Posts Tagged ‘writing’

A Quick Post About Life

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I’ve been working (writing articles) so much that the outside world feels shocking and new to me again. The air is crisper, the car engines are throatier, and the roaming gangs of turkeys in my neighborhood? Well, they’re warblier than ever.

I’ve been mostly writing for Demand Studios lately, which I really enjoy as it gives me the chance to make a decent living while indulging in my favorite pastime: being wickedly obsessive over things for a short burst of time, learning everything possible about it, then filing it away in the back of my brain. Then, later, topics bubble back up to the surface of my brain and come right out of my mouth with very little realization on my part. Like the time when I explained to the bag-girl at the local grocery store about how to bore-sight a bolt-action rifle. In retrospect, I don’t think she was very interested.

I’ve also been working on a multi-part article for EmailServiceGuide.com on Email Marketing. My latest post (Part 2) is a review of MailChimp, ConstantContact, EmailBrain, and LetterPop and a few reasons why it’s better to go with a third-party email marketing website than just trying to do mass-email blasts yourself.

The holidays are done and gone, and yet the most important days of the year for me are still to come. The wife was born on Valentine’s Day, which makes that date particularly important for us. We’ll be going out to Dim Sum and possibly minigolfing for that occasion. Because what else says “Happy Birthday” and “Let’s Get It On” like minigolfing, right? And, in addition to that, our five year wedding anniversary is on Feb. 11th! I keep telling the wife that five years is the “wood anniversary” but she’s just not having it. We’ll probably be doing dinner and a movie that night, nothing huge, just some quiet time to enjoy each other’s company. And then we’ll probably just come home and pwn some noobs on Halo 3 until the wee hours of the morning.

On the blog-front, I’ll be moving my little Geek Sauce webcomic over to its own domain in the next few weeks (www.geek-sauce.com), so it’ll have a new home. Check back next Friday for the third episode.

Tootle, pip.

Just a Quickie…

Saturday, September 12th, 2009

I’d really like to thank everyone who has visited my site in the last few days. The StumbleUpon community really enjoys a little post I wrote to amuse myself a while back called 8 Strange and Awesome Wonders of Nature. It’s always surprising to me that something like that post can bring a big, fresh wave of visitors to my little site here. Surprising and enjoyable.

I’ve been working hard on getting my book finished (and a few other projects) and I feel that I’m making good progress. I was experiencing a small bit of trepidation when writing last week, doubt was creeping in, and I found myself wondering if there was a reason why it’s so damn hard to just sit down and write sometimes.

And then I found that one of my favorite British people updated his blog with a highly inspiring little post. Stephen Fry, the notoriously floppy-haired actor and writer, quoted Douglas Adams, one of my literary heroes, on the subject of writing a novel:

It is almost impossibly hard. It is supposed to be. But once you truly understand how difficult it is, it all becomes a lot easier.

Fry then goes on to quote Thomas Mann as saying that “a writer is a person for whom writing is more difficult than for other people”.

It’s these kinds of things that encourage me to press on. What would I have done if I’d been born before the internet? Probably I would have had to look inside myself to find the courage to persevere. I would have had to dig down deep, possible plumbed some depths or something, and found inspiration in the words of people I actually know.

Ugh. No thanks. ;)

Lists, Listing, and Listerine.

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

OMFGKILLERDEER

My wife and I have recently been house-sitting for my wife’s parents, which, in itself, is rather nice. My in-law’s house is clean and spacious, two things which my own house are mostly not, regrettably. Now, by no means is my own house cramped and filthy, but let’s just say that our two-bedroom cottage lacks the deep-cleaning that seems to be my mother-in-law’s specialty. Between my wife’s work schedule and my… utter and profound laziness, it’s hard to avoid seeing things pile up in my own living room, things that don’t go together but have found a way to co-exist in a tall stack, leaning ever-so precariously and dangerously, like a drunken, reeling person standing next to the exercise bike, just waiting to be accidentally brushed against so it has an excuse to topple over and look up at me from the floor, offended, saying,

“Why didn’t you clean me and put my component pieces away when you had the chance? Now you’ve gone and knocked me over and I’m a big mess. Oh, I see. Even though I’m laying here sprawled out across the floor now, you’re still not going to clean me, eh? Just going to sort of kick a path through me towards your computer chair, is that right? You’re really something, you know that?”

