Five prompts to smack down Writer’s Block

“I learned that if you want to make it bad enough, no matter how bad it is, you can make it.”~Gale Sayers, American athlete

I was going to write about Writer’s Block, but I have writer’s block. 

Small, random prompts are the best. An unexpected string of words. I forgot how much fun that was until my last Deadwood Writers Group meeting. Facilitator John gave us all a 5-minute writing prompt to use all senses with this opening line: “Kelly and Shawn stared across a wooden table, cups in their hand.” Our group had been critiquing a member’s piece involving alcohol, so naturally my mind leaped to Beer Pong.

In five minutes, I only got touch, sight and smell. Maybe I did get sound with my sentence, “He snorted.” I definitely didn’t get taste, but that’s an easy one to add in without that time constraint. I embellished that prompt–more accurately, condensed that–into a 100-word micro-fiction entry for this year’s Rochester Writers contest. I’ve been procrastinating about that entry, but this spontaneous exercise in my writers group inspired me. It was a short piece, anyway; I just had to make the tight words do double duty.

So if you don’t have a creative writers group with you, how do you come up with prompts? Here are some ideas:

• Grab a book or magazine. Open to a random page. Write down 10 words: five nouns and five verbs. Then, depending on the words, ask the question, “Who/What/Where is that?” Or ask all three.

• Play an I-Spy game. Look out the window, and in 30 seconds, write down the first 5, 10 or 20 images you see. Begin a writing exercise with: “I never expected to see a/an [image] doing that.”

• Use the above Kelly and Shawn prompt above.

• Type “writing prompts” into your search engine. A plethora of images pop up with prompts for dialogue, alphabet writing, holidays, scenarios, What Ifs, poetry, storytelling and lists.  One website that stuck out to me is thinkwritten, which has a 365 creative prompts blogpost.

Of course, you could always start writing about having writers block.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

This #WeekendCoffeeShare: come in from the rain

If we were having coffee….

Hi. How are you today? Thanks for making it out in this rain. Downpour. I’ve never been to City Coffeehouse before. My husband’s gonna join us after he’s done record browsing. I recommend the Organic Rain Forest coffee. It’s smooth with notes of chocolate. *snicker* Look at me, sounding all barista-like. If you’re playing PokemonGO, there’s a 10% discount for Trainers. By the way, are you? What team are you?

With the the crazy curveballs Life has thrown at me this week, I am totally reevaluating those ROW80 goals I told you about. I’m finishing up the month’s challenge with just one focus: my blog posts. I’m not even worrying about my About Me page or anything else like that. I want…I need…to catch up or do whatever with all my draft posts and future scheduled posts and all that. Round 3 ends on September 22. When Round 4 begins on October 3, I expect my focus to be strictly on my memoir. I’ve avoided it long enough. Maybe I’ll also work on Jimmy the Burglar: Thief of Socks. I’ll review it all next month–oh my gosh, it’s almost next month!

image

One cool thing I’ve started is my YouTube channel, All Things Bookish. I don’t know how active I’ll be on it over the next few months, but for now, it’s casual and I’m having fun. I’ve filmed two planner videos. “Planning” is a subculture of scrapbooking; it’s decorating a paper datebook with stickers. I’m using my Happy Planner for my social media and writing plans, but it doesn’t feel like it sometimes. Some weeks it looks like one big to-do brain dump list. That’s okay, it’s a work in progress. I’m pleased that my iPhone produces decent videos. Every week, I create this makeshift tower of Starbucks mug boxes, binder clips and tape to make the setup work high enough to film. Like I said, right now it’s casual. My faves are the Beautiful Madness Book Case unboxing and the Plan With Me from Aug 22-28.

I have been productive with those blog goals of mine. I wrote and am editing previous Owlcrate unboxing posts, posts that didn’t transfer well from my old WolfHowlings website. Same with the A to Z haiku posts. The BookExpo America posts are slower to unravel because I’m filming videos with them, and I haven’t made the time to contact my hosting company to find out why my videos aren’t directly loading to my site.

We’ve got some great plans coming up next month: two road trips to Penn State football games, fireworks, ice cream and all the good stuff that comes with both Home and Away games.

How’s your week been?

Posted in Art & Scrapbooking, Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

The appeal of writing in coffeeshops

“You can’t blame gravity for falling in love.”~Albert Einstein, German scientist

Coffeeshops are my office.

Some people find the noise distracting. I find the background noise comforting. The conversations and overhead music soothes me, connects me to the outside world of people. I’m able to tune it always; I always have. I guess that happens from growing up in a house where the TV was turned on the moment we got home.

image

Haiku Horizons Prompt #131: “Climb”

What’s more distracting to me is being home and having the laundry, couch and kitchen snacks calling my name. Outside, I have only me, my laptop and coffee or tea. I’m an equal opportunity caffeine drinker.

People are fun to watch, both inside and out the coffeeshop windows. Who are they talking to on their cell phones? What gossip are they sharing under the awning? How long have they been sitting in the sun; isn’t it too hot? Where will they go after this? When will they leave, thus freeing up those wicker seats? Why are they here at all? Are they like me?

My coffeeshop post over at Deadwood Writers Voices describes more of why I like involving the five senses in a coffeeshop. There’s a vibrant world out there, with the occasional blueberry muffin.

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Unboxing Uppercase August 2016 delightfulness

“It is not only fine feathers that make fine birds.”~Aesop, Greek writer

I cancelled my OwlCrate subscription because I found better book box kits.

I’m frustrated with OwlCrate. Everything in their boxes is Harry Potter-themed, repeating vendors and impractical trinkets. You’ve read my diatribes of disappointments. Now read words of wonderfulness.

Uppercase. I gave myself a 2-month gift subscription, a way to try out the service without the long-term commitment. My first month, August, is delight-filled.

The bubble envelope did not impress me because I’m used to receiving sturdy cardboard boxes. The items inside did impress me.

image

Once upon a time there was this lovely necklace…

I’m beginning to think that a book subscription kit isn’t a real book subscription kit if it doesn’t include jewelry. What’s nice about this gold-plated necklace is that it is a general theme, not tied to any specific book or movie series. I like that. A lot. The scroll is an exclusive Uppercase design. It is sturdy and easy to latch closed. Love that.

image

Note to self: take notes

The designers had me in mind when they crafted the exclusive notepad. It’s wider than standard notepads. The lines are spaced far enough apart that it’s easy for those of us who write above an 8-pt. font to, you know, actually write on them. The picturesque designs eat up a lot of the writing real estate, but the design is what makes this charming. Piles of books: me. Coffee or tea: me. pens and pencils and sticky notes: so me.

I showed this to my husband, and he said, “This is perfect for you.” Yup.

That’s it. Those two bookly items are the only things included, but these are two nice bookly items. As of this writing, I’ve already worn the necklace once and received a nice comment on it. The featured book, P.S. I Like You by Kasie West arrived autographed with a pink quote print.

image

I do think I like you

There’s also a reading experience bookmark. I’m not sure what that does yet, but it seems that you enter a code online when you get to certain pages in the book–you’ll know what pages because they’re shown on the bookmark you’ll be using–there’s some exclusive content, stories, trivia, author perspectives, stuff like that. Paint me intrigued.

image

Uppercase August 2016: a complete package

The nicest touch is the handwritten note from the owner. It’s not something pre-printed on stock paper; at least, it doesn’t look that way, and it’s addressed to me by name. Makes me feel like a person, not a subscription number.

Eagerly awaiting September’s box.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Finding writing inspiration from cheesy sleazy motivational speaker

“Motivational speakers are used car salesmen without the wheels.”~D.W. Hirsch, soon-to-be-World-Famous author

I get pumped after a good motivational speech, which is the point of them. My writers group hosted a speaker this weekend who left me wanting more, which is not the point. The speaker was scheduled to talk about the “publishing journey with tips for writers and published authors about marketing and promotion methods, PLUS address concerns about what’s holding YOU back from your literary success.” From that description, and based on previous presentations with this group, I expected to leave with solid practical advice. You know, something like “I did it this way: Steps 1, 2 and 3” or “These are four companies I worked with that you should check out” or “Here’s a list of websites that are good resources.”

Instead, I heard a hyped-up talk from this Fearless Coach–whatever that is–who can “help you overcome all your fears.” For a price. The speaker’s book was for sale and upcoming classes and workshops were discussed.

Professor Encouragement dressed in a formal black attire, lecturing to this captive classroom. We listened to the strong, deep, energetic voice complete with a feel-good vocabulary, a combination that makes you feel good about yourself realizing you can do amazing things. So you buy the book to become even more amazing, but then you get caught up in life. The book gets buried under piles of paper or shoved deep into a crowded bookshelf. You forget the book that will make you amazing and move on, but the Fearless Coach has made the money and moves on to other lucrative speaking engagements.

Speaking engagements, by the way, are where writers make the real money, the speaker pronounced.

I don’t fall into the abyss of needing candles or lipstick or plastic dishes just because I’m invited to a party, so I passed on this fearless book but took away some thought-provoking quotes.

“God woke you up this morning.”

Religion, salvation and deity beliefs are subjective and personal. I will not stand in your way of that or lack of that.  However, this applied to me today. I was meant to attend this meeting. I doubted that because my body shut down Weds night, sleeping 12-14+ hours on both Thursday and Friday. I wasn’t sick, but my body needed to implode from something. I was going to sleep all day Saturday, figuring my body still needed it, but told myself, If I wake up in time to shower, get breakfast at Starbucks and arrive on time, I’ll go. I woke naturally and mostly alert at 8:17am, so I kept my self-promise. Kismet, luck or divine intervention…whatever you call it, I was there for all this.

“Our imagination leaves a legacy.”

I never thought of it quite this way. Books are our mark on the world. Telling our stories is important. Think of all the books you read as a child and the lasting impression those words made on you. How much less of a person would you be without that inspiration?

“When we talk ourselves out of writing our book, we talk ourselves out of our dreams.”

It’s easier to be a scientist or engineer: follow the rules of nature and science, and you succeed. Writing is not a mathematical equation; it’s personal. It can be a goal to be that successful scientist or engineer, but it’s personal when you’re exposing your imagination for the world to see and interact with. You’re writing is a reflection of you; don’t deny that. Even a nonfiction how-to book is framed by your experiences. There is no formula for success. We can follow all those prescribed rules, tips, guidelines and suggestions, but in the end, that book exposes us. Writing a book is scary. To not write it is selfish.

“We’re so conditioned to hear the word fail and think: end, give up, stop. A better word is defeat.”

What is success? That’s different for every one of us. I can look at the 2000 words I wrote and think, “That’s all?” and someone else will see those same words and think, “Wow! So productive.”  There are lots of better words out there.

The definition of defeat includes:

• “prevail over; vanquish”
• “to frustrate; thwart”
• “to eliminate or deprive of something expected”
• “the act of overcoming”
• “setback”

I like that last one, setback. Substitute that word for “fail,” and hear what changes.

My apologies to any decent used car dealers out there.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The beautiful unboxing of Beautiful Madness Book Case, Chapter 3

“Education is not preparation for life; education is life itself.”~John Dewey, American philosopher

I’m so glad I found Beautiful Madness Book Case subscription company tucked in the back of Aisle 1 at BookExpo America 2016 in Chicago.

image

Book in a box

The owner was so much friendlier than Owlcrate. She and I talked for a solid 20 minutes or more, sharing ideas and input. I felt important and valued. Owlcrate, however, snubbed anyone except potential new customers. I’ve been an Owlcrate subscriber for 10 months now, and I will never forget that poor customer service. I purchased the BMBC Messenger Bag kit because I support good customer service. Plus, the bag is roomy, strong and colorful.

The BMBC box themes are creative and book-related.  The August theme is: Chapter 3 “Be Right Back…Laughing Forever”

image

The mystery revealed….

.
.
Like any good care package, this one is wrapped in brown paper with the contents reveal on top. This is the way Mom sent me care packages in college.  Her loving note was the first thing I saw.

image

Library cards are extra-cool when they’ve got writing prompts on them.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
FIRST ITEM: Writing Prompts

I’m a sucker for prompts, idea books, journals and the like. This is a clever design–library cards in the envelopes–with quirky prompts written by the author. “If you were kidnapped,what embarrassing photos might your family use to find you?” Classic!






image

Gold-tipped pages make any journal feel exquisite.

.
.
.
SECOND ITEM: Writing Journal

Speaking of classic, this lined journal is edged in gold and the cover is designed to look like a bookshelf. Perhaps BMBC planned this as a great place to start writing down your ideas based on those writing prompts. The whole theme works. The paper is good quality, as is the cover and band, but the binding feels cheap. I pressed the journal to lay it flat, and I heard a crunchy sound like pages pulling apart. I’ll use this journal for sure, but I’ll have to be more delicate than I’m used to.

image

Cup, cold brew and candy. ‘Nuff said.





THIRD ITEM: Food and Drink

I count these as one item because a drink and snack are in every box. This month’s offerings are better than the ones in the messenger bag kit. The cold brew coffee is something different rather than packaged tea. I’m not big on making drinks by the pitcherful, like iced tea, but I like Latin American coffees. I’ll give this a try when I know I’ll be home for awhile, late September, when our upcoming roadtrips are over.

The sweets are two praline clusters. Looks like a sugar headache wrapped in plastic, but I expect to love them. Not too little, not too much, a delightful accompaniment to this set.

image

.
.
FOURTH ITEM: Coffee Mug

The heavy coffee mug is decorated with gold leafing, matching the journal, and that means the mug can’t be microwaved.  I’ll never use it for my drinks because I never drink a cup of coffee or tea in less than 30 minutes. I’m going to use this as a pen holder or something similar, making practical use out of this item and something I get to look at every day.

.
.

image

The freaky plate is being regifted

.
.
.
FIFTH ITEM: Plate

The sweets were possibly meant to be served on this item, the second reason for the Fra-gee-lay sticker on the box. The freaky deer plate will not live in my house longer than it has to. I know three housemates who will adore this; it’s perfectly suited for them, not me.

image

A funny memoir







.
.
SIXTH and FINAL ITEM: The Book

This is the first softcover book I’ve received in a subscription kit. Hardcover books are showpieces; softcover books are practical and easy to carry around in my (messenger) bag. I love it for that reason and that the subject is one close to my heart: a father memoir. I’m writing the memoir of me and my dad right now, so I am intrigued to read it. What a humorous tone!

“Harrison Scott Key…grew up in Mississippi, among pious Bible-reading women and men who either shot things or got women pregnant. At the center of his world was his larger-than-life father–a hunter, a fighter, a football coach. … He taught me many things: how to fight and work and cheat, and how to pray to Jesus about, how to kill things with guns and knives and, if necessary, with hammers. …When it became clear that he was not able to kill anything very well or otherwise make his father happy, he resolved to become everything his father was not….”

The is the next book on my TBR pile.  Positive.

MY OVERALL REACTION

image

This kit was worth the $46 shipped, which is the priciest book subscription box I’ve come across. I have high expectations for that reason, and this month met them. All of the items are useful and practical. The freaky plate will make me Gift Giver Extraordinaire with my friends.  This high quality regifting item is worth it to me. I’m not palming off some cheap lip balm or pinky ring. All items relate to the theme, and some are quite clever and unusual.  This box isn’t advertised as genre-specific, and it’s refreshing to receive a non-YA book.  For that reason, among many more,  I’m keeping this kit and cancelling Owlcrate.

I’m looking forward to the beautiful madness of the book case Chapter 4.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

What is the key to balancing social media?

“It always seems impossible until it’s done.”~Nelson Mandela, S. African statesman

Yesterday, I was reminded why I dis-Like Facebook: I spend too much d@=# time on it.

I have a social media schedule, one that continues to evolve. For now, Facebook is scheduled twice a week: Tuesdays and Fridays to post on my author page, as well as an optional Sunday post there or on my personal page. Yesterday was Tuesday, so after writing a status update where I contemplated my YouTube channel, I decided to look at my notifications and message and updates.

image

Haiku Horizons #128: theme is the “key” of life

I stared at the world earth icon. I have 68 notifications? What the h-e-double-hockey-sticks? That’s why I keep getting those mobile notifications like Monday’s “You have 99 new notifications, 23 group updates and 1 message” alert. By the way, 99 is the max number that FB will alert you of. I know I had more than that. If they went to three digits, I guess their servers would explode. Perhaps FB thinks that if you have 99 notifications, you better hurry over there before your life implodes.

Anyway, I wanted to clear that mess up, and before I knew it, I had been commenting and scrolling and Liking for 45 minutes. Geez, what did I just let happen?

I didn’t set a timer; alarms work well for me. I didn’t keep a focus; I let myself wander aimlessly through posts. I didn’t look at my to-do list; my planner sat across the table. I offered myself no incentives, like “Look at one final post and then you can reheat your coffee.” Maybe it was cool to be a part of all my friends’ worlds again. Maybe I was unmotivated or distracted. Maybe I wanted to ignore something. Probably all three.

What is it that locks me out? What have you found your key to?

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

On cloudwatching, ice cream and PokemonGO

“People may hear your words, but they feel your attitude.”~John C. Maxwell, American clergyman

My month began and ended with clouds.

I remember those two moments specifically because of a comment my husband made. “Look at that sky,” he said, whipping out his phone to take a picture of the heavenly clouds. “That’s just like the one before, at home.”

I remembered that other cloudscape, but I forgot that it happened only 30 days prior. Imagine that. I wouldn’t have realized that without my Photo365 app to capture images of the day.

image

I’m a scrapbooker. That means I take way too many pictures. My phone’s camera roll is in the upper 5-digits. Taking way too many pictures does ensure that every snippet of life is captured, but mine is a quantity that took 5+ hours to back up to my external hard drive this weekend.

Note to everyone: back up your computer, laptop and smartphone. No excuses; just do it. You’re welcome.

Okay, pardon that squirrel moment. Back to photos. My husband’s commented that I take too many photos of an event and don’t stop and just be in the event. He’s right. My mind goes back to the Rose Bowl game we went to in 2009. I was so busy taking photos of the Penn State band and whatever else was there that I missed seeing the Nittany Lion mascot on the parade float. It breaks my heart to think of that once-in-a-lifetime moment.  How did I let that happen? Unfortunately, I let it happen way too easily.

So I stop to look at clouds. I permit myself a moment or three to take photos and then I put my camera/phone away and just Be. It’s a hard thing to do. Fireworks are a harder thing to stay away from to relive the moment of swooshing and booming. Of course, if you’re too busy filming it, a rewind only lets you live it.

Screenshots are a big thing for me now. I plan to have them all printed out and scrapbook them, but…well, let’s just leave it at “plan.” It’s an easy thing to do–it takes but 5 seconds–and I get on with my life while still capturing it.

image

In July, my husband and I spent family time, both at home with my in-laws and locally here in Michigan. We went out for coffee, to dinner and stayed at home together. Together is a nice place to be with family. And friends. I saw a dear college friend while in Philly. Those were photo-worthy moments.  As was the ice cream at the University of Delaware’s UDairy Creamery.

I caught the fever and downloaded PokemonGO game. If you’ve been living under a rock or were stranded on an island for the past month, it’s a throwback game to the Pokémon video and card games of the 1990s and early 2000s. In this latest incarnation of video game, you catch critters inside a Pokeball and then fight them at gyms to gain experience points and get higher level goodies. You can read the rest of opinions and debates elsewhere, but I’m here to say that I like it. From July 12 to today, I am Level 11, halfway to Level 12, and a member of Team Mystic. How much will I play it in the future? Who knows? It’s the latest cool thing out there, but will I open the app much in, say, December? There was a time I couldn’t get enough of Angry Birds, but now I only remember to play it when there’s an update. I’m having fun, not tripping over or running into anything, so I’ll keep catching them. The photos remind me of the intriguing places I’ve seen Pokémon, the levels I attained and when I caught Pikachu.

Social media is a scary thing, and my Twitter and Instagram accounts are delicious dumping grounds for my photos. My Timehop app is connected to my social media accounts, and it showed me that this month 7 years ago I joined Facebook and what the first photo I posted there was. Look at July 26 to see what that was.

Swarm is a geolocation-based game, similar to checking in at a place on Facebook or tagging a location on Instagram. This is a stand-alone game where you checkin to places you visit, and if you go there more than anyone else in the world, you become Mayor of that place and get coins for that honor. This can be a fierce battle between you an friends or strangers. Note the image on July 30. The Shark of Death. Shark! Chomp!

Let’s not forget writing. I write in coffeeshops, and three are featured in my photos here. It’s a testament to my belief in myself, my writing and the knowledge that getting out of the house makes me more productive. I now have three writers groups that I’m active in, and they all give me something different. I’m lucky, and trust me, I know it.

I saw Star Trek Beyond with my husband. My baby turned 225K this month. My tree grows in Canton. I sold scrapbook supplies at a yard sale and made almost enough money for a massage. It’s not such a bad thing to take pictures to remember these little moments.

As long as you remember to stop and look at the clouds.

Posted in Art & Scrapbooking, Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

How I’m removing #ROW80 stress at this #WeekendCoffeeShare

If we were having coffee….

Hi. I’m glad you could come over today. My husband’s out of town for a few days. He left way early this morning, and it’s quiet and a bit lonely here. I’ve still got some of our Starbucks subscription Reserve coffee if you want. They’ve been good coffees so far, smooth and not too citrusy or tart. My husband–who was not a coffee drinker when we met, mind you–decided during a coffee tasting that we should have coffee delivered monthly. Yeah, so there we were, up at the Livonia Starbucks, doing their last Saturday of the month coffee tasting, and he leans over to me and says, “Okay, we’re in.”

