Posts Tagged ‘Hercules’

This is what I do with my draw-rings.  I don’t know why.  I am never satisfied, and I don’t do it enough to find a “flow.”  So I get pissed off, crumple them up, and throw them away. 
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This is appropriate to my post-NaNoWriMo blog because I sort of feel like doing the same thing to my . . . novel.  (holy shit, I wrote a novel?)

And I almost feel like I could do that—delete the entire 50,140 words—and still feel good about this past month of obsessive insanity.  Almost.  Because I have learned so much.  (I wonder how many “What I Learned From NaNoWriMo” blogs there are going out today?)  I learned:

1.  That it doesn’t take anything special to be a “writer.”  It is only the writing, and the stubbornness to keep on keepin’ on.  And I think that goes for any creative endeavor.  I mean, I’m assuming that if you can read this, you know how to write.  And everyone can use a pen, a paintbrush, a camera.  Easy.  I’m thinking, if you have something to say, it should be said.  Or written.  Or whatever.  (Or at least, attempted.  Right?)

2.  Despite my whining about “not having any time for myself,” I actually do.  Yes, it may be the stretch between 10PM and bartime, it leaves me exhausted the next day, and it requires Hercules to deal with the Sleepless Shortcake for a few hours, but it is there.    I cannot do this every night.  That was a tad o. ver. kill. ish.  But, a couple nights a week?  Yes!  We!  Can!  (And!  We!  Will!)

3.  I love writing.  Even if the book sucks.  (because, actually, I think, it does.)  But still, I loved doing it.

4.  I love other things, which I learned by reeeeeeeeally missing them.  I missed jogging (weird!!!).  I missed developing film.  I missed taking pictures on that film.  I missed drawing.  Today and yesterday, I’ve got this craaaaazy need to just draw draw draw draw and doodle paint sketch.  I missed cooking good food.  I missed showering.

sad little abandoned rolls of film

sad little undeveloped films

5.  I need a deadline.  I HATE goals and deadlines.  Hate.  I think they set people up for failure, and don’t allow room for following one’s own creative path.  In other words, I’m a lazy shit (who has recently been converted to the beauty of the deadline).  Deadlines are good.  I’m a moron.

6.  If you build it, they will come.  And by build, I mean show up at the laptop/page/camera/canvas.  And by they, I mean the words/muse/pictures.  I knew this, of course.  But it is very infrequent that I actually “show up” and invite the muse.  Usually, the muse follows me around all day, watching over my shoulder, impatiently, as I change a poopy diaper or moderate a fight or help with homework or read a picture book or chaperon a vanful (etc.).   And then she laughs as I try desperately to cram her genius into the teeny little morsel of opportunity that may or may not present.  And then I cry when I miss it.

7.  I am losing count.  Like did I say the thing about “making time” yet?  Because I think I did.  And PS, that reminds me:  It’s important.  And it really solved the problem of restlessness, for me.  Instead of thinking aaaah!  I really want to write!,  I knew that that time was there, waiting.

8.  I learned, tangibly, about “the dip.”  I felt it at about 38,000 words.  And then all the way until the end. 

9.  The people who love me, and even just kinda like me, are awesome and supportive and just really, really nice.

 

And there you have the last thing I will say about NaNoWriMo.  Ever.  Because I’m sure as hell not going to do this again next year.

 

(and, no.  I’m not going to delete the nanowrimo draft, for goodness’ sake.  I’m just not even going to look at it for a while.)

Sugar, Sugar

November 5, 2009

Forgive me, readers, for I am sinning—breaking my own no-blogging-until-NaNoWriMo-word-count-goal-is-reached rule.  I am only a hundred or so short for the night, but I have just finished an important scene, and now the characters change for a bit.  So I need to change my frame of mind.  Fuck Lay off.

I’m just going to share a few random things that are making me crazy-happy-giddy today.  Please excuse my sickening cheerfulness.

