Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Goals, Not Resolutions



I don't do resolutions, I do goals.

Resolutions come from a position of weakness: I'm not doing good enough, I need to fix something. Goals come from a position of strength: I want to make something new happen.

Resolutions aren't backed by planning. Goals are -- and in making the parameters of the goal SMART (specific, measurable, appropriate, relevant, time-constrained). The plan follows, and the plan increases the chances of success.

Here are my revised writing goals for the New Year:


Short-term: 


  • ·       Develop a platform plan by March 1, 2020
  • ·       Write/submit 5 short stories/poems/flash fiction by December 31, 2020
  • ·       Revise via developmental edit by March 1, 2020
  • ·       Send 50 queries for Gaia's Hands by February 1, 2020
  • ·       Send 50 queries for Whose Hearts are Mountains  by October 1, 2020

 Long-Term:  

  • ·       Get an agent
  • ·       Publish my first book
  • ·       Discuss with agent further books
  • ·      Develop personal sales presence
  • ·      Develop idea for next novel

Notice that my long-term goals are not SMART, largely because they depend on things beyond my control. I put them in as motivational, as a way to envision where I'd like to be. As that trajectory becomes clearer, I will be able to make them SMART.

I have other SMART goals for the year -- one is to lose 30 pounds by December 31, 2020 through eating a well-balanced 1500 calorie a day diet and exercising (the development of getting physically fit is in another goal). I will evaluate my goal every month or so and adjust accordingly if I'm not losing 2.5 pounds a month. (If I'm losing more, that's fine!)

Well-laid plans will beat resolutions every time. Unless they gang aft agley, I guess.

Monday, December 30, 2019

A small perfect moment

My aging calico cat sits on my shoulder, purring her heart out. My husband sits beside me on the couch, and we drink rich, strong vacuum pot coffee together.

This is as perfect as a moment gets.






Sunday, December 29, 2019

Discovering perseverance

Today is post number 976. In a little under a month, I will write my 1000th post.

This is probably the most consistent thing I've ever done in my life. Almost every day, I've written this blog as a way to reach out and as a way to help manage writers' block. I guess I'm in it for the long run. 

I'm serious about this being the most consistent thing I've done in my life (other than things like breathing and eating). I've had a habit of being really excited by a new hobby or skill and doing it for a while, but not completing it. Gardening is a good example: I will start seeds of all sorts of edible plants in January through March, plant them, and then give up right around the time weeds sprout. My yields go to zero because I can't find my plants through all the weeds. I'm not planting this year -- I'm letting my raised beds go fallow with tarps on them to kill the weeds. 

I wonder if my blogging will help me make more habits in my life stick. One of these is eating more healthy so I can lose weight again (Yeah, I didn't stick to that too well) and maybe walking. I may have to set New Years' resolutions (although I hate those). Or maybe I just keep doing the right thing.

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Back to Work

My writing time yesterday was taken up by 1) signing the contract to have my poem "Limerance" published in the Winter 2019 issue of Wingless Dreamer; and 2) replacing 56 passwords that Google said had been compromised. This took pretty much all my writing time.

Back to "no excuses but I don't know what to write" mode. I saw a flash fiction item on Submittable with the theme "Your character feels submerged but valued". Just about anything in the Archetype universe fits that category. Problem is that I think it's due today. Or yesterday. Let's see.

I'm once again not writing another novel by suggestion of an awesome editor I met at Gateway Con (an artist's conference). The plan is short stories, flash fiction, and poetry until one of the books gets picked up. 

So wish me luck.

Friday, December 27, 2019

A Case of Writers' Block

I'm back home, sitting at the Board Game Cafe, trying to figure out what I want to write.

Anything I start will be interrupted in two days when I get my dev edit for Whose Hearts are Mountains back, so I can work on fixing it. On the other hand, I feel weird not writing. Not writing poetry, not writing short stories, not writing novels, not editing. 

I'm afraid that if I take a break, I won't go back. But I have taken a break over finals week and beyond to Christmas. And inspiration has taken a vacation as well.

If I felt like starting a novel, I could turn the jam-packed short story Hands into a novel, if I could get some insight as to what Warsaw, Poland was like fifteen years ago. Boy, did I paint myself into a corner there. 