“In what?” I whispered back.

He showed me his phone with the confirmation screen pulled up. “I signed us up.”

I rolled my eyes.

Still, it is nice coffee. We have it ground at Starbucks, drink our first cup there. They let you do that, at least this one will brew a Clover cup before they hand us our coffee. It’s subscription exclusive, so if you want a cup, now’s the time to have it.

I’ve spent a lot of this week contemplating my ROW80 goals. The one thing that keeps stopping me is my blog. It’s my Number One goal for Round 3, and I expected to be all caught up by the end of July, today. Well, I’m not. Alex from the Emerging Writers group made an interesting comment on Thursday when I mentioned this. She said, “How can you catch up on a blog? It’s an ongoing thing.”

image

My current blog series scheduling template

I have too many things undone, hanging out there, and I feel as incomplete as those blog posts. Everything in my life–scrapbooking, email, blogging–is past due, incomplete, whatever you want to call it. I made a commitment to myself that night to make use of this round to focus exclusively on my blog: completing old posts and writing or scheduling future, ongoing posts.

I’ve searched the Internet for organizational ideas and inspirations, and I found a bunch of bloggers and YouTubers who struggle with the same thing. I combined a lot of those ideas into some Word and Excel files. I created lists or forms or whatever to help me map out my future blogposts, social media stats, blog series, categories, ideas and all that.

Looking at it professionally, what can I do in the Third Quarter to set myself up for success in the Fourth Quarter? Finishing or deleting old posts and updating my Pages will remove a large chunk of that visual noise. That gives me a month and a half, a more achievable goal than the three weeks I thought it would take me. Yeah, right.

I’m struggling with keeping up with emails. I had this great checklist idea using planning stickers, repurposing “hydrate” stickers for “email” stickers, but I did nothing with that this week, wasting 14 good counting stickers. I ordered a different set to try out. Who says planning and to-doing can’t be cute as well as functional.

I’ve been uninspired to call friends and family, and my social media plans are evolving a bit as I see what I have and have not been doing. I’ll tell you about it next week or so; I should have a better grasp on that by then.

I let go of goals #3 and #6. Organizing my phone photos can wait. Before my latest iOS update, I saved all photos to my external hard drive. If I was desperate, I could delete them from my phone and have a copy at home. I’d rather do something productive and scrapbook-y with them, so let’s wait until October. Same with my writing and editing. Start October as a fresh start, making Round 4 and the Fourth Quarter as productive as possible.

So, what about you? How’s your week been? What have you been up to?

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Owlcrate July 2016 unboxing: same vendors, sneaky theme

“Inside each of us, there is the seed of both good and evil. Once cannot exist without the other.”~Eric Burdon, British musician

Oh my gosh!  Thank GOODness I got the Good Owlcrate box.

image

.
.
.
The July theme was “Good vs. Evil,” and what a twist on that. Instead of a mix of good/evil themed items, each subscriber got a Good box or an Evil box. I would have been soooooooo disappointed with the Evil box, so Good is good!

It took me, honestly, until reading the card afterwards to get the clever theme. I’m not used to writing “good” about Owlcrate boxes, but lately, I have been surprised.
.
.
.
image

.
.
It didn’t start off well. The first peek inside the box did not fill me with hope. Oh, yippee, another Funko POP. Oh, yippee, another Harry Potter thing. Oh, yippee, Luna Lovegood. She’s not my favorite character, but I never disliked her.
.
.
.
Remember, I didn’t catch the Owlcrate theme yet. This will be important later.
.
image

She grew on me after I looked I looked at the back and saw what other characters I could have gotten. “I would have preferred getting Sirius Black,” I said to my husband who was sitting on the couch as I opened this. “Ew. At least I didn’t get Dobby.”
.
.
A small, brown box was next. Oh, yippee, another Vector Engraving piece of jewelry. I’m really tired of seeing repeat vendors. I get it, there’s probably some promotional thing going on between Owlcrate and their featured vendors, but this is getting old. Vector Engraving does some outstanding detailed work–the Tardis pin I recived in the February box was incredible and will make my friend’s Christmas super-sweet–but still, the same thing from the same company 6 months ago. I was not expecting what was inside, the crème de la crème of the box:

image

A Millennium Falcon necklace.

*swoon*

I showed it to my husband. “Cool,” he said, and not in that dismissive way men say things to feign interest in what women say. That was a serious, full-out cooooooool.

I’m a Star Wars fan from the 70’s. Yes, I know that dates me, but the movies are worth suggesting my age. Take a cloer look at this pictures; the details are amazing. I couldn’t figure out the good and evil part of this, but Han Solo and Chewbacca were good and scoundrels, so it fit the theme. Doesn’t matter how, really, because I adore this. I didn’t even put that in the to-put-back-in-the-box-until-later pile. Nope. I set on the side to wear ASAP!

image

Next came a magnetic bookmark. Oh, yippee, another magnetic bookmark. I don’t think I have enough books for all the magnetic bookmarks I now have. AT least this bookmark from Jane’s Tiny Things feels sturdier than last month’s Princess-Prince-carriage set by Crafted Van. I don’t grasp how Owlcrate comes up with their item descriptions. The promo card inside described “this adorable Alice magnet,” and to me, it’s creepy.

image

These boxes contain a lot of creepy items that are intended to be pleasant, but take a look at Alice’s squinty eyes. She looks possessed, and not in that happy drug-induced Wonderland way. The quote on the back of her head is cool, so if I use this, I’ll keep it turned backwards.

“At least I didn’t get the Queen of Hearts,” I said to my husband. That Queen looks nightmarishly angry and creepy.

Then there was a bright and beautiful, useful item: a quote sticker based on the book Illuminae. I haven’t read it yet, which probably makes me a pariah in the YA Bookstagram world, but the quote makes me want to run out and buy it and put it at the top of my To Read Next pile. “You have me until the last star in the galaxy dies, you have me.”

image

“Just like you and me,” I said to my husband, following with that Happy Couple awwwwww.

“I’m glad you’re liking your box,” he said. “Sometimes you don’t.”

“I know, they’ve been surpringly good lately,” I replied. I can use this. I’ll stick it on a dashboard in my Happy Planner so I can look at it. The sticker has a nice texture, a sturdy plastic feel, like flexible vinyl, so this will survive my planner abuse. Looking at it and feeling the bumpily texture makes me all kinds of happy.

Next was a coloring book. I’m not into the whole adult coloring book scene. I’ve done detail with my Zentangle art. I’ve colored in tiny spaces. Sometimes filling those teeny weeny spaces becomes tedious and stress-full, so to achieve that delicious black/white contrast, I own 05 and 08-size Micron pens.

image

Anyway, this was a coloring book based on YA book covers, including the promo bookmark for Every Hidden Thing by Kenneth Oppel included in the box. We discussed just such a coloring book at my Ann Arbor writer’s group last week, about how Barnes & Noble did that as part of their B-Fest Teen Book Festival in June, so I figured this was just some leftover promo material. Cute idea, but it seemed like a cheap filler, one that didn’t even include any colored pencils or crayons.

image

I flipped through, unimpressed, until I saw the back cover. “I spent my life folded between the pages of book” said by author Tahereh Mafi. That quote is so me. This back cover is sturdier than the flimsy coloring pages where I’m sure colors of anything will bleed through and it’s blank on the back side.

image

.
.
This will be the dashboard for my planner that I’ll put the sticker on the back. I tore that off immediately and set it aside with my necklace. Maybe I can give the rest of the book to someone.

