Friday, December 31, 2010

Amendment.

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On sober reflection I have to issue the following amendment to my previous post.

In 2011, I will try to increase traffic on my blog.

I will also promote my website at www.seeWordFactory.com more aggressively.

Be more proactive. It seems, holding my breath had not worked too well.

Resolutions... BAH

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December 31, 2010. The last we see of this year. Looking back, it has not been a bad stretch. We sort of survived the financial meltdown of the last two years with all its uncertainty and constant anxieties. I published Dreamcast 2, wrote Dreamcast 3 (it’s still at the printer), wrote zerodraft of Where Arrows Fly (now in third revision) and completed about two thirds of a new story I have no name for yet (perhaps The Canal Rat). So its been productive.

There had been progress in other parts of my life, but they don’t belong here. This blog is an outlet for all the leftover feelings, rants and musing of a restless mind. And please don’t assume any of it is true; I freely mix imagination with the real stuff. But if I have thought of it, and especially if I wrote it down, then it has an internal reality and occupies a track in my memory. That’s something to keep in mind. I often recall episodes in my books that have been edited out or in, and I have to backtrack to the completed product to see what the official version ended up as. "What were you thinking...?" I’m often asked, and I have to query back, "In which version?"

So it is in real life. I sometime have to ask my wife just "How things went down exactly...?"

But now here we are, starting a new chapter for 2011. I’m old enough to wonder just how many chapters are left in my book of life. Am I still climbing upward or have started on the decline? Should I be in first gear or am I still in overdrive? Not easy to tell. But life is still too much of a struggle, with aspirations ahead of me, so I must still be in drive.

But back to 2011. I resolve not to make any resolutions but to keep things as they are on their present course. There was a period when each year the list started with "I have to quit smoking for real this time..." and eventually, I did. Sometime later came "I have to write a book..." which was followed in subsequent years by "I have to finish the book(s)..."

But for 2011, read my lips, there are NO resolutions to pre-frame the year.

There will be challenges, setbacks, triumphs, miles stones achieved and passed, why burden it by artificial restrictions. I could say "This year, I will be a better husband, father or person in general..." but why force my character in some new straight jacket? Impose new borders on an already limited living space?

But you are a writer, surely you can come up with a better script for yourself? True enough. But that’s why I have my characters, to explore events and circumstances, feelings and emotions, not to forget consequences... to go where I myself dare not go.

My experience with resolutions... too often they are targets for failure. Aiming too high (insurance against success), or too low (evidence of a lack of commitment) makes the whole an exercise in futility...

Being environmentally conscious, I suppose, I could recycle something from past years... but NO!

So People, sorry, no resolution this year. Nada!

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Follow up to "Shopping with Angelina."

I can’t adequately describe how much the experience changed my life. Shopping, which I used to dread, now has become a daily adventure, with Angelina beside me in spirit, helping me navigate brands and resists other forms of temptations. Yes, now I can boldly push my cart past the ice cream display and not be filled with nostalgia.

And another thing, now I can’t get enough selenium. If that GOOD cholesterol put all those nice curves on her, imagine what it could do for me.

I’m still a little anxious facing the magazine rack at checkout, afraid to turn up in there, looking out of one or more of the tabloids. I have considered shaving my beard (I have only done that once since age what? 22) to hide my identity.

I’ll soon have to renew my driver’s license. Thinking of taking Taylor Lautner and his pack with me, so that no one messes with me. (I’m still flip-flopping between Edward and Jacob camps.)

See, how easy it is? Life has become a breeze.

Shopping with Angelina

I was reading a friend’s blog where she describes going fantasy Shopping with Brad Pitt at Sobeys (http://hickchic.blogspot.com/2005_10_01_archive.html what-brad-pitt-and-i-did-in-my-dream), so I figured if she can do it then so could I, with--who else?--Angelina Jolie. Well why not? We must have gender equality.

Let me tell you it changed my whole shopping experience.