My blog counts as writing, though, as I intended it to. Warmups to something bigger for the day. Let's see what that will be.

Thursday, December 26, 2019

On My Way Back Home

I'm spending my last couple hours at Starved Rock sitting in front of the fireplace in the Great Hall, soaking up the atmosphere. It has been a good vacation despite my frustrations borne of childhood issues temporarily clouding my perception. 

I need to get back to writing. This will be easily cured by a big project in the form of my developmental edit of Whose Hearts are Mountains. The frustration, though, is that I don't have any ideas on the back burner, neither short story nor novel. I don't like feeling so tenuous about my attachment to writing. 

I need to have a resolution that I will write two hours a day once more. It's been a while since I've spent that much time -- no, I take that back; I was writing/editing four hours a day cleaning up Whose Hearts are Mountains in November.

Does anyone have any story ideas I can play around with?

Wednesday, December 25, 2019

Christmas and the Days After

It's Christmas day, and I'm sitting in the Great Hall at Starved Rock State Park, in front of the fireplace. My husband just snapped a picture of the fireplace and some Christmas decor for us:



Despite my fretting, it has been a good Christmas. I knew pretty much what I was getting before Christmas, because that's how Richard and I do our shopping. He managed to surprise me with the chocolate in the stocking (given that I'm eating responsibly again, the chocolate should lasr me a long time.

Once Christmas is over, I'm going to need to strategize. January and February are hard for me, particularly because the weather is so bleak and the celebrations are over. I'm more prone to depression at this time. I will have to find things to celebrate and time to celebrate them until springtime comes with its sun.

But in the meantime, Wingless Dreamer wants a headshot of me so they can publish one of my poems. That's a positive.

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Christmases in My Family

It's Christmas Eve, and I'm sitting in the cabin at Starved Rock writing this. There's a small fire in the fireplace, and I've just gotten done watching "How the Grinch Stole Christmas".We go to my dad's at noon today, which almost didn't happen because Christmas is strange in my family.

Christmas was my mother's holiday -- she decorated the house elaborately with red ribbons and greens and ornaments until it looked like a Victorian fantasy. She chose presents with care and wrapped them in a way Martha Stewart would envy (for my overseas visitors, look up Martha Stewart. She's a personality whose fame is based on her overly-involved home decor aesthetic).  Mom planned menus and created a spread of Christmas buffet (but no cookies; she found those too fussy).

Even on her last Christmas in 2007, she orchestrated Christmas from the hospital bed in her living room when she could no longer make it up and down the stairs. She decided she would wear her grey robe with Christmas jewelry and direct the Christmas action from her bed. My mom died of the tumor in her brain just before Christmas.

I am my mother's child, and I celebrate Christmas rather vigorously. My husband, luckily, loves Christmas as much as I do, so the house is decorated, Christmas carols play all season, and we have our yearly ritual of Starved Rock because there are few places so welcoming at Christmas as the Lodge there. But there's still that remembrance of my mother mixed up in there, and all the complex feelings memories of my mother stir up -- sorrow, joy, frustration, anger, love. 

So my Christmases are strangely textured now. I accept that, and I accept my remembrances of prior Christmases are likely romanticized. It's all part of life. 

Monday, December 23, 2019

Anticipation -- good and bad

American culture is built upon anticipation. 

The foundling nation, in its Declaration of Independence, declared that its citizens had the right to the pursuit of happiness. Not happiness itself, but the pursuit of happiness with its implication that happiness will be at the end of pursuit.

The consumerist culture of America, likewise, is built upon this anticipation. Every commercial that sells a product or service hooks the buyer through anticipation. The scenario presented on the screen, the promised emotional experience becomes the commodity anticipated; the item purchased is merely the vehicle.

Christmas, likewise, is sold to Americans through everything from commercials to Hallmark movies. There must be family, of course; a big meal; a big tree with presents underneath; an admonition despite all the focus on accumulation that Christmas is in the heart.

