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Mar. 10th, 2008

Not doing what I'm supposed to be doing today.  Only caring a little bit.  Still, before I get too deeply involved (or, you know, further involved) in the necklace I'm making I should finish my chore list and find the paperwork Aub asked me to find today.  Or, you know, maybe not.

Either way, I think the writing is set aside for a week or two while I play with wire and shiny bits.  It'll give the bruising on my forehead time to heal.  I swear the library system in this county sucks.  Surely there's a way to research demons without relying on vague (and often inaccurate and/or incomplete) information on the internet or shelling out (literally) hundreds of dollars for books.  I find the entire situation annoying (and a little painful) and the librarian I asked for help crossed herself and told me I should pray for salvation.  So, yeah.  I'm thinking a break from the whole scene is in order before I either crack my skull or smack someone silly. 

I still need to make my mother the jam cake she wanted for her birthday.  I'll need to call her later this evening and ask if she's taking a day off this week.  If not, I'll do the cake Friday and take it to her before we go to the RenFest this weekend. 

And some silliness...



You Are a Jigsaw Puzzle



You are a complex person, although at first glance you seem quite simple.

Your personality is comprised of many interesting and distinct pieces.

You are captivating and often visually interesting. You can be seen from many angles.



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You are a Dark Red Rose



You represent unconscious beauty and deep passion.

Your vibe: sophisticated and worldly

Falling in love with you is: wildly carnal and forbidden

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Mar. 5th, 2008

The Universe gave me a dream catcher yesterday afternoon. 

March 4, 2008 (b)

The head of my bed is right under that window, and that huge freaking spider is covering my half of the window with its web.

If not for the pictures I snapped yesterday evening while this huge freaking spider was spinning its web and then lurking around in the center of it afterward, I'd think I imagined the whole thing.  Looking out my bedroom window this morning, there's not a single trace of that spider or its web.

Maybe it fell victim to the weather or a bat during the night.  Or maybe it entangled the wicked nightmares I felt looming just beyond the edges of my dreams all night and suffered in my place. 

I haven't been outside yet this morning (kind of afraid to open the door, not knowing what kind of spider that is or where it is now) but we'll have to leave in about forty minutes.  I'll look for it then.
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Mar. 2nd, 2008

She walks around all day quietly, but underneath it she's electric angry energy inside a passive form. The common woman is as common as a thunderstorm. - Judy Grahn
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Feb. 27th, 2008

Yeah, see, I'm a sick puppy.

CDs that MUST be purchased soon. Like, within the next few days.

Mojo Priest
Songs from the Crystal Cave
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Feb. 26th, 2008

Rest in peace, Dick Fletcher.  Rest in peace. 
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Feb. 9th, 2008

An essay by Isaac Asimov, entitled "What Writers Go Through". Found here: http://sprott.physics.wisc.edu/pickover/writerasimov.html

What Writers Go Through

(This editorial first appeared in the December 21, 1981, issue of Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine.)

Every once in a while I get a letter that strikes a chord. Jeanne S. King of Marietta, Georgia, suggested that I write an editorial on what writers go through. Her tender heart bled for writers and I think she has a point.

First, let me make it clear what I mean by "writers." I don't want to confine the word only to those who are successful, who have published best-selling books, or who crank out reams of published material every year
(if not every day), or who make a lavish living out of their pens, typewriter, or word-processors, or who have gained fame and adulation.

I also mean those writers who just sell an occasional item, who make only a bit of pin money to eke out incomes earned mainly in other fashions, whose names are not household words, and who are not recognized in the street.

In fact, let me go farther and say I even mean those writers who never sell anything, who are writers only in the sense that they work doggedly at it, sending out story after story, and living in a hope that is not yet fulfilled.

We can't dismiss this last classification as "failures" and not "real" writers. For one thing, they are not necessarily failures forever. Almost every writer, before he becomes a success, even a runaway supernova success, goes through an apprentice period when he's a "failure."

Secondly, even if a writer is destined always to be a failure, and even if he is never going to sell, he remains a human being for whom all the difficulties and frustrations of a writer's life exist and, in fact, exist without the palliation of even an occasional and minor triumph.

If we go to the other extreme and consider the writer whose every product is an apparently sure sale, we find that the difficulties and frustrations have not disappeared. For one thing, no number of triumphs, no amount of approval, seems to have any carrying power at the crucial moment.

When even the most successful writer sits down before a blank piece of paper, he is bound to feel that he is starting from scratch and, indeed, that the Damoclean sword of rejection hangs over him. (By the way, when I
say "he" and "him," I mean to ad' "she" and "her" every time.)

