Happy New Year's Day to my Aussie and Kiwi friends!
And Happy New Year's Eve to everyone else! :-) We have no huge plans for tonight, though Charlotte does have First Night celebrations. A lot of it will depend on how the kids are doing.
Stay safe and see you next year!
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Friday, December 31, 2010
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Questions from "Inside the Actors Studio"
The program "Inside the Actors Studio" focuses on the craft of acting, directing and writing for film. At the end of the interview, moderator James Lipton poses a set of questions based on the Proust Questionnaire. The answers reveal aspects of how a creative artist views the world and their personal style. Bernard Pivot used a variation at the end of his interviews, and Lipton (an admirer of Pivot's) adapted it for his own program.
Here are the questions Lipton uses and my answers to them:
1) What is your favorite word? Chocolate
2) What is your least favorite word? "We" as in "the royal we". ("I'm glad we made this decision." when it's really supposed to be "I'm glad I made this decision."
3) What turns you on? Creativity.
4) What turns you off? Closed-mindedness.
5) What sound or noise do you love? The sound of waves on the seashore.
6) What sound or noise do you hate? Crying children.
7) What is your favorite curse word? Three, actually. Bl**dy, f*ckin' hell!
8) What profession other than yours would you like to attempt? World traveler
9) What profession would you not want to do? Anything that has me trapped behind a desk doing the same thing over and over.
10) If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?
*God points to nearby hammock* "Take a rest. You deserve it."
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Here are the questions Lipton uses and my answers to them:
1) What is your favorite word? Chocolate
2) What is your least favorite word? "We" as in "the royal we". ("I'm glad we made this decision." when it's really supposed to be "I'm glad I made this decision."
3) What turns you on? Creativity.
4) What turns you off? Closed-mindedness.
5) What sound or noise do you love? The sound of waves on the seashore.
6) What sound or noise do you hate? Crying children.
7) What is your favorite curse word? Three, actually. Bl**dy, f*ckin' hell!
8) What profession other than yours would you like to attempt? World traveler
9) What profession would you not want to do? Anything that has me trapped behind a desk doing the same thing over and over.
10) If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates?
*God points to nearby hammock* "Take a rest. You deserve it."
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Post-Christmas Clean Up
There is a distinct disadvantage to having everyone home for more than a week. The house looks like a hurricane hit it.
Legos and blocks, trains and books
New Christmas ornaments in every nook
Broken crayons, uncapped markers
DVDs. And Mom is starkers,
going nuts, surveying her house!
But Banshee Girl is quiet as a mouse
And Son is watching the Wiggles
and Baby Girl, she's got the giggles.
Hubs 's paying Zelda on the Wii
A more peaceful setting, never to see
During the rest of the year.
A mess is just a mere
price to see family, precious and dear.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Legos and blocks, trains and books
New Christmas ornaments in every nook
Broken crayons, uncapped markers
DVDs. And Mom is starkers,
going nuts, surveying her house!
But Banshee Girl is quiet as a mouse
And Son is watching the Wiggles
and Baby Girl, she's got the giggles.
Hubs 's paying Zelda on the Wii
A more peaceful setting, never to see
During the rest of the year.
A mess is just a mere
price to see family, precious and dear.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Books and Stuff I Got for Christmas
My bookish, linguistic, bohemian side is jumping up and down this season. A $25 Barnes and Noble gift card from Hubby and some extra spending money gave me a chance to get some things I've had my eye on for a while. Most of the time, I only do window-shopping in the bookstores, unless I can get a good deal on something and/or it's something that I know I can't get anywhere else.
New on the bookshelf (links are to its entry on Amazon.com, where all the publication info is listed):
The Indie Author Guide by April L. Hamilton I definitely wanted to get this one. This outlines how to get organized, whether or not to have a brand name, and the ins and outs of POD publishing. The companion website http://www.indieauthorguide.com has additional information and tips too.
Biting the Wax Tadpole: Confessions of a Language Fanatic by Elizabeth Little This book has little anecdotes about how different languages (from Xhosa to Esperanto to Gaelic and Quechua) have things in common, and the little things that drive linguists nuts. She references pop culture icons like Dr. Seuss and Star Wars.
Doctor Who: The TARDIS Handbook by Steve Tribe Yes, I'm an unabashed Doctor Who fan. This book (published by BBC Books) chronicles the history and background of the transdimensional blue police box.
The Brilliant Book of Doctor Who 2011 Compiled of interviews, production notes and other tantalizing tidbits from Series 5, Matt Smith's first year as the 11th Doctor.
Fashion Design Portfolio Edited by Maite Lafuente I was excited to get this one. I'm mostly a landscape/still life artist...I used to avoid drawing people (and clothes) like the plague. Although I'm hardly a fashionista, I'd like to improve on my figure drawing. It's still lacking, but I'm practicing.
Basic Tagalog (for Foreigners and Non-Tagalogs) by Paraluman S. Aspillera While I was growing up, I heard my parents speak Tagalog (Filipino) among themselves and their friends, but they only spoke English to me and my two sisters. So I can understand it pretty well, but I can't speak it really well. It's a part of my culture and heritage, and I think it'd be nice to study the language of my ancestors. (MP3 Audio CD included)
Mandarin Chinese: Learning Through Conversation by Kang Yuhua and Lai Siping Each lesson is on the MP3 Audio CD and the conversations are written in both Chinese characters and pinyin (transliterated from how the words sound, with diacritical and tone marks). Being able to speak fluently in a language is part of the whole package. You also need to know how to read it and write it too.
Other gifts: a pair of Hershey's Cocoa ornaments, a Virginia Tech-themed ornament, a pair of Virginia-Tech flip flops (complete with a football-y attachment on the thong part...don't ask), jewelry and hair accessories from Del Sol (that change color in the sunlight), gift cards (from Starbucks and other places).
The kids really enjoyed Christmas this year. They received (much needed) clothes and shoes, art supplies, music, flashcards, books and LEGOS!!! Baby Girl is a big LEGO fan. I can see her being an engineer or an architect someday.
So...how were your holidays??
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
New on the bookshelf (links are to its entry on Amazon.com, where all the publication info is listed):
The Indie Author Guide by April L. Hamilton I definitely wanted to get this one. This outlines how to get organized, whether or not to have a brand name, and the ins and outs of POD publishing. The companion website http://www.indieauthorguide.com has additional information and tips too.
Biting the Wax Tadpole: Confessions of a Language Fanatic by Elizabeth Little This book has little anecdotes about how different languages (from Xhosa to Esperanto to Gaelic and Quechua) have things in common, and the little things that drive linguists nuts. She references pop culture icons like Dr. Seuss and Star Wars.
Doctor Who: The TARDIS Handbook by Steve Tribe Yes, I'm an unabashed Doctor Who fan. This book (published by BBC Books) chronicles the history and background of the transdimensional blue police box.
The Brilliant Book of Doctor Who 2011 Compiled of interviews, production notes and other tantalizing tidbits from Series 5, Matt Smith's first year as the 11th Doctor.
Fashion Design Portfolio Edited by Maite Lafuente I was excited to get this one. I'm mostly a landscape/still life artist...I used to avoid drawing people (and clothes) like the plague. Although I'm hardly a fashionista, I'd like to improve on my figure drawing. It's still lacking, but I'm practicing.
Basic Tagalog (for Foreigners and Non-Tagalogs) by Paraluman S. Aspillera While I was growing up, I heard my parents speak Tagalog (Filipino) among themselves and their friends, but they only spoke English to me and my two sisters. So I can understand it pretty well, but I can't speak it really well. It's a part of my culture and heritage, and I think it'd be nice to study the language of my ancestors. (MP3 Audio CD included)
Mandarin Chinese: Learning Through Conversation by Kang Yuhua and Lai Siping Each lesson is on the MP3 Audio CD and the conversations are written in both Chinese characters and pinyin (transliterated from how the words sound, with diacritical and tone marks). Being able to speak fluently in a language is part of the whole package. You also need to know how to read it and write it too.
Other gifts: a pair of Hershey's Cocoa ornaments, a Virginia Tech-themed ornament, a pair of Virginia-Tech flip flops (complete with a football-y attachment on the thong part...don't ask), jewelry and hair accessories from Del Sol (that change color in the sunlight), gift cards (from Starbucks and other places).
The kids really enjoyed Christmas this year. They received (much needed) clothes and shoes, art supplies, music, flashcards, books and LEGOS!!! Baby Girl is a big LEGO fan. I can see her being an engineer or an architect someday.
So...how were your holidays??
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
art,
books,
Christmas,
Doctor Who,
drawing,
gifts,
independent publishing,
language,
linguistics
Monday, December 27, 2010
Baby in Da House (Photo Post)
Baby in Da House (1)
Sarah wearing her cap her own way.
Baby in Da House (2)
Dad's amused by his Lit'l Girl
(And the cap says 'USS Enterprise CVN-65)
Baby in Da House (3)
Drive-by Photo Shoot
(You try taking a pic of a moving target!)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Sunday, December 26, 2010
Snowy Christmas in Charlotte (Picture Post)
Sarah and Dad in the Snow
Sarah doesn't look impressed.
Snow on the Patio
Care to sit down?
Tree in Front Yard
Backyard 1
Backyard 2
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Happy Holidays to You and Yours!
Merry Christmas, Blessed Yule, Happy Kwanzaa and Happy Holidays to everyone!
We visited my sister's in Virginia Beach, but had to come home early today because of bad weather coming into North Carolina from the west. Had some snow, sleet and rain on the way, but we got home in one piece.
Hope all of your holidays are joyous!
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
We visited my sister's in Virginia Beach, but had to come home early today because of bad weather coming into North Carolina from the west. Had some snow, sleet and rain on the way, but we got home in one piece.
Hope all of your holidays are joyous!
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Admin Post: Christmas Break
I'll be back after the New Year!
Have a happy holiday season and a Happy New Year 2011.
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Have a happy holiday season and a Happy New Year 2011.
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Monday, December 20, 2010
Song Lyrics: Vale Decem (Farewell, Ten)
This song was composed and conducted by Murray Gold, one of my favorite composers. He does the music for the Doctor Who series. This particular song accompanied the regeneration scene in "The End of Time, part II" when the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) turns into the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith). The words are in Latin.
Emerio (It is) well deserved
Alter altera This other (one)...
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Emerio (It is) well deserved
Alter... This other (one)
Alteri ti Other one of you...
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Vale Stragem Farewell (to) Carnage (destruction)
Valde Tempetua (to) intense trials
De glorio... (of) concerning pride...
