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Archive for » 2009 «

Nov
04

Well, I haven’t signed up on the site, maybe I should, but I’m getting there. Finished my first story/chapter on Monday, but yesterday was writing group which took up 3 hours, but was still very useful. Will push through today with as much as I can.

Oct
27

Got really good news today that I can’t talk about just yet.

Category: Uncategorized  Tags:  One Comment
Oct
17

Our X-box has a few retro games. Just heard a sound of nostalgia: Sega! That tone when you first turn on the Sega machine.

The Sega was the first game console we ever bought. We purchased it shortly after we got married. We played Sonic the Hedgehog on it.

Category: Uncategorized  Tags: ,  2 Comments
Oct
09

An idea for health care: If we’re going to go into economic crippling debt for this, maybe can we just bypass insurance companies and have the gov directly build clinics, pay for the education of docs who go into primary care, and pass tort reform? Then at least we’d have something more useful than profit bloated share holders when it all comes down. Oh, and another stim package? Why are they taxing us to save companies who, often because of unethical practices, can’t manage to make their business successful?

Oh and guess what? Building clinics gives work to people = economic stimulus.

We have been a country run by anectodal evidence for too long.

Category: Uncategorized  Tags:  4 Comments
Sep
30

 I’d said right after the concert was done that I would blog about it, so my oldest daughter has been waiting for this post. So I guess I must. It isn’t that I don’t want to write about it. It is just that I have had second thoughts about how much I want to say. Sometimes, writing about a thing can dilute it if we want to use the ideas somewhere else. And there are thoughts I want to express more in my fiction than in my blog.

But there are a few thoughts.

Watching Brandon Flowers up there on stage, I got a big dose of Artist. The feeling that he created, he performed, and is now connecting to people. It’s pretty powerful stuff, and is recieved differently by everyone. We put so much of our own stuff into the words and music we’re listening to. I realized that music, like story, had two sided creation. The artist creates their vision and then the audience experiences it through the vocabulary of their experience. I’ve always loved this aspect of artistic creation. Like one of the lyrics say “I don’t shine if you don’t shine”

Which brings me to an aside. The lyrics of Killers music, written mostly by Brandon, I understand, are very layered. A lot of different meanings can be taken from them. That’s some great writing.

There is only one problem with this. When we, as artists, make that connection with people we’ve never met, there is a lopsided relationship. The reader or listener feels that someone has understood them. And so often, the audience thinks they understand the artist too. They have found a friend. But it is a friend that can never give more than performances. They can’t be true friends to everyone in the audience, no matter how worthy that person might be.

There is one other thing I wonder too. Brandon is Mormon. So are we. The concert was in Salt Lake,  where there is a large minority of Mormons. I’ve noticed that his music has drawn from a lot from the well of religion. I wonder if he felt more understood in Utah and if those of us who are LDS get things a little more than others. Even as I wonder this, I berate myself for feeling elitist. True or not, the paragraph above still applies.

Then there is the other side. The downside of it all. The process of art has the deeply unfortunate side effect that it takes us away from our loved ones, even without factoring in performance and stardom. We live so much in our own head, we might find it harder to see how we are affecting our family and friends. This is not just arrogance. It is blindness, a native disability I must strive to overcome. A lot of artists, me very much included, are really introverts. Socially stunted in my youth from a variety of factors, hopefully less so now. Somehow, in me at least, this is part of the chemistry of living in our creativity and recording it in an effort to gain audience. It falls upon me, though, to try harder to give those around me what they need of me. Knowing my weakness is the first step to overcoming it.

I came out of there with a short story idea. Plotting it out, I’m afraid it might be a novel. But some of the elements are better suited for a short story, so I’ll have to rethink some things, as well as plot out the novel because that has great potential.   

 Yeah. So, wierd reaction to the concert maybe. But not for me, with the stuff that bounces around in my head. I hope your experience was a good as mine.

Sep
25

So, I got a new computer. It’s a tablet PC with hours and hours of battery power. Joy! As I was contemplating my email, I thought of just starting over. Then I realized, that there is just too much I’d lose. But there is also more than I want, with over 4000 emails. I decided to keep rejections and acceptances, plus a few other writing business things, and then delete almost everything else. Not tax related, or really important family things. Though I haven’t opened the ones I’m deleting almost since the first time I got them, I’m getting nervous. In fact, I’m surprised at the amount of anxiety I’m experiencing, as if I actually were deleting my history.

Here is a summary of it, before I forget. I was involved with the medical blog community for a while, enough so that I even hosted Pediatric Grand Rounds, which I think is no longer extant. I’m not sure, because though I have a couple of medical bloggers I like and read every few months, I’m no longer part of that community.

I had just started a new critique group. It is still extant, but I’m no longer involved because I didn’t have time and I was invited to a more rigorous one.

