Tagged: Thoughts

Nov 11

Bumping up against something… sharky

People are… complicated.  We strut through the world as though we are the picture of health, trying hide our damage as best we can, and then we meet someone new, someone we feel akin to, and we pull out our bag of bad experiences and pain and ask them to sit down and sort through it with us.

No wonder many relationships burn to the ground at this point.

I’ve been aware of this rather sad phenomenon for a while – never feeling that I was the one with the shit to sort.

But these past few years I’ve seen enough garbage from men, that apparently I’ve taken up my own collection, and now I find it floating on my perimeter, begging to be opened.

(sigh)

I don’t want to open it.

I certainly don’t want to ask anyone else to be around me if I do.

Maybe I’m thinking about all of this now because for the last 18 months or so I’ve been trying to figure out what the hell I was thinking getting involved with such a narcisistic, selfish, and damaged, man as I did… I’ve been able to (with the help of several bottles of wine, the love of good friends, and some hefty sob sessions) come to the conclusion that while he was a complete and total asshole, the responsibilities were divided – I could not deny that I had walked willingly into the drek.  And so, my quest was how to stop handing my heart to these wounded but charming men…  And I was doing all of this “thinking” on my own, with no timeline, and no risk.

I was singing “Single Ladies” all the way to the bank.

But I’m dipping back into the social pool now, I’m in the shallows, and I’m looking out at the water with a clearer head then I could’ve hoped for now… and I want to get wet!

But behind me a little voice is whispering “What about the sharks?”

And it picks up bits and pieces from my past, adding them like rocks to a gunny-sack it is trying to tie to my ankles…

So I think, maybe I ought to just turn around and stare this little bitch down…

It’s worry.

It’s fear.

It’s strong… it’s ugly…

It’s impressively verbose.

But maybe, if I look at it long enough, it will falter in the sunlight and begin to fade…  Like the morning fog… breaking first into chunks of cold mist and then (if I don’t blink) dissolving into sparkling wisps before my very eyes… wisps of something once thick that now is scattered on the air, pixelated and pruned… and powerless.  And then “poof” – it will be gone…

Because now there is someone near enough to notice my glances behind, and there’s no way I’m asking this person to play garbage man with me.

The truth is this:  We are our collected experiences… We are piecemeal-put-together from the rocks we lift ourselves from – emotionally, politically, physically – we cannot help but carry scars on our personage as proof that we were here, as proof that we have lived.

But we need not nurse those scars… Or sit on them, feeding the wound from whence they came.

Our scars cannot be our only stories.

Because scars are only sexy when we can tell the tall-tales of how we got them, flex, and move on.

And I aim to move further into the water…

But maybe I’ll keep one of those big inflatable ducks close by… just to be safe ;)

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Nov 07

I Blush Again in the Darkness

He’s looking at me again… I can’t see him because my eyes are zeroed in on my hang-nailed fingertips and I’m tugging at a sliver of skin because it feels safer somehow than those eyes…

But he’s there, looking at me, and I can feel his eyes on me nonetheless.

And I’m in my head, imagining what he must see… my third eye broadcasting some semblance of self into the nether regions of my psyche… I realize that the way I look at myself is quite probably very different from the way anyone else does; I hope his view is gentler than my own.

I look up at that, searching for kindness… my anxiety slows a bit, because he’s smiling at me.  It makes me smile.  I feel silly for worrying about any of it.

But I also feel Skepticism and Doubt haunting the perimeter of that warm-fuzzy feeling, and I realize just how deeply I’ve been infected by their musings.  We are, after all, the sum total of our experiences, no?  Haven’t my experiences been less than stellar thus far?

I look down at my hands again, which are by now tangled with his, and I feel my cheeks burn a bit at how absolutely consumed I can become with my own neurosis.  I wonder if he can see it, dancing across my face… my tranquility faltering against the rocks of my own self-doubt…  but then I’m laughing again at something one of us has said and then I chastise the “worry-wort” lurking inside; I can’t believe how nervous this whole situation is making me.

It’s been a long time since anyone has tried to “woo” me… and apparently the little gatekeeper within just doesn’t believe it.  I can’t say I blame the guard, after all, I did go through the equivalent of an emotional wood-chipper last year.

But we’re walking now, the leaves are falling, and he’s got his arm around me… He is warm and he leans in to kiss my cheek, only I’m focusing on my feet at the moment, because they’re safe, and so I jump a little at his lips against my skin… and I blush again, at his affection brushing up against my incredible awkwardness.

