Making Every Word Count

Last  night as I listened to this, one of my favorite Billy Bragg songs, it occurred to me the song’s like a mini-YA.  Everything you need for a satisfying story, right here.  In just 267 words.

THE SATURDAY BOY By Billy Bragg

I’ll never forget the first day I met her
That September morning was clear and fresh
The way she spoke and laughed at my jokes
And the way she rubbed herself against the edge of my desk

She became a magic mystery to me
And we’d sit together in double History twice a week
And some days we’d walk the same way home
And it’s surprising how quick a little rain can clear the streets

We dreamed of her and compared our dreams
But that was all that I ever tasted
She lied to me with her body you see
And I lied to myself ’bout the chances I’d wasted

The times we were close were far and few between
In the darkness at the dances in the school canteen
Did she close her eyes like I did as we held each other tight
And la la la la la means I love you

She danced with me and I still hold that memory soft and sweet
And I stare up at her window as I walk down her street
But I never made the first team, I just made the first team laugh
And she never came to the phone, she was always in the bath

In the end it took me a dictionary
To find out the meaning of unrequited
While she was giving herself for free
At a party to which I was never invited

I never understood my failings then
And I hide my humble hopes now
Thinking back she made us want her
A girl not old enough to shave her legs

** This video ends before the song’s finished but it’s the best quality version I could find on YouTube.  Just a taste….

Synchronicity

I’ve mentioned the Monday spaghetti dinner.  We’re a 100%-volunteer organization that’s fed the homeless and working poor for the past sixteen years.  We rely on donations to keep going.  Every December our local newspapers highlight different non-profits and collect donations on their behalf.  Last year I requested an application but there was a mix-up on my end and we missed the deadline.  When I bought my 2008 planner, I put sticky notes and reminders in it to keep me on track with this year’s application process.  I was determined to get Grant Avenue Street Reach into that program so we’d receive funding.

Street Reach is registered as a non-profit but because our gross receipts are so low, we don’t have to file with the IRS which means we don’t have formal financial records.  We use whatever money we have to buy what we can (and rely on food donations for the rest).  Yesterday morning I made last-ditch attempts to pull together enough financial information (990-N filing status, accounts receivable statements from our food service sources) to satisfy the Application Gods.  Well, the Application Gods told me it wasn’t enough, that we wouldn’t even get an application because we didn’t pass the screening process.

I was very upset. 

But I pulled myself together and went downtown to help out.  We’d finished serving the meal and were cleaning up the kitchen when a soft-spoken man arrived.  He told me he was with a local group that worked to help non-profits get funding.  (huh?)  He said they’d helped us last year and had intended to contact us again but hadn’t because of an oversight. 

Then he said, “Our group is the Denver Cycle Sluts and we’d like to give you all the money we make at Bingo this Friday night.”

That’s right, friends.  The corporate machine couldn’t help our tiny non-profit feed hungry people but a bunch of drag queens designated Grant Avenue Street Reach their charity of the month (and did so last year, too) and will raise money to help us out. 

BINGO!

            
                   

Fueled by Guts

I’m working on the intimidating middle section of my book. 
Feeling overwhelmed.  Full of despair.

Gave myself a pep talk and told myself I could do it.
Gave myself permission to write crap.

Wrote.
Quite possibly crap. 

Nonetheless, relieved to write for two days in a row.
Celebrating the baby steps.

Gotta keep digging deep and gutting it out.
Ugh.

        

Discovery

On Saturday I hooped for the first time in about a month, and then again today.  Ouch.  Apparently regular hooping toughens up the hip bone region but when you lay off for a while, well, it goes all soft and tender again.  Tiny green bruises may ensue.

In hooping, as in flossing, consistency is key.

                    

Bolder Boulder Experience

I wanted to update you on the race since your good thoughts were with me as I ran but I was absolutely exhausted all day yesterday. I could’ve dropped in to give you a short version of the events but so many thoughts/epiphanies kept bouncing around my head and I really wanted to do them justice which is what I hope to accomplish today. But in case you have a life to live and don’t want to invest the time in me deconstructing the race, here’s the short version:

  • I didn’t run a great race but I had a great race.
  • My official time was 90 seconds slower than my goal.
  • Despite my slow time, I placed 12th in my age group.
  • I will receive a medal.
  • For the first time running that race (yesterday was my fourth entry), I didn’t experience a moment of “This sucks. Why am I doing this?!”
  • I enjoyed myself throughout the race. Smiled. Laughed.
  • All the good thoughts carried me through.  Thank you, thank you, thank you!

