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Read these. Now.
Things I Learned from My Cat | There Are So Many People | ATM etiquette & raccoons | The Toaster Rebellion | A Knock On the Door | Where Am I Going | Ceramic Capricorn | Ode to Arrogance | Void conflicting | Is this Pomo? | One More Time | An open letter | All Gods Die | Inspiration | Daughters | Listening | Topic

Life, what life?
Annaleena: 80 Blood Elf Huntress
Nuala: 73 Blood Elf Priestess
Velyan: 71 Blood Elf Warlock
Osriel: 70 Blood Elf Death Knight
Holihail: 65 Blood Elf Paladin
Leverian: 50 Undead Mage
Iske: 41 Troll Shaman
Ferlae: 35 Blood Elf Rogue
Mahinya: 24 Tauren Druid

Twelve in a year.
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Thursday, May 20, 2004 // 3:59 am
Household Errands
Mood:    Ready to kick serious RPG ass.
Now Playing:  Sweet Rosalyn by Sheryl Crow
Now Reading:  The Complete Bard (A D&D Manual)

I thought I would share with you all a few of the To-Do lists that are floating around  my house.  It should give you some insight into the three people living here, and make you wonder why in the hell we all share the same place.

Grandfather’s To-Do List:
Repair leaking bathroom sink drain
Sand down, enamel and seal up the bathtub
Clean the hallway walls
Get rid of coffee table in front of fireplace
Fix dryer that no longer dries things (hang wet clothes on line)
Throw out Ang’s queen-sized bed that there’s absolutely nothing wrong with and replace it with much more space-oriented twin bed.
Get new hardware (faucet, showerhead,  knobs) for the bathtub

Grandmother’s To-Do List
Replace bathroom sink
Replace 3000-lb. Cast-iron bathtub
Replace Kitchen Sink
Replace hallway wallpaper
Replace dryer (take wet clothes to Laundromat for drying)
Buy 30-gallon fish tank for the coffee table in front of the fireplace
Steal Ang’s queen-sized bed and somehow fit it into her closet-sized bedroom
Get new hardware (faucet, showerhead,  knobs) for the bathtub

My  To-Do List:
Tell both of them to leave me the hell out of all dryer, bathtub, sink related issues.
Keep their dirty little paws off of my bed
Sleep in said bed as often as possible, preferably during the daylight hours so as to avoid constant cries of "Ang!  I need you!"  or "Hey, Paige, come here a sec."
Work like hell during very odd hours, while most people are sleeping.
Upgrade fish tank through any means necessary.
Keep my grandmother the hell away from the keys to my car.
Get new hardware (faucet, showerhead,  knobs) for the bathtub

Sadie (the Dog’s) To-Do List
Follow Gran around all day.
Look cute, sit behind her and stare until she is unnerved.
Repeat.

 At least us three humanoids have something in common with our hatred f the bathroom hardware.  Not sure if this is enough to forge a bond on, but we're trying.  Or they are.  Or at least trying not to kill each other.  I'm staying the heck out of the line of fire.  It's safer where the crazy people can't get you.


Filed under:

(2) Embraced the madness. //


Wednesday, May 19, 2004 // 5:11 am
Wednesday Mind Hump
Mood:  Mind-humping madness
(want in on the action? click BDI's fabulous piggie mascot)
Now PlayingFortunate Son by CCR
Still Reading:  Sharpe's Prey by Bernard Cornwell
Swear Words Spoken:  Three


Let's warm up with a new exercise. Think of a cliché, a favorite saying, a sampling of your favorite lyrics or a snippet from your favorite poem or movie. For instance, "... the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth." Now, hump it up! Here's how the example would translate, " ... the hump, the whole hump and nothing but the hump." The possibilities are endless ... have fun with it! Ready? Hump it up!

“He had it humpin’, he had it humpin,’ he only had himself to blame

“If you’d have been there, if you’d have seen it,

“I bet you you would have humped the same”
             --The Cell Block Tango
                  “Chicago”

(I feel sooooo dirty now)

Okay, now that we're all warmed up let's move on to a little Mind Humping fun with "I say ___, you think ___." In response to the following list of words enter the first words, phrase, idea or thought that comes into your ever humpin' mind. Ready? Put on your humping caps.

01. Lipstick: I really need to get in touch with Zombie about a project. Trust me, it’s related ;)
02. Dust:
I need to dust. This cubicle is starting to get slightly covered in dust. Bad cubicle! Bad maintenance people for never dusting the cubicles or taking out our trash!
03. Scissors: Don’t give em to Dustin. I work with him, and he should never, ever be given scissors. It’s dangerous to society.

04. Balls: Beach balls from our recent office party. I got bopped in the back of the head with one today while trying to act important. Needless to say, it ruined the effect.
05. Sponge:
Those artificial sponges that are synthetic, made to look real and quite harsh on the skin, yet are somehow passed off as “exfoliants.”
06. Bottom:
Sponges. Don’t ask me why. I really have no idea. I think it’s some weird play on Spongebob, a show that I passionately loathe.
07. Doodle: I just finished a really cute doodle of Xaos for her art collection. Clicketh here to see it. Also, I really need to draw that pic of my boss I keep promising her.
08. Bottle:
Need beer. I take that back. Need Smirnoff Ice Triple Black.
09. Cheese
: “I like cheese.” It’s this weird thing a few of my friends say when we’re super-confused.
10. Queen: My dog, because she thinks she’s Queen of the Universe.