I blush again in the darkness… and I smile.

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Oct 17

Slipping into something familiar

I never loved LA, and it never seemed to love me.  Rather, it tolerated me, as one does a toddler, eyeing me warily – not trusting me with any of it’s riches – but not shuttering me to the landfill either.

We danced like this, never deciding whether to dip or spar, for eleven long years, before I broke the embrace for good.

And now, when I come back, LA greets me like an old friend… I slip into the arms of this gritty, gravy-stained city with the kind of relief one feels putting on an old pair of jeans.  It is absolutely perfect – the terrible traffic, the honking mauraders, the bars with the skimpy-skirt-girls lining the block – it is absolutely, 100% perfect…

For just about 5 days.

You see, LA and I have become excellent long-distance lovers.

And while I’ve no dreams of moving back to this city, I know I will continue to visit and smile and soak it up in small doses.  I will pick and choose the pieces that I want to look at and snuggle…

And then I will return to my own, cleaner, safer, more comfortable world, far from here.

It’s a relief and a gift, and I am incredibly thankful to have at least worked this part out – this dipping-the-toes-in routine of mine.  Greatly relieved indeed.

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Oct 13

So. Damn. Busy.

I’m sure you could tell from the irregularity of my posts that it’s been a hectic week.  We were in Vegas, where the air is rife with cigarette smoke and the girls walk around in their underwear while men leer at them from beneath the neon lights… It’s really a super awesome experiment in human behavior – a Disneyland for grown-ups… only, the “grown-ups” don’t act all that grown – and I had a great time.  (I really relished that final, post-vegas shower though.  The place really latches on to your skin!) But I’m back, and I’ve a dozen things to be doing, and leaving again tomorrow for LA.

So, as you can imagine, I’m feeling a bit crazed.  And I hate to do this again, but…

BULLET POINTS:

  • My birthday was yesterday and I was tickled pink by the balloons that Amber sent and by all the calls, text messages, and Facebook shout-outs I received. Thank you, thank you.
  • Dad went in for hip replacement surgery #1 yesterday and is doing well… Today they get him up on his feet (already!) and I hope to GOD that he recovers smoothly and with good spirits.
  • I spent the better part of yesterday afternoon at the DMV – which is now the MVD – I don’t know why they had to go and change it aorund like that.  I really think that there is a whole faction of government employees whose job it is to sit around and think of useless crap to do and get paid for it.  Anyway, I’d been putting it off, not wanting to surrender my CA status, and not wanting to have to slink into the DMV, sorry, MVD for God-knows-how-long… As a result of all that “attitude”, I left it to the very last moment and wound up spending part of my birthday at the hole.  And now it’s official.  I have a new Driver’s License… that doesn’t expire until my 65th birthday.  AZ is crazy, yo.
  • I have scripts to turn in, mail, and ship out.  I can’t believe how many things are due NOW.  (panic, panic, panic)

And that right there, kids, is why I have to run, and why this post is kind of lame.  I PROMISE to get better, and have more interesting stuff for your mental palettes soon.  Forgive me, stick with me, and have yourself a GLORIOUS afternoon :)

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Sep 30

Taking Criticism

It’s never easy when someone looks at you/your work/your life/your whatever, and says “Hmmm, I think it could be better.”  There are times when people give me feedback on things and I have to mentally batten down the hatches so as to not flip them off/scream/list every reason what they’re saying to me is totally stupid… but I’m able to suck it up and at least listen enough to write it all down so that later on, when my blood pressure has returned to normal, I can come back and review their… well… reviews, in the hopes of tapping in to the “Why this person thinks it can be better” ness and (ultimately) making the “whatever” better.

Well, I’ve noticed something about my process; it seems that there are several factors behind how I take the “note.”