           

Okay, here’s ALL the minutiae of Tracy’s fourth running of the Bolder Boulder 10k:
I recovered from last Monday’s fall. I fought off upset stomach issues. I did visualization and mentally prepared for the race. I was confident all the hard work and training would carry me through so that I’d get my PR (personal record). There was no doubt in my mind I’d run my best race ever.

I shut off the light at 9:00 pm on Sunday night, alarm set for 4:30 am so Zippy and I could make the 5:30 shuttle bus to Boulder. Zippy, in his annoying fashion, fell asleep immediately. I drifted off about 9:30 only to wake at 11:30 to the sound of his snores. The rest of the night was one of those nightmarish experiences in which you desperately try to fall asleep but cannot and as you become more tired, your mind becomes more panicked. I ended up sleeping another 30 minutes before the alarm went off, for a grand total of two and a half hours of sleep. I seriously considered staying home.

But I went. And I’m so glad I did.

The Bolder Boulder is a massive road race (I think it’s the second largest in the nation). This year just under 49,000 people completed the race (wheelchairs, runners and walkers). You can’t help but get caught up in the excitement when you’re around that many people sharing the same goal. As I warmed up with Zippy I saw one of my coaches and she wished me well, and then another runner from my training group whom I hadn’t seen in a couple months since I’d started training alone called out to me with such enthusiasm that my chest swelled with pure happiness.

Every other year Zippy runs in an earlier wave since he’s a faster runner but this year he was two waves behind me (I got an automatic slot in the CC wave because I was in the Sub 50 training group but he used last year’s BB time in which he ran slow with me for his placement in this year’s DA wave.  Follow that?)  My wave started two minutes and 20 seconds earlier than Zippy’s. I love him dearly but knew I didn’t want to see him during that race; if he caught up with me it would mean I wasn’t running my pace. But if he met his goal and I met mine, we’d be together somewhere near the very end of the race.

I was at the back of my wave when the starting gun went off. I started my watch with the gun just as some guy next to me told his friend he wasn’t starting his watch until we actually crossed over the start line (tags on our shoes keep track of our official race times). I glanced at my watch as we crossed the start line and it said 33 seconds.

At the 1K mark I checked my watch and subtracted 30 seconds. Right on pace for the first mile that I wanted to run in 7:30. At the 1 mile mark, I checked my watch and subtracted 30 seconds from the total time. Right on pace. Why wasn’t I reading my mile splits? Because even though I’d thoroughly prepared for that race – handkerchief with peppermint oil in my pocket, DIG DEEP and 1-2-3-4 (tempo reminder) written on the back of my hand, all nineteen course turns and each downhill and uphill memorized, etc. – I’d forgotten to set my watch so that the mile splits would be in bold display while the total time would show in tiny, faint numbers at the top of the display. My splits were in tiny, faint numbers that were hard to see when I glanced. So instead of making an effort to read them, I got into the habit of looking at my total time and then subtracting 30 seconds.

I was running a great race. I felt good. I smiled and shouted thanks to the older man who shook a cowbell and cheered us on. I slapped the outstretched hand of Jake Blues singing “Soul Man” alongside the course. I grinned at the belly dancers and clapped along with the big-wigged band members performing The Cars’ “Best Friend’s Girl.” I felt a bond with all the men, women, and children running alongside me. I got tears in my eyes thinking how grateful I was to be out there running the best race I’d ever run after training so hard. I repeated 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4 in my mind to keep on pace. At each mile mark, I checked my watch and subtracted 30 seconds. When one of the running group coaches came up beside me on the downhill headed into the fifth mile, he said I was looking good. I told him I felt great and was having so much fun. We chatted a bit more and then he pulled away. I realized then I shouldn’t have talked since it took away my lung capacity but he called back to me and said to keep my eye on him, that he’d pull me through. Instead, he kept getting farther ahead but still I kept on running. Digging deep.