Finally, the book. This Savage Song by Victoria Schwab came with an signed–actually, just initialed–bookplate and a letter by the author.

image

I don’t understand the appeal of these letters. It’s not like it’s a personally handwritten letter; they’re just the ramblings of the writer about their inspiration, a self-serving book summary or just a “thanks for being an Owlcrate subscriber” note. These start out as real letters that Owlcrate folks photocopy onto a sturdy cardstock. This note took a good two minutes under a bright light with a magnifying glass to peruse. This woman has handwriting a doctor couldn’t read. Even her autograph is a squiggle of two initials, I think. The note would have been better typed up rather than the purity of keeping to the authentic. I appreciate authentic. I also appreciate readability.

The book sounds interesting. Condensed from the blurb on the inside jacket: “Kate Harker wants to be as ruthless as her father. August Flynn wants to be human. Their city is divided. their city is crumbling. Kate and August are the only two who can see both sides.But how do you decide to be a hero or a villain when it’s hard to tell which is which?” I’m intrigued. This is added to my TBR book pile. Not sure where on the list it falls, but it’s a good addition to that list.

image

Here’s my grading breakdown:
Funko POP: B
Necklace: A+
Bookmark: B-
Quote sticker: A
Coloring book: B+
The Book: B+ (only because I haven’t read it yet, but looks promising)

I finally read the spoiler card, and that’s when I realized the Evil box had different stuff than the good box. I looked online for unboxings of the Evil Box. That one included a Draco Malfoy or Dementor Funko (comparible to my Luna, but I’m happier with her); Death Star necklace (unimpressive); The Queen of Hearts bookmark (creepy!); small, circle quote “Am I not merciful?” also from Illuminae (very unimpressive); and the same coloring and hardcover books. Overall, the box was a not-bad one this month, and Good far outweighed Evil.

Except I could have been stuck receiving a Dobby Funko. That was the other Good box choice. *Whew* Dodged that disaster.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Sharing my Facebook social media tips this #WeekendCoffeeShare

If we were having coffee….

Hey, nice of you to join us here. I haven’t been back to Moonwinks since the start of my first job here in Michigan. Back then, we weren’t into coffee, just sweet flavored coffee drinks, and the lattes didn’t impress us. Today, we wanted to go someplace new after my Saturday workshift, and this place is on the way home.

Do you like Zingerman’s coffee? I don’t, which makes me even more a pariah around here. Everybody near Ann Arbor and beyond loves everything about Zingerman’s. My husband and I, we don’t get the fascination. The coffee is all orange-floraly, the bread is a bit chewy and just there, the brownies are chocolately but a bit dry and the overall menu is entirely too expensive for what you get. The espresso blend here isn’t bad, kind of round and not tart at all, so my Americano was a good choice. I recommend that, unless you like summer-y coffees.

image

It’s been a week for me: not good, not bad, just a lot of running around, not writing and lack of sleep. I was incredible productive at the start of the week. I’m excited to finally figure out a social media plan and to put that in my Happy Planner and actually use it all as intended. After Tuesday, however, it all fell through.

My goal is to maintain a regular schedule per my Round 3 ROW80 goal #4 which means a daily presence somewhere.

Why? It’s a bit selfish; I want people to know and love me and buy my future books, thus making me that world-famous author I am destined to be. It’s a bit selfless because I like being social, connecting with people and making friends. A part is the productivity, meaning if I’m writing something then I’m writing something. It’s good practice, be it a blogposts or a Tweet.

So I started my schedule with the media I dislike most: Facebook. I randomly posted on my Author Page that I was going to Book Expo America. My page got engagement noted by Facebook analytics or whatever, and I got 2-3 more Page Likes. That was encouraging. I posted something again and *poof!* more people. To paraphrase, “If you post it, they will come.”

I needed a regular schedule so that my fans or readers will know when to expect something from me. I’m a private person in public, so I don’t open Facebook or email on my laptop anytime I’m out in public. I’m out writing Mondays, Wednesdays and most Fridays, so Tuesdays and Thursdays are the only regular days I expect to be home to post. I scrolled through my phone calendar and noted that I had more doctor and household appointments, car repairs and business errands on Thursdays, so Tuesdays made sense. Turns out that’s a day I post my Tuesday Tree Update on Instagram, so I went with that.

Tuesdays are a good day in general. It’s the beginning of the week, but it’s not Monday. Never schedule meetings on Mondays. I learned that from my admin days. Mondays are when people catch up on work from the previous week, firefighting disasters that occurred over the weekend or they’re planning and catching up on the first day back after vacation. Mondays are volatile days. People relax on Tuesdays and can take guilt-free social media breaks. Tuesdays are a good day to post news from my weekend just passed or share news for the upcoming weekend, thus giving folks the opportunity to fit all my book signings, streaming interviews and personal appearances into their calendars. Tuesdays are a day I see my friends active on FB, so that’s a good way to start with a built-in audience. I also see them posting on Friday evenings, so I created my Fave Book Friday feature for that day. Two dedicated posting days, with an optional Sunday, is a doable schedule for me. I have finally controlled FB; it does not control me.

I’ve done that for two months now, and it’s actually been enjoyable. I’ve slipped on Fave Book Fridays because I tried the scheduling feature and I didn’t work it correctly. Yesterday, I packed up and set up scrapbooking items for the Baker’s Studio yard sale, and I was so exhausted from it that I didn’t check the Facebook scheduling thing again.

I’m working on some draft blog posts–my ROW80 Goal #1–but the rest of my goals were a no-show:

2–-Deal with 10 emails/day: 5 new and 5 old.
3–-Deal with the photos on my phone.
5–-Keep in touch with friends and family through phone calls and letters.

We’re going to see Star Trek Beyond on Sunday, and I should have time and energy to get some of the other stuff done. Monday afternoon, that’s my beautiful chunk of time where I review last week and plan this upcoming week.

How about you? What’s been going on in your life?

Posted in Art & Scrapbooking, Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Do you remember your first time? A momentous #TBT

“We know what we are, but know not what we may be.”~William Shakespeare, English poet

Today is a momentous Throwback Thursday:

July 21, 2009 is the day of my first Facebook post.

image

I was with my Journal Club writerfriends at the time, and we were discussing chocolate. Yep, that sums it up. Writing and chocolate: what better Facebook post than that to mark my entry into the social media world?

This date marks a good day overall in my writing history. Going through my Timehop app…

6 Years Ago (Weds)
I attended one of my first Deadwood Writers Group meetings. I know that because I checked into Brann’s restaurant across the street where we went for food and drinks afterwards. We fell out of that after-critique socializing pretty much since then, reminding me today that I miss it.

4 Years Ago (Sat)
I was in Toronto for the first-ever international stop on the Sketchbook Project Tour. Toronto was somewhat midway between me in Michigan and my friend in New York. Since we both wanted to see the city, we met there. My sketchbook was on tour, so she got to see it in person. That sketchbook was a product of my art and writing. The Teddy Bear Companion Book is a story about is about the lessons a teddy bear can teach us.

3 Years Ago (Sun)
My Tweet was a photo of a book by an author I know that I bought at Sandmeyer’s Bookstore. Chicago was the Midwest stop of The Sketchbook Project Tour. That same friend flew in from New York, and we drove to Chicago to see my sketchbook that year and tour the city.

image

2 Years Ago (Mon)
I posted a haiku on Instagram, probably one of my first because I wasn’t as active there as I am now.  There are some hashtags I use now but didn’t use then, and I never went back to update all of my earliest posts. They stand the test of time in my photo feed as is.

My blog post that day was about grammar set to music and my newfound editorship for Deadwood Writers Voices.

1 Year Ago (Tue)
Last year, I was all about eBooks. There was a great blogpost I tweeted by Kristine Rusch about the pros and cons of writers culturally dating their stories. I also became the Mayor of my local 7-Eleven. I’m not sure if that’s something to celebrate or not….

image

This Year (a #tbt on a Thursday!)
I’m in my local Starbucks–I’m the Mayor here as well–writing with a friend I met through Swarm/Foursquare. She’s working on her documentary script, and I’m blogging. Working on those draft blog posts per my ROW80 goals. I pulled out my Happy Planner, told her how I am using it to schedule my social media and showed her one of the template I created: how to plan and keep track of a blog post series. So far, the social media aspect is working to keep me on track–or point out when I’m not on track. After the blog is fine-tuned, I’ll turn to similar templates for my writing schedule.

Tonight is my Ann Arbor writers networking meeting. Sometimes they serve chocolate. That would bring my #tbt full circle.

Posted in #ThrowbackThursday, Art & Scrapbooking, Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Another #WeekendCoffeeShare of productive #ROW80 goals

If we were having coffee….

Hey there!  I’m glad you can join me so late this night.  It’s a gorgeous night for a walk, and we just came back from one in Plymouth.  The park area all around the fountain in Kellogg Park is swarming with PokemonGO activities.  It’s like those summer nights you imagine, just warm enough without being hot, light enough to see but still well-after-sunset dusk, couples sitting together on benches and walking around…I mean, perfect.

And then there was Pokémon GO. I downloaded the app this week, curious more than nostalgic, and I got to Level 5 by flicking balls while sitting in a coffeeshop. That was Thursday. I haven’t even chosen a team yet, but here was a mob of kids playing, faces glowing in the post-sunset darkness. I’m on a social media island in this respect, not having anyone to play with or even some idea what to do, but the sense of community here in this public park…wow!

As I said, ideal.

Are you playing? What team are you on?
Yeah, my husband’s rolling his eyes over there. **I lower my voice to a whisper** I saw a screen on his phone. He downloaded the app. Never told me he did. I don’t know if I can get him to play, but looking for Pokestops could help us get our daily 10K steps in. **I raise my voice to normal volume** I love these FitBits. The best Valentine’s Day gift we ever gave ourselves.

It’s been a quiet week, but I’ve been working on those ROW80 goals. Working at making my Happy Planner that social media guru book that I planned to do last November. Haven’t quite figured out still what works for me, and I’m weeks late toing a mid-year review of my overall plans, priorities and progress. For now, I’ll focus on Round 3 goals:

1–Update my blog.

I printed out all my draft posts. The titles alone are 14 pages long. Seeing them sprawled out like that makes it easy for me to see what I can let go of (1b). There’s a visual list of what needs to be migrated over to this site (1d), so I can plan that out, doing 1-2 at a time, or setting aside a chunk of time to do them all. I’m not doing anything with my blog pages (1c) because I am focusing on writing or completing all my draft posts (1a). I have two lists of posts to work on, and I’ve scheduled time to do that this week.

image

2–Deal with 5-10 emails/day: 5 new and 5 old.
4–Maintain current social media schedule, revise/update as needed.

I’m finally using my Happy Planner to more of it’s potential. I have a master to-do of Tweets, Instagram posts and such, and I’m putting some of the individual ones on the calendar pages with stickers. My Twitter Chats, for example, stay on my master sheet, but I’m using “hydrate habit tracker” stickers to denote emails I deal with. That’s eight checkmarks per sticker, thus 16 for each day, so that represents 8 old and 8 new emails I do or do not deal with. I completed the email challenge three days this week.

3–Deal with my phone photos: save, print, delete.
5–Keep in touch with friends and family through phone calls and letters.

Nope. I did not make the time to call or write to folks, and I cannot fathom dealing with the…let me look here…the 16,787 photos right now.

Yes, you heard that number right. That’s for another schedule another time. But I can carve out time for family and friends; I’ve chosen not to, and that’s an epic fail on my part.

I’m also not reading much, despite scheduling that in my social media to-do list. That’s important, but I can’t find the energy to make the time. Honestly, the blog stuff is weighing me down, so many little things to do to catch up. That focus feels good, so the more I progress I make on that first goal, the better I feel. Today, I feel pretty good about it, and that’s a good place to end.

I’m really diggin’ these Frappuccinos. Café Vanilla has become my latest obsession. I know it’s getting later–I’ve talked your ear off, I bet–but settle in with a drink and tell me what’s been going on with you.

Posted in Art & Scrapbooking, Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Writing productivity with #ROW80 for this #WeekendCoffeeShare

If we were having coffee….

Oh, I’m so glad you made it. This is so bizarre, isn’t it? A coffeeshop inside a movie theater, and not just a counter but a real sit-down coffeeshop with tables and pastries and you can’t even smell the popcorn from here.

The Bailout Blend may be the house coffee, but it’s very smooth. My husband, he’s trying the…what is it?…it’s a mocha drink, and look at that! The chocolate is melting from that chocolate lollipop. Oh, that’s gonna taste good. **Husband smiles** Great Lakes makes great coffee.

But we’re not here to talk about coffee…how was your week? My husband and I, we’re still recovering from the July 4th weekend and the drive back from Philly. I can’t remember the last time we were home when it wasn’t snowing. A 12-hour drive is best when done over a long weekend or Christmas break.  Let me show you some pictures.

image

Me and my uncle at Eat n’ Park in PA

.
.

image

My husband knows how I shop at A.C. Moore!

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

image

Summer grillin’…had me a blast!

image

Lucky looks out his window in the fence

.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

image

First time eating ice cream from University of Delaware creamery

.
.
.
.
This morning was my monthly Motown Writers Network meeting.  I haven’t attended since April, what with all my traveling to Chicago and whatnot. Interesting topic today: What is the purpose of your book?  That kinda ties in to Thursday’s Emerging Writer’s topic about whether your novel is really a book or just a blog post or an idea.  Without details and focus, you can’t move forward with your project.

The 30-Day Challenge posed to all of us is to visualize our book,.  We folded a piece of paper as if it was our book cover and wrote what we’d like to see on that: our name, book title, an idea of the cover image.  Inside, we’re to write the book’s blurb summary and maybe sample text.  If you visualize it, you can work towards that vision.

I’m passing on that because I’m dedicating July to my blog.  Updating it is the first goal for my current A Round of Words in 80 Days.  Did you read last week’s post about it?
Round 3 runs from July 4 to Sept 22.  This was the first week of it.  How did I do?  I’m glad you asked because I feel rather productive about it all.

1–Update my blog.
1a–Update blog with no draft posts.

