the old man is snoring

Today it rained, and Melbourne forgot to wake up.

I ventured out into the darkness and the hissing rain, giving the trench coat it's first outing (even though it's not cold enough for a coat of any description yet), and found myself utterly alone.

No cars, no pedestrians, just me and the rain and the dark and islands of damp glare glancing off the wet bitumen under the streetlights.

For the entire walk to the tram stop, I seriously considered the possibility that my night's dreams of the paddle pop lion1 had presaged the apocalypse. There were no lights on in any of the neighbouring houses, and the main street was deserted.

But the tram turned up on time — no apocalypse, then. Perhaps instead my clock was running early? But the dawn turned up on time as well, spattering the eastern horizon as the rain kept hissing down and the air turned from dark to gloom and then slowly to overcast as the tram dropped me off a mile from work.

And still I was alone. That walk is normally filled with pedestrians, dog-walkers and gym-goers and road crew grabbing a bite of breakfast alongside office workers too hurried and harried to eat at home. This morning the windows of the open cafes were as brightly-lit and abandoned as those of the closed furniture stores.

The whole of Melbourne hit the snooze button this morning, and the streets were mine.

It was lovely.

  1. Don't ask me. I just live with my subconscious; I have no insight into its vagaries. []

'cause none of us are angels

Sometimes, you learn best from people you don't like.

Figure out what you want to do. Then figure out what you need to do to get there. Then do it.

This advice was given to me by a man I … don't really like.1 We've always had a complicated relationship, at best. But it remains one of the best pieces of advice I've ever been given.

I have an anxious sort of brain, when all is said and done. I'm constantly thinking ahead — contingency planning, if you will. When I want to do something, particularly when I want to do something momentous, my brain throws up all the hurdles in the way. Instead of thinking of them as stuff I need to do in order to get where I want to be, after a while of being bombarded, I can fall into the trap of thinking of them as reasons I can't possibly do what I'd like to do.

Enter the advice above, which seems simple2 (probably because it is), but it's also a perfect way to remind myself that hey, even though they're in the way, hurdles are not roadblocks.

I just have to focus on what I want, and break down the stuff in the way into manageable steps.3

All of which leaves me, on a murky Sunday afternoon, pondering the irony that even though I would dearly like never to have to mention, think of, or talk about this man ever again, my way of dealing with the world, and dealing with my own brain, has been shaped, even just the tiniest bit, by him.

Life. Strange, innit?

  1. If you're reading this, and wondering Does she mean me…? the answer is No. Seriously. And also, please don't ask. I won't name names in a public forum. []
  2. The best advice is often deceptively simple. I think it was Hannah Wolf Bowen who once said It's simple. It's just not easy. And if that ain't the perfect encapsulation of, well, anything you're trying to learn, I don't know what is. []
  3. And not rush. That's the other thing I do. I'm very impatient, me. []

so many places to visit, and re-visit; so little rec leave

People, what is wrong with you? I tell you I'm going to Mongolia, and you make no comment?1 Perhaps it's because I put it right at the bottom of the post, and very few of you made it that far. Here, let me fix that.

I'M GOING TO MONGOLIA.

Travel insurance is purchased, flights are almost entirely paid for, and today I jaunted off to the doctor to discuss vaccinations. Did you know that Hep A + B, if you get the right number of shots at the right time, is lifetime protection? I did not know this. But it is good, because it means I don't have to have the jabs (more importantly: pay for them) again. The bad news is that the doc specifically and strenuously recommended the Fluvax, so I coughed over my $25 for said Fluvax despite my doubts as to the value of said vaccination. What's worse, though, is that I could have had this particular vaccine through work for free just yesterday. It's all about timing, people. And I have an arm that is aching just slightly and a wallet that's $25 lighter to remind me of that.

Of course I'm not going for a little while yet, so you'll have plenty of travel natter to endure before then ;)

Reactions so far have mostly been shock and bewilderment, sprinkled with a few responses of wide-eyed awe. Definitely outweighed by the shock and bewilderment, though.

And just as I was typing this up, the travel show on TV started a flick about the last country in the world to allow television, the only country whose capital city doesn't have any traffic lights, the one country in the world to officially rank gross national happiness higher than gross national product, the wondrous Bhutan. And now I want to go back! The agony of travelling: visiting a place ticks it off the to-visit list, but only to put it on the to-come-back-to list.

  1. Those of you who did comment are of course exempt from my present astonishment. []

what the heart wants, the head fears

This evening, after a flurry of emails throughout the day between the travel agent and myself, and many tweakings and confirmings of dates, I am in possession of a quote for an entire overseas holiday. Flights, accommodation, transfers, and insurance.

And about ten minutes ago I had a moment of sheer, blindness-inducing terror, because I couldn't possibly actually go through with it.

But you know what? It's simply not true. (Dear Brain Chemistry: I'm onto you. Stop it!)