The final mile is uphill with a steep incline into the stadium. I was pretty tired but not demoralized. I knew I was almost there and even though I was a bit off pace, I was still running a strong race. Just as I headed into the stadium, Zippy was next to me. He said, “Dig deep!” then ran ahead. For a moment I felt deflated because I’d wanted to run so fast he wouldn’t catch me at all but I kept going and as I ran into the stadium, I grinned up at the cameras mounted on the bridge over the track. I ran hard for the finish line and stopped my watch.  I stared at my time.

Somehow, the great race I’d run suddenly revealed itself as a fantasy. Even subtracting 30 seconds, it was not a good time. Not only hadn’t I broke 50 minutes (by my calculations, I ran it in about 50:06 and eventually discovered the official time was 50:31), I hadn’t come close to running the race in 49:00. Then I looked at my mile splits which I’d recorded on my watch but hadn’t bothered to read during the race, and felt like an idiot. I was clearly off pace on most every mile but hadn’t realized it. Math has never been my strong suit and it’s even harder for me when I’m sleep-deprived and trying to do calculations while running a race.

As we waited in line for our free post-race massages, I started to cry. Not only was my time slow, but the cool weather would make for fast times for all those other 45-year-old women who capitalized on that fact. There was no way I’d get a medal.

Why was I so hung up on medals? In 2004 I ran a strong Bolder Boulder (49:52) and placed 15th in my age group. However, only the top ten finishers in each age group got a medal. The very next year they started giving medals to the top 15 finishers.  I wanted my medal.

Were there other reasons I wanted so desperately to run a good race? For one, I’m not really a competitor in the sense that I get very nervous about races; I don’t enjoy the flutters and anxiety so wanted to make this the last time I had to really care about my time. Also, my knees have let me know they don’t enjoy lots of intensive training. But also caught up in all this is my writing life. I’ve mentioned the deterioration of my confidence and how my race goals were so important for me in that my own hard work and training would allow me to finally create my destiny; even though no editors had jumped on my books I could make myself stronger and kick some butt in a 10k. I wanted to shine in at least one aspect of my life. That felt especially important because just over a month ago, I broke up with my agent. It was the right thing to do but on some levels it felt like my writing journey was moving backward.

So I cried there in line. I silently berated myself for bad math skills and poor planning and all-around obliviousness. But I kept coming back to the fact that I’d had so much fun during the race. That I’d never had an urge to drop out and collapse on someone’s lawn. And after a while, I laughed. “No wonder I felt so good,” I told Zippy. “I wasn’t running very fast.”

Earlier I’d dreaded going home and telling Zebu and Wildebeest about the race. I’d wanted so much to prove my strength and make them proud after they’d suffered through those scary years filled with me in pajamas, heading off for yet another nap. But by the time we got home, I didn’t feel I’d let them or me down.  At first they felt bad for me but I honestly told them it was okay.  I was okay.   And when I explained my lack of sleep, Wildebeest sat up straight and said “Well, then you really kicked that race’s ass.”

Indeed.

So I was already in a peaceful frame of mind when several hours later Zippy came into the bedroom with his laptop. Earlier I’d soaked in epsom salts while consuming a quart of electrolytes and a bottle of beer, and then took a nap. I was barely awake when he showed me the screen display of my race results. Out of 452 45-year-old females, I’d come in 12th place. “Twelfth place!” he shouted. “You got twelfth!”

Just a few more thoughts (you’re kidding, she’s not done yet?!):

  • It turns out I was completely wrong about the 33 seconds and my official time shows only about eight seconds between the gun and when I crossed the starting line.  I was doing fuzzy math right from the start.  Possibly hallucinating.
  • I think I appreciated the medal news even more because I’d come out of my funk and was already proud of myself.
  • When the hubbub died down, I had an epiphany about Zippy’s race and he confirmed that he’d held back on passing me until we were at the stadium because he knew I’d lose confidence and he didn’t want to cost me precious seconds that might put me out of the medal race. I love that Zippy.
  • While writing this opus, a friend from the spaghetti dinner called to congratulate me (the director told him my news). He said, “If I was picking players for my third-grade kickball team, you’d be at the top of my list.” Hearing that was nearly as cool as learning the medal news.
  • I’m so grateful I had the training to focus on while making the decision to part with my agent. I had my period of mourning but then pushed it aside until after the race. I now feel ready to wade back into that breach and (1) get my sub history from former agent and (2) decide where to go from here. My head is clear and my confidence is up, and I will move on.
  • I’ve rediscovered my inner strength and capacity for joy, and am eager to get back to my writing. All that hard training reminded me of what I’m capable of and I have confidence about pushing through a meandering middle. Two weeks ago I went back to Novel #4 and will work on it until the revisions are finished because I’ve got the guts, dammit!