Filed under:

(4) Embraced the madness. //


Tuesday, May 18, 2004 // 6:12 am
Cat-Herding
Mood:   Amused


Our office is slowly becoming a kitten rescue project. I’ve seen quite a few of them pass through our “No Pets Allowed” interior of late. People are apparently dumping their kittens at me place of employment in hopes that some employee on their way to lunch or home will see them mewling pitifully and be overwhelmed by their cuteness and take at least one of the previously unwanted critters home.

So far, the plan seems to be working. Last year, Shadow came through the office, creating pandemonium in his wake. Here’s the story of the havoc he wreaked, as told in an entry on my old journal:

Today at work , during lunch one of our new agents found this little long-haired gray kitten on the side of the road and brought it back. the thing was so cute and pitiful and couldn't have been more than 2 months old, but it's a business so pets are not allowed in any sense of the word. So, we spent all day hiding a 2-month old cat from management until one of us clocked out and could take it home. My cubicle wound up being converted into a playpen, but the critter refused to be contained. It was completely hyperactive and ready to explore, so it kept jumping over all the barricades we made. We had to chase it all over our row of cubes.

All was going well until our manager went home. That's when we almost got busted. One of the more strict managers came over to talk to me while I was babysitting our kitty. He knew I'm going to new york and was recommending places to see while I was there. I had to shove this cat in my filing cabinet and kick the door shut before he saw it, or we were all in serious shit. The whole time we were talking, I was sitting on my desk hoping I didn't look too flustered, and had one foot on the drawer to keep the kitten from opening it and was just praying it wouldn't start scratching or crying. Thankfully, she seemed to realize we were in dire crisis mode and kept quiet.

Only problem was, the barricades were still up around my cube and he was naturally curious as to what the hell we were doing. I had to make up some bs story and be all cute and flirty, saying I was stressed out and had resigned from the team and was living in my playpen of happiness until further notice. He laughed, and I managed to lead him off our row and pass word for someone to liberate the kitty before something happened.

One of my teammates too her home at the end of the day, when we clocked out. So, hopefully, she'll live happily ever after.

Shadow turned out to be a he, and he is still doing will living with Andi, her husband and a Great Dane, among others.

Today, at around 1:30 in the morning, Joy, one of our new agents I just finished mentoring, goes shooting past my cubicle saying something about having to see the kittens. I’m thinking, wait, we have more kittens in the building, and naturally took off, as I love cute kittens and wanted to find out what the heck she was talking about. We would up running around half the building taking the long way (and yes, there is a long way and a much shorter, short way to do it) until we happened upon a cubicle in the back with one of the night-shifters and a duo of tiny little kittens, a blackish-brown one and a calico striped. Her manager was holed up in her office across the way, sneezing her head off from a combination of cat allergies and that God-awful mildew smell from where a storm flooded us out on Sunday and apparently collapsed half the roof (and yes, we’re still in business and no, this is not the first time our roof has collapsed) but no one bothered to ShopVac up the water. After a fair amount of oohing and aweing over the cute little things and trying to figure out who was going to take them home, another of the night crew came running over saying there was something meowing outside. Kittens in hand, we went to investigate and, sure enough, in the weeds, some poor little thing was crying its frightened head off.

Off go me and a few other workers into the weeds to chase the kitten, who instinctually starts bolting all over the place upon hearing things much larger and scarier sounding than it was, tromping towards it. Tramping through the woods in a dress and heels is not a good idea by any means, and I have no idea why in the hell I decided to dress up for work today, but thankfully I did no serious damage and we managed to catch the kitten, another little, black one who turned out to be the runt of the litter judging from the looks of him.

We’d no sooner found that little guy and gotten him calmed down on the smoke dock (our company’s version of the watercooler), when we heard a fourth set of plaintive mews. Back into the field of weeds went we, but the final kitty eluded us all. This little guy was smarter than his brothers and sister, though. Instead of running for it, he simply curled up somewhere and refused to budge or move. No one had flashlights, so someone got the brilliant idea to fire up their Jeep, turn on the bright lights and drive it out into the middle of the field to try to spotlight this cat, which had to be terrified out of its mind by that point in time. By this point, at least ten of the 35 or so people staffed for the night had joined in the hunt, and about three or four more were looking after the trio of hyperactive kittens we’d already found.

Sadly, I must leave the story by telling you that I don’t know if anyone ever found the fourth kitten, as my shift ended and I was ordered to give up the search and go home. I’ll keep you updated with what I learn when I come in later today.  When I did leave, you'll be happy to know, all three of the found kittens already had homes, and there was a waiting list of potential owners, should the fourth cat be found.  Sadly, I did not get to take one home, as I already have two spoiled cats and a dog that would have a nervous breakdown if a new animal moved in.  Not to mention a grandfather who would shoot me if I brougth home another stray.

And, one of these days, I promise to write a post about actually working at my place of employment, as it seems that all work-related postings have to do with the interesting ways in which I manage to avoid work.


