Note to Self…

October 21, 2007

The employees at Home Depot at closing are almost as bad as the ones at Sears Hardware the rest of the time.


Traffic Court

October 12, 2007

About a week ago, I got busted for speeding down Henry Street, a small off-street in Delaware, on the way to work. I got busted cleanly, fair and square, but the officer cut me a break and said I could either get a ticket for speeding or for not wearing a seat belt (yeah, I like to live dangerously). I took the seat belt citation and thanked him.

Because of our tight money situation, I wasn’t able to pay off the ticket until today, the day of my court appearance. When I got to the courthouse, there was a line of people waiting to get in and argue their cases with the judge. Evidently there were lots of people who disagreed with why they got tickets. I wanted to stick around and watch the goings on, but I got the impression that they were closed to the public, that just the officer and the defendant were before the judge. Oh, well. It was still an interesting experience.

And it’s probably a good thing that I paid up front and left. The guard told me on the way out that last week the last person left after 1PM. If I had waited for my court appearance, I would have almost certainly been late to work.


Note to Self:

October 11, 2007

It is impossible to remain irritable when listening to Tony Bennett.


Story of my life…

October 20, 2006

I’d have to go back into the archives to remember when I posted last.

I get sick and/or distracted, and blogging is the first thing to go.

Can’t promise it’ll get better before it gets worse. Because of my involvement in my church’s Christmas show (henceforth known as LCT), any time that isn’t spent doing something else like–oh, I don’t know… WORK… or some other obligation, is spent focusing on LCT. And any time leftover from that is just spent recuperating.

As much as I love being a part of LCT, and honored to have such a prominent role in its creation, I really loathe a lot of the time I have to spend on it. It takes away time I’d rather spend writing–or, at the very least, pretending to write.

Nanowrimo is just a little over a week away. Can’t do it because of LCT. Got short storie brewing away up in the noggin. Can’t do them because I have no time for them.

Of course, if I were being truly honest, I’d admit that the above paragraphs are lies. It’s all in setting priorities. If writing were all that important to me, I’d be doing it anyway. I’d be using that act of creation to relax and unwind, instead of reading or watching TV (although there are some really interesting and fun new shows this fall).

And, of course, as of Sunday afternoon, I’ll only need to plan out the last few minutes of the last song, and that will only take a couple of hours. Realistically, I could start writing on a regular basis as early as Sunday or Monday.

We’ll see… we’ll see.


“Sick, Sick, Sick,” or “Why I haven’t written dick-all in a week”

September 14, 2006

I’m home today, sitting in the library with a kitty on my lap, and the lap dog taking up the majority of the floor.

Mrs. Wesley had been out of commission Tuesday and Wednesday with the Crud, and now I’ve got it. Coughing, hacking, sniffles. The whole nine. And I’ve completely lost my voice. Like, the only sound I can get to come out above a whisper is when I’m wheezing or hacking up a furball.

I would have written my 1,000 words Tuesday, but Mrs. Wesley needed to be cuddled, and therefore we watched the remainder of LOST Season 2 on DVD.

I would have written my 1,000 words yesterday, but, quite honestly, I was already sickipoo and vegged in front of the TV while Mrs. Wesley needed to use the computer anyway. I think I went to bed at 9PM.

Ironically, I may very well write my 1,000 words today, when I’m sick as a dog. There are some things I really want to get down in response to the book I read (and mostly completed) this weekend: a collection of Max Brand’s (mostly) non-western short stories. Like how most of them are built around just five scenes, or how strong his female characters are. I mean, almost all of the stories I read were from 1934-1936, and they were GOOD. Well-plotted, well-paced… well-written stories with well-drawn characters.

It’s a shame that Mr. Faust hated them so much. He may not have been a great poet, but he was a fine writer.


Truer Words Have Never Been Spoken

September 13, 2006

“Flattery is like chewing gum. Enjoy it, but don’t swallow it.”

- Hank Ketcham (taken from ¡Journalista!)


Life, post-9/11

September 8, 2006

Back in 1998-99 or so, the singles group I was in at church had an event downtown, “Where’s Wesley.” Me and a friend, Bill dressed up as Waldo and the Wizard and wandered around a downtown mall and the statehouse as teams of 5 hunted us down and followed clues we had hidden. It was all very hush-hush. No permitions from either the mall or the statehouse. We even hid little pictures of me all over the statehouse–taped to statues and under displays and such.

