- What happens if you get caught picking your nose when you’re on Zoom?
- I know you pick your nose.
- Don’t lie.
- Hey, what’s up.
- Friday.
- Hard to develop the audience if you’re not consistently producing.
- I won’t make promises.
- Too easy to go unfulfilled and the cost sucks.
- I have been making lists in my notebook.
- For real.
- They’re mostly for me.
- It occurs to me I’m talking to myself.
- A list is a conversation with the other versions of me.
- Or the inside me?
- Anyway.
- This morning, I clicked on a Spotify playlist of new music from, or related to, artists I’ve followed.
- New Lamb of God.
- New Megadeth.
- New Royal & the Serpent.
- New Au/Ra.
- Anyway, played it.
- About five or six songs down, there was one called, “IT’S WORTH IT,” by Left on Red, whom I’ve never heard of.
- Soon as the vocals started, the singer said my name and then gave me like this whole positive affirmation message for like a minute and a half.
- And honestly, it was topically relevant given the existential week I’ve had.
- I found it fucking horrifying.
- Obviously AI based.
- Has to be, right?
- What in the fuck is Spotify listening to?
- My text messages?
- F the AI revolution.
- F the Administration taking away my rights.
- F you I won’t do what you tell me.
- I’m not making that up.
- I’m actually curious.
- If YOU listen to that song, will it plug in your name?
- Your mission, should you choose to accept it.
- You know how you can get your text messages in the browser window on your computer?
- I do that all the time.
- If you text me between 9 and 5, I’m answering with a proper keyboard.
- Yesterday, I answered texts all morning, and then I went to look up something on my phone …
- No phone.
- I searched the whole office.
- My desk.
- The floor.
- My bag.
- No phone.
- Did someone steal it out of my office while I was elsewhere?
- Did I drop it on the sidewalk?
- Panic, you know?
- That first moment.
- Motherfucking anxiety.
- Left it in the car.
- Two blocks and two stories away.
- Damn phone.
- I don’t even remember what I needed it for.
- Panic erased the task.
- But hey, didn’t lose my phone.
- Woooooo.
- I have a note that says, “Cheeto hands,” which I wrote down right before I went to the bathroom.
- Make sure you wash your hands before and after in that situation.
- Just sayin.
- What else …
- Song lyric of the week: “There’s nothing more American than starting a war.”
- A bunch of these are from last week, which means I no longer feel that urgency I did when I wrote them down.
- Saw this thing on Insta last week.
- They’ve added a new ‘vert: Otroverts.
- “They are not fueled by solitude and they are not energized by the spotlight. These individuals feel their best in the company of others, yet they don’t need constant chatter or the intensity of extroverted energy to thrive.”
- That’s closer.
- I believe we spend most of our time in one of the shorthand categories, but it’s situational.
- Sorry for the hopscotchery today.
- It’s Friday and I’m sitting in a webinar … that I sat through in person at a conference two years ago.
- Literally.
- Same two presenters.
- And it’s shit I do already anyway.
- It’s things like this that are driving me to the classroom.
- To teach.
- Taking my “How to teach at the College” class this month.
- Why get a grad degree if you’re not planning on teaching?
- Grad school, btw, is a helluva lot more interesting than undergrad.
- Okay, what else?
- If you followed the lists since April, you know what a headtrip I’ve been on.
- Daily Prednisone has ridden shotgun on the Eye for three years.
- I’ve been tapering since July.
- Took the last one yesterday.
- Now, we wait.
- There are “potential” side effects when disembarking from Train Pred.
- I got all of them.
- Might take a couple of months to get my body back.
- If ever.
- Knees weak, arms spaghetti.
- Or something.
- I have much empathy for long-term Pred users.
- How do you talk about a thing without it being a cry for sympathy?
- Anyway, the road to normal aging starts now!
- And maybe some PT.
- Wooooooo.
- Started reading A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny again.
- That’ll be three Octobers in a row.
- I don’t remember where I heard about the book, though I’m pretty sure I wrote it into a List for work.
- But I looked the book up on Reddit … or maybe that’s where I heard of it in the first place, and that’s where I learned there’s a whole community of people who love that book, and read it at a chapter-a-day pace every October.
- Which is easy because the chapters are named by date.
- It’s a good time.
- It’s like a macabre literary version of a dog cartoon.
- That’s a poor, poor description.
- Cause I need a nap.
- So about three weeks ago, I shared the draft of the Novel with a Librarian.
- And heard nothing.
- Wednesday, during my existential crisis, one of the haunting thoughts was about how bad the book is, how it’s not worth finishing, how I should let the dream die.
- For those playing the home game, Wednesday, for a lot of reasons, I was down in a hole.
- Do you understand how personal it is to share anything you’ve created with other people?
- Especially when you’ve tied so much of your identity to it.
- A Librarian.
- If the Librarian didn’t like it … well, I’d be fucked.
- They’re the book experts, you know?
- But I did hear back.
- And damn, talk about uplifting.
- Like a gift, really.
- Which brings me to this train of thought.
- Words have so much power.
- To uplift.
- To decimate.
- To inflict or incite or inspire.
- And we fling them around like bladed weapons, indifferent to their effects.
- I have 17 chapters left to go and a round of rewrites, but …
- It has to happen.
- Speaking of books …
- I preorder stuff on Kindle.
- Obviously.
- I have tiered authors.
- If I love them, I preorder hardbacks.
- If I really like them, I preorder Kindle (though I’m beginning to contemplate a way out of that environment since I don’t really “own” those books according to that rich asshole).
- The downside of preordering the ebooks … you’re apt to forget you bought them ahead of time.
- Probably I should make a calendar of preordered books, or what happened in September will happen again.
- I bought a book, The Society of Unknowable Objects by Gareth Brown on a Monday.
- And then … three more books showed up on my Kindle the next day.
- Or maybe it was two, and then another one the Tuesday after.
- Either way, too much money on books all at once.
- (Sorry, Dear.)
- The preorders:
- The Shattering Peace, by John Scalzi.
- To Clutch a Razor, by Veronica Roth.
- Thief of Night, by Holly Black.
- And then … Nm, man. I have a problem is what I’m saying.
- I prefer to think of it as being a Micro-Patron of artists.
- I’m supporting those brothers and sisters living the Dream.
- Yes, I’m procrastinating writing this List instead of the Book.
- The Book scares me.
- Goddammit.
- Before I get out of here, let’s go back to that Playlist.
- Writers are frequently asked whether they listen to music while they write.
- Stephen King does, for instance.
- My daughter does not (and yes, she’s officially started writing her passion project).
- I do.
- It just becomes something I need.