I would have the same jitters no matter where I was planning to visit, no matter how standard the destination, because I have a head that likes to throw all sorts of catastrophes and definitely-going-to-go-wrongs at me regardless of reality or probability.1

And at the end of the day, I don't want to waste what little time off I get on holidays that don't take off the top of my skull and reboot my soul. I want to see geography that makes my heart swell with awe, and to witness cultures and ways of life that break my expectations. I want to see mountains, and steppes, and deserts.

So yes. Tomorrow I'm putting a deposit on my flights, and booking my leave from work.

And I'm going to Mongolia.2

  1. And because I have a physical aversion to spending large amounts of money in one bank-account-emptying swoop, let's not overlook that charming little neurosis. []
  2. Although I can't promise I won't have a few more freakouts between now and actually jumping on the plane. []

methinks it is time to up the fitness levels

Yesterday I revised 1,300(ish) words on the short story, and stalked travel agents to obtain quotes for airfares, which means the travel plans, while not yet concrete, are progressing apace. I survived a trip with the world's most passive-aggressive tram driver, who shuts the tram doors while passengers are mid-way through them and drives into cars who dare to block his way. I also went and saw The Pixies live, and consequently will never hear anything ever again. (It was worth it.) On the way home from the gig, I got chatted up by a homeless boy who told me I should never ever steal, but sneaking in to watch movies without paying was perfectly fine.

Today I had exactly two tasks that had to be done: finding a pair of tennis shoes, and washing the car. Both achieved. I also — and I consider this a superhuman effort, considering it's Sunday — washed a week's worth of dishes.

And there's still time left to get some writing done.

Ergo, the weekend is officially a success, even if I haven't done the ironing and therefore have no presentable clothes for work tomorrow.

i am, yes, still listening to every decemberists song ever

Sshh, don't tell anyone, it's not definite or booked or anything so exciting as that, but … I did spend an awful lot of my day thinking about other continents. Specifically, me, kiting myself off to other continents. Where there are no phones. (Although I have just googled airfares and, oh, fark. Um…?)

I also have news of covers and illustrations and publications (not new ones — don't get too excited) sort of simmering away over here, but I'm not allowed to share any of them just yet. So frustrating!

So instead I will be whimsical, because I do so love being whimsical, and share with you a recent revelation/accusation. I have this friend who thinks I am the human equivalent of sodium thiopental (better known as sodium pentathol, or the truth drug). He doesn't subscribe to all my talk of mutant powers, because he's far too sensible for such things, but he's so convinced of my ability to learn the truth about and from people that he's even willing to admit it might be my mutant power.

And I don't know quite how it came about, but somewhere along the line one of us looked up the chemical formula for said sodium thiopental. And lookit!

could it be...? is it...? A GIRL?

If you use your imagination, you might just be able to see a girl with a sideswept fringe, a clip at each temple, and pigtails. (We are not quite so sure what's happening on the top of her head. Nor are we quite sure why on earth she is, er, on all fours. Moving right along!)

Who woulda thunk it? Maybe I do have some sort of mutant power after all. Although if that's the case I also have a questionable hairstyle and questionable, er, exercise habits.

i close my eyes and i keep seeing things

Here's a terrifying thought: It's officially beyond 2000 already, quite some way beyond it if we're going to get pedantic, and apparently the very best we can do … is Yarra Trams.

That thought is so replete with weltschmerz that I think I need a little lie-down and some quiet time.

ONE DAY I WILL HAVE TIME FOR EVERYTHING. EVEN YOU. ESPECIALLY YOU.

So the short story currently stands at 12,000+ words. And thus the short story is not short at all, particularly given the fact that there are great, enormous gaping holes all throughout the narrative. And thus the short story, in addition to not being short, is not actually a story (yet) either. (Two criteria, and it hasn't achieved either. Poor story is currently suffering a quite severe existential crisis.)

Normally, I'm of the "write, keep writing, don't stop 'til you get enough finish a first draft" school of thought. Because otherwise I'd have a perfectly polished paragraph which may or may not be the beginning and nothing to hang off any side of it. But there's always a tipping point, a point where I abandon the not-draft I'm working on and call it finished enough and start revising said not-draft into a proper first draft. And two days ago I hit that tipping point because I don't think I can fill in those narrative holes without actually knowing, well, the narrative. So back to the start it is for me.

Those of you who've been around for a while will know that my normal routine is to write sans outline, but also sans narrative order. I write a scene, or half a scene, or even just a line of dialogue, and figure out where it fits in the entire story only once I have the entire story. I even write scenes and paragraphs this way — leaving a couple of blank lines and just pouring sentence fragments onto the page, and then I go back and start writing up to and around them. (Writing paragraphs this way is actually probably approaching normal – it's just my way of both editing as I go and at the same time avoiding the "can't write because my brain is trying to edit it!" dilemma. Writing scenes this way gets a little trickier, but it's not so bad because a scene is small enough to keep the whole thing in your head at once. Short stories and novels, not so much.)

