Construction Update

Muse Medicine now has it’s own spot again. You can access it either via the links at the top of this page or directly at http://musemed.arizela.com . RSS feed subscription is available, so feel free to sign up that way. Just keep in mind that while the disclaimers aren’t visible on the RSS feeds, they still apply. There is also new information in the links at the top of that page on asking medical and other expertise questions. I’ll be putting up a new Muse Medicine general topic today.

You’ll also find a new link at the top of this page called snippets, where I’ll be posting some of my own work off and on – generally just bits and pieces of fiction, along with poems and some original photography.

This page will now be dedicated to my personal writing journey (which inseparably includes stuff like my family life, my health, etc) and will also include bits of info, wisdom, and philosophy I’ve picked up along the way.

I hope that the new format allows each of you to select what information you wish to continue receiving, and that the new design is better for your eyes. Please let me know if anything doesn’t work, if you have problems with anything, or if there are further suggestions.

Thanks for your patience!

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Summer Construction

Ohio is the land of orange barrels in the summer. If we have a stretch of highway longer than a mile, chances are it will be under construction between May and September at least once.

A couple of readers have pointed out to me recently that my template and format weren’t really very conductive to them getting what they wanted from my site. With that in mind, I’m going to be making a number of changes over the next week, starting with the template and shooting for the sky… or at least a format that lets people pick and choose which words they read and how.

Keep an eye out for the changes, especially if you read this with an RSS reader rather than coming straight to the site. I’ll be parsing out Muse Medicine, my personal stuff, and my writing stuff into three separate streams, so people who want the one without the other can get it.

Further, Muse Medicine will be opening its doors again very soon in full, with more active involvement and plot-bunny pieces as well as author Q&A. This will, of course, be dependent on how much energy the old ticker leaves me and how much of that limited supply my family and writing demand, but I hope to have Muse Medicine columns up at least bi-weekly.

And in the meantime, mind the barrels.

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On Research

So yesterday I put down the “fun” project I’d been working on for the last couple of weeks (it hit 19.3k before I stopped). It’s still fun, and it’s actually not a bad story at all, but I felt I was finally ready to get back to work on something serious.

After detoxing from the heart meds and giving my muse some room to play, I picked up a pencil, expecting to stare at a blank page for a while before opening up my old ideas file and skimming through to pick a project. Instead, I conceived a fully formed story idea, complete with hook and pitch-line, characters, talking-heads dialogue, and more.

I enlisted the help of a geology buff friend of mine (hi, Neko!) and picked a location. A real world location *gulp*. My new idea is firmly set in the real world, or an only slightly altered one.

The trouble with setting a book in the real world or even an alternate Earth is, you sort of have to know what you’re talking about. Particularly in a historical period or place that doesn’t match your own experience of the world, that means researching. My research list is quite literally longer than my arm. Two sheets of graph paper are covered with 1cm high letters in my careful handwriting listing all the things I need to know about.

I’ve never researched a book to this level. I’ve looked at things about horses and weapons and various technologies. I’ve researched a couple dozen conditions for other people’s books, too, but I’ve done lots of research in my time. From college papers to my Muse Medicine articles, and even as a nurse, I utilized research methodologies and tools to get the information I needed. I know how to research.

I even know the super secret trick of being a good author with a well-researched book. You want me to share it?

Editing.

When I write a Muse Medicine piece, I generally collect at least four sources of information, and read at least 4-5 times the word count of information than what I end up writing. The piece I write and post is still many times longer than what an author needs to actually put in his or her story. Editing the information down to just the most important and/or interesting facts keeps the story moving and the tension high. Knowing way more than your readers do about the subject lets you pull this off with a deft hand and ensures that you’ll get it right.

One other thing – I do the same thing with research for a story that I do for academic learning: I try to apply the concept right away. I stop to think about the things that I’ve read or seen and figure out how they apply to me. Relating the dry facts back to my characters or plot or setting both helps me retain the information longer, and keep my eye on the prize – the story. Research for the sake of research doesn’t get books written, after all.