If I may use myself as an example, I always wince a little when anyone, however sincerely and honestly, assumes that I am never rejected. I admit that I am rarely rejected, but between "rarely" and "never" is a vast gulf. Even though I no longer work on spec and write only when a particular item is requested, I still run the risk. The year doesn't pass without at least one failure. It was only a couple of months ago that Esquire ordered a specific article from me. I duly delivered it; and they, just as duly, handed it back.

That is the possibility all of us live with. We sit there alone, pounding out the words, with our heart pounding in time. Each sentence brings with it a sickening sensation of not being right. Each page keeps us wondering if we are moving in the wrong direction.

Even if, for some reason, we feel we are getting it right and that the whole thing is singing with operatic clarity, we are going to come back to it the next day and re-read it and hear only a duck's quacking.

It's torture for every one of us.

Then comes the matter of re-writing and polishing; of removing obvious flaws (at least, they seem obvious, but are they really?) and replacing them with improvements (or are we just making things worse?). There's simply no way of telling if the story is being made better or is just being pushed deeper into the muck until the time finally comes when we either tear it up as hopeless, or risk the humiliation of rejection by sending it off to an editor.

Once the story is sent off, no amount of steeling one's self, no amount of telling one's self over and over that it is sure to be rejected, can prevent one from harboring that one wan little spark of hope. Maybe--Maybe--

The period of waiting is refined torture in itself. Is the editor simply not getting round to it, or has he read it and is he suspended in uncertainty? Is he going to read it again and maybe decide to use it--or has it been lost--or has it been tossed aside to be mailed back at some convenient time and has it been forgotten?

How long do you wait before you write a query letter? And if you do write a letter, is it subservient enough? Sycophantic enough? Grovelling enough? After all, you don't want to offend him. He might be just on the point of accepting; and if an offensive letter from you comes along, he may snarl and rip your manuscript in two, sending you the halves.

And when the day comes that the manila envelope appears in the mail, all your mumbling to yourself that it is sure to come will not avail you. The sun will go into eclipse.

It's been over forty years since I've gone through all this in its full hellishness, but I remember it with undiminished clarity.

And then even if you make a sale, you have to withstand the editor's suggestions which, at the very least, mean you have to turn back to the manuscript, work again, add or change or subtract material, and perhaps produce a finished product that will be so much worse than what had gone before that you lose the sale you thought you had made. At the worst, the changes requested are so misbegotten from your standpoint that they ruin the whole story in your eyes; and yet you may be in a position where you dare not refuse, so that you must maim your brainchild rather than see it die. (Or ought you to take back the story haughtily and try another editor? And will the first editor then blacklist you?)

Even after the item is sold and paid for and published, the triumph is rarely unalloyed. The number of miseries that might still take place are countless. A book can be produced in a slipshod manner or it can have a repulsive bookjacket, or blurbs that give away the plot or clearly indicate that the blurb-writer didn't follow the plot.

A book can be non-promoted, treated with indifference by the publisher and therefore found in no bookstores, and sell no more than a few hundred copies. Even if it begins to sell well, that can be aborted when it is reviewed unsympathetically or even viciously by someone with no particular talent or qualifications in criticism.

If you sell a story to a magazine you may feel it is incompetently illustrated, or dislike the blurb, or worry about misprints. You are even liable to face the unsympathetic comments of individual readers who will wax merry, sardonic, or contemptuous at your expense--and what are their qualifications for doing so?

You will bleed as a result. I never met a writer who didn't bleed at the slightest unfavorable comment, and no number of favorable or even ecstatic remarks will serve as a styptic pencil.

In fact, even total success has its discomforts and inconveniences. There are, for instance. . . :

People who send you books to autograph and return, but don't bother sending postage or return envelopes, reducing you to impounding their books or (if you can't bring yourself to do that) getting envelopes, making the package, expending stamps, and possibly even going to the post office.

People who send you manuscripts to read and criticize (nothing much, just a page-by-page analysis, and if you think it's all right would you get it published with a generous advance, please? Thank you.).

People who dash off two dozen questions, starting with a simple one like: What in your opinion is the function of science fiction and in what ways does it contribute to the welfare of the world, illustrating your thesis with citations from the classic works of various authors. (Please use additional pages, if necessary.)

People who send you a form letter, with your name filled in (misspelled), asking for an autographed photograph, and with no envelope or postage supplied.

Teachers who flog a class of thirty into each sending you a letter telling you how they liked a story of yours, and sending you a sweet letter of her own asking you to send a nice answer to each one of the little dears.

And so on--

Well, then, why write?