The problem with anticipation is that it often builds into a fantasy against which reality can't measure. The family get-together involves political divisiveness, or such lack of acceptance from parents that it's made unbearable. The person tasked with making the big dinner grows resentful at the lack of appreciation and the pile of dishes. The presents don't provide as much joy as expected. One's heart isn't feeling Christmas.

My Christmas doesn't look like the one being sold on TV. My husband and I travel seven hours to visit my relatives, who do not greet us effusively. We have no children, and we leave our Christmas tree back home. We mingle with people celebrating Christmas and Hanukkah and many other holidays. The lodge we stay at is the only thing that looks like a Hallmark Christmas.

And I anticipate this escape every year, and it doesn't disappoint me. 


Sunday, December 22, 2019

Holiday Travel

I didn't write yesterday because I was on the road from the far northwest corner of Missouri to Illinois to visit my family and celebrate Christmas. I'm in town now, typing this at Jeremiah Joe's in Ottawa, IL, watching children misbehave next to the Christmas tree in the big display windows left over from when this space was Famous Department Store. 

I'm getting old. I'm talking in that way older people talk: "I remember when this was Famous Department Store ..." It's inevitable that, when one gets old enough to see things change, that one documents the change aloud. I don't like admitting I'm old; there's still that part of me that thinks younger men should be conducting courtly displays of mischievous intellectualism toward me, but I'm officially past my expiration date for that. 

The white Christmas this year will be only in our dreams, given that highs this week will be in the 40s and there's no precipitation in the forecast. I might be able to take a Christmas hike at Starved Rock State Park. I wonder if that's a thing.

It looks like my dev edit has been delayed till New Years (thank goodness; I wasn't ready for a Christmas present that would make me cry!) No, I know all of what I'm getting for Christmas, unless the universe decides to surprise me with good news about my writing. 

************
Yule was yesterday, Hanukkah starts tonight, Christmas is Wednesday. Good greetings to all of you!


Friday, December 20, 2019

Apprehensive about the dev edit

Maybe I'm a bit apprehensive about my dev edit. My new dev editor says she wrote 2500 words on the first two chapters alone. That's about half the words in the actual chapters. 

I'm afraid I'm going to be overwhelmed with the whole thing. Maybe I will go through the list and come up with short summaries of what I need to do. 

I mean it's a good thing she's this thorough. I asked for it -- in fact, I paid her to be thorough. This is what I want. But it's still intimidating, and still difficult, and still likely to make me feel like I just can't write. I'll need to close my eyes, take a deep breath, and tell myself it's for my own good.

I will be editing a bit over Christmas at Starved Rock; I always bring my laptop on trips for that reason. But the bulk of this editing will be when I return from my trip.

Wish me luck.

Wednesday, December 18, 2019

Looking forward to dev edit

My developmental editor has warned me that there's LOTS of comments on the manuscript she's turning in to me this week. LOTS. 

I think she doesn't want to freak me out. My only worry is that there's going to be so much to process I don’t know where to start. But it’s exciting to be able to delve into improving my work.

Note: this is going to be short because I’m typing it on my phone. I’m typing it on my phone because my cat is on my lap cleaning itself. Oh, the hardships I go through ...

Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Taking a vacation

Feeling a little down. That happens at the end of every semester. I think it's because I'm always in high gear to get through the semester, and then nothing. I don't know what to do with myself. I'm tired yet antsy. I suddenly have no goals. It's hard to deal with. 

Too much time to think. I suddenly have to fight a bunch of negative self-talk, I don't feel inspired to write. I get grouchy.

The solution: get up, do something. Go to the cafe and perhaps try something new. Conversely, get lots of sleep and meditation. Do something different for a change of pace.

In other words, take a vacation.

Monday, December 16, 2019

Dear Santa:

Dear Santa:

I dream of getting published by a major publishing house. 
Think of it as my visions of sugarplums for the season. I have no idea if my wish is overly ambitious, or if you can grant it. 

I don't know if you answer adults' wishes. I suppose if you did, you'd have to have McMansions and Maseratis in that big bottomless sack of yours. And I don't know if you answer everyone's wishes, because there are children starving and children separated from their families, and you haven't granted their wishes. To be honest, if you have to choose between me and those children, I'd prefer you give them comfort and peace and all good things.

