Showing posts with label writing life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing life. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

NaNoWriMo Workstation -- Wednesday Writing

The Full 8ft Long L

A couple weeks ago I traded my wheeled office chair for a rocking chair.  I thought I would be able to manage without the wheels but after one weekend of trying to manage with a stationary chair I realized it wasn't going to work with my work style.  It worked fine for those times when I was focused on one task at one desk station.  Especially for long sessions on one of the laptops either writing, online research or exploring and reading my story files.  But when I needed to spread out physical papers for editing or sorting I needed the wheels zip between the couch and the larger desktops at the far end.

The solution was the little wheeled stool like you see in doctor offices.  I had a very productive weekend after it arrived.  If I hadn't fallen off it at 6am Sunday morning as I was wrapping up my all night session I'd still be ecstatic about it.  I'm not about to give it up but I will have to be more mindful while using it.

What happened was that one of the times I approached the couch by walking it forward I didn't get quite close enough to reach the item I want to move to the far end so I stood up but that motion caused the stool to scoot back an inch or so and so when I sat back down I sat on the edge and tilted it onto one wheel and it shot backwards five or six feet across the room as I landed hard on my tailbone.


The Serious Writing Section


That was not a wonderful start to my 66th birthday.  

The fallout has been moderate tensing of the muscles at several locations along my spine.  The two worst at the rib cage and neck and right shoulder.  I've been spending a lot of time in the rocker with a heating pad.  But so far this is minor compared to three or four previous impacts on my tailbone going back to age 11 when I fell off a horse; age 16 when I fell from the top of a doorway after walking up one doorpost with my back pressed against the other; and at age 30 something while playing with children on a slide.  Those were the three times that gave me severe whiplash as well as bruised tailbone.  The worst one was the slide.  I'm pretty sure based on the extreme headache and vomiting I developed hours later that there was a concussion as well.  I did not know before that that you can get a concussion by falling on your butt.


The Research, Paper Sorting & Hardcopy Editing Section

 
Well I need to wrap this up so I can get back to work on my NaNo.

The big thing I accomplished last weekend was organizing the manuscript pages in my new Go Bag aka Trapper Keeper zippered 3 ring binder.  I now have all the stories in an order that makes sense to me with tabbed dividers between them that have pockets for the loose papers of all sizes that I'm finding tucked away in notebooks and folders.

I still don't have a wordcount registered at NaNo as I've been doing most of writing by hand and some of it scattered among the already existing application files.  For the latter I'm keeping the new words tagged.  For the paper pages I'm keeping them in the binder.  This weekend's big (non-writing) project will be to add up my word count and report it on my NaNo profile.

I know I'm way behind but somehow I'm feeling serene about it.  I'm really enjoying the return to the root story of the FOS storyworld and also a return to the process that I had before my first encounter with a computer in my early thirties.  I'm enjoying that and I think I'm going to be OK if I don't 'win' NaNo this year.  But I also believe that this year for the first time since 2004 I won't abandon my NaNo words after November 31.

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Thursday, November 09, 2023

From Where You Dream -- Wednesday Writing

 

From Where You Dream
The Process of Writing Fiction
by Robert Olen Butler
Edited and with and Introduction
by Janet Burroway

This is one of the writing craft books most influential on my craft.  In fact it was Butler who explained the story dreaming concept to me.  I can't claim he taught it to be since I'd been doing a version of it from the beginning which was before my double digit birthdays.  What he taught me was to respect it as the root source of the stories and the power source for their relevance.

He also taught me that for a story teller, daydreaming was the life blood of your work not evidence of laziness.  After I internalized this concept, I never had any further belief in writer's block as anything other than having gotten trapped in my left brain where the editor, critic and task master reside.  Perfectionists all and all full of disdain for daydreaming.  And yet no story and no idea is born in left brain machinations.  All things new and meaningful must incubate in dreamtime.

I have had this book checked out dozens of times from nearly a dozen different libraries over decades.  Now I finally have my own Kindle copy as I just stumbled on a sale while looking for the latest edition of Janet Burroway's Writing Fiction because I found it's Kindle edition on sale last August and bought it and was thinking of writing about it for this post.  So I grabbed this book and both images thinking I would write about both of them since Burroway's contribution to Butler's book is why I picked it up the first time as I'd been borrowing her book from my library for nearly a decade by then.  That was the 2nd edition.

Butler himself refuses to write non-fiction so without Burroway's help this book could never have been.  She recorded a series of his lectures made extemporaneously from a stack of index card cues then transcribed them (or possibly had students transcribe them) and then edited to smooth out the rhetoric, remove repetition and the grammatical glitches of conversational delivery.

It has been several years since I last read this so it is past time for a re-read.

I think I'll save Burroway's book for next Wednesday.  Unless I'm ready to talk about my NaNo project by then.  Right now that's still incubating.  I'm swimming in dreamtime and in spite of little wordcount, feeling as productive as a mother-to-be.

Storytellers must believe that day dreaming is not slacking but the ultimate making of meaning out of chaos.

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Wednesday, November 01, 2023

Two Kickoffs in One -- NaNo and the Storyworld Go Bag

 

Storyworld Go Bag Filling Up



My new storyworld go bag for my Fruits of the Spirit storyworld was ready for NaNo on Monday night.  I got the printed manuscripts of several WIP installed along with a stack of tabbed dividers with pockets for loose papers.  I don't have the dividers placed at the head of each separate story yet as I need to reorganize the pages.  They are all in protector sheets--two per with often the first page of one story on the back side of the previous one.  You can see how that doesn't suit the concept of a divider sheet placed between stories.

They've been in a vinyl 3 ring binder like that for years and I was always thumbing through looking for the start of this or that story.  I kept putting off tabbing the protector sheets themselves because I'd had the concept of the tabbed dividers with pockets for sometime but I would have had to split the stories between two one inch binders as the first one was already stuffed.  I would have also had to expand into separate binders the next time I printed off new scenes or chapters.

I was hoping there would be more room to grow in the new 3 inch ring binder but after adding the divider tabs it is already over half full.  And with the stuff I put in the expanding file on the left it is already a challenge to zip it shut.  Sigh.


More Pages for the Go Bag


Pictured above is a folder containing the rewrite project for my story Blow Me a Candy Kiss.  The rewrite is still unfinished.  That all needs to go into the big binder but not just willy nilly.  I need to look closely at everything in situ or risk missing all sorts of clues or memories of what I was up to triggered by seeing each item exactly as I left it.  But I don't think I'm going to take the time to do that during NaNo as my focus is on a different story.

I declared myself a Rebel Wrimo a few weeks ago by deciding that I was going to devote this NaNo to the story that started the storyworld even tho nearly 30K words already exist.  But it has become clear to me for some time that all of the stories I start for NaNo that grow out of it all stall out for the same reason: The root story isn't finished. 

Faye's story in The Substance of Things Hoped For impacts every other story either directly or tangentially.  Most of the other POV characters encounter her at least once on their own story arc.  But with Faye's timeline still not gelled I can't gel the other timelines.

So on Tuesday evening I started setting up my new Dell laptop for NaNo.  Once again a prep step that should have been done days if not weeks ago.  But I kept shying away because it involves so much tech stuff I don't feel confident doing without a techie in the house.  One of the things I needed was to install the Whiz Folder ap that I'd done NaNo on and most of my research and journaling and note taking and book reviews and..... ad infinitum since the early 2000s. 

I think it was after 2013 when I started using Scrivener for NaNo but continued using WhizFolders for everything else and thus always needed to have both open so I could keep referencing or adding to my notes in Whiz because I'd not got the material transferred over to Scrivener before NaNo Kickoff. 

And here we are again.

This is what was meant by the ROW80 Goal referencing working with my storyworld files both pixel and paper.  I set myself the goal in April and one thing after another kept taking priority. Whether properly or by simple procrastination.  Until here I am on NaNo Kickoff with a new computer that contains none of my files and only one of the aps I need to open those files. 