I am keeping the case study from my physical therapy, because it’s just cool that I was a student’s case study.

Geekatplay did not exist when I first started email. I need to write a post about how that has changed my life.

Deleting emails from a very enthusiastic, and a nice person, but not quite up to par wannabe contributor to Geekatplay. These are well over a year old, but I am still feeling guilty. It’s like I’m deleting the person.

Maybe that is the problem with all the emails. I feel like I’m betraying the sender. For some this isn’t big, since I’m still in touch and some emails were quite fluffy. But others, I’m just getting rid of the only evidence I still have that these people existed.

Well, to all those people, you’re great anyway and don’t take it personally.

Sep
18

If you know me, you know I’m religious. A faithful Mormon to be exact. And you know that I’m skeptical.

There is a church in the area I live that has a sign with sayings posted on it.

This week, the quote is “The real opium of the masses is bad science.”

Hmmmm. That could be true. How often do we see science invoked for a new drug, educational method, etc that turns out to have little benefit or be harmful.

But is that the opium of the masses? No. I don’t think so. The masses, I believe, really don’t care about science or about God. They care about cars, movies, gadgets, getting thin, eating good food, hair, facials, TV, etc.

But that is beside the point. I’m worried about what a church who is complaining about bad science thinks that bad science is. Is it  Creationism and flood geology*? I wonder how often that false doctrine has lead to the loss of faith by rationally thinking children who examine the evidence and realize that what their parents and Sunday School teachers taught them is wrong? If that is wrong, doesn’t mean everything else is? That is often the conclusion.

No. And it is a pet peeve of mine that many people hang the truth of Christianity on that. This means they must either hang on to a view of the world that has been proven false or give up their whole belief. Both reactions are the result of poor logic.

But then, maybe that pastor was making that point? That would be awesome.

Bad religion is limiting God to a universe that is small in time and scope, which is what Creationism does.

*A definition is probably necessary for anyone who might not be aware of that discussion, and think that I suddenly don’t believe God created the earth. By Creationism, I mean the idea that the earth was created in 7 days (even 1000 year long ones) and is only 6000 years old, and that the layers that imply a much older earth were laid down by the flood.

Category: Culture, Religion  2 Comments
Sep
10

My husband isn’t much of a writer, though he is a great story teller. As many know, he is also an artist and is responsible for most of the artwork in our book, Vue 7 From the Ground Up. So his blog is mostly pictures he has created, though he’ll write a few things too. I won’t be correcting his English except for spelling errors that make it difficult to understand. So you’ll be getting him as is. And you know, I think he’s pretty good that way.

http://vladimir.chopine.org/

And, my sister recently started a blog too. She is crazy busy and far more organized than I can ever hope to be. Read about everything she does on the header on her blog, and then let me tell you that she also organized our family reunion this summer, does my dad’s business accounting, one of her beautiful boys is autistic, the list just goes on, and she keeps it all together and is thoughtful to everyone around her. She’s a really great woman.

http://fragrantinspiration.blogspot.com/

Sep
09

No news that everyone needed to upgrade wordpress if they hadn’t recently to 2.8.4. So I did and of course it was harder than it should have been. Once I was doing that, it was time to change things around and get a few widgets installed and finally get that bibliography and story pages I’ve been wanting on here. So here is that change so far. Anyone have any plugin/widget advice?

Also, I’ve pretty much ignored the idea of tagging. Why have tags AND categories? Seemed and still seems a bit weird, but now there are tag clouds and not category ones, so I’ll start tagging too. I’ll wait to generate a cloud until I have a handful.

Sep
06

So, the last few years I have considered myself unable to do Nanowrimo. Good reasons: Last year I actually was writing a book in November, and got 70K words done in about 2 months. Non-fiction doesn’t count, though, and I took the contract with a 2 month deadling. Novels don’t fit in there. Also, there are two birthdays, not to mention Thanksgiving weekend. And a toddler the couple of years before that. It is one of the fullest months of the year for me.

Also, I think the idea of putting so much energy into something that I don’t have worked up enough and could prove fruitless (at least on the surface. I know the exercise is good) just makes me shy away from it.

Then I got an idea. Why a novel? It must be fiction, but it doesn’t have to have one single plot. So, why not short stories? One a day? No, since there are at least four days I won’t be doing it. But twenty in a month? Yeah. I think I can do that. I may not finish every story, but instead will at the very least start one and get 2500 words into it or more if I write other stories with lower word count.

Twenty stories, 50K words. I am sure that at least after November, there will be a higher word count between them all. I’ve never written a story less than 4K before.

My first task is to get 20-30 story ideas on paper. At the end of this all, I should have a handful of stories suitable for cleaning up.

Category: Writing  3 Comments