The first thing I used to look at was price. Well no longer. From now on, it’s ingredients, Lipids and Saturated Fats, Glucides, Salt Content-- NO more! Fiber, selenium, YES. She was telling me how selenium is really good at getting rid of BAD cholesterol. I pricked up my ears, if she said BAD cholesterol, then there must be GOOD cholesterol around. I meant to ask her about it, but just then she bent over to pick something off the lowest shelf, and I got an eyeful and forgot everything else.

The woman is absolutely amazing, reading label after label, pointing out chemical compositions, interaction, trade-offs and consequences. She must have a bio-med degree from Hopkins or something.

She says she doesn’t shop normally in large grocery chains, but gets all her food straight from the grower who is 120% organic certified by American Food and Drug. So its not "taste like chicken" for her, it’s "taste like free-range chicken." But here she was with me, since I dragged her into my fantasy, she was trying to do the best of a bad situation.

And let me tell you she was picky. I had my basket full, she barely had the bottom covered. And I was cheating too, I was buying products that I could hardly afford in a vain attempt to impress her. All the while pretending that I knew what I was doing and she was just... just another casual shopper.

Of course I was inhibited. I expected Laura Croft, The Tomb Raider, defeat evil right there in the cafe and condiments aisle. And what if, it were true that say, some villain was stalking her, and I would have to do a heroic thing and save HER. Got that? SAVE HER! Would I be up to it? Even in my fantasies?

But there is a softer side to her. I discovered that on the later part of our odyssey, near detergents and dryer sheets. She expressed a preference for April-Fresh Downy to keep her clothes soft and fluffy. I expressed my astonishment that she would do her own laundry... She frowned and shook her head, "Of course not, dear boy, but I can smell and know." I complimented her how nice she smelled, in her one-piece frilly suit, what little of it there was... She preened a little. (Well it’s MY fantasy, so she can preen...)

We had real fun at checkout. Of course all the lines were full, but you know Jolie, she told the lady ahead of us that the bacon was expired and shocked that lady to vacate the line in a hurry. But a step closer, we face her nemesis, the magazine rack, and half the issues had glossy pictures of her and Brad. She confided in me. "Brad sometimes leaves shavings in the bathroom sink..."
"I thought you would each have your own bathrooms..."

"We do. But you know how it is, we are so territorial, and I have my brand on everything, especially Brad. (That’s my girl Laura for you!)."

Then she got quite indignant, "Why that pucking bitch!" she said pointing at Jen on the cover still pining for Brad. "She whines still and claiming I stole his affections. As if I needed to. I’m blessed or cursed with pheromones few can resist..." I can testify to that. My head was spinning and well... my other body parts were reacting too.

She was still boiling by the time the cashier asked if she had a Sobeys’ card. She withered her with one look. Outside we got ambushed by the paparazzi, blinded by camera flashes and accosted with in-your-face microphones. I dread the next issue of the rags with me on the front cover looking stupidly surprised. I hope my wife won’t see it. You see, I had not told her about this little adventure.

And Angelina? I made a date with her to meet at Home Hardware, where she can help me chose the best grouting compound. In her persona as agent Salt, she is trained in all such things, no? She wasn’t happy about it, but I have my own pheromones and this is MY fantasy.

It opened up a brand new world for me. Maybe I’ll invite Jen to tell me her side of the story. Or for Jaylo to come clean about Ben and her Jen issues. Heck maybe I will ask one of them to scrub my back in the bathtub... but that’s for a late night story. The world is my oyster...
 

Friday, December 3, 2010

In The Flow...

So now, first draft of Where Arrows Fly is finished. It needs revision, of course, polish, rewrites, but the story is solidly nailed down. And I like it. My success as a writer is grounded in the fact that I write for my own amusement. I really have no mission of writing for anyone else. That comes in as an after thought. There must be at least a few people out there who, like me, are turned on by the stuff I write. So then, I write for them: certainly, for those who like my work, not for those who don’t.

My intent when finished, is to release this on the Internet as a freebie to stimulate Net traffic to my website (www.seeWordFactory.com). Unless... unless an agent throws his/her body in front of the departing train to stop me.

