Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

10
Mar
10

“Untitled, 2010″ †

After yesterday’s word-heavy post, I give you pictures of my daughter

doing creative and happy-making things.

I won’t brag that she’s reading everything in sight, at least a couple books a day, and sounding out (or guessing, when all else fails) at store signs and product packaging. No one wants to hear me do that.

When I ask her what she wants to do when she grows up, she always answers with something like “Drive a car!” or “Wear pink shoes!”

When I rephrase, she says she wants to work where I work. Then I cry and she skips off to color a picture of the neighbors’ dog.

We made this birdhouse when her class was studying pets and care thereof. It doesn’t really apply to the theme, but isn’t gluing and painting and hanging stuff fun!?

Some finished product. I’m going to hold onto a stack of these, just in case she ends up being crazy famous. Or, as this next picture suggests, famously crazy.

09
Mar
10

Books I Love: Bird by Bird †

One day, I woke up and decided that I was going to be a writer if it killed me. And sometimes, very nearly, it has, at least in the emotional sense. It’s hard to write, to throw your insides all over something permanent and then release that something all alone into the Multiverse with no parental supervision. It’s hard to wake up and do all the things you have to do (things that make you a “grown-up,” usually, and are fraught with unfun-ness), then convince yourself that it’s worth it to try and continue something that most people consider worthless, lazy, or selfish—especially if those are issues you have trouble reconciling in yourself, which any good self-loathing writer does. Writing in seriousness is brave, and generally, I am not. Whatever possessed me that day, and for the majority of the days since, clearly had no idea what a chicken it decided to inhabit.

The best book I’ve read thus far on the topic of a writer’s competing grandiosity and low self-esteem is Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. I reread it recently, and the book seems to ring ever truer with age. Lamott’s dark and twisty sense of humor is something I can easily relate to, and entire passages seem to be literal transcriptions from my mornings:

“Often when you sit down to write… your mental illnesses arrive at the desk like your sickest, most secretive relatives. And they pull up chairs in a semicircle around the computer, and they try to be quiet but you know they are there with their weird coppery breath, leering at you behind your back.”

I’ve wasted a lot of time hem-hawing, doodling, plotting ways to get rich but not plotting books, not being funny on Twitter, trying to figure out how to spell words I made up, and staring at the ceiling, and crying into my coffee, and digging for the end of a bottomless bag of salt and vinegar chips, and starting then stopping then starting then trying to quit and being told that I am not allowed. (Thankfully, people never allow me to quit, knowing [somehow] that I will do whatever they say is necessary. I love and hate these people in varying degrees—depending on the day, the task and whether or not I actually wanted to quit.)

Bird by Bird is less of a technique guide than a typical “writing book,” instead relying on the author’s extreme likability and honest voice to persuade the reader to actually sit down and put something on paper. It’s good to get permission from people with experience, especially when suffering the wavering self-assuredness specific to writing. Stephen King tells us in On Writing that we may write anything we want—anything! Likewise, Lamott has an entire chapter (hilariously-but-aptly) titled “Shitty First Drafts,” which extends us the freedom to make terrible, heinous, seriously grievous, heartbreaking errors with wanton abandon, to write down everything that floats across the conscious parts of the brain, even if those things are nonsensical and trite, unrelated, full of adverbs and split infinitives or beginning in conjunctions, or part of another story, or a retelling of a day in the life of your toaster, because eventually what happens is that you find the thing you’re really writing about buried underneath all the junk that fell out of your brain and onto the page. That’s a rule I can follow, and since I’ve started doing exactly that, my life has been somewhat less desperate and noticeably uninhabited by coppery-breathed mental illnesses.

Other chapters cover useful topics like jealousy and broccoli, which are things even non-writers might benefit from reading.

Bird by Bird was recommended to me by Caleb Krause, way back when MySpace was all the rage, and I’ll never really be able to thank him for mentioning it in passing and then forgetting all about it. It’s been really useful, more than most books, and I love it.

Actually, I can: Thanks, Caleb, for recommending this book in passing then forgetting about it. It’s been really useful, more than most books, and I love it.

08
Mar
10

Hey, gang! †

I’m working on a super-slick new layout for this old house, but it’s taking longer than anticipated and I’m not really happy with it. And “not really happy with it” is Nicespeak for “deeply in hate with it.” So, after much hand-wringing and self-loathing, I’ve opted to fail ; until I work out the kinks, you get to visit this same old Redoable Lite, minus the header and any hint of the awesomeness I’mma lay on you [insert measure of time here; ex.: soon, ASAP, someday, or when I stop banging my head on the wall in frustration].

Now. I want to talk about upcoming blog-type things. This Saturday is the big O-N-E for AdrienneCrezo.com, which I’m celebrating all week with content, including a guest blogger  and lots of talk about books, namely ones I love and use and sometimes have to repurchase because they’ve become too frayed and brittle and falling-apart for actual reading (see: 1984).

Does this happen to other people or am I really the only person who is physically abusive to my books? Well, at least they aren’t babies or puppies. Those are generally safe around me.

06
Mar
10

For Future Reference †

Expect to see a lot of these (†)  in the future. This dagger†  is the official indicator that something posted here, and subsequently announced on various social networking platforms, was written before the date and/or time posted and scheduled to auto-post, a convenient and widely used technology that has existed since roughly the beginning of Internet Time.

Please take a moment to look to your immediate right, where you will notice a handy Auto-Post Disclaimer widget. Should you be curious about the daggers (†) and what it all means, this daggery goodness on the blog, or if you just happen to miss this particular post whilst digging through old entries and don’t understand why, all of a sudden, I should want to stab everything with this (†) weird crossy-looking thing (stab stab stab!), it’s because I wrote this on my own time and apparently that needs to be indicated, like a-so: †

Nearly everything I post is scheduled, but for the sake of keeping people well-informed (a very nice quality, I think), and possibly being obnoxious (a not-so-nice quality that I will own to in this case), I will be indicating a post-dated, uh, post, with the dagger. After all, no one wants to get dooced.

20
Feb
10

Shutter Island: a reaction journal

Previews: ooh; ahh; no way; ok; I guess I’ll have to come see this with Chris; boo; meh.

5 minutes in: I hope this doesn’t end up as cheesy as it seems.

15 minutes in: Oh, man. This is straight pulp. I already know how this one goes.

30 minutes in: It puts the lotion on its skin.

55 minutes: Huh.

1 hour, 10 minutes: Holy $h!+.

1 hour, 30 minutes: What?

1 hour, 45 minutes: Heart. Breaking.

2 hours, 5 minutes: The girl behind me: “OK, now I’m confused,” despite having just learned the entirety of the plot (which is fairly apparent within the first hour), to which her friend replies, “OMG, WTF. IDK.” And I promptly stabbed myself in the eye.

2 hours, 12 minutes: Final credits, applause (!), fast-paced chatter as we spill into the blistery cold wind. Hugs, goodbyes, homeward.

Go see it. It was great.




† Auto-Post Disclaimer

† This symbol denotes that an item was written sometime in the past and scheduled to post at a predetermined point in the future. Updates at the time of publication (including but not limited to those for Yahoo!, Twitter and Facebook) may appear when I am at my desk at work, working busily on work things with coworkers and filing TPS reports with the new cover sheet. Additionally, updates may appear while I am napping on Saturday afternoon, or on an airplane with no wi-fi, or in line at WalMart taking cellphone shots for seedy niche blogs. In short, the Internet is a time-traveler and I am not, therefore I will appear to be in this place when I am actually in that place, doing whatever I am currently doing.

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