A 17th-century German chemist, Johann Joachim Becher, once wrote: "The chemists are a strange class of mortals, impelled by an almost insane impulse to seek their pleasure among smoke and vapor, soot and flame, poisons and poverty; yet among all these evils I seem to live so sweetly, that may I die if I would change places with the Persian King."

Well, what goes for chemistry, goes for writing. I know all the miseries, but somewhere among them is happiness. I can't easily explain where it is or what it consists of, but it is there. I know the happiness and I experience it, and I will not stop writing while I live--and may I die if I would change places with the President of the United States.</blockqote>

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Jan. 28th, 2008

The topic of me going back to school has been on the table quite a bit lately. Now, I've never really known what I wanted to be when I grew up, but over the last decade there's been an increase suspicion that I wanted to work with computers. Perusing the local community college catalog not too long ago, I think I found the degree I want to pursue. Information Technology Security.
This program prepares students for employment as information technology security professionals assisting business and industry in developing and implementing strategies to defend company e-business infrastructure and data assets against security attacks.
For a while I was looking at Computer Programming.
This program prepares students for jobs in the field of computer programmer aide, junior programmer, senior programmer, data manager, programmer analyst, and mid-range computer specialist.
Actually, I still am looking at Computer Programming but Information Technology Security has classes like Ethical Hacking I (Hands-on course teaches students how to hack into information systems using ethical standards. The student will learn system and network penetration testing, the tools and techniques used to exploit vulnerabilities such as social engineering, buffer overflows, etc., and how to defend against attacks.), Ethical Hacking II (A continuation of Ethical Hacking I with emphasis on advanced techniques.), Computer Forensics and Incident Response (The student will design and develop strategies for inspecting potentially corrupted servers, networks and workstations. In this hands-on course the student will practice detecting possible intrusions, inspecting log files, tracking violators. Students will practice computer forensic exercises using detection tools and tracking methodologies.), and Introduction to Network Security (Basic computer and network security theory, concepts and terminology are presented. The CIA triad, basic threats, intrusion techniques, vulnerabilities and their various countermeasures are included. Students will also discuss ethical behaviors and basic security practices for authentication, encryption and secure network topologies.)... and they give it a much higher appeal, though I still want to take a little more than half of the Computer Programming classes.

The problem is that the cost of each class comes to roughly $220 plus books and miscellaneous fees and expenses. The money just isn't in our budget. Even if we could scrape up the money, I'd only be able to take one class per semester. Financial aid of some sort would enable me to take two classes per semester, but I wouldn't be able to do more than that without disrupting my duties with the family life. If I'm lucky, I'd graduate with a two year degree about the same time Kat would graduate from high school.

I've got some time to think about it and play with the budget. I wouldn't be able to do any summer classes because Kat's home from school in the summer, so the earliest I could possibly start is the fall semester.

It's very tempting. I'd love to take the whole program. The thought is a little daunting, though. I haven't been in school for almost two decades, and the college experience I had after high school left a lot to be desired. Still, I'm not as dumb as I let people think I am. I think I'd do pretty well with the classes... assuming I had support from my family, and by that I mean assuming they'd leave me alone long enough to do my homework.

A lot to think about...
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Dec. 12th, 2007

Sometimes I love the freakiness of this world

Ok, um, late dinner combined with slipping into research mode and here I am still awake nearly two hours after I wanted to be in bed.

And even I recognize that it's time for me to go to bed when I end up digging deep into the topics of urethral rerouting, eunuchs, and self-given penectomies.

I'll spare everyone the links and gloriously explicit details.

Truly, I should not explore the internet (even in the guise of doing research) when I am this tired.

Sweet dreams, world.

Sep. 30th, 2007

"Concentrate on the few, not the many."

Your Daily Meditation

"You can think of many things that you want to change or achieve.  The problem is, when you set out to do too many things at once, noting gets the full attention it needs -- and, in the end, very little is accomplished.

To succeed, you need to set priorities.  Choose only one or two things that you want to achieve.  Concentrate your efforts exclusively on these goals.  Very quickly your efficiency will soar and you will see results."

Today's Affirmation:  My priorities are set and I'm experiencing success.

