Five glorious hours of normal hearing on the plane. As soon as we start descending, plugs right back up. Thanks, ear!
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Writing Journal
Originally written on 02 January 2016
Picking a new title for Too Dimensional
Why does the old title bug me?
- Too sci-fi, not enough fantasy
- Relates to story mechanic, rather than the story itself.
- Nikki would say I dislike it because she came up with it.
- Doesn’t feel linked to the story.
Opening conflict – Coll being tortured by “Adam” and demon in his dreams.
Next layer out – Coll telling Julia about it.
Next layer out – Coll isn’t the only one, some of his friends are involved in the Weird Shit, too.
From Julia’s POV, this is supposed to be a paranormal mystery story.
From Adam’s POV, this is a superhero/antihero genesis story.
From Coll’s POV, this is a horror story.
From Zeke and Grace’s POV, this is the beginning of an adventure story.
From Seth’s POV, this is a paranormal romance(?) story.
Central conflict – Adam vs. Self
Secondary conflict – Adam vs. Walter
Many Aspects / Many Facets / Tunnel of Mirrors / Supporting Cast / Story Crafters / Regenesis / Neogenesis / Rebirth / Lost Story Found
Heart of the story – growth through suffering (? Really?)
Heart of the metastory – discovery
The two lines above were from 26 July 2014, and having just re-read the whole thing, I have to disagree. Not with the metastory, that still feels accurate. But the heart of this story, something I remember insisting was true to Emma in that Biggby’s, falls flat to me now.
None of the characters, except for maybe Seth, do any real growth due to suffering. The heart of this story is Adam’s awakening. In later stories, the focus and the heart will be in those around Adam, in this story he is as much catalyst as catalyzed.
Editor’s Note – I ended up going with What No Eye Has Seen, rather than Lost Story Found.
Ow.
This morning I am painfully reminded of how many things I use my non-dominant middle finger for.
Sliced it open last night cutting ciabatta bread for homemade pizza. Right through the nail, too. Luckily, urgent care was able to glue it rather than stitch it.
Even as I approach 40 years old, I’m still gleeful for the excuse to stick up my middle finger. :)
San Francisco Wanderings
I’ve updated my Flickr gallery with the photos I took on my last trip out west.
I’ve also been updating my Morning Walk gallery almost every time I’ve gotten out and about:
Take a look, if you’re so inclined.
Better late than never.
On Fashion
First off, I’d like to thank Jim C. Hines for getting my mind cranking on this topic. His post here echoes my recent glasses shopping experience nearly exactly. (Go ahead and read it. I’ll wait.) While the similarity is a little creepy, it’s really good to know that others are out there having similar experiences.
Instead of taking the gray man approach when the inevitable nerd shaming began as a child, I made an effort to completely change my wardrobe and be “cool”. I remember seeing it as a fun challenge, and so I picked out all kinds of new clothes and got a new haircut. Remember those bright pastels that were out in the late eighties? Remember spike haircuts? My fashion experiment would be described by today’s anthropologists (by which I mean internet denizens) as an epic fail. Whoo boy, there are some school pictures that should be burned, if they haven’t been already.
After that, I abandoned wearing what other kids wanted me to wear (it’d never be right anyway), or what my parents wanted me to wear, and decided to wear what I liked. Lots of dark colors. Black dockers. Black dress shirts with bright ties. Comfortable, oversized shirts. I remember liking B.U.M. Equipment a lot. And when I got my glasses early in Jr. High, I went with half-rim metal frames and huge lenses. I mean, if my vision needed correcting, why would I limit the amount of viewable area corrected? The bigger the lenses, the more of my field of view came into focus.
I was never able to blend into the background, as Jim tried to do. I knew that my physical stature would provide too tempting a target for the taunters and bullies to resist, so I poured every ounce of my clothes-buying power (awww, Mom, can’t I PLEASE put this white shirt back on the rack? They have plenty of black ones over there! C’mon, Mom!) into reflecting who I thought I was. And I took a lot of crap for it.
As the years went on, I wore more and more black. My glasses frames got smaller and smaller, until I eventually tried contacts. A near-miss with an eye infection ruled those out in college. Started wearing trench coats just in time for Columbine to make people afraid of me. I grew my hair long in a skater cut. Shaved it all off, Uncle Fester style.
Then I met Nikki. Tireless, implacable Nikki. She’s gotten me to wear earth tones. Off-white. Respectable coats. My closet has greens and browns and reds and blues in it. I own khakis. I wear shorts when it gets warm. My world has come tumbling down in the past five years. The walls have crumbled before the relentless “How do you know you don’t like it if you haven’t tried it in over 20 years?” And a lot of it, I don’t mind. But to this day, I feel the most like myself when I’m wearing mostly dark colors.
