March 25th, 2010 | Tags:

That’s laziness, rapping at the windowpane. “Let me in,” he says, his voice muffled by the glass between the outside and the living room, and then by the distance between the window and my dining room table where I sit and write.  I almost let him in just now, thinking to get up and look for inspiration en route back to my chair.  But I know better–once I let laziness back in for the evening, he’d want to stay and chat.  And it would be pleasant, for he is an amiable fellow with lots of interesting things to say.  But in the end, he’d want to talk and talk, and I wouldn’t actually get to converse; I would perforce sit and listen, and then my eyes would hang heavy with sleep, who he’d unlocked the door for while he was charming me with his filibuster.

No, I no longer surrender so easily.  I’ll let him in soon enough, for today was another twelve-hour period spent doing nothing interesting, and I can’t physically accomplish everything that I want to do before bedtime.  But I am beginning to establish limits.  Writing comes before retiring to the bedroom, for example.  I have a netbook–indeed, it is what I’m writing on–but crawling into bed removes my body from the position of attention.  Supporting the netbook requires twisting, so it becomes a distraction to the writing.  There’s a comfy Sidhe beside me, adding further distraction.  And we still have the final episode of LOST’s Season Five to watch.  (I’m trying to catch up before the end of Season Six.) So in the dining room I stay, even though I have forgotten most of the fun things that I might have wanted to write about.  Because the habit of writing is more important to me than the specific output right now.

I can change my habits.  To do so is difficult, true.  Especially when you’re ADD and your todo list is longer than the days remaining to you.  But my first example is my fingernails.  I first discovered that I stopped biting my nails during periods of intense focus, such as Playa Del Fuego weekends, where I would join with scores of fellow bohemians and put on a crazy thing that took all our hands on deck.  But then I’d get back to the real world and bam, just like that, gnaw gnaw gnaw.  I don’t even remember when I started to bite them.  But the delicious pain that was generated by the tearing, the ripping of quick and cuticle served as a potent reason to keep it up.  I made more conscious effort later in college, but my nails ended up being too long and broke, throwing me right back on the bus.  It wasn’t until I went on amphetamines that I started to see measurable gains, but even so, my first long period off them (no insurance and no studies to keep me medicated) triggered the worst relapse yet.

I have finally conquered them, however, through the combination of medication and a proactive approach to habit-replacement.  I learned to use nail clippers responsibly.  The first few weeks were hardest; I wanted to keep putting my fingers in my mouth, and I kept telling myself to get them out.  Jamming hands in pockets helped.  Carrying nail clippers helped, too.  I learned to cut them nice and short, but not so short I reveal the quick.  Just enough that there is nothing to bite, really.  My cuticles still crack, and I’ll probably always have that problem, but I think I’ve actually kicked the nail-biting.

So I will probably kick the not-writing habit, too.  Stay out, laziness.  You’re not welcome here anymore.

March 24th, 2010 | Tags:

Tonight is an admission of defeat and a renewed sense of mission.  I missed writing last night because I was at work all day, and then I went to the next county to spend time with my nerd!friends, which kept me out until late into the night.  We played a marvelous game of Catan, and I arrived home safely, but no writing.  I will not allow two nights to pass without an effort, however; I’m too far along to just give up now.  So, no excuse for not writing last night, but no point in dwelling.

I have been planning a trip out west for the yearly Perseid meteor shower.  Since 2004 or so I’ve been watching them semi-regularly, and the last few years I’ve managed to make consecutive trips to places with good, dark sky.  In ‘07 I missed them because I was moving down here to NC, but in ‘08 we went out to Jordan Lake and then in ‘09 a gaggle of friends camped up on Mt. Mitchell.  The weather didn’t cooperate with us, but we had a grand time visiting the mountains nevertheless :)

This year, it’s the Appalachian Trail for me.  The plan is to hike to a nice mountain bald over a week, and camp out on top while the sky falls down on us.  I haven’t been properly backpacking since 2003, when the Sidhe & I traversed the 100 miles of trail between Waynesboro and Front Royal, VA.  Time to fix that!

I’m using my wiki to coordinate efforts with my fellow travelers.  Hurray technology.

This week, the inaugural week of the blog, has had a personal focus.  Next week, I shall try to write in the third person–either by talking about specific topics or perhaps just getting some fiction out there.  I’m getting my sea legs back, and with ScriptFrenzy right around the corner I need to be able to do more than just ‘blog.

