While I understand the need to keep websites up to date with the times and fashions, and also understand (though don't necessarily agree) that people want their businesses to constantly grow (tends to be disastrous if it was built for a niche audience though, as the philosophy will eventually eliminate the niche and make it be more like everything else that's popular in order to attract more people) -- the new site layout mostly sucks, and it's hard to read from a computer. (I understand it was developed entirely for use by cellphone.)
Not a great deal happening here... I might have accidentally given myself a tattoo by way of slicing my finger while cutting a piece of incense charcoal. The charcoal powder was impossible to thoroughly wash out of the cut, so the black mark might be there a while. I was getting a lot of injuries in a short timespan, so I decided to burn an Uncrossing candle just to be safe. The wax melted to form the letters POA (or possibly PDA.) I don't think I know anyone with those initials so no idea what it means.
I invented some very good freckle removers. I'm kind of proud of them -- unfortunately, the stuff goes bad quickly, and the one that works best would be illegal to sell (it's about 1/8 tsp hydroquinone in 1/4 ounce of rubbing alcohol. Fast acting but not very good for your skin.) The other one is legal to sell and my dad is trying to encourage me to make it and market it, but I'm not feeling like it will be a success. Plus I'd need to get some liability insurance since I know from my own experiments it's fairly easy to give yourself chemical burns with it. It's a fucking fast-acting skin bleach, you know? It does that part effectively, but I've seen Amazon product reviews and know folks kind of don't like things that are hideously irritating to the skin.
Business isn't going well, as usual. Not nearly enough customers and the few I do get drive me insane. I think I may have to just get rid of the Lucky Temple site. I'm not thinking of anything more that can bring me the happy balance of steady customers and cooperation from them without gambling on a great big website redesign -- and given how just risking $50 on AdWords never pays off, it would be ill-advised.