Thursday, September 28, 2006

Thursday 13 #8

Thirteen of My Favorite TV Shows,
Past and Present, including Miniseries,
in no particular order :)

  1. Airwolf
  2. The Winds of War
  3. MacGyver
  4. North and South
  5. Battlestar Galactica (the new version)
  6. Angel
  7. Felicity
  8. Buffy the Vampire Slayer
  9. Little House on the Prairie
  10. Sesame Street
  11. Silk Stalkings (when Rob Estes & Mitzi Kapture were on it)
  12. Beverly Hills, 90210
  13. Lost



Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others' comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!



Tuesday, September 26, 2006

BBW

No, not that BBW. September 23-30 is Banned Books Week!

Free People Read Freely

Monday, September 25, 2006

You've come a long way, baby....

since September 25, 2001, when this blog started.

This is the third redesign. Entries were sporadic those first few years. I was writing more often over at my online journal back then. Also, Blogger was not as WYSIWYG as it is now. I was surprised in 2003/2004 when I returned to write here regularly that the post box had a WYSIWYG interface. It used to just be HTML and you had to type any links using HTML code. I learned quite a bit with Webmonkey's help, but there was certainly a steep learning curve. (It's handy to know HTML anyway, because sometimes those WYSIWYG editors leave codes in after you delete something that then mess up the layout or cause weird things to occur. If you know HTML, you can usually deduce where the mistake happened and delete or fix what is causing the problem.)

I obsessed over learning HTML and getting the template the way I wanted it and all the other stuff that goes along with setting up a website.

Then I promptly decamped to Diary-X (*sniff*) and set up a journal. The blog was more casual than the journal. Maintaining them both was difficult. But then Diary-X died and I started writing here again. In other words, I made my writing more of a priority. I still have no real focus on this blog, but that's okay. It's not really supposed to have one. I could have just imported all these entries over to my new journal, but I didn't want to give this site up. Plus, there is an even steeper learning curve with WordPress. So I will definitely continue to maintain this site and the other site, at least for the near future. :)

In September 2001, I was reeling from the events of 9/11, but I didn't want to clog up my blog with my thoughts. The blog didn't seem to be the place for it. Back then, I had a cutesy design with fat puppies, and they were too happy for such a depressing topic.

Now I just write when I find something that strikes my fancy. I still think there is a difference between a blog and a journal: the blog is chatty, whereas my journal is more reflective. *shrugs* Everyone has a different opinion.

I suppose my blog has been around a while, but I still feel like a newbie. Happy anniversary to me!

Oh, and I have two new journal entries posted, if you're interested in reading them.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Thursday 13 #7

Thirteen of My Favorite Writing Prompts

  1. I remember...
  2. Today, I...
  3. The weather was...
  4. I look out my window and see...
  5. Choose an object in the room and write about it.
  6. Write about a current event.
  7. Today I am thankful for...
  8. Once upon a time...
  9. I feel...
  10. Back in high school...
  11. When I was ___ years old, I ...
  12. Write about a favorite quotation.
  13. Yesterday, I...


Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others' comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!



Friday, September 15, 2006

A Fill-in Prompt

  • I Am: alive
  • I Want: to find inner peace
  • I Wish: I was more patient.
  • I Hate: feeling guilty
  • I Miss: the way things used to be sometimes
  • I Fear: loneliness
  • I Hear: when I want to
  • I Wonder: how my daughter grew up so fast
  • I Regret: a few things, but the past is the past
  • I Am Not: one for small talk
  • I Dance: when the mood strikes (rarely)
  • I Sing: with my daughter
  • I Cry: alone
  • I Am Not Always: insane
  • I Make With My Hands: letters on a page
  • I Write: whatever needs to come out
  • I Confuse: my DH :)
  • I Need: to be loved
  • I Should: laugh more often
  • I Start: many projects
  • I Finish: few things I start

Thursday, September 14, 2006

Thursday 13 #6

Thirteen of My Favorite Books


  1. Gone with the Wind, by Margaret Mitchell—introduced me to tragic romance

  2. Tess of the d'Urbervilles, by Thomas Hardy—I wanted Tess to live in the end.

  3. The Return of the Native, by Thomas Hardy—another tragic romance tale

  4. The Winds of War, by Herman Wouk—WWII, concentration camps, star-crossed love, need I say more?

  5. Diary of a Young Girl, by Anne Frank—"In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart." (I love this book so much that I even own the revised critical edition published by the Netherlands Institute for War Documents.)