But I still wish, because I'm superstitious. I hope that it's possible for you to hook into that ephemeral luck and catch its attention for a fleeting second so my manuscript gets a second look. 

So if you're listening, Santa ...

Sunday, December 15, 2019

Waiting for the Snow

I love keeping up with weather forecasts when a winter storm is coming.

Yesterday, the National Weather Service said our area was to get 2-4 inches, then 4-6. This morning I wake up to find out we're going to get 1-2 inches. Hardly enough to justify putting the snow boots on, and certainly not enough to justify an emergency trip to the store to buy bread and milk.

I'd like some picturesque snow, enough to cover drab lawns and make for a cozy evening. But I don't want too much snow, or else I won't be able to get dug out in time to go to Starved Rock for Christmas.

I should know better than to expect the weather to conform to my wishes. I've been stuck in my house during blizzards only to watch the snow melt the next morning, driven into a half-mile wide blizzard on the interstate, snowed in for two-three days when a storm dropped 36 inches of snow overnight. 

But still, I hope the snow doesn't ruin my plans for travel.

Saturday, December 14, 2019

That feeling that something's going to happen

The feeling like something is about to happen.

It feels like an itch between the shoulderblades, so deep that no amount of itching could get rid of it. Like a target is painted there and I can feel where the arrow is going to land, but it hasn't landed yet. 

Most of the time I feel like this, nothing happens. 

If anything prompts this feeling, it's the belief something should be happening and frustration that it's not. I've just got off for break, I don't go back in until the second or so week of January, and I don't know what to do with myself.

I could work (I have a poster to do) but my brain is still tired from finishing up the semester and it's Saturday.

I could rest, but that's the sort of thing that brings up this feeling something should be happening.

I could write -- I probably should write. That would likely get me out of the house, because I write better at the cafe. A short story awaits. 

Friday, December 13, 2019

My semester is over! Now what to do?

I'm on break and I already don't know what to do with myself.

I'm too bored to surf and not motivated enough to write. Or do anything that uses my brain. 

This will definitely not do. 

What I'd really like to do is spend a day or two at a spa. As I'm 120 miles from a spa, that is not happening.

So I'm probably going to go to the cafe and see how much I can get written on Kami today. 

Thursday, December 12, 2019

Short note -- so sleepy, cannot brain.

So sleepy. Cannot brain.

My last final is today, and after that I've only got internships to grade, and grades to turn in, and I'm done for winter break.

I just need coffee to get through this. Luckily it's on the brew.

**********
The coffee has arrived. 

It might take two cups of coffee to get through this.

Or maybe even three.

***********
After break, stories to write. I'm a little torn at the expansion of Kami, because my writing is filling the background up -- with Barn Swallows' Dance, with its magic. I'm afraid it will be too strange for the contest I want to enter it in. Ah well, I knew I'm not that standard.

Have a great day!

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Counting the words

I am trying to extend a 1200 word story into a 7000 word story for a writing contest. I've written 300 words so far; so I only have to do this 22 more times. 

I tend to like short, concise writing, even in novels. I wonder if it's because I'm relatively impatient, or whether I have a short attention span, or whether I really really can get everything I want done in fewer words. I've been told the latter by my dev editor, who doesn't want me to lengthen things. On the other hand, I have a short story that an editor would like to see as a novel. He's absolutely right, and it would make a great prequel to Prodigies, but I would have to immerse myself in Poland for a couple weeks to get the feel for it. 


So, back to the story. The story is Kami, and it's about death and afterlife. It also features Jeanne and Josh Beaumont-Young, one of my favorite couples. Jeanne at this point is 80 and has just lost her 55-year-old husband of 27 years. I like the couple because they defyour common notions of love and attraction, and because they have a chemistry despite their bookishness.

I need to take a deep breath and set myself a writing goal, and just write, then edit. Luckily I have a vacation to do it.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Pandora's FedEx Package

I have a mystery box coming to me.

I found this out via a text from FedEx. One package to arrive on this Thursday before 5 PM.  I love packages!

