Invitation emails

The fuckyourselftohell.com Purity Test Challenge 2002

I’ve just sent out emails to seven different people, inviting nine people to the parties directly. It occurred to me after the fifth or sixth email that maybe I should have used some sort of template instead of writing a personalized message to everyone. Still, if only half of the people I emailed decide to play, I’m sure we’ll all have a good time. If I’m you didn’t get an email from me today regarding this, and you think you should have, email me and let me know I’ve somehow overlooked you. You’re probably welcome at the party. Or I assumed you’d seen the site already.

Continue reading Invitation emails

On Writing

I have been working on writing a novel this month, as you probably know by now. I have been writing an average of seven pages every day that I sit down to write, which would have certainly yeilded more than the minimum I was shooting for, had I applied myself every day of the month. For me, the project wasn’t originally about just meeting the minimum number of words, but really about wanting to find a way to getmyself started on writing a novel. I have long known that I wanted to write. That I had a certain level of talent at writing well, and that it made me happy to write, and to be able to share that writing with other people. Modern Evil is a lot about having a place to put the things I create, where I feel pressure from myself to always have new stuff online. I always feel that I am disappointing “my audience” if I don’t have new stuff to come look at with regularity. Which is exacly how I want to feel, because it forces me to do the creative things I like to do.

For years I would just hang out in my spare time and literally stare at blank walls. Sometimes thinking to myself, but often at the end of an hour or two of just sitting still, staring, not even watching TV, I would not have developed some clever idea or resolved some question that had troubled or even fleeted across my mind. Just to be able to stop moving, physically, mentally, emotionally, was a relief. I don’t get to do that much anymore. Yoga is close, or at least helps, because after a good hour of Yoga, my mind and heart are clear, and my body is ready to just totally relax.

Then I took up watching a lot of TV, which seems somehow better than staring blankly at walls. A lot of TV. I’ve seen a lot of really good shows as a result. I’ve become emotionally involved with a lot of different characters. (Obviously; I care what happens this week on the series finale of Felicity.) I’ve thought critically about how to write for television, and have become adept an understanding how teleplays are put together. Now, unless I try hard to just enjoy the show, I can see in my mind why the writer wrote something in and where it’s going and can recognise one writer’s style over another. Much more involved than staring at the walls.

What I wasn’t doing enough of was writing. I remember when I was writing new short stories or poems every day or at least every week. I remember getting an idea for a story and being able to hand it off to someone to read the next day. I remember how writing short fiction and getting immediate results used to scare me away from the idea of creating something longer. How long does it take to write a novel? How long until I can hand it to someone and see them smile at the good parts and react with shock to the shocking parts, and perhaps even care what happens to the characters? How long is a book anyway? I knew I wanted to write longer works, and the thought of not knowing when it would be done actually contributed to my giving up writing atogether. For years, I wasn’t writing anything more than the occasional rhymed couplet, and I think it was because I didn’t think I’d be able to finish a novel.

I don’t know how I found the NaNoWriMo site originally. I know that when I saw it, I knew that starting a novel wouldn’t be hard at all if other people were going to be doing the same thing. If other people could start a novel, so could I. I was already writing thousands of words every week for my websites. If I could do that for a novel, I could surely finish it in a month. All of a sudden, then end of the novel was in sight. I could start writing one day and know that within thirty days I would have a novel. Not six months, not three years, not indefinitely. I would have a completed book before summer. With print on demand, I could have a professionally printed and bound copy of my book in my hands before the end of the summer, even allowing twice as long to edit/rewrite the book as I was allowing to write it.

Except that the official NaNoWriMo is in November, and I didn’t want to wait that long. I have plans to be at least trying to be working on either making motion pictures in November or being back in school studying Fine Arts. Neither one of those things allows time to write a novel while working full time. So I decided to try to form my own little community of people who would write a novel. In May. I had six people say they would definitely try, and several others who thought they might give it a shot. As of right now I only have one person left who hasn’t told me outright that they’ve given up on the whole thing, and the other appears to be losing hope. I’m the only one still writing, as far as I know. The community effect that was able to get me started writing; knowing that I was not alone in getting started, in believing that it was actually possible for a novel to be written, is gone. I am on my own.

Still, I am writing. I have written more towards this story than any other I have ever attempted to write. This has to do with my historical fear of starting; I don’t want to start something I’m not going to finish, and I don’t want to start something if I’m not going to do it right. If I don’ finish this book before May is over, I will feel awful. No matter how far I get or whether I know I will be able to finish the novel, when May 31st rolls around, if it isn’t done, I know I will feel bad. I will not give up. This is not impossible. I write faster about blood and sweat and tears and death, and there is only more and more of that as I get past the halfway point in my story. If I can get halfway through the story, it will be much faster to get through the second half, simply by the nature of the story I’m telling, if not because of the deadline I’ll be working under. I will not give up. Even if it’s June 3rd and I have an act or two to of my story remaining to write, I will not give up.