Filed under:

(1) Embraced the madness. //


Monday, May 17, 2004 // 5:40 am
Ignoring the Problem
Mood Depressed as hell
Now ReadingSharpe's Prey by Bernard Cornwell


Quote of the Week...
"Though my soul may set in darkness it shall rise in perfect light
I have loved the stars too fondly to be fearful of the night."
      --Sarah Williams
      An Old Astronomer to His Pupil


It has come to my attention, or perhaps I've only been reminded, that I can only really do good work on the Centre books when I'm in a thoroughly shot to hell mood.  I've been getting work in on that stalled chapter today, in between dealing with emotional trauma, admin stuff and revamping my site.  Here's an excerpt.  Thought I'd share.  It's not anything special, but here it is:

---------------

“What’s the matter?” Kevin asked before sipping his drink. Save for a light in his eye and slight furrow of his brow, I’d have never known there was more than passing concern behind the questions.

I shook my head, tried to laugh a little, managed to fail at doing both. “Thinking.”

“Well stop it!” He ordered, rather forcefully. “It look is serious.” He leaned back in his chair, a rather drunken gesture considering how little he’d had and swirled the liquid in his glass.

I sighed, unable to help myself. “I’m just wondering if we did any good, that’s all.”

“You’re shittin’ me, right?” The question came from Vicious, who was looking at me with the kind of ludicrous expression that made me wonder, no matter how briefly, if I’d sprouted a third arm.

“I second that,” Kevin agreed with a finger pointed to Abernathe in emphasis. It was enough to make me wander if he’d started drinking before the meeting. Considering how he’d started his morning, it wasn’t entirely out of the question.

“Details, pray tell?” Abernathe added, leaning forward to rest his elbow on the table so that he could use his hand to prop up his face. If I didn’t know better, I’d think he was settling in for one hell of a story. I had no intentions of giving him one. Given the company I was in, I was too afraid it would be mistaken for a pity trip, which it probably was to begin with, but that didn’t mean anyone had to tell me as much.

“They’re shutting us down.” I responded simply.

“And from this conclusion you’ve decided the past two decades of your life were for nothing?” Kevin asked. “Good God, man, we haven’t saved the world in some grandiose fashion, but we’ve more than done our part and it sure as hell wasn’t for lack of trying.”

“It wasn’t enough, I observed, rather miserably.

My observation made Kevin sober just a little. In spite of the change in demeanor, he smiled softly, meaning to infuse his next words with some small level of comfort. “It never is.”


Filed under:

Embrace the madness. //


Sunday, May 16, 2004 // 11:56 pm
Reality

I just found out that one of my brother’s best friends died of an overdose. Cocaine. That along with oxy and heroin are pretty big in this middle-of-nowhere small-town community of mine. Everybody does it. The people who don’t still know where to get it if they want it. The funeral’s Wednesday at 11 am, so I should probably drag my ass out of bed without complaint and go. I haven’t actually seen Skeeter (don’t laugh) in about two years now, but he was a pretty good friend to me when I was younger.

It’s got me scared as hell and thinking about a lot of things I’d rather not think about. A few years ago, my brother got into a lot of trouble on oxy and heroin and went through a few failed attempts at rehab and barely kept himself out of jail. He finally got into a center that did him a world of good, and he moved to Charlotte afterwards and got his life back in order. He even found religion.

Then he moved back here for reasons that are still unknown, and it was the worst thing that could have happened. He took up with his old crowd and fell into his old ways, and now he’s facing serious jail time and one of his best friends is dead. Makes me think about how short life is, and how badly life can get screwed up and how quickly it can get there.  

Mostly, though, I’m worried as hell that my brother’s going to die on me.  He has a 5 year old son, and I don't mind bragging that my nephew is the most amazing kid on this planet.  His mother also isn't in the picture, and he worships his dad, my brother.  Auntie Ang, due to her work schedule, isn't in the picture nearly as much as she's like to be.  I've changed my life insurance policies, a few months ago, to make the kid beneficiary should anything happen to me.  I want to know he's looked after.


Mostly, though, I'm scared to death my brother's going to die on me.


Filed under:

(4) Embraced the madness. //


Friday, May 14, 2004 // 4:26 am
Wednesday Mind Hump on a Friday

Mood:  Mind-humping madness (want in on the action? click BDI's fabulous piggie mascot)

First, a warm up. in celebration of the 1812 birthday of Edward Lear, the man who popularized the limerick, reveal seven things about yourself using the letters N-A-U-G-H-T-Y. One word a hundred words, it doesn't matter - just hump it, baby!

N – Need coffee. I swore to myself that I was never going to become a coffee-drinking fiend.  It was one of those inexplicable matters of principal.  However, to get throghthe complete and utter boringness of my past few work days, I’ve been sucking down cappaccinos at three in the morning.  I now crave the coffee.  I must have the coffee.  Coffee!  Now!

A– angela@alec-velyan.com.  My new email address.  Drop me a line sometime.  For those who still have the yahoo and hotmail addys, they still work, I just wanted to be able to say I own an email address through my own domain.

U – Unable to commit to just one project.  My writing is suffering greatly as a result.  I bounce back and forth between projects with reckless abandon and never get anything accomplished.  I have too many ideas in my head demanding my attention and, while I have time to put their beginnings on paper. I seldom get to the ends or middles.

G –Going to Las Vegas in September and to South Carolina sometime in June to meet a few fellow Blogdrivers.  It’s the first leg of my “Blog Across America” tour.  I’m planning to Blog across Europe sometimes next fall.

H –Heights.  I love them.  Airplanes, tall buildings with observatories, I love looking down at the rest of the world from on high.  It brings me a feeling of peace and serenity.

T – The Practice.  I’ve been completely and utterly addicted to this year’s final season, which has seen the blessed firing of Dylan McDermott and the hiring of the remarkable James Spader

Y – Yearing to go back to school and get my masters, but completely unable to decide on a specific course of study.  I blame a combination of laziness and complete and utter inability to commit.

There's nothing worse than an idle hump. Now that we're warmed up, let's get humping, shall we?

01.You are a character from a children fairy tale or nursery rhyme. Who are you and why?

Little Miss Muffet, with a twist:  I’d have beaten the hell out of that spider.

02. You are a magic potion. What is your main ingredient(s) and what are you used for?

I would be a potion of haphazardly thrown together eye of newt and cold cappuccino, among other items that would probably include printer ink, crushed bits of my laptop, chocolate and that proverbial lightning in a bottle.  My uses?  Well now, why spoil a trade secret?

03. Tell us your favorite joke. It can be naughty but clean up the language, puhleeze.

I know cheesy jokes, not cool ones.  So, here’s a cheesy one:  What do you call it when a cow jumps over a barbed-wire fence?

Udder destruction.

04. Imagine you're in the Old West. What town character would you be and what would your colorful nickname be? Example: School Marm - Old Widow Maples

Are you kidding me?  I’d be a gunfighter, a la Waytt Earp.  I have had a long-running crush on the sophisticated Wild West Gunfighter (Wyatt Earp and Doc Holliday as opposed to Jesse James or Billy the Kid) since I was about five years old. 

05. You are a mythological diety/god. What are you the god of? What offering(s) would worshippers lay at your feet? If one displeased you how would you smite them?

I am Grammatica, Goddess of Grammar (thanks to Lorianne for the pic).  Armed with my Pencil of Wisdom and Dictionary of Knowledge, I use with and linguistic superiority scathingly criticize purveyors of Netspeak, incorrectly written slogans (Your the winner of a new car!), and all other barbarians who attempt to slaughter my beloved English language.  My followers worship me with offerings of flowing prose and poetry, and are never far from the Thesaurus of Creativity that is bestowed upon them when they worship at my temples.


Filed under:

(3) Embraced the madness. //


Thursday, May 13, 2004 // 6:22 pm
Home Improvement

Mood:   Mellow

Now Reading:  Sharpe’s Prey by Bernard Cornwell

Swear Words Spoken Today:  3

 

I know, I’ve been neglecting this journal of late, but I promise there’s an almost valid reason.  It occurred to me early last week that all my creative effort has been flowing into this little blog, and that my personal site has been much-neglected and in desperate need of an upgrade to match the wonder that is “The Occasional.”  The layouts were outdated, the colors bland.  Not a lot of exciting things going on on my once-beloved home page.  So I’ve been systematically Photoshopping and upgrading the hell out of  Alec-Velyan.com, hoping to bring its glory up to par with the weblog.  I’m a little less than halfway through remodeling and, in my effort to upgrade an entire website from work, have accidentally deleted quite a few needed files, such as the header for my site (which has since been replaced by an exceptionally cheesy temp graphic), the directory for my novels (which was thankfully backed up) and quite a few artbooks (which I am working to get back online before anyone notices they’re gone).

 

It’s also been an exceptionally uneventful week, with the exception of this morning, which seemed laced with more stupidity than usual.  My grandfather broke one of the pipes on our bathroom sink and flooded the place.  Gran got the brilliant idea to put a ladder in the bathtub and got pissed when it slipped with her still on it and I’ve been drafted into painting ceilings this weekend.  All I can say is, God I’m glad I work nights and get to spend my days sleeping through this particular brand of madness.

 

Also, it came a downpour today as I was preparing to leave for work, which may seem uneventful until I mention the fact that neither my pets nor my grandparents have the sense to come in out of the wet stuff.  Mirage, my cat, just sat on the railing, getting his fur soaked, and meowed in futile effort to be let into the house, a place he has never been allowed since we got him.  Sadie sat in the rain looking miserable instead of seeking refuge on the porch.  Gramps went out and started planting tomatos.

 

So I’m now at work, where people are normal and life is a hell of a lot better than it used to be.  Our team has been having issues with one another and our manager, which has led to immense stress for all involved.  A few days ago, we were semi-disbanded and sent to new managers for the times when we’re not training new agents (which is what our team does).  I’ve been placed on a team with the fabulous Tara and all the other cool peple (Jay, Cooper, Shannon Marlana, Fudd and even Ted).  You’ll probably be hearing more about them.  My new semi-manager, Clinton, is an awesome man who seems to delight in letting me slack.  Presently I’m batting 3 for 4 on completely worthless days that I’ve gotten paid for this week.  Today starts the fourth and final day, and the outlook is fantastic as far as the eye can see.

 

I’ll eventually get back to writing (and get around to doing that Wednesday mind Hump), but for now I’m enjoying getting caught up on bad literature and basking in the rare glow of serenity.