  • Their attitude –  If someone is dishing it out, I find myself often either completely ignoring them, or dishing it right back.  I prefer to ignore, but sometimes that irritated little inner muse looses her mind.  If you’re going to ask someone to improve something, ask them nicely!
  • Their status –  If I’m asking for notes on a script and another writer whom I respect rattles off a list of hiccups, I find myself much more open to their observations than if it’s some dude who didn’t even take the time to shower marching into my office and giving me crap about my fashion sense.  Secondly – depending on the criticism being handed out, I may listen or ignore you based on where you fit in my social circle.  Strangers of little know-how fall well below the top tier.
  • The project – I don’t like it when people give me unasked for fashion advice, however, I also don’t want to be running around town in out-of-date stone-washed denim (shiver) On the other hand, when I am writing, I can get snippy even to those I most admire and trust, just because the work is so personal.  However, as I’m experiencing more and more with my graphic design gigs, when I’m making something for a client, their critique becomes less and less personal (note I did not say it becomes less frustrating) because the project is not born of my own imagination, but rather, is something I’m trying to imagine based on their parameters.  The limited freedom then, also becomes a freedom of responsibility (for the idea, not necessarily the work)

I guess as a writer, I have a lot more truck with this process of listening, dissecting, and applying, than some… but I think it’s really weird that I process it so differently.  How about you?  Do you find yourself weighing different sorts of feedback differently in life?

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Sep 29

Bullet Points

no time, no time, no time…

  • I am deliriously excited about the upcoming Yavapai County Fair.  And not just because I entered a gaggle of photos in the photography exhibit/competition (I WANT A RIBBON! hee hee) but because there will be NAVAJO TACOS, and cotton candy, and baby alligators to wrestle, I mean pet, and, and, and a DEMOLITION DERBY!    (pant, pant)  I haven’t been to the YC fair in ages, but I always loved the exhibits (4-H, art, etc) and the food.  And don’t even talk to me about the LA fair, of the AZ state fair, because this little monkey DOESN’T love the crowds that those big-ass fairs attract.  No.  I like my little county fair with the ferris wheel and grubby carnies.  WAHOOO!!!
  • Did I tell you about the new blog I created for NAU-Yavapai?  You can check it out and give me your opinion on it if so inclined: www.NauYavapaiBlog.wordpress.com
  • My DVR is chock full of series premieres and just waiting for me to have a good sit-down with the couch.  (sigh) At least I’ll be able to enjoy a solid chunk of 30 Rock when I finally get around to it… almost making it worth the wait.
  • It’s play-submission-season and I am waaaaay full of axiety about not making the deadlines I’ve set forth for myself due to everything else happening… which is why I’m going to sign off for today.

Have a happy one, people!

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Sep 28

The Haps

Woof!  I made it!  I blogged EVERY SINGLE DAY last week, in ADDITION to blogging for the LAFPI!

So where’s my box ‘o’ chocolates ;)

But seriously, I was so tickled with myself that I then took yesterday off.  Mainly because I had SO MUCH to do yesterday that I was whiney and miserable to be around, and only would have complained anyway.

Seeing as how I’m still pretty far from done with the litany of tasks at my door (it’s big time submission season in the playwriting world) I am instead going to paste here my essays from LAFPI last week.  Maybe you have thoughts on the subject too?

I’m going to dedicate this week’s blog to a sensitive subject – and I do so in the interest of stirring a discussion.  I don’t propose to have developed a hard and callused opinion on the matter, but I do, as a writer and literary manager, find myself asking these questions on occasion.

I think we all must.

A few weeks ago a submission announcement went around the web, which included a call to female playwrights and my personal email address.

Woof!

While I worked to furiously track down the source of this submission call and staunch the flow of scripts steadily flooding my inbox, I also fielded submission after submission.  Most of my responses were a polite “Sorry for the confusion, but here’s our official submission language and the correct email address to submit to”, but a few I could tell right off the bat weren’t for us.  One in particular was written in Spanish, and I wrote a very polite letter telling the playwright that we didn’t do foreign language plays, but also included a list of theatre companies who might.  She responded with a terse “So much for your mission of working with LA female playwrights, then, huh?”

Whoa.  Hold your horses, lady!

What had just happened?

She went on to say that to claim our theatre company was interested in LA was a joke, that LA wasn’t just “White.”

Now, if she had done any research at all, she would know that our company is comprised of many different shades of people, and that yes, while we do have a large Caucasian population, we certainly don’t only do plays by/for/or about them.

But facts are rarely an issue to those who have been hit by a nerve… This woman was angry not just at me, but at all the other literary managers or contest readers, or agents, who had (for one reason or another) not responded favorably to her material.

She was frustrated that her work further marginalized her from “Female Playwright” to “Female Foreign Language Playwright”

It threw me back into a familiar and sensitive loop…

(Tomorrow: Part 2, or, Rewind!)

