Category: Uncategorized

  • Wait, Wha…?  It\’s December?  or, I Won NaNo!

    Wait, Wha…? It\’s December? or, I Won NaNo!

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    Wow.  Big picture.  As I\’m sitting here, still not done with my morning coffee, I decide to leave it because…  I WON NANO!  I\’m still not quite sure what happened.

    For those of you reading this, wondering what the heck I\’m talking about, National Novel Writing Month is every year in the month of November.  Here\’s five things I\’ve learned:

    1. Laundry is sneaky.  It will pile up and multiply in the basket when you\’re not looking at it.
    2. Dishes are easier to do if you get them done daily.
    3. Cats and dogs like to be fed on a regular schedule.  …  Regular DAILY schedule.
    4. Food is not optional.  It\’s a requirement for humans to keep writing.
    5. Coffee should be like air.

    There.  And to say folks don\’t learn anything during NaNo.  ~grin~

  • The Noonhour – In The Kitchen with Michael of Wolfshead Photography, and a Prize Basket

    Happy Saturday! Today\’s Noonhour features none other than my husband Michael, of Wolfshead Photography. We collaborated on this post, which is part of a feature over at my group\’s page, Nice Girls Writing Naughty. You should click over there and leave a comment, because each commenter during our event is entered to win a truly awesome basket of prizes. Check it out!

  • Sunday Box Talk – Get IN the Box!

    Sunday Box Talk – Get IN the Box!

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    It\’s ramping up to be the Holiday Season.  Thanksgiving is coming, it\’s NaNoWriMo, and soon it will be the Winter Holidays.  Busy much?

    Usually I talk about how to get out of the boxes of life. Today, I want to talk about how to use them.

    Many times when we\’re trying to figure out how to Do All the Things, we get stuck in list mania.  We create list after list after list until we burn them all on a pyre of Too Many Things.

    Melodramatic, I know. But true.

    So what to do?

    Create boxes.

    Try it with me.  Take a full-sized sheet of paper (oh, come now, of course you have paper – raid the printer, the back of a bill, or borrow from your kids\’ school supplies) and draw a line down the middle from top to bottom.  Then draw a line across the middle from left to right. This makes four boxes.

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    Now comes the hard part.  Pick four topics.  Only four, and make them as inclusive as possible.  Here, I\’ll start:

    1. Housework
    2. Kids\’ stuff (school, after school, carpooling, whatever)
    3. Family (this is for people not living with you, either friends or family members in other places or down the street)
    4. Work

    That\’s one example.  Here\’s another one:

    1. Exercise and eating well
    2. Writing/Reading/Education
    3. Family and Friends
    4. Homemaking (housework, meals, etc.)

    Pro-Tip: Think \”Vital,\” not just \”Urgent\”

    Stephen Covey describes \”urgencies\” as a ringing phone: something that demands our immediate attention but that may, or may not, be important to us.  \”Vital\” are the things that we want to make sure we do before we die: write a book, travel to Paris, spend time with ____, go to spiritual services regularly, go on retreat, etc. etc.  They don\’t come with a ringing alarm bell, and they are easy to push aside when the urgencies come calling.  The urge to write that book gets buried under carpool schedules and dinner preparation and work demands.  The savings for going on the dream trip get spent on expensive lattes and junk fast food or, worse, necessities because we have to tighten our belts due to layoffs or underemployment.

    The Vital won\’t get done if it doesn\’t even make it on the list.

    So use the box technique to think outside of the box.  If you have a vital something that hasn\’t made it onto the \”done\” list this week, why not try today?  Trust that now is the time, this is the week, and we\’re not gonna wait another minute.  It doesn\’t have to be the only thing we do this week, to the exclusion of all else.  Any dream can come to fruition with baby steps.  Paris can be visited with a guide book – so get one at the library this afternoon.  A book can be written in 30 minute increments – so shut off the internet and write a letter to yourself about the book you want to write.  If you have children under 18 at home, why not include them in this process?  Have them hold you accountable for working on your vital list between now and next weekend.  Imagine the progress that might happen then?

    So, what\’s on YOUR list?

     

  • Do You NaNo?

    Do You NaNo?

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    Do you NaNo?

    No idea if you NaNo?  No NaNo?  (C\’mon, you had to see that comin\’.)  ANYway, join me today at the Torquere LiveJournal for some explanation of what is this thing called NaNo, and some thoughts on why the world needs your novel.

    You know you wanna.

  • Going Visiting…

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    My buddy Robyn Bachar invited me over to her blog to talk about using music in character development.  As I write this, I\’m listening to one of my Pandora stations, which is how I stumbled on the Piano Guys (which is a piano and a cello, but that makes sense, right?).  They\’re amazing, and inspiring.  Join me at Robyn\’s and tell me what kinds of music you\’d use for your favorite characters!

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    Secondly, Reet Singh of the MFRW Goodreads Discussion Group (MFRW stands for Marketing For Romance Writers) invited all of us over for the Book of the Week feature, which this week is – Emerald Keep!  I\’m so excited.  Thank you to Reet and the whole MFRW crew for their support.  Please come by and join the discussion – and I\’ll be giving away a copy of Emerald Fire, Book 1 of the Persis Chronicles, to one commenter – it could be you!  Join me!