Yes, I will kick a path through you, former pile of junk, because you are absurd. You’re composed of a milk crate (?), a pair of Converse All-Star Knock-offs (one size too small), a book entitled “Beers of the World” (that I got from one of those big seedy book sales that I attend with Speedicut, that take place at the fairgrounds, the ones where you pay 5 dollars per grocery-sack-full of books), a six-pack of Diet Dr. Pepper with one can missing, a brand-new 32 oz. bottle of *shudder* “Original Flavor” Listerine mouthwash, a cracked vase with a painting of Lao-Tzu’s upon it, a fleece blanket with Johnny “I’m-So-Bloody-Handsome-And-I-Know-It” Depp’s smug little mug upon it (I take care to kick that particular item across the room with gusto.), and a yellow writing pad where the first page is a short list, titled (entitled?), “Books That I Would Like To Read, But Will Probably Never Get Written, And So I Should Just Write Them Myself, Because, After All, I Should Be Doing Something With This Whole Writing Business, Why Not”.*

This above mentioned list with the long name is comprised of these three items:

1) A book on the French Foreign Legion because it’s really a fascinating story of how an army consisting of French rabble, thieves, drunks, and hooligans became, with time, one of the most distinguished fighting forces on the planet. (Yes, I know there are a few books out there called “My Life in The French Foreign Legion“, but I don’t think anyone has really given a good account of how it evolved over time from what it was to what is now. It’s fascinating and my book would be, too.)

2) A sort-of detective noir that occurs in space.

3) A book about the Mercury 13, the famous female astronauts program that no one knows anything about, but should. (Yes, there’s is, alas, also already a book out there called “The Mercury 13“, but mine would be witty and gripping. Actually, that’s a bit unfair, as I haven’t even read the book I’m bashing in a sort of roundabout, passive-aggressive way.)

So it’s rather nice being in a house that is thoroughly dusted, thoroughly scrubbed and uncompromisingly free of grime, free of uppity stacks of accumulated junk, free of my scribbled notes, free of… well, free of all the things that make my little cottage wonderful really. And I can’t wait to get back there.

If I were there right now, I’d probably crack open a Diet Dr. Pepper, prop my feet up on the milk crate, toss out those uncomfortable mock-All-Stars once and for all, and get working on that Foreign Legion book. Or, at the very least, I might add a few more items onto that woefully short list.

* I enjoy making my list titles as descriptive as possible: otherwise I come across a list folded up in my pocket with a vague, or, more likely, no title at all. The last such cryptic list I encountered was written on yellow paper, probably from this same writing pad, and was folded up in the pocket of a t-shirt, and it bore no title at all, but the list consisted of six items.

1) The shiny pink spot on my right hand’s ring finger. (I used to get this spot on said finger when I’d write with a pencil for long periods of time. It’s been gone for years now, though, since I mostly use a computer.)

2) My grandfather once advised me, after a brief spat in front of me with my grandmother, to “marry a mute”.

3) Whittling. (I once nearly lost my right index finger whilst whittling a point onto a stick while camping in a quite ironic way. I was whittling and my grandfather called out something to me from the camper and I looked in his direction and sliced right into my finger, deep and in the knuckle. The funny thing was what my grandfather had called out to me that had so distracted me, which was “You be careful while you’re out there whittling, Chris, or you’ll lose a finger!” Yeah, I know, spooky.)

(On a side-note:I just had a malfunction in my brain while trying to think of the name of the index finger, and so I just looked it up on the Google and it told me that the index finger, when talking about hand analysis, is also called the “Jupiter Finger”, which I think is just neat.)

4) The feasibility of owning a ferret. (I really do want a ferret.)

5) That Tom and Jerry cartoon where they show, at the gates of heaven (cat heaven, I guess), a bag of sopping wet kittens, and St. Peter (played by a cat) looks down at them and says “Oh, what some people won’t do… tsk, tsk.”. (What the bloody…?! In a kid’s cartoon?!)

6) Bob Hoskins, the actor. (Well, obviously.)

Now, usually I would just think to myself, “What an odd little list. I wonder if I should Google these things?” or, more frequently “Hmm. I wonder if I have amnesia and I left myself this list of clues in order to help myself solve my wife’s murder, and I’ll eventually discover that I am, in fact, the murderer?” but then my wife will walk into the room and that’ll be ruled out, and so I’ll just toss the piece of paper out (on the floor, more likely), but since I’ve started blogging I’ve been writing lists like these whenever I want to remember something that I might want to write about at some point.

So, err… mission accomplished, I guess!

It's Not Talking To Myself If I'm Writing It Down…

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

The last few days have been, for me, tumultuous. Well, not actually for me, persay, but rather for a few imaginary characters I’ve been entertaining in my mind.

I’ve always played with the idea that the protagonist in my first novel would be an orphan. There are a few reasons for this, but mostly it’s because orphans are adventurous and don’t have familial obligations that weigh them down. Ask the Bronte sisters or Dickens and they’ll say that orphaned children make the best kind of heroes (the Bronte sisters were themselves orphans who rose to literary acclaim). Everything they do carries more weight, their hardships are that much more difficult to endure because they can’t run into their parents arms for comfort, and they must rise up from the muck of the world, pulling themselves up by their own bootstraps, purely with their own strength of will.