  6. Crime and Punishment, by Fyodor Dostoevsky—kill an old lady and then cover up her murder, only to be unable to live with the guilt? Why, it's a novel-length version of "The Tell-Tale Heart"!

  7. Dr. Zhivago, by Boris Pasternak—unattainable love set against the backdrop of the Russian civil war

  8. Les Misérables, by Victor Hugo—Jean Valjean is sent to prison for 20 years for stealing a loaf of bread because he was starving... yes, I read the entire unabridged version (in English)

  9. The Stand, by Stephen King—post-apocalyptic fiction at its best

  10. Swan Song, by Robert McCammon—another post-apocalyptic fiction book; in my opinion, better than "The Stand" since I read it prior to reading "The Stand."

  11. Dune, by Frank Herbert—epic struggle of good vs. evil in space

  12. Writing Down the Bones, by Natalie Goldberg—awesome book for writers who don't know what the heck they are doing

  13. Emily of New Moon, by L.M. Montgomery—YA novel about an orphan girl who has to live with a couple of snobbish, maiden aunts, and the clashes that ensue; when reading this book, I realized that I wanted to be a writer, just like Emily.


Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others' comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!



Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Weekly Check-In

Hello dear readers, all two of you out there! ;)

The past couple of weeks have been rather mundane, for the most part. I finished paper journal #63 and began #64 on Sept. 2, and have already written 135~ pages. It's a journal made by paperchase which I purchased at Borders earlier this year. It has rather wide lines and I write rather big. The book is about 5x7 so it probably won't take too long to fill. I also have new goals in filling it--instead of bookmarking my current place with the attached ribbon, I bookmark the page I want to get to by the end of the week. It helps to maintain a good writing pace.

I have also been reviewing some of my old journals this week, rereading what my feelings were on 9/11. I had forgotten so much about myself from that time. It was heart-wrenching to read some of the entries. I had so much self-hatred, even then. (For some reason, I thought it was a recent phenomenon!)

DH & I went out to eat at Texas Roadhouse last weekend. I had a southwest chicken sandwich and he had ribs and a ribeye combo. It was delicious, as always. DD was spending the night with my parents, so it was nice to have some one-on-one couple time for a change.

This weekend, DD & I are attending a wedding in Evansville, IN. My cousin (the groom) is getting married. We will be riding with my mom and sister, so it should be a fairly relaxing weekend, visiting with relatives. But I'm sure the traveling will wear me out anyway.

The Emotional Express reared its ugly head over the past weekend. I don't know if it was the weather, or hormones, or what, but I woke up feeling very crabby on Monday. Today is a lot better.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Just an ordinary day...

Today is the fifth anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Centers and the Pentagon (fondly known as 9/11). On 9/11/01, we as a country changed. Bad things could happen here.

Passing the buck and the blame game haven't stopped yet. Even after all the reports and the minute dissections by the various committees on the inaction of various agencies to recognize the threats, no one entity seems to be to blame. For nearly 3,000 people, their lives winked out, but their families remain behind, still devastated to this day.

For me personally, I knew no one there and no one immediately impacted by the attacks. For me, it was an ordinary day. I went to work—I remember that I was listening to a tape cassette that day rather than to the radio. Then someone at work flipped on the radio, and I sat transfixed, doing my work mechanically. I could have screwed up half of what I was working on for all I know. The news reports seemed unreal, as if in 2001, Orson Welles was narrating the "War of the Worlds" all over again, only with airplanes and skyscrapers instead of Martians and small country towns.

Even when my coworkers and I watched a few reports on an old black-and-white tv brought out from somewhere, I still couldn't believe what I was seeing. It was like a movie.