Filed under:

(2) Embraced the madness. //


Tuesday, May 11, 2004 // 4:51 am
Another Meme

Mood   Pretty darn good.
Swear Words Spoken Today:  None.  Today has been exceptionally exceptional.


1: Grab the book nearest to you, turn to page 18, find line 4. Write down what it says:

"Screw you and the horse you rode in on," he said.  (Makes you wonder what I'm reading,doesn't it?)

 

2: Stretch out your left hand as far as you can, what does it touch?

Photos of New York City that are hanging in my cube, and a Lego battleship setting just over the photographs.

 

3: What is the last thing you watched on TV?

The Practice.  I am addicted to that show—so much sexy James Spader/Rhona Mitra sexual tension.

 

4: WITHOUT LOOKING, guess what time it is:

4:13 A.M.

 

5: Now look at the clock, what is the actual time?

4:19 A.M.

 

6: With the exception of the computer, what can you hear?

Artie, a teammate, whistling that obnoxious tune Daryl Hannah’s character whistled in Kill Bill.  For the fifteen thousandth time.  Phones are beeping (ours beep, not ring).  Various shoes on the floor.  The humming of my very loud hard drive.

 

7: When did you last step outside? What were you doing?

Almost 12 hours ago.  I was leaving my truck and coming into the office.  It was nice and warm and sunny.  Then the sky exploded and it came a downpour and knocked our power to the office on three separate occasions within 2 hours.  Which is why I’ve been inside ever since.  That and the fact that I have to work.

 

8: Before you came to this website, what did you look at?

I checked my email and was working on writing a chapter for one of my novels.  Also redesigned the frames for my website.

 

9: What are you wearing?

Crushed velvet shirt with a rather metaphysical design of the workings of the universe, jeans, flip-flops, necklace with an Egyptian cartouche pendant. 

 

10: Did you dream last night?

Yep—that Tara, myself and a co-worker named Steven went to Manhattan and got lost wandering around the Metropolitan Museum of Art.  It was a very cool dream. 

 

11: When did you last laugh?

About 30 minutes ago, watching Steven climb atop our cubicles to hand decorations.  He looked ridiculously close to Tarzan.

 

12: What is on the walls of the room you are in?

Welcome to the tour of my cucible:    To the left we have a  horizontal, thin, poster of the Manhattan Skyline taken about 20 years ago, a photo of the Empire State Building taken last year by moi, a NYC postcard, NYC photos from my last vacation, and a Lego Destroyer on a shelf. 

 

Straight ahead is the hulking desktop, a Lord of the Rings mini-poster, Jack Vettriano mini-calendar and a few pics from the Stargate series, as well as a page-a-day calendar that is supposed to teach me French. 

 

To the right is my scared corner of zen.  The horrible pink of the cubicle walls is covered by silken bamboo-pattered fabric to make the look interesting, light-up globe lamp, lava lamp, pine tree that’s been dying a miserable death for two years now, three betta fish in separate tanks, miniature zen garden, fish paperweight and a pair of seashells.

 

Behind me is the filing cabinet, a Chinese takeout box that’s been converted into a night light, some plant monstrosity that I do not know the name of that refuses to die, postcards of the Mirage and Bellagio hotels from Vegas, massive Las Vegas Strip poster, vertical poster of a nice, uncharted island paradise and another massive poster of, you guessed it, the New York skyline.

 

Oh, and overhead is a 500-piece Lego fighter jet that I mouthed from the ceiling.  So far, it’s fallen on my head three times.

 

13: Seen anything weird lately?
Aside from Steven acting like Tarzan?  Yes, actually, I have.  I was driving to work the other day and, apparently, the sprinkler system on the college baseball field had died.  The entire team, in uniform, was lined up like a bucket brigade with a green garden hose running over their shoulders so they could walk around and water the field.  Why that hose needed to stay off the ground is still beyond me.

 

15: What is the last film you saw?

Kill Bill part 2.  Pretty cool film, but underwhelming in its conclusion.

 

16: If you became a multi-millionaire overnight, what would you buy first?

BMW Z8 convertible, turquoise in color, khaki interior.  Then I’d send a chunk of it to the VFW, another chunk to the ASPCA,another chunk to Visa, and then go buy a townhouse on Fifth Avenue with a Central Park View.

 

17: Tell me something about you that I don't know:

I am starting to really love Dungeons and Dragons.  I also collect little glass figurines.

 

18: If you could change one thing about the world, regardless of guilt or politics, what would you do?:

I would make it so that the educators of this world are fairly compensated for their lasting contributions to society, as well as the hell that they sometimes have to endure at the hands of the system as well as their students.  I would also take away the increasingly ludicrous salaries that are flung at professional athletes of all sports. Salary should be directly tied to the meaningful (re: useful) impact one has on society.  I don’t think hitting a ball is a requirement for greatness or worthy of a twenty million dollar signing bonus when there are people out there trying to make a difference in the lives of others, who have to decide on a daily basis between buying groceries and paying the bills.  Go ahead and flame me, but I’m not changing my opinion.

 

19: Do you like to dance?:

Oh yeah.

 

20: George Bush: 

has gotten some of his priorities severely out of order, and needs to drop the fucking war president agenda and start making decisions about the lives of others based on solid information rather than speculation and personal agendas.

 

21a: Imagine your first child is a girl, what do you call her?

Thessaly Rose or Brynne Asher

 

21b: Imagine your first child is a boy, what do you call him?