And this all took place on a Saturday afternoon. About 75 folks rushing around the statehouse shouting and causing no end of commotion, not to mention two freaks dressed as children’s literature characters–and the state troopers didn’t even blink.

Can’t do that today. Today, the statehouse has exactly one entrance available to the public, and NOBODY gets past the lobby without permission.

I know it’s rather inconsequential in light of some of the real changes since the September 11 attacks, but in a small way, it is representative of the freedoms we’ve lost since, in the name of security. I no longer have the right to just careen around government offices creating pandemonium (as long as I’m not disturbing the peace). I have to check in and get approval first.

Sigh.


1,000 Words: The Coyotes of Silver Moon

September 8, 2006

Starting out with just a little under three hundred words to begin with, so there’s that. Don’t know if I’m going to hit my target for today regardless. I mean, I will, there’s no doubt about that, I’m just not sure any of it’s going to have anything to do with the story.

See, Mrs. Wesley and I had another chat tonight, about how I’ve shirked my responsibilities with LCT this year, because I haven’t listened to the music—which I haven’t—and haven’t gotten in touch with the others on the team I’m supposed to be leading—which I haven’t.

It wasn’t so much a discussion as her telling me what she thinks I need to do, and me understanding it, even if she sees it differently. Unfortunately nothing is ever easy. Instead of her saying her piece and letting it go—which, admittedly, she’s done several times in the past. But each time I was ready to leave, she would ask, “so what are you going to do about this… tomorrow?” That turned a five minute lecture into a 45 minute cold war. She asks questions that demand answers, and I just don’t have them in formats that I can express or that she can understand.

Even as I write this, I’ve had to stand up and pace around and vent at least three times, wasting maybe 15 minutes because I can’t concentrate.

Okay, four times now.

That’s part of the problem with how I write. I have to clear my head before I can get into the story. I’ve got to put everything in my head down on paper. And everything in my head right now is my frustration with the wife and how I feel about the whole LCT thing.

Here’s the fact of the matter. I don’t really want to do LCT anymore. It takes up too much of my energy year after year. I enjoy being a part of it… sometimes. But the truth is I don’t often enjoy being there. That’s not true. In the past, when I was a cast member, I had often thought about dropping out, and there were years I did bail out completely, or nearly so. I just wasn’t having fun in rehearsals or performances very often.

Now, I’m in charge of them. I think I can really bring something new to the process. Hopefully, at least. But now it takes up even more of my energy, and I’m not really up for it this year. I mean, I have a couple of ideas to take the burden off my shoulders. An internship program where I would pick a few people to follow me around and learn a little bit about what goes on in the making of these programs. And then I’m going to ask the high school seniors to take charge of the younger kids.

750 words and counting. I’m tired and frustrated and scared and upset.

How am I supposed to enjoy myself this weekend now? We might as well not go, because I’m not going to be able to concentrate on anything except LCT now, am I? Right now I’m thinking about how that CD with all the music on it for the program is sitting on top of my CPU, and I’m here writing about how I don’t have the time to do anything with it, because I need to get my thousand words in.

But here’s the thing: LCT doesn’t do me any good for my writing. If I’m supposed to be a writer, if I’m supposed to be writing, then any time I spend working on something other than my writing is not time spent efficiently. Therefore, any time I spend fussing about LCT is really just wasted writing time.

I’m thinking right now that I should just can this weekend and devote it to storyboarding for LCT. That would be the rational decision. I’m not going to have any fun this weekend now.

I don’t have time to read. I don’t have time to write. The only thing I’ve done for the past two nights is watch old episodes of LOST that aren’t even that good, when I should be doing something else.

…and that, dear reader, is how to finish my 1,000 words on a low, low note.


Note to Self:

September 7, 2006

My job as a father (when I become one) is not to make sure my kids have it better off than I did, but to make sure they’re better people than I am.


1,000 Words: The Coyotes of Silver Moon

September 6, 2006

I’m going to try to get this cranked out while at work today. I probably should have started an hour or more ago, when I got back from lunch and everyone else was out. Now people are starting to come back, and I’ll have to get back to work shortly. So I may have to pound this one out as quickly as possible.

Still working on the Coyotes of Silver Moon. I’ve still got the germ of the idea: three outlaws discover a belt that turns the wearer into a coyote. I’ve still got the US Marshal and his posse tracking them down. But I don’t have much more than that.