     

  • Join Me at Torquere Press Today!

    Join Me at Torquere Press Today!

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    Join me today at the Torquere Press blog for some thoughts on art and writing.  Enjoy!

  • Over At the Romance Studio

    Over At the Romance Studio

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    Join me over at The Romance Studio for some thoughts about when writing is \”just\” writing.  Enjoy!

  • Sunday Box Talk

    Sunday Box Talk

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    Boxes.  I\’ve talked about them before.  We get into them by following set patterns of behavior without question.  So what do we do when we realize we\’re in a box that we don\’t want to be in anymore? More importantly, what do we do when we have no idea what box we do want to be in?

    There are a lot of resources out there that talk about how to network, how to find the job of our dreams, etc. But the more important work, the core work, is to figure out what we want.  Stephen Covey once said that we can fight and scratch and climb our way up the ladder of success, only to get to the top and find that the ladder is on the wrong wall.

    Today, I want to talk about how to find the right wall. Sometimes, all we need is to find the right village with the walls that we enjoy – meaning, we don\’t necessarily need to flip our entire lives inside out when we\’re dissatisfied. We can incorporate elements of our ideal lives into the one we\’re living now. By doing so, small changes can be made that, over time, can help realign our lives – and our ladders – onto the right wall.

    So how do we figure out what we enjoy?

    One way is to grab our trusty journal. Don\’t have a trusty journal, you say? Go to the dollar store and grab a spiral notebook, or get some loose-leaf paper. Something, anything to write on will do. Now, number your page from 1-5. Moving as quickly as you can, write down 5 occupations that sound fun.

    Next, number from 1-5. Write down 5 occupations that intrigue you, but you\’d personally never try. They might include professional skydiving instructor or tarot card reader with a traveling circus.

    Now, write 5 hobbies that sound fun.

    And finally, 5 things you would love to try once, if you didn\’t have to tell anyone you did it. Maybe, go to a strip club, or midnight golf, or hitch hike to New Orleans (which is more fun if you don\’t already live in New Orleans, but you get my point).

    Now you have your list of things to explore. You can read up on them, do internet searches about them, talk to people who are already doing them. There are many ways to incorporate our desired lives into our current ones if we are willing to start small, be creative, and honor our own creative impulses.

    Now, I\’m curious. What\’s one thing from your lists that you\’re willing to share? Mine is be a professional tarot card reader and psychic with my own storefront, Madam Noony. What about you?

     

     

  • Gratituesday! – Five Things For Which I\’m Grateful

    1. A good day job with people I like.
    2. A safe and comfortable home.
    3. Michael.
    4. Rachel.
    5. The dog and catz.  (Yes, that\’s more than one thing.  That\’s okay.  Cats multiply.)

    Happy Tuesday!

  • Z Is For… Zoo!

    Z Is For… Zoo!

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    I love going to the zoo. They serve an important function in the conservation of these amazing animals.  Brookfield Zoo here in Chicago is no exception.  Much of their work, besides creating a fun zoo to wander, is in helping many different species of animals to survive and thrive.  In fact, each of the signs describing the animals has a meter that shows where it is on the scale of wild populations.  Many of the animals at Brookfield, sadly, are endangered in the wild.

    When my husband and I visited recently, we lucked out: the pair of snow leopards had fallen asleep right next to the glass in the viewing area.  I got to sit on the ground, not two feet away from them, and study them for a full twenty minutes.

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    What about you, Dear Reader?
    What\’s your favorite animal to visit at the zoo?

  • Y Is For… Yarn! or, The Joy of Stash

    Y Is For… Yarn! or, The Joy of Stash

    I know, this is a topic one might think would be more suited to the Knoontime Knitting side of my website.  But yarn is an integral part of me, and I adore it so much, that it spills out into the rest of my life.  I also like the double entendre of yarn = story.  I\’m an equal opportunity textile addict.

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    When we moved into our bigger flat, I had the opportunity to set up an office (which, if you have the chance to do it, take it: it\’s heaven).  This, of course, meant that I had to move all the bits and pieces of my stash from one place to another.  I did have it somewhat organized, but I wanted to take the opportunity to make it Martha Stewart organized.

    Best-laid plans, and all that.

    I discovered something that surprised me.  I\’m a right-brained thinker, which wasn\’t the surprising part.  Because of that, I found that too much organization killed the fun of having the stash.  I no longer could wander into my mess and find something at random on which to work.  Now it felt like a duty:  finish this project, and then this one, and that one.

    What to do?

    I went to Big Lots and bought myself a three-drawer storage cart on wheels.  This now lives next to my spot on the couch and I can hide all my in-process mess in there if I need to.  The rule is strict:  no organization whatsoever in the drawers.  They\’re clear plastic, so I can see what\’s in them, but the drawers keep them dust and fur-free.  It\’s the best of both worlds – I can have my mess, and hide it, too.

    What about you, Dear Reader?
    How do you organize your hobbies?