Sep. 28th, 2007

::giggles::

http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=978
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Sep. 7th, 2007

the worthless word for the day is: cornobble

[fr. cor-, with(?) + nobble, to strike, hit, beat up]
/kor NOB bul/
to beat on the head {Phelps}
http://books.google.com/books?q=cornobble&btnG=Search+Books
cornobbled : hit with a fist {Mrs. Byrne}

NB: hit with a fish is a bit of a stretch, but fun
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WsfiD78Cy0s


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James 4:13-17 (King James Version)
13  Go to now, ye that say, To day or to morrow we will go into such a city, and continue there a year, and buy and sell, and get gain:
14  Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away.
15  For that ye ought to say, If the Lord will, we shall live, and do this, or that.
16  But now ye rejoice in your boastings: all such rejoicing is evil.
17  Therefore to him that knoweth to do good, and doeth it not, to him it is sin.

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Title:  Prompt for Today
Date:  Friday September 7, 2007
Time:  All Day
Repeats:  This event repeats every year.
Notes:  Write about a place you long for.

*********

Today, I will solve the problems of today. I might have become so focused on solving all the problems in my life that I haven't noticed the little problems that arise each day.

Do I have anything that needs to be completed or resolved today? I will take a moment each day and work on what I need to do just for that day. Even though solving long-term problems is necessary, so is solving the smaller daily problems. Not allowing things to pile up keeps me from feeling overwhelmed.

Today I will pay attention to what needs to be solved today.

--Time to Fly Free by Judith R. Smith

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"A choice is not really a choice, until you act upon it."

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http://www.endlesspools.com/main.html

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6 Years After 9-11 GAO Reports Failing Marks for Department of Homeland Security

Jul. 30th, 2007

Insightful moment #647,882,143

Aub wants me to be the next J. K. Rowling or Stephen King... meaning, he wants me to write and publish books and make lots of money.

I don't care about the making lots of money part, or even so much about the being published part.  I just want to write well.   

You can have the worst story ever in the history of story-telling but if you write it well it will still be better than a fantastic story written badly.
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Jul. 25th, 2007

Not that I'm complaining... much... because, yeah, I love my daughter, but what the fuck is she doing up at 630 in the morning??  I mean, seriously!  This is why I don't get any writing done.  Right up until I shut down the computer last night she was all "mom... mom... mom...", even though we'd already had a huge talk earlier in the day about what the words "Ok, I'm sitting down to write now.  Do not bother me unless there is blood or fire" mean.  There was no blood.  There was no fire.  It wasn't until after I shut down the computer that she went to her room to draw, and that's where she was when I finally went to bed.  Now she's up before me and already the "mom...mom... mom...." has started??  I'm not even fully awake yet! 

*headdesk, repeatedly until there's blood*

God, please help me not kill my child today.
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Jul. 19th, 2007

When did TOY STORES stop selling MARBLES??

No, seriously. 

I need marbles.  ROUND.  MARBLES.  Not squished ones.  Not flat ones.  ROUND marbles. 

I can find them all over e-bay, and a lot of them for some pretty hefty prices that get even heftier when you start tacking on shipping.  But locally?  Pft.  I might as well be asking for a bloody Fabergé Egg!!

I actually had to explain to the morons at both Target and Wal-Mart what I was looking for.  They had no earthly idea that marbles came in *gasp* bags!!  They wanted to point me to all sorts of games that have marbles in them. 

I wonder if I can shellac gobstoppers and use those instead...
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Jul. 17th, 2007

Well, Aub will be back tonight.  Part of me is glad because he agreed to do a project for me and I really want it done before he leaves again Sunday night, but part of me is looking at the 750ish words I banged out last night and have tweaked (and tweaked and tweaked and tweaked...man, do I need to kill off some inner critics) today and going "DUDE!! It's NOT Kat!  It's HIM!!"

Kat has been happily holed up in her room playing Warlords on her computer, leaving me distraction-free most of last night and today.  Of course, she stays up all night while I'm sleeping to play games and watch tv, but... eh.  What can you expect from a little vampire?

Also?  I let Kat read the prologue I wrote and she's demanding that I write more.  Now.  Immediately.  She wants me to write it so much that she volunteered to do some of my chores and cleaned up her mess in the living room when she retreated to her room.  Without being asked. 

Yeah.  It was a true "Who are you and what did you do with my child??" moment.

She's also a great little editor-in-the-making.  She pointed out a few things that weren't clear (well they were clear in MY head!!).  She's not too terribly advanced with the critiques and reads with the eye of a reader rather than an editor or writer, but that's still good.  She's fairly good at picking out the holes and loose threads.  She doesn't catch everything, but she's ten.   

The brain, she does hurt, and I need to spend a few hours being domestic.  I have to shut the computer down while the storms rage around overhead anyway.  I just heard the first rumbling of thunder, and if today's storms are anything like yesterday's it could be a few hours before it's safe to power up again. 
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Jul. 6th, 2007

So the big research project for this weekend is federal and state tax ID numbers, business licensing, and all sorts of other brain-melting stuff.

Why? 

Because I'm insane, that's why.

Also, because I'm getting twitchy again with the crafts and the husband hates when finished products just sit around cluttering up the place.  Also, he bitches about the expense of supplies and insists that if I'm pursuing these hobbies of mine, they should fund themselves.  *sighs*  Just typing that makes my Muse shrink back in abject horror and sprint off to parts unknown.  But I need wire.  And a jewelers anvil.  And...

So. 

Questions.  If I'm going to offer the results of my various hobbies for sale, do I need to have any sort of legal documentation from the government - either federal or state - saying that I'm allowed?  If I set up a shop on Etsy do I need any sort of licensing to keep myself from getting in trouble down the road, especially with the IRS?

I do know that if I want to set up a booth at a flea market or a craft fair (or on the side of the street like so many do in this area), I have to have all sorts of licensing and/or permits and collect sales tax.  I do know that if I want to have a yard sale, I do NOT need to adhere to such silliness... um, unless they got that silly proposal passed last year that said you had to have a permit for a yard sale, but I don't think they did. (Note to self, check on that.)

Having such licensing would be great when it comes to buying supplies, because let's face it, the wholesale market just rocks when it comes to prices and there are more than a few wholesale items I'd love to get my hands on that I simply can't find on the retail market.  But how would having such licensing complicate my life come tax time?  And I'm not sure about the renewing of said licensing.  Is it an annual thing?  How much am I going to have to listen to Aubrey bitch if I'm spending money on renewing licenses and/or permits and not selling enough of the products from my hobbies to even cover those costs, let alone the costs of supplies? 

I'm not looking to open a business.  I don't want to open a business.  I'm too fucking busy for that.  I do, however, want to be able to indulge myself a bit in the crafts I do for pleasure and relaxation, and people I know are soooo very tired of receiving the results of my little play sessions as gifts.  (Read: Basically, I've run out of family and friends to push this stuff off on and the husband won't let me play any more until I find some other way to get rid of the finished products, because really, that about sums it up.)

Where does that line between HOBBY and BUSINESS fall? At what point do I cross over from one to the other?

So.  I guess I have to go into research mode later tonight. 

By the way, my horoscope just landed in my  mailbox.  It reads:
Friday, Jul 06, 2007:

Today's Outlook: This can be an intense day as the intuitive Pisces Moon squares powerhouse Pluto in the morning before entering forceful Aries at 10:56 am EDT, creating an emotional storm. But with the Sun and retrograde Mercury in passive-aggressive Cancer, we may feel more motivated than we act. Additionally, the Sun forms a difficult quincunx aspect with Chiron the Wounded Healer, placing us in situations where imagined inadequacies get in the way of our success.

Sagittarius (Nov 22 - Dec 21): A fresh wave of enthusiasm may not be enough to solve all your woes, but a complete attitude shift can be exactly what the doctor ordered. If you have been overly methodical, try doing something that's totally off the wall. Don't worry about what anyone else thinks; just smile and have a great time.
My brain hurts. Oh, not because of this, but this certainly isn't helping.

And completely off topic: Your item was delivered at 8:10 AM on July 6, 2007 in INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46201. Someone might need to go check their mail today.
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Mar. 18th, 2007

"Just living isn't enough," said the butterfly, "one must also have freedom, sunshine, and a little flower."

-Hans Christian Anderson
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Mar. 12th, 2007

"Time is the truth-teller. They love you, they hate you. They buy you, they trash you. But over years and years, because I held on to myself, I became a commodity that other companies would put their money on." -- Betsey Johnson
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Feb. 12th, 2007

Last night, I dreamed that I went to the eyeball doctor to get my eyes checked, and he took them out and wouldn't give them back.  Them being my eyeballs. 

I don't think I slept well.

I have no idea what I'm cooking for dinner tonight, but it involves chicken.

My husband is far too amused by the idea of me wearing a shirt that reads either "Shut up voices or I'll poke you with a q-tip again" or "Careful, or you'll end up in my novel."  He's very tempted to buy them both for me, except that I don't wear white shirts.

Joints ache this morning, in a most unpleasant way. 

Apparently, octopuses...octopi?... are sluts.  Don't ask why I'm learning about their mating practices. 

I need a nap.  Or something. 

Ohheylookie.  Aub's taking Kat to school, then taking me to the eyeball doctor.  Apparently he doesn't trust me to get there on my own...

Feb. 7th, 2007

*blink*







Which Wiggin are you? From the Ender's Game novels




You are Andrew Ender Wiggin.
Take this quiz!





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