10 Ways to Make Yourself Feel Stupid

Well, the novel is in the hands of the lovely sister once more, and I do believe it’s for the last time.

While it’s out, I found a really quick and simple way to make money online. Ah, but there’s a catch…

There’s this site called Listverse, see, and they’ll pay you a hundred bucks to provide a list of, well, really, on any subject you choose. You make a list, write a paragraph or two about each item, list your sources, and submit it. They like the list and pump a hundred bucks into your PayPal account. Done deal.

Come on. You’re a writer. You know how this goes. It’s like shooting candy from a barrel, or something like that. Come on. Make a list, right now, of ten things you know about that would be interesting to somebody…

I came up with one topic. And I got, like, seven items. How about this? Ten Common Phrases that have Nautical Origins…

Well, let’s see, there’s “three square meals a day”, and “there’s keep your powder dry”, although that one’s not so common. Howzabout “you’ll have the devil to pay for this.” That’s a good one, except nobody ever says it.

Hmph.

I’m a smart guy. I really am. I don’t have a PhD or anything, but I’ve been to the doctor’s office. And I played Elwood P. Dowd in Harvey at the Santa Paula Theater Center with a really good actor who played a doctor. That should count… Doctor by extraction or something. Anyway, I’m not a total dope.

At least I didn’t think so.

But I cannot come up with a list of ten interesting things to save my life.

Ten Euphemisms for I Feel Like a Dummy.

Hey! I got one!

Done Once More

I have rewritten the rewrite of this rewritten novel so many times, I believe I may never need to write a new book again. I shall just rewrite the rewritten rewrite!

You’re a writer. You know how it goes. There comes that moment, when, way down there in your writerly guts, you know there is nothing more to say.

Here’s a little passage from the book:

“There is nothing more to be said,” the princess stated coldly.

Auric stared at the princess, his mouth hanging open in surprise, his fists working in frustration, his eyes meeting her cold, determined, green-eyed stare in disbelief and anger. 

“Nothing more to say,” she said firmly.

“No, I imagine that there is not,” Auric replied haughtily. “When you change your mind, I am quite certain that you know where you may find me.”

It’s done, my writer friend. The rewrite of the rewritten rewrite of my current novel. D-O-N-E, finito.

And this done is done. You know, the one that’s finished as in there is no more to write. No words to say. It’s all out. We laugh, we cry, but we finish.

And, well, there it is.

Now it’s off to my readers, as a thanks-and-see-how-your-input-matters sort of a deal, and then off in search of an agent.

Oh, sit down, I must, for surely this is exciting, isn’t it?

Truly?

Express to Geezerville

So, like you, like every writer, like anyone and everyone who spends a great deal of time at a keyboard, I have eventually found myself stuck in the Carpal Tunnel.

My neurons, upset about the traffic, actually switched lanes and tried to take the Guyon Tunnel across town instead. No good. Blocked. Probably holiday traffic. So, I had to get them fixed.

One of the great mysteries of life is why stuff that is so easy to do is so very hard to undo. Perhaps the Pyramids were a vast mistake, which is why they’re still here.

Anyways, out from under the knife, one more day before the dressings come off, my puppy firmly wedged in my lap and absoLUTELY determined NOT to let me use the voice keyboard on my fold-phone, my mind reels back to things the nurses said to me…

“Don’t worry, sweetie”

“Oh, you’re a funny one”

“Put on your clothes now, cutie…”

Wait a minute.

These are not the words nurses say to virile men of a certain age. Those are not terms of respect.

We use those terms on GRANDMA!!!

OMG! They see me as a GEEZER!

They thought I was a feeble old man!

Sweetie? Dearie?

Pat your hand while you sit in the park and watch the birdies! Feed you milk-toast from a TV tray while watching Matlock! Shoes? Don’t you mean slippers?

How did this happen? How did I slip from cool video producer to vintage cracker-sucker in just one day? Successful writer and author to elderly gent in his jammies in just an hour? Cool guy goes under the knife, wrinkly old geezer comes out. Whaaaaat?

What kind of hospital is this?

I wasn’t scared of the surgery, but I’m sure as hell not getting anything else fixed! Not now that I understand the side effects! The risks are just too great!

