25 February 2010
mud
16 February 2010
Details
Andrea's Car Poem
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sunglasses warrior sister
in a blue convertible florida spring,
the heat rises off us
like a death valley mirage.
the open highway ahead
looms large
like those passed by already
in relentless travel.
we are a movie
that no one can name,
the physical embodiment
of a tattooed singer's lust.
we speed down the asphalt
and know our minds
are twice as fast:
alive -- alight -- incendiary.
11 February 2010
Training Exercises
But I still had hope. Jim was supposed to be coming home early from work. He could stay with the kids while I went for a run. The eldest son had a 1/2 day of school, I picked him up and learned that he had a playdate planned. So we went over to his friends house. I stayed, determined, in my running clothes. Got home at 4:30, Jim still not home. Turned out his work day was longer than he thought. Finally, 5:00 rolls around and he gets home. The sky is beginning to darken. I don't like to run in the dark, especially in winter. I say it's too late, I'm too tired to run, but I feel like shit and I need it, I need so much to get outside by myself and breath the cold fresh air and move my body, so I go.
I'm writing about this here because I got rid of my running blog and Andi requested an update and eventually it has something to do with writing. I've been depressed and annoyed with everyone and everything. I'm tired of winter and everything feels so gray and cruddy. I have dark circles and bags under my eyes. I am so tired. But as I ran through the woods at dusk, I began feeling better. Even as I imagined mountain lions watching me as they hunted for their evening meal, I felt better. I felt alive again. I imagined, as I often do, one of the stories that I am working on that is inspired by this small patch of woods where I often run. I started formulating ideas.
I tripped over a log. I gasped. A soft "whump" as my body hit the soft snow. Nothing injured. But suddenly I found myself so tired, the ground so soft and comfortable, I just lay there, not wanting to get up, wanting to actually just sleep right there. But I got up. When I got home I realized that I had done my short loop really fast.
Now I've cleared some of the crud out of my brain and feel like I can write again. I have been frustrated with my writing, and was really hoping that by participating in this little writing group of ours, I would work on some new stuff and have some fresh ideas. For me, the purpose of having our little "writing assignments" is just to do some writing other than whatever big project it is I'm working on, to just do some writing because we are accountable to each other. So I was disappointed with the way that the last one went, for a few reasons. First of all, I think two weeks is too long. Kelly sat down and did her "assignment" in one sitting. She just cranked it out. We can all do that. Why should it take us 2 weeks? Then there's the thing with Andi not finishing hers because she was still editing. Come on! Fuck the editing. That's not what this is about. Edit it later. Just get it done. So then we didn't end up being able to talk about our writing at all during the last chat.
I see these assignments as exercises. Like training for the big race. Each training run doesn't have to be great. Sometimes you can run a measly freakin two miles, fall down in the snow and want to go to sleep. But the important part is to do the exercise on a regular basis, to work up to the big run, the race, whatever your goal is. These writing exercises are like training runs. We just have to put in the miles. You don't stop in the middle of a run, go back and re-run the last mile because you feel like you could have done better. You just keep going.
Lori
09 February 2010
excuses, excuses
So what do I do now? Do I retype the last two scenes or would that be a waste of time? Do I continue this blog post? Or do I...
I think I retype the last two - no, three - scenes and have done with it.
In the meantime, how's about an update? How's the new setup treating you, Kiki? How's the training for the half-marathon coming, Lori?
~Andi
Update: 2/10/10, just past midnight.
Couldn't bring myself to retype seven fucking pages when the damned file has just GOT to be at work. Have made progress with a scene in Sanctuary that's been blocking me for a while. Brian asked this evening how I was going to have time to actually work on the book when I'm busy working on the assignments. "Well, when I'm working on the assignments, I actually am working on the book. The last short story gave me some information about Paxton that I just didn't know before. And this latest one is making my villain real, so that he doesn't disappear when he turns sideways, like Gwyneth Paltrow on a MasterCleanse. And, like Lori said, they keep the juices flowing." He gave me a rather lewd look at that. "You KNOW what I mean." "Yeah," he said. "I do. " So that's OK.
Big Babies

Are we all just big babies?
Mostly, and recently, I would have laughed at that idea, and at people who thought it was true. The older I get, paradoxically, the less sure I am.
I just finished setting up my guest room as a quasi-office. I have a laptop and it's nice, but it's also too easy to get all wi-fied in front of the television and then get jack-shit done. So I moved my (grievously ignored) desktop into my guest bedroom, hooked it up to the internet, installed a webcam per my current job's requirements, and voila...a wired computer set at a sane distance from the satellite dish, refrigerator, front door, and all other distractions.
The guest room and bath in my house are set nicely apart from everything else -- their own little private space. They were also, two years ago, the tiny suite for one of the many cats I've rescued. Mija, a four-week-old kitten of inexplicable origins, spent two weeks there before we deemed her old and big enough to hold her own with our other cats. She was originally slated to go to our wonderful local sanctuary, but fate intervened, and she has become our one friendly cat, welcoming everyone and answering to any version of her long, long name: Mija Mustachio Honey Honey Hey.
Anyway -- I was trying to troubleshoot my webcam setup when Mija joined me in her old room. She jumped onto the guest futon, crawled around happily, and fell asleep. In fact, she refused to leave. She passed out around seven p.m.; at midnight, she still hadn't left, despite several opportunities.
A bit of background, particularly for those unfamiliar with cats: four weeks old is far too young for a kitten to be separated from her mother. Mija did not know how to eat solid food, or drink other than from a nipple, or use a litter box, or even how to clean herself. I spent two weeks teaching her those things. For many months, she treated me as her mother (and I was). In her youth, she would sometimes crawl on top of me and suckle my t-shirt. It was sweet and sad and inevitable, and she mostly outgrew it -- after her first year, she stopped this behavior, and would revert rarely.