Sure, it’s sort of cliché but it’s a great starting point. And also, it’s like I always say about novels and marriages: It’s best to get the first one out of the way as quickly as possible. So I’m not going to allow a small thing like a cliché character history slow me down. I mean, it’s not like he falls for a hooker with a heart of gold in Act 2. Although… hmmm.

It’s sad, of course, but I used to wonder to myself as a child what I would do if my parents never came back from the movies, never returned from a company softball game, and heaven help them if they went to Mary’s Pizza without me and didn’t bring me back a bambino with cheese. There was a sense of dread that ran through me when I imagined this, but also the thrill of adventure. I didn’t want them to die but I wondered what life would be like if they just disappeared altogether, leaving my brothers and I alone to fend for ourselves.

I would clearly have been the leader of our ragtag bunch, despite the fact that they are years older than me and have proven time and time again during our regualr roughhousing episodes that they could whip the snot out of me with their hands tied behind their backs. I would lead because I write my own story and I’m the hero.

Recently, though, I’ve been writing someone else’s story. When you’ve been thinking about a character for a long time he or she becomes as real as a friend you’ve known since grammar school. It was a bit difficult breaking the news to him, at first, that his parents died in a tragic accident shortly before his twelfth birthday, but he got over it.

“How’d they bite it then, eh?” he asked me nonchalantly, as I sat at my computer, a synopsis of his life on the screen in front of me.

“Oh, I don’t know. Plane crash?” I guessed.

“They didn’t have any planes back then. Well, I think they had a few, but since you never really studied up on your early aviation, I can’t tell you for sure. When did the Wright Brothers invent their plane?”

“1909? I think?” I throw out there.

“Not exactly brimming with confidence here, buddy.”

“Alright, alright. Geez. How about a disease then? Leperosy?”

“Hmm. Sounds a bit undignified. Didn’t you want them to be sort of legendary in my mind, these larger than life figures that I worship? If they fall apart bit by bit, well, that’s just distasteful.”

I think for a bit and then, suddenly, we both shout at the same time.

“THEY DIED IN A SHIPWRECK AND THAT EXPLAINS THE CRIPPLING FEAR OF WATER THAT TAKES PLACE IN CHAPTER SEVENTEEN! JINX!”

Aww, he got me. I owe myself a Coke.

Win $500 just for leaving a comment? Heck yes. Go to WhoaThatsInteresting.com and leave a comment to enter a the drawing.

Why, with $500, I’d be a millionaire…

Yogurt, Writing, and Beginnings

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

I stand on the rain-slick precipice of darkness, knowing I should be writing my first book, knowing it deep within the meaty core of my yearning heart like a… like a, ummm…

A thingy.

“Jesus Badger-Copulating Christ, this yogurt is disgusting.” I exclaimed. “It tastes exactly like sour cream.”

“IS IT sour cream?” My wife ventured, apparently not putting it past me that I might accidentally consume a small container of sour cream in lieu of yogurt.

(Alright, so it happened once. Ages ago. But it wasn’t yogurt that I thought was sour cream, it was whipped horseradish-cream for putting on prime rib that I thought was regular sweet whipped cream. I proceeded to make the most awful ambrosia salad ever.)

“No, it clearly says yogurt on it. It’s authentic nonfat organic greek yogurt, vanilla flavored. And it tastes like authentic nonfat organic greek s**t, s**t flavored. I mean it, it tastes and has the exact texture of sour cream. There’s nothing about this that reminds me of yogurt, except that it’s clearly labeled yogurt.”

“Well throw it out then,” she said helpfully, a suggestion at which I balked and then scoffed.

Throwing out perfectly edible food is, to me, unthinkable. Surely she jests. Why, yogurt that tastes like sour cream can just be put back into the refrigerator and used on a baked potato someday soon. I’ll just think of the raspberries I’ve added to it as a bit of exotic flare.

These are the types things that interrupt my productive writing time, and yet I allow them to happen. I allow my valuable work time to be consumed by small-talk or daily tasks or other people’s excellent blogs. It’s always been difficult for me to start anything because I’m afraid that I’m beginning it wrong. Crippling self-doubt, etc.

Perhaps my most favorite writers out there are people who I can’t actually imagine writing, at least, not in any real sense. Did Ernest Hemingway have a special boxing glove that could grip a pen so he could write between rounds? Does Anthony Bourdain write while hunched over in a meat locker, pounding away at a typewriter while downing booze and smoking a cigarette that’s subtly flavoring tomorrow’s filet mignons? Did Edna St. Vincent Millay compose poetry in her head while it lay upon the breasts of her lover? Yes, I imagine.