Sweetie, indeed…

A Fantastic Twist

Oh, the Saga of Me continues… wait, don’t sagas usually have a dramatic grand finale? Uh oh…

So, in the meanwhile that I’ve been re-working the half-maligned-yet-quite-ballyhhoed rewrite of a previously published novel, I happened to mention to my OWN lovely sister that I was rewriting a book.

My sister the psychologist! I’d written much of Droppington Place with her in mind! How did I not send her a copy?

She asked to read all three novels (Sawdust Man, Droppington Place, and Marigold’s End), and I apologetically sent them along.

What a knockhead was I to have excluded her from my reader’s list in the first place. But now all was fixed.

She picked out precisely the themes I’d intended in the first two novels, but get this… Ready?

Okay, a touch of backstory:

Droppington Place is the story of a twelve-year-old kid who gets trapped inside a magical realm made entirely of paper, overseen by a silly-yet-kinda-maniacal Elizabethan playwright overlord made of sawdust. What? It could happen.

Sawdust Man makes the playwright a sympathetic lead character in a bittersweet love story that takes a thousand years to tell. Same guy, different story.

So, here’s the really cool twist:

My sister the psychologist saw that Sawdust Man was actually a SEQUEL to Dropington Place!

Holy cats! Do you see what this means? My sawdust playwright just might be a recurring figure in any number of magical realism stories!

Why had I not seen this before? Many, many thanks are owed to you, dear writer friend, for riding with me on this crazy adventure, and certainly to my lovely sister the psychologist for her unflinching support and her crazy, zany, utterly brilliant idea!

It’s the Founding of an Empire!

But Wait, There’s More…

You know that saying “the hurrieder I go the behinder I get?” Howzabout “the more I think about it, the confusider I get…”

As you’ll recall from the Saga of Me, I’d been waiting and waiting for first my lovely wife, and then her lovely sister, and then, well, ANYONE, to roll out some valid feedback I could use on the novel I’ve just rewritten.

Well, after much haranging and ballyhooing on my part, my lovely wife, who had already begun reading it without my haranging, finished it. Despite her quite justifiable frustration with the author, she felt the book made it all the way to page 70 without falling apart.

For one of my books, that’s epic.

Upon our return from the recent drive-the-kid-to-Oregon trip, what waits upon our doorstep but notes from the lovely sister-in-law.

She read it no less than 4 (spelled f-o-u-r is you skeptical), yes, four times. Four!

She really liked it! Pointed out some themes and metaphors that I have to nod and smile knowingly to rather than say what I actually thought, which is “I did?”

Her notes are concise and well organized, and just plain breathtaking.

She liked the book.

She liked the book enough to actually want to read the upcoming final rewrite.

Over the moon. Gobsmacked. Thunderstruck. That’s me.

With Lovely Sister’s tempering of the notes given by Lovely Wife, I believe I now see a way forward that will make everyone  happy, and that will produce a good and marketable novel we can all enjoy.

Four times!

Over the moon!

Writing the Wrong Story

So, when I lived in Sacramento, I had to move from my apartment because the guy upstairs would be pounding on the floor at, like, 2:00 in the morning, totally interrupting my trombone practice… Ba-dump-bump

My wife, puppy, and I just returned to southern California from having helped our youngest daughter move in for her fourth year of university in central Oregon.

My lovely wife and I had a long and lovely chat about a number of things, including the structure of the book.

Say, when you were a kid, do you remember telling your parents what you wanted to be when you grew up? Ballerina, heart surgeon, astronaut, CPA…

When I got out of school, my dad asked me what I was going to do.

School didn’t end well for me. I was too much of a knucklehead to link the coursework I was taking in radio and television with getting a job. Internships? You mean actually work during the summer? No thank you, buddy. Not for me!

Idiot.

So, when I got out of college, I could have, and often was, correctly and completely considered to be Count Clueless.

My dad asked me what I wanted to do, and I said, “you know, I think I’d like to get into acting.”

My mom said “That’s my boy!” and offered a firm handshake and a round of applause.

My dad said “Acting. Huh. You should get a day job, and once you have a day job, don’t quit your day job.”

Anyway, in downtown Salem, Oregon, at the corner of Liberty and State on Saturday evening, my daughter, lovely wife, puppy, and I sat down on the sidewalk patio of a very pleasant little place.

We brought the puppy along on this extended road trip because we have three dogs. The other guys are so old and doddery that the puppy, being 75% chow hound, would gobble down all of the food we left out before they even knew we’d left.

Anyway, across the street from us on this busy downtown street corner on a warm and sultry Saturday night, cooled by the gentle breeze wafting in off the Willamette River, and where you have to speak loudly because yahoos in their jacked-up pickup trucks roar down State Street trying to impress girls, or guys, but ultimately only themselves, stood this maybe 14 year-old girl.

She quietly switched on her battery-powered amplified and plugged in a pale-blue electric guitar that was nearly as tall as she, set a microphone in her portable mike stand, and proceeded to belt out her version of a seemingly endless set of tunes.

The glorious chords from her guitar echoed up and down the canyon of building fronts and off the sides of the passing pickup trucks and deep down inside our eardrums with equal indifference. And then she began to sing…

“Buuuuuuusted flat in Baton…………… Rouge, as ragged……….as……….my jeans,” she worked her own stylized way through Janis Joplin’s Me and Bobby McGee (or, as Martin Mull called it, You and Bobby McGoo), in a brave contralto that was full of oomph and intensity but totally off key, and with a timing that would challenge even the most avant garde jazz musician.

She. Was. Awful. And she had a huuuuuuge repertoire of songs, some current, some classics, some her own, that were nearly indistinguishable from one another.

Seated about ten feet away, in one of those little beach kind of folding chairs that are super low to the ground but have a nice little canvas backrest, sat what we finally figured out had to be her mom, watching this 14-year-old girl’s performance intently and applauding after every dragged out, whiny tune.

The restaurant’s service was slow, and the wall o’ sound was agonizing, but there was something kinda cool about it.

This kid told her parents “I don’t want to be an astronaut or a CPA. I wanna be a blues singer.”

Instead of Dad patently saying “you’ll make better tips as a waitress,” or maybe he did, Mom said “let’s try it!”

Because you think something you created is pretty good is not reason enough to put it on the street corner to sell. This is my fear about my work. Well, maybe benignly selling it is okay, but trying it out on the rest of the world without their permission might be a stretch.

Still, though, her parents supported her in fulfilling her dream. Good luck with that.

Anyway, that’s not the point of this post, not by a long shot.

My wife, who has forgiven me and allowed me out of the dog house (much to the relief of the dogs), told me a number of amazingly helpful things about the book, and about my writing itself.

For example, she pointed out that this friendly, folksy style in which I write was, well, friendly and folksy, and had an appeal that I should be exploiting by writing articles in. It. I think I got lost in the sub-clauses, there. All those commas…

To the book, which is far and away the best thing I’ve written, she said it’s a great book until about page 70 (of 135), at which it loses its thread a little and becomes more like a movie script than a novel.

And, she said, you’re telling the wrong story.

See, the book is about a grimoire, a book of magical spells, which is created by a 10th century prince for the purpose of wooing a 10th century princess. Sadly, he dies before he can give it to her, but his spirit takes up residence inside the grimoire. It takes a thousand years, but the prince, still trapped inside the book, maneuvers and manipulates 5 men, (a sawdust manikin, a lovesick seventeen-year high-school junior, and three sorcerers desperately seeking to own the book), into creating a sawdust manikin of the princess, so that he can profess his love to her. It’s a tricky and adventurous path, but he eventually succeeds. Sadly, things go awry once the job is done.

That sounds fun, doesn’t it? Yeah! It’s just not the story I wrote.

My story is about the sawdust manikin and the high-schooler trying to outwit and escape the three sorcerers. When the five ultimately do meet, the prince, hidden in the book (surprise, surprise), connives them into creating a sawdust the manikin princess. Just in writing it down, it seems kind of disjointed.

You’re a writer. You can see the difference, yes? I couldn’t when I was writing it. I had teased around the idea of having the prince recreate the princess for a long time, and ultimately decided to bite the bull by the tail and put it in.

And that, my friend, that turned out to be the point of the story.

My wife said that this was the good story I should write.

So, here I sit, like that kid boldly and badly belting out blues tunes to an indifferent world, actively telling the wrong tale.

Maybe I shouldna fired my wife as my editor…

The Chase Renewed

You’re a writer – you know how it is. Writing is the best thing in the world! New ideas, new chapters, maybe new characters! It’s like taking that Shelby Cobra onto the Pacific Coast Highway with the top down… unless it’s on blocks in the driveway.

So, the Saga of Me continues. The lovely wife and editor did in fact read the book. Got all the way through with some insightful notes and suggestions. More suggestions followed after page 51, which is the point at which I harangued about how long it was taking.