Currently, my WP-admin dashboard shows 152 draft posts. Embarrassing.  Some are ideas, some are half-finished, some are finished and waiting to be published and some are somewhere in between. Have you ever felt like that? Complete yet not complete?

I’m finding it hard to write with these nagging “my blog isn’t updated” guilt trips. Catching up with all of it will free my mind of clutter and distraction.

This weekend, I’m printing a list of all my drafts, and next week I will go through that list and vet posts, probably during my reserved writing times on Monday or Wednesday afternoons.

2–Deal with 10 emails/day: 5 new and 5 old.
I haven’t done this yet, but I am going to set up habit trackers in my planner so I’ll have visual motivation.  That’s a start.

3– Deal with the photos on my phone.
Not this week, probably not next, either. Not a priority right now, but still a goal.

4–Maintain current social media schedule.
Visuals ground me, as you can tell from above, so I typed up and printed my social media calendar.  Now I have a neat version to work from, not just scratches and scribbles.  Let’s see what I can do with that.

5–Keep in touch with friends and family through phone calls and letters.
I made one phone call this week.  I count that as success.

6– Write current WIPs, edit drafts, write new stories and just for fun.
Nope.

This first week was a short one for me because of vacation.  I will make time to list specific tasks on specific days.  Maybe that will help me focus.

What about you?  Any tips or tricks you care to share?

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Writers, ask yourself this one question

“The best way to predict the future is to create it.”~Peter Drucker, American businessman

Is your book actually a book?

This is the Fiction Journey.

That initial question posed at tonight’s Ann Arbor Emerging Writers workshop did not make me pause. I have several stories in development, and of course my book is a book. My story is developed, thought out, planned and is written or in the process of. There’s lots of fun, dramatic characters in both my memoir and crime fiction and my story is published. That’s what makes a book a book. Right?

image

That question is more layered than “I want to write a book.”

The co-organizers challenged us by delving further: is it a book or is the story just an idea? There’s a different focus when you’re writing fiction versus non-fiction, but that initial question remains the same.

At its heart, a book has conflict. Without that, your story is a blog post. The three elements to determine the difference are idea, concept and premise.

The idea is just that: a quick thought, a wish or a vague desire. Let me play the book game using my Jimmy the Burglar short story as an example. Since I’ve been working nonstop of memoirs, I wanted to try a different genre, so I wanted “to write a fun crime story.” That’s my idea right there.

The concept is a focused description of that one-line idea. At this stage, you expand that into a general or generic scenario. Jimmy the Burglar‘s concept was about “a thief who is trying to get into an organization, but he doesn’t have all the skills needed.” Notice how there’s a spark of conflict there? At this point, there are no names or physical description, but now there is focus. The details come next.

The premise is the last step, and this is the one that turns your idea into a story. This is where you introduce the plot, similar to a book’s back cover blurb. The premise of Jimmy the Burglar taken directly from my Amazon page is this:

“Jimmy has always wanted to follow in his family’s footsteps and become a member of the prestigious Burglars Union Guild. He has two strikes against him when he can’t pick a lock and he fails his practicum. In order for him to be admitted into BUG, he has to pass his final exam. Jimmy’s proposal is ambitious and potentially profitable. It also involves picking a lock.”

If you can expand your idea into a premise that evolved from “just” an idea, then you have a book. Now what?

I’ll be exploring that “Now what” aspect in future posts. I’m writing Jimmy’s sequel, expanding his world into a series, and I’m going to dig in to those now what requirements. I’ll examine this as edit my memoir, too, as I explore the non-fiction aspect of what makes a book a book. 

Whatever the genre, we can all learn how to turn our book into a book.

Stay tuned.

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Be accountable for your writing: my #ROW80 Round 3 goals

“I am always ready to learn, although I do not always like being taught.”~Winston Churchill, English statesman

Here we go again.
A Round of Words in 80 Days, Round 3 for 2016 runs from July 4 – Sept 22, 2016. I’m in it to begin it.

image

Doing this again; bring it on!

I revisited the ROW80 site to read the “rules” of this challenge again. The key idea here is measurable goals, and that’s the part I struggle with. Kait Nolan’s post from 2011 resonated with me. When you keep items too broad, “these aren’t goals they’re end results.”

I love the breakdown that Raeanne G. Roy has. Her goals are a FABulous list of specific and achievable items. Maybe that’s the part I don’t publically list because I don’t want to bore everyone with all those individual steps to reach that Big Goal.

I need a balance of wishful idea with specific action steps, and I am responsible for them. I can make the time if something is important enough. What is most important to me now?

What will make me happy to complete this summer? Overall, what do I want?

I want to feel less stress and more motivated with my writing. For me, that means cleaning out the clutter in my life, physically and metaphorically. That means catching up and keeping up. That’s three of my goals for #ROW80 Round 3:

1–Update my blog.
This is a broad goal I’ve broken down into smaller to-dos and brain-dumps in my planner. This list includes:

1a–No draft posts.
1b–Let go of old posts.
1c–Finish all Pages (for now).
1d–Migrate older posts to new site.

This also includes mechanical stuff like: explore widgets; video posting help; Mailchimp newsletter; green Follow button; and email current subscribers and followers.

image

Dare to Dream!

2–Deal with 5-10 emails/day: 5 new and 5 old.
Whatever action I need to take, take it: read that blogpost; reply to sender; file; print; make notes; forward…but in the end, it’s no longer in my Inbox. Use hashmarks to show my progress!

3–Deal with my phone photos: save, print, delete.
This is an ugly, hot mess. It’s good that I purchased the highest GB phone available. I did that specifically for photos and videos, apps being a secondary consideration. It’s embarrassing and shocking the number of photos I have saved. Let’s just say that the quantity is six digits. Some of these are for blog posts, some are actual photos I want to save and scrapbook. Too many are duplicates for social media posts. When you’re staging the perfect image, there’s no reason not to take 25 photos to get the best one. I have to work out an achievable schedule to wrangle this.

Moving on to goals that I was successful with and want to continue doing:

4–Maintain current social media schedule, revise/update as needed.
This includes posting, reading blogs, commenting, reading books and replying.

ROW80-CircleBadge

5–Keep in touch with friends and family through phone calls and letters.
If I make two phone calls and write two letters each week, that’s not a bad way to maintain connections.

My final goal is something that should supersede all others, but right now isn’t:

6–Write: current WIPs; edit drafts; new stories; and just for fun
Yeah, the idea of this Round of Words is to be accountable for writing, hence the word “words” in the title. Blogging doesn’t count for me.

How do I make this a measurable 80 days? Maybe my weekend post will look ahead to the week the way I do in my planner–seriously, I love playing with stickers!–and list out week-goals that relate to the overall Big Goal. It all relates somehow.

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

OwlCrate unboxing June 2016: Royalty

“Find a place inside where there’s joy, and the joy will burn out the pain.”~Joseph Campbell, American writer

Wow. This makes two mostly-satisfying OwlCrate boxes in a row. I think it’s the longest streak since my subscription began with “Spooky” in October 2015.

image

Welcome to OwlCrate June2016

.
.
.
I like suspense, but it’s hard to keep the book kit theme a mystery when OwlCrate splashes “Royalty” all over their social media. I think back to the November 2015 kit, “Myths and Legends,” that included a tin of Cinderella pumpkin spice tea. I hold my breath that this is not a repeat. The six items are not duplicates of that box.