PART 2

When I was an undergrad, I worked as a literary intern for a Los Angeles theater company.  The company’s mission was to produce work by Los Angeles writers.  I was put in charge of selecting plays for a fall festival of new work.  “Oh goodie!” I thought, “I can’t wait to meet these writers!”  And I proceeded to select a handful of plays that I thought exhibited the most talent and promise.  They were on varied subjects, three were written by men, two by women, one of the women was Latina, one of the men Japanese; all the rest were white.

When I sent an email to the artistic director with the playwright’s names and play synopsis, I received back an email exclaiming that my selection wasn’t diverse enough – why were there so many white men in the line up? – Along with a list of “diverse” playwrights to contact about putting in the festival; playwrights who I had previously heard of, but none of whom had submitted work to me.

I wrote back questioningly, “It looks like you have a quota in mind – are you asking me to fill these slots according to ethnicity?” Which elicited another bristling response “Los Angeles is a diverse community.  It has always been our intent to reflect that on our stages.  We have only once done an all white-cast play, and one of those characters was handicapped”

Wow.

Needless to say, only one of the plays I had selected was for an all-white cast.

So I suggested that the artistic director’s intent be reflected in the company’s mission; maybe more diverse people would submit work and we would have a more colorful (and well written) pool of scripts to pull from in the future.

To say that the whole discussion was “awkward” would be an understatement.

Now… several things must be addressed if I am to be as objective as possible :

  • I am white.  It is possible that as such, on a subconscious level, my predilection is for scripts by/for/about similarly pale-skinned persons.  I don’t think this is the case, as some of my favorite authors hail from different parts of the rainbow, but, nonetheless, it could very well be a factor for me in determining which plays I find exciting.
  • I am a woman.  As such, my tastes may very well be different than a man’s, or, as recent studies have shown, I might be more critical of  women’s work than men’s… I certainly hope this isn’t the case, but it must be mentioned. Especially since, as I acknowledge in the following bullet point:
  • I am a playwright.  What does this have to do with anything?  Perhaps nothing… or perhaps as a playwright, I have developed a certain style/taste and hold material to similar standards of my own work… perhaps I like best the work that I would like best to have written…   I couldn’t tell you.  Certainly I revel most in work that I look at with admiration – but is this admiration based on an internal, completely subjective scale?   Am I secretly lusting after white-centric plays because those seem to be what I write?

I bring these things to the forefront of my discussion because I think it is important  (if I am going to ask what I am about to ask) that I acknowledge what may be my own limitations as a script-reader.  It is important to acknowledge that while I am a heterosexual, white, female playwright, the artistic director was a homosexual, *non-white (I don’t want you all guessing who I’m talking about now), male director, who had a completely different perspective than I .

So who was I to argue for these “White man” plays?  Who was I to be reading for this company in the first place if our aesthetic was so off?

More importantly; who was he to host a new play festival of work he had to go out and ask for, when we had a mountain of engaging submissions from Los Angeles writers before us…  just because those submissions were from predominantly white playwrights.  And was I supposed to include (what I considered to be) weaker material, simply because it was written by someone more “representational” of LA?

Was it my job to go out and ask for new material from established writers of color simply to make our festival better reflect (in the artistic director’s eyes) the Los Angeles community?

Right, wrong, or in-between, what wound up happening is what usually happens when an artistic director makes a request – we shuffled and asked, and put together a line-up much more in line with his vision and much further from the material I’d been reading the past 6 months…  Meanwhile, I had to send “TBNT” letters to a handful of very qualified and talented writers, for no other reason than that they were too pale for us to produce.

Isn’t that a strange and odd turn of events?

(Tomorrow:  Part 3, or The Angry White Woman…)

PART 3

Fast forward 6 years to yet another literary job, wherein I’m actually the person in charge this time – Yes, I reported to an artistic director, but this time I was running the literary department, which consisted of… oh…  wait a minute, it was just me again.

Hmmm, maybe “being in charge” was really just a nice way of dressing up an otherwise low paying pile of responsibility J

In any case, I was a woman on a mission!

This theatre company was also dedicated to Los Angeles writers, but specifically plays by, for, and about culturally diverse peoples.  This time it was written into the mission statement, I had a very clear understanding of what they wanted and I loved the energy and the people responsible for this theatre.