This race reminded me again how important it is to have a support system. I thank you again for the good wishes that carried me along that course.  Some of you I’ve met in person and others I know only online but I’m grateful for all our friendships.  Thanks for hanging in there with me.

        

Accepting All Good Thoughts

It’s that time of year again when I ask for your good thoughts.  Monday (Memorial Day) is the Bolder Boulder 10k, the race I’ve been training for the past five months.  I’ve set a time goal that I believe will place me in the top fifteen of my age group.  I’ve trained hard and have high hopes.

However………….

This past Monday I was running out on the trails when I tripped on a rock and fell down hard.  I slid on my stomach, arms stretched out before me (like Superman, except not in the air and without a cape).  Torn skin, embedded rocks, and dirt in my mouth.  Jammed muscles.

The good news:

  • for the first fall ever, I didn’t tear up my knees!
  • I was able to rest for several days
  • I had a great massage yesterday

The not-so-good news:

  • Zippy came home early yesterday with flu symptoms
  • I woke up this morning with an upset stomach

My plan is to lay low and keep quiet.  Read and nap.  Think healthy thoughts.

My wave starts at 7:09 a.m. (Rocky Mountain Time) on Monday and I hope to cross the finish line a few minutes before 8:00.  If you can, I’d very much appreciate good thoughts.  Last year as I ran the race I felt the encouragement and support from my friends here in LJ-Land, and I didn’t give up.  It meant so much during that nasty third mile to know I had good vibrations aimed my way; those vibes buoyed me.

It feels a bit tacky being absent the past week and then coming to you for a favor.  But here I am.  Call me Tackyworld. 

I wish all a wonderful holiday weekend filled with sunshine, laughter, and rock-free trails!

                    

Dig Deep!

Just ran my final speed workout before the Bolder Boulder on Memorial Day.  I didn’t want to do it.  But I put on my running togs and drove to the Jeffco Stadium track.

It was chilly.  It was windy.  I was not enthusiastic.  But (there’s that but again) I warmed up and stretched and then started the workout.

Five 1000m (1K) intervals (2.5 laps) at faster than 10K race-pace with 3.5 minutes rest in between.  Oy.

It was really hard work but I did it.  Not only that, but my last two intervals were faster than the third.   And that’s because I dug down deep  and pushed myself to the finish.

Which brings me to the reason for this post. 

As I jogged my cool-down, feeling so proud of myself, I started thinking of all my writer friends who work hard at their craft yet have days when they doubt their abilities to finish a project or question whether they’re producing anything worthwhile or even if they should just call it quits on the whole writing thing. 

Well, I’m here to tell you to complete that poem!  Finish those novel revisions!  Send out that query letter!  Start that chapter book or graphic novel or screenplay or essay, and don’t stop until you have a first draft!

It’s all there inside you.  You have the strength and inspiration and guts needed to get the job done.  So dig deep, believe in yourself, and accomplish whatever it is you want to do!

              

Early Birds

This morning I got up at 4:45 in order to join the local Audubon group for its 27th Annual Spring Bird Count.  I got to where I was supposed to be a couple minutes past 6:00.  A little bleary and slightly anxious since it had rained in the night and I wasn’t able to find my rain pants before I left and had forgotten gloves.  And hadn’t packed a lunch or snacks since I didn’t realize it was a 5-6 hour hike. 

But those worries faded when I met the friendly master birder leader-guy who got very excited when he learned I’d never participated in a bird count before.  He introduced me to the rest of the group, all seasoned birders, and said, “She’s got a good pair of binoculars so she must know what a bird is.”

Gotta love a man who admires your bins.

The birds were singing their little hearts out from the moment we started.  I heard many but cannot yet identify them.  (Maybe

 could give us a tutorial.  Snicker.)