- I cannot abide a silence.
- Silence makes the ringing louder.
- It can be detrimental when you’re trying to give new music the attention it might deserve.
- Like, four or five songs played through and I heard nothing.
- They were on.
- I heard them not.
- Listen.
- Actively.
- With focus.
- It’ll change your life.
- I’m not sure if this is the record for List length.
- Gotta be close.
- Okay, one more thing.
- Facebook showed me a post from 11 years ago, my feet propped up on the back porch, a pint of DNR in my hand.
- Accompanying the picture, I talked about how great that Friday, Oct. 3 was with a temperature of 64 degrees.
- Time flies when you’re having fun, and all the things you want remain undone.
- Do not go gentle, gang.
- I’d pay for a proper October temperature about now.
- Sigh.
Tag: books
-

And On And On And On
-

Epistolary Nonsense
- Belt
- I don’t know why it says “belt.”
- This document’s been open for days.
- I mean, yes, I need a new belt.
- Had to get one in Minnesota, and it sucks.
- Might as well be plastic.
- Okay, maybe I remember.
- Facebook heard me say belt, so I’ve been getting a lot of belt ads, which is funny, because I don’t even have the Facebook app on my phone.
- Anyway.
- It showed me one I liked, so I clicked.
- Pretty sure it’s coming from China.
- Pass on that.
- Not because I’m opposed to having China make my belt, but because I don’t want to wait on it for two or three weeks.
- That’s one thing Prime did to me for sure.
- NOW! GIVE IT TO ME NOW!
- Maybe “belt” was the start of an incomplete to-do list?
- I do have a to-do list in my journal.
- There’s a bunch of creative projects on there at the moment.
- I have a bunch of list stuff in there, period.
- And I’ve lost the ability to remember if I’ve already written those up and sent them out in the ether.
- I could go reread the old lists.
- Scan, really.
- But then it becomes like walking through a door and forgetting what you came in there for.
- Let’s get serious.
- Caramel.
- Apple.
- Empanadas.
- Fuck yes.
- The Wife actually called me on the phone to ask me if I’d seen they were back.
- I had not.
- We scratched the itch.
- They are just as delicious as I remember.
- And that marketing campaign.
- Oof.
- “Relive Y2k”
- I mean, yes please?
- The Matrix was right.
- 1999 was the peak of human civilization.
- Saturday, driving up Harvard, I saw someone whom I presume was homeless.
- I also assume it was a woman.
- Who had her backside hanging entirely out.
- Some kind of shredded black shirt, red thong.
- Footwear.
- I mean, yes, it was hot.
- I get it.
- But I felt like probably she needed some help.
- I get the feeling of being unsafe some might have being around the homeless.
- 99 percent of them need help.
- (I have hands-on experience working with this population.)
- But we’re all convinced that despite not being asked to be born, you’re only value to society is … work.
- Fucked up.
- Something else that happened while driving …
- Slayer’s “Seasons in the Abyss.”
- I’m not a huge Slayer fan.
- But I love that song.
- (Okay, “love” is a strong word.)
- And it is appropriate on a Monday morning commute.
- “Step outside yourself and let your mind go …”
- “Close your eyes and forget your name …”
- No?
- Maybe just me then.
- Over the weekend, I saw someone post about Harry Potter night at the Driller’s game.
- Harry Potter Night … at … a … baseball game.
- I mentioned that to the kid.
- She said, “What’s wrong with that?”
- That right there is the difference in generations.
- Sure, Quidditch, a sport, is a huge part of those books, but … in my day, magic and sports did not mix.
- “As you go insane, go insannnneeeeee.”
- My office door sticks.
- Standing there with my coffee in one hand, keys in the lock, turning, and nothing happens because the door has swollen in its frame.
- For real, if you want me to not go in, I’ll do that.
- What if after a Zoom meeting, I can’t get out.
- I’m on the fourteenth bloody floor.
- There’s no jumping.
- And don’t get me started about Zoom and Teams meetings under a no-WFH mandate.
- Control.
- Lately, when AI comes up, my brain sticks me into that sequence from Joe Vs. The Volcano when he’s going into work.
- Gray and drudgery.
- And I’m back in that spot where I don’t understand the techbro need to replace creatives.
- You can’t smash out the creative impulse just because you want to make another buck.
- Art is the soul of humanity.
- Why do you think there are cave paintings?
- Just one of the things happening today … I’m researching yoga.
- I’ve talked about that before.
- On the work list, not this one.
- I need to be doing that.
- Prednisone withdrawals are wrecking my joints at the moment.
- I’m in this stage where they hurt so bad, I feel the need to stretch them incessantly.
- I dropped an earbud.
- Getting down to get it was excruciating.
- This shit better end.
- That’s all I’m saying.
- From time to time, I stick Spotify in Lyric mode.
- Today, during Anthrax’s “I Am The Law,” it called him Judge Drucker instead of Dredd, and said, “Druck it” instead of Drokk.
- Joey’s not mispronouncing anything.
- Spotify’s lyric AI sucks.
- And you should not trust it.
- It’ll have you singing “Dirty Deeds and the Thunderchief.”
- Another thing I saw the other day …
- This clothing company called Other.
- Saw they were doing some Metallica apparel.
- I followed them.
- Yeah, $100 t-shirts.
- Wtaf.
- Sorry, sirs, but that’s “getting tricked by biz-ness.”
- …
- I came up with a new short story idea the other day.
- First one in a long time.
- The Book does not allow me to cheat on it creatively.
- I’m going to have to write this one, however.
- Might be epistolary.
- Can journal entries be considered epistolary?
- Whatever, that’s the format I’m thinking.
- Only if I do it that way, dialogue might we weird.
- (I might be overthinking that part.)
- Bat!
-

Arrow to the Knee
- So the kid does this thing.
- If she starts a book, she feels bound to finish it.
- Obligated.
- I don’t think I’ve ever been that way.
- Last night, well, yesterday, she read an entire 400-page book she didn’t really like or enjoy reading.
- Me: “I don’t understand why you read books you’re not enjoying.”
- Her: “Because you never know. It might get better. It might have a great ending.”
- Me: “If it’s not good, you know that’s not going to happen.”
- Her: “It might.”
- And then there was something about having bought the book, so maybe a bit of financial obligation, too?
- Me: “You know, if you got a Kindle, you can do samples of books.”
- Her: “I’m not getting a Kindle. Stop trying to sell me on a Kindle!”
- You will learn, grasshopper.
- When you’re away at college and money is nonexistent, you’ll be calling home to beg for book money.
- And because that’s a good habit, I’ll probably still give it to her.
- Because I’m a sucker.