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Vale Decet (farewell) in a proper way
Honore res quara because of (your) honor
Alter cerna The next separation (change)
Armis (by) force of arms
Grata tunc, usquera, emani flow out, all the way, with joy.
Vale (x12) (Farewell)
("I don't want to go...")
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Honore res quara Because of (your) honorEmerio (It is) well deserved
Alter altera This other (one)...
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Emerio (It is) well deserved
Alter... This other (one)
Alteri ti Other one of you...
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Vale Stragem Farewell (to) Carnage (destruction)
Valde Tempetua (to) intense trials
De glorio... (of) concerning pride...
Vale Decem Farewell, Ten
Vale Decet (farewell) in a proper way
Honore res quara because of (your) honor
Alter cerna The next separation (change)
Armis (by) force of arms
Grata tunc, usquera, emani flow out, all the way, with joy.
Vale (x12) (Farewell)
("I don't want to go...")
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
David Tennant,
Doctor Who,
language,
Latin,
Murray Gold,
song lyrics,
Tenth Doctor,
Vale Decem
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Post Birthday Report
It's been a whirlwind of 24 hours. Yesterday, we went out early to pick up some coffee and get some lunch at McDonald's. The kids were more than ready to go out and about, even with the gray skies. By the time we reached McD's, it started snowing.
Yup, snowing. It hasn't snowed on my birthday since we moved here to Charlotte in 2001. Sarah was wondering what this stuff was, Michael was entranced, and Christina didn't like all this cold, wet, yucky stuff in her air. All the kids stared out the large windows of the Playplace as the fat flakes fell to the ground, in between climbing and exploring the play equipment.
We went by one of my favorite stores, World Market. Hubs picked up some coffee, while I distracted Michael by showing him all the colorful, pretty gifts on the shelves. He was curious about them, reaching out to touch and being fascinated by the sparkly wine bottles. He particularly liked a huge, green papasan lounge chair. It was big enough for him to curl up and snuggle in the middle of it. I think he would've been content to stay there all day if I'd let him.
Later, I went back out to the Dollar Store to buy wrapping paper, tape, and plastic zipper bags for holiday cookies. Then to Hobby Lobby for more gold ink, and the office store for some recordable DVDs. In the meantime, Hubs had bought a tiramisu-flavored panettone cake. I'd grown up with panettone (fruitcake) while living overseas in Italy, and it was a special treat around Christmas time. In fact, it's probably the ONLY fruitcake I'll ever eat. This version had tiramisu cream filling instead of fruit. I was in choco heaven.
Yes, birthdays are fun. I can either grouse about being a year older or celebrate it. I choose to be happy, not sad.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Yup, snowing. It hasn't snowed on my birthday since we moved here to Charlotte in 2001. Sarah was wondering what this stuff was, Michael was entranced, and Christina didn't like all this cold, wet, yucky stuff in her air. All the kids stared out the large windows of the Playplace as the fat flakes fell to the ground, in between climbing and exploring the play equipment.
We went by one of my favorite stores, World Market. Hubs picked up some coffee, while I distracted Michael by showing him all the colorful, pretty gifts on the shelves. He was curious about them, reaching out to touch and being fascinated by the sparkly wine bottles. He particularly liked a huge, green papasan lounge chair. It was big enough for him to curl up and snuggle in the middle of it. I think he would've been content to stay there all day if I'd let him.
Later, I went back out to the Dollar Store to buy wrapping paper, tape, and plastic zipper bags for holiday cookies. Then to Hobby Lobby for more gold ink, and the office store for some recordable DVDs. In the meantime, Hubs had bought a tiramisu-flavored panettone cake. I'd grown up with panettone (fruitcake) while living overseas in Italy, and it was a special treat around Christmas time. In fact, it's probably the ONLY fruitcake I'll ever eat. This version had tiramisu cream filling instead of fruit. I was in choco heaven.
Yes, birthdays are fun. I can either grouse about being a year older or celebrate it. I choose to be happy, not sad.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Thank you for the Birthday Greetings!
Thank you for all the good wishes! I'm overwhelmed by them all...I'll probably be off line most of today, but I promise a full report tomorrow.
Annie
(who turns a year older today)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Annie
(who turns a year older today)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Friday, December 17, 2010
Doctor Who Christmas Special
Yes, I'm a Doctor Who fan. I started watching the New Series with David Tennant (Tenth Doctor) on BBC America, then with Matt Smith (Eleventh Doctor). I was hooked...it was the "traveling anywhere in Time and Space" in a blue Police Call Box. It also helped that I thought David Tennant was a brilliant actor (and a bit cute, in a goofy kind of way. Ditto Matt Smith.)
Midway through the most recent series, I went back and watched the first year of the New Series (with Chris Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor) and a lot of things made sense. I thought it was amazing that with three different men playing three different versions of the Doctor, they still managed to convince me that this was actually the same guy, just wearing three different faces.
I hadn't been too much of a fan of the Classic Who serials, although I'd mostly watched the episodes with Tom Baker (Fourth Doctor). I remembered him because of his long, multicolored scarf and the big googly eyes. When I was a kid, I wondered how he never got that scarf caught in a door somewhere. Or a conveyor belt. Or on an escalator. If I had that thing, I would have been constantly tripping over it. "Ah, let's save the universe...oops!" *trips on scarf and falls on face* Yeah, pretty heroic, Doc.
So I've got a whole line of classic Who episodes in my NetFlix Queue, including "Logolopolis", "Tomb of the Cybermen" and a few others. It'll have to do until the Doctor Who 2010 Christmas Special, 9 PM on BBC America on Christmas Day (Boxing Day, the 26th in Canada). I'll be out of town, but I've got the DVR set to record it.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Midway through the most recent series, I went back and watched the first year of the New Series (with Chris Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor) and a lot of things made sense. I thought it was amazing that with three different men playing three different versions of the Doctor, they still managed to convince me that this was actually the same guy, just wearing three different faces.
I hadn't been too much of a fan of the Classic Who serials, although I'd mostly watched the episodes with Tom Baker (Fourth Doctor). I remembered him because of his long, multicolored scarf and the big googly eyes. When I was a kid, I wondered how he never got that scarf caught in a door somewhere. Or a conveyor belt. Or on an escalator. If I had that thing, I would have been constantly tripping over it. "Ah, let's save the universe...oops!" *trips on scarf and falls on face* Yeah, pretty heroic, Doc.
So I've got a whole line of classic Who episodes in my NetFlix Queue, including "Logolopolis", "Tomb of the Cybermen" and a few others. It'll have to do until the Doctor Who 2010 Christmas Special, 9 PM on BBC America on Christmas Day (Boxing Day, the 26th in Canada). I'll be out of town, but I've got the DVR set to record it.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
BBC America,
british english,
Chris Eccleston,
Christmas special,
Classic Who,
David Tennant,
Doctor Who,
Matt Smith,
New Who,
TARDIS,
Tom Baker
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Trying something new this season...
I'm eager to try new things, artistically speaking. I have a calligraphy pen with four different nibs, watercolor paints, black and gold calligraphy ink. The set's been sitting idle for the past year, since last Christmas. Lately, I've been reviewing both my Chinese and Japanese grammar and realized my kanji, katakana, hiragana, and Zhongwen are awful, since I haven't been practicing lately. My writing in English is decent (for a left hander, anyway), but you still need a decoder to read it.
So I'm back to practicing my characters with pen and ink. Earlier this week, I found some bottles of colored ink at Hobby Lobby for 40% off and picked those up as well. My hands aren't up to fine detail work anymore, but I think I can manage to do some ATCs (artist trading cards) and postcards with them.
Wish me luck and that my hands will cooperate in this new undertaking. :-D
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
So I'm back to practicing my characters with pen and ink. Earlier this week, I found some bottles of colored ink at Hobby Lobby for 40% off and picked those up as well. My hands aren't up to fine detail work anymore, but I think I can manage to do some ATCs (artist trading cards) and postcards with them.
Wish me luck and that my hands will cooperate in this new undertaking. :-D
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
art,
ATCs,
calligraphy,
Chinese,
Japanese,
languages,
linguistics,
pen and ink,
rheumatoid arthritis
Wednesday, December 15, 2010
Where Did the Time Go?
A major "Mommy moment" today at the pediatrician's. Son needed to get a physical so he could do Special Olympics in the spring. He's seven now, and the nurse took his blood pressure, his height and his weight. Compared with his measurements from last year, he's now 49 3/4 inches tall (a little more than 4'1) and he's gained 10 pounds. That puts him slightly a foot shorter than I am. (I'm only 5'2 1/2).
[Insert googly-eyed emoticon here.]
It seems that time is speeding up for me, especially now that the holidays are approaching. Maybe it's also because I turn 37 on Saturday, and 40 is just around the corner. It's a really sobering thought. My youngest is now a chatty 2-year-old whose favorite word is "Bye-bye." It used to be "No!", but I'm sure that one will make a comeback sometime soon.
A few nights ago, I watched "Raiders of the Lost Ark". Indiana Jones said, "It's not the age, honey, it's the mileage." Times like these make me feel the mileage.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
[Insert googly-eyed emoticon here.]
It seems that time is speeding up for me, especially now that the holidays are approaching. Maybe it's also because I turn 37 on Saturday, and 40 is just around the corner. It's a really sobering thought. My youngest is now a chatty 2-year-old whose favorite word is "Bye-bye." It used to be "No!", but I'm sure that one will make a comeback sometime soon.
A few nights ago, I watched "Raiders of the Lost Ark". Indiana Jones said, "It's not the age, honey, it's the mileage." Times like these make me feel the mileage.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
Stuck at home...what now?
They're predicting ice/sleet/cold rain tomorrow here in Charlotte. The storm that's hammered the Midwest is heading here. My friend in Miami tweeted that it's too COLD down there. I think Mother Nature's thermostat is broken and she needs someone to come in and repair it. I've never been a fan of cold weather; we moved farther south to get AWAY from it.
My house sits on top of a hill in our neighborhood. We really didn't plan it that way; it just happened. On the good side, we don't have much of a flooding problem when it rains heavily, since water runs downhill. When that water freezes into ice, though, it's impossible to get down the street, much less the housing development. I've actually watched people slip-slide down the hill or try to make it up and fail miserably. During the winter storm of 2002, my husband jokingly called our house "The Fortress of Solitude".
