Friday, February 5, 2010

A Day in the Life




Thursday Night: Already thinking ahead to Friday. Hubby is working second shift for awhile. The promise of a quieter evening, relaxed dinner hour... just the sort of change in ritual that could help redefine my tragically dragging (mostly nonexistent) writing ritual.

Thursday Night, part II: Hubby's new boss calls to say that in light of an impending snowstorm in the forecast for Friday - Saturday, 2nd shift employees will report to the 1st shift Friday morning. 8:00 AM - 4:30 PM. Okay, a change in scheduling. I can still work with that. I'm excited to get at to my novel in progress, so will just make some adjustments to my plans. I still have all afternoon.

Friday Morning AM: Stayed up late watching Celebrity Rehab (I'm hooked, no pun intended.). Pushed the snooze button a few too many times already, so now I've gotta scramble to pack-up hubby's lunch, son's breakfast, then pack his lunch as well since a fourteen year old can't be trusted to prepare a meal or pack a brown bag lunch unless there aren't any issues with them surviving on pop-tarts and potato chips. (And I do have issues.)

Friday Morning late AM: Work-out finished, showered, dressed, ready to run out to the store for "storm supplies," since this winter snowstorm is actually looking like a whopper and there are few things more dangerous then being trapped in a snowbound house with two males and unacceptable stores of edible items.

Friday Morning late AM, part II: School calls to announce that students will be dismissed at 12:30 PM in light of aforementioned impending storm. Argggg...don't know if 14 year old son who has his own key actually remembered to carry said key with him. Have to take off immediately if I hope to have shopping done and arrive back home before potentially keyless son does.

Late Friday Morning: Drive like escaping bank robber, bolting from store to store in quest of necessary items on list. Now have everything minus one particular item. Three grocery stores do not have Fennel, and I really MUST have fennel. (Inspired to try recipe for Fennel/Lemon cleansing tea.) Store number four proves to be the charm. Tear out of parking lot, race home. Make it back before boy - who it turns out DOES have his key.

Early Afternoon: Haul in grocery bags, then begin the chore of loading firewood into the house for wood stove (essential for survival in 130 year old uninsulated house), as son ushers in friends he's invited home after early dismissal to play video games. I continue hauling wood, ignoring as best I can the weird popping noise I've heard - and felt - in my lower back.

2:00 PM: No writing yet, but morning dishes I didn't have time to wash before the marathon shopping trip are now washed, dried, and put away. I cannot write in a messy environment, so now I'm ready to get to it.

2:15 PM: Last dish goes into the cupboard and son appears with a request to bake chocolate chip muffins for his STARVING buddies. Baking supplies quickly accumulate on the counters and in sink.

2:30: Son offers friends chips and cookies to tide them over until muffins are ready.

2:50: Muffins baked, slightly cooled and instantly consumed. Grinning son appears in kitchen to put empty muffin plate in sink.

3:00: Laptop is whining, then screaming for my attention. Despite the very distressing sound of son and friends continuing to devour the newly stored collection of "Blizzard food supplies," I am nevertheless determined to write something. Something! Just SOMETHING!

3:20ish: One of the friend's is leaving before the snow starts. Which, btw, a single flake has yet to drift down from a fuzzy grey sky.

3:25: I continue to get up now and again to stuff another log into the fire, but I'm writing. Still writing. I think my eyes might've accidentally closed for a couple minutes, but I wasn't sleeping. I'm writing...still writing.

4:00: Friend #2 is leaving too now. Son comes in to check out the weather channel. Where's the snow storm? Still, not a flake,but the reports of what's to come are ominous.

4:15: Here it is. A little something seems to be drifting down. Still writing, but this is it. Hubby on the way home, son back in the cupboard. He's tall and slender as a blade of grass, but forever hollow.

4:30: Stationed at the stove, stirring the turkey/tortellini soup, preparing the filling for the sausage-egg-cheese Stromboli. I try to pretend that I'm really not finished sorting through words for the day. But I know that's it. There's too much excitement building over the coming storm. Hubby has work tales, son is chatty and actually not eating at present. Alas it's Friday evening and overall it's been a productive week. Tuesday marked the first day in 6 months that I worked on this novel and it feels fantastic to be back at it. Here it is Friday and though I've rewritten the same two pages for four days, they're starting to look like two really good pages! (Or at least until the next time I look at them.)

8:00: Day is done, snow is really starting to pile-up. Within the hour I'll be in my soft and comfy pj's, settled in for last night's installment of "Project Runway." All in all, I'm feeling a lot like Rocky, (I love this guy! He's me, but with really big muscles!) slammed around, pummeled, and gut punched, but still, I went the distance and that's all that matters when the final bell rings!

8:26: Next week will be different...

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Just one word at a time

The scariest thing happened to me this past weekend -- or maybe it was just sobering enough to feel very scary. It was innocent enough, I'd just popped into a local store to pick-up a particular brand of toothpaste to send to Chelsea at college (a story in itself, since yes, they do sell toothpaste in New Orleans!) when I found myself immediately drawn to a $3.00 sale table heaped to overflowing with BOOKS - stacks and stacks of beautiful books!!! It didn't take long to fill an arm with must-have tomes, but it was in flipping through the pages of a charming little book filled with literary quotes, that the shocker came crashing down. Because as I glanced over the words - beautifully composed and magnificently constructed sentences - the thing that all at once stuck my browsing eyes, was the horrifying conviction that I could no longer do this. That over the course of 6 months, when I'd foolishly ignored the keyboard, I'd forgotten how to write! Now, I'm not exaggerating here. Sure, I'm pretty certain I can sit down at any time and write SOMETHING, but what I'm referring to here is REAL writing. The kind of sentences we agonize over like a brain surgeon extracting a tumor.

In an attempt to be fair to myself, I haven't abandoned my novel in progress out of disinterest or laziness. It's more about temporary abandonment in order to immerse my confused brain into the convoluted mess that is book publishing and marketing. As my debut novel, The Secret of Lies, is a single season away from lowering the landing gear and hitting the runway, this other stuff seemed (and assuredly is) of immediate importance. As I pour over the particulars of "Early review copies, preparing media releases, book trailers, etc" the essential ingredient I've left out of my plan is the necessity to keep writing! An hour for this, an hour for that, it all needs to fit in. So to those who have this time management game sorted out - I'm impressed and enthusiastically applaud you! I, on the other hand, need an intervention.

And so, for the first time since June 2009, I sat before my trusty laptop computer this afternoon and opened the long sleeping file of said novel-in-progress and wrote. Squeaky, squeaky, rusty, rusty, popping up and down for snacks and refills of coffee, anything to avoid the screaming blank page. But then at last - a sentence (later deleted, but a nice collection of words nevertheless)! Followed then by a couple more, and at the end of an afternoon, two pages (which I will likely delete tomorrow.) And it feels good - great actually - to be wiggling back into my groove.