But Chris Hoke? Well, he writes at night while he sits in a lovely little cottage, experiencing slight ankle pain he acquired when getting out of the shower the wrong way that morning, pausing every once in a while to go to the fridge and see if anything has materialized out of thin air since he’s been there last, some 10 minutes ago. He wonders if the bottled water sitting on his desk from 3 days ago is too old to finish off (does water go bad?), and wastes time being pithy on the A.V. Club comment boards. He admires other blogs, social networks, thinks about his personal character arc, and screws around a bit on his bass guitar until his wife, currently trying to sleep, tells him to knock it the hell off.

The answer to my own un-asked question: It must be that there is no wrong way to begin, except perhaps to never begin. For even if the end product is the most horrible thing ever created, there is still hope. It can always be rewritten, polished, backspaced out of existence, hacked up, re-rewritten, and, if that fails to produce something decent, it can be finally buried in soft peat for three months and recycled as firelighters, then begun entirely anew.

And, besides, nothing I write can ever possibly be as bad as that yogurt tasted.

A Rambling Thought

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

As I sit here, typing, I can hear the television in the other room. Since I’m not quite listening it thinks it can get away with saying scandalous, strange things, things that make no sense.

“A pub is not only a great place to raise a family, it can help steer you in the right direction…” it informs me.

Clearly, this is false. A pub is not a great place to raise a family. I don’t have any children, but I mean, where would you put the baby down?  I guess a corner booth might work, but still, come on. It’s irresponsible. The baby would be knocking over drinks and not holding up it’s end of the conversation.  And babies are notoriously bad at darts.

As my wife gently snoozes on the couch, I have stolen away to write. Writing is, you might already know, my passion and my mistress. I write when I should be eating. I contemplate submitting essays to lofty magazines or finally finishing my book and submitting it to publishing houses, before remembering that thousands of people have the same idea, people with full college educations, people with connections, people who want to ‘get their foot in the door’, not just ‘get invited to crazy-fun parties and drink Bombay Sapphire like it’s going out of style’ (it never will, btw), people who don’t rely on run-on sentences to convey their  stream-of-consciousness rambling. People with serious names like “Howard Bell” and “David Sedaris” and “Diablo Cody”.  People with boobs.

Sure, I’ve got other passions. Playing music, for one. And it’s a passion I’ve been able to make a fairly decent living at, too. But it’s not like this writing thing. This writing thing has got a grip on my guts now. It’s exciting to me and new. The simple act of turning a phrase, making it a bit more visceral or a bit more graceful with just a subtle tweak of the language can be exhilirating. It must be so rote and familiar to some of you more experienced writers out there, but to me it’s still a novelty, still a fascination. Still something to obsess over when I should be, say, eating or sleeping.

“Let’s see what kind of booby traps this thing’s got!” the television states quite plainly from the other room.

Indeed. Let’s see what kind of hidden bits I can unearth from the wet, pink-gray folds of my brain today. My shovel is the written word, and my pickaxe, punctuation. And booby trapped this brain of mine certainly is. I start off writing about my Dad, and suddenly a trap door opens and I find myself in the back of a station wagon, sometime in the late 80’s, remembering the time my parents took me and my brothers to see Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade at the drive-in. We had to park close to the screen, so close that I got a pain in my neck that lasted for several years. The pain only began to subside with weekly neck adjustments from my granfather, a licensed chiropractor.

“Never, ever, EVER,” he told me, “become a chiropractor. Just promise me that if you decide to become a doctor, you won’t become a chiropractor.” I nodded in agreement, not knowing at that young age the stigma associated with chiropractors, how many people don’t consider them to be ‘real’ doctors. If my grandfather wasn’t a real doctor, then I’m a ballerina.

(Note: I am not a ballerina. However, I did participate in some Armenian folk dancing a few years ago, at an international food festival. If you are ever invited to an international food festival, I urge you to go. The experience changed my life, and mostly for the better.)

“Your brother was an animal!” the TV says.

“You’re right,” It says in reply to itself, in a deeper register. “He WAS an animal. And you got his number, didn’t you?”

It’s an action movie, edited for television. I’ve seen it before. They’re not really supposed to be saying ‘animal’, they’re supposed to say ‘asshole’. The way it sounds when it’s edited makes it sound sort of racey, sort of, well, incestuous and homo-erotic, quite frankly.

I leave you now, to pay attention to the television and to my long-suffering wife, and to leave the winding, dense hallways of my mind free from my probing tendrils for the moment. My wife’s soft breath, a comfortable place on my BROWN couch, and a late-night, heavily-edited, action movie beckon to me, and I must oblige them.

(For an excellent read, check out this blog: Grace Undressed.)

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