DH called me at work to ask me if I'd heard what happened. I wished I could have come home right then. I remember thinking that quite clearly. What if that attack was only the beginning? But I had to swallow my fear and somehow make it through the rest of the day. I sat at my desk, trying to work, while listening to the radio as the world changed.

That evening when I got home, DH & I continued to watch CNN, to try and make sense of it all. But there was no why. Even now I still don't comprehend the depth of the insane hatred that drives fanaticism. I doubt I ever will. Perhaps that is my luxury of being born into a white, middle-class, rural Midwestern family.

For all the victims of that day, their day also started out quite ordinary. But none of us—no one—would ever be the same.

I won't be watching the memorial tributes, or CNN's all-day retrospective, or the documentaries. The fear-mongering is with us every day. No clear progress has been made. The politicos talk about improvements in national security, but it seems that we have fewer freedoms than before. Big Brother is always looking over our shoulder. I suppose that's the price we must pay to feel even a bit of the carefree attitude we used to have before 9/11.

Bad things can happen here, even on an ordinary day.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Flash Fiction Friday #3—Zombie Aardvark

Your assignment, should you chose to accept it, will be to write the very worst short story, between 750 and 1000 words, you can. Must contain at least three of the following words: putrefy, jewellery, encephalogram, aardvark, banana, and zombie. Extra points for using all of them.

Cliches are nearly required, as are excessive use of adverbs, sentence fragments, run on sentences... Extra points if you include the opening phrase "It was a dark and stormy night..."




The Tale of the Zombie Aardvark, a Children's Story

It was a dark and stormy night when Mama buried Fluffy, our pet aardvark. Her silver jewellry flashed a beacon at me as she dug under a light in the backyard. Actually, the storm was just heat lightning, but to my six-year-old imagination, it seemed to be a sign of great importance on this auspicious occasion of a beloved pet's death and subsequent burial.

Fluffy had passed away, the victim of a vicious neighborhood Rottweiler. We had taken Fluffy to the vet, but the when the encephalogram showed no brain life, we brought our pet home. Now, though buried, his poor body would still putrefy in the oppressive summer heat.

I was fascinated by the entire process. After all, what was death to a six-year-old?

A day later, I was playing with my older sister, Jenny, in the backyard near the burial site. She was swinging on the swing, while I nibbled on a banana left over from lunch. As she swung higher and higher, I stared at the grave.

"Hey Jenny. Let's dig up Fluffy!"

"Ewww. You're disgusting! I'm telling Mama!" Jenny ran toward the back door and disappeared inside the house.

I squatted beside the gravesite and poked it with a stick. The dirt was soft and squishy, how I imagined Fluffy's body would be. I wondered how deep the grave was. It couldn't be too deep; Mama hadn't been out there very long that night.

I decided to wait.

The next night, when everyone was asleep, I crept out to the backyard. There, in the faint moonlight, stood the silent grave. I shivered a bit, even though the night air was still warm from the heat of the day.

"Now I'm going to poke you with a stick," I thought as I dug through the softened dirt. I dug for what seemed a good long while, but never found anything. Sighing, I turned away from the grave toward the house. I decided to go back to bed before anyone found out I was missing.

Just then, I heard a shuffling noise from behind me-from the grave. I wet my pants and a shiver ran down my spine as a soft breath whispered along my neck.

I didn't turn around, but instead ran straight for the back door. I quietly went inside the house and took the stairs two at a time. I huddled under the blankets of the bed all night long. I didn't even bother to change my wet nightclothes.


"What's wrong with you?" Mama asked me the next morning as we ate breakfast.

"Uh, nothing," I mumbled, taking a huge bite of pancakes drizzled with "real maple" syrup. How does a big boy of six tell his mama that a zombie aardvark made him wet his pants in the middle of the night?

He doesn't. And he doesn't go poking at gravesites anymore, either.


Thursday, September 07, 2006

Thursday 13 #5

Thirteen Things I Like About Myself


  1. my eyes
  2. my smile
  3. my creativity
  4. my intelligence
  5. my ability to multitask
  6. my imagination
  7. my hands
  8. my lips
  9. my writing/journaling
  10. my ability to be a good friend/listener
  11. my ability to find a bright side even though I am naturally pessimistic
  12. my ability to empathize with others
  13. my love of animals


Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!