The problem is that I have no pending merchandise orders from anywhere. My husband doesn't have any pending orders from anywhere. And, as far as I know, the cats don't have any pending orders from anywhere.

In examining the FedEx text, I can discern the following: The package originated in Berlin, CT. The shipping path began in Northborough, MA. The package's dimensions are 20x12x4, and it weighs 4.2 lbs. It has been in package jail in Odessa, MO for two days.

What can I deduce? I'm failing. My fantasy life has many guesses: 

  • A present from family? (From Berlin, CT? I have no family there.) 
  • A marked-up copy of my novel with a book offer? (I'm pretty much sure that's not how it's done.) 
  • A package bomb? (By FedEx? Highly unlikely). 
  • A sweepstakes prize? ("Here's a grocery sack with our logo!")
  • An inheritance from a long-lost relative? ("Here's a grocery sack with a logo!)
I will know soon. It will likely be something I ordered six months ago that I can't remember. But I can dream, can't I?


Monday, December 9, 2019

The semester is winding down ...

It's finals week, and after I do some wayward grading, all I have left is the finals, which are multiple choice and computer graded.  And then I will be done with the semester and get some quality time with my brain.

I wonder if I will feel possessed to write a new novel? I said I would back down from noveling because I have five I can release to the querying process. I could query -- I think it's been enough time. I could write short stories or poetry. I can't just sit around and do nothing. 

So my break will be at least partially a writing break. It will also be a research break, a class-tweaking break (most of this is, however, done). A sit and pet kitties break. A big coffee break. A sit at the massive fireplace at Starved Rock with a mug of Irish coffee break. 

I'm looking forward to it.

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Something to learn

Sometime around the 2nd of February, I will have put in 1000 entries into this blog. A couple-three years or so worth of entries. This boggles my mind, because I didn't think I could stick to something for that long.

To be honest, I've never been good at sticking to things. I plant a garden and the weeds take over. I start a hobby and I abandon with a room full of supplies. A good amount of this is from the bipolar, when one gets a boost of enthusiasm and energy in mania and then heads down a spiral of depression. Some of this has to do with my ability to over-focus at times, and the subsequent burnout. Some of it has to do with my somewhat lacking planning skills. In other words, I'm a mess who can concentrate on two things well: My job and my writing. 

Maybe I have something to learn from this -- what keeps me on track on these two areas?  Influence on the outside. 

How can I use this? Provide myself with external contact points, such as this blog does. There aren't many of you, but I don't want to let you down, so I keep writing. I keep trying to publish. I keep asking for feedback.


So, if you're stuck anywhere in life, what motivates you? What is your workaround? 

Saturday, December 7, 2019

The Christmas We Make

I'm sitting on my couch in a room transformed into the Christmas my husband and I never felt we had. Both of us had mothers with illnesses, especially around the high-stress times of Christmas, and we tiptoed through the house hoping not to aggravate things. So now we have stockings (hanging on a windowsill; our mantle is a fake fireplace and scaled to make the stockings look ridiculous). We have greenery and seasonal stuffed toys and a now-collectable Avon Christmas train tree that plays tinny Christmas carols. And a tree, lit like my tree in my childhood was, with little multicolored lights. (These modern lights are a bit day-glo, but I'm okay with that).

We play Christmas music almost non-stop. One thing I didn't know about my husband when I met him is that he has an ever-growing set of Christmas albums on iTunes. Right now, it's cool jazz; I'm looking forward to some classical pieces on the soundtrack.

This is where some would piously import that trees and such aren't the real meaning of Christmas. I would argue against this; the real meaning of Christmas is celebration. Let people celebrate the spirit of good that they will. Richard and I celebrate recovery from painful childhoods, among other things. We celebrate that we can make a Christmas for ourselves.

**************

I really apologize for the test note blog yesterday -- I was testing to see if IFTTT could submit a post announcement to Twitter and Facebook so I could quit the extra step of using Hootsuite to post. (Note: It can't.) Ten of you actually read the post, which is really nice of you.)