This is a who’s who of what I saw (master birder leader-guy told me up front I might only see a quarter of what the rest of them saw):

  • Say’s Phoebe
  • Cowbirds (in a group of 3-4)
  • Yellow-breasted Chat
  • Kingbird
  • Red-winged Blackbird (many throughout morning, singing a song I know)
  • Red-tailed Hawk in its nest
  • Great Blue Heron (saw three herons or maybe the same one three times)
  • Starlings
  • Robins
  • Flicker

The big excitement happened when one woman announced she’d possibly sighted a Hepatic Tanager which is not usually found in Colorado.  The master birder leader-gal (who is married to the master birder leader-guy) whipped out her walkie talkie to call the other group which was covering a different portion of habitat.  Much activity ensued as we were instructed to call out any details we saw (light bill; red on top of rump; orange-ish underneath rump; etc) as others checked guide books and one man went back to parking lot for his scoping lense and  the other group hurried to join us as  master birder leader-gal called out “Does anyone have a Western Sibley?” (which is the authority in field guides).  It was like an episode of ER except without the blood and guts and blue scrubs.  After a half-hour watching this extremely cooperative bird hop about in plain view from trunk to branch as it caught insects, it was decreed a Summer Tanager.  I gather that’s not quite as exciting as a Hepatic but also rare so will be reported to the rare bird hotline or some such.

Continuing on, I saw:

  • Yellow Warbler
  • Bullock’s Orioles (2 males and 1 female who watched as the males chased each other)
  • Spotted Towhees (2 males carrying nest materials)
  • Yellow-rumped Warbler
  • Song Sparrow (which has one dark spot on its white chest, an identifying feature I think I’ve internalized and will know from now on!)
  • Cowbird (through the scope which was very cool although it would’ve been cooler seeing a cowbird lay its eggs in another bird’s nest)
  • Evening Grosbeaks

About this time the master birder leader-gal said, “There goes an American Finch saying ‘potato chip’ as it flies over head” and as I struggled to hear it she said, “Gone.”

  • Turkey Vulture (although I couldn’t see its red head through my bins)
  • Orange-crowned Warbler (whose orange crown is impossible to see in the field so how they knew that’s what it was is beyond me; something to do with wing bars or something)
  • Long-eared Owl (sitting in nest so that I could only see one ear and the top of its head but it was still a thrill.  Seriously)

Birders are some of the nicest people you’ll meet.  They made sure I saw what they were looking at and answered all my questions and pointed out differences in bird songs (too bad I immediately forgot them and/or confused them with another).  If I hadn’t been so cold and hungry I would’ve stuck around for the whole outing.  As it was, at 9:45 I thanked them for a wonderful morning and headed back to my car. 

Next time I’ll come prepared.  Who knows what they saw after I left?

            

Me and My Notebook

I know it sounds crazy but I’ve never used a spiral notebook for a writing project.  Each book has come out differently: the first was handwritten with a fountain pen on legal pads without any outlining or character sketches that I can remember (which might account for the blithering, blathering, circuitous route I followed before finally calling it finished); the second was outlined in part on a dry erase board and then written longhand and via word processing; the third and fourth were born through notes jotted notes here and there, some in a composition book divided into sections for PLOT and CHARACTER and DIALOGUE, others on loose leaf paper clumped together on a clipboard before getting transferred to a computer file. 

Even though I haven’t finished revising the fourth book and even though I usually don’t move onto a new project until I’ve completed the old (at least a draft), this time I’m doing just that.  I hope it doesn’t mean the death of Book Four but regardless, I’ve been swept away by a new idea ALL of which I’m scribbling in my blue notebook.  Willy nilly.  I’m dating stuff as I write it and do have full pages set aside for character notes but mostly I’m just letting it rip.

Right now I’m having great fun.  And that’s my main concern these days.

                     

Be Afraid! Be Very, Very Afraid!

Today at the spaghetti dinner I had a conversation with a friend whom I admire in many ways.  Big heart.  Lots of energy.  A recognition that BushCo is a trainwreck of an administration.  Well,  I made the mistake of letting my curiosity get the best of me and so finally asked what it was she liked about the candidacy of Hillary Clinton that motivated her to place three Clinton signs in her yard.

"I don’t like him," she said.  "Because he didn’t put his hand on the bible and he doesn’t put his hand over his heart."