Crazy-happy-giddy moment of synchronicity:  First, you must know that the white lily and the red poppy have been important symbols in the book that I am writing.  I won’t go into details, but I have focused on these two flowers extensively, as they represent the two main characters.  OK then.  So.  I brought Kiki to an art class at our small local art museum last night.  I have been spending the hour and a half of her Wednesday night class time in the library next door in quiet, blissful, aloneness.  This week was the first Wednesday of NaNoWriMo, so I brought along my laptop, excited to have this stretch of undisturbed writing time.  Usually, because the exhibits are closed by that time, the lights are all off in the museum.  But last night, the lights were on, and the large mural that was in the front hall was replaced by an exhibit of flower paintings.  In the center of the paintings, the focal points and the largest pieces, were two flowers: a single white lily and a single red poppy.  Giddy.  “O.K. then, Universe.  I catch your drift.”  (I did not say this out loud.)

Roulottes.  I have decided that I will be dragging my family, from now on, around with me in a gypsy caravan.  (To which Hercules, reading over my shoulder, just replied, “There are six of us, Terri.”)  I have a grand scheme planned: mountains, meandering stream, and a few of our favorite families, each with their own roulotte (or two).  A central space for gathering, a communal cellar . . .  C’mon.  Let’s do this.  Yes?  If anything, I think I will be getting even more gaudy than ever.  This all makes me out of my mind crazy-giddy.  It’s possible . . .

Honey, Honey.  I sang this song to Shortcake last week, and it made her giggle uncontrollably.  Since then, she requests it for lullabies, wants it played continuously on the computer, and she sings and dances to it with ferocious passion.  She prefers “you are my candy baby,” and will correct me if I slip.  It is the cutest thing ever.  Giddy-happy.  Indeed.

Is Terri. . . O. K.?

October 8, 2009

“Is Terri. . .  O. K.?”

Hercules was asked this the other day, by a very concerned someone who recently read a few recent blog entries.  I’m assuming he meant, more specifically, ”Is Terri. . .

. . .mentally ill?”

. . .attending anger management classes?”

. . .having a pre-midlife crisis?”

. . .doing drugs?”

. . .leaving you for a woman that she met on the internet?”

 So:

Dear concerned someone:

I am doing very well, actually.  Thank you for asking.  To tell you the truth, I have never felt happier.  If, in fact, I am mentally ill; or if someone is secretly baking something into my brownies; or if this is midlife (does that mean I will be dying at 64?); then so be it.  I like it this way.

Love,

Terri

p.s. Speaking of crazy, this is the moment, the sparkly beads moving around with the Lucky Duckies, that made me snap last week.  I videotaped it, said “whoa… trippy, dude,” and planned on sharing the experience here.  But, I could not find the silver cord that connects the video camera to the computer, and spent like 900 hours obsessing over finding it. 

Ob.  Freakin.  Sessing.

And then I got over it, especially when I realized it was less Lucy-In-The-Sky-With-Diamonds, than it was Baby-Einstein-Mozart.

Imagine moving and sparkling (and quacking):

p.p.s.  i just don't DO digital color.  Somebody please give me a photoshop action.  Or take away my DSLR.
p.p.s. i just don’t DO digital color. Somebody please give me a photoshop action. Or just take away my DSLR.

Tonight, while I was rinsing a roll of negatives, I found a beautiful old book in a yet-unpacked-from-2005 basement box.  It was a decades-old Edgar Allan Poe collection, the binding a faded red, the pages yellowed with age.  Oh…  the words.  I had forgotten!  I devoured them, and they felt like rich dark chocolate to my eyes; and I forgot completely about the water wasting away down my darkroom sink.  This passage is from the short story Eleonora:

Men have called me mad; but the question is not yet settled, whether madness is or is not the loftiest intelligence — whether much that is glorious- whether all that is profound — does not spring from disease of thought — from moods of mind exalted at the expense of the general intellect. They who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only by night. In their gray visions they obtain glimpses of eternity, and thrill, in awakening, to find that they have been upon the verge of the great secret. . . .

We will say, then, that I am mad.

And in my own rapturous madness, I grabbed a pen, and I drew on the pages!  I boxed in a particularly beautiful line, then drew a woman’s face around it, her hair flowing across the words of a haunting tale.  I did stop to pause for a moment, thinking, this isn’t a problem is it?  But a picture of a large, new book I had purchased as a gift for Hercules, (the-complete-works-of-poe-or-something?) flashed in my mind.  Right, then.  All good.  draw, draw, doodle, doodle, read, read, yay.