Let’s dive right in.
.
.
.
.
.

image

Belle: the best Disney figurine!

Disney minifigure
I got Belle! She may be my fave Disney princess. She’s creative, smart, resourceful and rejects having a man in her life rather then being a distressed damsel. Not only was Beauty and the Beast a great story, strikingly animated, but the film major in me swooned during the swooping chandelier scene, the first and still the best use of computer animation. She’s perfect. There are some seriously disappointing figures of the 16 options available. I would have been happy with Jasmine or Arielle, too, but any other figure and I’d be one cranky customer again. Score!
.
.
.
.

image

Once upon a time….


.
.
.
.
Bracelet
This adorable jewelry item comes from Rich Love Shoppe, which may be a new vendor. I don’t know if everyone got the same design, but I adore mine that reads: “Even in the future the story begins with once upon a time.” I’d wear this.
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
,
image

Page flags
Crafted Van, who we’ve seen in these kits before, created a princess, prince and carriage set of magnetic bookmarks. They have designs on the front and the back, and I appreciate that. The detail makes it look complete, but these feel flimsy. I’ve used scrapbook paper thicker than this. The magnets aren’t the strongest and don’t easily snap together. It took me a few tries to secure them and I had to press hard to make them stick. These would be okay to mark a page that has a quote or favorite passage on it, and I’d consider using them that way, but it would be quicker to use a paper bookmark.
.
.
Speaking of bookmarks…
.
.
Bookmark
How cheesy!

The oversized bookmark from MyBOOKMark reads: “Your personal discount for the most unusual bookmark.” The company makes bookmarks with feet sticking out, which is definitely unusual.

image

USE MY CODE! I won’t! Save money!

The designs include Wizard of Oz, Hobbit and zombies. The dog ones are really creepy; I don’t want to read a book with a dog butt sticking in my face. The bookmarks look sturdy, but they may be too heavy or awkward for the thinner paperback books I tend to read. Still, the C-3PO was cool, and I figured I’d get a great deal for being an Owlcrate subscriber.
.
.
Nope.

The code gives you $10 off a bookmark, all of which cost $25. That means I pay $15 for an item after I already paid $37 for the OwlCrate kit. That $15 doesn’t include the shipping. Really? If you want one, go to this site. Here’s my code. It expires on September 1st and I won’t be using the code. It’s good for one use, so the first person who reads this and wants one, go for it.

Print
Once again, the monthly box includes a cardstock print, always good quality cardstock. I used the print from the January 2016 kit as a dashboard in my Happy Planner, so I figured I would do that again. This way, I enjoy looking at the print more often than if it was hanging on my wall. However, the quote by Victoria Aveyard, Red Queen is deflating to a writer: “Words can lie. See beyond them.”. Not only that, it’s a creepy, bloody pic, reminding me of horror movies. Only a snippet is pictured in this post; I don’t want to be responsible for anyone else’s nightmares.

The Book
My Lady Jane by a trio of authors Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton and Jodi Meadows.

image

The Main Attraction: a book with a happier ending than real life

I’ve heard of collaborations between two writers, but three? Interesting. I wonder how well they do that? The inside book blurb is boring, but the handwritten letter-print is friendly and wants me makes me want to read the book!

“Jane Grey was simply awesome…loved books…became Queen of England for nine days and then was beheaded. That was less awesome. So we decided to give Jane a better ending….” which includes jokes, magic and a transforming horse. I immediately thought of the Xanth book series by Piers Anthony, which I absolutely adore, so bonus points there. It comes with a paper crown. A cute touch.
.
.
.
.
image

This month’s verdict:
I am satisfied with what I received in the June 2016 OwlCrate. Seriously, Belle set the tone for the unboxing.

Items to keep: Belle, bracelet, book, crown and maybe page flags.

Items to regift: None, but I will toss the BOOKmark code (PLEASE USE IT!) and the print.

Overall: success.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Why I like Mondays

“The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.”~Joseph Campbell, American writer

I like Mondays.

Today is not the end of a weekend; it’s the deliciously selfish start to my week.

Two scheduled work shift bookmark my day, guaranteeing a defined midday writing schedule. I know how much time I have, so I’m productive during my time. I write in the same Starbucks because of its location to work. I know the baristas here, and they know my order, which is mostly the same cup of Clover-brewed coffee.

I know it’s going to be cold in here, which is why I’m writing in my extra-heavy reddish sweater despite the 94-degree temps outside.

The tables are big enough for my laptop, papers and mouse; I am prepared. The background hum of music, conversation and coffee grinding is peaceful. Today is the day I look back on the week passed and plan for the week ahead.

Routine is not a bad thing.

Is your Monday as complete as mine?

I hope so. It’s a good feeling.

Posted in Writing | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

TBT from a #TBT 

“I never said most of the things I said.”~Yogi Berra, American athlete

Here’s a look back to 2010.  Good stuff. Sad stuff. It’s nice to know it happened.

Posted in #ThrowbackThursday, Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Appreciating friends and loved ones: Part 2

“Love isn’t something you find. Love is something that finds you.”~Loretta Young, American actress

This morning, my husband woke me up, held my hand and whispered, “Happy 14-year Engagement Anniversary.”

Sometimes I forget how sentimental he is. We sit in the same room at home, both on our laptops or smartphones, and we might not talk or say anything meaningful for an hour. We text each other when we’re at work. Some days we eat dinner at different times. It’s easy to get lost in the day-to-day expectations of cooking, running the dishwasher, emptying trash and replacing the roll of toilet paper to appreciate us. Anyone who says marriage is always pure bliss hasn’t woken up from their dream yet. But together, he and I have formed an Us.

My husband is active on one online social media outlet, and he reads me some posts that others write: their job sucks; their wife complains about the toilet seat; the divorce is messy; the holidays are depressing because they’re alone; the kids are a pain in the…; the wife doesn’t listen; and so on. He doesn’t post anything negative as a general rule–you never whose boss is reading what post of what friend who knows someone who is complaining about something relating to that boss or friend–and he’s private enough to refer to me only as “my wife.” When he does make a comment regarding me, it’s either genuinely complimentary or it’s a joke with a smiley face emoji just in case. 🙂

Seriously, we have a strong relationship together. I know that, my friends know that, but I didn’t know his friends knew that until he read me what he wrote last week in response to one of those depressed-because-women-and-relationships-suck posts.

It made me melt.

I don’t often hear that from him, not in those exact words. I see it from him when he takes out the garbage or changes the roll of toilet paper. We play Yahtzee in coffeeshops. He brings home bagels for breakfast some Saturdays. He kisses me when I come home from work. I hug him every morning before he leaves for work. Living in New Jersey during 9/11 made me realize that there might not be a next time to appreciate someone, so I work hard to have no regrets when one of us walks out the door. I say “I love you” at the end of every phone call to everyone. I hope you do, too. There’s no opportunity to take back what’s unsaid.

He shows me his moments of deep, deep love and caring; I don’t always pay attention to them. That’s my fault. I was caught off-guard by his comment this morning, but I shouldn’t have. After all, he proposed to me 14 years ago today–the same date that his parents got married–and I said yes. I’m still saying yes today. So is he.

Posted in Movies, Music, Vibrant Creativity, Writing | Tagged , | 1 Comment