I screamed.

It was as if I was in a haunted house and some creepy, crawly creature jumped out at me; I had no control.  I screamed.  Because I was horrified to meet someone up close and in person who couldn’t tell me anything positive about her chosen candidate yet was casting a vote  against the opposition candidate based on media manipulation and lies.  I know plenty of people have done just that in the past seven years or so (for dawg’s sake, 27% still think Bush is doing a heckuva job), but I’ve resigned myself to them being so adamantly ignorant that nothing could blast them into reality.  My solace was that the majority of the population would use its brainpower regarding the upcoming election.  Wrong.

The whole scene got ugly.  Friend got upset.  I was embarrassed to have reacted so vocally and apologized profusely.  But then it got quieter and the conversation continued.  I pointed out Clinton’s vote on the Kyl/Lieberman Amendment which basically lays the groundwork for invading Iran in a repeat of Iraq, and someone else responded with "The U.S. is already the world’s police, so what’s another country?"

I kid you not.

What is there left to say when people put more energy into their ignorance than their awareness? 

After the fact I wondered if maybe I could’ve changed their perspectives if I’d mentioned Clinton’s vote against banning land mines.

Yeah, right.

                          

No worries!

This morning was my longest training run before the Big Race on Memorial Day. We were supposed to run one hour and twenty minutes at an easy pace. I haven’t been running with the group but thought it would be good to join them today because (1) I could finally meet my wonderful coach in person and (2) the group was running on a flat surface which was more appealing than the hilly streets and trails in my neighborhood.

Well, I met my coach and the two of us ran together because I was the only runner assigned to him who showed up. One-on-one!

We chatted and ran. And ran and ran. He kindly waited while I ran down into some bushes off the trail and made my bladder flatter. He gave me tips on stretching. He discussed the pros and cons of drinking coffee before running.  He laughed at my jokes.  He told me about races he’s run and the progress he’s making on painting the exterior of his house.

And then we were done. Nine miles in one hour and twenty-two minutes. You can bet I’ll remind myself of that when I’m slogging through the hated mile 3 of the Big Race.

Bonus: all these endorphins are also giving me good feelings about my WIP and the writing life.  Everything feels bright and shiny right now.

Hope everyone’s having a great weekend.

                 

Look who came to visit!

This is a Spotted Towhee (image found on photobucket). I happened to glance out my window today and saw a bird hopping around my backyard. I grabbed my binoculars but instead of getting overwhelmed the way I usually do as I try to remember every little detail, I recited them aloud: Black head and neck, white chest, white spots on wings, white on tip of tail, red eyes.

Then he flew away. But when I picked up my bird guide and thumbed through, I found a match. And sure enough, the description matched mine.

That, my friends, was a very satisfying birding moment for this bad birdwatcher.

A Book to Change Your Life

My friend once teased that rather than a birder, I was a “ducker” because I was never quick enough to identify birds but could usually, eventually ID a waterfowl as it paddled about. I felt somewhat intimidated by people who knew grosbeaks from finches from sparrows from the multitude of other little brown jobs. No way was I cut out to be a birder.

But somehow in the past year or so I began watching the pigeons that flock near a neighborhood intersection, taking great joy in their synchronized flights and landings. They always made me smile as I sat at the red light. Then I started seeing crows in certain cottonwood trees as I drove Zebu to school each morning, and they made me smile. And then I started watching for birds everywhere I went because I realized birds made me feel good. Calmer and more centered. They give me hope.

Which is what How to Be a (Bad) Birdwatcher by Simon Barnes is all about. Basking in the wonder and delight of birds, and then easing into the understanding of identifying who and what you’re seeing. In the beginning, he warns, you’ll make mistakes. Embrace those errors.

From page 94: “You start by blundering about and making a good few blunders, too. Everybody does. My advice is to carry on blundering in a totally unembarrassed way. The more you look, the more blunders you will make, and the more blunders you make, the more you will see, and you find that slowly a pattern has been building up without you realizing it. This building up of patterns is one of the deeper joys: once you begin to understand the rhythm of birdwatching, you are beginning to understand the rhythm of birds themselves. Which is nothing less than the rhythm of life.”