I want the outlaws to be genuinely afraid of the Marshal, but I don’t know if I want the Marshal to be a bad guy. It would be so easy to make the marshal a corrupt cop stereotype, but that would make him a stereotype, wouldn’t it?

Wait, I may have just had an epiphany. What if I took a page from O Brother, Where Art Thou? That movie was about three convicts on the lam, followed by a Marshal who was truly frightening. Even though he had no ulterior motive, just the fact that he was always there, just a step or two behind them, and his presence was so ominous that the three convicts often escaped by the dumbest of luck. Of course, that was a part of the charm of the movie. But I think I want that kind of relationship between my characters. Once the outlaws discover who’s after them, they’ll be jumping over each other to get away.

But I still don’t know what to do with the belt. Which is just kinda important to the whole story, don’t you think?

I think I need to go to the bathroom and stretch my legs (and hips) for a moment. That’s what I think.

620 words to go.

But I’ll get to the belt in a little bit. Let’s take a look at the outlaws. I know I want at least one of them to be severely injured, probably dying, wounded in the shootout resulting from the botched robbery.

Gutshot. Something that produces a lot of internal bleeding, but won’t allow the person to die for several days. Like, in the kidneys or something.

But why not just leave him behind? Maybe he’s someone’s kid brother?

Okay, I’m getting a real vision of Déjà vu here, and I don’t know why. Is it something about the kid brother that’s setting this off? I don’t know.

What other reason would two of these outlaws have for not abandoning the gutshot outlaw? Younger brother… what else? Maybe he’s the leader of the group, and they’re loyal to him. Maybe he’s holding a secret of his own, like a stash of gold he’s been hoarding for years… or something else. But my gut tells me that the kid brother idea is the winner. I like the idea that one of the outlaws is trying to save his brother—maybe not even a kid brother as much as his TWIN brother… hmmm…

They’re all going to be young. In their 20s, at the oldest. I don’t know that any gunfighter outside of the famous lawmen like Wyatt Earp really lasted past their 30th birthday.

The other two outlaws… I don’t think either one of them should be the ‘leader’ of the gang, the mastermind. One may outrank the other because of his familiarity with the gang leader, but, hey, if the boss gets shot and killed or captured, I think it’s perfectly reasonable that the foot soldiers start fighting amongst themselves.

Sorry about that. Got distracted trying to come up with names and ended up looking at county maps for California. Such is life.

The twins will be August and Alexanander Luther. Well, crap. I just realized—Alexander Luther—Lex Luthor. Can’t use that, can I? Or can I? Well, why not. As long as I –

Hold on, just realized something. I changed my mind. They’r—Alex and August—aren’t going to be the Luther boys, they’re going to be the McHenry boys.

Okay, how about this for a little bit of conflict. Luther Slope, the third of the outlaws, was maybe second in command of the gang, or maybe one of the ranking lieutenants, while August and Alex were a bit younger and hotter tempered. August was looking to make a name for himself and his brother—the McHenry Boys, and he wanted to start up his own gang. So it was something August did that caused the robbery to go south, and yet he gets away. I like that. Lots of conflict. The McHenrys boys, August specifically, were causing trouble within the ranks, disagreeing with the way things worked. Maybe they were more educated than the others, graduated high school. That’d be fun. The McHenry boys are more schooled than the rest of the gang, and August flaunts this as much as possible, challenging decisions and plans and such.

And Luther Slope was an older, high ranking officer.

Scratch Alexander—How about Julius? Julius and August McHenry. Okay, THAT sounds like a couple of city slickers brothers who get in over their head. I like that a lot. Julius and August.

And they were all members of the Rollie Pierce gang. Julius and August McHenry, Luther Slope and Rollie Pierce. I like that a lot.

Now, what actually happens in this story? How do they find out about this shaman? And more importantly, what do they do with this belt—and maybe most importantly, and what will define this story, will they get out of it alive?

I know I DON’T want to show the actual robbery going bad. That’s beyond the point of this story. I want to start with them on the run, being chased by the Marshals.

NOTE TO SELF: I really need to pick up (again) The Writers Guide to Life in the 1800s (or the Old West—I forget which).

I may work on this more tonight, just fleshing out some ideas. But as of here, I’ve got my 1,000 words.