He had a point. The first day of ice is beautiful. The second, third and fourth days aren't. Cabin fever sets in...and the millionth Christmas movie or rendition of "Let's Clap Hands for Santa Claus" drives me nuts. That's when you stock up on hot chocolate, board games, crayons and paper. Take your camera and shoot pictures that will never come again. Spend time with family, snuggled up under blankets and next to the space heater.
And hope that the Groundhog doesn't seen his shadow and spring comes early this year.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
My house sits on top of a hill in our neighborhood. We really didn't plan it that way; it just happened. On the good side, we don't have much of a flooding problem when it rains heavily, since water runs downhill. When that water freezes into ice, though, it's impossible to get down the street, much less the housing development. I've actually watched people slip-slide down the hill or try to make it up and fail miserably. During the winter storm of 2002, my husband jokingly called our house "The Fortress of Solitude".
He had a point. The first day of ice is beautiful. The second, third and fourth days aren't. Cabin fever sets in...and the millionth Christmas movie or rendition of "Let's Clap Hands for Santa Claus" drives me nuts. That's when you stock up on hot chocolate, board games, crayons and paper. Take your camera and shoot pictures that will never come again. Spend time with family, snuggled up under blankets and next to the space heater.
And hope that the Groundhog doesn't seen his shadow and spring comes early this year.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Monday, December 13, 2010
John Scharffenberger's Classic Drinking Chocolate
This recipe is from The Essence of Chocolate by John Scharffenberger and Robert Steinberg.©2006 by Hyperion Books, New York NY. Scharffenberger is a chocolate/candy making company.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Classic Drinking Chocolate (serves 6-12). This can be made ahead of time, but keep in mind that the spices intensify over time.
Ingredients:
2 1/2 cups whole milk
4 ounces 99% unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon (optional)
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper (optional)
Heat the milk in a saucepan over medium heat until it's hot to the touch. Whisk in the chocolate and sugar ad continue whisking for 1-2 minutes until the sugar is dissolved. Whisk in the vanilla, the cinnamon, and the cayenne. Reduce the heat to low. The chocolate will thicken as it sits.
For a lighter, airy consistency, remove the hot chocolate from the heat and mix with a hand blender on low speed just before serving. Or make ahead and use the frother of an espresso machine to reheat it. Individual servings can be topped with frothed milk.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Merry Christmas in Many Languages!
The Omniglot website is a treasure trove of language and linguistic-related information. Here is a list of how "Merry Christmas", "Happy New Year" and similar greetings are said around the world.
Happy Holidays in Many Languages
Here are a few of my favorites:
Maligayang pasko at manigong bagong taon! (Filipino (Tagalog), my parents' native language)
Naragsak a Paskua! Narang-ay a Baro a Tawen kadakayo amin! (Filipino (Ilocano), a dialect)
QISmaS DatIvjaj 'ej DIS chu' DatIvjaj (sg) QISmaS botIvjaj 'ej DIS chu' botIvjaj (pl) (Klingon!)
Alassëa Hristomerendë! Alassëa Vinyarië! (Quenya---Lord of the Rings!)
Nadolig llawen a blwyddyn newydd dda (Welsh)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Happy Holidays in Many Languages
Here are a few of my favorites:
Maligayang pasko at manigong bagong taon! (Filipino (Tagalog), my parents' native language)
Naragsak a Paskua! Narang-ay a Baro a Tawen kadakayo amin! (Filipino (Ilocano), a dialect)
QISmaS DatIvjaj 'ej DIS chu' DatIvjaj (sg) QISmaS botIvjaj 'ej DIS chu' botIvjaj (pl) (Klingon!)
Alassëa Hristomerendë! Alassëa Vinyarië! (Quenya---Lord of the Rings!)
Nadolig llawen a blwyddyn newydd dda (Welsh)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
Christmas,
culture,
holiday,
languages,
New Year's
Saturday, December 11, 2010
Nguzo Saba: The Seven Principles of Kwanzaa
Joyous Kwanzaa, or Habari Gani! (What's the News?)
Kwanzaa is an African-American holiday that runs from December 26 to January 1. It was first celebrated in 1966 to celebrate pride in African heritage and culture. The phrase "matunde ya kwanza" means "the first fruits of the harvest" in Swahili. Households decorate their houses with kente (African cloth) and family members wear brightly colored kaftans (dresses), daishiki (suits) and kufi (caps). Offerings of drinks (libations) are shared from a common cup, and Kwanzaa ends with a large feast for all the participants.
The kinara (candleholder) holds seven candles, with each candle representing Nguzo Saba, the seven principles of Kwanzaa. Three red candles are set on the left, a black candle in the middle, and three green candles on the right. It's similar to a Jewish menorah, lit for Hanukkah.
The seven principles are: Umoja (unity), Kuchichagulia (Self-Determination), Ujima (Working Together as a Community), Ujamaa (Working Together Prosperously), Nia (Purpose), Kuumba (Creativity) and Imani (Faith). Each day of the celebration is dedicated to one of these principles and how a person can contribute to the community at large.
Habari Gani! :-)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Kwanzaa is an African-American holiday that runs from December 26 to January 1. It was first celebrated in 1966 to celebrate pride in African heritage and culture. The phrase "matunde ya kwanza" means "the first fruits of the harvest" in Swahili. Households decorate their houses with kente (African cloth) and family members wear brightly colored kaftans (dresses), daishiki (suits) and kufi (caps). Offerings of drinks (libations) are shared from a common cup, and Kwanzaa ends with a large feast for all the participants.
The kinara (candleholder) holds seven candles, with each candle representing Nguzo Saba, the seven principles of Kwanzaa. Three red candles are set on the left, a black candle in the middle, and three green candles on the right. It's similar to a Jewish menorah, lit for Hanukkah.
The seven principles are: Umoja (unity), Kuchichagulia (Self-Determination), Ujima (Working Together as a Community), Ujamaa (Working Together Prosperously), Nia (Purpose), Kuumba (Creativity) and Imani (Faith). Each day of the celebration is dedicated to one of these principles and how a person can contribute to the community at large.
Habari Gani! :-)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Friday, December 10, 2010
An Autism Christmas...
I saw this link this morning and read this poem. This really describes Christmas for my older two kids, who are autistic. If there is one thing you read today, please read this. Thanks.
An Autism Christmas, on the Autisable website.
Thanks to @LornadEnt on twitter for the link. :-)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
An Autism Christmas, on the Autisable website.
Thanks to @LornadEnt on twitter for the link. :-)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Thursday, December 9, 2010
Christmas Memories, Part II
The children of St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church (Naples, Italy) took part in a re-enactment of the manger scene. There were Mary, Joseph, Baby Jesus (represented by a doll), the Three Wise Men, angels, shepherds, donkeys, sheep, and townspeople. Yes, it was a major production, and all the Sunday School teachers made sure everyone had a part.
By this time, I was considered too old to dress up (I was in my early teens, so I didn't mind being excluded). My two younger sisters were angels, with white robes and halos made with bendy wire and gold tinsel. Another friend dressed up in the blue robe of one of the Wise Men, and his brother was one of the townspeople. He chose to be a cook, complete with apron, spoon, chef hat, and bowl. We asked him, "Why a cook?" His answer? He admired my dad (who was a cook, or formally a "mess management specialist") and wanted to dress up just like him. Aw!
The production was a great success, even if there were a few stage miscues. After Mass, all the fledging actors and actresses all went home for presents. I was proud of them all for their thespian skills, and even though I wasn't directly involved with the production, it remains one of my fondest Christmas memories.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
By this time, I was considered too old to dress up (I was in my early teens, so I didn't mind being excluded). My two younger sisters were angels, with white robes and halos made with bendy wire and gold tinsel. Another friend dressed up in the blue robe of one of the Wise Men, and his brother was one of the townspeople. He chose to be a cook, complete with apron, spoon, chef hat, and bowl. We asked him, "Why a cook?" His answer? He admired my dad (who was a cook, or formally a "mess management specialist") and wanted to dress up just like him. Aw!
The production was a great success, even if there were a few stage miscues. After Mass, all the fledging actors and actresses all went home for presents. I was proud of them all for their thespian skills, and even though I wasn't directly involved with the production, it remains one of my fondest Christmas memories.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
angel,
Catholic,
childhood memories,
Christmas,
church,
cooking,
manger scene,
Wise Men
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Christmas Memories, Part I
One of my fondest Christmas memories is going to Rome to see the Pope say Midnight Mass. Of course, when you're thirteen at the time, you aren't exactly thrilled about sitting in a crowded cathedral (or freezing outside sitting in St.Peter's Square), but the atmosphere is like nothing else. Solemn, yet festive at the same time.
We went as an organized church group, with a chartered bus from Naples. It was a 2 hour drive north to Rome and St. Peter's Basilica. The purples of Advent were changed to the red of Christmas, and the Pope was in his red, white and gold robes. Our group ended up close to the back, so the Pope looked like a tiny spot among the cardinals and bishops. The choir sang the Hallelujahs and prayers were said in multiple languages: French, Italian, English, Latin, Spanish...it was a polyglot of chants and intercessions.
The Mass went on for an hour or more. By the time it was finished, all the children of the group were more than eager to go back home and open presents, even thought we didn't arrive until 3 in the morning. We were all too keyed up to sleep on the trip home.
It was difficult to appreciate the event when you were so young, but now I look back on it with fondness and I would turn back time to go there again.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
We went as an organized church group, with a chartered bus from Naples. It was a 2 hour drive north to Rome and St. Peter's Basilica. The purples of Advent were changed to the red of Christmas, and the Pope was in his red, white and gold robes. Our group ended up close to the back, so the Pope looked like a tiny spot among the cardinals and bishops. The choir sang the Hallelujahs and prayers were said in multiple languages: French, Italian, English, Latin, Spanish...it was a polyglot of chants and intercessions.
The Mass went on for an hour or more. By the time it was finished, all the children of the group were more than eager to go back home and open presents, even thought we didn't arrive until 3 in the morning. We were all too keyed up to sleep on the trip home.
It was difficult to appreciate the event when you were so young, but now I look back on it with fondness and I would turn back time to go there again.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
A Day of Remembrance, 7 December 1941
Today is the 69th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, that ushered in the US's entrance into World War Two. Please spare a moment of reflection for all those who died that day, including the ones aboard the USS Arizona.
