Saturday, August 15, 2015

Listing

I need to put together a first chapter for the historical fiction piece I want to start in a month or so, and I need to run through the edits on the revised first draft of the beach read. I need these two things and I need the time to make them happen. I can feel it coming with Summer winding down and I am scared and excited to be in that state of desperation, because I want my wheels spinning before they hit the ground.

I am starting to romance coffee again, and I want short hair. I am all sorts of in between and transitional. There are too many things going on and I am easily obsessed at the moment, so I am just going to list to get it out, in hopes that I can get back to one of two first chapters.

Current obessions:
1. Party Down: The cast, the jokes, the single camera set-up that makes me feel like the first time I watched The Office or Parks and Rec (which I want to watch all over again since obsessing over #2 on the list).

2. Amy Poehler's Yes Please: The thoughts on parenting and change and age and apologies. The way she describes her problem with sleep with such delicate and empathetic comedy that this kindred insomniac laughed and cried and wanted to read it all over again.

3. Play it Again, Dick: A second chance at experiencing a new and sardonic world of Veronica Mars. Enough said.

4. The Nutri Ninja: Because I love smoothies. Liquid nutrition, yum.

5. Comic books: It's general and it's not new, but it has been 7 or 8 years since I really knew what I was doing in a comic book store. I just picked up Carol Corps and Phonogram and the Spidergirl title that was so popular in the mid 2000s. I am utterly tickled by the return of comics to my life. 

6. Running: That obsession never ended, but I think I may finally be healing enough to make it regular for the first time in a year. September starts training for another half marathon. I like being the insane person who has to run at least 15 miles a week. I like putting sneakers on while my eyes are half-closed and forcing myself to move until it is all I want to do. Something about running makes me feel like a kid again. I like that. I want that forever.

7. Moonrise Kingdom: Finally saw it, and it was perfection. We celebrated 9 years of marriage yesterday, and it was good. We ate an obnoxious amount of fried potatoes, got a little tipsy on good beers, and spent an hour playing Galaga and Ghost Squad. Then we came home and watched Moonrise Kingdom for the first time, over honey bourbon and lemon juice, and we laughed and we cried and everything was perfect.

That's it. Hopefully that exercise helps me get some stuff done. Or I'm just going to watch Party Down until I feel fully hydrated and maybe take one more nap before I pick the kiddo up from her sleepover.

Thursday, August 6, 2015

Titling by Date is Stupid and Boring

So, I realize that it is absurd to keep popping into this blogspace in order to assure this blogspace (and all 53 people who have viewed it, if they ever return) that I'm NOT DONE WRITING. Nevertheless, here I am, promising myself and the internet that I am most assuredly not done writing. This Summer has simply made me put a pin in it. Between camps and climbing and the ongoing requirement to get outside and revel in Vitamin D. I have allowed myself to stop pushing the word count. I am not (very) lazy, I swear. I actually LOVE working. I know that, because I have spent a decent amount of time aching for it as I have been shuttling between zoos and parks and pools. Yes, I have other goals that are calling me away from writing as well, but in truth it's just the birds singing and the fulfillment of weeding the garden and playing with my kid that has pulled me away from the computer.

I don't feel too bad about closing the laptop for a short while, because I haven't been ignoring the craft at all. In fact, I have been spending a lot of time figuring out just how much I don't know and what I need to start attacking first. I have reread the first 5(ish?) chapters of my book and found my main character boring. In an attempt to keep her from being me, I have successfully made her nobody. I have spent a few hours, on and off, with a legal pad, trying to find out who she is. I have spent more time journaling in my written journal (not enough, but definitely more) alowing myself out, in order to better digest the complexity involved in writing a character. I don't know if it is working, but that is what I have been doing. I am also reading EVERYTHING. I am watching documentaries again and studying people like the wallflower freak that I have always been. Afterall, that is what made me want to write, right? I wanted to understand WHY PEOPLE KEEP DOING THOSE THINGS. I wanted to play with characters that frustrate and confound and relieve and inspire and excite and motivate me. I wanted to give people some authentic truth to look at and question, and rub between their fingers for a while.

In an attempt to conform and be more likeable, I think I forgot that I am 100% weirdo who likes to ask questions and know more and wonder why and stare. I LIKE TO STARE. Somewhere in there I became embarassed by these tendencies that make me feel so remarkably, so strongly me. I started feeling like I needed to be ready in case someone stared back at me. I felt like I had to be just interesting enough, but in a way that did not intimidate anyone. That is not me. I like discomfort and awkwardness and the power that comes with a good long intimidating stare. I am not averted by fear, which is probably why it felt so frustrating and false to pretend otherwise, and why it feels so invigorating to work through and undo all of that bullshit.

I haven't really done this in a long time. I used to blog almost every day, pouring an obnoxious amount of words into the internet, like fuel on an anonymous teen-packed bonfire. Most of it was not great or even good, but it was at least easy to do back then. When did it get so hard to stop thinking when I wrote? When did I trick myself into thinking that everything I did was big-I Important? I think some point in adulthood plateaus into the feeling that there is real power and importance in the things we do, and I definitely believe that there is truth in that, but we settle into the idea that we are powerful and Important because of it. We are still nothing other than the constructs that we rebelled against and exposed in our teen years. Legacies and influence don't really change that fact. Our kids will throw it in our faces one day, and everyone who bought into the idea that age inherently adds meaning will have to stare down the empty shells that they worked so hard to establish. Living in denial also works pretty well for some.

Anyway, if we all just stopped trying to be liked and banding together in a fearful attempt to keep feeling like we matter, then growing older might not have to be such an emotionally painful process. I'm still trying to figure out how to alleviate some of the physical ailments, but at least I can rest in the knowledge that the less I fake it, the happier I am. Maybe then I'll stop hunching so much.

That's it then. Or however I used to end these things. Synopsis: 1, I'm not writing much, but I am alway thinking about it and working towards the next rainy day. 2. I'm done being afraid of getting old and having no fans. I have friends. I don't need an entourage.

P.S. - There are a lot of other things stressing me out right now. Home buying and selling things. Training for a half marathon things. My kid is starting school in 3 weeks and AM I A GOOD PARENT YET? things. But, time is limited, and this blog is supposed to be about writing, or something.