Edward Aleczander or Vidar Alejandro.  I love all names starting with “A.”  If you don’t believe me, check out the cast list of some of my stories. 


Filed under:

(7) Embraced the madness. //


Monday, May 10, 2004 // 4:45 am
It's Good to be Me
Mood   Accomplished
Now Playing:  Angels and Devils by Toby Lightman.


Quote of the Week

"The only completely consistent people are dead."
         --Aldous Huxley


A list of things that make being me a good thing to be right now:

I just finished back-to-back chapters, one on the sequel to Alan and Edward, posted in the next entry down, one on the long-dormant Jinx (my little romp through the occult). 

In the even cooler department, I think I have found a publisher for a novel that isn't even complete yet--my opus Out of Nowhere.  Talk about a feeling of overwhelming excitement.  Now, all that remains is to whack Alec over the head with something heavy and persuade him to co-operate with me so I can finish the chapter I've been stonewalled on for the better part of a year.

I am definitely going back to Vegas to spend some time with a throughly awesome person I've met on this site.  The date has been set for the last week of September. Also, there is the possibility of a few of us crashing for a few days and partying our asses off.  This vacation is not going to be the near trip-from-hell that my much-anticipated New York trip was.  Tara's elected not to go becase Vegas does not interest her, but I'm pretty sure I can talk Kisha into it.

I've been dreaming about New York, specifically going with Tara back to the Met and browsing the statues and paintings.  Every time I think about it, I break out into a grin.  So I have a feeling I'll be postponing the Europe trip in favor of the familiar and fabulous known. There is so much of New York that I still want to see.  I plan on seeing it all.  Tara, you'd better plan on coming with me.

Finally, in the way of an announcement, look for the lyrics in the header to rotate on a fairly irregular basis.  I have decided to keep the image the same (I love that image) but change the lyrics to suit my moods and keep things interesting.


Filed under:

(3) Embraced the madness. //


Sunday, May 09, 2004 // 10:45 pm
Terms of Bereavement (Part Two)
Mood   Bleh.
Now Playing:  "Broken" from The Punisher soundtrack
Now ReadingBlue Moon by Laurell K. Hamilton
Swear Words Spoken Today:  0, surprisingly.  Very surprisingly.

Mother's Day sucked so muchly  that I do not wish to speak of it.  So, instead, here is Part Two of the continuation of the continuing saga of Edward and Lin…..

Breaking News

The first thing I said when Estrella’s younger son answered the phone and told me that his mother had died wasn’t “Oh my God.” Nor was it “how did it happen,” “I’m so sorry,” “are you okay,” or, God forbid, “what do you need me to do?” No. I guess I wasn’t that kind of person, no matter how hard I sometimes tried to be. My first question to Paul Sloane, upon returning his call and learning of the death of his mother was “does Alan know?”

Sad part was, some deep-pitted and immensely worried part of me already knew the answer. Lin’s last two recordings left on my machine were replaying through my mind too loudly for me to have any conceptions otherwise. He’d been furious. Or at least that was what I’d thought at the time. That was all I had heard in his voice, or all I’d chosen to hear. Now, though, I was tempted to hit the play button and listen to them again to see if I’d misinterpreted that anger for franticness. Alan was so unaccustomed to having to rely on others for support that more than traces of frustration would not have been out of the question for him. He had never enjoyed acknowledging his own weaknesses. What he perceived as having to flaunt them to others was unacceptable, no matter what the circumstances.

Paul didn’t seem to mind that I didn‘t seem to give a damn about him. I doubted he was in any condition to. The complete and utter shutdown that comes from being dealt such a traumatic emotional blow will do that to a person. I’d felt it a few times myself. Instead of getting angry or reminding me that Alan wasn’t the only one who had lost someone, he merely thought about my question for a moment and, in that same weak, exhausted and vacant voice with which he’d broken the news, answered me.

“I told him earlier,” he says. “He was at work. I think…I don’t know…he was upset about something. I probably should have asked…. But he said he’d be right over. That was—“ A pause fills the line between us. I imagine him checking the same watch he’s worn since he was fifteen years old. “That was about four hours ago.”

He stops again. He thinks. I let him. It’s the least I can do. I’m entirely too busy trying not to think about entirely too many things. I’m primarily thinking that now is really not the time to fall to pieces which, in turn, makes me realize how dangerously close to falling to pieces I am. I’m thinking, how in the hell could I have let myself lose contact with all of them over the past few months. After everything Alan’s family--Estrella especially--had done for me over the years, how had I dropped out of their lives without even bothering to send a Christmas card? Of course, I’d been in rehab over Christmas, and Estrella’s birthday, but that wasn’t really an excuse. I’d just told myself I’d get around to calling her at some point when I’d have my head on straighter, so that she wouldn’t have to worry about me. She’d always worried about me, sometimes more than her own children. No, that wasn’t fair. Sometimes more than Alan, maybe. Definitely sometimes more than Alan. God, she’d treated me like I was her own--

“Teddy?” Paul asks, reminding me, once more, that now was not the time to fall to pieces. Not yet, at least.

“I’m here.” My voice is a little weaker and I’m wishing I wasn’t so close to having to blink back tears, but I was there and I was determined not to give Paul one more emotionally frantic person to worry about. He’d probably been making too many of these calls both before and after he’d left the message on my machine. He needed to hear at least one person who was going to hold up well. I could do that much for him, at least.