The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others' comments. It’s easy, and fun! Be sure to update your Thirteen with links that are left for you, as well! I will link to everyone who participates and leaves a link to their 13 things. Trackbacks, pings, comment links accepted!



Monday, September 04, 2006

Weekend Update

Well, now that this three-day weekend has passed, I can safely say I was completely lazy. I ended up getting DD's cold, which she had all week long. Right now, I'm still having feverish hot flashes. I shouldn't be sitting here typing this. :)

On Saturday, DD & I went to the library. I owed 90 cents on two overdue books of mine and four of hers. We checked out a few things, and then I took DD to Subway to eat. She had her first spelling test on Friday and got 6 out of 6 words correct. I was so excited that she did so well. We practiced all week. I was so excited because it was her first test. I was unsure of how she might do on tests; sometimes, I think she hurries through things. I remember being a hurrier myself. :) So that was her special Saturday surprise.

On Sunday, we went over to the local state park again. There were a lot of people taking advantage of the nice weather, so it wasn't nearly as peaceful as last weekend. DH fished a bit, but didn't catch anything. We had a picnic lunch and DD collected acorns.

Today, DD & I went outside for awhile, but I got bitten by several mosquitoes, which seem to be out in force in our yard. Yuck. Even though I sprayed with bug repellant, I was still getting bitten. So we weren't outside very long. DD didn't get any bug bites, so maybe bugs just don't find her as tasty as they do me. :)

This evening, I had some laundry to do, and DD took a bath. We played some Go Fish and now she's asleep. It was a nice peaceful weekend that passed too quickly. I wish I hadn't been feeling stuffy all weekend. That would have made the weekend even better.

Hope everyone has a great week!

RIP Steve Irwin. You'll be missed.

Friday, September 01, 2006

Flash Fiction Friday #2—Totem Pole

The totem pole was the 7500th stop we'd made that day, or so it seemed. I knew somewhere along the miles of interstate we had driven that this trip had been a colossal mistake.

Was it when he wouldn't stop humming The Proclaimers' "I will walk 500 miles"? Or was it when he belched loudly, yet again, after eating yet another country-fried steak at Cracker Barrel? I shivered slightly, even though the interior of the minivan was stifling. The air-conditioning had given out a hundred miles ago. This trip was like "National Lampoon's Vacation," only without the laughs.

The totem pole was one of the last few carved by the "real" Indians who made them. I was astonished at its size as we pulled into the visitors' center. For a moment, all thoughts of escape left me. The totem loomed, blotting out the sky almost. Once we stopped, the kids (teenagers, natch) jumped out and ran off. I yelled "Meet back here in a hour!" toward their retreating backs. I'm sure they couldn't wait to get away from us--from me.

"Be right back, hon," he told me, heading off toward the restroom sign.

"Sure," I muttered, not taking my eyes off the totem. It seemed to beckon toward me, with its vaguely eagle-shaped head and wings... a thunderbird, I thought, like the phoenix.

A plaque underneath explained about totem poles and the Natives who carved them, once upon a time. My White Guilt started to seep in as I gazed out over the ridge. If I imagined hard enough, I could picture the Natives who had once lived in the valley below.

People milled about, exclaiming over this and that. My eyes were unfocused, unseeing. Not even the other tourists' inane chatter could take away my concentration. I knew what I had to do.

The spirits of place still danced here.

...I joined them.



Prompt from Friday Flash Fiction.

(315 words)


TGIF!

Six Reasons I'm Glad it's Friday

  1. This cold I'm getting would be totally even more miserable if it was only Monday.
  2. I have a three-day weekend, due to the Labor Day holiday on Monday.
  3. I don't have to go anywhere for three days, unless I want to, thereby avoiding insane drivers and people who don't look where they're going, causing accidents in parking lots (not me, thankfully).
  4. It's been a long time since my last holiday, on July 4.
  5. I can finish reading those two library books I've had checked out since May (renewing every two weeks).
  6. It's the weekend!