markarth City Guard, Solitude Guard, Stormcloak Soldier, and Windhelm Guard, contribute to the sonic architecture of the province. Their work extends into other franchises, including the Fallout series and additional video game titles where similar background roles anchor expansive worlds.
Open-world games rely on spectacle. But they endure because of repetition done well.
The unnamed voice actor is not a footnote. He is the hum of the world. The steady rhythm behind the sword clash. The authority at the gate. The human presence in a digital tundra.
And without that voice, Skyrim would be very, very quiet.
This morning marked a quiet return.
Back to the YMCA after a long holiday hiatus. Long enough that the habit had started to feel theoretical. Long enough that the bathing suit and sweats had been sitting in the corner of my closet like a polite but persistent reminder.
Walking through the doors again felt familiar and slightly humbling. The smell of chlorine drifting out from the pool. The low mechanical rhythm of treadmills in motion. The soft clank of weight stacks settling back into place. None of it had changed. Which, in a strange way, was reassuring.
The holidays have a way of bending routines. Meals get heavier. Evenings get longer. Motivation negotiates for more couch time. And while there is nothing wrong with rest, there is something steadying about returning to motion.
The first few movements felt honest. Muscles remembering what they are supposed to do. Lungs negotiating terms. No personal records were threatened today. That was not the point. The point was simply showing up again.
There is a particular kind of victory in resuming something good after letting it drift. Not dramatic. Not loud. Just a quiet re-alignment. A small promise renewed.
By the time I walked back out into the daylight, there was that familiar post-workout clarity. Not euphoria. Just a sense that the gears had been re-engaged.
Routines wait for us. Sometimes patiently. And today, I went back to meet one of mine.

Today turns a page.
The Year of the Fire Horse arrives with a kind of restless energy. Horse years are said to carry motion, independence, forward momentum. Add fire to that, and it feels less like a quiet candle and more like a forge. Heat that shapes. Heat that transforms.
There is something fitting about that thought. A horse does not idle for long. It moves. It tests fences. It runs because running is what it was built to do. Fire does not apologize for being bright. It simply burns.
I like the symbolism of beginning again under that banner. Not a timid start. Not a cautious shuffle into the months ahead. But a year that invites courage. Initiative. Maybe even a little boldness.
The lunar new year always feels different from January 1. Less about resolutions and more about rhythm. Cycles. A reminder that time does not just march forward in straight lines. It circles back, renews itself, offers another chance to step differently into familiar terrain.
So here is to the Fire Horse. To motion after stillness. To warmth in cold places. To the quiet decision to run toward what matters.
May this year carry strength without recklessness, passion without burnout, and forward motion without losing sight of where we started.
#doodle #lunarnewyear2026 #yearofthefirehorse
Nice palindrome, if nothing else.
Day 20,834, seed 570014142729
Today moved quietly.
Not in a sleepy way. Just steady. Like it knew exactly how much it needed to be and refused to be any more than that.
Somewhere along the way, the calendar and the clock quietly noted a small personal milestone: passing the 500,005th hour. No fanfare, no fireworks, just another tick forward in the long, ongoing accumulation of days, which somehow made it feel even more meaningful.
The morning light came in soft and undecided, the kind that does not commit to drama. No grand sunrise performance. Just a gradual brightening of corners. Coffee tasted like coffee. Floors creaked in familiar places. The small rituals held their shape.
Later on, the grill came to life and the in-laws stopped by, the backyard filling with that familiar mixture of conversation, laughter, and the steady sound of food cooking over open heat. Veggie burgers made their way onto plates, simple and good, the kind of meal that works best when nobody is in a hurry and everyone stays just a little longer than planned.
Outside, the air had that in-between feeling. Not quite winter, not quite spring. The trees stood patient. The birds seemed to be negotiating something among themselves. Even the wind felt measured, as if it had agreed not to make a scene.
Nothing dramatic happened. No sudden revelations. No plot twists.
And that was the gift of it.
Some days arrive like a thunderclap. Others just sit down beside you and keep you company. Today was the second kind. The kind that asks nothing more than attention. Sometimes that is enough.
Web drawing now has wind and a few color mods
I messaged myself someone else’s Epstein story and IG put me on restriction. I can still post and even share stories, but I’m not allowed to message! Yeah, *I’M* the problem! So if you messaged me, I can’t respond for 3 days. Thanks IG for protecting PDFs!

Guess what’s coming?
#doodle #fridaythe13th #thursdaythe12thisthenewfridaythe13th #thursdaythe12th

Kitty is new to me, not sure which of the venison brood came by