Wandering Wisdumb

The older I get, the more I realize that wisdom is kind of a myth. I thought I had a little when I was twenty. I thought I had more when I was thirty, but looking back I realized how naive my twenty-year-old self really was.

Some day, I figure I’ll look back at the me from today when I’m forty or fifty or seventy-two, and realize I was as dumb as a bag of dirt.

In the meantime, for posterity, I’m going to record a few things I think I know here on this blog.

Starting with:

If someone doesn’t do things my way, that doesn’t mean she’s doing things the wrong way.

Posted in Miscellany | Leave a comment

Another Great Resource

If you have any interest in science or writing science fiction, you might want to take a peek behind this link. The Howard Hughes Medical Institute publishes talks and DVDs on a variety of topics and distributes them free of charge to anyone who asks. Not just free of charge, but free shipping as well.

Topics range from the science of fat and human metabolism, to gene coding and viral diseases. Need a zombie plague? Pull up a chair at your own TV and learn about emerging pathogens — for free! How can you pass that up?

Posted in Miscellany | 2 Comments

Muse Medicine Relaunch

Exciting times here in Ariville.

As a nurse, I often find myself sharing my specialized knowledge with my writing buddies. In years past, this happened so often that eventually it just made sense to put that information down in a more or less permanent fashion. Muse Medicine was born in 2008, with the premise that a little bit of knowledge from an expert in the field could help writers inject realism into their fiction, and find inspiration in areas they would normally not consider.

It’s gone through several different iterations in the last several years, but the one constant was me – my knowledge of medicine, psychology, childbirth and pregnancy, life and death. And now that’s changing, too.

I’m introducing contributors at Muse Medicine, to add to the content. From astrophysics to zoology, from computer security to New York City, authors are donating their valuable time and expertise to help out and inspire their fellow writers, and I couldn’t be more excited.

Contributors will be announced throughout the coming weeks, and anyone who has an expertise, no matter how broad or narrow, is welcomed to sign up. Editorial duties will be handled by yours truly, to maintain the standards of being clear, informative, and entertaining when possible. Come on over and help us give the Muse a hand.

Posted in MuseMed | Leave a comment

Searching for the Spark

My sister Kate wasn’t really my sister. She was biologically my aunt. She was also my part-time parental figure and called me her sister because my grandparents (her parents) had more to do with my upbringing than my mother did. She was 24 years older than me, the eldest of my grandmother’s children.

That’s her on the left, and I’m the curly-headed cutie on the right. I loved her like a sister, a mother, a friend. I saw her beauty and accepted her flaws. She was my cheerleader, with a copy of my finished novel in a 3-ring binder on her bedside table, though the first sentence gave her the shivers. She was part of who I am, but she was not my whole world. Still, when she died, my world came crashing down, and the weight of all that shared history suddenly being mine alone crushed my writing.

I tried. I really, really tried to keep the chin up and keep going. In the process, I took HUNTERS, my “nearly there” novel in mid-revision, and demolished it. I shredded every bit of what made me love it enough to keep writing and perfecting it through the years of floundering to find my voice and my story.

I took a few months off. When I came back to it, I rolled the changes back to right before she died and breathed a sigh of relief that I keep archives of everything – but it didn’t help. Nothing fit. The story was alien to me, foreign, not as if someone else had written it, but as if it were an invader in my head and in my heart. I forgot the point of writing it. I couldn’t even remember what it was about. I still haven’t found it, that spark of life that made the story worth telling. I’ve been poking at it from a distance while working on another project for the last month, and still nothing seems right.

My sister was fifty-eight years old when she died. Young, by today’s standards. Too young by mine. She left behind a legacy of love, of caring and humor and generosity that I have rarely found in the world. She taught me how to laugh at my own foibles and frailties by example, and I find that I feel no despair at the difficulties I’m experiencing. Frustration aplenty, but not despair.

I don’t know what the solution is, other than to keep knocking my head on the wall until something rattles loose. She’d have wanted it that way. I guess she taught me persistence, too.

Posted in family, writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Decisions, Decisions

I read an article at the New York Times recently about some of the factors influencing decision making – specifically, willpower and blood sugar.

As a writer, I make decisions constantly. Do the characters take this path or that one? Is it MC1 or MC2 that stumbles onto the Big Secret? Do the people of this world have steam engines and revolvers or carry swords and ride on the shoulders of giant lemurs?

The results of a number of studies reported in this article seem to indicate that people have a limited resource called willpower that can be depleted by making decisions or resisting temptation, and replenished with a quick burst of blood sugar (glucose) from a sugar-containing beverage or snack.

With any article you find in mainstream media regarding the findings of experiments and research, take what you read with a grain of salt, but it might be worth doing your own experiments where writing decision-making is involved. Rather than stay up all night planning every detail of that work-in-progress while trying to diet, perhaps you’d be better served scheduling several work periods through the day – a half hour after lunch, a little time after dinner, on the morning commute with a donut in hand (or better yet, after a breakfast including complex carbs and a source of protein). Or have fresh or dried fruit handy when you work to top off the decision-making tank.

Further, the studies suggest we might be able to horde out decision-making power to use when we really need it – by using routine to avoid having to make decisions in the first place. As a number of successful authors have been trying to tell us all along, having a daily writing routine is the hallmark of someone who actually gets things done. This article supports that notion, with study findings that reveal that a fatigued brain will usually go the easier path when forced to make the decision (especially late in the day or when hungry) of whether to do the work of writing a book or turn on Sims 3 just for a little while. Without a routine, we’re routinely forced to choose between working and crawling through our feed readers, tweeting, checking Facebook, or playing around with games. 

Writing is hard work, and approaching it when already mentally fatigued can lead to poor decision-making, both in getting started and in story choices. Maybe it is the sugar content in alcohol that makes it such an appealing crutch for some authors, who are faced with near constant decision-making?

———–

How do you manage your willpower reserves in regards to your writing? Do you find yourself making poor story choices or avoiding writing when mentally fatigued?

Posted in In the News, writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment