Category: blog

Blog Entries

  • #WhyIWrite

    Happy National Day on Writing. Only remembered this morning that today was the day.  I’m going to put it into my calendar so I don’t forget again.  People on Twitter have been responding to the hashtag #WhyIWrite, so obviously there have been some real gems floating about as well as some of the usual platitudes about writing.

    I was working on something I rushed to finish so I could run outta the office, get to the library, and think about it before I wasted the rest of the day away letting my mind flitter back to technical things, baseball scores, and whatever’s on the DVR that needs to be watched.

    So why do I write?  I used to have grand notions of changing the world, fighting and righting all the injustice once and for all, and telling stories that one day, people would read by the campfire and their bedroom night lights.  Along the way, I discovered I wasn’t up for changing the world, yet; I had to change myself first, or at least at the same time.  And I discovered that I loved theatre and drama as much as I loved straight ahead literature, and if people read plays as much in the future as they do now, I might not be read then as much as I’d hoped.

    I also discovered that my goals didn’t have to be so lofty for me to do something important or valuable.

    #

    I used to hate writing.  Reading, too.  My sister Charlene recently told me a story about when I was five or so.  My younger sister Kellee and I had gone to visit her and my sister Robin, my father, and his fiancee, in California.  When my father brought us home from the airport, Charlene asked me what I liked doing and I told her, “read.”  She told me she thought, “I gotta loosen this kid up.”  I was pretty wound tightly on reading and writing then.  My mother had drilled and drilled and drilled me to the point where all I did most of the time was read.  She’d read with me and taught me how to read, but after I got really going, I did all the reading.

    I read the Baltimore Sun and the Evening Sun, to my mom, often.  I had a set of Childcraft Encyclopedias that I pored over and read frequently.  My favorite book was the one on physical sciences (my least favorite was the gold one, which, if my memory serves me correctly, was on animals.  I thought it was insulting that people would always ask me about which animals I liked, just because I was a kid.).  I wore out the spine on the fat, yellow Childcraft dictionary, too.
    In kindergarten, I loved this little book called Freight Train.  It was mostly pictures of the types of rail cars and few words, so after a while, the teachers didn’t want me reading it.  I hid it on a random shelf in the rear of the library, so whenever we were brought down to the library, I could find it and read it again and again.  It was a small diversion from the heavier stuff I’d be reading when I got home.

    I didn’t read any of the kids stuff.  Didn’t like it.  Even now, people talk about all the fun kids things they liked reading: Hardy Boys Mysteries?  Nope.  Nancy Drew?  Nope.  Judy Blume?  Nope.  I don’t remember how, but at school, they got me to read It and A Stitch in Time.  I cheated when reading A Stitch in Time.  I skipped a bunch of pages.  I got the gist of the story and my explanation of it seemed to satisfy the folks who had made me read it.  To the extent that I could bullshit my way through all the reading we had to do, I would.  I did the barest minimum I could get away with (which wasn’t that much, given how my mother was).  I tried, though.

    #

    This same story of my being assigned reading and my mother having to take drastic measures to get me to do it, carried on all the way to middle school.  I’d do the readings, but I hated, HATED them.  I still read the newspaper, always the sports section, but I even started doing that less.  I was reading my encyclopedas less, too.  I had indeed been seduced by the tube, but I was probably just burned out on reading.  With the exception of the sports section, I seemed to always be reading something I didn’t care to be.  This wasn’t fun, it was a chore.

    I was trying to find out my thing.

    #

    My 6th grade English teacher, Ms. Baumgartner, was vexed.

    She knew I was a good reader but couldn’t figure out why I just wouldn’t just do it.  Things weren’t in my favor, though, as I wasn’t doing too well.  I eventually felt safe enough to say out loud the truth I’d never felt confident enough to say: I really hated everything the school made us read.  Never liked any of it, ever, and given how stubborn I was, it took my mother almost yelling, screaming, and threatening me to get me into these books.

    Ms. Baumgartner asked me what I really liked, loved, and would read about.

    I told her baseball.

    Baseball was then, as it still is, my favorite sport.  I loved watching it.  I loved playing it.  I wanted to be a baseball player when I grew up.  My love of baseball helped me get through 5th grade (another story) and in some ways then, changed my life and would change it even more (even though I didn’t know it then).

    As much as I told her baseball because it was a real passion, I was being a smart ass.  I thought there’s no way she’ll ever let me read a book on baseball for class.

    We went to the library and walked around until she found a book on baseball that would be suitable for me.

    World Series Memories.

    The drill was the same: I was to read this book and report back on what I’d read.  It was a good book.  I read it and even did the report.  Eventually.  I even didn’t mind it.  I even seek out more books on baseball to read (I found a few books on basketball, but I said no thanks, not the same thing), but what I’d discover later wasn’t just that I enjoyed books on baseball.  I didn’t care for those kids books because I really loved reading nonfiction.  Most of the books we’d been reading were some genre of fiction.

    #

    Back in 5th grade, one day, I’d missed a homework assignment.  How I got home the night before and back out of the house without finishing this assignment, I’ll never know.  Yet, there I was, sitting in class, without having written my essay.  And despite the fact that Mr. Marchetti was standing over me, ignoring the rest of the class for a couple of moments, asking where it was, and after getting my less-than-satisfactory answer, assigning me to do the essay over, right there, in class, I was not having it.

    I’d hated writing.  The majority of the writing we did, that I remember, was book reports, responsive writing, zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.  I hated it.  HATED IT.  Read this book, tell the teacher back what it said.  Why, I’d wonder when I was much younger, did I have to read the book and spit it right back out to the teacher?  I even thought once to tell a teacher that the whole enterprise was stupid, that they knew what the book said, and that my telling them what it said didn’t prove anything.  Especially once they taught us how to properly quote.  They told us to quote but not only quote, not only repeat the book back.  If I’m reporting the book back to them, wasn’t I just repeating it back to them anyway?  And why do I care what this person said in some obscure novel a few hundred years ago?  Why does this matter?

    We didn’t do much other writing.  We read poems, but we didn’t dare write them.  Poems were for reading and analyzing and therefore, hating.  Which I didn’t, however.  This was different.  I started writing my own poems at home.  Bad poems that a 10 year old might write.  But I liked it.

    But what I didn’t like was essays.  And Mr. Marchetti was standing over me, demanding an essay.
    I don’t even remember what we were supposed to write about.  Mostly because I wasn’t paying attention, but Mr. Marchetti gave me the option of writing what I wanted to write.  And that still wasn’t good enough.  I didn’t know what I wanted to write about.  I didn’t actually care.  I didn’t want to do it and to hell with it.  Plus, I’d forgotten the stupid essay format (which really was and is still, stupid) that we’d learned and really gone over in 4th grade (another story).

    So I took the paper he gave me and on the top line, instead of writing essay, I wrote “SA.”  On the lines below, I probably wrote about how much I didn’t want to do it and how much I hated it.

    That went over as well as one might expect.

    #

    I kept on scribbling my little poems.  By the time I was in 6th grade, my boy Brandon and I were rapping.  I still was fighting all of the whole entire school on reading and writing, but outside of school, I was doing my own thing.

    #

    The summer before 9th grade, though, I had a Come to Jesus moment, with my mother.

    The school I’d been assigned to, Baltimore City College, better known to Baltimoreans everywhere as simply City, had mailed home the summer reading assignment for its Honors (A course) students.  My classmates everywhere were opening their mail to find out that we had three books to read that summer and we were expected to do exactly what I hated to do: respond to them.  In a journal.

    Before, my mother had had to use one negative possibility or another as a means of motivating me to do the reading and the writing required in school.  Now, I was going to City, but that was a privilege.  The outcome of not doing well at City: failing out and being sent to my zone school, in this case, Northern.  Or if I was lucky, I might somehow get a shot at redemption at Mervo.  But even so, going to Northern wasn’t going to happen.  If I’d washed out of City, I’d have to go to California with my dad.  His brand of house discipline would be good for me in that case.

    We went and got a marble notebook and the books.

    I decided to read the shortest first.

    #

    Down At The Cross — Letter from a Region of My Mind

    People actually wrote like this?

    I knew some of the church where he’d been raised, that he rebelled against.

    Who were these people he’d dined with?  They believed that God was Black?  People talked about racism in this way?  It wasn’t just how things were?

    #

    My world started to lay itself bare the first time I read The Fire Next Time.

    It opened itself up even more when I got to the next assigned book, Native Son.

    I’d never read anything like those.

    All the times employees followed us around Eddie’s Super Market or Woolworth’s or some other store.

    The swastikas painted on the back wall of the gym at school.

    The looks we’d get walking up or down Roland Avenue.

    #

    I’d understood these things in a prima facie way, but these great works put me squarely into the minds and worlds of great writers, great thinkers, which helped me understand my own.

    This is one thing good writing can do.  There are many more.  Whole books have been written.

    #

    On the back end, my Aunt Brenda began feeding my growing love of books.  My mother must have told her about her struggles trying to get me to read something, anything, because eventually, my aunt would do what Ms. Baumgartner did: give me things I liked to read.  My aunt’s bookshelves were full, 2 books deep on each shelf, of books by black writers.  History, sociology, a few novels, essays, everything.  I had access to nearly her whole library.  All I had to do was read the book, not destroy it, promptly give it back.

    #

    Before I got out of high school, we’d read many more great books, many more great writers.  Achebe.  Morrison.  Shakespeare.  Those were among my favorites.

    The writing continued.

    We’d write our own poems in class in 10th grade.  Finally.  Sonnets.  Ballads.  Free verse.
    In 11th grade, when we began reading philosophy, we didn’t have to just regurgitate what we’d read; no, we were encouraged to develop our own ideas about the subjects we’d been reading about, and to write them.

    Even my history teachers encouraged me to explore my writing.

    All of this combined with my rapping and poetry, I found a love of writing, of letters.  And in some ways, it did change my life.  Even through all the false starts and disappointments, I still love reading and writing.

    A great book or play or essay or poem or memoir or biography or whatever, can do that.

    #

    August Wilson said:

    I try to explore in terms of the life I know best those things which are common to all culture, so while the specifics in the play are black, the commonalities of culture are larger. There are universal realities in the play.

    That’s the space where I want to be.  I want to explore the life I know best.  I hope I can one day, say some things that matter to someone else’s life.  The way that writers like August and James Baldwin and Richard Wright and many others have done for me.  That’s why I write.  Or at least one reason.

  • NaNoWriMo/WNFIN

    I’m going to do NaNoWriMo/WNFIN again this year.   Actually, stop.  Since words matter, I need to phase this better.  I’ll phrase my intention thusly: I plan to participate in NaNoWriMo/WNFIN this year and during the month of November, I will write a 50,000 word book.

    There.

    It’s November again and writers of all types are gearing up for National Novel Writing Month and Write Nonfiction in November, where you’ll either flow out or grind out (or perhaps something in the middle of those) a 50,000 word novel.  Just 1666 words a day, every day, for 30 days.

    #

    I wrote my only novel this way.  I didn’t finish it in 30 days; I got to perhaps 35,000 – 40,000 words, but the important thing is I completed it at some point.  It wasn’t that good, not that anybody’s first draft is.  But at least I got it out.  And I even rewrote a couple of drafts and had a really good editor friend go through it and give me the straight truth on what it needed to become really good and publishable (even though, these days, with some of the ebook titles that are pointed out to me on a weekly basis, I wonder what connotation that word even has anymore).  This was all before I stopped writing poetry and prose pretty much entirely to focus on drama.

    #

    I need to choose what I’m going to write and get outlining.  We’re two weeks out.  I’m pretty much a committed pantser, so this time I’m going to outline.  I think my commitment to pantsing and the supposed freedom to be as creative as I like, is also a commitment to the freedom of not finishing.  It’s easy to say that the muse didn’t hit me on any given day and that I can make up that day’s writing the next.  I’ve used that line of thinking before and the results have been dismal.  At least with outlining, I’ll know where I’m planning to go that day and even if I end up going slightly off track, I’ve at least gone somewhere, which is more in the spirit of NaNoWriMo than not going anywhere and instead, just watching Monday Night Football without making any traction in the writing.

    #

    I’m not going to write another novel.  Not this time.  I’m going to write either a memoir or a collection of essays.  I just haven’t decided yet.  I already have a memoir in progress and I wonder how much material I have to get to book-length.  I might just do what I saw on a book cover recently — I think it was a memoir whose subtitle said it was novella-length.  Why not?  Even if I decide to write another memoir for November and run out of things to say by the time I get to only 35,000 or so words, at least I might be able to work on it and get it to the point where it’s publishable (that word again) and get it out there.

    I like the idea of writing a collection of essays more as I can just spout off, meander, think things over, and then get to somewhere new, without having to hold true to a larger narrative.  But again, with this freedom sometimes comes the freedom not to finish.  Especially when the range of possible topics becomes overwhelming.

    #

    When I wrote the novel I ended up finishing, I published the individual pieces on my then website as I wrote them.  I’m torn as to whether I’m going to do that or not this time.  I do need content for this site.  And I do have one or two people who are viewing this site and asking me what I’m writing and why I’m not updating the site and motivating and/or possibly shaming me, so publishing the pieces as I write them, in whatever first draft form they’re in, might be a good idea.

    At the very least, I’ll probably talk about the process here.

    #

    I once wrote a play during a different 30 day month.  The next time they have one of these months for drama, I’m in.

    #

    Even if I don’t end up with a publishable work —and I don’t even know how many published titles there are out there that have ever come out of NaNoWriMo participation or even if “real” writers participate or whatever— at the very least, I want to come out of this with a better writing habit (or practice) and the confidence to put more work out there.

    As of this date, I have 58 1/2 composition notebooks filled with daily thoughts, small to large musings, morning pages, poem fragments, scene fragments, you name it.  And that’s just my regular journals.  I have a handful of other journals filled with writing exercises and other miscellany.  Lots of words, all kept more or less sealed and hidden.

    It’s time to begin sharing something daily, as the artist/writer Austin Kleon says or shipping, as Seth Godin says.  Whether I share whatever I write daily or end up with a finished larger work (even one that needs massive work by the end of November), what I ultimately need the most are the practice of doing it (and completing it) and the confidence to put at least some part of it “out there.”  Writing is very easy to give up on, or finish, then throw it in a drawer (or an encrypted file on your computer) and never think of it again.  Or even worse, to put it in there and think about it all the time and yet, never actually do the work of putting it out in the world because of fear, feelings of inadequacy, etc.

    That’s why I’m doing this.  I need to get back to my desk and grind or flow, whatever I’m going to do.  Because if you’re not sharing or shipping, who are you?  I have a day job and I work with some smart and talented people doing good work, but I’m more than just the guy who helps keep the computers running.  But if only I know it and that truth isn’t fully expressed so that somebody else can know it, how true can it really be?

  • Five Things – 14 October 2015

    1.

    October.

    As I was on my way to the library, Edwin Encarnacion hit a 443-foot shot to tie the Rangers-Blue Jays game 5 in the bottom of the 6th.  By the time I got in and unpacked and plugged in, the Rangers had taken the lead again.  The online box score says Rougned Odor stole home to put them back up.  If they hold on and win this game, Cole Hamels might end up becoming a Texas hero as his fellow Phillies cast away, Chase Utley, creates one of the most controversial plays in recent memory and turns himself into public enemy #1 in Queens.

    October.

    The other day while I was at work, I listened online while the Royals strung together a series of hits and runs to come back from 4 down to go up 1, then get 2 more insurance runs in the 9th and force a game 5.

    October.

    The Cubs beat the Pirates in the Wild Card game to get the right to play the Cardinals, the best team in baseball this year.  They run into this year’s playoff buzzsaw, Jake Arrieta, who pitched out of his mind all during the regular season and now in the playoffs.  Toss in a few home runs and the Cubs have a chance to end the curse.

    I wish the O’s were in it, taking another run at the Royals, but the Mets are still going, facing down Zack Greinke tomorrow.  At least the Dodgers will have to get through Jacob deGrom to make it to Saturday.  It’s still great baseball.  Definitely takes the edge off what’s been a disaster of a football season so far (see: Ravens 1-4; Ravens IR list).

    (Blue Jays tied the game on a bases loaded bloop single and then Jose Bautista hit a 3 run home run to put them ahead 3.  He also flipped his bat like no one ever before and maybe since.  October.)

    2.

    It stormed here last night.  It was partly sunny when I walked in to check on my computer (more on that later) but 20 minutes later, it had already rained and left puddles.  Lots of lightning with these storms; to the south, cloud to cloud and ground.  If it’s raining hard enough when I’m at work, I go stand outside of the front door and take video with my phone.  The street there is a broken, pitted mix of brick and asphalt, partly resembling a series of horizontal waves, and in some places, the water runs and in others, it pools.  You could slip and slide down one side, splish and splash down the other.

    I keep track of this sort of thing in my journal, as well as Nor’easters during the fall and winter months, blizzards, regular snowstorms, hurricanes, all of it.

    3.

    I wanted to be a meteorologist when I was younger.  Atmospheric phenomena both thrilled and scared me.  Like that time we had thundersnow.

    I was out with my mother and trying to rush her back home, as I’d heard that the oncoming snowstorm might produce such an event.  Thunder with snow?  I’d faithfully watched the morning and 11 PM weather reports faithfully for years (I had to sneak to watch the latter) and I didn’t recall any meteorologists ever mentioning even the possibility of something like that.  It sounded fantastical, like time travel and magic and faster-than-light travel, all the imaginative things in all those children’s novels at school that I refused to read.  My mind raced.  I wanted to believe it was all bullshit, but still, what if it could thunder during a snowstorm?  What couldn’t the weather do?

    (Years later, the question would be answered by tornadoes wiping out entire towns, Hurricane Katrina nearly taking New Orleans off the map, and Hurricane/Superstorm Sandy flooding what seemed like the entire Jersey Shore.)

    We were just outside the house when the storm blew in.  One moment, nothing, the next, a wall of snow and wind pushing us back down the street.  After we fought our way inside, I decided I wanted to see.  I was hoping for enough snow for school to be closed the next day.  The window in my room was small, but there was a huge window in the kitchen.  I went downstairs and stood right by it.

    The snow was coming down so fast, I just knew school would be closed the next day.  The school system had no choice, I thought.  It would take a lot for them to make the decision, but this one was looking bad.  And the best part?  No thunder, just snow.  I knew they were bullshitting on TV.  There wasn’t any such thing as thunder and snow in the same storm.  And as I was just about to celebrate my rightness and the desires of children all over the city over the powers that be …

    -BAM-

    The whole kitchen lit up.

    No.

    I stood there frozen.

    All I could think of was how wrong this was.  Later in life, I’d learn the term for how I was feeling: cognitive dissonance.  All of my watching of the skies and of the news and waiting for severe storm watches, had taught me that lightning and thunder were summertime affairs and here we were in the middle of a snowstorm, and …

    -BAM-

    The kitchen lit up again.

    As soon as I could move my feet, I backed away, far away from the window, past the table in the middle of the floor.  I crept away from the kitchen entirely, my mind jumping back to all the stories and explanations I’d been told growing up, of God sending things like lightning and unexpected weather events like this to punish people.

    On one hand, I didn’t think God would be punishing me for damn near dancing for celebrating a day out of school; surely, God had to have more on the agenda than that.  On the other hand, I didn’t want to take any chances, so I sprinted back upstairs to my room and put out my clothes for school the next day.  Surely, this had to be enough penance.

    The weather people were right.  As the terror subsided, I thought about how cool it was that you could even forecast whether a snowstorm would make lightning.  Even though this storm had scared the hell out of me, it made me want that kind of power more and more.

    4.

    I love question lists;  I’ve pretty much always answered them when sent in email.  I was looking up some things I might want to talk about in these 5 things posts, and came across this list, answered by Ashley Ford.

    1. The meaning behind my URL

    It’s my name.

    2. A picture of me

    Not now, maybe later.

    3. Tattoos I have

    None.  Not one.

    4. Last time I cried and why

    When my father passed away.  It was because my father had passed away.

    5. Piercings I have

    None.  Not one.

    6. Favorite Band

    Incognito.

    7. Biggest turn off(s)

    Misused apostrophe’s, spoken word, crazy sports fans.

    8. Top 5 (gelato flavors)

    Strawberry, mango, Granny Smith apple, mango, and strawberry.

    9. Tattoos I want

    None, not one.

    10. Biggest turn on(s)

    Someone who knows when I want to be bothered and when I want to be left alone.

    11. Age

    38

    12. Ideas of a perfect date

    A Ravens night game in September before it gets too cold.

    13. Life goal(s)

    Write. Make theatre.  Marry and love this woman.  Spend as much time as I can with my family.  Root for these teams.

    14. Piercings I want

    No piercings.  Ever

    15. Relationship status

    See number 13.

    16. Favorite movie

    “Contact.”  The interplay of skepticism and spirituality has been a theme throughout my life.

    17. A fact about my life

    I’m afraid of lightning.

    18. Phobia

    Lightning.

    19. Middle name

    Alexander

    20. Anything you want to ask

    Why do I like doing these?

    (Blue Jays won.  Royals won after I finished writing this.  October.)

    5.

    Another huge turnoff: business jargon.  I’ll have to talk about this at length in the future.

  • Five Things

    One of the highlights of my week is to read folks’ Five Things blog posts.  The ones I read a nice diversion from the mishmash of the usual political BS, upcoming must-have gadgets, sports happenings (the Lions got screwed the other night), and entertainment brouhaha (trust me, making theatre and other entertainment is much more fun than reading about the entertainment that others make) that I read daily.  They remind me that there are some people still living as humans having actual experiences, and just not head-to-toe sports stat machines, OS-or-hardware-manufacturer-branded-cyborgs, or political talking point dispensers.

    So, after some gentle prodding from people who won’t let me anymore tell them that I have nothing to say or that I wrote everything I might say into my paper notebook, I’m at least going to try to write Five Things every week, to be posted on Wednesdays or Thursdays.  My first one will be on a Tuesday because today is Tuesday and I have to write and publish this today or else.

    1.

    I decided to go to the library to write.  Not only are there too many distractions at home, but I don’t have a desk.

    I need a desk.  Writing at a desk makes the writing feel more real to me.  I read once that sitting on the bed or the sofa can hinder the writing process because when you’re on the bed, your body gets the signal that it’s time to go to sleep and on the sofa, your body is ready to sit and relax, watch TV, read (which isn’t necessarily a bad thing, it’s just not writing).  However, if you’ve ever been to school or an office job at all, sitting at a desk tells your brain that you’re ready to get work, since that’s what it’s been trained to do.

    Given the number of words in this blog and the fact of my often trying to write sitting on the sofa before something invariably comes on TV, I’d imagine there’s some truth to this.

    So I need a desk.  Other than my one at work.  I’m always being sought out there.  Not conducive for writing.  Unfortunately, none of my hiding spaces at work have desks or even room for a desk.

    I also want to stop writing on my laptop and get a PC again.  Even if it’s a Chromebox.  Something with a mechanical keyboard.  Maybe I’ll even get a mouse with a cable attached, again.  Something not facing the TV.  Something I won’t feel tempted to pick up and go sit near the TV with.

    2.

    This time last year, the O’s had won the AL East and it was the best time in my adult life to be a fan.  Now, we have Chris Davis signing going-away bats for his teammates and Buck hugging him, seeming like a father about to see his son head out into the world.  All discussion is about who might be staying, who might be going, and how the team will look vastly different next year.  Even after the Royals gutted the O’s in the ALCS last year, there was still hope and excitement.  I knew they wouldn’t go back to being the same sad O’s we’d become accustomed to.  AJ and Manny and Crush would still be here, even if they let Nelson Cruz and Andrew Miller walk.

    This time around, I’m not so sure.

    3.

    Now they’re talking about magnetic trains and futuristic pods to get around back home.  I guess if they don’t put any of the pods in the hood, folks can just go back to riding horses.  Might be faster than the bus or the current light rail.

    They should have just built the new light rail.

    When the maglev is finally done, you’ll be able to get to DC in 8 minutes.  Once you get back, you’ll probably have to take a bus to get to your final destination and that bus will take an hour to get you there, but I guess that’s progress there.  Maybe they should find a way to magnetically levitate a bus or everybody’s cars if they live in the county.  The state might be willing to pay for that.

    4.

    Coach Jim Harbaugh and his Michigan Wolverines took a picture in front of a local Cracker Barrel and thanked them for the great food and service.

    While I do enjoy a trip to the Cracker Barrel for a hamburger steak, I really hope they didn’t travel 700+ miles to eat only at a chain they can get probably get anywhere, when they were literally minutes from G&M Restaurant and some of the best seafood in Maryland.  Maybe they had to stretch their per-diem money.  You can get a couple of hamburger steak dinners for the price of a crab cake platter.  Not that I suggest this.

    5.

    The Lions got hosed during Monday Night Football.  Sure, had they been given another play, they might have fumbled the ball again.  This is the Lions.  But at least get the call right, especially if you’re standing right there.  Saying that you didn’t make the call because the batting of the ball wasn’t overt, is a cop out.

    You know what else might not be overt?  Doctoring a baseball.

    “Sure, he threw a spitball, but we’re not going to eject him because he wasn’t overt.” Sounds ridiculous in that situation, too.  Just call the game as it is.  The Seahawks have been to two straight Super Bowls and won one.  They don’t need the help.

    Bonus:

    Nearly 90 minutes of writing can go by so quickly when you’re really in it.  My reward for this: relaxing with a nice cup of Kefir while watching Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.

    What I’m reading: “Dear Mister Essay Writer Guy” by Dinty W. Moore

    What I’m listening to: WFAN. Bound to be lots of angry Yankees fans tomorrow.

  • Coming Alive

    You sit around a large table with a bunch of other writers.  Make small talk.  Talk writing.  Read about writing.  Write.

    The clackety-clack of chiclets, the low-grade growl of pens grinding into paper.  Don’t stop until the time ends.  Run over time a second.  A second more.  (Does everybody else understand?)

    Read again.

    One writer’s father died hard; so did her uncle, both almost the same way your mother did.  She thinks about home often like you do.

    Someone else’s pillow talk is far juicier, wetter than yours ever was.  You contemplate your use of the term “pillow talk” to begin with vs. the reveling of their descriptions of bodily fluid exchange.  Pillow talk — they’d never even use that term.  You applaud their freedom.

    Your turn again.  You remember how nervousness tastes — sour, bile-like.  You read.  You tell everyone you love some things they probably don’t.  Probably, really don’t.  You survive the telling.  The voice in your head wasn’t right.  It’s silent – it must be on a pee break.

    Another question.  You write some more.  You read some more.

    More first draft, more first thoughts.

    Everyone reveals their struggles they have culling them, corralling them when they’re not in the room.  You finally hear writers say, in person, that they feel the same way as you do.  You finally meet the others all the books on writing say that exist.

    Unpolished, unvarnished creativity, vulnerability — writers living, sharing it.

    You want to linger in that freedom, remember how it feels to not be under load when you’re not at the table.  When you’re not in the room.  When you’re miles away, which you will be again in a couple of hours.

    You wonder if your perfectionism took the day off or would perhaps go on a longer vacation so you can really get to work.

    The next day, you’re reminded that every day won’t be as high as that one.  But since you feel more alive than when you came into the room, that’s something you can live with.