“It doesn’t take four hours to get here, does it?” he asks me.

From where Lin works? “No,” I tell him. “I don’t think so.” The truth of the matter, and Paul knows as well as I do, is that it takes forty-five minutes in heavy traffic to make the drive. Paul knows this. But now is no the time for me to remind him.

“Do you—“

“I’ve been trying his cell since I called you,” Paul says at the same time I start to speak. Whatever he’s got to say is more important and probably a hell of a lot less stressful than my string of unasked questions. “I keep getting those…those recordings.” He spits the last word out as though it was a curse. He is disgusted by his brother’s decidedly unique choices of answering machine material. I’ve always found the recordings to be amusing and accurate snapshots of the state of affairs of the life of Alan Sloane. But now’s probably not the time to mention that, either. Or to act on the sudden urge to dial up his cell and see what, exactly, he has to say now that he’s probably not answering.

“What’s it say?” Needless to say, I hadn’t meant to ask that question out loud. I swear silently once I hear myself say the words, come close to knocking my fist against the desk.

“What?” He sounds numb, confused. They’re adjectives I’m not used to using in reference to him.

“The messages on Lin’s machine. What do they say?”

“I don’t remember,” Paul admits, sounding truly sorry that he can’t answer me. “About two hours ago, they just stopped. The phone just keeps ringing now. Nothing picks up. I‘ve--I‘ve been trying him about every twenty minutes.”

The disconnecting of his answering service tell me that Alan had made a stop by his hacienda to pack before driving like hell across the Nevada border.

Then it occurs to me that I’m probably the only person privy to that information; who knows that Alan had been feeling so overwhelmed by the double-blows he‘d been handed that he‘d skipped town, country and right across the state line. Which helps explain why Paul called me. He would have wanted me to know about their mother, but he’s also apparently (and rather blissfully) unaware of the fact that Alan and I have spent the better part of two months not speaking to one another. Which means that, without even trying, Lin’s once again put me in the middle of a damned impossible situation. How am I not supposed to tell his own brother what I know, especially given the circumstances surrounding the entire situation?

He knows I can be egocentric, petty, self-serving and occasionally demanding, but I’d never imagined he could think I was so unapologetically cold-hearted.

“Are you okay?” I finally ask. No point for me, though. I’m asking entirely too late but, mostly, I’m asking to keep him from asking the question that was his inevitable reason for calling me in the first place. I’m also trying like hell not to think about what I’m wishing I didn’t feel like doing to Alan the next time I saw him for planting me squarely in the middle of his family crisis.

“Yeah.” It’s barely a noise, much less a word. “Um, Dani’s here with me, so are the kids. Sheil’s on her way over.” Dani is Danielle, his wife. Sheil is Sheila Sloane-Bishop-Bridges, the eldest of his three siblings and a completely and utterly unbalanced woman I’ve had to obtain a restraining order against.

“I’m—I’m okay.” Paul adds after a moment of silence. It’s rather obvious that he’s not, but he’s doing the best that he can.

“Just let me know if you--”

“Teddy, could you do me a favor?” His voice wavers when he asks me, which means he hadn’t heard that I‘d been on the verge of volunteering my services for whatever he might need to help take some of the load off his shoulders. “I mean, if you’re not busy or anything. I—you’re not on a shoot or anything, right?”

“No,” I say, even though I’m supposed to report back to the set in a few hours, once the mess with the lighting rig was sorted out and suitably repaired. “I’ve been taking some time off ever since I got out of treatment. What to you need?” I can call the set and make my excuses. The director probably won’t understand, and I’ll probably tell him he can sue me if it makes him feel better.

“Can you find Alan for me?” he asks. The request succeeds in doing what the revelation of losing Estrella had not. I find myself sliding down in to my seat, my throat feeling completely closed off. I have to fight not to drop the phone, fight harder to find my breath.

“Teddy?” As badly as I hope my struggle to keep my own composure isn’t filtering through the line, Paul’s damned quick to realize he’s asked me for something I’d rather not be doing. “You’re busy, aren’t you?”

At least I can take some small comfort in the knowledge that ignorance, no matter how personally earth-shattering, can be someone else’s bliss.

“No,” I manage to say. “No, of course not.”

“You’ll find him, then?” Paul asks again, and in his voice is the kind of hope that I can not bring myself to extinguish. “I mean, he listens to you. If he’s screening calls, he’ll answer for you.” There’s a pause. “Right?”

He’s searching for validation that I cannot, in good conscience, give him. I also absolutely cannot let him try to cope with the loss of his mother on top of the fact that I’m now the least-qualified and downright worst choice of a person to help track down Alan. Worst choice of a person, definitely. But I realize one more, that I am hardly the least qualified. I had a message sitting on my recorder telling me everything but the room number of his hotel.

The knowledge only added to the feeling that whatever decisions I made during the duration of the phone call were going to throw my life even more out-of-balance than it already was. I couldn’t risk upsetting it anymore than I already was. Not for Alan. Not even for Paul.