At the same time I also have to do final touches on the cover of Dreamcast 3 so it can be sent to the printer. Then my self-published paranormal trilogy is outed, in public, with no thought of Dreamcast 4 in the works yet (but I had said that before).

Concurrently with the above, I need to send out more query letters to agents about The Locksmith Dilemma. My characters have been patient, but my conscience is bothering me at the neglect. I have read the story again, and Damn, I’m good!

Then there is Seize The Day (Marcus, my Roman legionnaire) waiting its turn. I have to do something about that too. And Rufus (Sail the Red Hammer) ... and Chaiko (of the Fourteen Stones series).

I have to prepare for an upcoming Small Press Book Fair in Toronto. I have a 3x3 space reserved on a table. I got to get a brochure printed, new business cards...

So I still work, not having given up on my day job, and am still a husband and father with pets to care for. There is just not enough time in the day.

And my poor wife. As my editor-in-chief, she was just finishing the latest run through Dreamcast 3, when she asked me what was I typing. "Uhhh... Where Arrows Fly..."

"What! Are you insane! Haven’t we got enough to do getting these others out the door??!"

Uhm. What could I say. That in the back of my mind another story was brewing... coming to some kind of boil?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Going for it!

If I were Catholic I would have to fess up, "Bless me for I have sinned... I have not updated my blog in many, many days..." And won’t be able to unless the earth slows down and we get an extra two hours added to a day, and that’s not taken up by things I’m already committed to.

The fact is my third book about to be self-published is ready, only the cover needs to be finalized. Do you know where I can pick up a cheap cover? Not cheap looking.

Also, as I wait for things to gel, I have launched into a new project. My 12th book, Where Arrows Fly, draft zero is in the last chapter. Of course, it will yet take months to get it truly ready. This is- wait for it!- intended to be release on the my website (www.seeWordFactory.com) FREE of charge. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, you heard me right, 100 percent free.

The idea is to increase traffic to my website. Now I’m getting just a pedestrian flow. Imagine a desert, with a waterhole in midst of sand dunes, with tracks visible converging onto it. Sadly, in my case, I can count every footprint, no camping, just passing through.

But that will change, with the offering of Where Arrows Fly, I shall go viral, I’m sure of it.

And my blog? No one comes here either.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Insights

The other evening, we had a guest speaker in my writers group. Her focus was on creating for children and she tried hard to inspire us.

Part of her presentation involved writing assignments to recall an early memory, then one from about age 8 to 10, and then something as a teenager. I don’t like to be ambushed by such spontaneous tasks, nonetheless, I struggled through the exercise, trying to stir up my creativity. Typically my muse doesn’t like to work on such short notice, and didn’t this time. I produced only mediocre work, which I didn’t feel comfortable to read to the group.

But the process I found interesting, to flashscan my memory and extract something halfway interesting. For the teenage segment, I came up with an embarrassing incident of an early date with an attractive girl who I took roller skating. Holding hands, we went around in endless circles in the rink; she used me as an anchor to accelerate around the curves. But I was nervous and sweated a lot and in a sharp turn she slipped out of my moist grasp and bounced off the boards. I don’t recall anything else about the event, she simply disappeared from my life.

What did that tell me? That painful and embarrassing events are like bookmarks in the archive of my memory, sort of waypoints on a near-forgotten landscape. Sometimes I can reconstruct happenings around them, and sometimes not.

We also talked about the process of writing, of how some writers plan everything before they start, whereas others have no clue where they will end up. I belong to the later group, and I’m fond of saying that my books were really written by the first sentence. The initial part is dedicated to finding my characters and they finish the book for me. There is considerable leap of faith involved, because the journey is a process of discovery: do I have a story or not? I have been lucky, my dream machine is good at conspiring with my protagonists to reach successful conclusion: 11 times now I could pen "The End" to close a book.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

8...9...10 Launch!

I launched my second self-published book during my town’s summer fair. A gala event: traffic is diverted around the downtown core, and booths are set up in the freed-up streets. It gets overrun by neighbours and by people who all look familiar even if I don’t know them by name (The advantage of living in a small rural community).