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On Finishing

When you write in a very organic fashion, as I do, getting to The End can sometimes be a very nebulous goal. Projects often take years to develop, and you can’t quite tell which ones will make the cut. My In-Progress file commonly has 12 to 15 partially completed projects at any given time. Some of them will continue to simmer in the back of my mind until I find an idea that really strikes me – like Hunters. Some of them will no doubt languish in the In-Progress file for years to come. Some of them may never see the end at the light of the first draft tunnel.

But finishing is of the utmost importance to me. For a long time, when I was learning the basics of writing, I would start something with a specific goal in mind – description practice, character building, tension, action scenes, you name it. Those nibs of story got set aside once I’d gotten a handle on the lesson I set myself, but there are lessons you can only get from the finish.

Plot happens in every scene, but without the whole thing, you can’t tell if you’re doing it well. Revision (not just line editing or copy editing, but actual revision) can’t be done effectively on a chunk of an unfinished story. The submissions process, finding an agent, seeking publication – these are things that should happen only after you have a finished product in your hands. So The End is a vital part of the process for a serious writer with intentions to seek publication.

I know a writer who finishes everything she starts. Realistically, I will never be that writer. Not all of my ideas are worth so much time and energy. I’ve never been shy about killing off my darlings when it comes to writing fiction. Growing stories organically puts me at a disadvantage when it comes to timelines, deadlines, and project count, but it offers me a much richer end product than what I have been able to produce from an outline or by line driving through the story. It may not be the most efficient method, but it is certainly my method.

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Do you finish everything you start? How many open projects do you have at a time?

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Being Your Own Advocate

Whether in health care or elsewhere in the world, being your own advocate is hard work. It’s also risky, sometimes. You risk damaging relationships when you don’t just role over and play nice. You risk losing the deal when you stand up to a salesman, editor, or agent, even if it’s for a good cause. Most of the time, the risks are worth it, in my opinion. Who wants a relationship where they get walked on all the time anyway? And who wants a deal that takes advantage of the buyer, or in the case of a book, the author?

But the risks are still there. I ran up against this one Friday with my cardiologist. I found out that he wasn’t including important parts of my symptoms, treatment, and progress in his notes to my other doctors. So I asked to review my file prior to my appointment. I discovered that not only was he failing to record one of the most important, and debilitating, symptoms of my heart problem, he also lied to me about the results of one of my tests. “Perfectly normal” doesn’t really fit when the report says there were changes on my EKG indicating ischemia (lack of blood flow/oxygen) to my heart after only 5 minutes of very slow walking (slower than I would normally walk down a hallway when I was at work as a nurse). At the age of 33 (32 at the time of the test), I think that qualifies as a poor tolerance for exercise!

Now, when I’m not on personality-changing medications (bisoprolol, anyone?), I’m a pretty congenial person. I’m also a reasonable person. So rather than stomp my feet and yell and get demanding, I sat through the pre-appointment screening, got weighed, had my blood pressure taken, and told the nurse how I’d been between that appointment and the last. When the doctor came in, I explained that I had noticed his notes didn’t mention syncope (losing consciousness), which I’d experienced and reported to him several times, and asked why that was.

My doc replied to me that I had never had any syncope. At which time I mentioned that the episodes I’d reported were in his nurse’s notes for each visit. He flipped to that part of my chart, looked at the note and told me he’d include it in his note for this visit and that I should find a new cardiologist. He said I obviously no longer trusted him, and so he didn’t want to continue treating me.

There’s a difference between blind, unquestioning faith and trust. No doctor should expect the former. If asking a simple question about how he was reporting my condition to my other doctors causes him to drop me as a patient, well… all I can say is that he beat me to the punch. I’ll be seeing someone else for my future cardiology needs, and once the feelings of being ignored, mistreated, and pacified fade, perhaps I’ll find a doctor who can respect that I have a mind and opinion of my own and bigger stakes than he will every have in managing my own care.

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