The files are all on an external drive that needed to be ejected from the HP laptop and plugged into the Dell. I've kept it hooked up to the HP because once I'd copied the files last spring I did not want to save anything new to the old files as I feared loosing track of what changes I made to which drive.  I know there is supposed to be a way to sync so that any change you make to one will automatically be made to the other but I don't know how to set it up.  There is also the fact that the HP hard drive is stuffed to the gills and had been giving me warnings for some time. Especially around update times.

So Tuesday evening I ran into a snag when I discovered that the company that created WhizFolders had stopped supporting it.  I'd missed the warning emails in 2018 along with my last chance to get the latest updates.  The downloads for the version I owned was also no longer available.  Luckily I remembered that I'd saved a copy of the setup file from the Pro version I bought in 2008.  I'd been using the Delux since at least 2013.  But the Pro would still allow me to read and write to my files.  After some frantic sifting through my email I found the one with the code I needed to input to validate and lo it still worked.

So I spent NaNo Kickoff swimming in my story files instead of generating new words.  And yet if felt like the most productive kickoff ever.  I discovered a Scrivener file in which I'd set up a title page and at least one scene page as its child for every story belonging to the storyworld that I've ever worked on.  Each POV character's story was kept separate as if a separate novel even tho it is probable several of them need to be smashed into single novels with 2 or more POV characters. Nearly each story contained at least one scene I deemed written well enough I was willing to expend ink and paper on them.  I need to cross check these with the ones in the binder now because I can't be sure I've got hardcopy of everything I found in this file.

The Substance of Things Hoped For contains two complete stories aka chapters 1 and 3.  I am still trying to decide whether to do the NaNo words right there or create it's own file.  But I think my concept for creating this file was about keeping it clean as a showcase for scenes that were print ready.

One interesting note: when I click on the top of the file hierarchy the ap treats it as all one file and gives me the total wordcount.  It is closing in on 90K.  If only there was a complete novel in that mix.  Well maybe by the end of this NaNo I'll be closer than ever before to that goal.

I am unsure whether the stories in this file that have a title page followed by a blank scene page are missing words because I felt there was nothing good enough to move there or because I didn't finish combing through them.  Each one of those several blank stories have they're own Whiz and/or Scrivener file.  Some of those Whiz files are named only NaNo plus the year instead of the story title so I have to open them to identify them.

I explored these files all night quitting just after 7am.  I tried to get a nap before time for a zoom appointment at 11 but I felt like I was plugged into an electric socket.  All I could do was rest in the dark with my eyes closed and swim in the storydreaming.  So I was 34 hours awake by the time my caregiver left that afternoon which is why I'm writing my Wednesday post on Thursday evening tho I'm going to predate it.

I better wrap this up if I want to have any hope of getting NaNo novel words for day 2....

Find me on NaNoWriMo


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Wednesday, October 25, 2023

Storyworld Go Bag

 

Upright



Several times since the late 1980s when I first conceived the concept of the storyworld I call Fruits of the Spirit, I've lost much and once most of all of the related materials in a hasty move.  That's all but the hundred or so printed pages of manuscript i'd deemed worth the use of ink and paper.  I lost all the notes and outlines, character and setting sketches, family trees and timelines, lists of planned scenes and character rosters, research and bibliographies, floor plans and street plans.  The last time it happened was the worst as I lost all the computer files as well as all the paper files as the floppy disc drive had not been working for several years and we had to leave the computer and whatever we could not carry on the bus in a storage shed which we never went back for.

These incidents haunt me and I've been anxious for several years about how scattered and unprotected my FOS files are now--paper and pixel both.  The number of manuscript pages that I deemed 'worthy' of ink and paper has at least doubled and possibly tripled but the computer files have grown exponentially.  The NaNoWriMo site started putting a word count on my profile last year and it topped a million words.  That's just for the November and the Summer Camp NaNos.  That doesn't count the words I put in for JuNoWriMo and ROW80 or any created between challenges I participated in.  Nor does it count anything that still exists only on paper.




Flat

Well a couple months ago, I remembered a three ring binder I had in Junior High that held about 300 sheets of paper and zipped shut.  I wondered aloud to Laura, my caregiver, if they still made those and she said Oh yes!  They are called trapper keepers.  So I shopped for one on October 11 hoping to snag a Prime sale but this was the one I fell in love with and ended up ordering even though it wasn't on sale and it was out of stock though promising to be available soon.  It just arrived today.

It has 3 inch rings that will hold 600 pages on one side and an expandable file on the other.  When closed it measures approximate 4 inches thick including the outer boards.  It has a carry handle and also a shoulder strap and access to the expandable file is available through a separate U shaped zipper on the edge opposite the handle so you don't have to open up the binder to access it.



Open


Now I have a safe place to keep all in one place all my notes and manuscripts.  I hope to include all the computer files as well on either flash drives or a small external drive.  The story bible I've been working on for several months will be in the expandable file as It doesn't have holes punched for the rings.

Next Wednesday, along with my report on NaNo Kickoff, I'll share another pic of the inside showing whatever materials I've been able to gather and organize by then.

FYI Product info: Case-it The Mighty Zip Tab Zipper Binder








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Wednesday, October 18, 2023

To Be--or Not to Be--a Wrimo Rebel.

35 Years, a Million Words and No End In Sight

 NaNo kickoff is closing in and I'm not ready to commit to a new story in my storyworld.  Oh, there are possibilities that tempt me--several minor characters that could step forward and carry a POV story arc for 20-50K.  If I'm unsure of one taking it all the way to 50K there is the possibility of pairing up two or three characters into a single story with three separate POV characters each with their own character arc that is braided into one story. 

Several of them interest me and a couple excite me.  That is until I remember all the previous NaNo endeavors that interested me or excited me enough to take me to the 50K finish line only to molder in pixel dust after the clock struck midnight on November 30.  I've lost count but I think there are at least 20 separated POV stories set in my Fruits of the Spirit storyworld and since so many of the characters are interwoven into so many of the other characters stories the plots and timelines are a tangled jungle. 

This tangle contributes to the difficulty in sustaining each new POV story and especially in maintaining the pace for a NaNo 'win'.  I put that in quotes because it has not felt like any kind of win for several years.

All summer I've been working with the entire storyworld in my story dreaming and in the collecting from my story files all the relevant story facts into a story bible for reference no matter which POV story I happen to be working with. This work has reconnected me with the original story.  The one from which the rest have flowered.  The one that is still the heart of the storyworld.  Faye's story aka The Substance of Things Hoped for.

I find myself sad at the neglect.  A neglect motivated by the NaNo rule that it has to be a new story not a WIP.  The original story--Faye's POV--was already closing in on 30K when I first encountered NaNoWriMo in 2004.  Nothing has been added to it except in my story dreaming and notes.  But from that I'm confident there is material for another 50K words and I know much of the story I want to tell intimately. I've been living with it and dreaming it since the late 80s.

More importantly I already understand it's architecture which is based on Faye's character arc.  All of the other POV stories that I've spun off from Faye's story intersect with Faye at some point just not always inside the timeline of Faye's novel but if they do it is a bit part.  A line or two or a scene or two and strictly in Faye's POV.

My heart yearns to return to Faye's story and give it the same focus as I've given the spin offs each November for nearly 20 years.  But not if it too were to end up smothered in pixel dust.  So I am caught in a dilemma.  I'd rather work with Faye's story than any other right now but I don't want to give up NaNo.  Neither do I want Faye's story to suffer the same fate as the 20 odd spinoffs.

The best solution seems to be becoming a Wrimo Rebel by investing my November words into a WIP while simultaneously committing to continue working on Faye's story going forward until the story arc is complete and after that whatever rewrites and edits are necessary.  I think if I continue to give it half the attention of a NaNo month each month after I could have something close to publishable within six months.