Now don’t laugh, this annual event goes by the name "Carrotfest." The town abuts onto a fertile marshland that cultivates in a cornucopia of vegetables, namely, carrots, onions, celery and cabbage. Given that list I guess, the carrot is a natural choice. The town mascot is, what else, a big, orange Carrot. Anyway, the best names are taken already. A nearby town claims garlic, and north-west of us we have Potatofest. Beeton boasts of Beefest.

Anyway, with couple other indigenous authors we set up a table, arrange an attractive display of our works, and paste on smiles to make ourselves presentable or at least approachable. After all we (that is, our Writers’ Circle) comprise about 25 percent of the cultural wealth and resources of the community.

However, as the day progressed, the crowds came and went... mostly away from us toward more plebeian pleasures like face painting, battle of the bands, general street theatre (jugglers, fire-eaters, magicians), and ubiquitous jumping castles for kids... We watched as people streamed by and we cast lures into the flow, just likes fishing, getting the odd bite. We landed a few, talked seductively about our various opuses, sold and signed a few books, then bragged about the big one that got away.

I was lucky enough to have had an article published about me in the local paper the week before, and had people come up to me to congratulate me on my accomplishments. And we talked, which involved mostly me listening to them describe the book they always wanted to write but never got around to. Of course I was encouraging, patiently followed the twists and turns of the plot of the book that never was (but yet may be... who knows?). So I sold a few, not because my book was so great, but because theirs was or would have been... Go figure.

On the whole, I didn’t do badly. I reduced my inventory and recouped some of my initial investment. In two weeks I’m going to a regional literary festival where I have rented a table to do it all over again-- to challenge some stray soul to take a detour through my books (a life-changing experience, I assured them. Well not really, but it is entertaining.)

Between these rare interludes, I dream of success, and work on a marketing strategy. You will see me on streetcorners perhaps, peddling my stuff, face to face. Reading to writers’ groups, braving (and hopefully surviving) their criticism. Or putting on a lecture in libraries, about how I got to where I’ve gotten to other aspiring souls who yearn to put their imagination onto paper (sorry, into computer files) and breathe life into them.

Anyway, you won’t see me on shelves in bookstores, not in Chapters, nor in Indigo, or among Barnes and Noble offerings. To find me, you’d have to dig deep into the underbelly of the Internet, overcome near insurmountable odds to find me or my books. My vision is, if I can’t be the best of the bestsellers than I’m going to be among the rarest books of my generation. That’s what I wanted to say.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Racoons in the Attick, tick... tick...

Damn! There are raccoons in the attic yet again.

I don’t know, but I have sprinkled my urine in the corners that is supposed to warn them off that the territory is already claimed, but these creatures pay no attention to the signal. This means that either they can’t smell (i.e., handicapped) or they had not bothered to read their own DNA-manual (mentally retarded)..

Now where had I put the live trap? I’m sure it’s in the barn someplace. I’m reminded that I don’t have a perfect record using this implement (certified 100% humane). I have repeatedly caught my cat, and the last time, a fully functioning skunk who let it be known it wasn’t amused. I had some difficulty letting the creature go without getting contaminated for a tomato juice bath. In the end I had to use a large plastic sheet, cover the entire cage and deftly employing a long stick spring the mechanism that is hard to manhandle in the best of circumstances. After considerable trial and error, I did manage, before the creature could sign the lease. For a month, the memento of that encounter lingered on the front yard.
But this is a new batch of raccoons. Strange, they usually come before winter and move out during the late spring. But this time, they chose a transitional period, not quite this but not quite that either.

2 years ago, I drove 6 raccoons (one at a time) to release into a forest about 15 k’s north. My friend warned me, to make sure to have a river between my location and the release site, so they won’t find their way back. No river, so had to settle for four lanes of the 400, as it is well known that raccoons are notoriously bad at crossing highways. If one makes it, then it deserves to make it.