But the notes are good and very helpful. Another month under the hood and the thing’ll be ready to submit for real. For real.

Under the hood, which is fortunate, for I find myself rather living in the garage. You know, temporarily. It’ll blow over. It’s all good. Everything’s fine. And I seem to find myself with a lot of time to myself here at home.

Ups and downs. Rises and falls. That’s the way it works, right? I’ve been terribly blessed so far. Sometimes storms brew up, right? Even the noblest ship on the sea can expect a right blow once in awhile, eh?

I’m not really living in the garage. But never have I felt such coldness in a summer.

The thing is, the thing is this: you ARE a writer, and you know what joy there is in tapping out exactly the right words. You know that rush and sense of oneness as you make the literary pieces fit in place.

That’s the thing, isn’t it? But writing is such a solitary business.

And, the real pain of it is that those who don’t write really don’t understand, do they?

Well, I’ve got the book back and much to do to get it ready to submit, so I’ll be rejoining the hunt, the race, the chase… there’s a correct word, I’m sure.

From the garage.

From the Land of No Brains

I’ve done some stupid things in my time – once I was offered a job at Jet Propulsion Laboratories. JPL! But I turned it down. No brains…

So if you know the Saga of Me, you know that I’ve been waiting and waiting and waiting for my lovely wife to read my book and give me some feedback. Waiting and waiting.

I got it in my head last week – Thursday morning at 2:34, to be exact – that I can wait no more.

This book is my dream – it’s The One. I know it instinctively.

And I just can’t toil away in the day-t0-day endlessly waiting for my darling editor to get around to helping me make it come true.

So I fired her.

Read it if you want, I’m moving on .

She counters with “my goal was to finish it this weekend.”

Ah.

Oh.

Oops.

No brains.

Just Shoot Me

Say goodnight, Dick. It’s over. The ship has sailed, the fat lady has sung, etc, etc. I’m out.

Here’s why: The Saga of Me, Chapter 918: The missus, love-of-my-life, brilliant editor, dozed off on page 51 of her first read of my 135-page novel. Dozed off. Zzzzzzzzz…

Okay, that’s it: just shoot me. I just can’t handle this pace. I’m starting to crack. I’m not a patient guy in the first place…

My boss significantly over-uses the phrase “death of a thousand cuts.” Like says it four or five time every day. I feel ya, man!

To fill the time whilst waitin’, I’ve been working on building a database of the historical aircraft in museums here in California. I just wrapped up recording the huuuge collection at the Planes of Fame museum in Chino, finishing with record number 268. That’s a bunch of airplanes so far.

The next museum, if one records them by their home city as I’m doing, appears to be right across the street, and has 190 planes. A HUNDRED AND NINETY?!? That’s like all the work I’ve done so far, and it’s just on one museum!

Just shoot me!

And this is only the data-entry portion of this project. In the next phase, I’ve promised to visit each museum.

How long is THAT going to take? The rest of my life? And I don’t have that much time left!

All seriousness aside, I’m just goofing around. Things take the time that they take, right? I mean, we’re busy folk, she and I. I get it. I get it. I can handle it. I can. Right?

But, I mean, really? The book can’t be that dull…

OMGeezies!!!

The impossible has happened, and I don’t want to jinx it, but, hey, right?

The girl of my dreams. The very love of my life. She’s on Page 29 – yes, 29! of my 135-page manuscript.

What do you mean that sounds short? You’re short!

Anyway, the point is… SHE’S READING IT!!!

And she’s lika-likin’ it!

You’re a writer, you know this feeling. It’s like pins and needles and empty-headed confidence and bravado and you want to go hide in the closet until it’s over.

The thing is, well, it’s been in the “reading phase” for almost two weeks. So that hiding in the closet thing is right out.

But, hey! She’s reading it, and I am soooooooo happy! I can hardly wait to see what she thinks of the chapter that starts on page 29.

I once worked with a wonderful lady, from the lovely town of Oxnard, who used to say “OMGeezies,” when she thought something worthy. Kind of violates the acronym, kinda.

Here’s a piece of useless trivia: the first time OMG was used? 1917! An English admiral wrote it in a letter to Winston Churchill, First Sea Lord at the time. And, to make sure it was understood, the admiral wrote “(Oh My God)” after it.

Watch this space… more to come!

OMGeezies!!!