You see, it was always just about getting me started writing again. Even if I set myself unreasonable goals, even if the story doesn’t flow as smoothly as I’d like in some sections, if I’m writing then I’m doing better than I was when I was staring at the walls or watching TV. Every time I set still for a few minutes, or find myself surfing the channel guide looking for something to watch with no specific program in mind, I remind myself that I ought to be working on the novel. Every time I wonder what I’m going to do with this afternoon or that weekend, I remind myself that I ought to be working on a creative project. Get a dozen pages done, or fix something on the website, or sketch out something for a painting. There are even a lot of utilitarian things that I’m falling behind on (not any more than usual because of the novel; I always fall behind on dishes and yardwork) that I could certainly be working on instead. Could be working on right now.

So I’m started writing again. I’ve got writing momentum. Obviously. Look at what I’ve written here. And in the forums lately. And if you could see all the emails I’ve been writing lately… It’s a lot of words. I can sit down at the keyboard here or the typewriter there and words just flow out of me. Writing momentum. I don’t see it stopping at the end of the month, and that’s a good thing. That’s a real life saver. I’m going to go write somplace else now. Or maybe pull that weed I keep seeing out the window. It’s bugging me.

Speaking of debauchery

I know I ought to be investing my time that weekend into writing my novel; that will be the last weekend I have to work on it, you know, but I have decided to make a plan for a few hours on Memorial Day weekend (1-3 of 5.1.0) and again in the last weekend of June (1-2 of 6.2.0) for coordinated debauchery.

Get ready for the

The fuckyourselftohell.com Purity Test Challenge 2002

That is, I am going to have a Purity Test party and a followup Purity Test party, with a challenge to see who can drop the most points from their Purity Test score. With 7 weeks (just over a month), everyone should be able to drop at least a few points. Married couples will be allowed to be considered teams, their scores added together and divided by two at each party. We will be using the same 500 question, Universal Omnisexual v4.0 Purity Test at both parties (this test is the same one used at puritytest.org, and has been my favorite for nearly a decade).

I have not set a time and date in stone, but I tend to go with the suggestion of whoever contacts me first, so if you’ve already got plans for one or both of those weekends and you’d like to attend when you’re free, email me now and let me know when the parties should be (ie: Friday, Saturday, Sunday, or Monday. Morning, Noon, Night, or Late-Night). When I have more specific plans or updates, I will post them here with the above banner.

Oh yeah, and there will be prizes. I’m not sure what the prizes will be, but I do live just a couple blocks from a Fascinations I’m pretty familiar with, and it is a Purity Test challenge, so you probably get the idea.

This post is sort of a general invite, but I’m going to need everyone to RSVP (or at least express their interest in attending to me) so I can be sure everything comes together properly. Call me (if you’re not too retarded to remember my phone number) or email me, or if you see me in person, just let me know you want to come. I will be contacting people I think will be interested directly, but most of them read this site anyway, so this should cover most of them before I get to them.

Comics, lately

So, I actually did have a new comic for today, I just forgot to post it last night, what with all the staying up late discussing possible plot twists in the next installment of Star Wars, and with waking up 1/2hr late this morning and not having time to really do much more than cover my nakedness, shove raisins, bran flakes, and skim milk down my throwt with a spoon, and head out the door. I plan on posting the comic when I get home today.

Today’s comic mentions blood.

That’s always a good sign.

Attacking my clone

Edison and I went to see Star Wars Episode II Attack of the Clones last night (many other people happenned to show up and join us, most unexpectedly). We’re going to work on a review and try to have it up as soon as possible. Hopefully, worst possible case, we’ll do it during Sunday night TV and you’ll see it late Sunday night/early Monday morning.

Still, for those of you trying to decide whether to see it this weekend, the critics aren’t far off; if you are a big Star Wars fan, this is a must-see movie. If you are even a little bit of a fan (ie: have seen all four other movies, maybe a couple of times each, over the last 25 years, and liked at least 2 of them), this movie is worth seeing in a theatre, preferably with an excited crowd (ie: opening weekend crowd). If you have never heard of Star Wars before, or have only learned of its existence because of the hype surrounding this movie, or even Episode I, you may find yourself confused/bored/uninterested in the first 90 minutes or so of this movie, though even you will likely enjoy all the excitement/battles in the last 45 minutes. Finally, if you loathe Star Wars with a vehemence that could freeze the three suns of Tatooine or melt the ice on Hoth (for instance), then you’ve probably already seen this movie so you could tear it apart and posted your own little “review” online by now.

Okay. I’ll try not to repeat myself too much when discussing the film with Edison later, but … I haven’t asked him what he thought yet.