- Since I’m kid talking today …
- We have one of those L-shaped sectionals.
- She sits in the corner against the wall.
- The Korner.
- She’s earned the nickname Corner Troll.
- I did not give it to her.
- Anyway, there she was yesterday when I got home from work/grocery shopping, book propped up on knees, covered in blankets.
- (No, I don’t know what book it was. I can’t keep up.)
- There’s this croissant bread, a whole loaf, I’ve found intermittently at Whole Foods, and only Whole Foods.
- She loves it.
- I carried it into the … TV room and showed it to her.
- Her eyes widened.
- I turned around and started to walk off.
- “You bring me that bread!”
- Made me laugh.
- I have a bread problem.
- I won’t foist any of the blame upon Steph.
- (She likes it, too.)
- Genetics.
- Hellva thing, right?
- Foist was a Wordle word a couple of weeks ago.
- I think.
- You know what’s awesome about having some kind of growth near/in your brain?
- You get to make all kinds of jokes and excuses.
- “I’m sorry. I don’t remember that. Brain tumor.”
- I’m doing it for at least a year.
- We’ll see what October brings.
- (Next MRI.)
- Yesterday, we listened to party hits from the 2010s.
- Today, I’m on someone’s “Songs that give me the thousand-yard stare” playlist.
- Not bad so far.
- I guess I should give you Spotifyians the link just in case.
- Here:
- Oh, wait.
- I’m not online.
- Long story.
- I’ll get online to post this.
- Obviously.
- Also, I have no recollection of adding the playlist to my Library.
- Sigh.
- It’s probably all AI-generated.
- Which goes against my values.
- I get the potential of AI.
- It has the ability, as a tool, to revolutionize a lot of things.
- Definitely going to change our world.
- I hope the outcome is not Elysium.
- I wish people would focus on that instead of trying to take the human out of everything.
- Creatively speaking, I’m sure they’ll use AI to make all the things.
- I’m definitely having an old man response to it.
- I’m not alone, and plenty of the AI rebels are younger.
- But all it can ever do is mimic the human experience.
- It can’t have any of its own.
- Even when it’s sentient, its experiences will be alien to ours.
- Until we all start getting implants anyway.
- I won’t be around for that, but the kid might.
- I have a novella I started during the Pandemic about that kind of thing.
- It got bulldozed to the side by the book.
- I’m told sometimes it takes years to write a book.
- The fact mine’s unfinished makes me feel like a failure.
- I talked to my therapist about this.
- All fear-based.
- Loss of identity.
- Negative self-talk.
- Working on it.
- I’m self-aware on a lot of things now.
- Would not have gotten there on my own.
- I’m a therapy zealot.
- It’s changed my life.
- Could change yours, too, if you need it.
- Working on the book yesterday …
- Okay, my process involves reading what’s already there to get in the right flow and headspace.
- And I had an idea about an interaction between two of my main characters that changes their relationship a bit, so I’m going to have to go back and rewrite a bunch of conversations.
- I think I told you that.
- Anyway.
- During rereading yesterday, I made myself laugh.
- The protagonist has a super dry sense of humor.
- And I could hear her delivery.
- I laughed out loud.
- Just once.
- But … kinda felt good, you know?
- Battled some of that impostor syndrome.
- Brad sent me this Trae Crowder clip yesterday where the comedian riffs on the advantages of being dumb.
- He’s not wrong.
- (I’ll find that link, too, here in a minute. You won’t be able to see it on FB, but it’ll be there on the blog.)
- (No, I’m not doing the comment link thing.)
- (Maybe.)
- (If someone asks for it I suppose.)
- (I’ll post it in the Discord.)
- (About time to share that again I suppose.)
- Gonna have an Old Fashioned tonight.
- Just the one.
- I actually want to build a Top 10 Best Old Fashioned list for Tulsa, but …
- I don’t want to go to all the bars to try to figure it out.
- Maybe Top 10 Best OFs in Tulsa Restaurants.
- Still a bold quest.
- Nevermind.
- I like ‘em at Jimmy’s Chophouse.
- Waterfront.
- Bull in the Alley.
- The Tavern.
- (McNellie’s Group cornering the market …)
- Oh, Charleston’s.
- I guess it’s Friday when you start thinking about cocktails before lunch arrives.
- My weekend to-do list is monumental.
- Things piled up (sometimes literally) while recovering on my ass for 12 weeks.
- Speaking of that.
- Don’t do that ever.
- I’m sure part of the pain I’m dealing with is the Prednisone leaving my body, but goddamn man, everything is tight. Everything hurts. When I stand up, I look like an old man. I mean, my freaking heels hurt, and that is the worst.
- Sitting all day in an office chair doesn’t help.
- Standing desk, bro.
- You know what I’m going to say, right?
- …
- C’mon, I repeat the hell out of myself.
- “Do not go gentle” into that good weekend.
-

I Mean, What the Hell
- Yeah, this work stuff.
- Tomorrow’s my last half-day before resuming full-time on Thursday.
- There’s not been one day in the last almost two weeks where I haven’t come home and fallen asleep in the … den?
- Is it the den?
- It’s the TV room.
- The room we spend most of our time in.
- That’s why they’re called Living Rooms, I guess.
- Our house is weird.
- There’s one room that’s like a wide hallway with a fireplace.
- Anyway, the point …
- You haven’t been getting lists because of work.
- Ironic.
- Maybe Alanis’s version.
- Maybe the actual version.
- Who can say.
- I have notes in my notebook.
- Those were relevant at the time.
- And looking at them now, I’m not feelin’ it.
- Them.
- Feeling them.
- Which would …
- I mean, rehashing my anger toward our lives of indentured servitude … done it already, and I’m too tired from my job to try again.
- Which is all you need to say.
- Those notes were from July anyway.
- Barely.
- The day before the end of July.
- I did spend that particular afternoon listening to Twenty One Pilots.
- That shit should be hyphenated, by the way.
- Twenty-One Pilots.
- Compound adjectives are hyphenated.
- And judgment is not spelled with an E before the M.
- I did have a note about grammar, so … that written list might be paying off a tiny bit.
- A tad, as it were.
- Also from the notebook:
- Parking garage
- WFH
- Idiots
- Interview
- Virgin Islands
- Negative Inertia
- Tai Chi
- A/C guy
- Read Wednesday’s notes
- Walgreens
- The other day, the kid and I went to Walgreens for dessert.
- She offered to drive.
- Alas, we did not have the Pilot because it was in the shop.
- And I haven’t taught her to drive a manual yet.
- Anyway, we walked into Walgreens and saw a Reese’s display of pumpkins and bats and ghosts and whatnot.
- You know, the Halloween stuff.
- And I thought, “Of course that shit’s on sale, it’s olll … oh, shit.”
- I have time warped.
- 2026 is going to have to be my year, because I missed a quarter of this one.
- Woosh.
- But yes, it’s too damn early for Halloween stuff.
- Three solid months.
- At least two months early.
- Right?
- We’re willing to give stores a month before a holiday to sell the shit for that particular holiday, right?
- Virgin Islands?
- Ooh, right.
- Bought this book about how to refine your writing/research process, and at the end of the introduction from the author, he signed his name and followed it with … “Virgin Islands.”
- Bro.
- You sonofabitch.
- Rubbing that shit in.
- “I wrote this book and self-published it and now I get to live in the Virgin Islands while you buy my book and daydream of breaking free of your indenturedship! Sucka!”
- It’s like that meme of the dude flashing the Peace sign from someone’s freshly dug grave.
- At least he didn’t use AI to write it.
- (Because then anyone could repackage it and sell it with a different name and get their own Virgin Island residence.)
- (Or maybe he got to write the book because he already had money in the first place.)
- I collect books about writing.
- My three favorites are probably Hemingway’s, Stephen King’s, and Elmore Leonard’s 10 writing tips, which is a … list.
- Last week, the kid told me she was reading the intro for King’s The Life of Chuck, and said it sounded like my writing.
- I told her his book, On Writing, was really good and that she should read it.
- She said, “Perhaps.”
- The really odd part of that … I haven’t read a lot of King.
- Fewer than five.
- A few days ago, we were talking about work/school and trying to be creative afterward.
- “I want to work on something creative, but when I get home from being bored all day at school, I can’t do it.”
- “It’s difficult.”
- That’s not my real problem.
- Yes, it’s true, but …
- Wait.
- I’m about to overshare.
- …
- Nevermind. Not doing that.
- Authenticity.
- Gross.
- It would smell like excuse refuse.
- Funny how that is, right?
- Your feelings about a thing are legitimate.
- Your struggles to overcome a thing are real.
- And yet, say them aloud they become excuses.
- Oof.
- Do your therapy.
- Do the work.
- Overcoming the thing is the goal.
- Avoiding the thing is the problem.
- Blameshifting is the problem.
- Own your shit. Conquer it.
- You go to therapy, right?
- No?
- “You think that air you’re breathing is real?”
- Again!
- “Fear is the mindkiller.”
- Inertia is the worst.
- Trying to write from a recliner in the … TV room … while the kid’s watching The Office (which I never got into) …
- (We can still talk about tacos without them being Trump, right?)
- (Nevermind.)
- I started getting ads for tai chi.
- Which I want to do.
- Finding a place though.
- Do you know what that’s like for introverts?
- Going to a class of any kind?
- But especially those martial arts classes.
- (It is a martial art, but not one where they punch each other in the head; doing that when you have a titanium plate in your dome and a rescabbed scar is probably a bad idea.)
- I want the habit, though.
- I get tired of push-ups, you know?
- (This is what I get when I write when I should be napping.)
- (Seriously, this one’s a sack of cats.)
- (Imma stop now.)
- (You’re welcome.)
-

You Are Our Last Hope
- Last week, on my first half-day back at work, I fired up the laptop, started typing on my wireless keyboard.
- The E key did not work.
- How does that happen?
- The keyboard, far as I know, was not touched while I was gone.
- dEad.
- …
- I’m actually in a bit of a quandary.
- Writing these during recovery was a bit of a different experience than writing them for work.
- I’m not sure I want to go back to doing them the other way.
- The work way.
- Unfiltered feels better.
- I haven’t ruled it out yet, but I’m on the “no more for work” side of the fence at the moment.
- Let me tell you a story. I started a journal entry this morning where I lamented the fact that most of my writing these days is lists of random thoughts. Five years I’ve been communicating that way on a regular basis. I’m out of habit making paragraphs. Maybe even coherent arguments, or expounding upon the paragraph’s subject to a logical conclusion (provided you believe I have any logic at all).
Like everything else, I beat myself up about it. My writing skills are somehow suffering. I can’t stay on topic to write a proper essay. A visual representation of a hyper-active brain. Not that mine’s hyper-active by diagnosis.
Not sure any of that is true, but it’s the current mental narrative. - I dunno if you know this, but I am hard on myself.
- DID YOU KNOW: Journalism schools coach you to keep paragraphs to one idea.
- That might be one sentence or a few.
- Definitely not those epic ones that create giant blocks of copy labyrinths where eyes get lost, take wrong turns, wander off, lose the train …
- I often wonder who really pioneered the style of writing.
- (We didn’t really study the history of the mechanics of journalism writing in school.)
- (Only best practices.)
- Write clearly.
- Fast.
- Small words.
- Objective words.
- Truths.
- I felt, at the time, it made my fiction better.
- Because when you use objective descriptors, you create a better picture, something shared between you and the reader, and your intent is accurately conveyed.
- Trying to narrow the gap because there always is one.
- Reading is a subjective endeavor, after all.
- …
- Recuperation still in process.
- Came home today, sat on the couch.
- Put my feet on the coffee table.
- Snoozed.
- Typing now, but I’m still tired.
- Could nap some more.
- Oof.
- On the other end … well, in the corner of the sectional, the Kid is reading Plath’s “The Bell Jar.”
- I never have.
- She reads more Lit than I do.
- Makes me proud.
- “What’s that about?”
- Her: “A girl who goes insane.”
- “How is it so far?”
- “Good so far.”
- “Is she insane already?”
- “No, but she’s very weird.”
- Kinda makes me want to read it.
- In other fun news, I hit my head on the corner of a thing taking a bite of a taco, stabbing my scar.
- Bled into napkins.
- Currently, I have a new scab.
- The wound’s covered by a layer of Neosporin and a Band-Aid.
- Gifted.
- Makes me wonder if I am, in fact, clumsy.
- I don’t think anyone would’ve ever described me as graceful.
- But I’m not uncoordinated.
- You don’t get to start teaching knife fighting classes after a year if you’re uncoordinated.
- Yesterday, the new boss scheduled a department bonding activity.
- Axe throwing.
- Never done that before.
- Got there.
- Had to sit and watch for a few minutes and listen to people going, “Are you going to throw next?”
- C’mon, man.
- Don’t rush me.
- A) Still not comfortable having a room of people watch me do a thing.
- 2) Still hate being bad at things.
- ii) Especially new things.
- Half the crew threw with two hands, like a wind-up behind their head.
- I think the old man in Last of the Mohicans threw that way?
- I envisioned whacking myself in the back of the head with the axe.
- No, thank you.
- Took me a bit.
- Had the armed goth manchild babysitting us show me the technique.
- Started chucking.
- I ended up with three or four bullseyes, but the one in the pic was the best of the bunch.
- Could totally get into that.
- First, it’s hella cathartic.
- And then it’s a skill for post-Trump America.
- And also they did not teach us to throw our weapons in Kali class, because … if you throw your weapon, you no longer have it in your hand.
- Duh.
- I’ll go back is what I’m saying.
- To your unasked question: yes, my shoulder is sore (in the good way).
- So is the rest of my body.
- 11 weeks of lethargy will kill a 50-something.
- Oh, fuck. I’m a 50-something.
- Seriously, I wish they’d just rebuild me like the Six Million Dollar Man at this point.
- My heels hurt (so they need stretching).
- My shoulders, neck, and thighs are sore from the bike ride three days ago.
- Four?
- My hips are still sore from the trip.
- My IT bands are making my leg go numb.
- What. The. Actual. Fuck.
- Do Not Go Gentle … or go Nap.
- Whichever.
- I’m wearing a t-shirt featuring a Molotov cocktail drawn by one of my great friends.
- I love the sentiment behind that.
- Create a work of art based on a poor-man’s explosive typically used in riots and social upheaval.
- I sometimes want my words to be a hand-made, hand-tossed explosive.
- We’ll get back to a regular schedule soon.
- Until then …
- Never give up. Never surrender!
-

Get ‘Em Up in the Back Room
- Whose woods these are …
- Kidding.
- I mean, I’m not kidding.
- Probably nothing better than starting a hot summer day with a little Frost.
- But no, I’m not cut-and-pasting that in here.
- I wonder how far I could get from memory …
- I remember taking a lit class in college.
- Lit 1? Lit 2?
- We had to memorize a poem, then stand in front of the class and recite.
- That’s the one I chose.
- Because I’d already had to memorize it once, back in high school.
- Obviously.
- I don’t remember what I wore that day, though I can guess.
- Baggy jeans, probably a Polo t-shirt of green or blue, covered by a giant plaid button-up that wore more like a jacket than a shirt.
- Brown Docs on my feet.
- I remember studying the poem the night before.
- And then I didn’t have to go the first day, so it got punted to the next class.
- Sitting here, I can remember the steps in the Classroom building, because my Lit class wasn’t in Morrill with the rest of the English classes.
- This was before I committed to writing.
- Before taking hours of creative writing and poetry classes and switching my major to Journalism.
- Clouds obscured the sky that day, shrouding everything in muted gray.
- Which made it darker in the classroom in the Classroom.
- I sat there staring at the poem on my desk, copied by my own hand into a notebook, repeating the words in my mind, probably paying no attention to anyone else’s rote recitation.
- Then it was my turn.
- I walked to the front, turned, and … did the whole thing in one take.
- Monotone.
- I stared at the back wall of the room, making no eye contact.
- Tried not to clench my hands into fists.
- To go slow enough so as to not skip words or lines.
- And then it was done.
- They actually clapped.
- Caught me off guard.
- I still love that poem.
- The atmosphere mixed with the profundity.
- Good stuff.
- I’m never ever going to be that good at words.
- Not bad, but never great.
- I think it’s important to keep that perspective.
- Helps remind you to stay within yourself, but also to strive.
- At some point, you’ll reach that spot mentally.
- Where you become okay with being as good as you are, with what you do, and that you don’t have to be Robert Frost or Ernest Hemingway.
- I did try to type it from memory.
- Botched the last two lines of the second stanza, but I got the rest.
- I’ll take it.
- I could go for watching the woods fill up with snow about now.
- Other than sitting by the ocean seeing waves crash, there’s nothing more calming than watching snow at night.
- If I won the lottery, I might spend my time volleying between those two things.
- You can get there with wind in autumn trees, too.
- Or through the tall grass.
- You sure af don’t get it from city traffic, though maybe if you were a born and raised city kid, I can envision you sitting on a concrete step, eyes closed, letting the traffic ambiance entrance you.
- There’s peace to be had in sounds is what I’m saying for the kids in the back row.
- “Get ‘em up in the back room …”
- (Name that song!)
- You know what is not a peaceful sound?
- The goddamn microwave.
- Our microwave sits above the oven, high enough you have to reach for it.
- I’m not sure how Steph manages sometimes.
- I heated up Mom’s coffee in it this morning.
- Popped the door open, sat the mug inside, closed it up.
- Then … I set it for 27 seconds.
- I almost never do even numbers with the microwave.
- Never multiples of five.
- Usually threes and sevens.
- I’m sure we could compare this to those of you who smash the :30 second button two or three times, then take out whatever it is when you’re good and goddamned ready.
- The microwave isn’t the boss of us.
- You can’t let the little battles you control out of your hands.
- It is important to keep winnable victories.
- Tons of books shout the importance of habits to our outcomes.
- Talking to Mom over coffee this morning, tai chi came up.
- Been thinking about starting that.
- Have to overcome the social anxiety.
- The noob anxiety.
- But.
- The goblin dog wakes us early every day.
- Used to outrage me, put me in a terrible mental place before the day even starts.
- Still find it annoying, but I’m trying to … get up and stay up when she wakes me up, even on occasion.
- Because that’s free time, right?
- And I dislike being mad at the dog.
- I have transitioned from being a night owl to getting in bed at pretty much the same time every evening.
- Reading to calm my brain for a bit.
- The routine established, maintained.
- While talking, I wondered if the secret to health …
- Nevermind.
- It’s not a wonder.
- Consistency is key in everything.
- Positive habits rather than negative.
- I sat there and imagined getting up early every day.
- Doing tai chi.
- Drinking my coffee.
- Then doing what has to be done.
- Could only help to have that habit.
- Could only improve my longevity.
- Or barring that, improve the quality of my Time.
- My. Time.
- Mine.
- Like these lists.
- The cat, lying next to me in a sunbeam, holds my foot with her paw.
Whose woods these are I think I know.
His house is in the village, though;
He will not see me stopping here
To watch his woods fill up with snow.My little horse must think it queer
To stop without a farmhouse near
Between the woods and frozen lake
The darkest evening of the year.He gives his harness bells a shake
To ask if there is some mistake.
The only other sound’s the sweep
Of easy wind and downy flake.The woods are lovely dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.Robert Frost, “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.”
*Jerm, thanks for the hat.
-

The Jury’s Sleepless
- In all this time, it’s the first writing from a desktop in months.
- Not because I couldn’t climb the stairs, but because I got comfortable typing from the corner of the couch with people in the room.
- Writing’s a solitary endeavor.
- Mostly I write from a desk.
- Laptop and attached monitor for that fantastic dual-screen action.
- Good ergonomic split keyboard.
- Keyboards:
- At home, I rock an X-bows Nature.
- At work … (Ugh, we’ll get to that in a moment) … I have a Microsoft Sculpt keyboard, which Microsoft doesn’t make anymore, but … someone else makes it for them?
- Prior to getting the X-Bow, the Sculpt claimed the title as “best keyboard I ever used.”
- Keys felt like a good laptop keyboard.
- The split perfect.
- I dealt with carpal tunnel early in my career and took the pain associated with that seriously.
- I only do straight keyboards when working on laptops.
- Which makes the current laptop writing trend … concerning?
- An hour is not all day at work, however.
- Anyway.
- Like the teaser teased, I awoke with the dulcet sounds of Rage Against the Machine in my head.
- They were never my favorite band.
- Took me a handful of listens just to get onboard.
- Once I did, however.
- It’s more Zack’s lyrics and delivery than their sound.
- Though I do like their sound.
- They’re in my Top 10.
- (Which I probably have in my head, but have never committed to paper or e-ink.)
- But yeah, awoke to a dog lying against my back superheating me, “Guerilla Radio” blasting through my head.
- READY TO FACE THE MOTHERFUCKING DAY.
- Rallying around my family to keep me sane.
- One of the constants about me is that I’m angry.
- Like, all the time angry.
- I don’t think of myself that way.
- I do have a lot of frustration with things and am not shy about voicing them.
- There’s an angry element to it, sure.
- Dissonance between the way I’d like things to be and the way they are.
- And don’t give me that crap about “well, make the changes.”
- I control what I can … to help manage my frustration.
- Like …
- I write to give myself a voice.
- How many people just don’t have one?
- They walk about with all the stuff boiling inside and never express it.
- Tick, tick, boom.
- Let’s get into that.
- Frustration.
- How much frustration comes from fear?
- Not all of it, sure.
- But maybe a lot of it.
- I have always been afraid.
- Like that’s my trauma default.
- Life dominated by fear, by what-ifs, and with substantially less focus on the good, what’s going right.
- Don’t fuck up in view of anyone’s expectations because the Bad will happen.
- People will walk.
- Jobs will be lost.
- Opinions of will occur.
- And you know why I’m wired that way?
- Because it’s typically been true.
- Hard to relax.
- Guard always up.
- Scenarios, mostly bad, on decision tree in my head.
- How much do you miss that way?
- Scared of opportunity.
- To even look at it, to entertain the possibilities in something other than risk.
- The specter of failure the screen saver of the brain.
- I hate it.
- I hate being afraid.
- Hate what it does.
- Has done.
- Don’t get me wrong, when the moments come, I usually step toward it and face it.
- I don’t ever do that willingly.
- I’m not as cowardly as my daily voice says.
- Maybe not at all much anymore.
- It’s tough to break thought patterns.
- Remember that as you give yourself some grace, right?
- I say that right?
- That grace shit?
- “I think I heard a shot!”
- Let’s get back to the Frustration thing.
- I talk a lot about time.
- Can’t help it.
- How modern life has wasted a lot of mine.
- It does beg the question … what would you do with your time if it truly belonged to you?
- I’d still write.
- But in addition to that …
- I’d be one of those Maker people neck deep in Raspberry Pi and 3D printing.
- Like a character from a Doctorow novel.
- (Seriously, go read Little Brother. Do it. Do it now.)
- And goddammit, I’d be playing music.
- And painting.
- Though the painting thing is going to get some practice because I’m going to attempt to do some abstract stuff for the house.
- That shit is expensive.
- Even not paying a real artist to make it.
- North of $500 for a reasonably large piece of art.
- Artists need to get paid.
- But I still can’t afford to pay them.
- So gotta make my own stuff.
- I need to go buy the paint and canvas.
- Changes, man.
- Promises made, to myself and others.
- Still listening to Rage.
- Damn, Zack has a gift for rhyme with substance.
- There’s a reason Rage resonates with me, is what I’ve taken 800 words to explain today.
- That, btw, is what most people do.
- They identify artists expressing what they can’t.
- Maybe that’s a life goal for me.
- To be someone’s expression.
- To those tired of being victims of the in-house drive-by.
- Goddamn, Rage was ahead of their time.
- “Am I standing in line?”
- See you tomorrow.
-

Face Up, Make Your Stand
- Sorry for the unexcepted interruption.
- Moose out front should’ve told ya.
- Shit just happens sometimes.
- Immune systems get interrupted.
- Compromised.
- Mine’s on strike, apparently.
- Which resulted in a two-day stay at Ches St. Francis South.
- And here I thought we’d be five days into the Reclamation Project.
- Alas.
- Two days on, two days off.
- Maybe three off.
- Dammit all.
- During this health odyssey, I’ve experienced exhaustion so deep I could not do anything.
- Most the time, even feeling awful, I get up and do what I have to do.
- I’ve learned there’s another level of fatigue.
- The kind where you lay in bed and stare at the wall and do nothing.
- You know how I am with boredom.
- These few times in hospital rooms in the aftermath of something, I have not read, not watched television, not listened to music.
- Just laid there, drifting in and out.
- Not talking.
- Nothing.
- And you can’t even remember what you thought about when you’re through it
- Or I can’t.
- Health Time Theft.
- Wasted days.
- Wasted time.
- Wasted Years!!!!
- And yet, it’s the price of continued life.
- If your body isn’t in tune, you’re shortening your timeline.
- And even then, doing everything right doesn’t mean you’ll avoid shenanigans.
- It’s important to remember what you can and can’t do in these situations.
- What you do and do not control.
- There’s no capitulation.
- No surrender.
- Do or die.
- (Sometimes literally.)
- It wasn’t the entire time I was in the hospital for the brain stuff, mind you, just that first couple of days.
- Then came The Manifesto.
- Anyway.
- Been the longest gap since we started the public List.
- Was not intentional.
- This is my first time even holding a laptop in three days.
- (Let me get my notebook. I had some notes over the weekend.)
- Oh, right.
- Mom’s staying with us because she’s had her hip replaced.
- She’d mentioned before her favorite Star Wars movie is Rogue One.
- Caught me off guard, really.
- But honestly, I get it.
- It’s probably my favorite, too.
- So Saturday noonish, I threw it on.
- Told her she needed to watch Andor.
- We had a cool conversation about “most watched” movies.
- Hers are Star Wars flicks, the Harry Potter movies, The Lord of the Rings … and I forget.
- There were others.