I read a ton of beautiful plays (and not-so beautiful, of course) in my time there; all were written by playwrights with dreams of getting produced.  I learned a great deal about the art of the submission, I also learned a little bit more about those who submit…  Particularly in the case of my first nasty email; a vociferous letter written to me by a white female playwright who had read over our submission guidelines and found them lacking.

Among it’s many blistering accusations, the following stood out as the writer’s main beef with me and the theater: “How nice of you to support female playwrights of color… what a shame the rest of us are left out in the cold.”

I sat in shock for a good 10 minutes after I read the thing, wondering how in the world I would respond…   Wasn’t it the theatre company’s prerogative to decide what its mission would be? And had they really denied “white women” a slot in its mission anyway?  In their drive to represent diversity in LA, surely women as a whole were included as an under-represented people… or were we?

I wrote back to this woman in the kindest words possible “Thank you for your interest in our company, and for sharing your heartfelt opinions.  While I, a female playwright as well, hear your frustrations, I encourage you to seek out more opportunities for women playwrights on the web, as there are quite a few…”

What else could I say?  I certainly wasn’t going to ask her for her script- she had been ridiculously spiteful.  She had also signed her email anonymously, perhaps forgetting in the heat of the moment that her name would be clear as day in the “from” field – note to all:  if you’re going to send an anonymous email, make sure you’re covering all your bases.

In any case, it was an awkward exchange, but one I remembered well… And one that begged the question – Is polarity healthy?  Are the limited support resources that exist fractured and specific for greater purpose?  In creating our own sort of theatrical “Affirmative Action”, are we creating better theater?  And is this system breeding resentment among the very playwrights it is designed to help?

(Part 4, or, In Which We Juggle…)

PART 4

I’ve always been a big advocate of “Competition of Self” – what I mean by this is that as I navigate the playwright’s landscape, I may see many people winning accolades that I myself covet, but I truly believe that the only course of action from such observations is to learn from these talented writers as I myself strive to top my last work with the new.  I may feel a flash of jealousy or of heartache, but I never think to myself “They won!  They beat me!”  Instead, I think to myself “DAMNIT!  (sigh) Alright… well, what can I learn from this writer so that I do better next time?”

It’s one of the things that keep me sane.

But in exploring this week’s train of thought, I have to ask myself who my scripts are in competition with…  It’s certainly not the brain-child of Sarah Ruhl or Martin McDonough!  While I like to think I write on par with them (don’t we all) and while I have been influenced by both, no theater in their right mind is currently weighing my playscript and one of David Lindsay-Abaire’s in their hands wondering “Gee, I wonder which we should go with.”   Because I’m simply not a big enough fish yet to be part of that kind of decision.  Instead, my scripts are sitting in piles with other “emerging” playwrights – those that have a few awards under their belts, but no big productions… yet.  We are engaged in silent battle for desk space and shelf space… We go head-to-head for literary manager’s time and interest.

Every.

Single.

Day.

We playwrights just aren’t present to witness the literary carnage.

And so, we send out scripts to various competitions, hoping that we’ll win a reading or a ribbon, or, if we’re lucky, some kind of travel or monetary prize… OR, if we’re really lucky, an airline ticket stuffed with cash all wrapped in ribbons and trade magazine announcements about our brain-child of GENIUS…

Yeah, that happens…

But the point is, we hope we will win accolades so that we can use the 5-seconds of fame to edge out the other scripts in that “emerging” pile to the left of the Lit Manager’s elbow.  (The pile that sits depressingly close to the lip of the desk and the gaping mouth of the trashcan…)

So what happens when a theatre company run by someone like that first artistic director endeavors to fill slots according to a cross-cultural quota?    Does such thinking narrow the question from “Who’s the best playwright?” to “Who’s the best Latino playwright?  Who’s the best Woman playwright?” or “Who’s the best transgender African American who walks with a limp playwright?”

And is it helpful?

I don’t know the answer… I wear enough hats to recognize that it’s overly complicated.  There have been times when, in reading a winning script, I’ve scratched my head and thought to myself “Jesus, I wish I had thought of this!”  And there have been times when I’ve looked over lists of contest winners that read like a United Nations meeting, but included plays that I had actually turned away for (what I perceived to be) poor writing.  I’ve been on both sides of the selecting and entering… and I still don’t have an answer.