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
Hawaii,
Pearl Harbor,
remembrance,
World War II history
Monday, December 6, 2010
This Wonderful(?) Wintry Season
Brrr, it's COLD! I know it's December, I know it's supposed to be cold. There's frost on the grass right outside my window. I've got the heat turned up. The commercials on the kids' channel Sprout are advertising "The Snowy Side Up Show" and "Elmo's Christmas Movies." Some of my on-line friends are digging out of several feet of snow and school's been canceled in some places. We've been rained on, drizzled on, sleeted on, with cold, wet stuff. College football teams battle it out for Bowl games, and the Super Bowl is next month! The malls ring with Christmas music and I still have to figure out where to put up the tree.
But I still enjoy this season. So many different cultural holidays (Hanukkah, Yule, Christmas, Festivus, Kwanzaa, Boxing Day (December 26), birthdays (mine is the 18th, an aunt's is the 25th, Banshee Girl on the 5th of January, Hubs on the 6th of January) and traditions (cookie goodie boxes!).Christmas Eve Midnight Mass, opening presents at 2 AM Christmas morning, and seeing the kids enjoy their new toys and clothes.
Christmas carols, traditional and all the variations thereof, both reverent and irreverent. Before my hands went kaput, I used to play the piano for hours to fill the house with music. My playlist has the Wiggles' "Go Santa Go" with Mannheim Steamroller's "Carol of the Bells" and Bob Rivers' "Wreck the Malls".
I love this season, even with the weird weather this year.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
But I still enjoy this season. So many different cultural holidays (Hanukkah, Yule, Christmas, Festivus, Kwanzaa, Boxing Day (December 26), birthdays (mine is the 18th, an aunt's is the 25th, Banshee Girl on the 5th of January, Hubs on the 6th of January) and traditions (cookie goodie boxes!).Christmas Eve Midnight Mass, opening presents at 2 AM Christmas morning, and seeing the kids enjoy their new toys and clothes.
Christmas carols, traditional and all the variations thereof, both reverent and irreverent. Before my hands went kaput, I used to play the piano for hours to fill the house with music. My playlist has the Wiggles' "Go Santa Go" with Mannheim Steamroller's "Carol of the Bells" and Bob Rivers' "Wreck the Malls".
I love this season, even with the weird weather this year.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Dear Santa (Wish List 2010)
Dear Santa,
Here is my list for this year:
a gift card to any bookstore (Barnes and Noble, Borders, Books-A-Million, etc.)
a gift card to any art store (Michaels, A.C. Moore)
some clothes to jumpstart my wardrobe
a ticket to Barbados
a week-long stay at the Spa at Hershey's.
a month in my home country (England) and a car to drive all over
Jewelry from Fire Mountain Arts
An iPAD/electronic tablet for art
The Wii fit (so I can get in shape and lose 10 pounds)
The Doctor Who Series 5 DVD Collection
and most importantly...
a world that my kids can grow up without hate and fear.
Thanks, Santa
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Here is my list for this year:
a gift card to any bookstore (Barnes and Noble, Borders, Books-A-Million, etc.)
a gift card to any art store (Michaels, A.C. Moore)
some clothes to jumpstart my wardrobe
a ticket to Barbados
a week-long stay at the Spa at Hershey's.
a month in my home country (England) and a car to drive all over
Jewelry from Fire Mountain Arts
An iPAD/electronic tablet for art
The Wii fit (so I can get in shape and lose 10 pounds)
The Doctor Who Series 5 DVD Collection
and most importantly...
a world that my kids can grow up without hate and fear.
Thanks, Santa
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Saturday, December 4, 2010
Admin Post: Art Blog and Zazzle Art Store Name Change
Note to my readers! I've renamed my art blog to Phoenix Fire Arts. The new feed address is http://feeds.feedburner.com/PhoenixFireArts
Please readjust your feeds accordingly!
The Phoenix Fire Art store on zazzle.com is at the same address http://www.zazzle.com/artistmum1*
New Christmas cards, posters and apparel will be available by Monday, 6 December! Browse the store to find ideal gifts!
Thanks,
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Friday, December 3, 2010
Song Lyrics: Two Hanukkah Songs
In honor of Hanukkah, I'd like to share two of my favorite songs of the season. I'm not Jewish, but I have friends who are, so this is dedicated to them.
Dreidel Song (I am a Little Dreidel. Yiddish: Ikh bin A Kleyner Dreidel)
I have a little Dreidel
I made it out of clay,
And when it's dry and ready
O Dreidel I shall play.
A dreidel ("Sevivon" in Hebrew) is a 4-sided top. Each side has a Hebrew letter: Nun, Gimel, Hei, Shin, which is short for "Nes Gadol Hayah Sham", "A Great Miracle Happened There." Each player starts with the same number of tokens (like chocolate coins, or 'gelt') and spin the dreidel during their turn.
If Nun comes up, nothing is done
gimel, , the player takes the entire pot in the middle.
hei , the player takes half (or half plus one, if there's an odd number)
shin , the player puts one token in the middle.
The few times I've played the Dreidel game, I've always been the first one to run out of money. I'm the first to admit I have lousy luck in games of chance.
Oh, Chanukah! (Chanukah is another spelling of Hanukkah. It's the same thing.)
Oh Chanukah, Oh Chanukah
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Dreidel Song (I am a Little Dreidel. Yiddish: Ikh bin A Kleyner Dreidel)
I have a little Dreidel
I made it out of clay,
And when it's dry and ready
O Dreidel I shall play.
A dreidel ("Sevivon" in Hebrew) is a 4-sided top. Each side has a Hebrew letter: Nun, Gimel, Hei, Shin, which is short for "Nes Gadol Hayah Sham", "A Great Miracle Happened There." Each player starts with the same number of tokens (like chocolate coins, or 'gelt') and spin the dreidel during their turn.
If Nun comes up, nothing is done
gimel, , the player takes the entire pot in the middle.
hei , the player takes half (or half plus one, if there's an odd number)
shin , the player puts one token in the middle.
The few times I've played the Dreidel game, I've always been the first one to run out of money. I'm the first to admit I have lousy luck in games of chance.
Oh, Chanukah! (Chanukah is another spelling of Hanukkah. It's the same thing.)
Oh Chanukah, Oh Chanukah
Come light the menorah
Let's have a party
We'll all dance the horah
Gather round the table, we'll give you a treat
Dreidels to play with, and latkes to eat
Let's have a party
We'll all dance the horah
Gather round the table, we'll give you a treat
Dreidels to play with, and latkes to eat
Menorah: A candleholder with nine branches. The ninth candle is the "shamash" (helper) from which the other eight are lit, one candle per day of Hanukkah.
Horah: A circle dance
latke: Potato pancake
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
Chanukah,
culture,
dreidel,
Hanukah,
Jewish tradition,
languages,
menorah,
song lyrics
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Detective Inspector, Grammar Police, American English Division
I used to teach ESL (English as a Second Language) to non-native speakers. Since I live in the US, I adopted and used the American English spellings for my lessons. I'm a native-born Brit and it took me a while to adjust to both spellings, depending to whom I'm talking, or to whom I'm writing. I'm sensitive to word spellings and constructions because I also do line editing. I'm so used to AE that a British friend dubbed me the title of this entry (in the most affectionate manner, of course).
So D.I. Annie presents to you some differences between British English and American English:
Just changes in spelling, but same meaning:
colour/color
honour/honor
favour/favor
centre/center
criticise/criticize
authorise/authorize
traveller/traveler
defence/defense (nouns end in -ce. If it's a verb, the British use the -se spelling)
cheque/check
storey/story (as in floor of a building)
aluminium/aluminum (note the extra "i" in the British spelling. It's pronounced "a-loo-MEE-nee-um")
anaesthesia/anesthesia (the British keep the extra "a")
grey/gray
Some British English (BE) words and their American English (AE) counterparts:
Davenport:a small writing desk (BE)
a sofa (American and Canadian)
Bomb (v): A smashing success (BE)
a failure (AE)
table (v): to consider immediately (BE)
to postpone till later (AE)
access (n) custodial rights (BE)
permission to go somewhere (AE: visitation rights)
Bristol fashion (adj) all taken care of (BE)
taken care of, all A-OK (AE)
Bungalow (n) modest house, cottage (BE)
one story house (AE)
Call (v) dropped by, visited (BE) The British say, "He telephoned" or "He rang." to refer to a phone call.
telephoned (AE).
catch (you) out (v) spot an error (BE)
The Americans say "Catch an error" or "Spot an error."
pavement (n) (BE)
The Americans say, "sidewalk."
razzle (n) A binge (BE) "To go on the razzle." means "to go on a spree" for Americans.
"razz" (v) to tease (AE).
run in (v) Breaking into a brand new car. (BE)
to meet unexpectedly, have an accident (AE).
slag (v) to mock, deride, tease (BE) to "slag (someone) down" means to "give someone hell, read them the riot act, call them on the carpet"
(n) destroyed (AE, military). "It was reduced to slag."
shake (someone) down (v) to let someone stay the night at your place (BE)
"shakedown cruise" in American naval terms is the maiden voyage of a newly commissioned ship.
flat, n. apartment (BE).
It's an adjective in AE, meaning two-dimensional.
bonnet (n) a car hood (BE)
a ladies' hat (AE)
boot (n) the trunk of a car (BE)
a shoe that goes above the ankle (AE)
zebra (zebra crossing) (n) pedestrian crossing (BE) Also called pelican crossing
crosswalk (AE). Also a sports term for the referee (who wears a black and white shirt)
wash up (v) wash the dishes. "Do the dishes" doesn't exist in BE.
use the restroom (AE)
And to clarify some numbers:
A zero in the US is a naught or a cipher in England.
A million in both countries is 1,000,000 (1 with 6 zeros)
A billion in the US is 1,000,000,000 (1 with 9 zeros). In England, it's a milliard.
A trillion in the US is 1,000,000,000,000 (1 with 12 zeros). In England, it's a billion.
A quadrillion in the US is 1,000 x 1 trillion (1 with 15 zeros). In England, it's a thousand billion.
So a billion in the US isn't the same as a billion in England. It does make a difference...a huge difference, by about 1,000.
And some commonly misused proper names:
(Note: Most people think of themselves as Scots, Welsh, Irish, etc. first, before being British)
British: a naturalized subject of Great Britain (it can include someone from Scotland, Wales, N. Ireland, or from any Commonwealth Country)
Briton: a person from Great Britain/England (shortened to Brit)
English: specifically from England in culture and outlook. (DO NOT refer to a Scot, an Irishman or a Welshman as "English". Just don't.)
Scot: A person from Scotland
Scottish: from Scotland (i.e. bagpipes, kilt, etc.)