Thursday, December 5, 2019

Short Essay: Through the Years


“Through the years, we all will be together
if the Fates allow – “

I have spent Christmas surrounded by family, sitting in Santa’s lap as a young child. I have spent Christmas stirring gravy for the Friends of Christmas holiday meal for those alone or suffering. I have spent Christmas musing about some fellow I’d developed a crush on. I’ve spent Christmas estranged from family. I’ve spent Christmas sleeping on a friend’s couch. I’ve spent Christmas admitted to a private psychiatric treatment program. I have spent Christmas caroling with Mormons, sitting in silence with Quakers, performing at Lessons and Carols with Episcopalians, holding a Yule ritual on my own. I have spent Christmas trying to convince my mother she wasn’t dying and years later watching her on her deathbed. I’ve spent Christmas being snubbed by a boyfriend’s family. I have spent Christmas holding my breath on a perfectly still Christmas evening among the lights of a community park, realizing that every Christmas holds a mystery for the heart to solve.

My Muse


My muse holds a magician’s top hat in the spotlight,
busks on a street corner playing with fire,
pens sonnets in the corner of the coffeehouse.
He disappears in crowds as I arrive,
and I pursue him to no avail
through the trail of illusion, through lingering tones,
through words scattered in my path,
through his vital force imbued in the air like ozone.

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

My Loneliest Christmas


This is the Christmas story I seldom tell, of the time thirty years ago that I spent Christmas in an inpatient treatment facility for female sexual abuse. I was lucky to be in a facility with an outstanding program for women like me, and I credit them with turning my viewpoint from that of a victim to that as a survivor. There’s a big difference between the two.

Christmastime is not the time to have one’s husband (now ex) disclose that he had molested several children in his teens*. Especially when one is a sexual abuse survivor. Especially at Christmas. I spiraled into a depression, my promises to weather anything in my marriage warring with my promise not to stay married to a man who could relapse anytime and harm my young nieces. I was already estranged from my parents at that point; I had no support left except friends many, many miles away.

I had exhausted my long-distance friends with my anger and depression and suicidal ideations**. I had exhausted the crisis hotline worker with numerous calls on numerous sleepless evenings. My mentor/father figure and the crisis worker both urged me to seek inpatient treatment. Finally I listened.

I found a place where I could get treatment, a place called Brattleboro Retreat in Brattleboro, VT, one of two facilities my insurance could cover. I visited my PA to see if she could help me get insurance to cover the visit; she informed me that they wouldn’t pay unless they believed I was either suicidal or psychotic. I wasn’t psychotic, and we weren’t sure if I qualified for suicidal despite ideations to the effect, but she convinced the insurance company that I wasn’t suicidal yet, but I could very well be shortly. Insurance accepted me, and I scheduled my stay for the two weeks I had during Christmas break. This, the intake person at Brattleboro told me, was less than the recommended minimum of three weeks, but I knew I needed to get back to work on time to preserve my dignity.

I took the bus from Oneonta to Brattleboro carrying one suitcase as soon as winter break began. I looked out onto a grey, bleak winter which made me feel more bereft. I felt I had nothing, would not have anything ever again. I vaguely remembered the check-in procedure at the small front office, the mental status exam questions about hearing voices and whether the TV spoke especially to me.

My first impressions of the unit, my two-week home, was that of old wood in need of some refinishing, worn green carpet, in a comfortable stately boarding house in need of a little freshening up. I remember the room with bath I had to myself, the front central desk, and the white paneled doors with security alarms.

From the first day, I experienced Brattleboro as a combination of summer camp and boot camp, with my psyche being remade through stark honesty and challenge, meditation and self-soothing. Brattleboro Retreat’s program could be best described by this metaphor: You’re standing on a rickety floor, an unsafe floor, but it’s the only floor you’ve known. Suddenly, the floor is being torn out from under you plank by plank, and suddenly you find yourself falling, but then there’s a safety net catching you and tools to help build that floor up. But I cried a lot, mourning my lost relationship, feeling overwhelmed with the feelings coming up from my childhood abuse, taking the scorn of my new roommates too personally. I know now that they reacted to my academic language, my talking about recovery but not recovering, and to their own vulnerabilities which they tried to hide with tough talk while I wore mine like a suit.