“Listen, I--”

“Please?” he interrupts, and in that word is a weak, raw and desperate cry for help. With that one word, and all the plea behind it, I decide I can tell a few lies to help Paul hang on to what little sanity he has left. I can even get the hell over whatever it is I’ve spent these past few weeks feeling about Alan and try to get a call through to him in Vegas. I’m not sure how much good the effort will do me, especially when I take a moment to consider the shape Alan must have gotten himself into by now.

“Sure,” I tell him, sounding as aloof and casually confident about the matter as I can manage. “If he’s around, I can find him for you.” He’s not around. It will take the better part of the rest of the day for him to be anywhere close to around. But I can find him, and I could try to talk some sense into him and try to talk him down from whatever he’s gotten himself into during these past few hours. I can help Paul maintain the few illusions he has left about the state of his life and the people in it. I owe him that much.

“Thanks, Teddy,” he says. A sigh of relief follows that, to me at least, has a lot to do with unburdening an enormous amount of worry from his shoulders. “I mean it, thanks. I wouldn’t ask, but—“

“It’s not a problem,” I can interrupt before he has a chance to start rambling and feeling burdened again. The ‘Teddy’ part grates and has been since he first used the aw-shucks moniker, but I can ignore it. He calls me that because, more than twenty years ago, my agent turned ex-wife decided that Edward was too stuffy a name for a pretty-boy movie star. I’ve always—always—loathed the nickname. I hear it shouted by entirely too many people every time I show up for something that’s important to the industry. The talk show hosts call me Edward. They’ve learned. So have the reporters who do their research in effort to get on my good side. There was a subconscious part of me that’s since become conscious that will only sign autographs for people who at least make it as far as Ed. It’s one of those things I’m now working on in therapy to make me a more well-adjusted human being.

The moral of the story, however lost, is that my best friend’s little brother just lost his mother. He can call me whatever the hell he wants to.

“Paulie?” Unconscious revenge for having to be called Teddy over and over again? God, I hope not. I don’t think I’ve called him that since he got his Ph.D. It slips out, and somehow it feels right.

“Yeah?” Despite that dame, barely audible word, I hear him come close to laughing at his old, detested childhood nickname. If he’d been in a better mood, he probably would have warned me to watch it, and I’d have been telling him he started it. It’s a amazing, sometimes, how much and how little changes.

I don’t know what to tell him, or what I’d started to tell him, but I have to make an effort of saying something. Everything in his world has to be upside down and backwards at the moment, spiraling towards a black hole. I remember that feeling. I’m starting to remember it all too well, and to worry that I may be joining him thee shortly. I need to give him something—anything—

“You’ll be okay.” No matter how feeble. “I’ll try and find Lin and I’ll be there as soon as I can.”

There’s a moment of silence. I wonder what he’s thinking, or if he’s even capable of thinking at all right now. “Thanks.”

Another hesitation, then the phone slips into the cradle. Paul’s gone back to his wife and his kids and waiting for his sister to arrive, while trusting me to make sure his brother does the same in something close to acceptable condition. All that and trying to accept the fact that he’s never going to see his mother again, and having to worry about things like burial outfits and coffins and flowers and those little papers they give out at the funeral homes with the obituary printed inside, while outside there’s some image of a cross at sunset with words from the Bible, Tennyson or Byron.

I’m left holding the phone, and somehow can’t bring myself to hang it up. Estrella’s dead. Paul’s got to be in shambles. Sheila’s probably more unraveled than usual. And Alan? I seem to be the only one who knows that Lin started his day off by getting fired over breakfast. Lunch was served with a phone call from his younger brother saying their mother had died. He’d gone to Vegas, presumably to get himself immensely drunk and drugged up and screw his way back into a better mindset.

I happened to be the only person who knew that particular piece of information. After two months of not speaking to one another, after trying to convince myself to move on with my life because we were probably never going to speak again, me had told me where to find him. Realization finally dawned on me--and I wasn’t quite sure if it was for the first time or not--that he wanted me to be the one to find him.

He didn’t want me to call. He hadn’t left me a phone number, and the fact that he wasn’t answering his cell told me he didn’t have it with him. He never screened calls on his cell, despite what Paul was thinking. I’d never known him to, at least. It was the number that all his clients had, so he didn’t recognize half of them when the ID picked them up. After the fist year, he’d stopped making the effort. He didn’t want me to call. He wanted to go to a fucking hotel room in Vegas and find him and make an effort of helping him sort himself out.

With a sigh that takes most of the air from my body, I rest my elbows on the desk and run my fingers through my hair until my face is buried in my hands. I can feel my throat trying to constrict again and have to consciously focus on the often taken-for-granted process of inhaling and exhaling.

I’m on the verge of a monumental collapse of my own at a time when too many people are asking me to be their lynchpin. I need to sit back, think and put a call through to my therapist and my sponsor before I even think about having an independent-minded thought. Instead, I turn the phone off, turn the phone on and call my agent. I tell him to tell the director I won’t be in for the rest of the day, possibly the rest of the week, possible the rest of the foreseeable future. He doesn’t take it well, so I deicide not to ask him to book me a last-minute flight out of the state. He asks me if I’m thinking clearly, which I assure him I am. He asks what happened, which I assure him is nothing, then think ‘screw it’ and proceed to tell him I’ll be needing the production company’s private jet for a few hours to make an emergency trip out-of-state.



Filed under:

(1) Embraced the madness. //


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