Which is why Tessa, for one, gets a wild and panicked look in her eye whenever we discuss this scattershot/jigsaw habit of mine, as if I've just confessed I've decided to take up juggling pissy cobras and I don't need to practice with inanimate objects first, really, how hard can it be? She's right, really. So much to go wrong! So much does go wrong! My first attempt, the not-draft, is appalling. It's basically one big tangle of continuity errors, ambience at the expense of narrative, characters with no names, clues about what the story hinges on that my subconscious has oh-so-conveniently dropped rather than just, yanno, telling me outright, and notes in the margin. (Normally the latter are of the FUCK FUCK FUCK I DON'T KNOW WHAT? variety. Or sometimes the equally amusing, ER, REALLY? variety.) Seriously, those tangential illogical outlines that pour out of a fevered brain at 2am in an illegible scrawl are cohesive in comparison to the not-draft. Hence the tipping point.

The not-draft, being so very appalling, does then present serious difficulties when it comes to revision time. It's basically like doing a jigsaw — one where some of the snippets have been jammed together incorrectly and need to be undone in order to be put together correctly, where some of the pieces are missing entirely, and where some of the pieces may, in point of fact, belong to your Aunt Mildred's puzzle depicting a vase of gladioli and she's been wondering where that got to, thank you dear. Thankfully, I've gotten a little better at this jigsaw revision process, so that the official first draft doesn't (always) look like I've pieced together bits of the cat's vomit.

Part of this improvement is learning just how ruthless and brutal to be. Answer: exceedingly.

I've spent the past two nights — two weary, post-dayjob-wrung-out sort of nights — painstakingly massaging this one particular scene, getting the words just right. And last night, as I fell asleep, I realised that this one particular scene has to go. In its entirety. Because it's the second scene, and a giggle in a doorway, while important, is not enough to justify an entire scene, particularly the second scene in a story that should have started by now. Fuckit.

All of which is a very long way of saying Note to Self: Every scene and paragraph and sentence must accomplish more than one important something. Kill your darlings. YOU KNOW THIS ALREADY.

So tonight I'm going to spend my evening excising that painstakingly-revised scene out of the story, leaving no traces behind. I'll scavenge some of the passages, and weave them in among the rest of the story as appropriate, so the work (and the time spent on it) is not lost entirely. And any work that gets you to realising precisely what you need to do to fix or improve a story is never lost.

But it FEELS like lost and wasted time.

but i guess they do that here, i dunno

The lovely Mek posted this yesterday, and I can't help but post it myself for those of you who read my journal but not hers, because I love me a bit of whimsy, and this sort of stuff makes me laugh out loud:

In other news, I appear to have started yet another novel. Yes, before finishing that short story which has glomped and bulled its way into novellette territory, and before finishing the faerie novel. And before so much as starting those seven or so novels lined up in the back of my brain, impatiently waiting their turn to be written. Er, oops? My only excuse is that enthusiasm is infectious. My plan is to finish the short story while writing this new novel, and then finish the faerie novel while writing this new novel. No plan survives first contact, of course, but we'll see how we go.

I'm keen to get more writing done this year, partly because after Shadow Bound I have nothing contracted and, you know, I'd really like that to change; and partly because my ability to pin words to the page seems to have slowed down frighteningly of late. I don't know if the words I am pinning down are better put together, and will therefore require less editing. Here's hoping, because that would mean the extra time I'm taking now will be recouped later and it might all even out. (That just sounds too neat to be true, though.)

dear melbourne: spare me

So, about a month ago, I mocked Melbourne's attempt at a flash flood. Melbourne, it would seem, is of the revenge is best served cold school of thought. Today, after a month of plotting and planning, she struck.

Originally there was a forecast of rain for today — I believe the phrase was "chance of thunderstorms".

Thunderstorms my left butt cheek.

where was deb? oh, yes, deb was right in the CENTRE of that there apocalypse. right as this was being issued.

Tessa has the story of our fleeing the State Library into the teeth of that storm, because we figured, between the clamour of the hail and the klaxons of the library's evacuation alarms, writing wasn't going to happen.

Turns out getting home wasn't going to happen either, at least not easily. The trains got me close to work, where I'd left my car, but the roads were impassable: those that weren't sunk under flooding from the rain that had nowhere to go were clogged with traffic. Stationary traffic. Walking wasn't any easier.

For a while I simply stood on the corner of Alexandra Avenue and Yarra St, staring at the bridge that used to span a road but had now graduated to spanning a river proper, and watching the cars trying to navigate their way down that river which used to be a road. Here's a hint, kids: engines? Are not made to combust water. Don't try it.

I saw cars limping past with bumpers and chassis striking sparks from the roads, semi-drowned trams, and a girl running her basket of freshly-washed laundry through the downpour.

At least this time I'd learnt my lesson and I had an umbrella. Not that it helped much.