Because I want to believe that the best man or woman will reach the stage.  I want to believe that if I keep growing as an artist, if I keep writing and dreaming and running this race, that my work will be recognized, produced, and applauded regardless of my gender or (lack of) ethnicity.  I want to believe that I will get there on merit…

But as a woman playwright who is all-to-aware of the numbers before her, I will also take any advantage I can get.

I will enter contests designed to honor female playwrights, and I will challenge any contest or theatre company that seems to eschew balance in (perceived) favor to male playwrights over female.  I will also look at a list like that one from the UN and sigh with frustration – what were the parameters of their evaluation if not totally and irritatingly PC?

Because I want it both ways.

And it all speaks to the one achingly human truth – no matter the rules or the designations, we are all of us reaching and scraping for the finish line.  It’s a business, it’s a dream, it’s a damned difficult trail.  We try to find the best shoes to get us there… sometimes they’re ugly, but if they get us there…

Well, more often than not (and no matter their “how”) we will defend their merits to the death.

Because that goal, that gold, that rising above the tides to be seen, heard, my GOD, produced?  Doesn’t it seem built on a lot of hard spilt blood and tears all the same?  Isn’t it the mountain we look down on, and not our feet, even as we focus our eyes on the next looming peak?

(Tomorrow:  Part 5, or, Some and Summation)

PART 5

I think, then, as I wrap up this monster, that the thing to remember is that we are all of us aspiring towards the extraordinary.   This is not an easy, or necessarily friendly, field.  Neither is the theater industry is a snake-pit either.  (Hello Hollywood J)  But the journey of the creative spirit continues to ask of us an incredible balance:  making art for art’s sake is one thing, commercializing it quite another.

If a theater company is interested in diverse theater, or if a theatre company generally produces plays about/by men, and if I am a white female playwright, do I keep writing the way I have, or do I write more characters of color/men?  How do we maintain our integrity in our strides to get ahead, be we author, producer, or artistic director, while we also strive to maintain cultural “fairness”?

Or is thinking about it too much a danger of another sort?

As a literary manager, I must remember to value balance – I would not want to see a whole season of plays written by “privileged white men” anymore than I would like to see a whole season of just about anything else.  The key is to create a balance within the designated aesthetic of any given theater company… And the theatre company itself has every right to decide what that aesthetic is.

My job as playwright then is to try to find theater companies who’s aesthetic matches my own… or even (perhaps) those theatre companies who look to be open for a feminine revolution.

The struggle then continues to be both global and internal; to engage in the community we so want to conquer, but to do so as best we, the individual theatre artist, can.

We will continue to juggle our own perspectives of what makes a play “good” and what makes it “necessary” and we will continue to fight for those that stir our convictions.

Meanwhile, there will continue to be conversations among those on top and between those on the bottom, about how in the world to manage things better…

I guess, what I’m saying is, I can’t wait to be one of those people at the “top” – where the discussion is less about surviving as it is about setting the trends.

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Sep 21

Password FRENZY

Holy.  Cow.

Much of my new job entails computer time; I started and maintain our Faceboke page (become a FAN!), our Twitter account, AND I’m working on launching our new blog.  In addition to all of this, our class programming is hybrid, which means a computer support system, AND, adding madness to mayhem, we straddle two pre-existing computer systems.  All of this adds up to numerous username/password combinations, all of which are driving me absolutely INSANE.

Because I already have a ton of usernames and passwords for my own personal emails accounts/blogs/FB/Twitter/everything else you need to log-in to access on-line, and I have just added a whole ‘nother list of digits to remember to the… well… pre-existing list.

And of course, each of these new systems has different requirments per username and passoword – some issued to me sans my input, and others left up to me to determine.    What has resulted then, is a mish-mosh of combinations all revolving around roughly the same name/password concepts, that dangle on my memory like solar flares – I reach, I grab, I pound the cpomputer in frustration, and then KA-BLAM, the right combination comes back to me…

Or I have to reset it.

In any case, I find myself in desperate desire for a little Password Locker – somewhere to keep these passwords written down and safe, and available ONLY to ME.  I NEED A PASSWORD FAIRY to sit on my shoulder and wave her magic wand, and promise to keep my little sign-in’s safe and precious in her little fairy head…

Because of course, writing them down – anywhere – would make them locatable.

(sigh)

So, a toast (glass held high) to the new technological pain-in-the-ass.  (gulp)  Drinking does help the memory, does it not?  (And don’t worry, I’m just drinking tea this early in the a.m.)  ;)

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Sep 19

Where’d Everybody Go?

I did it, didn’t I?   I scared you away…  I missed posting too much this week, and now you’ve all left me for some other slightly high-strung, generally funny, overly-pensive, blonde blogger.

(sigh)

I’m sorry I’ve been a bit spotty lately – but I am WORKING like, ALL THE TIME now… and I don’t really know how to manage my time well enough yet. (Isn’t that a strange thing… to be THIS old, and having done THIS much, and still not be certain how in the world to handle the ticking away of the minutes?)

But I’m trying.  I even wrote that cock-a-doodle of a story about the centipede – I had illustrations!

I really, really love you.

(double sigh)

Can you tell I’m feeling a wee bit guilty about me recent irregularity?  (hmm, that sounds… like an add for Metamucil or something – *shiver* – NOT at ALL the kind of irregularity I’m talking about)  I really, genuinely enjoy blogging- it’s a daily workout for my writing muscles – and I get a thrill when you stop by to read… So this weeks challenge?  TO GET BACK ON THE DAILY – BALL.

But first, some random bits (since it IS Sunday, and you know, I’ve got cartoons to watch … Okay, really, I’ve just got pages to tend.  Working 5 days a week is impacting my pages, as in, blogging ain’t the only writing I’m not getting to.  This MUST be REMEDIED!  SO – in addition to getting reliable again on here, I’m also going to work out a reliable Writing schedule.  I AM!)

Woof…

WAIT A SECOND!  I’m blogging for LAFPI this week too!  Oh boy.  Okay – might be a bit spotty here this week as well- unless I’m so awesome that I seriously do both all week.  That would be Impressive, wouldn’t it?  Would you send me congratulatory chocolates if I pulled it off?  I like See’s milk buttercreams :)

1- WANT, WANT, WANT to see :  Get Low, The Town, and Never Let Me Go… I’m going to try to get to at least one of these this week.  (Boy, I’m putting a lot of pressure on this week.  I hope it can handle it!

2- Having a new RELIABLE and (mostly) FULL-TIME job (that I actually REALLY ENJOY) has got me feeling fabulous in a few ways, but mainly it’s freed me from the gigantic storm cloud of financial insecurity that I’d been living under for the past year and a half.  It’s a relief in so many ways – like, being able to say “yes” to the second margarita without feeling gobbled by guilt (and hearing Visa uproariously cheering on my bad decisions in the background)

3- 2 feels so good in fact that yesterday I went shopping with Mom and bought some new shoes, new shirts, and 2 new pea-coats (one’s bright YELLOW- it’s a happy coat – and the other is a bit more subdued for when I wants to look fancy!)  We shopped ourselves silly and it felt so good.  Hello, economy, I’m a member again!

4- I have so much writing to get to today, that I’ve just decided this slot shall be used for HAPPY SUNDAY TO YOU!  wishes.  Hope you are well, happy, and rested :)

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Sep 14

In which I say “Thanks”

I may not say it enough (because sometimes it is easier to complain) but I am so very thankful -

For my friends who listen to me when I need an ear, who lift me up when I am fallen, and who make me laugh more often than not.

For my family who basically does all the above but also puts up with my bed-head and has to listen to a LOT more of my ridiculous puns.  My mom and dad have inspired me to always be (or strive to be) my best, they love me no matter what, and they have opened their home to me even though I came back loaded down with a lot of boxes and two more cats… I couldn’t be the human being I am today without their love and support and good humor.

For my new job… There are so many people out of work right now, and I was one of them for far too long – To now have a paying job that I actually ENJOY and CARE ABOUT, is a blessing I shall not take for granted.

For my creativity and passions – yes, I’m thanking the Muse – I treasure this gift and talent I have been given and continue to hone.  It doesn’t always pan out as awesomely as I may have imagined, but I continue to study, to work, and to (hopefully) grow as an artist, and I value each and every creative moment along the way.

And I want to thank you as well.  Keeping this blog is not only a fun exercise for my brain, but also an excellent way to get my writing bug fix.  It’s a healthy habit, and one that I enjoy, and it’s all made a lot more fun knowing that (on occasion) I make you laugh, give you something to think about, or elicit a crazy comment or two from the masses.  Thanks for stopping by!

And I promise, let sap tomorrow :)

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