Scots: Scottish English, Scottish dialect of English (NOT the same thing as Scottish Gaelic, which is Gaidhig)
Scotch: This is the English word for Scottish dialect (see above). The Scots themselves would not use this for their language. It's also in certain expressions "Scotch whiskey" (whisky in England), and "Scotch tweed".
(Most terms from British English A to Zed: Revised and Updated Edition by Norman W. Schur, updated by Eugene Ehrlich ©2001 by Checkmark Books, New York)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
So D.I. Annie presents to you some differences between British English and American English:
Just changes in spelling, but same meaning:
colour/color
honour/honor
favour/favor
centre/center
criticise/criticize
authorise/authorize
traveller/traveler
defence/defense (nouns end in -ce. If it's a verb, the British use the -se spelling)
cheque/check
storey/story (as in floor of a building)
aluminium/aluminum (note the extra "i" in the British spelling. It's pronounced "a-loo-MEE-nee-um")
anaesthesia/anesthesia (the British keep the extra "a")
grey/gray
Some British English (BE) words and their American English (AE) counterparts:
Davenport:a small writing desk (BE)
a sofa (American and Canadian)
Bomb (v): A smashing success (BE)
a failure (AE)
table (v): to consider immediately (BE)
to postpone till later (AE)
access (n) custodial rights (BE)
permission to go somewhere (AE: visitation rights)
Bristol fashion (adj) all taken care of (BE)
taken care of, all A-OK (AE)
Bungalow (n) modest house, cottage (BE)
one story house (AE)
Call (v) dropped by, visited (BE) The British say, "He telephoned" or "He rang." to refer to a phone call.
telephoned (AE).
catch (you) out (v) spot an error (BE)
The Americans say "Catch an error" or "Spot an error."
pavement (n) (BE)
The Americans say, "sidewalk."
razzle (n) A binge (BE) "To go on the razzle." means "to go on a spree" for Americans.
"razz" (v) to tease (AE).
run in (v) Breaking into a brand new car. (BE)
to meet unexpectedly, have an accident (AE).
slag (v) to mock, deride, tease (BE) to "slag (someone) down" means to "give someone hell, read them the riot act, call them on the carpet"
(n) destroyed (AE, military). "It was reduced to slag."
shake (someone) down (v) to let someone stay the night at your place (BE)
"shakedown cruise" in American naval terms is the maiden voyage of a newly commissioned ship.
flat, n. apartment (BE).
It's an adjective in AE, meaning two-dimensional.
bonnet (n) a car hood (BE)
a ladies' hat (AE)
boot (n) the trunk of a car (BE)
a shoe that goes above the ankle (AE)
zebra (zebra crossing) (n) pedestrian crossing (BE) Also called pelican crossing
crosswalk (AE). Also a sports term for the referee (who wears a black and white shirt)
wash up (v) wash the dishes. "Do the dishes" doesn't exist in BE.
use the restroom (AE)
And to clarify some numbers:
A zero in the US is a naught or a cipher in England.
A million in both countries is 1,000,000 (1 with 6 zeros)
A billion in the US is 1,000,000,000 (1 with 9 zeros). In England, it's a milliard.
A trillion in the US is 1,000,000,000,000 (1 with 12 zeros). In England, it's a billion.
A quadrillion in the US is 1,000 x 1 trillion (1 with 15 zeros). In England, it's a thousand billion.
So a billion in the US isn't the same as a billion in England. It does make a difference...a huge difference, by about 1,000.
And some commonly misused proper names:
(Note: Most people think of themselves as Scots, Welsh, Irish, etc. first, before being British)
British: a naturalized subject of Great Britain (it can include someone from Scotland, Wales, N. Ireland, or from any Commonwealth Country)
Briton: a person from Great Britain/England (shortened to Brit)
English: specifically from England in culture and outlook. (DO NOT refer to a Scot, an Irishman or a Welshman as "English". Just don't.)
Scot: A person from Scotland
Scottish: from Scotland (i.e. bagpipes, kilt, etc.)
Scots: Scottish English, Scottish dialect of English (NOT the same thing as Scottish Gaelic, which is Gaidhig)
Scotch: This is the English word for Scottish dialect (see above). The Scots themselves would not use this for their language. It's also in certain expressions "Scotch whiskey" (whisky in England), and "Scotch tweed".
(Most terms from British English A to Zed: Revised and Updated Edition by Norman W. Schur, updated by Eugene Ehrlich ©2001 by Checkmark Books, New York)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
american english,
british english,
dialect,
english,
english as a second language,
language,
linguistics
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
The "Fiction" in Science Fiction (part II)
Yes, scientific accuracy is important in a science fiction short story or novel. A glaring mistake can pull the reader out of the story and ruin the experience for him or her.
Then there's something called "suspension of disbelief". It's the concept that allows us to believe in blue-skinned humanoids with antennae on their heads, or a sentient android, or a time-traveling alien who can alter his appearance before he dies. It allows us to believe in Warp 9.8, hyperspace drive, and a floating space station not far from the event horizon of a black hole. Or a man being trapped in a computer, fighting for his life in a deadly tournament.
Science is one important part of science fiction, but the fiction part is important too. As I stated before, each author puts his or her unique spin on the same concepts, and that is what makes each story unique. Bug eyed aliens (or Reptilians) take over Earth? How do our heroes triumph over the bad guys? Do our heroes stumble all over the universe, finding problems to solve in every space and time? What kind of adventures do they have? Good storytelling transports the reader into that particular world and as the pages turn, he or she becomes so engrossed in the story that the words "THE END" is a disappointment.
That's a hallmark of good writing, no matter what genre. Science Fiction, in particular, should be a balance of science and fiction, in order to tell a good story.
P.S. Can you identify the various SF series/movies/books mentioned in this article (Parts I and II)?
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Then there's something called "suspension of disbelief". It's the concept that allows us to believe in blue-skinned humanoids with antennae on their heads, or a sentient android, or a time-traveling alien who can alter his appearance before he dies. It allows us to believe in Warp 9.8, hyperspace drive, and a floating space station not far from the event horizon of a black hole. Or a man being trapped in a computer, fighting for his life in a deadly tournament.
Science is one important part of science fiction, but the fiction part is important too. As I stated before, each author puts his or her unique spin on the same concepts, and that is what makes each story unique. Bug eyed aliens (or Reptilians) take over Earth? How do our heroes triumph over the bad guys? Do our heroes stumble all over the universe, finding problems to solve in every space and time? What kind of adventures do they have? Good storytelling transports the reader into that particular world and as the pages turn, he or she becomes so engrossed in the story that the words "THE END" is a disappointment.
That's a hallmark of good writing, no matter what genre. Science Fiction, in particular, should be a balance of science and fiction, in order to tell a good story.
P.S. Can you identify the various SF series/movies/books mentioned in this article (Parts I and II)?
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
science fiction,
storytelling,
writing,
writing process
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
The "Science" in Science Fiction (part I)
"What's the difference between science fiction and fantasy?"
"Genetics, propulsion and the speed limit of the galaxy."
I don't remember where I saw the above quote, but it has a point. Most of my short fiction falls under science fiction or fantasy. My shelves are filled with books on linguistics, travel, military traditions, flight, NASA and the space race, and quantum physics. It's a geek's library, but I'm always pulling down one book or another to check facts. If I can't find it, there's always the Internet.
Science is a starting point in science fiction. Space stations, ships, exotic races, futuristic weapons...the author extrapolates from current trends in biology, chemistry, and physics. Each writer puts their own personal spin on how they envision the future fifty, one hundred or even one thousand years from now. Arthur C. Clarke, Issac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein and many classic sci-fi writers took those ideas and made them unique. A science fiction story might have the same elements as another one, but it's how the concepts are presented that makes it different from the others.
That said, I wince when I read something that is scientifically impossible. Even now, I still chuckle at Star Trek's transporter and think, "Heisenberg, Heisenberg." I can handle minor inconsistencies in the story, but a planet with 2 times the gravity of Earth and our heroes can walk on it with no problems? A ship hovering a mere 100,000 miles from and exploding supernova and getting through the holocaust unscathed? (Those must be some really awesome particle shields. Can I get those for my car?) And yes, I've read stories that involve those two examples.
Some of my sci-fi writer friends sit around and analyze every glaring (and not so glaring) scientific mistake in a story or novel. It borders on the nitpicky and ridiculous at times. If I wanted a purely accurate science story, I'll go read a journal or a dissertation. Sure, Einstein said there's a speed limit to the universe (light speed), but should it prevent a writer from telling a good story? What if the Millennium Falcon didn't have hyperspeed? Or the Enterprise with no warp drive? Or no obelisk on Jupiter in "2010"? Or...
You get the idea. Now for the "Fiction" in science fiction...(part II)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
"Genetics, propulsion and the speed limit of the galaxy."
I don't remember where I saw the above quote, but it has a point. Most of my short fiction falls under science fiction or fantasy. My shelves are filled with books on linguistics, travel, military traditions, flight, NASA and the space race, and quantum physics. It's a geek's library, but I'm always pulling down one book or another to check facts. If I can't find it, there's always the Internet.
Science is a starting point in science fiction. Space stations, ships, exotic races, futuristic weapons...the author extrapolates from current trends in biology, chemistry, and physics. Each writer puts their own personal spin on how they envision the future fifty, one hundred or even one thousand years from now. Arthur C. Clarke, Issac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein and many classic sci-fi writers took those ideas and made them unique. A science fiction story might have the same elements as another one, but it's how the concepts are presented that makes it different from the others.
That said, I wince when I read something that is scientifically impossible. Even now, I still chuckle at Star Trek's transporter and think, "Heisenberg, Heisenberg." I can handle minor inconsistencies in the story, but a planet with 2 times the gravity of Earth and our heroes can walk on it with no problems? A ship hovering a mere 100,000 miles from and exploding supernova and getting through the holocaust unscathed? (Those must be some really awesome particle shields. Can I get those for my car?) And yes, I've read stories that involve those two examples.
Some of my sci-fi writer friends sit around and analyze every glaring (and not so glaring) scientific mistake in a story or novel. It borders on the nitpicky and ridiculous at times. If I wanted a purely accurate science story, I'll go read a journal or a dissertation. Sure, Einstein said there's a speed limit to the universe (light speed), but should it prevent a writer from telling a good story? What if the Millennium Falcon didn't have hyperspeed? Or the Enterprise with no warp drive? Or no obelisk on Jupiter in "2010"? Or...