I happened upon this book in the library and cannot recommend it enough. It’s funny and poignant and life-affirming. The travesty is that the book is out of print. Really, that makes my heart hurt. The good news, though, is there are used copies available. I can’t wait for mine to arrive so that I might read it again, marking the many passages that brought me joy.

Simon Barnes doesn’t go birdwatching. He is birdwatching. And so am I.

Last-Chance Daffodils?

Yesterday was 78 degrees but the weather people said today’s high would be 47 with snow/rain later.  I realized I should get a photo of these brand-new daffodils before the snow got them.  Sure enough, when I was out snapping pics a gust of wind blew in and the snow began to fall.

                
 

Mature Writing Advice

Paging through WRITING IN FLOW by Susan K. Perry, Ph.D., I came across a passage from author Tom Robbins that I’d highlighted (with an ! in the margin) during an earlier reading.  I’m going to share it here not because it’s a practice I share (really!  truly!) but because the whole thing makes me laugh:
 

        “You should spend thirty minutes a day looking at dirty pictures.  Or thinking about sex.  The purpose of this is to get yourself sexually excited, which builds tremendous amounts of energy, and then carry that into your work….Keep yourself in, not necessarily a frenzied state, but in a state of great intensity….You should always write with an erection. Even if you’re a woman.”

Having read his books, this advice shouldn’t surprise me.  In fact, it explains an awful lot about how Sissy Hankshaw came to be. 

And I’m thinking there might be other fun advice out there in LJ-Land on losing yourself so completely in your writing that you enter some altered state in which time disappears and you’re tapping into the creative core of the universe.  

Anyone want to share?
           

                 

Living in Tortured Times

Lost in last Friday’s news dump was the stunning-although-not-surprising admission by George W. Bush that he was not only aware of but approved the meetings held by his top advisers to discuss and approve the CIA’s use of torture.

The president of the United States admitted that his administration violated (and continues to violate) the War Crimes Act and the Geneva Convention.

Apparently just another ho-hum admission by this band of war criminals because where was our “liberal” media? Fanning the flames about “elitist” Barack Obama who rightly pointed out that this country’s poor and disenfranchised feel abandoned by their government. (Does that “elitist” label sound familiar? The media attached that word to Al Gore and John Kerry. Remember what happened to them? And have you noticed Hillary Clinton is now smearing Obama with the same word despite the fact that in 1991 Bill Clinton spoke a similar truth about economically insecure people?)

No wonder the Bush administration does whatever it damn well pleases; the media is like those parents who don’t offer guidance or supervision as their toddlers run wild in public places.  It doesn’t matter how heinous the BuchCo crimes, they’ve learned there’s no accountability. The lapdog talking heads – Russert, Matthews, Stephanopoulos – will avert their gaze and focus instead on how out of touch Obama is because he can’t bowl. Why wouldn’t BushCo strive for the very bottom of the barrel?

I’m horrified to live in a country run by a government that openly admits to torture. I cannot believe we’ve reached this point. As unpleasant as it is to face the ugly facts, it is worse to remain silent on this issue. So I apologize for beginning the week this way but torture isn’t one of those family secrets that can be safely locked away. We need to shed light on this ugliness.

CrooksandLiars.com has joined the ACLU in its call for an independent counsel to investigate BushCo for its complicity in torture.  You may add your name/voice there.

                         

My new best friends

It’s been Robin-Mania around here the past week or so but none of my pics turned out so I borrowed this one from Photobucket. 
Robins are such fun and they make me smile.  Every time.
Wishing all a wonderful weekend.

           

Running Past My Fears

I’ve mentioned the running group I joined in order to train for the Bolder Boulder 10k on Memorial Day.  What I haven’t mentioned is that I’m the oldest in my group.  And the slowest.

We’re grouped according to our race day goals and so even though we all hope to run the 6.2 miles in less than 50 minutes, some of us in the Sub 50 group are more sub than others, if you know what I mean.

We do speed workouts on Tuesday evenings and over the past several weeks I began to lose focus of my personal goals because I was too busy comparing myself to the other runners.  Instead of listening to my body, I was watching everyone else.  In my defense, it’s pretty easy to fall into the comparison trap when you’re continually running behind people.

Epiphany!  I realized just thinking about the Tuesday night training was making me anxious and that I could do some of those speed workouts on my own.  For instance, last week I ran the tempo workout (intervals) on my treadmill at home and was pleased with my performance. 