But what am I worried about, this clutch(?) of raccoons are mentally challenged or handicapped, they can’t smell their way home, or use the GPS that the street wise urban raccoons can. In any case, I’ll let you know how I made out.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

Call to Celebrate

After a gruelling 12 months through an accelerated paramedic program, my oldest graduated first in his class.

Here he is, giving the valedictorian address.



And again, more relaxed with his lovely girlfriend.


Behind the camera are two very proud parents.

Of course, now we no longer have medical opinions to speak of...



Friday, May 21, 2010

The Spider and the Fly.

Naively I thought it would be so easy. Build a website from scratch, just the way I want, how I want.

Although, I’m not of the "text-now" generation, I know a few things. Hell, I still remember programming in machine language (1000110010100001...) so I thought, well how hard can it be?

So I started. OK, I can learn HTML. At the end of which, I found out that I had to also learn CSS, and after that XHTML (Extensible what??!), followed by JavaScript. To a smaller and larger degree, I did all that. But was is Joomla?

And I did put together a website that worked on my computer. So then, I rented myself space, loaded it, and there I was--on my own WEB.

"Come in. Come in," said the spider to the fly, who was just surfing by, "Look at my attractive web. Careful, you don’t want to get stuck. But look around at all my treasures, my guilty pleasures..."

And there I’m, day in, day out, hoping someone will drop in.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Trouble Parking

I wheeled a hard right into paid-parking serving the bus depot. I had to take the bus to Waterloo, and I was in big trouble. I had plenty of time, the schedule had said not till 8:45, so that wasn’t the problem. What was though, was that I had to go in the worst way, and had just three seconds to reach a bathroom before my bladder would explode. I pulled up to the kiosk to get my time-stamp, but the attendant was busy on the exit side, where an outbound patron was paying for his stay. They made a social time of it, chitchatting, while I was in the last stages of pain.

I had to do something... NOW! I jumped out of the car, just leaving it in the entrance lane, strode across to the bus depot, took a tight turn toward the washrooms in the back. I was within reach when I ... when I woke up, out of a dream, home in bed.

But the urgency was real, very real.

I scrambled out of bed, and staggered into the bathroom. Having reached the refuge of the bowl, about to be relieved, I nonetheless hesitated. The mind did tricky things when it did not want to wake up when nature called, and "dreamed up" a bathroom for convenience, not caring about the repercussions. In agony I did a quick reality test to find that I was indeed in my bathroom and it was safe to proceed--which then I did. I can hardly describe the relief and rush of well-being that followed.

My business done, I stumbled back into the bed room, eased down on my bed, and in two winks of the eye was back in my dream. So then, I walked out of the depot into the parking lot, noticing for the first time what a beautiful sunny day it was. I crossed over to the kiosk, only to find my van gone. During the three minutes I had been away, my car had been towed. The attendant was still busy with a new customer, so I pushed into the adjoining office to inquire about my car. A man with a bushy hair looked up from his desk, the very picture of an owner of such an enterprise.

"Yeah?" he demanded gruffly, directing all his attention on me.

"Excuse me, but my car has been moved..."

He frowned hard, and set to berate me for blocking his business access, costing him tons of money.

"I had no choice... my bladder was going to explode... had only couple of seconds..." I stumbled through my excuse.

The owner turned to his partner and said in a smug voice, "See, just like I told you, Jake. There is always a story someplace. Even in a straight forward business like ours." He looked back at me with a sharp look, calculating. He had me: he could legally charge me a hundred bucks for a tow and in his mind he was already spending the fine he was set to extort from me. But I had him dead to rights too; we both knew we were in a dream, and I could just say screw it and walk away scot free. In the end we settled for $6.00, the regular charge for half-day parking.

With a sense of triumph I walked into the bus depot, bought my ticket and climbed on the Waterloo bus. The glow was still with me as I eased into the seat. Now, if I only knew why I was going to Waterloo, everything would be fine. But between the start and the end of the dream I had forgotten, but I was going anyway. Perhaps on the way I would remember...

Saturday, February 13, 2010

The Flame

With the goal still half a continent away, the torch passed through my small town over a month ago with a windy cold, driving snow into our faces. We lined the road like penguins, huddled together for warmth and shelter, four, five deep on either side. The street was blocked, police cruisers patroling up and down trying to keep the road open.

On the side feeder streets buses were disgorging more school kids, coming from 50 miles away; mothers were pushing strollers through the crowd, trying to get a glimpse of the route. Stores emptied; businesses closed shop; people wrapped in their warmest, were waiting, stomping feelings into their feet. Everywhere you looked, people were still coming. Then it got so crowded, you couldn't see anything.

Lights flashing, a procession of fire trucks rumbled by, giving us a burst of horns. It was cold and our breath smoked. Beside me shivering, were grade niners, holding onto each other. Some had flags to wave, so they waved them. Others had cell phones out, taking pictures of each other, red noses and all.

The runner was late, way behind schedule, and we had been standing there for an hour, jostling each other. The line was solid to the east and solid to the west as far as thr eye could see. More cars passed; the sponsoring Coke truck blaring music moved by' more police and emergency vehicles, lights ablaze, flashing, tried to keep the road open. The anticipation was there but where was the runner?

By now I could see nothing beyond the press of people. Eventually a shivers passed through the crowd, full sirens approached, and a phalanx of police cars squeezed through the constricted road. The cops inside, for once, were smiling and waving to the throng. I was up front, holding hands, forming a chain, to keep the tide of people back. We had overflowed curbside, and half-choked off the way. I recognized the police chief in his SUV, so the runner had to be near. Hold tight, I warned the adjoining links, and we held as the crowd surged again and pushed us onto the road some more.

Then the crowd roared and applauded, and in a flash, a young girl, with a bright smile, proudly holding the flame, bounded by. Who was she? What had she done to deserve the honour? In 12 seconds she was gone, swallowed by the crowd. Someone hit me on the head with the flag he was waving so enthusiastically.

What had just happened? That was it. The fruit of all the waiting? No more? In minutes the crowd cleared, rushing for warmth. It took longer to clear the choked-up parking that grew around the passing of the flame. A line of yellow school buses tried to weave through the congestion.

On a cold, blustery winter day, the sun had shone for 12 seconds, warmed the air with enthusiasm, then passed on. Hundreds of elementary graders, no doubt, had to write about the chain of runners who brought the flame all the way from Greece, onto our shore, heading for Vancouver.

So, last night, I saw the flame arrive. Then the lighting of the rings. In spite of my innate cynicism over such a tribal ritual, I was touched, remembering that for 12 seconds I was also a part of it.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Hell no! I won't...

Every morning when I can fit it in, I exercise for 30-40 minutes, dancing to RAM-Killing In The Name: "Do what they tell you," pounds into my brain. My body responds, revving up. The heavy beat of the music drives me to dance, to gyrate and to shadow box. I resists: I lash back. I move, I vibrate, topping up my own rage: "No, I will not DO what THEY tell ME ..."

By the time I hit the weights, 72lbs in each hand, I’m sweating, but have full rage on. I snap off the count, on a good day to 30 reps, gritting my teeth, straight up, then down, sideways, alternate laterals. You would think that I would burn up the fury--but No, the base conspires with the drums to drive me higher still. The lyrics delivered in staccato rhythm of a machine gun bursts, come screaming at me, bouncing off me. My muscles are tight, burning. My face a mask of clenched fury as I ricochet and feed off the pulse of the anger of the song.

When finished, I’m not tired at all. I’m ready to slam through doors, burst through the walls. I’m fuelled by an overcharge of emotions, burning with an accelerant like gasoline. My ODD (Oppositional Defiant Disorder) won’t let me go. "Hell NO! I won’t do as They tell me..."

Often, I have to, in this state, face the day. Watch out world, I’m coming through.

On the weekends I have time to switch to Tristania and decompress, let the fires burn out, cool down. I sometimes tell myself I have to chose a more pro-social song to exercise to, but I need the anger to face the repetition and mindless effort. Either that or take steroids... Hell no! I won’t...