See links to outtakes from my FOS storyworld: Fruits of the Spirit Story World Portal

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Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Of Notes and Notions and Drafting Dreams

Boxed and Bindered Scribbles

 It took four 6-10 hour days of effort to undo the chaos created by the forced switch of the beanbag/tramp with the table to accommodate installation of the cooler in the alcove window last August.  As featured in Sunday's post, I have my beanbag and tramp nook recreated and ready for use for resting, day dreaming, reading and crochet on the beanbag and exercise on the tramp.

It is still not back to the way it was and never will be as there were too many changes in the configuration and the small adjustments that will be needed won't become obvious until I start trying to use it as intended. I've been using the tramp daily and the beanbag for brief reading or resting breaks but my focus has gone over to the other side of the table which is the living area, my office and my bed/couch.

There was much chaos of time and space and mind created on this side during the 8 weeks as the number of activities performed here more than doubled while the availability of homes for the extra items was next to nil to start and by the end I had piles of stuff that kept shifting.  I had an archaeological dig on the surfaces of the big table and my entire 9 foot desk.

The most disruptive of my writing goals though was the loss of the boxes of notebooks pictured above.  There was no way to keep them on the office side so I put one stack on the far wall beside the table facing down the path from the 'office' and the other under it at 90 degree angle facing the hallway.

The problem with that was I couldn't get to them by just rolling my chair over and remain sitting as I pulled out what I needed.  I had to get up and go over there and then bend over or squat in front of them but this would block all light so I'd need a flashlight but it takes too hands to get most of the items off those shelves so I'd have to hold the flashlight in my mouth.  It killed my back and leg muscles.  I came away trembling and no longer interested in the project I'd gone over there in service to.

I sat on the couch/bed to take that picture so I could get all eight of the boxes in.  That also gives a good view of the edge of the table that I depend on to guide me in the dark on the path to and from the bathroom without needing to turn on a light.  That was yet another major dysregulation of routine and mental stability.  I have two blood blisters on my toes and at least one bruise and one broken nail to show for it.

Two of those eight boxes contain new and unmarked notebooks of various shapes and sizes.  I am a collector of notebooks. The two vertical ones on the right side contain accordion files, binders and portfolios containing notes, drafts, research, journals, drawings and misc. The remaining boxes hold more of the same in less organized or contained form.

My next project is to comb through every folder, binder, notebook and loose paper and organize by category with separate file or folder or binder for each.  Categories include creative writing notes and drafts, research notes, book review notes and drafts, journaling, fiber arts notes, sketches and doodles, and lots of lists and notes on lots of topics some not related to the categories already listed.

The main motive for tackling this project now is to mine out every last draft or note related to my Fruit of the Spirit storyworld for the storybible project I'm working on for Preptober.  This is part of the 'spend time in my story files' goal that has been part of my ROW80 goals for years but I tended to find it easier to click a short cut on my computer than to sort through this jumble that has been through uncountable moves in the last twenty-four years: from across the room to across the house to across the state to across state lines.

It it is time.  My work with the files on my computer and my storydreaming has awakened memories of notes I made at some point related to the thoughts I'm having now.  I need to salvage them.  This time I need to also protect them against ever devolving back into this kind of chaos and danger of being lost forever.

I've been contemplating how to corral everything FOS into one location that is as portable as possible.  I once upon a time--about 25 years ago--had a file box with a handle that contained the first fifteen years of work on these stories.  But that got left behind when we abandoned our storage shed to hop on a bus after being homeless on the streets of Silicon Valley for ten days.

This time I need a bugout bag that can contain all the paper files and all the electronic in a regularly updated external drive and/or high memory thumb.  I will also back up the electronic files in the cloud but I don't fully trust it and anything that causes a need for a bugout could also make getting access to the internet immediately iffy.

As I contemplated this need, my mind lit on a memory of the three ring binder with a zipper that I had in Junior High.  The perfect concept.  But I wasn't sure they were still a thing until I went shopping for them.  Not only are they a thing but they now have handles and carry straps and can be double or triple the size I had.  I spent several hours drooling over them.

I was hoping to take advantage of the prime day sale but the one I fell in love with was not on sale.  But it was still less than some of the sale prices.  Nor was it in stock. But the message said they were going to be soon so I ordered it.  I will have to wait a little longer for it's arrival but knowing it will arrive has my fingers itching to get started on the search and rescue.

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Sunday, September 24, 2023

Crystalline -- Sunday Serenity -- ROW80 Check-In

 

Crystalline

The crystal sculpture pictured above is another of the treasures I picked up at the Highland's Festival in Kelso WA two weeks ago today.  See my Jazzed post for details of that adventure. It is still my favorite post so far this year.

It graces the top today as a symbol for both the Sunday Serenity and the ROW80 portions of this post. 

As a serenity tool it serves a bit like a mandala or any other focus aid.  But in this case it is 3D so i can hold it in my hand to explore its shape.  I can grasp the opposite columns  with index finger and thumb of each hand and spin it watching the light flicker in its facets or hang it under a lamp or in a sunny window and watch the slow light show.

Yes, yet another fidget toy.

For my goals it symbolizes the clarity I've been moving into throughout this round.  Not there yet but then it's about the process not the destination Isn't it?  I mean we have to keep the destination (goal) in focus but then the process needs to serve that goal. That is why my goals for ROW80 have always been more about the process and the elements of my daily life that support the process than about things like word count.

But when the process I set up this round was not working, I blamed and shamed myself for weeks rather than wonder if my process rules had been setting me up for failure.  Some of the rules I'd made for myself weren't even made explicit in the goals list I set up.  Many of them were based on assumptions no longer valid if they ever were.  Some were based on advice I'd gleaned from writing craft books and blogs, from self-help and motivational videos, from the way it once worked for me decades ago.

So in the last month or so I've pulled back into observer mode, watching myself as I interact with my aspirations and with my writing tools, my environment, my routines and myself.  I'm questioning assumptions.  I'm still thinking hard about it but I'm sure my goal list is going to look quite different next round.

These are some of the lessons I've learned about my process:

  • Engaging with a task that requires focus is not something I can do in time increments under an hour.  It takes me twenty minutes to get focused.
  • I am more productive with the first and roughest of rough draft of a scene with a pen or pencil on paper.  This is how I worked before my first typewriter at age 13 and even after I hesitated to 'waste' the ink to compose on it.  But I think it was about more than my fear of 'wasting' ink and spendy paper.  I think I was a creature of habit and I'd developed a process that worked.
  • I am still as always in my memory more productive with hours long sessions at a task.  But that is not sustainable if I require it of myself every day.  So I'm taking a look at the time goals of X minutes per day.  Except for the exercise ones.  For the storyworld bible and file engagement I think I'd do better squeezing those 7 thirty minute sessions into one or two several hour sessions per week.
  • I have to be willing to accept the incursion of life events that I can't or didn't predict at the time I formulated my goals post and learn to see adjustments to them as something other than failure or proof I'm not serious.  Flexibility is not a strong trait for those of us on the spectrum.  But finding the balance between accepting the necessary amount and letting things slide into chaos--that is the challenge.

I also had to give myself a bit of grace on several fronts this week as I'm in the second week of cutting back my coffee and other caffeine intake.  That process involves cutting it in half every third to fifth day while learning to accept substitutes.  This has messed up my daily routines and counterintuitively caused both long sleeps and insomnia.  I am now at the place where I need to decide if I can trust myself to maintain a single mug of moderate strength coffee without slowly increasing it again or do I need to eliminate it entirely.