You get the idea. Now for the "Fiction" in science fiction...(part II)
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
biology,
quantum physics,
science fiction,
scientific,
writing
Monday, November 29, 2010
New Experiences, New Ideas
My kids love watching the Imagination Movers, a show on Playhouse Disney. Four guys (Dave, Rich, Scott and Smitty) work at the Idea Warehouse and help people solve their various problems. They stress creative thinking, brainstorming and seeing things in a different way. Their music is a mix of rock and other genres, with catchy tunes to keep you dancing.
One particular episode caught my attention. "Out of Tunes" involved a blues musician (New Orleans musician Chris Thomas King) who couldn't write any new songs for his upcoming CD. The Movers' solutions included getting your mind primed by asking 'what if?' and being physically active through exercise. Great ideas (sound mind, sound body), but in this case, it didn't help their client. So what was the root problem?
It turned out he wrote about the same subjects all the time. Food, family...and he was convinced he'd exhausted all the possibilities. So the Movers introduced him to their Fairy Tale Room in their huge Idea Warehouse and the rock climbing in the Rock Climbing Room. Armed with new things to write about, he was able to write brand new songs for his CD.
I know how the guy feels. Is my Idea Well running dry? Could it be there isn't anything else I can write about? My hands hurt seven days out of seven, and typing on a keyboard made them stiffer and even more painful. Or maybe...
I needed to shake up my usual schedule.
We visited my sister for Thanksgiving, and we wandered through new malls,and visited a favorite used bookstore. On our way home, we drove through all kinds of scenery: cotton fields, a paper mill, truck stops, antique shops and peanut stores. I drew sketches, scribbled story notes and ate all sorts of food from the Thanksgiving table. In the process, I was refilling the Well.
Now I'm back home in Charlotte and the Muse is busy simmering Ideas in her pressure cooker. And the words are flowing again.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
One particular episode caught my attention. "Out of Tunes" involved a blues musician (New Orleans musician Chris Thomas King) who couldn't write any new songs for his upcoming CD. The Movers' solutions included getting your mind primed by asking 'what if?' and being physically active through exercise. Great ideas (sound mind, sound body), but in this case, it didn't help their client. So what was the root problem?
It turned out he wrote about the same subjects all the time. Food, family...and he was convinced he'd exhausted all the possibilities. So the Movers introduced him to their Fairy Tale Room in their huge Idea Warehouse and the rock climbing in the Rock Climbing Room. Armed with new things to write about, he was able to write brand new songs for his CD.
I know how the guy feels. Is my Idea Well running dry? Could it be there isn't anything else I can write about? My hands hurt seven days out of seven, and typing on a keyboard made them stiffer and even more painful. Or maybe...
I needed to shake up my usual schedule.
We visited my sister for Thanksgiving, and we wandered through new malls,and visited a favorite used bookstore. On our way home, we drove through all kinds of scenery: cotton fields, a paper mill, truck stops, antique shops and peanut stores. I drew sketches, scribbled story notes and ate all sorts of food from the Thanksgiving table. In the process, I was refilling the Well.
Now I'm back home in Charlotte and the Muse is busy simmering Ideas in her pressure cooker. And the words are flowing again.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
break,
Creative muse,
new ideas,
scenery,
thanksgiving
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
ADMIN POST: Taking a break for 2 weeks!
Due to health issues, I'm on a 2 week break. I Gotta Write will be back after the Thanksgiving holidays!
Have a safe Turkey Day and see you then!
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Have a safe Turkey Day and see you then!
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Thank you, Veterans! We salute you!
Thank you, all those who serve in the military now and those who served in the past. We owe you so much.
Most of my family are/have been in the armed forces. My dad is retired US Navy (28 years, Chief Petty Officer), one uncle served in Desert Shield/Desert Storm, another was a master chief petty officer during Korea and Vietnam. My brother is in the Navy now, and my cousins have been in the US Army, Air Force and Marine Corps.
I think one of the most inspiring men I've known is a retired WWII Air Force Colonel, who worked with Werner Von Braun during the heyday of the space program in the 1950's-60's. Man, did he have stories about his time in the service! I met him when he went back to school to finally become fluent in German...and he was the oldest student, in his 70's at the time.
Colonel Jack Crooke, USAF (retired). You're so awesome. I hope to be so awesome when I get to your age.
Have a good Veterans Day, everyone, and be sure to thank those in uniform!
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Most of my family are/have been in the armed forces. My dad is retired US Navy (28 years, Chief Petty Officer), one uncle served in Desert Shield/Desert Storm, another was a master chief petty officer during Korea and Vietnam. My brother is in the Navy now, and my cousins have been in the US Army, Air Force and Marine Corps.
I think one of the most inspiring men I've known is a retired WWII Air Force Colonel, who worked with Werner Von Braun during the heyday of the space program in the 1950's-60's. Man, did he have stories about his time in the service! I met him when he went back to school to finally become fluent in German...and he was the oldest student, in his 70's at the time.
Colonel Jack Crooke, USAF (retired). You're so awesome. I hope to be so awesome when I get to your age.
Have a good Veterans Day, everyone, and be sure to thank those in uniform!
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
Song Lyrics: The United States Marine Corps Hymn
Happy Birthday, United States Marine Corps! My cousin's husband served in the USMC, and I knew many cadets while I was in the Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets.
Here's your song:
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Here's your song:
- From the Halls of Montezuma,
- To the shores of Tripoli;
- We fight our country's battles
- In the air, on land, and sea;
- First to fight for right and freedom
- And to keep our honor clean;
- We are proud to claim the title
- Of United States Marine.
- Our flag's unfurled to every breeze
- From dawn to setting sun;
- We have fought in every clime and place
- Where we could take a gun;
- In the snow of far-off Northern lands
- And in sunny tropic scenes;
- You will find us always on the job
- The United States Marines.
- Here's health to you and to our Corps
- Which we are proud to serve;
- In many a strife we've fought for life
- And never lost our nerve;
- If the Army and the Navy
- Ever look on Heaven’s scenes;
- They will find the streets are guarded
- By United States Marines.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
The Devil's in the Details
...also known as "It's the little things that count."
I'm the first to admit that this is one area I need to improve in my writing. I'm used to getting to straight to the action, dialog and interpersonal interactions. When it comes to setting up the plot or describing settings or clothing, I end up expanding that during subsequent drafts. In my first drafts, I have a perfect picture of what the setting is and how my characters look like. Unfortunately, that doesn't always transfer to the page, at least, not without a lot of work on my part.
"Your reader is not a mind reader!" ranted one of my betas. She'd gone over one of my chapter drafts and put that note all in capital letters in the margin. "Who IS this person and where the heck ARE we?"
Oops. Yeah. Kinda glossed over that part. Granted, I'm not like Arthur Conan Doyle or James Joyce who spend pages describing the countryside or the "phantom lights over the moors" or something like that. I tried reading "War and Peace" and haven't gotten through the damn thing yet. I'd spent a lot of my younger years reading Spillane and Hammett and other crime noir and I think it shows. Fast pace, action, catch the bad guy, case closed.
Slow down, put on the brakes, describe the scene and people in it, enthrall your readers. Like my wise beta said, they can't read your mind.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
I'm the first to admit that this is one area I need to improve in my writing. I'm used to getting to straight to the action, dialog and interpersonal interactions. When it comes to setting up the plot or describing settings or clothing, I end up expanding that during subsequent drafts. In my first drafts, I have a perfect picture of what the setting is and how my characters look like. Unfortunately, that doesn't always transfer to the page, at least, not without a lot of work on my part.
"Your reader is not a mind reader!" ranted one of my betas. She'd gone over one of my chapter drafts and put that note all in capital letters in the margin. "Who IS this person and where the heck ARE we?"
Oops. Yeah. Kinda glossed over that part. Granted, I'm not like Arthur Conan Doyle or James Joyce who spend pages describing the countryside or the "phantom lights over the moors" or something like that. I tried reading "War and Peace" and haven't gotten through the damn thing yet. I'd spent a lot of my younger years reading Spillane and Hammett and other crime noir and I think it shows. Fast pace, action, catch the bad guy, case closed.
Slow down, put on the brakes, describe the scene and people in it, enthrall your readers. Like my wise beta said, they can't read your mind.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Monday, November 8, 2010
A Short Letter to my Painful Joints
Dear Physical Body (especially my overenthusiastic immune system),
I know that the weather's changing from summer to fall. It's crisp and cold outside and we've had to put the heater on. The ouchies in my joints usually grow worse during these transitional months. I was expecting that after five years, so it's not a surprise. I've got the Icy-Hot, Advil and methotrexate all lined up.
But please, do you mind sparing my hands these days? I can't write or draw without them, and if I can't do either, I will absolutely, positively go insane.
Thanks much,
Me
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
I know that the weather's changing from summer to fall. It's crisp and cold outside and we've had to put the heater on. The ouchies in my joints usually grow worse during these transitional months. I was expecting that after five years, so it's not a surprise. I've got the Icy-Hot, Advil and methotrexate all lined up.
But please, do you mind sparing my hands these days? I can't write or draw without them, and if I can't do either, I will absolutely, positively go insane.
Thanks much,
Me
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Sunday, November 7, 2010
I Live a Rich Fantasy Life
Writing distracts me from all sorts of storms in my daily life. I can construct all sorts of worlds where my characters actively explore the universe, whether it be through space ships or through relationships. No one is completely good or evil, but they interact each other and enrich their lives.
Yes, I know you can do that in real life too. I have three kids and a husband, plus friends, acquaintances and family I interact with on a daily basis. It's a challenge to deal with two autistic kids, their doctors, therapists and teachers. You just concentrate on getting through the day. Lately, the hubs and I have been doing our own thing, growing somewhat apart.
Writing is an escape, where I can feel like I have some control over the lives of my characters. They can still "boldly go where no one has gone before" without having to worry about a dwindling bank account, or a call from school because your kid lashed out and bit someone because she was frustrated.
Yes, I live a rich fantasy life. I do know that it's just that, fantasy, and that I've still got to deal with real life issues. As much as I wish I could stay in my own literary and artistic creations, I need to remind myself that others need me in real life too. But the fantasy is still there whenever I need to escape.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Yes, I know you can do that in real life too. I have three kids and a husband, plus friends, acquaintances and family I interact with on a daily basis. It's a challenge to deal with two autistic kids, their doctors, therapists and teachers. You just concentrate on getting through the day. Lately, the hubs and I have been doing our own thing, growing somewhat apart.