March 22nd, 2010 | Tags: , ,

I have a great deal of difficulty with execution; very often I stall, delay, or undo what I am trying to accomplish simply by thinking for too long about how best to go about it. I get caught up in letting the perfect be the enemy of the good. The amphetamines I take by prescription help to alleviate this, and for sundry things (dishes, cleaning, etc.) it is an effective tool. But it is ultimately a human problem I’m facing–one that we all face. How do we decide to do something?

Waking up, for instance. I am fairly uncognitive when I arise. My motor usually doesn’t get running for at least a few minutes, so between the time I first awake and the time I finally regain voluntary control over my body, there is a period where an irrational being operates the controls. He will slap at alarms, speak his mind, or just usually just go back to bed. Detrimental, of course, to a quick start to the day, but I find I have little choice in the matter, even if I get a good night’s sleep (about 8 hours for me). I have gotten up, walked out into the living room–snatching a pair of socks en route–and sat down in the comfy chair to put them on, only to wake up a half hour later with only one sock on, half-rolled up my calf. One of my friends claims to have the solution to getting up in the morning: “Dude! Just get up.” I would it were that simple.

I have no good answer to the question–the lights that shine on the path for me remain, I think, by my choice. I refuse to give them up, no matter how long I fail to take a single step in their direction. But time constrains our will. We must deal with the problems before us that are most pressing. Or not, which leads to consequences. So to avoid consequences, we must deal with the problems. And then–what do you choose to do for a positive reason? Not to avoid the stick, but to chase the carrot? Why one path over another? Why, for me, this thrice-damned game table that I have been putting off for seven years? Or any other arbitrary ideal on the list? (It is hundreds deep. I do plan to post it here some day.)

Maybe there is no answer. Certainly I haven’t given up on looking for one. :)

March 21st, 2010 | Tags: , ,

Today is another New Year, this time for many Iranians, called Nowruz. It’s a new one for me–I enjoy the absurdity of marking each new year as it arises, so it’s nice to have another one under my belt. Gregorian new year, Chinese new year (zhēng yuè), Nowruz, summer solstice, Rosh Hashanah, Ras al-Sana, winter solstice…Wikipedia has a fairly detailed article, and I note that there are so many different New Years that I’ll probably not mark them all after all. I could just delve completely into the bizarre and recognize each day as the beginning of a new year, as my dear friend Daniel Pearson suggested, but I think my interest in it stems more from anthropological curiosity than sheer calendrical whimsy.

(Rest assured, I possess no dearth of whimsy, calendrical or otherwise.)

The point of this blog is to fan the flames of inspiration. I participated in (and won!) NaNoWriMo last year, and in the process of that chaos realized, or perhaps remembered anew, that I possess an intense passion for writing, expression, poetic arrangement of words. I have used other sites as outlets for this in the past (LiveJournal being the primary one), but when I turned thirty, I made a commitment to make my own mark rather than suborn my creativity to someone else’s domain. Moreover, the only way to improve one’s writing is, well, to write. So here we are.

Many subjects will be on display here. Some are personal, such as my struggles with how my brain works in comparison to the rest of the world, or philosophical meanderings that I wrestle with. Some are experimental, meant to allow me to play in new sandboxes, to get a feel for different ways of expression. Others are more subject-specific, be they articles on gaming mechanics, topics of a political bent, or hacking around in my operating system of choice. But all are open for criticism, discussion, and friendly advice–I offer these things in the spirit of open communication that I may foster its growth around me.

To that end, I am committing to writing here at least one public post a day for a year, starting today. I may write more, but I will hold myself to this minimum. I invite you to participate with me–to call me out if I slip, to share insights, to praise or condemn, or to dig deeper where there is more to be discovered. No topic is verboten, nor tone off-putting. I demand only honesty. Indeed, I favor that over tact. After all, if you’re not going to leave it all out on the field, what’s the fucking point?

March 13th, 2010 | Tags: ,

Well, this is home. Cardboard boxes sit unpacked, still smelling of the truck and the city and the movers’ sweat. The walls are still white, untouched by brush or scuffed by furniture. The carpet even smells new!

I thought I would have something interesting to say for my first entry ever in my own blog, but I am simply pleased to have begun. I have led myself (and have been led) by small steps to this doorway, and now there is nothing for it but to start. To light the match; to catch the accumulated, organic pile of emotions and reasons and happenstance on fire; to form a bed of coals; to burn brightly in the night, bringing others near for warmth and mirth.

May my life be spent not in vain but in earnest, pursuing calefaction.