On Christmas Eve, we played Jenga and Scrabble amongst the tinsel that decorated the windows, in a world of our own, as we were not allowed outside the campus until we’d earned outing privileges. Once or twice a resident acted out, using old broken strategies for dealing with feelings, and we would have group meetings to tell that resident how their actions made us feel as part of the protocol for dealing with destructive behaviors.

On Christmas, I felt lonelier than I ever had in my life, and I spent too much time on the unit’s one phone talking to my friend long-distance. But I journeyed down to the gift shop and bought myself a midnight blue sweatshirt with “Brattleboro” emblazoned across it in collegiate letters and a jar of good-smelling body cream. I rubbed the cream on myself after I soaked for a half-hour in the private tub I was allowed because I was neither an imminent suicide risk nor did I have an eating disorder.

My experience of Brattleboro, looking out the large windows of the common space at the frozen river at night and Christmas lights in the distance, changed my life in ways I am still learning. It taught me how to mourn and let go, how to seek the light, how to see myself as a survivor rather than a victim. I am who I am because of Brattleboro, because of that lonely Christmas.


* It is entirely possible (and believed by several mutual friends) that my ex lied about his history of being an abuser for obscure reasons, but I can only go on what he told me at the time. 

** At this point, I was probably also suffering from a rapid-cycling bipolar episode, but I had not been diagnosed yet.

What I've learned by using Submittable

When I went to Archon, a conference for writers in St. Louis, a few people advised me to start submitting shorter items, poetry and short stories, as the novel market has been so capricious. One person tipped me off to Submittable, a web page/app which helps writers identify potential publishers (literary journals, writers' web pages, etc.) and streamlines the submission process.

What I've discovered from using Submittable:

1) Many journals have submission fees, so submitting in bulk can cost some money. The lowest fee I've seen is $5.00, the highest fee I've seen is $30. The more "literary" or exclusive the journal, the higher that fee.

2) There are a lot of themed calls for submissions -- fantasy, horror, romance, cross-genre and more.  Some of these offer a prompt -- one of the ones I entered had the prompt "Catch up". 

3) I have a ten percent success rate, which has kept me from the despair about not finding an agent/publisher for my novels. 

I get a lot of rejections for my work, but because there's always more contests, and more hope, I feel better about trying.

Monday, December 2, 2019

On Christmas Music

I'm not tired of Christmas carols yet.

Given that it's only Cyber Monday, a designation that seems odd given the online stores have been offering sales since Thanksgiving, I haven't had too much exposure to Christmas carols this season. 

But I have my favorite Christmas albums, Harry Simeone Chorale and Sinatra and Johnny Mathis, and -- OMG, my husband just put Mantovani on (ok, Boomer)!

I have my new favorites, Pentatonix and Take Six, and -- not "All I Want for Christmas is You", which I'm tired of even though I haven't heard it yet this season. 

Throw in Benjamin Britton's Ceremony of Carols and a bit of Handel's Messiah, and my Christmas slate is filled with much music to listen to. 

If you have Christmas favorites, please let me know in the comments!

Sunday, December 1, 2019

Unusual Dreams of Christmas.

It would be a nice time to get obsessed with a story, while I'm waiting to hear back from potential developmental editors for Whose Hearts are Mountains, while I'm waiting for responses for things I've sent, while my last two weeks of school are easy and the festive season gives me ideas to play with.

I'm not getting any of those inspirations at the moment. "Silent Night" in Gaelic is playing on the stereo. The artificial fireplace is crackling and I can smell fake pine scent, and I wonder why these artificial remnants of a vital, pagan culture give me comfort. Would the real things give me more inspiration? I don't know. 

I admit that I have fantasies about Victorian-style Christmas Eves (note that in Victorian Christmas, decorations were put up Christmas eve and remained till January 6, the twelfth night of Christmas.) Of course, my fantasy soon takes me off into a decidedly pagan adventure with Father Christmas, finding a way to slip largesse and joy into people's lives in the countryside. This might involve some invisible smuggling hunting of wild game for the table in a Robin Hood turn.  Or modern ones, following an elusive busker through Chicago decorated for the holidays, a search for the treasure of knowing a talented soul. 

 For not being inspired, I sure feel inspired today.