An hour later, in the living room, Hercules is standing with an old, red book in his hands.  His eyes are wide, and he appears dumbstruck.

Crap.

“. . .in a 1927 edition of Poe?”  I think he might cry.

Suddenly, I understand Mowgli, when, in such painfully obvious circumstances, he replies, “I didn’t mean to!”

 

Mowgli, in a compulsive moment of catalog-doodle weakness.  I totally get it.
Mowgli, in a compulsive moment of catalog-doodle weakness. I totally get it.

And I Like To Do Draw-rings

September 19, 2009

I’ve started a routine of daily sketchbook journaling.  That is, if doing something for three days straight counts as a routine thing.  My Moleskine has been sitting in my junk drawer, mostly blank, for months.  I decided I didn’t like the paper.  I decided I wasn’t good enough at drawing.  I decided I didn’t have the time.  I decided I couldn’t decide what to designate the book for (thoughts, dreams, practice sketches, photo ideas, don’t-forget sketches, technique experiments, etc.).  I decided it was too small.  I decided it was too expensive to waste on my juvenile skill. 

Moron. 

I paged through this book, which I picked up at the library, and realized how idiotic and arrogant I was being.  I’ve been wanting to draw.  I love to draw.  It is one of those things of which I simply do not tire, and cannot get enough (like chocolate).  I’ve been wanting to improve my skill, to work out kinks in technique, vision, and medium.  I’ve been wanting to record a few of the little glimpses of beauty that surprise me daily (and evaded my camera).  And all that was stopping me was a group of really pathetic excuses.  I have the book, I have paper, I have pens and inks and graphite and acrylics and markers and brushes.  What, again, was it that I was waiting for? 

(Ready, set, go.)

This is definitely an exercise in letting go of expectations and perfection.  I now try to have the book open on my counter (requires a clean one, though), or in my purse, or in the front seat of the van, and I jot down thoughts and doodles.  I just draw, without intention, whenever I get a chance.  It’s still extremely frustrating, not being able to give it my all.  But I’ve come to realize that I can do this, or I can do nothing.

So, in the tradition of SNL/Mike Myers’ Simon, I’m overcoming my humiliation, and showing you a few drawings from this week.  (Well, hello, my name is Terri.  And I like to do Draw-rings.)  This is from my second Moleskine day.  It’s just something little and rather insignificant, but it felt so good.  (…which is somewhat ridiculous considering I do actually doodle all the time, on envelopes, on the sidewalk, on shopping lists; but this sort of felt like committing?  I guess?)

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Then, Hercules took all four kids to a local football game the other day, and I had precisely one hour to a) sleep, b) clean, or c) cook.  I chose to. . .  draw.  The next drawing  (pencil and sepia ink on rough watercolor paper) is a hint of a vision that has been trying to work her way out of my head.  It was either very, very good to scratch this particular itch, or very, very bad, in a past-the-point-of-no-return way.  I will be restless until I resolve what this is trying to “say,” and how to “say it.”

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Today, I was an unjustified martyr, as I watched a friend’s kids (and mine), while she went out by herself for her birthday.  For the first couple hours, I was without the youngest.  Figure that: “freedom,” with six kids under my care.

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Oh!  And, this is important, if only indirectly relevant:  Our very good friends moved here from England a few years ago.  When I learned that the Mr.’s name was Simon, I couldn’t help but walk around the house singing, with a very sad Mike-Myers-impersonating-British-child accent, “Well, hello, my name is Simon, and I like to do draw-rings…” all day long.  I did exercise good social skills, however, and restrained myself when accepting our first dinner invitation.  Dimples, however, marched into their house singing the Simon song, with an even sadder mommy-impersonating-Mike-Myers-impersonating-British-child accent. 

I would have been humiliated, but I was still trying to digest the fact that upon our arrival, Simon was planting grass seed on the front lawn.  His greeting for his first-time dinner guests: “Whoops!  Oh, Dear.  You’ve caught me spreading my seed!”

No, maybe that wasn’t important.