- I’ve mentioned it before, but Mom’s a nerd, too, apparently.
- I would not have guessed it from my youth, except …
- She took me to see Empire Strikes Back in the theatre.
- And Raiders of the Lost Ark.
- And out early on the last day of school to see Return of the Jedi.
- (Yes, I know I’m leaving words out of those titles. Idgaf.)
- We take her with us to Marvel flicks.
- She, the kid, and one of the kid’s friends went to see Thunderbolts* without us (because I couldn’t go, obviously).
- She’s recently been reading some sort of epic post-apocalyptic series I’d never heard of (pretty sure she found it on Kindle Unlimited).
- I know my kid is a nerd, but I’ve used my influence for that outcome.
- I’d never considered it might be in our DNA.
- Though she took me to movies, we never talked books or anything.
- It could all be I didn’t pay attention.
- Because now that I think about it, I know she loved Ladyhawke and Princess Bride.
- (Not starting now. There’ll be many missing Thes today.)
- And now we have a grammar question.
- The only time, pretty much, you use apostrophes to make something plural is if it’s a letter.
- Like the A’s.
- This error stands as one of my most hated grammar mistakes, because it’s either willful disregard or ignorance, but if you can make a sentence at all, it leans toward the former.
- And I’ll be goddammed if I endure the language acceptance of something because people are lazy.
- Get off my blank white pages with that nonsense!
- So.
- How to make The plural.
- Just add the S?
- Add the apostrophe and S?
- It does not reconcile that my anti-rule following nature follows most the grammar rules.
- I had multiple instructors in college throw out the “you must know the rules before you can break them” cliché.
- (Adage?)
- Clichadage!
- Wachow!
- Fuck you I won’t do what you tell me.
- Sigh.
- Ain’t none of us consistent.
- Especially not English.
- I never dug into why Rage broke up … until today.
- And it’s mostly speculation still, which I admire.
- The leading theory: creative differences.
- Zack wanted to stay more political.
- And is a perfectionist.
- Like, did you know … he worked on an album with Trent Reznor, but never released any of the music because “it was not right?”
- Tom and the rest of the band had no problem with increased commercialization.
- And this is why I don’t really follow artists as people.
- Like, I don’t want to hear Hetfield’s opinion about much of anything.
- Don’t ruin things for us, bro.
- I’ve forgiven you for St. Anger.
- Shhh. Don’t mess it up now.
- Same with Bruce from Iron Maiden.
- I actually did read some opinions from that guy.
- I’ll stick to the music, thanks.
- Dude’s got a bit of a superiority complex.
- To be fair, I might too if I were in a pretty big band for more than four decades, a trained pilot, a skilled fencer (like could’ve done the Olympics I heard) and other things.
- Maybe it’s just the Britishness?
- I dunno if he’s from a landed family or anything like that.
- Okay, gonna stop.
- Getting the pump primed.
- …
- I don’t even know what day it is.
- F.
- Have a whatever.
-

Until It Types …
- Yesterday kept me from typing.
- Today, if I don’t do it right now, will do that same.
- A couple of doc appts.
- A wake.
- Driving practice.
- Tumbling from one thing to the next.
- While the world falls apart.
- Could just repeat the Han Solo dialogue from the prison block in Star Wars.
- (Sorry, I’m not calling it “A New Hope.”)
- I did have a list in a notebook for yesterday’s.
- One of the things on it, “Donette Bag,” I don’t even remember why I …
- Waitaminute.
- Shrinkflation strikes again.
- The little strip of tabs you used to close the bag?
- Gone.
- Staleness .
- At least the donettes are the same size, right?
- RIGHT?
- Maybe that’s why I can actually bite them again …
- Hmmm.
- Before we get into today’s topic (yes, I have a topic, though I’m not feeling it as much now as I did yesterday when I scribbled the note …), let’s talk about judgment.
- There is no fucking E in the middle of judgment.
- Dammit all.
- Is it ironic, do you think, that I’m being judgy about judgment?
- There used to be a forum, 20 years ago, called The Grammar Nazis.
- And people on there would cut and paste bad grammar examples and destroy it like the high-browed jerks they were.
- Made me laugh all the time.
- Don’t know if it still exists.
- Not going to look for it.
- They probably had to change the name, if it’s still around.
- I get twitchy reading all the memes and reels and whatnot with grammar and spelling errors.
- Typos happen, sure.
- I have them all the time in here.
- I think.
- But this is a lot of words.
- I meme’s got like, what, 20?
- You don’t notice when you mess that up?
- Don’t care?
- Don’t know the difference?
- It does make filtering content easier.
- It’s weird, right, because that same approach to content is what makes AI attractive.
- You’ve got a lot of artists and creatives in different fields scared because people who do not have the skills are creating “art.”
- Writing a prompt makes you an “artist” these days.
- There’ll be some truth to that.
- Could be a situation where people who did not have access to the training and education have found a tool that allows them to finally express themselves.
- Definitely a little bit of that.
- Happened in music, too.
- I used to have this … argument … all the time about preference vs. quality.
- For instance (and I’ll use things I like as examples so as not to make anyone feel crappy) …
- I’ll go with the Mission: Impossible flicks.
- Are they hallmarks of cinema, destined to be taught in filmmaking classes (that you can get on Udemy before they’re eradicated by corporate use of AI)?
- Oh, hell no.
- But I like them anyway.
- Liking them doesn’t make them “good.”
- It’s still okay to like them, however.
- Which does, however, get us to the heart of the problem.
- If you don’t know the difference between quality and not, does it make any difference?
- If you don’t care …
- AI makes the next blockbuster movie.
- Everyone goes to see it.
- It makes $500 million.
- Queue the chain of AI-generated movies.
- Screenwriters end up working … at Walgreen’s (where, let’s face it, they already do).
- The human voice dies.
- /end scene.
- “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.”
- Seems like the American cautionary tale at the moment.
- ‘Cept swap out “scientists” for “billionaires” or “politicians.”
- You can see the things I struggle with in these lists, my worries and anxieties, whether I try to avoid discussing them or not.
- Sigh.
- Remember the book merry-go-round I was on?
- Ended up reading the Jack Reacher book they’re using for Season 4.
- This is your brain on easy prose.
- Maybe I should’ve used books instead of movies up there.
- But then … no one reads anymore.
- …
- Truth: the bullet lists exist as part of my Don Quixote campaign to get people reading again.
- If you give people good, compelling content, they’ll drop those phones and read, man.
- (Tell me the movie I just stole and adapted that from …)
- (I can hear his voice.)
- I’m in marketing.
- I know this works, honestly.
- I have almost 30 years of experience in it.
- Authentic content of any kind with a good voice kicks the crap out of rote nonsense every time.
- Stand out or be lost.
- Do whatever you can to combat the Algorithm.
- That’s my new life Antagonist.
- The Algorithm.
- Followed by whatever proper names they give AI as it becomes sentient.
- Damn you, Gibson.
- Lists like this come from a lack of music.
- Brought to you by … Tinnitis! Conversation! Interruptions!
- This is why, for me personally, wfh is better than being in the office.
- Interruptions kill creativity.
- But also, inherent to creativity is time to stare into the void and drool.
- If you don’t have time to NOT do the thing, you’ll just get stuff that checks the boxes.
- That “subject” I mentioned earlier?
- Was going to write about Fear.
- One of those lists with some gravitas.
- Instead we get this.
- I should be ashamed of myselves.
- I bought a three-pack of those little Moleskine notebooks.
- Field Notes work, too, but Moleskine is better paper.
- So I can carry it around in my pocket for when inspiration strikes.
- Doing so makes me feel guilty I’m not journaling properly.
- I should’ve been Catholic for the amount of self-imposed guilt I tote around.
- You know, when they do a craniotomy, a bunch of nerves get cut.
- Everything around my temple has zero feeling.
- And I get tingling around my eye, to the tip of my nose, in my cheek, across my forehead.
- Disconcerting.
- Yeah, maybe I’m not here to cheer you up.
- The recent release of Metallica’s remastered “Load” has a ton of instrumental demos of the songs.
- There’s one of “Until it Sleeps” bouncing around in my head.
- It’s good stuff.
- There.
- Music.
- Enjoy your holiday weekend eve.
- Question of the day: What’s your favorite piece of media you know is crap, but like it anyway?
-

Now We’re Playing with Portugals
- “Retire 17.5 years early by moving to Portugal!”
- That ad popped up in Instagram first thing this morning.
- Ah, yes please?
- No, I don’t speak Portuguese, but … I can learn enough to buy groceries, order from a menu, and get bus and train tickets.
- Plus, five years and you can become an EU citizen!
- Having lived in Europe … Yes, I would move there and never come back.
- The terms of my current indenturedship do not allow for such hopes, but …
- Yes, yes I would.
- Steph and I trade house listings from Norway and Denmark.
- You can get a place for less than $200k.
- Sure, you’re living in the artic north, and close to those desperate Russians, but … it’s affordable and the scenery is a helluva lot better than Oklahoma.
- The thing I keep stressing to my daughter … do your best to not go into debt, because debt keeps you from freedom.
- Debt and fear of financial insecurity has kept me from acting on many things I’d like to have done.
- Anyway, what’s up.
- Happy Tuesday.
- Yesterday, saw some random article telling me NOT to post anything personal on Facebook or social media.
- Duh.
- Those darn hackers!
- Again, I have f-all for them to take, but … what’s the point of social media if you can’t be, you know, social on it.
- You do not connect with people if you’re not sharing.
- They’re going to have to call social media something else.
- Or at least all this shit that’s been monetized.
- We’re going to have to boot up old versions of social and get back to its roots.
- “They” have made it hard.
- I saw this Instagram video, a guy (bupc_boopsy) I’ve seen before who posts GenX stuff.
- He talked about posting on social like I do, how we do it, and more importantly, why.
- “Social media is the equivalent of that yard with all the bikes parked on it.”
- “We were the background noise of society.”
- “There are so many GenXers on social media because it’s the first time in our lives anyone has asked us what we think.”
- “We’re not here to be recognized, to be influencers, we’re just here to be seen, to shout into the void and to finally hear somebody yell back, ‘Dude. Same.’”
- The reel resonated.
- (I’ll put the link in the comments.)
- Dude is doing what I’m trying to do, only I don’t like to be on camera.
- The type-written word or nothing.
- But I can build community, by god.
- Which is odd coming from an introvert.
- I’m kind of an extroverted introvert.
- Depends on who’s around.
- At some point, I’ll flip the audience switch from Friends Only to … everyone.
- Maybe.
- I’m not sure I want to add the non-filtered dumbfucks to the comment section.
- (Same on the Discord.)
- So yeah.
- Not the Monday rant.
- I think you should expect ranting on Mondays.
- Sorta my schtick.
- That’s my crazy.
- After I finished yesterday’s list, got all that out of my system, I started a new Word doc with notes.
- I’m writing from that.
- Next up, books.
- After watching the show, I threw a couple of those Dept. Q books on my Kindle.
- 2025: the year of book sampling.
- Because I’m having trouble sticking.
- Again, it’s me, probably, not the books.
- I’ve started three books in three days.
- “Navola,” Paolo Bacigalupi
- “Nettle & Bone,” T. Kingfisher (mentioned yesterday)
- “Modern Divination,” Isa Agajanian
- Other than the first one, those other two were on the TBR list.
- “Navola” started pretty good.
- Might stick with it.
- My reading reflects my mood: restless.
- The “Project Hail Mary” trailer looked good.
- Book accurate.
- And it was a fun book.
- Much closer to “The Martian” than “Artemis” was.
- Dude has a simple writing style, but it’s jam-packed with well researched knowledge.
- Simple is good, and I enjoy his stuff.
- Off the cuff, I feel like I read more sci-fi than fantasy.
- I’m not sure it’s true.
- Probably closer to even.
- Goes in cycles.
- Like last year, I read all that Gibson and Doctorow stuff.
- Which reminds me …
- Now is a super good time to read “Little Brother” if you haven’t.
- That trilogy is good stuff, and current events relevant.
- But yeah, sci-fi is good.
- I wish I wrote it.
- During the pandemic, I started a short about AIs (not A1s) going for joy rides in implanted humans.
- Need to finish that.
- It’s more of a novella than a short, but definitely not a book.
- Gotta get the book out of the way so I can work on some other stuff.
- Stay on target.
- Tons of good sci-fi to read.
- Gibson.
- Doctorow.
- Scalzi (“Old Man’s War”).
- Simmons (“Hyperion”).
- The annual reread of “Dune.”
- The semi-annual reread of “Ender’s Game.”
- Those “Murderbot” novels are a good time, though overpriced.
- (There’s a good story about those books saving the life of the author …)
- And on and on.
- Youtube fed me an electronic artist, Caught In Joy, yesterday after I watched that trailer.
- Digging it so far.
- Retro-atmospheric electronica.
- I started to go look him up because of the AI thing, but seems to be legit because I was not fed it by spotify …
- Ugh.
- We’re living in a Gibsonian dystopia.
- Yay?
- Okay, I’m out.
- Gotta head to the hospital … to get the PICC removed!
- Wooooooooo