So, today -- Mija curled up onto the bed of her youth, and stared around the room strangely, and then she began to purr and mrr in a kittenish fashion. I laid down beside her, and she curled into me and began to try to nurse at the blanket. I petted her and tried to soothe her; she eventually fell asleep. I was surprised by her reversion. Eventually we left the room (and I finally got the fucking webcam set up).
It made me wonder, though. I visit my sister and her family (best brother-in-law ever; sweet niece and nephew) for a month or two every summer. I am in New Mexico; they live within twenty minutes of my childhood home in York Beach, Maine. For a million reasons, at least, it is my favorite time of year -- I get to enjoy the incomparable company of my family, and also to revisit the haunted haunts of my (early) youth. We are adults now, but we are also children retracing time-worn paths, and getting to choose the best of it all.
We go to the beach at York. We follow the meandering back roads between York and Eliot and Berwick and Kittery, Maine; Portsmouth and Newington and Dover and Durham, New Hampshire. Simultaneously uplifted and starved by the usual cacti and creosote and mesquite of the Chihuahuan Desert, I feast on the pine trees and granite and cold, sandy beaches. I inhale the humidity, dance in the rain, feel friendly green grass beneath my bare feet. I live a totally different life.
In fact -- I live my old life, just as Mija does, in her old room. I know it's an old life, but it's a new life too. It's hard to separate -- do I love this place for now, or for then? It's both, of course. But it's also confused...in a happy way.
I wouldn't trade my past; I wouldn't trade my present. And I wouldn't trade the jumbled-together joy of having it all, even if just for a moment -- on the lemon-lit beach of Short Sands, a quick jog from Nubble Light, a sweet walk from Wild Kingdom, a brief jump from beach-side skee-ball -- every now and then, life is perfect.
02 February 2010
Fun With Words!
#1 The Most wonderful person in the World. Kind, Sweet, Loving, Caring, Gentle. Perfect in Every ways. The one you love for all your life.
#2 Crazy hot girl. Beautiful, smart and funny; Lori posesses atributes absent in 99.9% of women. Truly a lucky find. Plus she rocks.
#3 The most wonderful drug in the world, better know as Hydrocodone or lortab. taking the pill may cause a sense of euphoria, and well being.
So, that was kind of fun. Then I found the word "Lorgasm." (It actually has to do with sneezing, not sex). It reminded me of the fun exercise that Kelly and I have done using old, rarely used words, like hurley-burley. Check it out, see what you can find. What does your name mean?
Insomnia
You know what's weird? How easily I slip into "being" Casey -- and that happens (happened) with Coco too. And a few other protagonists, past and present. Am I a million characters contained within one body? Just telling their stories? Who knows?
How does it work for you?
Rain Chronicles
Nonetheless, wish me luck: it's supposed to rain Tuesday evening through Thursday morning. If so, I will be in desert heaven...dancing in the drops, singing at the tops of my lungs, shrieking happily at the dark clouds, and watching my hair slowly expand into a scary Irish afro, all volume and no substance.
Wow. I just wrote a post about not writing about something. Kind of like my Irish 'fro. How...inspired. Or something.
01 February 2010
this week's assignment...
Also, I think the main reason why I still check Facebook is to avoid writing. And I don't think I'm the only one who does it, either.
That. Is. All.
~andi
31 January 2010
Why? Er...
I wish I could say that I write for any remotely altruistic reason, but it's all selfish.
First and foremost, it's plain old fun. (Most of the time.) Since I'm happy to be a fiction writer, much of my time and imagination is spent trying to make the impossible sound believable - to myself and to my reader (which is why your input was so valuable last week, Lori). My husband likes Legos. Aeryn likes to draw. I like to scribble, because I get to think up strange and scary and sometimes wonderful things and make them happen in my own head.The second reason is that I get to learn. Since I've started this project (and since I've been thinking about the next few), I've delved into odd and fascinating areas - psychological therapy, aikido, the study of angels and demonology (and oh dear God the awful movies I have subjected myself to in the name of research), New York City geography and history, dying, Catholic liturgy, book restoration... and that's only the beginning, I'm sure. Writing gives me an excuse to read voraciously, to Google incessantly, and to get my mind back to where it was so many years ago - open wide, like a baby's mouth waiting for mama's milk.
One last reason: I have a compulsion to communicate. Get me talking and I won't stop. If I'm stoned and caffeinated, you might as well put the phone down and go take a shit, because I'll still be talking when you get back, even though I will have changed the subject at least eight times. Get me writing about something that I love, and I won't stop until my forehead falls down and I start drooling on the keyboard, no matter how early I have to get up the next morning.
Nope, can't lie about it. All selfish reasons. But I do it anyway, because I have to be selfish about something. And this is it.
~Andi
29 January 2010
Why do you write?
I'm getting ready to go for a run, listening to "Don't Fear the Reaper," my all-time favorite "get psyched to go out for a run in the cold woods" song. It reminds me of Stephen King's "The Stand," which I love. It also has a great beat to run to, so I like to get it into my head before I go out. But I also love the message: everybody dies, don't be afraid. It's a universal truth. Come on baby, take my hand. We'll be able to fly.
Why do you write?
28 January 2010
22 January 2010
To Cee, On the Occasion of Your First Cycle
~Andi
21 January 2010
You know its bad when

20 January 2010
Myaikus
kids are late for school again
early morning fog
running in the snow
click click click crunch crunch crunch crunch
echoes through the trees
all these things I do
to try to forget your name
yet still it whispers