A few months back, we finally made time for appointments with a local optometrist. It was the usual, including the steady slow increase to my nearsightedness, and the ever-present mild astigmatism. When we went looking for frames, we both went with something out of our norm. Nikki picked some very cute frames with some design work on the arms, instead of her usual simple design.
On my last pair of frames, I had deferred to Nikki’s wisdom. My skin had reacted to the metal of the previous frames, so we had picked out a dark brown frame with plastic arms. They were smallish, as I liked them, and the corners around the lenses were rounded. Very nondescript, but not the black or gunmetal that I had purchased in the recent past. This time, like Jim, I wanted something different. They had plenty of styles close to what I usually got, but I wasn’t satisfied. The salesperson suggested a pair of black hipster frames, straight out of the 1960’s military. I tried them on, and was heartily amused when they didn’t look terrible. “You can pull that off.” “Really?” “Definitely.” I looked to Nikki, and she made a face. THE face. I slowly put them back on the rack, making no sudden movements.
I looked around a bit more, trying to find frames designed for large noggins. I found one pair with bowed out arms which seemed to have been designed that way, not mangled into the shape. They were black, and more striking than my usual, but not as crazy as the hipster frames. I slid them on, and they were comfortable. They didn’t squeeze the sides of my head. They didn’t even touch where they weren’t supposed to. I looked in the mirror and… liked what I saw! I turned to Nikki, and while she didn’t make THE face, she was not pleased. They were more pointed than she was used to, she said, and it would just take time to get used to them.
The good news is that she did, and I love these frames. While I echo Jim’s sentiment to all of these that have said “nerd” to me as if it was a bad thing, I send this message to show that despite all of their best efforts, I’m still happiest when I’m just being me.
The Collector Gene
A few nights back, I filled another journal with words. This usually takes anywhere from ten months to two years, depending on the size of the journal and how often I’m writing. They went much faster back when I was writing The Remembrance, but slowed down once I began The Glass Crown.
This one took six months to fill, and is the second one to bite the dust since I picked the Adam’s Name story back up. It was a gift from a friend, back when I was writing the first book. He was bummed, if I remember correctly, because I hadn’t gotten to any of the notebooks he’d given me by the time I finished. I assured him that I had plenty more stories that needed out of my head and onto the page. I wasn’t done, not by a long shot.
As time goes on, my desire to collect things is shifting from Transformers and comic books to unique notebooks and journals. The one that I filled last had pages made out of recycled cotton instead of paper. It had a suede cover and a celtic knot button to wrap the closure cord around. I picked it up from a shop at the Holly, MI Renaissance Fair called Under the Mango Tree. I’ve also got two books, gifted to me by my brother if I remember correctly, that are made out of the fibers of elephant dung. (Oh, wow, those guys are making them with lines on the pages now!) A while back, I was gifted one made entirely out of bamboo, from cover and spine to the pages.
When I’m in second hand stores, I have to restrain myself from picking up the ones with yellowed or wavy pages. Or when a favorite webcomic offers branded notebooks. Or when I go to a Ren Fair.
Yeah, I’m in trouble. :) Well, enough blathering. It’s time to fill the next one!
Blinking in the Sunlight
I tend to hermit.
I have limits on how much social interaction that I can usually handle. Pre-kids, I’d just make sure that I drove myself to whatever was going on, so that I’d always have the ability to leave if I needed to. After kids, most of my social interaction buffer was eaten up by trying to keep up with the constant barrage of interaction that kids require. The idea that I needed to go out and spend time with more people, instead of going out as a way to get a break from all of the people in the house… inconceivable!
I’ve made some attempts to combat the hermit urge over the last few years, but I haven’t been consistently successful. There was the get together at my house, then there was the Round Table at the bar… Single events that didn’t form a pattern. I lapsed back into hermit mode.
Then came my trip to Cleveland. I’d actually been feeling the need to go down there and visit, instead of having to force myself. I wanted to catch up and visit and get input and feel that being creative could be an actual career, and all the things that are great about visiting with Gil.
When I was invited to my friend Mike‘s birthday party in Frankenmuth, I felt the same way. This was something that was outside of our normal operating budget, and so I used a babysitting gift certificate that I’d gotten for Christmas, sold a nearly-working netbook that was collecting dust, and we were on our way! It was amazing to see Mike, Erica, Mike R. and his wife and daughter, Sara, and to meet Erica’s friend from OMG way back. My only regret is that we had a sitter stopwatch, so we had to leave right after the meal. It would have been nice to visit my brother and my grandmother, who both live very near there, but I will take what I can get.
I’m hoping that this desire to reconnect continues, but I’m terrified of jinxing it.
Let’s recap!
Though we’re all past our LARPing days, we still can’t resist talking about our characters.
I did not eat six hundred chickens, no matter what they’re saying on Facebook.
OMG I drive a family car!
Does anyone want that last piece of chicken before we ask for more? Yeah, Mike does.
Serious girl is serious.
Mike really did eat six hundred chickens.