The writing challenge that
 knows you have a life


 ROW80 Round 3 Goals:

  • Morning pages daily.  Average 40 minutes (ala Julia Cameron The Artist Way and Writing For Life) YES Started May 20.  Probably would not have jumped into NaNo and ROW80 without having had a month of morning pages behind me. But the very fact that I've hung on to this YES throughout the crisis' is PROOF that I am committed to the writing and still belong in ROW80.  Don't worry, I know the ROWers need no such proof.  Only my Stella.
  • Storydreaming with notebook for noting ideas for characters or scenes. (ala Robert Owen Butler From Where You Dream)  30 10 minutes per day 2/7  of a yes since last Sunday  (Storydreaming itself is becoming habitual and feeling more natural but the notebook is the key to this goal as without it the storydreams go to the same place night dreams go an hour after waking.) Note: I've adjusted the goal for the duration of the round to ten minutes a day with the caveat that as long as I'm sitting with notebook and pen it counts even if I don't write anything new.
  • Working on the Fruits of the Spirit (aka FOS) Storyworld Bible at least 30 10 minutes per day at least 5 days per week.  I'm sure this will expand as I get involved but I need to set a minimum for that jumpstart. YES (except it was one hour on one day.  anticipating next round goals here)   (still hoping to make this and storydreaming  my ROW80 main project for the remainder of this round as I need a substantial start on it in time to use it for Preptober and NaNo next Round.)   Note: I've adjusted the goal to 10 minutes 5 days a week or 50+ minutes on one day with the caveat that I don't need to work into the pristine spiral notebook I bought for this project yet.  The first task is to get a feel for how that notebook needs to be organized and to figure that out I will start re-reading my files with loose scratch paper or note cards at hand to note down every 'fact' I encounter as I read.  I realized one of my sticking points has to do with not being able to visualize exactly what is expected.  But I know what it means to 'read' and 'take notes'  I've been doing it with other people's stories every day for weeks and weeks.  For most of a year in fact.
  • Weekly Artist Date (ala Julia Cameron)  This is about doing something to recharge your creative battery.  I'll go into more detail in one of the check-ins.  YES  More 24/7 cams discovered.  Also screensaver vids of color or image in motion.  Some with music excellent for background ambience for writing. Shamanic Drumming to storydream by.  I wasn't possible to go out in public for this this week as my caregiver had been exposed to COVID and until we know for sure that she doesn't develop it we won't know if I've been exposed.so we had to limit certain activities we had tentatively planned.  Always something right?
  • A minimum of 5 minutes of physical activity daily.  Either a walk outside with my caregiver or a session on my mini-tramp, or pacing the floor between front and back door. YES (may need to look at upping the expectation soon.  this is getting too easy.)  
  • I want to reengage with my blog so: Two One blog post per week besides the two check-ins. Either about encountering other people's stories via print, video or audio which can include formal reviews or about a current fiber art WIP or about one of my personal challenges: widowhood, independent living with visual impairment and autism and issues related to health and aging among them.  Not yet.  Note: I've adjusted my expectations here for the duration of the round.  I removed the theme of personal challenge from the options as it turns out that has been the theme of my check-in posts and those take a lot out of me and a third one would be overloading my readers as well as me. 

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Saturday, September 16, 2023

A Notable Week -- Sunday Serenity -- ROW80 Check-In

 

Handmade Leather Notebook


The notebook pictured is one of the treasures I bought at the artisan booths at the Highland Festival I attended last Sunday.  If you missed that post, which is likely because I posted well after midnight last Sunday, you might want to check it out as it was my favorite post all Round if not all year.

I love notebooks in general but hand made notebooks can actually raise my pulse.  I am often caressing them at these artisan booths or stores that sell on consignment but this is the first time I bought one.  I just could not resist.  The dreamcatcher, butterflies and feathers all have spiritual significance for me. 

Now I just need to figure out what to use it for.  And that will be a challenge as one of the reasons I've never bought one is that I know myself so well.  I know that the more I love a notebook the harder it is for me to put a mark in it.

I chose the notebook to preside over this week's post as it so relates to the theme of my week and the theme of this week's goal triumph.  A triumph I practically stumbled into or was pushed by circumstances.  The same circumstances that prevented me from posting a check-in Wednesday.

Last Wednesday I woke up to a glitchy computer.  Every mouse click or keyboard tap took forever to respond.  I spent more time watching spinning wheels, greyed out aps, and 'not responding' or 'end task' messages than I did doing tasks.  This caused me to be late to an important Zoom which had to be conducted except for the last ten minutes via phone. 

By late afternoon, I was worn out by hours of trying to get my computer to cooperate with me and possibly a bit by sleep deprivation so by dusk I was ready for bed.  Then I woke at 2am and opened my laptop and there on the screen was a dialog box saying that my computer needed to restart to install updates and a countdown clock that had about three minutes to go. 

Of course.  Doh!

Over the next day or two I got requests from several aps for installing updates.  So multiple companies were working in the background at the same time.  No wonder there was no RAM left for me.  Stop me before I start my rant about product service personnel invading our private spaces and commandeering our products at their whim. 

Would we tolerate it from our car dealership's mechanic?  Imagine finding your car in pieces in your garage as you rush out to head to work or school. I don't think so.  So why is it OK that once a month for several days the one device that is most integrated into our daily productivity can be made useless for hours on end?  

Ooops.  I ignored that stop sign.

So, returning to the story, I managed to get the two aps that might be irritated by a forced shutdown closed and then with a minute to go clicked 'restart now'.  Then I read for the nearly forty minutes it took to get back to my desktop.  It was what I found shortly after Chrome reloaded the twenty odd tabs that had been closed for the shutdown that put the ROW80 check-in off my radar. 

Open tabs often serve as my todo list and sometimes I don't close them when I'm done with the task so one of my habits after a restart and reloading of the closed window is to close the tabs I know I'm done with and remind myself what is urgent and to bookmark and close things that can wait.  This is how I discovered a tab I'd left as an urgent task but that had still gone off my radar weeks ago.

This was a tab to the Evernote site where I had been trying to find out how to unsubscribe from the paid version and whether the free version was still available and if not, what happens to my notes.  I'd been researching this after getting an email from them in mid August announcing that my annual payment was due on September 16th and it would be doubling.

As if that wasn't bad enough I learned by signing into my account trying to find answers that this had happened once before and I'd never known.  So I'd already been paying twice what I signed up for just before the pandemic for two years and now they were doubling it again?  No!  This is not sustainable on a fixed income.  Stop me before I go into a rant about the subscription economy and how it is creating a balkanized caste system of information haves and have nots.

But that isn't the theme of this post.  This is about me having a fire lit under me to rescue my notes in case I needed to deactivate my Evernote account in order to prevent the autopay from dinging my card on the 16th since I couldn't figure out how to stop the payment.  So at 3am I began moving my notes.

I identified three major types.  There was the web clippings that were either links alone or links with clipped portions of a page or links with notes added.  Then there were three types of text only notes: quotes, lists, writings of various lengths.  The links alone were easy.  I opened them and bookmarked them in the browser.  Links with more I found I could copy/paste to a Google Docs.  The very short text only stuff I copy/pasted to my sticky notes ap and the longer text pieces to Google Docs.

This project took most of twelve hours.  I had to stop and eat a couple times.  I had to stop and watch a screensaver for ten minutes before doing the 40 minute morning pages exercise about when my morning alarms started going off.  I had to stop briefly to get my caregiver started on her tasks.

I moved the last note just after 3pm.  There had been 120 odd.  No way that had been worth what I'd been paying. Not even what I had started out paying.  But that was because my life imploded just after I started the subscription so that I didn't use it how I'd envisioned.

I'd had big plans for it when I subscribed in 2019.  At that time I had multiple devices and was moving from room to room in Mom's house, going to appointments and spending part of every weekend with my husband.  I couldn't always have my laptop with me.  I'd just bought a Bluetooth keyboard that worked with all my devices except the laptop and thus it was finally possible for me to compose on my android devices wherever I found myself. 

I got to use Evernote as I imagined for only about three months before the pandemic which was just the beginning of the shakeups in my life.  Most of the relevant events are covered in the dwindling posts of those years.

After assuring the safety of my notes, I returned to the Evernote tab to start exploring my options once again.  The only thing like a FAQ was a Forum for asking questions and I had to register to join it.  Luckily my questions had already been asked and answered.  Yes the free version was still available and thus my notes would have still been accessible except that any very large ones could not be edited but I'd never uploaded or created anything large.  I would no longer have access via unlimited devices and my limit of data moved shrank considerably but again, I'd never needed the extra MB the way I'd been using it.  I am still unclear whether I can access via two or only one device.  Moving files between devices was one of the ways I used it.  But Google Docs works for that too.

As it turned out the majority of my notes had been via the Web Clipper browser extension and I think that will be the main way I use it going forward.  I discovered that Google Docs was a lot easier to use for the plain text as well as for text with hyperlinks and graphics. 

But if I'm going to start using Google Docs that way I'm going to have to perform a similar task with it as what I just did with Evernote.  Not a note rescue exactly unless you can call organizing files so you can find them when you need them a rescue.  I've been dropping stuff in there willy-nilly for ages.

Meanwhile I hope no one will quibble with me for giving myself a big YES for working with my FOS storyworld notes this week even though it was all done in a single day rather than spread out over the week.  Because the majority of those notes were related in one way or another to my storyworld project from reading notes, character or plot ideas, quotes, research, musings on theme, and even a very rough draft of a potential scene that I completely forgot existed.  Sigh.

Actually I'm thinking I need to rethink that goal for next round.  I was trying to train myself to have a daily or semi-daily habit but that doesn't take into account one of my autism related superpowers: to hyperfocus on one task for many hours.

That goal of 30 minutes five times a week also flies in the face of one of my autism challenges: the fact that changing channels in my mind takes twenty minutes.  Thus for a thirty minute task I'm lucky if I'm on task and productive for the last ten of it and then I'm irritated if I'm forced to quit and change focus again. 


The writing challenge that
 knows you have a life


 ROW80 Round 3 Goals:

  • Morning pages daily.  Average 40 minutes (ala Julia Cameron The Artist Way and Writing For Life) YES Started May 20.  Probably would not have jumped into NaNo and ROW80 without having had a month of morning pages behind me. But the very fact that I've hung on to this YES throughout the crisis' is PROOF that I am committed to the writing and still belong in ROW80.  Don't worry, I know the ROWers need no such prrof.  Only my Stella.
  • Storydreaming with notebook for noting ideas for characters or scenes. (ala Robert Owen Butler From Where You Dream)  30 10 minutes per day 2/7  of a yes since last Sunday  (The notebook is the key to this goal as without it the storydreams go to the same place night dreams go an hour after waking.) Note: I've adjusted the goal for the duration of the round to ten minutes a day with the caveat that as long as I'm sitting with notebook and pen it counts even if I don't write anything new.
  • Working on the Fruits of the Spirit (aka FOS) Storyworld Bible at least 30 10 minutes per day at least 5 days per week.  I'm sure this will expand as I get involved but I need to set a minimum for that jumpstart. BIG YES (with the caveat that it was all in one day.  see above)   (still hoping to make this and storydreaming  my ROW80 main project for the remainder of this round as I need a substantial start on it in time to use it for Preptober and NaNo next Round.)   Note: I've adjusted the goal to 10 minutes 5 days a week with the caveat that I don't need to work into the pristine spiral notebook I bought for this project yet.  The first task is to get a feel for how that notebook needs to be organized and to figure that out I will start re-reading my files with loose scratch paper or note cards at hand to note down every 'fact' I encounter as I read: names, dates, descriptions, titles of books and chapters and stories, character quirks, symbolism associated with a character...etc.  It occurred to me that my resistance to this task was at least partially related to not wanting to make a mess in that pretty notebook.  So now I have permission to make a mess with scratch pads and note cards.  Let's see if that makes any difference.  Also there is a trick I'm playing on myself here.  I almost never do a thing for only ten minutes but if I think I must do 30 minutes I balk at starting thinking of all the ways I'm likely to get interrupted or not fulfill my expectations in some unexpected way.  I realized this has to do with not being able to visualize exactly what is expected.  But I know what it means to 'read' and 'take notes'  I've been doing it with other people's stories every day for weeks and weeks.  For most of a year in fact.
  • Weekly Artist Date (ala Julia Cameron)  This is about doing something to recharge your creative battery.  I'll go into more detail in one of the check-ins.  A big YES  More 24/7 cams discovered.  Also screensaver vids of color or image in motion.  Some with music excellent for background ambience for writing. 
  • A minimum of 5 minutes of physical activity daily.  Either a walk outside with my caregiver or a session on my mini-tramp, or pacing the floor between front and back door. YES (may need to look at upping the expectation soon.  this is getting too easy.)  
  • I want to reengage with my blog so: Two One blog post per week besides the two check-ins. Either about encountering other people's stories via print, video or audio which can include formal reviews or about a current fiber art WIP or about one of my personal challenges: widowhood, independent living with visual impairment and autism and issues related to health and aging among them.  Not yet.  Note: I've adjusted my expectations here for the duration of the round.  I removed the theme of personal challenge from the options as it turns out that has been the theme of my check-in posts and those take a lot out of me and a third one would be overloading my readers as well as me.  The main reason I've not posted extra is the same reason I missed the Wednesday check-in: The note rescue caper.  Plus I'm still super busy chasing library book due dates and trying to finish books before the next set of holds comes back my way.  I sometimes feel like I'm chasing my own ponytail around the 440 track. Boy do I miss the days when I could read 100 pages an hour or better.

Read more...

Monday, September 11, 2023

Jazzed -- Sunday Serenity -- ROW80 Check-in



Celtica Nova & The Wicked Tinkers: "The Atholl Highlanders" 


I went to the Highlander Festival in Kelso, Washington this afternoon and sat through three sets of the Wicked Tinkers.  I'm in love. 

With the drumming!!!

I'm so jazzed.  It took me hours to wind down before I could be calm enough to put this post together even though I'd been planning it in my head all day.

The video I embedded was from someone else's  audience experience somewhere else.  My ten second attempt was crappy in several ways and not worth uploading.  Most of what I found on YouTube was either bad amateur video with jumpy image and poor sound or, if more professionally produced, from 6-9 years ago.  Good sound and image but not even close to the ambience of my experience so I went with the Celtic Nova offering.  It has good steady image and tolerable sound and from only five months ago and thus a very good display of the energy of my experience in the performer-audience interaction.




After one set my caregiver, Laura and I, had our picture taken with the band with my cell.  It was only tolerable quality but better than nothing.  I can't believe I did that.  I've never done that.  But I haven't been to that many events and when I was I didn't have someone like Laura with me to ask me if I'd like to have my picture taken with the band and the be bold enough to make it happen. 



This was the only pic from today that Laura took for me that turned out well enough to post and it shows only three members and there were at least four and possibly five.  It was hard for me to count them as neither they nor the audience between me and them stayed still long enough for me to keep track of them as I counted.

One time they all came down into the audience and wandered among us playing.  Imagine having one of those knee-kicked kilts a foot from your knees and the drum knocking on your eardrums. 

Oh my!  A memory indelible.  Even with my eyes and ears.

And the drum so close I could have reached out and touched it.  I could have swooned.

For the drums guys.  For the drums.

I'm serious.  I'm coocoo for drums.  Drums were my first choice of band instrument when I was offered the choice at age eleven but both my parents and the band teacher nixed it.  My parents because "You can't plays hymns on the drums."  The band teacher because, "Girls don't play drums."

So glad both premises have been proven balderdash.  Please oh please don't take our girls back to the 1960s!!!!

Between the sets, Laura and I wandered the artisan booths and I handled a lot of very interesting, well-crafted art in many categories.  Jewelry, crystal and other rock, leather, fiber art and more.  A lot of it on the Celtic theme, of course.  I'm going to dole out pictures of the treasures I brought home over several posts.  It would take me another hour to do the photo shoot and prep the pics and then yet another hour to write about each item and besides this Sunday Serenity and ROW80 focus is on the Wicked Tinker experience.

So what do you think ROWers, does this qualify as an artist date ala Julia Cameron even tho it wasn't just me and my muse?


The writing challenge that
 knows you have a life


 ROW80 Round 3 Goals:

  • Morning pages daily.  Average 40 minutes (ala Julia Cameron The Artist Way and Writing For Life) YES Started May 20.  Probably would not have jumped into NaNo and ROW80 without having had a month of morning pages behind me. But the very fact that I've hung on to this YES throughout the crisis' is PROOF that I am committed to the writing and still belong in ROW80.  Don't worry, I know the ROWers need no such prrof.  Only my Stella.
  • Storydreaming with notebook for noting ideas for characters or scenes. (ala Robert Owen Butler From Where You Dream)  30 10 minutes per day 4/7  of a yes since last Sunday  (The notebook is the key to this goal as without it the storydreams go to the same place night dreams go an hour after waking.) Note: I've adjusted the goal for the duration of the round to ten minutes a day with the caveat that as long as I'm sitting with notebook and pen it counts even if I don't write anything new.
  • Working on the Fruits of the Spirit (aka FOS) Storyworld Bible at least 30 10 minutes per day at least 5 days per week.  I'm sure this will expand as I get involved but I need to set a minimum for that jumpstart. 2/5 of a yes   (still hoping to make this and storydreaming  my ROW80 main project for the remainder of this round as I need a substantial start on it in time to use it for Preptober and NaNo next Round.)  This week the life that got in the way is a crochet project for a birthday on Tuesday.  Note: I've adjusted the goal to 10 minutes 5 days a week with the caveat that I don't need to work into the pristine spiral notebook I bought for this project yet.  The first task is to get a feel for how that notebook needs to be organized and to figure that out I will start re-reading my files with loose scratch paper or note cards at hand to note down every 'fact' I encounter as I read: names, dates, descriptions, titles of books and chapters and stories, character quirks, symbolism associated with a character...etc.  It occurred to me that my resistance to this task was at least partially related to not wanting to make a mess in that pretty notebook.  So now I have permission to make a mess with scratch pads and note cards.  Let's see if that makes any difference.  Also there is a trick I'm playing on myself here.  I almost never do a thing for only ten minutes but if I think I must do 30 minutes I balk at starting thinking of all the ways I'm likely to get interrupted or not fulfill my expectations in some unexpected way.  I realized this has to do with not being able to visualize exactly what is expected.  But I know what it means to 'read' and 'take notes'  I've been doing it with other people's stories every day for weeks and weeks.  For most of a year in fact.
  • Weekly Artist Date (ala Julia Cameron)  This is about doing something to recharge your creative battery.  I'll go into more detail in one of the check-ins.  A big YES  More 24/7 cams discovered.  Also screensaver vids of color or image in motion.  Some with music excellent for background ambience for writing.  More walks to the gazebo and back with my caregiver and at least one where we sat reading there for an hour where I could look up from my book and see birds or neighbors walking dogs or neighbors having interactions with each other on their porches or the breeze in the leaves which is better than screen savers.
  • A minimum of 5 minutes of physical activity daily.  Either a walk outside with my caregiver or a session on my mini-tramp, or pacing the floor between front and back door. YES (may need to look at upping the expectation soon.  this is getting too easy.)  
  • I want to reengage with my blog so: Two One blog post per week besides the two check-ins. Either about encountering other people's stories via print, video or audio which can include formal reviews or about a current fiber art WIP or about one of my personal challenges: widowhood, independent living with visual impairment and autism and issues related to health and aging among them.  Not yet.  Note: I've adjusted my expectations here for the duration of the round.  I removed the theme of personal challenge from the options as it turns out that has been the theme of my check-in posts and those take a lot out of me and a third one would be overloading my readers as well as me.  The main reason I've not posted extra is the same reason I missed the Wednesday check-in: I'm super busy chasing library book due dates and trying to finish books before the next set of holds comes back my way.  I sometimes feel like I'm chasing my own ponytail around the 440 track.  Last Wednesday I was still trying to finish the over 800 page Sun House by David James Duncan even tho it was going to be a fail.  I closed in on 70% by the time Libby took it from me but I still needed 13 more hours for that last 30%.  Boy do I miss the days when I could read 100 pages an hour or better.

Read more...

Sunday, September 03, 2023

Jelling -- Sunday Serenity --ROW80 Check-in

Live Jelly Cam -- Monterey Bay Aquarium 7am-7pm Pacific
If it's black when you tune in just back it up

 
I've decided to revive one of my old memes, Sunday Serenity, making it the focus of the Sunday post with the check-in like a footnote with little to no essay above the goals section.  Last Wednesday I spent 7 hours on my check-in post and I can't sustain two posts a week like that and then complain I can't get any writing done.

I'm not sorry I wrote that essay.  It was a story I needed to tell.  It was therapeutic and necessary for me even if nobody ever reads it. But if it is wearing me out trying to do that every check-in, I'm sure it is wearing my readers out.  So I'm backing off to one or less of such essays in a week.  And from now on if it is not ready to post after three hours I'll save the essay part as draft and post something fun and writing related above the goals section.  Even on Wednesday.

Well, Sunday Serenity will not always be writing related.  This video is only tangentially so as I have found it useful several times since I discovered it Thursday to reboot my brain, to change my focus from one task to another and most useful for writing was when I overslept and didn't have time to do my morning pages before a scheduled Zoom and I used five minutes of watching the jelly fish to put me back in my dreaming mind.  It essentially erased an hour's worth of encounters with language so I could do morning pages as if I'd just woken up.

 


The writing challenge that
 knows you have a life


 ROW80 Round 3 Goals:

  • Morning pages daily.  Average 40 minutes (ala Julia Cameron The Artist Way and Writing For Life) YES Started May 20.  Probably would not have jumped into NaNo and ROW80 without having had a month of morning pages behind me. But the very fact that I've hung on to this YES throughout the crisis' is PROOF that I am committed to the writing and still belong in ROW80
  • Storydreaming with notebook for noting ideas for characters or scenes. (ala Robert Owen Butler From Where You Dream)  30 10 minutes per day 2/3 of a yes since Thursday  (The notebook is the key to this goal as without it the storydreams go to the same place night dreams go an hour after waking.) Note: I've adjusted the goal for the duration of the round to ten minutes a day with the caveat that as long as I'm sitting with notebook and pen it counts even if I don't write anything new.
  • Working on the Fruits of the Spirit (aka FOS) Storyworld Bible at least 30 10 minutes per day at least 5 days per week.  I'm sure this will expand as I get involved but I need to set a minimum for that jumpstart. NOT yet   (still hoping to make this and storydreaming  my ROW80 main project for the remainder of this round as I need a substantial start on it in time to use it for Preptober and NaNo next Round.)  This week the life that got in the way is a crochet project for a birthday on Tuesday.  Note: I've adjusted the goal to 10 minutes 5 days a week with the caveat that I don't need to work into the pristine spiral notebook I bought for this project yet.  The first task is to get a feel for how that notebook needs to be organized and to figure that out I will start re-reading my files with loose scratch paper or note cards at hand to note down every 'fact' I encounter as I read: names, dates, descriptions, titles of books and chapters and stories, character quirks, symbolism associated with a character...etc.  It occurred to me that my resistance to this task was at least partially related to not wanting to make a mess in that pretty notebook.  So now I have permission to make a mess with scratch pads and note cards.  Let's see if that makes any difference.  Also there is a trick I'm playing on myself here.  I almost never do a thing for only ten minutes but if I think I must do 30 minutes I balk at starting thinking of all the ways I'm likely to get interrupted or not fulfill my expectations in some unexpected way.  I realized this has to do with not being able to visualize exactly what is expected.  But I know what it means to 'read' and 'take notes'  I've been doing it with other people's stories every day for weeks and weeks.  For most of a year in fact.
  • Weekly Artist Date (ala Julia Cameron)  This is about doing something to recharge your creative battery.  I'll go into more detail in one of the check-ins.  A big YES  More 24/7 cams discovered.  Also screensaver vids of color or image in motion.  Some with music excellent for background ambience for writing.  There was also a walk to the gazebo and back with my caregiver on Friday during which I met two of my neighbors.  Finally.  After two years.  And my adjustment of Cameron's Artist Date rules makes that count for me.  But the BIG one happened Saturday while I was home alone.  I'm usually tied to my unit by fear of stepping more than three steps beyond reach of my front door without an escort.  But months of practice with my caregiver I finally found the courage to push my boundaries.  I walked out to the bench at the end of my front walk and sat in the sun crocheting for nearly an hour.  One of the ladies I met Friday stopped by for a chat.  That was huge.  I can't stress that enough.  Just about two months ago I was almost ready to try that and then on one of my escorted walks I took that fall that upended more than my body for the next several weeks.  My confidence took the biggest hit.
  • A minimum of 5 minutes of physical activity daily.  Either a walk outside with my caregiver or a session on my mini-tramp, or pacing the floor between front and back door. YES (may need to look at upping the expectation soon.  this is getting too easy.)  
  • I want to reengage with my blog so: Two One blog post per week besides the two check-ins. Either about encountering other people's stories via print, video or audio which can include formal reviews or about a current fiber art WIP or about one of my personal challenges: widowhood, independent living with visual impairment and autism and issues related to health and aging among them.  Not yet.  Note: I've adjusted my expectations here for the duration of the round.  I removed the theme of personal challenge from the options as it turns out that has been the theme of my check-in posts and those take a lot out of me and a third one would be overloading my readers as well as me.  

Read more...

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

The Game of Shame - ROW80 Check-In


The writing challenge that
 knows you have a life




Shame was the main game we played in my home, in my church, in my classrooms, on my playgrounds.  I learned that game so well.  I learned to self-shame as a way to avoid the worst of the shaming because self-shame looks like the remorse and surrender that most authority figures and bullies needed to see to believe they'd won the game. 

I've been doing a deep dive on this theme in my life for most of the past month.  I suggested in a previous post that I would share that journey here but I'm not ready to share much of what has been on my mind yet.  It is too amorphous and/or triggering.  But I can share the one story I hinted at before.  The story of an encounter between myself at age 12 with my sixth grade teacher that was suffused with shame and had a direct impact on my relationship to my writing that has me in its thrall to this day.

As I wrote a week ago Sunday:

I thought I'd already unpacked all the baggage around this incident.  I even wrote a flash fiction piece and devoted a NaNo to developing a YA novel expanding on that.  But apparently I left some seriously stinky laundry in the bag because as I started thinking about what I planned to say in the post while I was working the stuff shuffle in my room, I found myself reliving that moment in emotional technicolor and then I was weeping.  And I couldn't stop for four hours. 
The fictional piece I linked above stays fairly true to the exchange between me and my teacher.  I changed the topic of the term paper to Flannery O'Connor who became my favorite author for years after I encountered her in high school.  So at least 4 to 5 years after this incident.  I did this so I could make that play on a title of one of Flannery's stories.  Hers was Everything That Rises Must Converge and I, in my cynicism at the time wanted to argue that no, Everything that Rises Must Submerge because that had been my basic experience in my family in the school system and in my marriage.

In my family and Church, 'rising' was too closely related to 'pride' for their comfort and all signs of pride must be quashed.  Usually by shaming.  As for the school system... They just didn't have the eyes to see anyone who colored outside the lines.  So to speak.  Unless it was disruptive to others.  But when it came to a quiet-as-a-mouse girl who took home all of her textbooks the first week of the school year and had read them all cover-to-cover by her birthday mid-November and had written out all the questions and answers for every single chapter into a notebook she kept at home?  Nothing in their training prepared them for noticing anomalies like that let alone for how to respond in a way that was in the child's best interest.

The go-to programing for these young twenty-something teachers was to insist that all the rules be followed all the time by all individuals involved.  So when the teacher would patrol the class after giving a reading assignment and walk by my desk and find me with a library book open on top of my text book, he didn't even ask if I'd finished the reading assignment, he just confiscated my book and put it in his desk drawer and the rule was that I could not have it back until the due date or the end of term whichever came first.  And I would have to remember to ask for the book on the correct due date.

It didn't make any difference to him whether the book was a novel or a reference book related to the big semester-long term paper project.  He never noticed or at least never commented on the fact that many of these books were upwards of 400 pages and the NF were heavily footnoted and indexed.  In other words most of the books confiscated from me at age 12 were college level. 

This is where my sentiment of 'rising gets you squashed' came from.  I'd watched my brother, one grade behind me, get pushed back down in other ways but since he was a boy with a temper and a 'Mr. know-it-all attitude who'd started lecturing every ear in range from playmates to parents from the moment he could speak complete sentences, he didn't fly under the radar as I did and earned one creative punishment after another--as many from the bullies as from the teachers and principals. 

Until, that is, I had another encounter with a teacher in high-school.  My 10th grade typing teacher gave an inspired motivational lecture to the class about the perks of learning to type.  (If you've read the flash fiction linked above you know the irony of that) He rhapsodized on all the doors it would open and how merit and hard work was rewarded by the system and all the ways you would find it useful in your personal life.

As he spoke, I started weeping.  He noticed.  I noticed he noticed and began an intense examination of the wood grain on my desk top.  He didn't speak to me until the bell rang and the chaos of the class leaving began but then he quietly asked if I would stay and speak to him.  I did.  He asked why his words had so upset me.  Tho I'd had flashes of my own stories I did not share any of them.  I shared what I'd observed about my brother including the current crisis in which his 9th grade teacher was threatening to fail him in history.

This was because he refused to take notes in class as required and instead doodled and handed that in for a fail every week.  He was even able to explain that he was unable to listen to spoken words and write them at the same time but when he doodled he could remember everything that was said by just looking at the doodles.  But the teacher wasn't interested in that nor in the corroborating facts that he aced the tests and quizzes and wrote cogent essays, he cared only about the rules. 

My brother was stubborn and insisted they couldn't make him do what he couldn't do and if they made him repeat the class he would just fold his hands and sit in class and do none of the work for if he was going to fail anyway what was the point?  Our Mom had been up on campus for a conference with the teacher, our Dad had lectured him at the dinner table and there were angry stalemates at school and at home.

In my mind, of course, I was drawing parallels between what was happening to him and what had happened to me four years earlier.  I was now wishing I'd made a stink like he was doing.  I was wishing I'd at least told my Mom so she might have advocated for me since she was a witness that at least 3/4 of what he accused me of was untrue. But for some reason I'd internalized the shame of the failure and was too mortified to tell anyone.

That male typing teacher who was a retired Marine Corp Sargent, in an effort to prove to me that the system works if you light a fire under the right butt, pulled some strings in the school system and got my brother a full blown IQ test.  The kind administered one-on-one by a psychologist instead of the multiple choice, color-the-dot-by-your-answer test administered in Junior High.  He tested over 160 which was 30 points higher than he tested on the standard one. He'd beat me by three points on that one, I think tho I can't really trust my memory's precision.  I just remember wondering if I would also have gained 30 points by having it administered one-on-one and would I have still been just a few points behind. 

A few years after the fact, I wondered why my typing teacher did not have me tested also just based on the fact that I'd been the one to see the issue and correctly diagnose it.  Coupled with the evidence of the books he watched me carrying into class and how based on them he directed me to our school library's set of the Britannica Great Books, introducing me to its syntopicon, the index to ideas, which has become an integral part of my life and of my work on my Fruits of the Spirit storyworld.  He would point at a book sitting on my desk and say "If you're reading that, you're ready for Plato or William James or one of the other philosophers that aren't such lazy thinkers."

So here is my story unfictionalized:  In sixth grade in the late sixties we were presented with a semester length project directly after the Christmas holidays.  The Term Paper.  It was broken down into manageable tasks to be completed in order and checked over by the teacher over the course of the project.  It began with field trips to the school and the public library where we were taught all the intricacies of finding sources and recording them on bibliography slips.  How to use the card catalog to find books and how to find references to magazine articles in the Reader's Guide on our topic and then fill out the slip for the librarian to take back into the magazine and newspaper archives.  Our bibliography needed to include two of each kind of resource: encyclopedia, periodical, full length book. 

The moment I comprehended the assignment I was in love.  And since I just happened to be in the middle of a 500 page footnoted tome about Jenny Lind the singer whose popularity in her era might be comparable to Celine Dion in ours that was the topic I settled on.  The whole project from start to finish was a joy.  I loved it.  Even with Mr. T. confiscating my books as fast as I could check them out.  I just patiently waited for them to be due and took them back and checked them out again. 

Except the first book had belonged to my grandmother and so I didn't get it back until after the assignment due date.  And that was the one that created the crisis in my mind that prevented me from confronting the teacher or asking my Mom to advocate for me or even telling her what had happened.  Because I was so sure I was guilty as charged.  After all it had been a teacher accusing me and a male at that and men in authority held ten times the weight of women because of the training of the cult I was raised in.

So this was Mr T's accusation: No sixth grader can write with this sophistication so either you plagiarized or your mother or big sister wrote this for you.  The fact that it is typed just reinforces my theory.  I warned the class at the beginning not to submit a typed paper unless you typed every character yourself and you cannot convince me that a sixth grader can type with this proficiency.  If you make me prove my theory by going back to examine all your resources to find the material you copied then I will make sure you fail sixth grade and do it over again next year and spend the entire summer in summer school.

Then he handed me my paper with zero markings on it other than the c/-c grade which reflected form over content or visa versa.  I just took the paper from him silently with burning red cheeks and returned to my desk swallowed up by shame.  I had done a rapid calculation of all the existing proof against his claims and of my witnesses but there was one sticking point.  That fat book that had kindled my interest in Jenny Lind that I'd started reading during the Christmas holidays and which had spent the last couple months in his desk drawer.

I'd finished the read through but I'd not finished going back through to copy out the marked passages on my note cards.  And because I was a proficient memorizer having been started on Bible verses before I could read and memorizing chapters at a time by the time I was 9, I knew how easy it was for me to hold onto chunks of text.  And because I'd read the memoir of Helen Keller not all that long ago I also knew that she had fallen into that trap as an adult and got charged with plagiarism after using some phrases belonging to someone else as her own because she had not kept good enough notes and since I had not been able to keep good enough notes on that one book it was quite possible he would find the evidence he was so sure was there if I challenged him.

I chose silence over taking that risk.

Despite knowing that my parents could vouch for the fact I'd typed every word and that I'd been typing for several years or maybe let me bring Mom's typewriter to demonstrate, and despite the fact the evidence I had been doing the work was in the outlines and notecards and drafts in my own hand that he had signed off on over the weeks and in the existence of the books he kept in his drawer.  Which books could explain the sophistication of my writing style without being proof of plagiarism.  Despite knowing for a fact that I was not guilty of conscious copying directly from the sources without quotations, just that small chance that he would find evidence of unconscious plagiarism which would be impossible to prove was unintentional was all it took to squash me.

And apparently I am still struggling with the loss of my self-confidence with my writing that was created in me that day.  And there is still a part of me that is willing to believe in the face of evidence to the contrary that a male teacher knows the truth and mustn't be challenged.  And in my mind, formed in the sixties and seventies, all editors are male.  Could this be why I've submitted a short story only once, in my early twenties, and nothing since?

 ROW80 Round 3 Goals:

  • Morning pages daily.  Average 40 minutes (ala Julia Cameron The Artist Way and Writing For Life) YES Started May 20.  Probably would not have jumped into NaNo and ROW80 without having had a month of morning pages behind me. Must must must watch my posture.  No hunching over.  No leaning on elbows. But the very fact that I've hung on to this YES throughout the crisis' is PROOF that I am committed to the writing and still belong in ROW80
  • Storydreaming with notebook for noting ideas for characters or scenes. (ala Robert Owen Butler From Where You Dream)  30 10 minutes per day NO for over two weeks.  (The notebook is the key to this goal as without it the storydreams go to the same place night dreams go an hour after waking.) Note: I've adjusted the goal for the duration of the round to ten minutes a day with the caveat that as long as I'm sitting with notebook and pen it counts even if I don't write anything new.
  • Working on the Fruits of the Spirit (aka FOS) Storyworld Bible at least 30 10 minutes per day at least 5 days per week.  I'm sure this will expand as I get involved but I need to set a minimum for that jumpstart. NO for over two weeks  (still hoping to make this and storydreaming  my ROW80 main project for the remainder of this round as I need a substantial start on it in time to use it for Preptober and NaNo next Round.)  Note: I've adjusted the goal to 10 minutes 5 days a week with the caveat that I don't need to work into the pristine spiral notebook I bought for this project yet.  The first task is to get a feel for how that notebook needs to be organized and to figure that out I will start re-reading my files with loose scratch paper or note cards at hand to note down every 'fact' I encounter as I read: names, dates, descriptions, titles of books and chapters and stories, character quirks, symbolism associated with a character...etc.  It occurred to me that my resistance to this task was at least partially related to not wanting to make a mess in that pretty notebook.  So now I have permission to make a mess with scratch pads and note cards.  Let's see if that makes any difference.  Also there is a trick I'm playing on myself here.  I almost never do a thing for only ten minutes but if I think I must do 30 minutes I balk at starting thinking of all the ways I'm likely to get interrupted or not fulfill my expectations in some unexpected way.  I realized this has to do with not being able to visualize exactly what is expected.  But I know what it means to 'read' and 'take notes'  I've been doing it with other people's stories every day for weeks and weeks.  For most of a year in fact.
  • Weekly Artist Date (ala Julia Cameron)  This is about doing something to recharge your creative battery.  I'll go into more detail in one of the check-ins. YES  I did several things that could qualify under my new rules as described last check-in.  I have found several more 24/7 cameras on interesting or exotic locals.  Two of them in Africa but their ambience is so different they could be two different planets and I've seen animas I can't even name.  Like an 'ox' with a zebra face and horns that look like upside down elephant tusks except black.  I've also been exploring the old type of screensaver I used to storydream while watching.  They are variations on color or image in flowing motion.  Think lava lamp or kaleidoscope.  I've also gone for walks in the villa cul-de-sac with my caregiver.
  • A minimum of 5 minutes of physical activity daily.  Either a walk outside with my caregiver or a session on my mini-tramp, or pacing the floor between front and back door. YES (may need to look at upping the expectation soon.  this is getting too easy.)  
  • I want to reengage with my blog so: Two One blog post per week besides the two check-ins. Either about encountering other people's stories via print, video or audio which can include formal reviews or about a current fiber art WIP or about one of my personal challenges: widowhood, independent living with visual impairment and autism and issues related to health and aging among them.  NOPE  Note: I've adjusted my expectations here for the duration of the round.  I removed the theme of personal challenge from the options as it turns out that has been the theme of my check-in posts and those take a lot out of me and a third one would be overloading my readers as well as me.

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