Writing is an escape, where I can feel like I have some control over the lives of my characters. They can still "boldly go where no one has gone before" without having to worry about a dwindling bank account, or a call from school because your kid lashed out and bit someone because she was frustrated.
Yes, I live a rich fantasy life. I do know that it's just that, fantasy, and that I've still got to deal with real life issues. As much as I wish I could stay in my own literary and artistic creations, I need to remind myself that others need me in real life too. But the fantasy is still there whenever I need to escape.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
How Often Do You Update Your Blogs?
How often do you update your blogs? Daily, weekly, every other day, monthly? When the inspiration strikes you? A lot depends on the reason for your blog: an informational blog or a business blog might update every day. An art gallery blog might do it weekly, and a "this is my life" might depend on how much time you have to write. There are no rules set in stone; it's all up to you and the message you want to relay to your readers/followers.
Here's a rundown of my various blogs and how often I update them. I've had the criticism of "you've got too many blogs", but I know people who have even more than I do.
Daily (if at all possible)
I Gotta Write
Lady Rainbow's Art (non-fanfic art)
USS Sarasvati NCC-Art1 (Star Trek art)
Weekly
Annie's Flights of Fantasy (writing archive original works, just switched to a weekly schedule, thanks to time and other projects)
Writin' Across Universes (Star Trek/Doctor Who/Stargate/Other fanfic. Ditto, see above)
Whenever I can
Scribblings and What Nots (Life Journal)
Three Special Kids (special needs blog)
Mama Java (inspirational, food, Doctor Who gifs, pics)
Each one of my blogs has a definite purpose, so if a reader isn't inclined to read my Star Trek fanfics, but would be willing to read my short fiction and poetry, he or she could go to that blog instead. All the blogs are linked together, despite being on Blogger, LiveJournal, Dreamwidth and tumblr.
So, how often do you update your blogs?
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Here's a rundown of my various blogs and how often I update them. I've had the criticism of "you've got too many blogs", but I know people who have even more than I do.
Daily (if at all possible)
I Gotta Write
Lady Rainbow's Art (non-fanfic art)
USS Sarasvati NCC-Art1 (Star Trek art)
Weekly
Annie's Flights of Fantasy (writing archive original works, just switched to a weekly schedule, thanks to time and other projects)
Writin' Across Universes (Star Trek/Doctor Who/Stargate/Other fanfic. Ditto, see above)
Whenever I can
Scribblings and What Nots (Life Journal)
Three Special Kids (special needs blog)
Mama Java (inspirational, food, Doctor Who gifs, pics)
Each one of my blogs has a definite purpose, so if a reader isn't inclined to read my Star Trek fanfics, but would be willing to read my short fiction and poetry, he or she could go to that blog instead. All the blogs are linked together, despite being on Blogger, LiveJournal, Dreamwidth and tumblr.
So, how often do you update your blogs?
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
art,
blog,
fanfics,
poetry,
prose,
social media,
special needs,
writing
Friday, November 5, 2010
Culture Clash between Generations...
I can file this under "Culture Clash" LOL
Stopped by World Market this morning on errands and saw they had a sale on a childhood snack of mine: norimaki. (Japanese rice crackers wrapped in bits of seaweed wrapper, the same nori you see with sushi). OMG, I can eat a bag of these little things w/o realizing it. Anyway, I bought 2 bags for less than a dollar and introduced it to Baby Girl on the car ride home.
She held the little piece in her chubby hand, stared at it with a definite "WHAT is this? You EAT this?!"
That's OK. The guy in the truck behind us at the stoplight was looking at me kinda funny too. LOL
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Stopped by World Market this morning on errands and saw they had a sale on a childhood snack of mine: norimaki. (Japanese rice crackers wrapped in bits of seaweed wrapper, the same nori you see with sushi). OMG, I can eat a bag of these little things w/o realizing it. Anyway, I bought 2 bags for less than a dollar and introduced it to Baby Girl on the car ride home.
She held the little piece in her chubby hand, stared at it with a definite "WHAT is this? You EAT this?!"
That's OK. The guy in the truck behind us at the stoplight was looking at me kinda funny too. LOL
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Getting back to Linguistics 101
I'm going to be dating myself here. Fifteen years ago, I graduated from Virginia Tech with a degree in Foreign Languages and Literatures (with a teaching certificate). My biggest ambition was to teach English overseas (maybe in Asia?), travel, and see places that I'd only read about.
Fifteen years, several unexpected turns, and painful lessons later, I'm nowhere close to that dream. But that doesn't mean I still can't work towards it. I've kept up my languages with reading, interacting with others on the Internet, and finding materials in teaching stores and used bookstores. I still watch Univision occasionally, and keep up with goings-on within International House in Charlotte. It's difficult, but it's doable.
My husband used to tell me, "You just have to wait for the right opportunity." (Insert snooty attitude here). He hasn't said that since I pointed out how elitist he sounded. If I just sat around and waited for "the right opportunity", I'd be waiting more than fifteen years.
So I've dug out my old textbooks and scoured the Internet for updated information. Yes, the teacher must become the student again...back to the basics. I must unlearn what I've learned (that having a family--and two autistic children and a toddler--should preclude your dreams) and learn what I've forgotten, namely what a locative-content transformation is, how to solve a substitution cipher, and what Chomsky's Theory of Universal Language is.
Allons-y! Wish me luck!
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Fifteen years, several unexpected turns, and painful lessons later, I'm nowhere close to that dream. But that doesn't mean I still can't work towards it. I've kept up my languages with reading, interacting with others on the Internet, and finding materials in teaching stores and used bookstores. I still watch Univision occasionally, and keep up with goings-on within International House in Charlotte. It's difficult, but it's doable.
My husband used to tell me, "You just have to wait for the right opportunity." (Insert snooty attitude here). He hasn't said that since I pointed out how elitist he sounded. If I just sat around and waited for "the right opportunity", I'd be waiting more than fifteen years.
So I've dug out my old textbooks and scoured the Internet for updated information. Yes, the teacher must become the student again...back to the basics. I must unlearn what I've learned (that having a family--and two autistic children and a toddler--should preclude your dreams) and learn what I've forgotten, namely what a locative-content transformation is, how to solve a substitution cipher, and what Chomsky's Theory of Universal Language is.
Allons-y! Wish me luck!
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
better late than never,
culture,
dreams,
linguistics
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
What Would You Like in your Dream Studio?
Question posed in an e-mail to me today:
A view of the ocean or at least some other body of water
South-facing room with lots of light
Desktop computer with ethernet connection, DSL
fax machine, copy machine, scanner, phone
CD player/iPod with multiple changer
fully stocked mini-fridge and bar
Lots of chocolate handy
Art easel set up nearby
Storage for art supplies, canvases, etc.
couple of cats, maybe a dog
travel memorabilia on the walls
keyboard, guitar, musical instruments w/music and stand
someone to share it with
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
A view of the ocean or at least some other body of water
South-facing room with lots of light
Desktop computer with ethernet connection, DSL
fax machine, copy machine, scanner, phone
CD player/iPod with multiple changer
fully stocked mini-fridge and bar
Lots of chocolate handy
Art easel set up nearby
Storage for art supplies, canvases, etc.
couple of cats, maybe a dog
travel memorabilia on the walls
keyboard, guitar, musical instruments w/music and stand
someone to share it with
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Hanging on to Hope with a Thread
How do you hang on to hope that things will get better in the future when the present seems so bleak?
For personal reasons too complicated to get into right now, I'm in some sort of creative funk right now. Suffice to say, I'm having the equivalent of a creative mid-life crisis, and wondering whether or not I'm actually making a difference. I wince at the state of our bank account, and have to deal with parent/teacher conferences and calls home because of behavior. Not to mention other personal issues in my marriage.
I look at my kids. They and my creative work are the only things that are keeping me going right now. I think if I didn't have either, I'd probably have gone completely crackers by now. I have to believe things will be better. I have to.
But it's so difficult right now. How do you deal with issues like this?
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
For personal reasons too complicated to get into right now, I'm in some sort of creative funk right now. Suffice to say, I'm having the equivalent of a creative mid-life crisis, and wondering whether or not I'm actually making a difference. I wince at the state of our bank account, and have to deal with parent/teacher conferences and calls home because of behavior. Not to mention other personal issues in my marriage.
I look at my kids. They and my creative work are the only things that are keeping me going right now. I think if I didn't have either, I'd probably have gone completely crackers by now. I have to believe things will be better. I have to.
But it's so difficult right now. How do you deal with issues like this?
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Monday, November 1, 2010
Good Luck to all doing Nanowrimo 2010!
To all my writer and reader friends doing National Novel Writing Month...good luck and may you have fun spinning 50,000 words of great writing! I'm not doing it this year (too many things going on at the same time), but if anyone needs any cheerleading, drop me a line! I'd be more than willing to encourage you!
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Some Halloween pics need no explanation...
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
autistic kids,
childhood memories,
costume,
grandma,
Halloween
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Sickness Affects Your Outlook (and your Productivity)
Yes, I'm back after a few days of being sick. I'm still tired as all get out, but at least I've got coffee.
A flare-up of my rheumatoid arthritis made my hands so swollen I couldn't type, draw or paint. The medicine I take for RA saps my strength and makes me just want to curl up and sleep. That doesn't do wonders for the productivity factor. My brain tries to push my body into doing something, anything, but my joints inform me, "I'm not going to cooperate. Go to bed. Thank you."
Frustrations abound, big time. Even now, I get impatient at my body's limitations. "Okay, now that you've had your little R&R, I've got to play catch-up." And the Muse shoots back with, "There really isn't any good time to have a breakdown. I don't care if you're Human or a car. Live with it."
Live with it. Writing, at least, is flexible enough that I can do it anywhere, even when I'm stuck in bed. Even if I scratch out a few words, it's better than not having written at all. A little writing goes a long way, and my mind says, "At least I'm getting something done and it doesn't matter if it looks like chicken scratch. I'm a linguist, I can handle it." And when I'm better, I can transcribe it to the computer.
But still, I've never been one who did well just being sick. And it's true that if you don't give your body the rest it needs, it'll take that much longer to recover. It's like a chain of dominoes...when one falls, they all fall and you can't do anything to stop the process. When it's all over, you just pick 'em up and set them up again.
Isn't that how life goes anyway?
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
A flare-up of my rheumatoid arthritis made my hands so swollen I couldn't type, draw or paint. The medicine I take for RA saps my strength and makes me just want to curl up and sleep. That doesn't do wonders for the productivity factor. My brain tries to push my body into doing something, anything, but my joints inform me, "I'm not going to cooperate. Go to bed. Thank you."
Frustrations abound, big time. Even now, I get impatient at my body's limitations. "Okay, now that you've had your little R&R, I've got to play catch-up." And the Muse shoots back with, "There really isn't any good time to have a breakdown. I don't care if you're Human or a car. Live with it."
Live with it. Writing, at least, is flexible enough that I can do it anywhere, even when I'm stuck in bed. Even if I scratch out a few words, it's better than not having written at all. A little writing goes a long way, and my mind says, "At least I'm getting something done and it doesn't matter if it looks like chicken scratch. I'm a linguist, I can handle it." And when I'm better, I can transcribe it to the computer.
But still, I've never been one who did well just being sick. And it's true that if you don't give your body the rest it needs, it'll take that much longer to recover. It's like a chain of dominoes...when one falls, they all fall and you can't do anything to stop the process. When it's all over, you just pick 'em up and set them up again.
Isn't that how life goes anyway?
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Labels:
how I write,
illness,
rheumatoid arthritis,
writing
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
One at a time vs. multiple projects?
I know some writers who write one story at a time, some artists who paint one painting, some potters who fire one pot at a time. They focus their energies on a single project and don't divide their attention. This way, they complete their tasks before starting new ones, and nothing is left unfinished. On the other hand, a complicated project can take weeks (or months) before it's completed. A fellow painter puts it this way, "The quality of my work is more important to me than just the quantity. If I end up cranking out picture after picture, the process loses something. I end up losing my soul."
Other creatives have multiple pots on multiple burners on their stove. I admit that I'm more of this type. If my writing Muse hikes Her way to Key West again on my novel, I can work on my poetry, or my drabble collection. If I can't make any headway on my acrylic painting, I'll grab a few old magazines, cut and paste a collage to my heart's content. Sometimes I'll get an idea on how to approach my original problem (by doing something completely unrelated), so I'll scurry back to it.
Of course, some of my projects sit untended for a while, and eventually may go to the reject or the recycle bin. But that doesn't bother me as much. Things ebb and flow, and change, other ideas come and go.
Everyone has their own style, methodical or chaotic, but as long as it suits your creative life, have fun!
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Other creatives have multiple pots on multiple burners on their stove. I admit that I'm more of this type. If my writing Muse hikes Her way to Key West again on my novel, I can work on my poetry, or my drabble collection. If I can't make any headway on my acrylic painting, I'll grab a few old magazines, cut and paste a collage to my heart's content. Sometimes I'll get an idea on how to approach my original problem (by doing something completely unrelated), so I'll scurry back to it.
Of course, some of my projects sit untended for a while, and eventually may go to the reject or the recycle bin. But that doesn't bother me as much. Things ebb and flow, and change, other ideas come and go.
Everyone has their own style, methodical or chaotic, but as long as it suits your creative life, have fun!
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Admin Post: Art Store on Zazzle.com/Lady Rainbow's Art
Just a note, since we're going into the holiday season soon!
Check out my art store, Artistmum Creations at http://www.zazzle.com/artistmum1*
If you're looking for gifts for Halloween, Veterans Day, or Christmas, drop by and see the designs I've made for shirts, posters, mugs and other items. Some of the artwork are also featured in Lady Rainbow's Art.
Thanks for reading my blogs and supporting creativity! I appreciate it more than you know.
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Check out my art store, Artistmum Creations at http://www.zazzle.com/artistmum1*
If you're looking for gifts for Halloween, Veterans Day, or Christmas, drop by and see the designs I've made for shirts, posters, mugs and other items. Some of the artwork are also featured in Lady Rainbow's Art.
Thanks for reading my blogs and supporting creativity! I appreciate it more than you know.
Annie
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
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Monday, October 25, 2010
Thinking too Much with the Intellect, Not Enough with the Heart
"Lovers and men of intellect cannot mix:
How can you mix the broken with the unbroken?
Cautious men of intellect shrink back from a dead ant:
Lovers, completely carefree, trample down dragons.
The intellect says, "the six directions are limits; there is no way out."
Love says, "There is a way; I have traveled it thousands of times."
The intellect saw a market and started to haggle.
Love saw thousands of markets beyond that market."
Rumi
*****
I read this quote and this really spoke to me. Thinking too much can hamper our creativity. When confronted by the unexpected (the dead ant), sometimes we panic and freeze in our tracks. If we don't allow the weird and the wonderful to throw us off balance, we can tackle the biggest problem and triumph over it.
Once we hit a barrier, it's so easy to just give up. "There's no way around this problem; there's nothing I can do!" Look for unorthodox solutions, try new ideas, see what works. If it doesn't work, try another way. And another, and another.
When your livelihood depends on your creativity, it's easy to fall into the 'will this sell and for how much?' trap. The practical side keeps us fed, clothed, and able to make more creative items. Once your main goal becomes achieving a bottom line, the quality of your product suffers. It becomes just a means for an end: to satisfy a certain "market". "Love saw thousands of markets beyond that market". Don't lose sight of what matters the most to you, and don't limit yourself to just one way of doing things.New roads and new directions can inspire more ideas and the circle begins again.
Think, but also use your heart in your creative efforts.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Sunday, October 24, 2010
Quotes about Music
Music:
"I want to sing like the birds sing. Not worry who hears or what they think." Rumi
"I began to hear music differently. I began to hear something in bare sound I had never heard befrore to experience in the very act of hearing an upward intention, as if some current were drawing us toward it." W.A. Mathieu
"In the beginning was noise. And nose begat rhythm. And rhythm begat everything else." Mickey Hart
"The drum is sacred. Its round form represent the whole universe, and its steady beat is the pulse, the heart, throbbing at the center of the universe." Nick Black Elk.
"There is nothing better than music as a means for upliftment of the soul." Hazrat Inayat Khan
"In writing songs, I've learned as much from Cézanne as I have from Woody Guthrie." Bob Dylan
"FREQUENCY + INTENTION = HEALING" Jonathan Goldman
"Music has the capacity to touch the innermost reaches of the soul and music gives flight to the imagination." Plato
"All passionate language does of itself become musical---with no finer music than the mere accent; the speech of man, even in zealous anger, becomes a chant, a song." Thomas Carlyle
"Seek out a man who is skillful in playing the harp, and when the evil spirit from God is upon you, he will play it and you will be well." 1 Samuel 16: 14-16
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Saturday, October 23, 2010
More Digging in Old Files...
When I have the time, I'll clear out the old files in my computer. I have manuscripts (and various sundry parts of manuscripts) dating back nearly ten years. I save everything on a separate hard drive; after several computer crashes and outages, laptop malfunctions and kid-caused keyboard spills, I've become a wee bit paranoid about losing stuff.
On the one hand, it makes me a literary packrat. On the other hand, you find all kinds of treasures you completely forgot about. This past week, I stumbled over:
1) several old chapters of a science fiction novel I abandoned a couple of years ago.
2) short stories that I was convinced I lost when my second laptop crashed three years ago
3) Old poetry chapbook layouts
4) lists of story ideas that never quite gelled
I was stunned at the stuff I found. Reading through those words gave me more ideas for new projects. I might combine two ideas into a new story, and three snippets in particular might work. My Muse has plenty of ideas to mull over and when She's busy, I'm happy.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
On the one hand, it makes me a literary packrat. On the other hand, you find all kinds of treasures you completely forgot about. This past week, I stumbled over:
1) several old chapters of a science fiction novel I abandoned a couple of years ago.
2) short stories that I was convinced I lost when my second laptop crashed three years ago
3) Old poetry chapbook layouts
4) lists of story ideas that never quite gelled
I was stunned at the stuff I found. Reading through those words gave me more ideas for new projects. I might combine two ideas into a new story, and three snippets in particular might work. My Muse has plenty of ideas to mull over and when She's busy, I'm happy.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Friday, October 22, 2010
Writing Exercises: An Unhealthy Obsession
Directions: Plan a story about a person's obsession with collecting something.
Collecting books
Miranda collects books. She scours used bookstores for prizes as well and the big chains. She jokes that books just jump into her hands. Her home is one huge library--almost all shelves. She even has them in displays and in her bathrooms. The town she lives him holds her up as an example of literacy.
Rewrite the story so the character's obsession is against this person's best interests.
The books are literally crowding her out of her home. Miranda is socially handicapped--she would much rather be home reading instead of being with people. She doesn't need TV- the shows are in her imagination with her as the star. Her collection sits and gathers dust-a valuable collection hidden away from public eyes.
Sketch out a plot based on the information above:
"Between Two Covers"
The story is told by Miranda's friend who runs the local used bookstore. Miranda leaves her enormous book collection to Susan Yoo when Miranda mysteriously dies. Susan dreads the required cataloging and sorting through the massive shelves, but she finds Miranda's secret diaries...that blows the lid off the secrets in their small town.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Collecting books
Miranda collects books. She scours used bookstores for prizes as well and the big chains. She jokes that books just jump into her hands. Her home is one huge library--almost all shelves. She even has them in displays and in her bathrooms. The town she lives him holds her up as an example of literacy.
Rewrite the story so the character's obsession is against this person's best interests.
The books are literally crowding her out of her home. Miranda is socially handicapped--she would much rather be home reading instead of being with people. She doesn't need TV- the shows are in her imagination with her as the star. Her collection sits and gathers dust-a valuable collection hidden away from public eyes.
Sketch out a plot based on the information above:
"Between Two Covers"
The story is told by Miranda's friend who runs the local used bookstore. Miranda leaves her enormous book collection to Susan Yoo when Miranda mysteriously dies. Susan dreads the required cataloging and sorting through the massive shelves, but she finds Miranda's secret diaries...that blows the lid off the secrets in their small town.
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Quotes about Living WIth Gusto
"I make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes." Sara Teasdale.
"You will do foolish things, but do them with enthusiasm." Collette
"Jump into the middle of things, get your hands dirty, fall flat onto your face, and then reach for the stars." John L. Curcio
"I don't want to get to the end of my life and find that I have lived just the length of it. I want to have lived the width of it as well." Diane Ackerman
"To be energetic, act energetic." W. Clement Stone
"You have to be careful about being too careful." Beryl Pfizer
"Don't bunt. Aim out of the ballpark." David Oglivy
"Act as thought it were impossible to fail." Dorothea Brande
"Love the moment, and the energy of that moment will spread beyond all boundaries." Corita Kent
"Success is a ladder that cannot be climbed with your hands in your pockets." America proverb
All original writing and art copyright A. Dameron 2000-2010
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