Time For Changes

Passing on the poetic vision Ron shared, written by his friend, Colleen Redman, because I like it.

Ron.'s avatarScrambled, Not Fried

Change

Change armory into harmony
Change artillery into art
War into worship
and nuclear into new clear
Change invasion into vision
Conquer into concur
Change bombs into bonds
Change end into mend

– Written in the early 90’s by my friend Colleen Redman over at LOOSE LEAF NOTES and published in the New River Free Press and other places.

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Low Fat Foods

Just made lunch, and I must spread the gospel on these low fat foods.

This particular offering comes via Trader Joe’s. Low fat chicken and bean burritos, they’re ready after four minutes in the microwave. I put them on three and a half and then add some Mexican cheese for a little extra flavor and nuke it for thirty more seconds. Salsa is spread on it for additional spiciness. Afterward, I add some guacamole so I can get some good fat into me, followed by a few dollops of sour cream. The sour cream is a matter of economics; it’s getting old and I don’t want to have to throw it out. Waste not, want not.

It’s all quite delicious. I’m telling you, these low fat foods are the way to go.

The Fork

There is a book called ‘The World According to Garp’. 

It’s not an obscure novel so you might know it. Written by a guy named John Irving, who has written and published several pieces of interesting fiction. Some have even been made as movies. I think this one was made into a movie, and had several major actors star in it.

In the book I reference, the main character is TS Garp. TS Garp is an author. His mother, Jenny, a nurse, also becomes a writer. But her process irritates Garp (as I remember it) because she never seems to indulge in the silence of thinking and editing. She’s always hammering the typewriter.

I often think of that because I love that silence, when I drop a still bomb on my existence, cross my arms and stare out the window to think, where do I go today?

That summarizes my situation. I just finished a major piece of the pirates’ tale. Today, I’m thinking, do I continue writing the pirates’ arcs or do I turn to Pram and his team’s activities, or back to Brett and his role? Each have beginnings and middles to further develop in the push toward climax and denouement. The arcs all seem equally easy and difficult to write, that paradox of writing tension where you’re on a peak, trying to capture the lightning. But I’ve been spending so much time with Handley and her captain and crew, I’ve really enjoyed their company and know them so well. I wonder, how important is that? I know Brett very well, too, but he is a more complicated person, in a complex situation, and yet is the novel’s largest cog. But Pram’s POV offers a major twist and I’ve been sitting on the edge of that for several weeks, letting it brew.

So I sit in personal silence amid the coffee shop’s music and conversations, meditating to a degree about which story to take up. That’s actually a lame description of the process. I open the book in my mind and return to each arc’s place where I paused. Consideration of where they’re stopped and what’s to happen next is studied. From that process, one aspect gathers a stronger brightness, a sharper focus, a more immediate presence. My mind takes up its mental pen. I begin to see and hear words. Words become sentences. Scenes flower.

Then I know where to go, what to write, and I begin again, to write like crazy, at least one more time. Often it’s the middle of a scene. It may not even be ‘connected’ with what’s already written. I know I can write such bridges later. I’m interesting in writing down the bones. I’ll add verisimilitude and substance in the immediate edit. The immediate edit is the stage I conduct after completing a scene, just part of building continuity and managing pace and story.

In that marvelous way that brains can work, my thought processes are segregated and compartmentalized, and while I’ve been thinking about this post and my process and writing, I’ve been thinking about the novel and the aspects I’ve described. From these ruminations have arisen the next piece to write.

Here I go again. It is such a wonderful high, the sort of moments that you hope will never end….

Nobel Prizes

Love the Nobel Prize for Physics this year. You’ve probably heard but I’m a pedantic beast so I’ll tell you that three Brits, working in the US, won the Nobel Prize for their work in exotic matter.

David J. Thouless, F. Duncan M. Haldane, and J. Michael Kosterlitz are the three awardees. Being a science fiction fan, I love such work that pushes our thinking into new directions and recognizes new potential.

Over in Medicine, Yoshinori Ohsumi won for his work on cells that eat themselves in a process called autophagy. I pay less attention to medicine than physics, so my reaction was…whhaaat?

These discoveries and the explanations behind them unroll reams of imagination and story ideas. I swear my brain began overheating. I’ll never understand this stuff but it’s cool to think about theoretical applications and situations, and how you can take off into new directions. So many ideas and stories, so little time. My mortality and human limitations really limit me.

(Hah, and there’s another kernel of an idea for a story/novel/incident. So many ideas….)

Knowledge! Got to love it.

 

 

A Writing Cat’s Advice

You don’t know what’ll happen tomorrow, so eat, drink, play and sleep today, my pet. And be sure to groom.

Today’s Theme Music

Sometimes when people tell me that they want to write a novel, I suspect their motives are right out of Dire Straits’ ‘Money for Nothing’.

This song has special meaning for me. My wife and I had just returned from a four year tour to Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan. This was January 2, 1985. We flew from LA to San Antonio, Texas, to visit family and make plans. Our new duty assignment was to Shaw AFB, SC. Before heading there, we were taking leave to detour to Pittsburgh, PA, and southern WV to visit family.

We bought a new car as part of our plan. We’d just pile our two cats in their carriers and our luggage into our car and drive across country instead of flying. At that point, we’d never seen MTV, although we knew about it. After taking possession of the new car, a Mazda RX-7, we were tooling through SA, acquainting ourselves with our vehicle, when ‘Money for Nothing’ came on. We cranked that mother up, laughing as we startled people in the cars around us with our music. What did we know? I was just twenty-eight years old.

Ah, good times.

 

 

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