Tonight’s workout is a three-mile time trial in which we’re supposed to go all out.

Ever since I learned about that time trial, I’ve been a nervous wreck.  Each time I thought of it my heart would race and I’d feel awful.  There was absolutely no way in hell I was going to do that run with the group.  Not only that, I also gave myself permission to skip the run if it was going to cause me too much stress. 

But just in case, I had Zippy use this handy tool to map out a three-mile course on the only two (mostly) flat streets in my neighborhood.

This morning I gave myself a talking-to complete with the declaration that all I really needed to do was run three miles and that it would  just be a bonus if I ran them speedy-quick.   No pressures.

Guess what?  I ran three miles!  Speedy-quick!

Three miles in my time.  Who cares how fast all those young things run tonight?  Not me. 
                                            
                               

Oops, Lou. You just revealed yourself

This short video clip is very enlightening.  Lou Dobbs is pontificating on how our society doesn’t have a problem talking about race but does fear recrimination and distortion of expressed viewpoints.  Lou, the wealthy white man that he is, insists the U.S. is the most progressive and racially diverse country in the world and then mid-rant about Condoleeza Rice and her remark that “race is a birth defect on America,” catches himself using the expression “cotton-picking.”

Now, I’ve heard that expression before.  In fact, my mother used it when I was growing up (“Keep your cotton-picking hands off those cookies”) but I never thought of it in racial terms.  And I don’t think my mom did, either.

But Lou Dobbs obviously correlates “cotton-picking” with black people.  All I can say is that it’s a pretty amazing sight when his brain catches up with his mouth and he realizes he’s just blown an enormous hole in his fatuous argument.

Now can we please put to rest the delusion that this man would make a good president?!

(Note:  I just realized the original video I posted contained inserted commentary so I’ve replaced it with the video clip of the television segment only.)
                  
 

Carrie Jones!

It’s easy to feel cynical about the political process in this country.  Too many corporate special interests, too little humanity.  And that’s why I was so excited to learn Carrie Jones is running for the Maine Legislature.  I’ve never met Carrie but her online presence is full of heart.  She’s smart, funny, and fierce in her convictions, and I wish I could cast a real vote for her.  But because I don’t live in Maine I can only shout my support from Colorado:

                                                                                            

     

Thank you, Carrie, for stepping up on behalf of our democracy.  You give me hope for a brighter future.

                   

Name that Beetle

This little beetle has been roaming my bathroom for the past few days. Caught him here on the rim of the bucket we use for catching water as it warms up. Anyone know what kind of beetle it is? Whatever the name, it’s a beauty.

Agnes and Trout

In which the long-suffering Trout speaks her mind…….

Agnes by Tony Cochran

Ahhh, the joys of no holds barred friendship.

                  

           
                      

%$^&*%#!!!!!!

I had a great post for the first day of spring, complete with many photos but for some bizarre reason even though I resized my photos so they wouldn’t explode off the screen into my friends’ eyes, the images appear enormous and unwieldy and just way too much to inflict on an unsuspecting populace.

So you’ll have to take my word for it that it was really cool. Possibly the best post ever.

Confidence

I’ve set a running goal for myself to place in the top fifteen in my age group this Memorial Day in the Bolder Boulder 10k.  I’m dedicated to making that happen; I participated in a winter training group and am now in a 10k spring training program.  I’m following the weekly workouts.  I have a coach available to answer questions and boost my morale when necessary.  I’m confident I’m going to reach my goal.

And now I’m trying to figure out how this whole confidence thing works.  The good thing about running is the results are objective; the clock doesn’t lie.  So when I’m running intervals until my lungs burn I try to remember that the pain is an investment in my 10k performance, and I push on through.  But it’s more difficult pushing myself in the writing life.  Lately as I work on revisions, it’s easy to falter and second-guess.  I know my writing has improved in the ten-plus years since I began my first novel but instead of measuring up against a stop watch, my performance is evaluated by editors.   So far I haven’t placed, much less in the top fifteen.

My hope is that as I continue to train, getting stronger and faster, my runner’s confidence will overflow into my writing life. 

“If I have lost confidence in myself, I have the universe against me.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson