Tag: A. Catherine Noon

  • Werk It! – Five Tips For Working Out

    Werk It! – Five Tips For Working Out

    \"Screen

    Join me over at The Romance Studio for five thoughts on working out.  Hoo-rah, baby!

  • Post Comments and Spam

    Post Comments and Spam

    \"2015-12-02

    A few folks have let me know they\’ve had trouble leaving comments on the blog here, and I wanted to have a short chat as to why and what\’s going on.

    Unfortunately, when I went to the new platform on my website, as opposed to a free site (like Blogger or WordPress), it meant that I got a ton of spam comments – like 40 a day.  I turned commenting off for a while, then allowed it with a sign-in on WordPress or Open ID (and a few others); then turned it off after a while, thinking maybe I was done with spam, but no such luck.

    Sadly, I\’ve had to keep the sign-in requirement.  I STILL get spam, 10 to 20 a week, but it\’s more manageable.

    And if you\’re a spammer reading this, I\’m not very happy with you.  Jus\’ sayin\’.

    And so, Dear Reader, that\’s why I have comments set up the way I do.  I hope it doesn\’t prevent you from leaving comments; but if it does, know that I\’m stoked that you\’ve visited and taken the time to read.  I appreciate you.

  • Tuesday Tips: Keeping Notes

    Tuesday Tips: Keeping Notes

    \"20151118_0009\"

    I just realized something as I was looking at my design notes for the lace wrap I\’m making.  My notes go back to about 2010.  That\’s like five years, sports fans!  Cool!  So, I figured I\’d share some reasons why I think Keeping Notes is the Thing To Do:

    1. Keep track of your current project. This way, if you have to set it aside and you forget about it for a month or ~cof~ year, you\’ll remember what you were doing.
    2. Keep notes of stuff you are planning that you might make someday.  In other words, it doesn\’t have to be the Notebook of Things I Will Make.  It becomes a NOTEbook.  Of notes.
    3. I found a list of gifts I wanted to make from 2011.  I haven\’t made everything on there, and the ideas are good ones, so why not crib from that for the 2016 gift planning list?
    4. You can use it for the 2016 Gift Planning List.  (See how I did that?)
    5. Pro-tip: if you get yourself a pad with grids on it, then you can use it for regular notes, in words, but also for design concepts if you\’re learning how to use charts (which I am).  In fact, that picture up there ^^^ is my vereh first real chart.  (My vereh first unreal chart is actually page one of the notebook, but I couldn\’t figure out charting, so there you go.)
    6. Number six in my list of five things:  the point of number 5 is that this is a work in progress.  Keeping notes, and reminding yourself that they\’re notes and notes by their nature are informal, reminds us that we are learning, always developing, and that it\’s not important to get it right the first time.  It\’s just important to show up with yarn, needles, a pad of paper and a writing implement.

    Happy making!

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

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

    \"NaNo-2015-Winner-Badge-Large-Square\"

    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!

  • Join Me At ChiWriMo!

    Join Me At ChiWriMo!

    \"598915_10151281202296944_379698216_n\"

     

    It\’s November, the time of the keyboards singing and the turkey tryptophaning and the avoidance of the holiday madness until after Black Friday, thankyouverymuch. It\’s National Novel Writing Month, Dear Reader, and yours truly is one of the volunteer Municipal Liaisons, or MLs, for the Chicago Region.  My main duty is to help host write-ins, which are big parties where magic happens.  No really, that\’s what they are!  People gather somewhere, like a cafe or restaurant or library or park or… and they write.  And have word wars.  And it\’s a lot of fun.  One of my other duties is to exhort participants to ever greater heights of literary abandon.  (Hey, man: I\’m in mid-NaNo myself and my vocabulary is running full steam ahead!)  So join me at our ChiWriMo blog for some thoughts on Week Two – it\’s not too late!  Keep going!

  • Sunday Box Talk – Get IN the Box!

    Sunday Box Talk – Get IN the Box!

    \"2015-11-08

    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.

    \"2015-11-08

    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?

    \"bloggerlogo\"

     

    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…

    \"Screen

    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!

    \"Screen

    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!

    \"bloggerlogo\"

     

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

  • Sunday Box Talk – How To Unblock. With Rats.

    Sunday Box Talk – How To Unblock. With Rats.

    \"2015-10-11-Garden-Before\"

    Ordinarily, I talk about my garden on my craft blog, Knoontime Knitting. But I learned something this summer and it clarified itself yesterday. The boxes of our lives are created as we live them, and if we don’t question them – think out of the box, if you will – then we get stuck in them. We know that.

    Sometimes we get stuck in them without even knowing it. We get blocked.

    Then what?

    I’ll answer that question, but bear with me. There’s a story here.

    In my studies to find tools that work for me in terms of creativity, writing, and trauma recovery, I’ve looked at various journaling methods. Journaling has long been a tool of psychologists and artists, and many times for the same goals. Tristine Rainer has done a lot of research on the subject of autobiographic writing and she mentions a Japanese treatment that involves a lot of journaling and “light manual labor” in a rural location with lots of greenery and fresh air.

    Gardens, quite literally, are in the ground, unless of course you have a container garden and create the ground yourself. (I can see the precise among you saying, “But what about air gardens?” Chill, dude. I’m makin’ a point here.) The idea of light physical or manual labor appeals to me because it’s a way to put ourselves into our bodies, and for many of us who are writers, we have a tendency toward over-intellectualization. You can’t think a plant strong. You have to give it what it needs: dirt, water, fertilizer, food, light, and a good growing environment.

    Hmm. Mayhap there’s a metaphor there?

    Which brings me to my point about yesterday. My coauthor, Rachel Wilder, and I are together for our autumnal retreat. We met with our Founders Circle group at the end of September for a literal mountaintop retreat (I’m not kidding, the place was on the top of a mountain – awesome), and then we came home to Chicago to do a bunch of projects, both writing and homemaking. Yesterday, we put the garden to bed.

    That’s where it gets complicated. What about the rats?

    I’ve been gardening here for over fifteen years. Four years ago, the City of Chicago had an abnormally warm winter, followed by another warm one. Last year was a deep cold snap, but it didn’t kill off the rats. They’ve become a serious problem on the north side and the park district has signs all over the river park about not leaving trash out to attract the rats. Unfortunately, my raised bed garden, my little, tiny corner oasis of fifty square feet (ten feet by five feet, people, we’re not talking huge) is a rat Mecca. They love it.

    Now, you might ask, Noony, what do you do about rats?

    This is the short, and utterly useless, “How-To” section of this post:

    1. Call the city and tell them you have rats, so they’ll come out and bait the alley.
    2. The city will come out and bait the alley.
    3. The rats, apparently, laugh in the face of danger. And hide. In my raised bed.
    4. Call the city and tell them we have rats in the raised bed.
    5. They send a guy who is a professional rat assassin to come and assassinate my rats.

    Tangential: have any of you seen The Rats of N.I.M.H.?

    My rats aren’t like those rats. Jus’ sayin’.

    Anyway, where was I? Oh, yes. 6.

    1. Last year, Year 3 of the Rat War, the dude the city sent came out in his customary bluish grey overalls. (By the way, romance novels that have pictures of sexy rat assassins on their covers, who woo passersby with their sultry charm, are LYING!) You know what his brilliant advice was?

    “Whatcha gotta do is call your friends and have ’em come over. Give ’em each a shovel. Stand around the raised bed in a circle. You’ll have to have someone next door in that yard, since ya got a fence right there. Yup, have ’em climb right over the fence and stand there with a shovel.”

    “What’s the shovel for?”

    “Well, ya gotta getcherself some road flares. The kind you snap open and they spew out that flame stuff. Get a brick, and light the road flare. Stick the road flare down the rat hole and put a brick on it. When the rats come boiling outta the garden, you and your friends chop off their heads with the shovel.” Pause. “Oh, and watch out. ’Cause they bite.”

    And that, my friends, is the wisdom of the city of Chicago’s rat assassin.

    1. Purchase your own rat poison and put it down the rat holes; put a brick on top of it and plug up all the rat holes. I looked it up; the poison won’t affect the plants that you’re growing – like, say, tomatoes that you want to eat.

    On the other hand, you can’t compost dead rats, so I’m not sure what they have to say about dead, poisoned rat carcasses rotting in one’s garden, but I digress.

    1. Build a cage around your garden. I think this is what we’ll try next year, if we’re still living here in Chicago. I don’t have the skill to do this, but my husband does, so we’ll see.
    2. Buy rat repellant. Don’t laugh. No, really, it gets better. They apparently make the stuff using fox or ferret piss.

    ~blink~

    I’m imagining buying a bottle of yellow liquid on the internet and having it shipped. What if it breaks, leaks, or otherwise vents its precious cargo all over my poor package carrier? I’ll never get Amazon again.

    Apparently, they pelletalize the stuff. You read that right: they turn it into pellets. (Wouldn’t THAT be a fun job? “Bobby, today your project is to figure out how to take this,” pats the jar, “and turn it into inert, odorless pellets that little old ladies can use in their gardens to repel pests.” “Uh, boss? That smells like piss.” “That’s because it is, Bobby. Isn’t chemistry fun? Oh, and I’ll need it before lunch, ’cause the boss is waiting on it. His wife has a garden problem.”

    So we bought some.

    I read the ingredients. Mint is high on the list. It’s apparently a rat repellant. The other stuff on the list is some organic foo-foo that doesn’t actually involve a canid’s pee. So I think my landlady either got confused, or tried something less noxious than milking a ferret.

    So I planted mint. A lot of it.

    Then there was the garden vandalism incident.

    That’s right, folks, my garden was vandalized by the basement tenant. She flipped out and hacked off all my plants, then piled all the dead stuff on the few remaining live plants. Which killed almost all of the mint but one clump, which I’ll get to in a second. But the point is, I don’t know if mint repels rats.

    It certainly doesn’t repel crazypants tenants, I know THAT for sure.

    1. Give up.

    I’m not really there quite yet, but getting close. This year, my coworker and I went in on a community garden and I had 200 square feet (which felt like a wealth of land next to my meager raised bed) to play with. We had a bumper crop of tomatoes, and even some Romas and beefstakes (which, if you’ve been reading me awhile, you’ll remember I don’t have luck with here due to lack of enough sun, though my cherry toms do great). We also had rabbits.

    Rabbits like lettuce, chard, kale, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts, in case you were wondering.

    They are, however, cuter than rats. And the repellants for them are much the same: predator pee.

    Seriously? Who thinks this stuff up?

    Next year, we’re going to plant herbs – lots of mint, since it supposedly repels rats and not neighbors; chamomile, lavender, marjoram, thyme, chives, cilantro, and a few other things I’ll think up between now and then. Also, we’ll plant flowers: some more lilies (because the crazy neighbor killed eight Lily of the Valley plants and all three of my big lilies that I don’t know the name of but I think are called star lilies), snapdragons, marigolds and calendula (which I read are actually two different plants), pansies, Johnnie-Jump-Ups, daffodils, and whatever else will grow in partial sun.

    You know, a’la rat.

    What about you, Dear Reader? Any rat tips?

    And for those of you still with me, the point of all this is that the shrinks were right: gardening IS grounding, and it does help us get back on the page. I just blasted out this blog post, for example, and actually have some inklings on what to do next on the novel that’s stuck in the mud. (Maybe I’ll put some rats in the novel and then kill them off in various creative ways.) (Just not with shovels and road flares, KTHXBI.)

    And if you\’re still with me, some pictures:

    \"20151008_0317\" \"20151008_0316\" \"20151008_0318\" \"20151008_0319\" \"20151008_0320\" \"20151008_0321\" \"20151009_0323\"